He moved back.
“This is coming from my concern for you. I want you to know
that.” She looked at him in earnest. “I feel sorry for Paulina, but it’s clear that she’s been holding what happened over your head in order to keep you in her life. I’m wondering if she gets into trouble just so you’ll rescue her. I think it’s time for her to develop an emotional attachment to someone else. Someone she can fall in love with.”
“I don’t disagree,” he said stiffly.
“What if she can’t be happy until she lets you go? You let her go
and you found me. It would be a mercy on your part for you to let
her go so she can find her own happiness.”
Gabriel nodded grimly and kissed her forehead but refused to
say anything more on the subject.
The rest of their stay in Florence was a happy one, a counterfeit
honeymoon of a sort. They frequented various churches and museums
52
Gabriel’s Rapture
during the day, in between returns to their hotel, where they would make love sometimes slowly and sometimes madly. Every evening
Gabriel would choose a different restaurant for dinner, and they
would walk home afterward, pausing on one of the bridges to make
out like teenagers in the cool evening air.
On their last evening in Florence, Gabriel took Julia to Caffé
Concerto, one of his favorite restaurants, which was positioned on the banks of the Arno. They spent several hours over a multi-course dinner, leisurely talking about their holiday and their burgeoning sexual relationship. They both confessed that the past week had been an awakening of sorts — for Julia, an awakening to the mysteries of eros; for Gabriel, an awakening to the mysteries of the four loves intertwined.
In conversation, he final y revealed his surprise. He’d rented a
villa in Umbria for their second week of holidays. He promised to
take her to Venice and Rome on their next vacation, possibly in the summer after they visited Oxford.
After dinner, Gabriel led her one last time to the Duomo. “I need
to kiss you,” he whispered, pulling her body close to his.
She was going to reply, she was going to tell him to take her to
the hotel and mark her body in a deeper way, but she was interrupted.
“Beautiful lady! Some money for an old man…” A voice called
to her in Italian from the front steps of the Duomo.
Unthinkingly, Julia leaned around Gabriel to discover who was
speaking. The man continued, begging for money so he could buy
something to eat.
Gabriel caught her arm before she could approach the steps.
“Come away, love.”
“But he’s hungry. And it’s so cold.”
“The police will come around and carry him off. They don’t like
panhandlers in the city center.”
“People are free to come and sit on the steps of a church. Sanctuary…” she mused.
“The medieval concept of sanctuary no longer exists. Western governments abolished it, starting with England in the seventeenth century.” Gabriel grumbled as she opened her purse and withdrew
a twenty Euro note.
53
Sylvain Reynard
“So much?” He frowned.
“It’s all I have. And look, Gabriel.” She gestured to the man’s
crutches.
“A clever ruse,” he complained.
Julia fixed her lover with a very disappointed look. “I know what
it’s like to be hungry.” She took a step in the beggar’s direction but Gabriel pulled her back.
“He’ll spend the money on wine or drugs. It isn’t going to help
him.”
“Even a drug addict deserves a little kindness.”
Gabriel flinched.
She looked over at the beggar. “St. Francis of Assisi didn’t make
his charity conditional. He gave to whoever asked.”
Gabriel rolled his eyes. There was no way he was going to win
an argument with Julianne when she invoked St. Francis. No one
could win against that kind of argument.
“If I give him something, he will know that someone cared enough
to help him. No matter what he does with the money that will be a
good thing. Don’t deprive me of an opportunity to give.” She tried to step around Gabriel but he blocked her path. He took the bill from her hand and added something to it from his own pocket, then he
handed the money to the beggar.
The two men had a quiet exchange in Italian, and the poor man
blew kisses to Julia and tried in vain to shake Gabriel’s hand.
He retreated, taking her arm and leading her away.
“What did he say?”
“He asked me to thank the angel for her mercy.”
Julia stopped him so she could kiss at his frown until it morphed
into a smile. “Thank you.”
“I’m not the angel he was referring to,” he growled, kissing her
in return.
54
Chapter 5
The next morning, a limousine met the happy couple at the train
station in Perugia. The driver conveyed them down the winding
roads to an estate near Todi, a medieval village.
“Is this the villa?” Julia was in awe as they traveled up the long, private drive to what looked like a mansion on a hill. It was a three-story stone structure that sat on several acres of land dotted with cypress and olive trees.
As they drove, Gabriel pointed out a large mixed-fruit orchard
that in warmer weather grew figs, peaches, and pomegranates. Nestled beside the villa was an infinity pool surrounded by a bed of lavender.
Julia could almost smell the fragrance from inside the car, and she vowed at that moment to gather a few sprigs to perfume the sheets
of their bed.
“Do you like it?” He searched her face eagerly, hoping that she
would be pleased.
“I love it. When you said you were renting a villa, I didn’t think it would be so opulent.”
“Wait till you see inside. They have a fireplace and a hot tub on
the upstairs balcony.”
“I didn’t bring a bathing suit.”
“Who said anything about needing a bathing suit?” He moved
his eyebrows suggestively, and Julia laughed.
A black Mercedes sat in the driveway so they could visit the
neighboring villages, including Assisi, which was a destination of particular interest for Julia.
The housekeeper of the villa had stocked the kitchen with food
and wine in anticipation of their arrival. Julia rolled her eyes when she discovered several bottles of imported cranberry juice in the pantry.
Sylvain Reynard
Professor Gabriel “Overprotective” Emerson strikes again.
“What do you think?” he asked, settling his hands on her waist
as they stood together in the large, fully equipped kitchen.
“It’s perfect.”
“I was worried you wouldn’t like being in the middle of Umbria.
But I thought it would be good for us to spend some quiet time
together.”
Julia arched an eyebrow. “Our times together usually aren’t quiet, Professor.”
“That’s because you drive me mad with desire.” He gave her an
impassioned kiss.
“Let’s stay in tonight. We can cook together, if you like, and
maybe relax by the fire.”
“Sounds good.” She kissed him once again.
“I’ll carry the luggage upstairs while you explore the house. The
hot tub is on the terrace just outside the master bedroom. I’ll meet you there in fifteen minutes.”
She acquiesced with a smile.
“Oh, and, Miss Mitchell…”
“Yes?”
“No clothes for the rest of the evening.”
She squealed and scampered up the stairs.
Not only was the house tastefully decorated in various shades of
cream and white, but it boasted a very romantic master bedroom on
the second floor that was punctuated by a canopy bed. Julia found
herself trying the bed out just for a moment before taking her toiletry case into the washroom.
She unpacked her makeup and placed her shampoo and bath gel
in the large, open shower. She pinned her hair up and took off all her clothes, wrapping herself in an ivory towel. She’d never skinny dipped before, but she was looking forward to it.
As she folded her clothes and placed them on the vanity, she
heard music coming from the bedroom. She recognized the song
“Don’t Know Why” by Norah Jones. Gabriel thought of everything.
His voice outside the bathroom door reconfirmed that. “I brought
up some antipasti and a bottle of wine, in case you’re hungry. See you outside.”
56
Gabriel’s Rapture
“I’ll be there in a minute,” she called.
Julia looked at herself in the mirror. Her eyes were bright with
excitement, and her cheeks were a healthy pink. She was in love. She was happy. And she was (she thought) about to christen the hot tub with her beloved underneath a darkening Umbrian sky.
On her way to the terrace, she saw Gabriel’s discarded clothes
hanging over the back of a chair. The cold evening breeze wafted in through the open door, ruffling her hair, making the pink of her skin pinker still. Gabriel was naked and waiting for her.
She walked out onto the terrace and waited until she had his
complete attention. Then she dropped the towel.
P
Near Burlington, Vermont, Paul Virgil Norris was wrapping
Christmas presents at his parents’ kitchen table: presents for his family, for his sister, and finally, for the woman for whom his heart pined.
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