and briefly had second thoughts.
“Want some coffee?” she asked, sliding off her stool.
“Sure.” I rose to my feet to help her clean up.
“I’m impressed,” she said, watching me set my dishes in the sink and rinse them.
“Thank you.”
“I meant with your mother. You have nice manners.”
I poked her in the side and she giggled, scooting away from me. “Yeah, well, when she wasn’t busy screaming at my father, she managed to raise polite kids.”
We cleared off the island, and while I loaded the dishwasher, she put the food away. “You want to take some pasta home?” she asked.
“Are you kidding? Yes, please.”
She grabbed a plastic container from a cupboard, filled it with pappardelle, and snapped the lid on. “Don’t forget to take it. It’ll be in the fridge.”
“Okay. Thanks. Hey, can I use your bathroom?”
“Sure. Around the corner on your right.”
When I came out of the bathroom, instead of going left to head back to the kitchen, I peeked into the small room across the hall. It was a bedroom set up like an office, but it also had a couch, which looked like it might be a pull-out. Spying a bunch of framed photos on the bookshelves behind her desk, I switched the light on and moved deeper into the room to check them out.
They were mostly family pictures—some recent, some from her childhood, some vintage shots in black and white—but she also had a couple travel photos too. I could tell she’d been to Italy at least once, and it looked like she’d been to Paris and London as well.
Taking a snapshot of Bianca and her immediate family at what might have been her high school graduation off the shelf, I studied it. She looked much the same at eighteen as she did fifteen years later—same black-framed glasses, same wide-mouthed grin, same smooth, bright complexion and fiery hair. She definitely looked like her mom. Bianca DeRossi was an Italian name, but the actual Bianca looked about as Irish as a person could be. I made a mental note to crack a few leprechaun jokes at some point.
“You get lost?”
I turned to see Bianca in the doorway. “Just snooping in your office. Making sure you’re not a secret psychopath.”
“I don’t keep the bodies in my office, Enzo. Give me a little credit.”
Smiling, I set the frame back on the shelf. “You like traveling, huh?”
“Love it. It’s where I get all my design inspiration.”
“What’s your favorite place? I should probably know this stuff about you.”
“Good point.” She came around the desk and stood next to me. She smelled like garlic and tomato sauce, which was actually kind of sexy. “I’d say Florence. No, the Amalfi Coast. No, maybe Capri.”
I nodded. “I like a woman who gives a straight answer.”
She poked my shoulder. “At least they’re all in one country. What about you?”
“I like Italy too. I’d say Rome or Florence, for the architecture.”
“What do you know, we agree on something. If we were going on a real honeymoon, we could have gone to Italy.”
“Who’s that?” I pointed at one of the black and white photographs—a wedding picture, from the looks of it.
“Oh, those are Grandma Vinnie’s parents—my great-grandparents. Their last name was Lupo. They were married in 1923.”
I studied the couple. “So that’s your great-grandmother? You look like her.”
“You’re just saying that because she’s short. Everyone called her Tiny too. That’s where my nickname comes from.”
I laughed. “It’s not just because she’s short. It’s her face too. The heart shape of it.” Bianca had a more lush mouth, but I didn’t feel like that was something I could say.
“She had red hair too,” Bianca said. “I mean, she died when I was only three, so I don’t remember her, and her hair was white by then anyway, but I’ve heard stories about her. Apparently, she was a real pistol.”
“Oh yeah?” I gave her a sideways grin, nudging her with my elbow. “Your namesake was a pistol? There’s a surprise.”
She stuck her tongue out at me. “Do you know any family history?”
“Very little,” I admitted. “I should ask my parents about it. Apparently my great-grandfather, the one I’m named for, was into some sinister business. Mobster stuff.”
“That’s funny, because mine was too. They both were,” Bianca said, gesturing at the old wedding photo. “They ran whisky into Detroit from Canada during Prohibition.”
“Seriously?” I looked at the petite woman and her short, barrel-chested husband. There was something sly about the smiles on their faces. “That’s pretty cool. My great-grandfather lived in Detroit