Breathing Room

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Book: Breathing Room by Susan Elizabeth Phillips Read Free Book Online
Authors: Susan Elizabeth Phillips
Tags: Fiction, General, Romance, Contemporary
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a small cluster and walked deeper into the vineyard. She needed her sneakers. The heavy clay soil felt like rocks beneath her thin sandals. But she wouldn't think of what she needed, only of what she had – the Tuscan sun over her head, warm grapes ripe in her hand, Lorenzo Gage in the villa at the top of the hill....
    She'd given herself away so cheaply. How would she ever get past that?
    Not by running away.
    Her stubborn streak set in. She was tired of her sadness. She'd never been a coward. Was she going to let herself be chased away from something precious by a degenerate movie star? The encounter had been meaningless to him. He obviously disliked her, so he'd hardly come searching her out. And she needed to be here. Every instinct told her this was the place she had to stay, the only place where she could find both the solitude and the inspiration that would let her figure out how to set her life on a new course.
    Right then she made up her mind. She wasn't afraid of Lorenzo Gage, and she wouldn't let anyone force her to leave here until she was ready.
    *
    Renput away the seventeenth-century flintlock he'd taken out to examine just before Fifi had barged in. He could still hear the echo of those efficient little heel taps as she'd swept from the room. He was supposed to be the devil, but unless he was mistaken, Ms. Fifi had left the scent of brimstone behind her.
    He chuckled, then closed the cabinet door. The pistol was a beautiful piece of workmanship, one of many priceless objects in the villa. He'd inherited the place two years ago, but this was his first chance to visit since his Aunt Philomena had died. He'd originally planned to sell the property, but he had good memories from his three visits here as a kid. It didn't seem right to sell the place without seeing it again. He'd been impressed with both the housekeeper and her husband when he'd spoken with them on the phone, and he'd decided to wait.
    He retrieved his bottle of scotch from the table on the loggia so he could resume the drinking Ms. Fifi had interrupted. He'd enjoyed giving her a hard time. She was so uptight she vibrated, yet her visit had left him feeling almost relaxed. Weird.
    He stepped through one of the loggia's three arches out into the garden and made his way along the clipped hedges toward the swimming pool, where he sank into a chaise. As he absorbed the quiet, he thought about all the people who usually surrounded him: his faithful posse of assistants, business managers, and the bodyguards the studios occasionally wanted him to keep around. A lot of celebrities encircled themselves with aides because they needed reassurance that they were stars. Others, like himself, did it to make life easier. Aides kept overzealous fans at bay, which was useful but came at a price. Few people spoke the truth to the person responsible for their paycheck, and all the brown-nosing had gotten old.
    Ms. Fifi, on the other hand, didn't seem to know anything about brown-nosing, and that had been oddly restful.
    He'd pushed aside the bottle of scotch without uncapping it and sank deeper into the chaise. Slowly his eyes drifted shut. Very restful....
    *
    Isabel cut a wedge from the aged pecorino she'd purchased in town. This was the sheep's cheese so beloved by the Tuscan people. While she'd counted out her money to pay for it, the female store clerk had pressed a tiny pot of honey on her. "It is the Tuscan way,"
    she'd said. "Honey with the cheese."
    Isabel couldn't imagine it, but wasn't she trying to be less rigid? She arranged the cheese and honey pot on a ceramic plate, along with an apple. All she'd eaten today were those few grapes she'd picked on the way back from the villa three hours ago. Her encounter with Gage had stolen her appetite. Maybe a little food would make her feel better.
    She discovered half a dozen crisp linen napkins in a drawer, removed one, then arranged the others in a tidier pile. She'd already unpacked her suitcases and organized

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