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Saved by the CEO(8)

By:Barbara Wallace

       
           



       

If the trade-off for sanity meant living a life alone, then so be it.

Why was he even thinking about this? Louisa's comment about needing time  for herself, that's why. Someone had hurt Louisa badly enough that  she'd fled to Italy. Her pain was too close to the mistakes he'd made  with Floriana. Poor, sweet Floriana. He'd tried so hard to want her  properly, but his tepid heart wouldn't-couldn't.

Was the man who'd broken Louisa's heart trying to be something he  wasn't, too? Hard to believe a man would throw her over for any other  reason.

"Mario, could you turn down the volume?" he hollered. He could hear the television from in here.

Leaving the beakers he'd been measuring on his lab table, he left his  office and walked into the main processing area where Mario and his  production manager, Vitale, stood watching the portable television they  had dragged from the break room.

"Last time I checked, football didn't need to be played at top volume,"  he said. With the equipment being readied for harvest, it didn't take  much for the noise to reverberate through the empty plant. He motioned  for Giuseppe to hand him the remote control. "I didn't know there was a  match today."

"Not football, signor, the news," Mario replied.

"You brought the television in here to watch the news?" That would be a first. Football reigned supreme.

"Si," Giuseppe replied. "Vitale's wife called to say they were talking about Monte Calanetti."

Again? Nico would have thought they were done discussing the royal  wedding by now. "Must be a slow news..." He stopped as Louisa's face  suddenly appeared on the screen. It wasn't a recent photo, she was far  more dressed up than usual, and it showed her with a man Nico didn't  recognize. A very handsome man, he noticed, irritably.

The caption beneath read Luscious Louisa-Back Again?

Luscious Louisa?

"Isn't that the woman who owns the palazzo?" Vitale looked over at him.

Nico didn't answer, but the news reader droned on. "...key witness in  prosecuting her husband, Steven Clark, for investment fraud and money  laundering. Clark is currently serving seventy-five years..."

He remembered reading about the case. Clark's pyramid scheme had been a  huge scandal. Several European businessmen had lost millions investing  with him. And Louisa had been his wife and testified against him?

No wonder she'd run to Italy.

Another picture was on the screen; one from the royal wedding. Nico  gritted his teeth as a thousand different emotions ran through him. The  presenter was talking about Louisa as if she were some kind of siren  who'd led Clark to his doom. Had they met the woman? Alluring, yes, but  dishonest? Corrupt?

His ringtone cut into his thoughts. Keeping his eyes on the television, he pulled his phone from his back pocket.

"Have you seen the news?" Dani asked when he answered.

"Watching it right now," he replied. On-screen, the presenter had moved on to a different headline.

"The story's on every channel. It's all anyone in the restaurant can talk about."

It's untrue, he corrected silently. The ferocity of his certainty  surprised him. He had not one shred of evidence to support his belief,  and yet he knew in his bones that Louisa wasn't guilty of anything. One  merely had to look in her eyes to know that whatever the press said,  they didn't have the entire story.

"Did you know?" he asked Dani. Rafe's wife was Louisa's closest friend. If Louisa had told anyone of her past...

"No. She never talks about her life before she got here," Dani answered. "Hell, she barely talks about herself."

Nico's gut unclenched. Silly, but he'd felt strangely hurt at the idea of Louisa sharing her secrets with someone else.

"There are reporters all over town," Dani continued. "One even came in  here asking questions. I've been trying to call her since the story  broke to see if she's okay, but she's not answering her phone."

"Probably avoiding the press."

"I'm worried, though. She's so private, and to have her life story plastered all over the place..."

Terrifying. "Say no more," he replied. "I'll head right over."

* * *

Louisa had lost track of the time. Curled in the corner of her sofa,  away from the windows, she hugged her knees and tried to make her brain  focus on figuring out the next step. Obviously, she couldn't stay in  Monte Calanetti. Not without tainting the village with her notoriety.  And going back to Boston...well, that was out of the question. What  would she do? Go to her mother's house and listen to "I told you so" all  day long?                       
       
           



       

Louisa hugged herself tighter. Ever since seeing the media alert,  there'd been a huge weight on her chest, and no matter how hard she  tried to take a deep breath, she couldn't get enough air. It was as  though the walls were closing in, the room getting smaller and smaller.  She didn't want to leave. She liked her life here. The palazzo, the  village...they were just starting to feel like home.

She should have known it wouldn't last. Steven's shadow was destined to  follow her everywhere. For the rest of her life, she would be punished  for falling in love with the wrong man.

"...you're doing?" A giant crash followed the question. The sound of  tinkling glass forced Louisa to her feet. Running to the terrace door,  she peered around the corner of the door frame in time to see Nico  dragging a stranger across the terrace toward the wall. The crash she'd  heard was her breakfast table, which now lay on its side, the top  shattered.

"Hey, what do you think you're doing?" she heard the stranger gasp. "This is my exclusive."

"Exclusive this," Nico growled. Holding the man's collar in one hand, he  yanked the expensive camera the man carried from around his neck and  hurled it over the wall.

"Bastard! You're going to pay for that."

"Be glad it was only your camera." Nico yanked the man to his feet only  to shove him against the railing. "Now get out. And if I ever see your  face in the village again, you'll find out exactly what else I'm capable  of breaking, understand?" He shoved the man a second time, with a force  that made Louisa, still hidden behind the door frame, jump. Whatever  the reporter said must have satisfied him, and Nico released his grip on  the man's shirt. Louisa stepped back as the man started toward the  stairs.

"Where are you going?" Nico asked, his hand slapping down on the man's shoulder. "Leave the way you came in."

"Are you kidding? That's a five-foot drop."

"Then I suggest you brace yourself when you land." The two men stared at  one another for several seconds. When it became obvious Nico wasn't  backing down, the reporter hooked a leg over the railing.

"I'm calling my lawyer. You're going to pay for that camera."

"Call whoever you'd like. I'll be glad to explain how I'm calling the  police to report you for trespassing on private property. Now are you  leaving, or shall I throw you over that railing?"

The reporter did what he was told, disappearing over the rail. Slowly  Louisa stepped into the light. Nico's shoulders were rising and falling  in agitated breaths, making her almost afraid to speak. "Is he gone?"  she asked in a soft voice.

"Is he the first one?" he asked, voice rough.

He turned, and the dark fury Louisa saw on his face had her swallowing  hard to keep the nerves from taking over her throat. She nodded. "I  think so."

"He was climbing over the wall when I got here. Probably saw your  terrace door was open and thought he could catch you up close and off  guard."

"In Boston, they preferred using telephoto lenses."

"You're not in Boston anymore."

"I know." She should have realized how ruthless the press would be.  After all, this was Italy; they'd invented the word paparazzi.

"At least you won't have to worry about this one trespassing again. That is, if he's smart."

"Thanks."

"Can't promise there won't be more, though," he said brushing past her. "You'd best be prepared."

More. He was right, there would be others. It was all she could do not  to collapse in a heap where she stood. Those months of hiding in Boston  had nearly destroyed her. She wasn't up to another go-round. The  stranger on her terrace was proof enough of that. If Nico hadn't shown  up when he did...

Why had he shown up? Returning to her living room, where she found her  neighbor searching through the bookshelf cabinets. "What are you doing?"

"Carlos kept a stash of fernet tucked in back of one of these cabinets. Do you still have it?"

"Two doors to the left." She hadn't gotten around to finding a better location. "I meant why are you here?"