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Page 21 of Hello Goodbye Amore

Antonello nodded. “I’m sorry about this morning. I woke up and didn’t want him to find us. I had to sneak back into the house because I didn’t want to face my mother’s questions.” He rested his hands on the railing, watching the water as it flowed beneath them. “My cousin’s wife is pregnant.”

“The one we met here on the bridge with some other woman?” Chase asked, shaking his head.

“Yes. Aria is pregnant, and my mother shared the news as though it were the coming of the apocalypse. Of course she’s using it to add pressure for me to find someone and get married.

” Maybe coming here was a mistake. Chase hadn’t asked him, and he’d just barged into their day.

With the way he felt right now, he was not going to be adding any fun or joy to the day.

“And are you?” Chase asked.

“I don’t know what I’m going to do. Maybe it’s time I just told my parents the way things are. They will explode with drama, but then it will be over and I can deal with the fallout.”

“You have to do what you’re comfortable with,” Chase said.

Antonello had expected him to press him to open up, but no. He truly seemed to understand and was backing Antonello. He almost didn’t know how to take it.

“I wish I knew a way forward for you, but I don’t.”

“I know. This is my own problem.” There was no easy answer.

His duty to his family told him one thing, and yet that was not at all in line with parts of who he was.

Up until now he had hidden the part of himself that didn’t fit, but that became more difficult each day.

Something was going to break, and the longer it went on, the more he was convinced that it was going to be him.

“Maybe. But there are times when we all need someone to talk to.”

“Daddy, can we go now?” Ricky pointed toward the city side of the bridge.

Chase scooped him up. “Let me guess. You saw the gelato shop and want some?” He swung Ricky in the air to giggles of delight.

“We can get you some, but we need to go farther away from here.” He strode toward the city, with Antonello next to him.

They passed a store selling pietra dura items, and Ricky asked to stop so he could look at the pictures.

“Gramma would like one,” Ricky said.

“We already got something for her,” Chase told him.

Ricky pooched out his lower lip. “But they’re pretty.”

“I know, but we don’t need one right now.

Maybe later, okay?” Chase distracted him with tickles and got Ricky out of the store and down the street past the way overpriced gelato shops.

One thing was a truism in Florence: the prices got higher the closer you were to the Ponte Vecchio.

At least in general. That was part of the reason their shop was so successful.

His father had long ago decided that the family would sell their goods at the same price at all their stores in the city, regardless of location.

“But I want gelato,” Ricky said as he came to a stop.

“There’s lots of places.” Chase took Ricky’s hand and led him around toward the Duomo and back to where Antonello had taken them a few days ago. “See?”

Ricky picked out his flavor while Antonello sat at one of the tables on the sidewalk, waiting for them to get what they wanted.

“We got you one,” Ricky cried as he handed Antonello a chocolate pistachio cone. “Daddy said you would like this.” He sat down, and Chase gave Ricky his cone before joining them.

“I swear I’m going to balloon up the longer I stay here. It’s almost like being on holiday all the time. There’s always excitement, and the city seems like a party every day.”

“You get used to it. After years of that sort of energy, you learn to ignore it, because you have to. Every day can’t be a holiday, as you put it, because work needs to be done.

And after a while, it just gets exhausting.

I walk by the Duomo every day, and on Sundays my parents attend Mass there.

It’s our family church. To the tourists, it’s an architectural wonder, but to us, it’s something more personal.

So many of the things the tourists flock to are just part of our everyday lives.

My family makes part of our living by tourists crossing the Ponte Vecchio, but for the rest of the city, it’s a bridge to get us from one side to the other. ” He shrugged.

“You really love this place,” Chase said.

“I do. It’s fun,” Ricky interjected. “There are all kinds of fun things to see, but too many naked people.” He stuck his tongue out, and both Antonello and Chase chuckled.

“I like it too, and I’ve seen those naked people since I was younger than you.” Antonello smiled, and his gaze shifted to Chase.

“Daddy, you look gooey,” Ricky said, his head turned from side to side like he was watching tennis. “Mr. Nello too.”

Chase tickled him, and Antonello pulled his gaze away. He needed to be careful. If a six-year-old could sense how he was feeling and the way he looked at Chase, then others could as well.

Ricky yawned, and Chase reminded him to eat more and talk a little less. “You need to finish before it melts, and then we should go home. It’s been a busy week for all of us. We have some movies, and a little quiet time will be good.”

“But I want to see Santo and Gerardo.” Ricky smacked his lips after the last of his gelato.

“I’ll let Isabella know, and we can arrange for you to play with the boys again,” Antonello said.

“But for now, we need to go home. We’ve had a big day. There will be plenty of time for you to play with the boys, and we’re going to be here in Florence long enough for you to see everything.” Chase grinned. “You know, we’re going to be here long enough that we could take a weekend trip to Rome.”

Antonello smiled. “It’s only two hours by train, and my family has a small villa in the city. If you want, we could go in a few weeks. The initial testing should be complete, and we’ll be between tasks until the limited production run. Everything is on track.” He smiled brightly.

“What about your parents? Will they use the house in Rome?”

“No. The only one who has recently is my cousin.” Antonello looked upward and groaned. “He and his wife like to go there for weekends.”

“And they won’t be there?”

Antonello smirked. “I know how to make sure they aren’t. Leave that to me. I’ll get the tickets, and we’ll go to Rome in a little under three weeks.” Time couldn’t go by fast enough for him.