type of person,' she said. 'After this...arrangement is over I want to get married and have a family. I'm twenty-six years old. I don't want to leave it too late to settle down. I want stability and commitment. You're not the person to give me those things.'
A hard light came into his eyes. 'Nor was my father, but that did not stop you from talking him into giving you a fortune.'
Emma pulled out of his hold. 'You're starting to sound like a broken record, Rafaele. I'm not even going to waste my breath denying it again.'
'Have dinner with me tonight.'
She frowned at him. 'What?'
'Let's go out for a meal,' he said. 'Let's do it the old-fashioned way. Guy meets girl, that sort of thing. Let's forget about my father and take it one step at a time.'
'Rafaele...this is crazy,' she said.
'What is so crazy about two people going out to dinner and strengthening their acquaintance?' he asked. 'After all, we have got to live together for months on end - wouldn't it be better if at the end of it we were friends instead of enemies?'
'I can't imagine us ever being friends.'
'Only because we got off to a bad start,' he said. 'I am not always such a brute you know. I can be quite charming when I put my mind to it.'
Yes, well, that's what I'm worried about, Emma thought. She was having enough trouble keeping her head as it was. God only knew what would happen to her heart if he laid on the Fiorenza charm at full strength. She had seen a glimpse of it already, that lazy smile and those dark, smouldering eyes had set her heart racing a few times too many. 'All right,' she said. 'I'll have dinner with you, but only because it's the housekeeper's afternoon off.'
He grinned at her, a boyish grin that sent her stomach into another dip-and-dive routine. 'You really know how to annihilate a man's ego, don't you?' he said.
Emma felt an answering smile tug at the corners of her mouth. 'I'm sure yours should be listed as one of the great wonders of the world,' she said. 'In fact I bet it can be seen from outer space.'
'I can see I am going to have to work extra hard to improve your opinion of me,' he said. 'But who knows what a bit of wining and dining will do? I am going to have a bit more of a swim before I get out and have a shower. Is eight-thirty OK with you?'
'Sure,' Emma said, moving to the side of the pool, her stomach already fluttering with excitement. 'I'll be ready.'
When Emma came downstairs close to eight-thirty Rafaele was waiting for her in the salon. He had been reading through one of the weekend papers and rose to his feet as she came in, his gaze running over her appreciatively. 'You look stunning, Emma,' he said, 'absolutely stunning.'
'Thank you,' Emma said shyly.
'I thought we could eat at a restaurant at Villa Olmo,' he said as he led the way out to his car. 'Have you had a chance to visit it yet?'
'No, but I've walked past it a couple of times,' she said. 'It's very grand, isn't it?'
'It's the most famous residence of Como,' he informed her. 'The villa owes its name to an elm tree that in ancient times grew inside the park. The architect was Simone Cantoni and now the town of Como owns it and uses it for various exhibits. The restaurant is situated to the right of the villa.'
'I've made a bit of a start on my sightseeing,' Emma said. 'I've been to Duomo, the cathedral, and to the Volta temple and on the Funicular so far.'
He glanced at her. 'Did you walk up to the lighthouse?'
'Yes, it was an amazing view from up there,' she said. 'I didn't want to leave.'
'The funicular has been running from the end of the eighteen hundreds,' he said. 'From the top you can make out the castrum, the rectangle that made up the old establishment of the Roman town. You can even see the first basin of the lake and the villas and plains that lead to Milan.'
Emma looked at him. 'Did you miss all this while you were living abroad?'
He took a moment to answer. 'Yes, I did miss it,' he said. 'There was many a time I wanted to come back, but it was impossible.'
'Do you really think your father would have turned you away