"Isn't she beautiful? Such sleek lines."
"Yes. But for how much longer?" Paul Pettit answered his brother, Philip. They'd gone on shore in Naples for a morning away from the chaos of the quickly whipped-up double marriage ceremony and were returning to the yacht in a motor launch. The boat was anchored near the Isle of Capri, across Naples Bay.
"I was talking about
Gabrielle
," Philip said, with a laugh.
"So was I," Paul answered, his voice a bit morose. He was trying to think he wasn't being railroaded into this double marriage with his brother as the other groom, but there it was. He was having cold feet.
"
Gabrielle
, the ship, not Gabrielle—your blushing bride Gabby. I was talking about the yacht. Biggest and baddest one in the bay today."
The confusion was understandable. Watching their motor launch approach and waving from the rails of the top deck of the yacht
Gabriella
was Gabriella, the woman, the Countess Gabriella Fabbri, known as Gabby to her friends and past and prospective husbands. From this distance she looked no older than a very-well-preserved forty, rather than her actual sixty-two, which didn't take a large edge off the fact that Paul Pettit, her intended in two days' time, was twenty-eight.
"She's hardly blushing—the bride," Paul said. "Every time I turn around she acknowledges another husband she's had. And she's obviously had more than her share of someone else's husband."
"And the husbands have all had money," Phillip came back with. "And they all wanted her because she was a beautiful and vivacious woman. She didn't build and isn't maintaining this yacht herself. You're the lucky next husband. You will be receiving money, not giving it."
They both stood there in the motor launch, admiring the sleek lines of the sixty-five meter, five-deck, Codecasa-designed yacht, with its nine-bedroom cabin capacity. It indeed was a far more comfortable world Paul would be entering than he currently lived in—than either of the brothers inhabited. Philip, at thirty-one, also was moving up in class in marrying the French-national Rome fashion designer, Nita Pelletier, who, at forty-eight, was still model trim and attractive, and who now joined Gabriella at the fifth-deck rail and waved to the young men. But Philip wasn't making the sacrifice that Paul was, and he knew it—and Paul didn't stint from reminding him who was taking on the most work and sacrifice in their grab for a better life.
Both men had a good life already and were blessed with good genes, handsome faces and bodies, and Ivy League educations. Philip was the more public of the two, a middle-of-the-pack professional tennis player, who still, at what was elder statesman status on the pro tennis circuit, was making it to the second round in Grand Slam tournaments. Paul was the mid-listed novelist who knew he could write that breakout novel if only he didn't have to worry about money. Seeing the end of his tennis career looming and not sure where to go next, Philip also felt the pinch of not enough money, something he'd always had before, and it had been his idea for the two men to go on the prowl together and attract rich wives. The plan had worked. They both had done that—or were within two days of doing that. For now, though, the two were scared shitless at the changes to come.
The one thing they'd agreed to before they embarked on this was that they weren't going to be total gigolos about it. They were determined to marry fascinating women they would work on loving. The only added proviso was that the women had to be filthy rich. They didn't set out to match up with older women—much older, in Paul's case—but the two best friends, Gabby and Nita, had been the best they could find. Both women were smart as whips, sex on wheels in bed, witty, and great conversationalists. At one point Paul had complained about Gabby's age and when Philip called him on it, said, "Then why don't you marry Gabby and I'll take Nita?" He almost swallowed his words, though, as his brother knew him too well.
"I will if you like," Philip said. "It won't be easy, because I think Gabby genuinely loves you. She certainly likes you more than she does me. But if you want to give it a try—"
"No, sorry," Paul answered. "I know Gabby is the best for me . . . it's just too bad we are from two different generations in age."
"Sometimes I think she's younger than you are," Philip said.
"That's because she can be carefree. She has all the money she possibly could need."
Then they had both laughed, having come full circle again to why they both had gone on the international social circle to attract rich wives.
"I think we have company," Paul said, pointing to extra motor launches pulled up to the pontoon dock attached to the
Gabriella
as they putted in. Then he looked up, exclaimed a "Shit" under his breath, and said, "How did
he
get here?"
Philip looked up, his eyes working down the line of men surrounding the two women. There were four young and one older, but distinguished-looking, men lounging on the rail around the women. This wasn't unusual. Gabby and Nita surrounded themselves with men and avoided the presence of women. Both Paul and Philip had just been members of the entourage until they had moved up to a regular presence in the women's beds and, eventually, central roles in their lives. It didn't take him long to figure out which of the men had elicited the "Shit" from his brother's lips. Paul wasn't given to easy profanity.
"You mean Steve?"
"Yes, I fuckin' mean Steve Talbot. How did he find out? . . . It was you, wasn't it?"
"Yes, I'll admit it. Steve had been pestering me to come to the weddings. The women decided it wasn't enough for you and me to serve as each other's best men. They wanted a groomsman too. And on short notice. Steve wanted to come. They both know and like him. Gabby actually told me to call him and invite him. I did and here he is. I thought it was over between you two."
"It is, of course," Paul said. "Still, I don't need any more worries or distractions than are needed for the next couple days."
"Besides, it never went too far with you two, did it?" Philip asked, as they started climbing the ladder from the pontoon dock to the salon deck of the
Gabriella
.
It sure as hell did, Paul, thought, as he grimly set the welcoming smile he knew would be expected of him and pulled himself up onto the yacht.
* * * *
Gabby had been the one to propose to Paul. Philip had been playing in a tennis tournament in Monaco and had messaged that he would be proposing to Nita at dinner on the waterfront after the championship match—which he wasn't involved in; he'd lost out two rounds before the final. He'd stuck around at the tournament because the partying that went on on the sidelines of these events had become as important to him as playing tennis matches before a crowd was. Gabby and Paul had flown in from her Tuscan villa near Lucca to be there. The proposal had gone swimmingly. Later, Paul and Gabby had sunk into romantic and sentimental sex in her Fairmont Monte Carlo suite, during which each had conveyed to the other how much they enjoyed each other's bodies and minds—neither mentioning love.
"Marry me," Gabby had said, simply.
Paul had groaned, sat up in bed, and reached over to the nightstand for a cigarette to light up. "We're doing so well as we are," he said. "Just because Philip and Nita—"