The Boy Is Back + Every Boy's Got One Bundle

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The Boy Is Back + Every Boy's Got One Bundle Page 52

by Meg Cabot


  I haven’t been able to do much relaxing since I got to Italy—well, except for like five minutes by the pool that one day—what with the sightseeing and the worrying about Holly and Mark’s wedding not working out and the whole Cal thing.

  But today I relaxed, and I looked around, and I… well, I liked what I saw. Italy, I mean. Well, Le Marche, anyway. They’re all so friendly, and say hi to one another as they pass on the street.

  And all of the windows have flower boxes instead of fire escapes on them, because none of the buildings is more than two stories high.

  And because the buildings are so low, the sky looks HUGE overhead, like in Wyoming, or something. Only it’s a blue like it never gets in New York, on account of all the pollution from the traffic. Here, most everyone rides scooters, or at most, they have tiny little Smart Cars.

  Even the ice cream tastes better than back in America. That was the best pistachio I ever had.

  And the pace of life is kind of catching. I mean, I definitely don’t approve of three-hour lunches. But if you NEED to take that long for lunch, it’s nice that it’s not frowned on. Like it would be in Manhattan. I mean, can you imagine if you worked on Wall Street or whatever and you tried to tell your boss you wouldn’t be back for three hours?

  There’s something kind of nice about the way no one hurries, and how there always seems to be time for a cup of coffee and a friendly Buon giorno.

  It’s a shame we have to leave Friday, really. I mean, not that I’ll be sad to say good-bye forever to SOME people I’ve met here. But I think I’ll miss this place. And Peter. And even his great-grandmother and snotty Annika (whom, when she asked me what she was supposed to do with Holly’s bouquet after she caught it, I told it was traditional to shred the flowers to pieces and throw them into the sea for good luck) and the mayor and the smell of horses drifting into my bedroom window in the morning and those skinny cats and the oven that you can’t turn on without the lights going out and all of the Virgin Marys and the castles on every hillside and…

  Well, just everything.

  Except HIM.

  After I take that class at the Learning Annex—on how to speak Italian—and I meet that guy—you know, the simple one who’ll be able to appreciate life’s vagaries—we’ll come back to Italy, and we’ll have a fabulous time, because both of us will know what carabinieri are, and neither of us will laugh at the other’s mistakes, unlike—

  HIM.

  Oh, my God. He’s back.

  He has some nerve.

  Oh, and look. His face still has that same hangdog expression that he had on when I left. What happened, Cal? Did your Italian skank refuse to put out when she saw how stupid you look sitting at the bottom of the pool?

  Huh. He’s trying to make conversation. Yeah, nice try, buddy. But you’re not going to get anywhere in front of the kid. Why do you think I invited him over here? Yeah, not because I have such a burning love for card games. No, it was because I had a feeling you’d come crawling back. And I know you aren’t going to be talking about us if there’s a third party—

  OH MY GOD! THAT’S BRIBERY!

  Wait, two can play at that game—

  AARRRGHHH!!! WHY DIDN’T I GET CASH WHEN I WAS IN TOWN?

  Fine. Whatever. So Peter’s gone. A twenty, and he’s off. Traitor.

  I don’t care. I still don’t have to listen to what this guy has to say. I can just go inside and see what Holly’s doing—

  Um, no, I can’t. Because Holly and Mark are at the hotel. The hotel room he bought them. We’re all alone. We’re all alone in this giant villa because he—

  PLANNED IT THAT WAY!!!!

  OH MY GOD. I AM SUCH AN IDIOT.

  But whatever. Still not listening. No. Not listening to you, Mr. My Only Goal In Life Is to Break the Heart of the Stupid American Girl. NOT LISTENING.

  Cal: “Jane. Seriously. Quit writing in that book and look at me. Just for a minute.”

  Me: “No.”

  Cal: “Fine. But I’m not going to go away. Not until we have this out.”

  Me: “There is nothing to have out.” Cal: “Yes, there is. Look, I know I’ve acted like a jerk almost from the first moment I met you—”

  Me: “Almost?”

  Cal: “Okay, from the first moment I met you. But I want you to know that I feel terrible about it now. You were right. I am an ass. And a creep. The things I said—the stuff I did—all of it. You were right. You were completely right about Mark and Holly, and I was completely wrong. I see that now.”

  Hmmm. This is an interesting turn of events. He’s apologizing. And conceding wrongdoing. I’ve never had a guy do THAT before. What can this mean?

  Oh, wait. I know. Silly me.

  Me: “If this is all just an act to get me to go to the hotel too, so you can have the villa to yourself for the night for you and your skank, it’s not going to work. I happen to like it here, and have no intention of leaving, even for a Jacuzzi tub.”

  Cal: “Jane. If I wanted to spend the night with Grazi, don’t you think I’d be at the hotel with her now, and not here, trying to reason with you?”

  DAMN HIM AND HIS GENIUS LOGIC!

  Me: “Well, whatever you’re trying to do, cut it out. It’s making me nervous. I liked it better when you hated me.”

  Cal: “I never hated you—”

  Me: “HA! HA! HA! CARABINIERI!”

  Cal: “What? I can’t even joke with you?”

  Me: “That wasn’t joking with me. That was a joke ABOUT me.”

  Cal: “And you haven’t made plenty of those about me this past week?”

  Me: “Not to your face.”

  Oooooh. He just swung one of the wrought-iron chairs around, set it directly in front of me, sat down in it, and leaned forward, so that I can see the blond five-o’clock shadow dusting his jaw. Also those blue eyes.

  LOOK AWAY. LOOK AWAY FROM THE HYPNOTIC BLUE EYES.

  Cal: “Jane. Quit writing in that book and listen to me.” Ha. So not going to happen.

  Cal: “Fine. If that’s the way you’re going to be, then I’m just going to say this. I will admit that when I met you, I might have been laboring under some misconceptions about male-female relations. I’m not going to tell you I’ve never been in love, because you and I both know that’s not true. I was in love once, and it didn’t work out, and because of that, I have worked very, very hard to convince myself that love doesn’t actually exist. Because I didn’t want to admit that I’d screwed it up. And if I couldn’t have it, I didn’t want anyone else to, either.”

  Hmmm. Nice little explanation there. Neat. Tidy. Almost believable.

  Cal: “But meeting you changed all that. You made me see that two people—like Mark and Holly—can fall deeply, madly in love, without any ulterior motives, and that that love isn’t just in their heads, a result of a chemical imbalance, but the result of attraction, mutual trust, and sheer, genuine affection. The love those two have for each other—the kind of love that would make them throw caution to the wind and get married in spite of almost everyone else in the world that they cared about being totally against the idea—that’s the kind of love I’ve always wanted, but never thought actually existed. Until yesterday.”

  Hmmm. That’s pretty good, too.

  Wait. What the hell is he talking about?

  Me: “What happened yesterday?”

  Cal: “Yesterday, I was stuck in a car with you for eight hours.” Bastard. I didn’t even sing along with the radio. Much.

  Me: “Yeah. And?”

  Cal: “Something happened.”

  Me: “If you’re referring to my driving skills, may I just say I didn’t TOUCH that truck. What you felt was just the wind. We were going pretty fast. And there wasn’t even a scratch. I checked.”

  Cal: “I’m not talking about that. I’m talking about the fact that I fell in love with you. And I’m pretty sure you’re in love with me, too.”

  !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  Cal: “Can yo
u stop writing in that book now?”

  How can I stop? I mean, I can barely hold onto my pen, my fingers are shaking so badly….

  This can’t be true. This has to be some kind of elaborate boy scheme to… I don’t know what.

  Me: “Okay, I understand that guys like you will stop at NOTHING to make a sexual conquest. I mean, telling a girl what you think she wants to hear… that’s par for the course. But it’s never a good move to presume you know what she feels for you. Because I can assure you, I am NOT in love with you.”

  Cal: “I’m not presuming. I know exactly what you think about me. You think I’m an anal-retentive Armrest Nazi… an arrogant Modelizer. You can’t stand the way I talk, any of the subjects I choose to talk about, the imperious manner I order food in restaurants or tell cab drivers how much we owe them. You find my taste in women odious, the fact that I don’t own a television an unforgivable sin, and the fact that I would choose to write a book about Saudi Arabia completely unfathomable. And you’re also totally and completely in love with me. If you weren’t, you wouldn’t have pushed me into the pool earlier today when you saw Grazi walk in.”

  Me: Speechless.

  Cal: “Now will you put that book down and kiss me?”

  Me: “No, I will NOT. What are you—how did you—did HOLLY tell you all that?”

  Cal: “No. I read that book you’re writing in.”

  WHAT?

  Cal: “Could you write a little bigger? I’m not sure China saw that. Yes, I read your diary. It does say, on the first page, that you intend to give it to Holly and Mark as a wedding present. I didn’t think it would be any big deal for me to read something you obviously meant for them to read. It wasn’t until I was much too deeply engrossed in it to put it down that I realized you’d changed your plans.”

  Me: “Ngh.”

  Cal: “Well put. Yes, I know all your darkest secrets, Jane Harris. How much you pine for Dr. Kovac, who is, I’d like to point out, a fictional character. Your mistaken impression of the size of a certain part of my anatomy. What, exactly, you think about my book—not that your facial expression whenever I bring it up doesn’t say it all. I know you’ve got a soft spot for humpbacked dwarves, stray cats, and your friend Holly, and I know you want to go to Veselka’s with me and eat blintzes. I don’t know what Veselka’s is, but I’m a big fan of blintzes. I’ve never enjoyed myself more than I have the past forty-eight hours, during which I’ve been trapped in a car with one of the worst drivers I have ever seen, run up the Spanish Steps and then down again so I could be on time to wait in line to perjure myself at the American consulate. And I’d like to continue doing those sorts of things with you on a regular basis for the foreseeable future. Although I would also like to include sex with you, if possible. And if none of that convinces you, perhaps this will: I have every intention of sticking around long enough to form an intense, unbreakable, long-term bond with The Dude. And to prove it, this afternoon, I went and got this.”

  Oh, my God. He’s rolling up his sleeve. Why is he rolling up his sleeve? What could he possibly—

  NO!

  IMPOSSIBLE!

  It’s a tattoo!!! He’s got a tattoo. Of Wondercat! Just like the one on my ankle.

  Me: “But—How? Where?”

  Cal: “Crazy Bar and Sexy Tattoo Shop in town. They say Wondercat’s one of their best sellers.”

  Me: “But–but–but that’s PERMANENT!!!!”

  Cal: “So is how I feel about you. Now. Could you put the pen down and kiss me, please?”

  And suddenly, I find that I can.

  Because my heart has become filled with something. Something I can’t really describe.

  Except that it feels like bianco frizzante.

  Travel Diary of

  Holly Caputo and Mark Levine

  Jane Harris

  Oh my God. He lied. It’s totally true, what Mark told Holly about Cal’s—

  Travel Diary of

  Holly Caputo and Mark Levine

  Jane Harris

  Poor Frau Schumacher. She’s going to have a LOT of sheets to wash when we leave. I think we’ve done it in every bedroom at least once.

  Oh well. I suppose she’s used to hard work, considering all the time she put in over at the Führer’s place.

  Travel Diary of

  Holly Caputo and Mark Levine

  Jane Harris

  Even Cal admits that Nutella on strawberries, washed down with champagne, makes a lovely midnight snack.

  Travel Diary of

  Holly Caputo and Mark Levine

  Jane Harris

  Must write fast, as he’s downstairs, getting more strawberries.

  He loves me! At least as much as I—I can’t believe I’m admitting this—love him. YES! It’s true! I love him! I could shout it from the rooftop: I LOVE HIM!

  And I don’t think that’s the phenylethylanamine talking, either.

  Endorphins? Definitely.

  Oh, my God. I love Cal Langdon. CAL LANGDON.

  And you know, really, the only reason he doesn’t like ER is that he’s never seen it. It turns out they don’t have ER in Libya or wherever it is he’s been all these years. I’m sure he’ll come around as soon as he’s caught up with everything that’s happening at County.

  I showed him my Wondercat sketch book, too, and he laughed at my most recent cartoon. Cal Langdon LAUGHED. At one of my cartoons!!!! And called me a comic genius!

  Which I already knew. But it was nice to hear it from him.

  Oops, here he comes. I promised I’d stop writing about him in here.

  For now.

  * * *

  To: Arthur Pendergast

  Fr: Cal Langdon

  Re: The Book

  Hey, Arthur. I was thinking. How would you feel if my second book was on Le Marche? In case you don’t know, Le Marche is one of Italy’s lesser-known regions, filled with breathtaking vistas of ancient castles atop rolling picturesque hillsides, shady olive groves, curved white beaches, delicious seafood, and earthy but delicate wines like the Verdicchio, considered among the finest of the vini da meditazione.

  This is a region in which family-run businesses thrive. It’s a nearly self-sufficient area that many countries—for instance, those formerly dependent on the exportation of oil—might do well to emulate.

  I’m thinking about renting a place here for a few months with my girlfriend to do some research. You might have heard of her— Jane Harris? She’s the creator of Wondercat, that hilarious comic strip about the cat. I’m sure you’ve read it.

  Anyway, let me know what you think.

  Cal

  * * *

  To: Cal Langdon

  Fr: Arthur Pendergast

  Re: The Book

  Le Marche? What the hell are you talking about? No one’s ever heard of Le Marche. Who the hell is going to buy a book about some place they never heard of?

  Let me tell you something: if Sweeping Sands wasn’t Number 2 on the Times Bestseller list right now, I’d tell you what you can do with Le Marche.

  But as it is….

  Go with God.

  Arthur Pendergast

  Senior Editor

  Rawlings Press

  1418 Avenue of the Americas

  New York, NY 10019

  212-555-8764

  PS Girlfriend? Since when do you have a girlfriend? I thought you were monogaphobic.

  PPS What the hell is a Wondercat?

  * * *

  To: Listserv

  Fr: Peter Schumacher

  Re: JANE HARRIS

  Listen up, kids! You are not believing what is happening! JANE HARRIS, creator of our beloved Wundercat, is STAYING here in Le Marche! Yes! At least, this is what she tells me today when I come in the morning to bring the brotchen.

  Actually, JANE HARRIS does not come to
the door this morning when I bring the brotchen. JANE HARRIS does not come downstairs until very late this afternoon to get the brotchen. And then she is looking very tired. But very good, as usual!

  And Cal Longdon, who comes to the door with JANE HARRIS, asks if I know any houses to rent in Le Marche, because he wants to write a book about us! US!!!

  YES! Because Le Marche RULES!!!!

  And JANE HARRIS says she thinks she had better stay in Le Marche, too, to help Cal Longdon write his very important book about US!!!!

  And when I ask her what I know you are thinking—“WHAT ABOUT WUNDERCAT?” she says, “Oh, I can draw Wondercat anywhere.”

  YES!!!! JANE HARRIS IS MOVING TO ITALY! AND YOU HEARD IT HERE FIRST. Courtesy of me, #1 Wundercat Fan Of All Time!

  Wundercat Lives—4eva!

  Peter

  Private to Annika: When you are done with Wundercat Volume 1, tell me, and I will bring you Volume 2 on my motorino.

  * * *

 

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