The Postcard from Italy: Absolutely gripping and heartbreaking WW2 historical fiction by Angela Petch
Author:Angela Petch [Petch, Angela]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781800199620
Publisher: Bookouture
Published: 2022-03-15T16:00:00+00:00
Still feeling delicate â and knickerless beneath her jeans as she hadnât the courage to knock on the downstairs flat to retrieve them â Susannah sat on the restaurant terrace with Giacomo and ate most of the surprisingly delicious spaghetti.
âIn England, itâs usually curry after a heavy night,â she said, putting down her fork in surrender.
âAnd which do you prefer?â
âYou have to understand this is all most unlike my usual behaviour, Giacomo. In fact, I lead a simple life back in Hastings.â
He smiled. âItâs good to be brought out of yourself once in a while.â
âYes, but not like this. Iâm so embarrassed.â
âWhatâs to be embarrassed about amongst friends?â He got up and removed her plate. âCoffee?â
âWhat Iâd really love is a strong cup of builderâs tea.â
âI can do that for you. I brought back tea leaves from England. Got into the habit of drinking it myself.â
âYou are a wonder-man, do you know that?â
âKeep dishing out the compliments. I like them.â
She followed him into the kitchen and watched as he set a pan of water on the stove for tea. âYou know, Susannah: what you told me about Mario. It wonât be the first time a straniera is seduced and it definitely wonât be the last. Iâm afraid itâs a kind of sport for young Italian men, chasing foreign girls.â
âI know that. Apart from the fact that heâs not a young Italian, I didnât want it to be me: the foreign-girl-on-holiday cliché. I misjudged Mario totally and thought he genuinely liked me. And he reminded me of that Venetian guy who presents the TV programmes about Venice: same steel-grey hair, cheeky grin â a kind of anything-is-possible-if-youâre-with-me guyâ¦â She blushed as she thought about the possibilities that Mario had shown her in bed.
Giacomo frowned. âNot sure which TV guy youâre talking about, but Iâm sure Mario does genuinely like you. Whatâs not to like?â He handed her a cup. âHereâs your tea.â
âLetâs change the subject, Giacomo. And⦠thank you for looking after me.â
âMy pleasure. By the way, you christened me with a new name last night. Jack is the new Giacomo.â
âDid I really? Jack is less of a mouthful than Giacomo, but⦠I donât remember much about last night.â
âItâs what my English friends used to call me too. So, Jack I am. They used to say I was Jack the lad â whatever that meant.â
Her head sore, it was too difficult to explain. âDonât think youâre a Jack the lad. Hope not. Couldnât cope.â
âWhatever! Listen â I can drop you back to the masseria this morning. I need to go that way to see one of my suppliers.â
âThank you so much. I kind of regret returning the car hire now. I didnât think I needed it anymore. Jack, thereâs something I want to show you when we get there.â
âOh yes. You did say something about a box. But I wondered if it was some kind of euphemism.â He winked at her and she swiped him with a tea towel.
âDonât be ridiculous!
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