
‘Leave me alone,’ she whispered desperately, closing her eyes. ‘In the name of pity, leave me alone.’
Silence. He wasn’t there, but even his absence had a mocking quality.
Beneath a huge tree a stone had been erected, bearing the names of the dead, with James near the bottom. She knelt and touched his name, feeling the stone cold beneath her fingers. This was as close to him as she would ever be again.
‘Sapevi che lui?’
The voice, coming from behind her, made her turn and find Drago di Luca towering over her, glowering. He looked immense, blotting out the sun, forcing her to see only him.
‘Sono Inglese,’ she said.
‘I asked if you knew the man whose name you touch.’
‘Yes,’ she said defiantly. ‘I knew him.’
‘Well?’ He rapped the word out.
‘Yes, well. Very well. Is that any business of yours?’
‘Everything concerning that man is my business.’
She rose to face him. ‘Because he ran off with your wife?’
She heard his sharp intake of breath and knew that he would have controlled it if he could. His eyes were full of murder. Much like her own, she suspected.
‘If you know that-’ he said slowly.
‘James Franklin was my boyfriend. He left me for a woman called Carlotta.’
‘What else did he tell you about her?’
‘Nothing. He let her name slip, then refused to say any more. But when this happened-’ She shrugged.
‘Yes,’ he said heavily. ‘Then every detail came out for the entertainment of the world.’
The crowd jostled her slightly and she moved away. At once he took her arm, leading her in the direction he chose, as though in no doubt of her compliance.
‘Are you still in love with him?’ he demanded sharply.
Strangely the question didn’t offend her as it would have done from anyone else. Their plight was the same.
