CONTENTS
Title Page copy
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
HER ROMAN HOLIDAY
by Jamie Anderson
To my beloved, TCN.
© 2007 Susan Deefholts
Cover Art by Razzle Dazzle Design
Model: Tajana Pajo
Photographer: Sanjin Pajo
Designer: Amanda Kelsey
CHAPTER ONE
Calia first noticed him on the platform in Milan, as she waited for her train to arrive. His brooding sexuality drew her interested gaze as he paced back and forth, frowning absently at the tracks, his mobile phone against one ear.
‘Italian Stallion’ didn’t even begin to do him justice, though he had about him the fierce, honed elegance of a purebred, his movements marked by a graceful economy of motion. Occasionally, he’d pause in his restless prowl to let loose a barrage of fluid Italian.
Interesting, how he could be so disturbingly attractive, despite his impatient grimaces and the obvious irritation that underlay his abrupt gestures.
Calia couldn’t resist the urge to watch him—and she soon decided she wasn’t going to bother trying. After all, he seemed oblivious to his surroundings. A scruffy backpacker was unlikely to attract the attention of someone like him, so why not enjoy the view?
His dynamic good looks demanded it: golden skin, sharp cheekbones and broad shoulders that filled his well-cut suit to breathtaking perfection. His short, dark hair carried just a hint of curl. She hadn’t yet glimpsed his eyes, but she imagined them dark enough to drown in.
A grin curled her lips and she was about to look away when he turned abruptly. Their gazes collided, and she found herself looking into the burningly intent glare of a wolf. Piercing, silver grey.
Her smile faded as she felt herself being assessed with insolent thoroughness. One of his eyebrows rose, then he said something into his phone and turned away.
Calia swallowed, indignation rising at the disdain in his expression. Then, she made herself shake it off. After all, what did it matter what some ill-tempered stranger thought of her appearance—regardless of how sinfully sexy the man might be?
She glanced down at herself and chuckled. Oh yeah—lookin’ good, Cal. No wonder he was bowled over.
Over the years, she had been called ‘beautiful’, but Calia had rarely seen that in herself. More often, she thought of herself as dwelling on the attractive side of ‘average’, and for the most part that suited her just fine.
Of course, after a long day, followed by an all-night train ride, even Cindy Crawford might be hard pressed to look good—which didn’t say much for Calia Ryan’s chances.
She tried tugging at her wrinkled t-shirt, but it didn’t help. Her clothes were hopelessly rumpled for having been slept—or rather, dozed—in. The journey from Paris had involved a 5 am transfer in Nice. She vaguely remembered scooping up her backpack, daypack and other accoutrements, before stumbling over to the connecting platform.
And now—Milan to Florence.
The train pulled in not long after. She swung her backpack into place and clipped the straps across her chest and waist, before hanging her daypack over the front of her body. She picked up her water bottle.
Only then did she allow herself one more glance in his direction, but he was gone.
She walked over to one of the railcars and pulled her laden self up the stairs. The interior had seen better days. A corridor ran along one side, opening onto a series of compartments with grubby, sliding glass doors. Each compartment seated six.
Calia shuffled along the corridor until she found an empty compartment—and after double checking that none of the seats were reserved, she let herself in and loaded her backpack onto an overhead rack. Then, she rummaged through her daypack until she found her makeup bag.
A glance in the mirror and she had to laugh. No wonder he had been unimpressed. Her eyes still looked half asleep and her straight, dark brown hair was a haphazard mess of tangles.
By the time the train pulled out of the station, she had repaired the damage. She was just contemplating a quick visit to the washroom when a slouching, middle-aged man with greasy hair pushed open the door to her compartment.
He pointed at one of the seats and said something in Italian. Calia assumed he was asking whether he could sit down. She nodded and gestured towards the seats. He closed the door, then settled into the spot opposite her, beside the window. Her nostrils flared at the sour, acrid smell of dried sweat. This close, he looked even more disreputable.
After that observation, Calia made a point of keeping her gaze fixed outside the window at the passing scenery. But she could still feel his stare. She shifted uncomfortably and resolved to ignore him. She had almost succeeded, when he spoke, “Vi occupate di se fumo?”
Between her tiny smattering of Italian and her fluent French, she guessed he was asking whether she minded if he smoked. When he removed a pack of cigarettes from one of his pockets, her suspicion was confirmed. She shrugged and turned back to the window. But moments later, he touched her hand and shook the pack of cigarettes at her.
“Grazie, no.”
He grinned, revealing several rotten teeth. “You English?”
“Canadian.”
“Ah, Canadian.” He nodded, still smiling as he lit his cigarette.
Then, just as Calia was about to return her gaze out the window, he pointed at her, then at himself, before twitching his hips lewdly.
She shook her head. “Grazie, no.”
That set him off. He launched into a torrent of Italian. She didn’t understand a word of it—until he pulled his wallet out of his inside pocket and started waving some Euros in her face, making the nature of his proposition degradingly obvious.
“No, grazie!” This time, she spoke more forcefully, reinforcing her refusal with a gesture of negation. “I’m not interested. Capisce? No interessato.”
But her refusal only seemed to make him more emphatic. His expression darkened and he raised his voice, gesticulating wildly. What had at first seemed innocuous was rapidly escalating out of control, and Calia glanced at the door, wondering if she should grab her backpack or just get out of there. Before she could act, he stood, looming over her, his expression ugly. He waved the hand with the cigarette in front of her face and said something more, before walking over to the door.
Good. He’s leaving. Calia watched his hand approach the door handle, then pass by it to the curtain that had been pulled back from the windows facing the corridor.
“Hey! What are you doing?” she demanded, her voice rising in volume. She stood, walking towards him. “Don’t close those curtains. I told you, I’m not interested—now get the hell out of here, or I’m calling for help.”
She reached out, intent on pushing past him to get at the door and out of the compartment. His other hand came out of nowhere, shoving her towards the side where he had been sitting. Her head knocked against the lower metal baggage rack and she blanked out as she fell onto her side across the row of seats.
She regained awareness to find the man straddling her, his hand over her mouth, the other groping at her chest. His face was several feet above her own, his rotted teeth clenched around his cigarette.
One of her arms was pinned, but she struggled and shouted as best she could, trying to take a bite out of his hand while she worked to maneuver her free hand into a place where it might do some damage.
The door to the compartment opened, distracting her assailant, and a male voice barked something in It
alian. She took advantage of the distraction to deliver a hard punch to her attacker’s privates. He groaned, the cigarette dropping from his mouth onto her chest. She grabbed it before it burned anything and butted it out on the closest available surface—his thigh.
He yowled, raising a threatening hand—when someone else grabbed his wrist and pulled him off her, all the while spewing a barrage of Italian.
Calia sat up, her heart still pounding, as her rescuer continued speaking. She drew in deep, steadying breaths and stared at her hands, which were shaking badly. That didn’t surprise her, since her insides felt all jittery and askew. Distantly, she noted that her attacker had been expelled from the compartment and the man who had burst in on the scene had settled in the seat beside her.
He smelled of spicy soap, underlaid with a hint of something darker. Something that might have intrigued her under other circumstances. But for now, all she felt was an overwhelming relief.
He continued to speak in Italian, his tone no gentler than it had been with the man.
Calia didn’t understand a word of it. She finally looked at her rescuer—and froze a moment. The Lone Wolf, from the platform. And if anything, his expression was harder than it had been earlier. Despite that, her throat was suddenly dry and she felt a mortifying tide of embarrassment heat her cheeks. She let out a slow, steadying breath.
“Grazie, signore. Thank you for your help.”
“Lei parla l’italiano?”
“Not really, no. But molto grazie, for coming in when you did. For getting rid of that man.”
He shook his head. “A beautiful woman, traveling alone, and you don’t even speak Italian.”
Calia frowned, bristling at the accusation in his tone. Of course, his English would be flawless. Only the slightest of accents betrayed him as a non-native speaker.
“What exactly do you mean by that?”
“You people always assume everyone speaks English. So just tell me what you think would have happened if I hadn’t come by when I did?”
Calia raised her chin. “I would have managed. It might have gotten a little messier—and I did appreciate your intervention. But I would have fought him off, even if you hadn’t come.”
“Is that right?”
“Yes, it is. And what the hell does that have to do with whether or not I speak Italian?”
“You don’t even know enough of my language to be able to shout for help, do you? So, for the record, it’s ‘aiuto’. Remember that.” He shook his head, his expression still hostile. But now Calia was right there with him.
“Are you always this gracious—or have I somehow been singled out?”
His frown darkened. “What would you have me do?”
“A little courtesy might be nice. Maybe an ‘are you all right?’ or something like that?”
He just scowled at her.
“Right,” she said, nodding. “Well, as it happens, I’m not totally all right, thanks for asking. I’m still a bit shaken up. But I’m sure that if you continue to snarl at me, I’ll be feeling right as rain in no time.”
His expression shifted to perplexed hostility as she spoke. “My English must be failing me, since I have little idea what you are talking about.”
The train had begun to slow. Her surly rescuer walked to the window. “Just so you know, I told him to get off at this station, so if you want to press charges, then you will have to act quickly.”
The train pulled to a stop.
Calia shuddered. “No, no. Just as long as he’s gone, I don’t care.” She stood and peered over his shoulder. With a sense of relief, she spotted her former attacker walking swiftly across the platform, towards the station’s exit. “He seems in something of a hurry.”
The broad shoulders shrugged. “I also told him that if he didn’t get off here, I’d take great pleasure in ensuring he was off the train before we reached the next stop.”
“I see.”
He turned, and she was suddenly breathlessly conscious of the spicy darkness of his proximity. Calia generally thought of herself as an independent woman—her older brother Matt had often joked that Calia’s stubborn self-reliance meant he got to slack off on the ‘protective’ aspect of his role.
Still, for a few moments, she wished that she could collapse against this man—who hadn’t even introduced himself—and lose herself in the comfort of his arms. She swayed towards him, the full weight of reaction setting in. Between her recent ordeal and her largely sleepless night, she suddenly felt deeply exhausted, and as out of her depth as he had accused her of being.
Then, just as she was pulling in another breath and reaching for the strength to step away from him and collapse into one of the seats, she felt his hands close over her shoulders, the grip firm, but surprisingly gentle. Any final reserve of control was swept beyond her grasp by the warmth of that human contact. She leaned against his chest with a shuddering sigh.
As his arms slipped around her, she found, to her horror, that her next breath was even shakier. And then, the floodgates opened.
She felt herself being led to one of the seats. Heard the murmured Italian as he stroked her hair and rocked her gently. Slowly, the racking sobs abated, taking the jittery tension with them. She found she was holding a tissue in one of her hands, and she used it to dab at her face, swiping away the eyeliner she had applied short minutes and long eternities ago.
She pulled away from him, suddenly conscious of the fact that she had just been bawling into the shoulder of this remote, disturbingly attractive, stranger. She stared at her sodden tissue because she didn’t want to look at him. Lucky fellow—always seeing her at her best. First, all rumpled and groggy from a sleepless night. And now, this. She swallowed, feeling the rawness in her throat.
“So. Better now?” He spoke gently.
She nodded. One of his arms remained draped across her shoulders. Now that she felt more like herself, she was heatedly aware of his touch, as a different kind of tension suffused her.
“Good.” His hand shifted so that he was rubbing her back soothingly. At least, she suspected that was how he meant it to feel. Calming. Comforting. The opposite of exciting. “Do you want me to stay with you here?”
Yes. But that was silly. “No, no. Of course not. I’ll be fine. Really.”
He pulled away to regard her. Then, he shook his head. “No. I will stay.”
A silence.
She sighed. “I could really do with a coffee right about now—there’s a cafeteria car on the train, isn’t there?”
“Yes.” He stood. His expression had become unreadable. “I will get you a coffee while you check your bags to make sure nothing is missing.”
Calia smiled at him. “You know what? I think I actually need a bit of a walk. It’ll help steady me. But if you could just stay here, with my backpack?” When he nodded, she continued, “Did you want anything? It’s on me—as a thank you for helping me out. I do appreciate it, you know.”
He shook his head. “I am fine.”
She refused to be intimidated by his forbidding inscrutability. “C’mon. It would make me feel better if you’d let me buy you a coffee.”
His eyebrows rose. “All right. An espresso. No sugar.”
“Great. I’ll be back shortly.”
Except that Calia didn’t quite have enough change to pay for both the coffees and the calzone she had ordered. And when she went to pull out her money belt, so she could dip into her larger stash, she discovered the belt was gone. I must have shoved it into one of my packs.
She tried to push aside her rising uneasiness and gave the woman behind the counter an embarrassed smile. She didn’t want to rummage through her daypack here in line, so instead she held out the small amount of cash she had left, which was just enough to cover the coffees. “No calzone, grazie,” she said in her broken Italian. “’Scusi.”
The woman’s friendly smile belied her keen scrutiny of Calia’s face. Then, with a shrug, she accepted the money—and handed Calia
the coffees and the calzone. “Is okay. Take it all.”
Calia thanked the woman and returned to the compartment to find the Lone Wolf had retreated behind a newspaper. When he heard her fumbling with the handle, he opened the door for her, accepting the coffee she handed him with a nod.
“Grazie.”
“You’re welcome.” Calia set her own food on the tray by the window and turned to her daypack. The zip on the front pocket was open.
She frowned. She was usually very careful about zipping her bags closed when she was done with them.
I must have forgotton. But still. It has to be in here. Where else would I have put it? Her heart had started to pound again. After all, she only ever took off her money belt when she showered. She even slept with it under her pillow…
Ohmigod. She closed her eyes, rubbing her forehead as she tried to steady her breathing. A 5 am transfer of trains in Nice. She had that compartment to herself, and had taken advantage of the fact to stretch across the seats. She had been exhausted.
Thinking back, a vague recollection emerged from the dimness of her early morning memories. The Italian border guard, sometime between 5 and 9 am, rousing her in order to check her documents. For some reason, it had seemed easier, amid all the fumbling, to remove the belt completely, before extracting her passport.
Then, still half asleep, she had shoved the passport and the money belt into the outer pocket of her daypack, with every intention of putting the passport back and tucking the flat pouch under her jeans later. When she was more awake.
Except that she had forgotten all about it. Until now.
And though her passport and railpass were still safely tucked into the outer pocket of her pack, her money belt was nowhere to be found.
She sank into her seat, the throbbing of her pulse loud in her ears as she sought to hold herself back from blind panic.
“What is wrong?”
His voice penetrated the rising tide of her horror.
“My money belt. It’s gone.”
“You are sure?”
Her Roman Holiday Page 1