To Catch a Thief - By Sherryl Woods Page 0,9

make lasagna and spaghetti sauce with meatballs. He’d let her experiment with new recipes when cooking the traditional dishes had grown boring. And then he had helped her to persuade her parents that she would be better off going to culinary schools around the world than to any traditional college. It had been a tough sell, especially to her father, who’d been convinced that a degree in accounting would be a lot more practical. Given her current circumstances, Gina had to admit her father might have had a point.

A wave of nostalgia washed over her as she approached the back door at Tony’s and knocked, then opened it without waiting for a response from inside.

“Anybody in here have a good recipe for meatballs?” she called out.

“Cara mia,” Tony said, a smile spreading across his round face when he saw her. “Where have you been? I heard you were coming home, but then nothing. I am insulted that I was not at least the second stop on your list after your parents.”

“I know, I know,” she said, giving him a kiss on the cheek. “Will you forgive me?”

He studied her. “That depends.”

“On?”

“How long you intend to stay. It has been too long, Gina. My customers are grumbling about the same old food, week after week. Not a day goes by that someone doesn’t ask when you will be back to liven up the menu.”

“What do you tell them?”

“That you are now a famous chef in New York, and that if they want to eat your food, they will have to travel there.”

Gina eyed with longing the huge old stove with its simmering pots. “I could fix something for tonight,” she offered. “Maybe a spicy penne arrabiata or a Greek-style pizza with black olives and feta cheese.”

“But you are on vacation,” Tony protested. “I cannot ask you to cook.”

“You didn’t ask. I offered. Besides, I have some thinking to do, and I always think more clearly as I cook.”

He studied her intently. “Problems, cara mia? Do you want to talk about them? I may not be able to solve them, but I can listen. Sometimes that is all we need, yes? An objective listener while we sort through things?”

Gina debated telling Tony everything. She knew he would keep it to himself. She also knew he would sympathize with her predicament because he, more than anyone, knew how important her restaurant was to her.

“Are you sure you wouldn’t mind?” she asked.

He regarded her with feigned indignation. “How many nights did I listen to you go on and on about this boyfriend or that?”

She grinned ruefully. “More than I care to think about, but this is different.”

“How?”

“Because it really matters.”

“When you were sixteen, those boys mattered, too.”

She thought back to the string of broken hearts she’d suffered. “Okay, you’re right. I guess it’s all a matter of perspective, isn’t it?”

“I will fix us both an espresso and we will talk.” He gestured toward the front. “Go in there and sit.”

“But you have things to do,” she protested. “We can talk here.”

“Nothing that can’t wait. Now, go. I will be there in a minute.”

Gina walked into the dining room with its familiar red-checked tablecloths, the dripping candles stuck in old Chianti bottles, the wide-planked oak floor and the big picture window overlooking Main Street. An inexpertly done mural of Naples had been painted on one wall by Tony’s homesick wife, Francesca.

By comparison, Café Tuscany had five-star ambience, but Gina felt perfectly at home here with the rich scents drifting from the kitchen and the sunlight spilling in the window. An astonishing sense of peace crept over her. Right here, right now, she could believe everything would be all right.

Tony joined her at a table in front. She smiled as she accepted the cup of dark espresso and took her first sip. “Still the best,” she told him. “I grind and blend my own beans, but it’s not the same.”

“When I die, I will leave you the secret in my will,” he teased. “Now talk to me. What is this big trouble in your life?”

Gina sighed and gazed into Tony’s dark-brown eyes. There was so much fatherly concern there. She realized suddenly just how much she had missed this man, missed sitting here and talking about her hopes and dreams until she was certain he must be bored silly, but he had never complained. Some of the time Francesca had been with them, clucking over Gina’s disappointments and offering encouragement.

“Did I ever thank you for everything

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