“It was a bit of fun. A little wildness. Nothing more.”
“That makes itworse,” Lara cries, standing up on the diving board, her hands balled into fists at her sides. It would be a much more dramatic gesture, the kind of thing that begged for a plaintive “Don’t jump!” from Mari, but of course, Lara is standing over six feet of beautiful turquoise water, and Mari can’t help the laugh that bursts out of her.
It’s just so… typicallyLara, so overwrought but ultimately pointless and silly, and Mari is so, so tired of this particular drama that she and her stepsister keep playing out.
She shrugs at Lara and throws her hands up. “I really don’t see how it is, but—”
“Because I love Pierce,” Lara says, and now Mari doesn’t feel like laughing at all. “I love him, but he loves you!” Lara goes on. “So, I tried to love Noel instead, but you couldn’t even let me have that.”
“Noelwon’t even let you have that,” Mari reminds her, but Lara just makes a disgusted sound, marching down the diving board and back onto the patio. The door slams again, and Mari wonders if all the hinges in the villa will need to be replaced at the end of the summer.
Tipping her head back, she looks up, where clouds arealready beginning to form, promising yet another evening trapped inside the house, trapped with Lara and her feelings.
Mari can’t help it. She opens her mouth wide and screams, literally screams at the sky, a howl of frustration that hurts her throat, but at least relieves some of the pressure in her chest.
That done, she flops into one of the chairs next to the pool, the metal screeching against the stone.
“Christ, I hope that wasn’t a comment on last night’s performance.”
She whips her head around to see Noel standing in the doorway that leads into the kitchen. He’s wearing sunglasses and carrying a mug of coffee, the chenille blanket that had been covering Mari earlier now wrapped around his waist, and he makes his careful way out to where she sits, taking the chair next to her and sinking into it with a sigh.
Mari guesses she should feel differently about Noel now that he’s made her come, but it’s just that same mix of faint disbelief that she’s talking toNoel Gordon, mixed with an almost begrudging fondness—plus the slightest tinge of annoyance.
Which is a relief, actually. It would be disastrous to feel anything more for this man.
She wonders if Pierce knows that.
But then Pierce’s tastes have always run to women. To girls, really. Mari was sixteen when she met him, and his wife, Frances, was only fifteen when he took her from her boarding school in the north of England and crossed into Scotland to marry her.
He worships Noel, and clearly enjoyed himself last night, but Mari instinctively understands that what Pierce was after was experience and novelty, and now that he’s had them, last night will probably not be repeated.
Which is undoubtedly for the best.
Noel blows out a breath over the top of his coffee, his long legs stretched in front of him, feet crossed at the ankles. “What’s that thing you’re writing?” he asks her, and Mari startles.
“What?”
“That journal you’re always carrying around. You left it on the sofa last night, and I had a gander this morning.”
“You read my journal?”
He shrugs, completely unapologetic. “I was hoping to find moony sonnets about me, so imagine my surprise to see Mistress Mary is writing a novel.”
She flushes red. “You shouldn’t have done that.”
“But I did. And it’s honestly quite good, which I find extremely annoying given that you’re already young and beautiful. Being talented on top of that just isn’t fair.”
Mari doesn’t reply, and Noel clears his throat. “This is the part where you’re supposed to point out that I also have all these attributes.”
That makes her laugh against her will, and he smiles again, affectionately nudging her foot with his own. “I am serious, though. You’ve got something there. I hope you’ll follow it wherever it leads.”
Those few pages, still unfinished, call to her, and Mari allows herself a small smile.
“I hope I will, too.”
There were always rumors about just how involved the five young people at Villa Rosato were that summer. Of the five, Noel Gordon was the eldest, and he was only twenty-six. Pierce Sheldon was twenty-three, Johnnie Dorchester a mere twenty, and Mari Godwick and Lara Larchmont were both still teenagers, just nineteen in the summer of 1974. They were also all part of a set that ran fast and loose when it came to sexual partners and mores. Pierce had already left one wife, as had Noel, and both men had been involved with Lara Larchmont at different times.
But it’s also tempting to make things more illicit than they actually were, especially when it comes to rock royalty. It’s equally possible that none of the rumors were true at all, and that the romantic configurations at Villa Rosato were fairly tame. None of the survivors ever indicated differently.