Kitabı oku: «Resisting The Italian Single Dad», sayfa 3
Emotion continuing to whirl in her chest, Carly grabbed the magazine and again pretended to read it.
‘I’m sorry.’
Carly nodded but refused to look up from the magazine, hating how exposed, how humiliated she felt having told him. She flicked through the pages of the magazine, trying to understand why the publishers thought their readers would be interested in the weight gain of a soap-opera actress. Hadn’t they heard about emotional eating? Carly might have binned her wedding cake but that hadn’t stopped her from eating her own body weight in ice cream and her favourite comfort food, Brazil nuts, in the weeks that followed. It had taken her months to return to her normal weight. A weight that wasn’t particularly impressive in the first place. But Carly had long ago accepted that her body would never be lean, no matter how much she dieted or exercised.
‘Tell me about your ex—what happened?’
‘I’d prefer not to.’
‘It clearly upsets you.’
Carly raised her eyes. She knew she should change the subject. Not answer even. But there was a genuineness to his expression, as though he really wanted to understand what had happened to her that had her blurt out, ‘He told me he was still in love with his ex-girlfriend.’
Max’s eyes softened. ‘That must have been heartbreaking for you.’
Something popped in Carly’s heart. She had expected pity, perhaps even outrage from him. Just as her friends had been outraged on her behalf, calling Robert every name under the sun, telling her she needed to be positive, that there were plenty of other guys out there. Her mother meanwhile had fretted over what people would think while her stepfather had simply asked why she could never get things right in life. Nobody had got just how sad it all had been. Until now. Carly’s throat closed over; she felt undone by the understanding in his eyes. She shrugged.
‘I’m sorry you had to go through that,’ he said gently.
Carly nodded, not trusting herself to talk.
Max considered her for a while and then, with a gentle smile, he added, ‘I bet he’s regretting it now, letting someone like you slip away.’
Carly grimaced. ‘Not really. He’s married his ex since.’
He tilted his head. ‘But I bet he’s not on the way to taste the best chocolate ice cream in the world.’
Carly laughed, something lightening in her. ‘That’s true.’
They smiled at each other for the longest while. Carly felt the heat grow on her cheeks. Max’s smile disappeared to be replaced by a tension in his expression that reflected the heavy beat of disquiet that was drumming in her heart.
She tore her gaze away, picked up her magazine.
The sun had set when Max turned his car into the driveway of Villa Isa with the beginnings of a throbbing headache about to take hold.
The narrow road cut into the hillside and, surrounded by woodland, hid well the exquisite beauty about to be revealed.
‘Wow, oh, wow—now that’s what I call a view.’ He winced at Carly’s excited exclamation as Lake Como in all its magnetic night-time beauty of shadowy mountains and fairy-tale villages with twinkling lights opened up to them.
He pulled the car to a stop in the carport and looked towards the brightly lit villa with a heavy heart. His housekeeper, Luciana, had turned on the lights in many of the downstairs rooms to welcome them before she left for her home in nearby Bellagio. He knew he should be feeling pride in the renovations he had commissioned to restore the mid-twentieth-century villa to its former glory. So many would have knocked it down, but Max had loved its quirkiness, its tall ceilings, exposed stonework and vast open-plan living spaces. But instead of pride he just felt a numbness, a detachment from the villa that was once supposed to be his primary home.
‘Papa, out!’ Isabella’s call was accompanied by her feet banging against the sides of her car seat. Since they had landed Isabella had been truculent, running away on the tarmac, refusing to sit in the car that had been waiting beside the runway on their arrival. And once in the car she had immediately begun to grumble, unhappy at being restrained in her car seat.
Carly’s pert nose had wrinkled when he had admitted that he didn’t have any nursery rhyme CDs he could play for Isabella. So they had spent the journey from the airport with Carly leading a sing-along and insisting he join in. Unfortunately Isabella became fixated on ‘Three Blind Mice’ and insisted they sing it time and time again.
He had known it was a bad idea to allow Isabella to sleep on board the plane.
‘Out!’ Isabella shouted again, her foot furiously hammering her car seat.
He had work to do. It was going to take him for ever to get Isabella to settle.
He turned and regarded Carly. ‘Are you so certain of the benefit of allowing her to nap now?’
Carly glanced back at Isabella, gave her a smile. ‘You just want to run around, don’t you, Isabella? Why don’t you play with Papa?’
‘It’s beyond her bedtime. She should be asleep by now, not bouncing off the walls.’
Carly shrugged and got out of the car. She went to unlock Isabella’s belt but Isabella shook her head and then buried it into the side of her car seat, refusing to allow Carly to lift her out.
The headache gripping his temples ever tighter, Max pushed open the driver door and lifted Isabella out of her seat. His phone, in his trouser pocket, buzzed once again.
‘I’ll say it again, the views from here are spectacular. And it’s so warm, even at this time of the night. I’ve missed the heat so much. What’s the nearby town called? It looks so cute.’
Distracted by an email from a client in Taiwan, he glanced over to see Carly at the edge of the driveway, looking beyond the brightly lit terraced garden that sloped down to the waterfront and his private jetty, and vaguely answered, ‘The town is Bellagio…’ This was unbelievable—how did the client expect the new train terminal to open in time if at this late stage they wanted to make changes to the roof design?
‘I have a call to make.’ He attempted to pass Isabella to Carly but Isabella clung to his shirt, her legs wrapping even more tightly around his waist.
Carly folded her arms. ‘No calls. You must settle Isabella first.’
‘This is important.’
‘I’ll sort out the luggage. Isabella needs some exercise to wind down. I suggest you take her down to the garden, let her explore for a while. In the meantime, I’ll prepare her a small snack.’
He was about to argue that she should take Isabella down to the gardens instead but before he could do so, Carly had popped open the boot of his car and was walking towards the front door, carrying two heavy suitcases with ease. There went his excuse that it made sense for him to look after the heavy luggage instead of playing with his little girl.
He glanced down at Isabella. She frowned back at him. His daughter might not have many words but she sure seemed to understand every word spoken around her.
How did a twenty-two-month-old possess the capacity to make him feel like a completely lousy dad?
He was still standing by the car when Carly returned to retrieve more luggage.
She steadily ignored him but gave Isabella a smile.
Isabella tucked her head into his shoulder.
He yelped when her fingers pinched his skin as she gripped onto his shirt sleeves.
Carly ducked her head, laughter threatening on her lips.
He stared after her once again retreating back as she carried more suitcases into the hallway, before he climbed down the steps and headed in the direction of the playground that had been constructed to the side of the terrace. He went to place Isabella onto the swing but she clung to him. He tried not to sigh and instead sat on one side of the sprung seesaw. He bounced up and down, feeling ridiculous. He was about to climb back off but then he heard Isabella chuckle. He bounced again, his heart lifting to hear her chortle again. His serious-minded daughter rarely laughed.
He bounced and bounced, feeling an unexpected happiness. And he remembered some of the things Carly had said during the past few days—that it was natural for children to wake, that Isabella wasn’t alone in doing so.
A movement inside the villa caught his attention.
Carly was inside the open-plan kitchen searching through the cupboards, taking out some items, pausing to stretch her back, roll her head side to side as she studied the contents of the fridge. She had tied up her hair into a loose ponytail and rolled up the sleeves of her blue blouse that was tucked into slim-fitting, navy, ankle-length trousers. Her body was curvy. He supposed some men would say sensual.
He slowed in his bouncing and winced at the realisation that it felt good to have her around. Yes, he had employed nannies, had some support. But Carly was different. She had the strength of conviction to tell him things he didn’t want to hear but with an empathy that had him struggling to argue back. He admired her for that. As much as he hated to admit it, he was enjoying her company.
And earlier, in the tight confines of the plane, when Carly had placed the blanket on his lap, when he had woken to see her staring at him, as they had spoken in low voices to one another, he’d known he could no longer ignore the kernel of attraction for her growing inside him.
This was not supposed to be happening.
Isabella squirmed in his arms, began to protest at the lack of movement.
Her once again serious eyes glared up at him.
Fresh guilt slammed into Max. He had no right to enjoy the company of another woman.
CHAPTER THREE
AFTER PREPARING A snack for Isabella, Carly had unpacked both her own and Isabella’s suitcases, carried out a recce of Isabella’s room and returned to the kitchen to find Isabella sitting in her high chair, munching on a banana, her gaze firmly fixed on her father, who was typing on the keyboard of his phone.
Carly came to a stop beside him and waited until he finally looked up. ‘I chose a bedroom for myself close to Isabella’s so that I can help you during the night when she wakes.’ She pushed on in the hope that if she spoke quickly there was less chance of her giving away just how disturbed she felt to be in the intimacy of his home. ‘I left your suitcases in your bedroom.’ She didn’t add that she knew it was his bedroom because a quick look into the attached dressing room had revealed a row of bespoke suits and expensive casual wear. His whole bedroom, with its accent blue wall behind a white supersized headboard filled with dramatic modern art and pale wooden floor boards, was masculine. Him.
Her own room, next to his, decorated in soft greens, had the same breathtaking views of Lake Como and shared the same terrace that led down to the floodlit outdoor pool. She just hoped that they never bumped into each other out there. The image of Max dressed only in swimwear strolling down to the pool made her pause; she’d happily bet the entire annual income of her business on the guess that he had a seriously impressive body.
‘I…’ She paused as the image of Max’s powerful broad shoulders, narrowing to a slim waist, swam unwanted into her mind. ‘I… I…yes, what I was trying to say was that I had a look at Isabella’s bedroom to ensure that it’s the right environment to promote sleep. I suggest you install blackout blinds in addition to the curtains that are already there.’
Max considered her for a moment, his raised eyebrow the only hint of mischief in his otherwise deadpan expression. ‘I take it that you’re wanting some company in bed tonight?’
Carly stared at him; only after a long few seconds did it dawn on her that her mouth was gaping open. She snapped it closed. ‘What? Certainly not!’
Max’s lips curled upwards before he nodded towards the toys in her arms. ‘I meant the soft toys…are you taking them to bed with you?’
Carly shook her head, trying to rein in her embarrassment. She hit him with an unimpressed glare and went and placed the three stuffed toys on the long sleek white kitchen table that complemented the steel and pale wood of the super-modern kitchen.
Turning, she moved back to him, held out her hand. ‘Okay, for the next hour we’re having a phone-free zone.’
He pulled his phone out of her reach. ‘Please tell me that you’re joking.’
She shook her head. ‘Phone on the kitchen counter, where I can see it.’ Then she wiped Isabella’s hands free of banana mush and cleaned the tray of her high chair with some wipes. She placed all three toys onto the high-chair table—Sami the white long-eared rabbit, Skye the blue bear and Sunny the grey elephant. Isabella eyed the three toys dubiously but then lurched and grabbed hold of Sunny, squashing his long trunk in under her armpit.
Carly smiled at Isabella and touched her fingertips against Sunny’s grey velvety fur. ‘This is Sleepy Sunny, Isabella. He and his friends here, Sami and Skye, live together in Sleep World. They love nothing more than lying in bed, being all snugly and warm and falling asleep.’
Isabella looked at her doubtfully and held onto the heavy-eyed and tiredly smiling Sunny even closer.
Carly turned to Max. He was propped against the kitchen’s central island thick slab of white marble countertop, arms crossed with a bemused expression on his face. ‘And tonight your papa will read to you a story about Sunny in Sleep World, won’t you, Papa?’
He eyed Sunny and the other animals. ‘Will I?’
Carly decided to ignore his dubious expression. ‘You mentioned at the parent talk on Wednesday that Isabella has no particular toy she uses as a comforter.’ She had shown the group the story book she had written and published to encourage sleep, Sleepy Heads in Sleep World, and the three main characters that were available as soft toys, Sami, Skye and Sunny. ‘As Isabella clearly has taken a shine to Sunny, for the next few days we’re going to include him in all of Isabella’s activities until she identifies with it as being something of comfort and reassurance.’ Max’s sceptical frown only intensified when she added, ‘Starting now. I found a toy teapot and teacups in Isabella’s room. I’ve left them on the rug there—I want you to take Isabella and Sunny to her room and for all three of you to have a tea party.’
‘I don’t have—’
Carly interrupted Max, choosing to ignore his horror at her suggestion. ‘Give the tea party ten minutes. I want Isabella to associate her bedroom with comfort, that it’s a nice safe place for her to be in.’ Moving to the door that led to the main hall and stairs, Carly added, ‘In the meantime I’ll run a bath for Isabella. You can bathe her after your tea party—make sure to bring Sunny along to take part. Then it’s into bed and you can read Sleepy Heads in Sleep World to her. After that it’s lights out. If Isabella is still restless I have a lavender massage cream that you can use with her.’
‘I’ve calls—’
With a bright smile Carly interrupted him. ‘Let’s go. Think of this as the new, exciting beginning of you and Isabella spending some fun time together.’
Max’s expression grew incredulous.
And as though to make her position clear, with one mighty throw, Isabella threw Sunny towards her father, the drowsy elephant hitting Max square on the shoulder.
Carly fled the room, her initial amusement at Isabella’s amazing aim giving way to disquiet as she climbed the polished concrete stairs. Would she ever manage to get Max and Isabella in tune with one another? And more to the point, would she manage to get through this weekend without embarrassing herself by revealing that, rather foolishly, she was attracted to him?
An hour later, Carly stood at Isabella’s door, hearing Max speaking in low whispers to his daughter as he sat on the side of her bed. Isabella’s room was in darkness, the only light coming from the faint moonlight twinkling through the roof lights that ran along the corridor.
Max was whispering in a mixture of English and Italian, his voice deep, gentle.
Carly closed her eyes, suddenly tired after such a long day, her shoulder dropping against the doorframe.
Max’s whispers continued.
Carly inhaled the lavender massage cream Max had at first reluctantly massaged into an equally reluctant Isabella. Max had used unsure strokes on Isabella, who had slapped his hand away when he had first begun to massage her forearm as Carly had suggested. But slowly and rather miraculously father and daughter had eventually given in to the soothing pleasure of the massage.
‘You’re tired.’
Carly jumped. Her eyes shot open to find Max standing directly in front of her. Unnerved at having him stand so close, unnerved by his height, the force of the bone-melting energy that oozed from him, the darkness enclosing them, she edged back into the corridor.
Max followed slowly closing Isabella’s door, but leaving it slightly ajar.
He nodded when she asked if Isabella was asleep.
She gave him a smile, trying to focus on being professional. ‘You did a really good job tonight. Well done.’
In the faint light of the corridor she saw a gleam of amusement light in his eyes. ‘Apart from bath time, you mean.’
Carly laughed softly. ‘I’m sure Isabella didn’t mean to soak you.’
‘You reckon?’
Carly tried not to react to the lightness, the teasing in his eyes, all the while doing her best not to recall how gorgeous he had looked as he knelt beside the bath earlier, his damp hair slicked back, his tee shirt soaked through, his exasperation towards Isabella’s splashing giving way to amusement and shared laughter.
‘I’ve an office downstairs—I must go and make some calls. My housekeeper, Luciana, has left food in the fridge. Please help yourself.’ He went to walk away but, pausing, he added, ‘Thank you for your help tonight. It was calmer than usual.’ He rubbed a hand tiredly at the base of his neck. ‘It took for ever, though. I won’t be able to spend so much time settling her every night.’
For a moment Carly considered Max. He was so loath to relax, to allow himself to enjoy being a parent. Sometimes, a lightness broke through his intensity. She needed to help him appreciate the joy of being a father. ‘You know, with time, you might grow to enjoy spending your evenings with Isabella.’
He shook his head, clearly unconvinced. ‘Why did no one warn me just how exhausting and time-consuming being a parent is?’
‘But it’s rewarding too.’ Carly waited for a response from Max but when none came she asked, ‘Don’t you agree?’
Rewarding. That was not the term Max would use for being a parent. Bewildering. Frustrating. Exhausting. Those were better words. But what parent could admit to those feelings?
He winced at Carly’s calm gaze.
And then her hand was reaching out, touching his bare forearm. ‘Things will get better, Max…you’ve been coping for far too long on your own.’
He swallowed at the gentleness of her tone. He should step away, tell Carly that he would see her in the morning. But for the first time since Marta’s death he wanted company, he wanted to be able to sit down and eat a meal with another human being. Apart from work dinners, he ate alone, mostly snacks taken at his desk.
He wasn’t sure what madness was taking him over, and quickly he rationalised to himself that, as it was at his insistence she was here this weekend, the least he could do was be hospitable. And after this weekend he would rarely see Carly Knight again, so what was the harm in sitting down and sharing a meal with her?
‘You know, I’m hungry. Let’s go and have dinner. We can sit outside on the terrace, where you can take in the view—you haven’t seen much of Lake Como since you arrived.’
Carly edged away from him. ‘I…’ She wrapped her arms tightly around her waist, her fists bunching against the red wool of the jumper she had earlier pulled on. He could tell she wanted to say no. Was she this wary of all men thanks to her ex? A desire to somehow make it up to her in some small way saw him offer her his arm. ‘Luciana makes the best pasta in the whole of Italy…she’ll have left some in the fridge for us to have tonight.’
Carly eyed his arm warily but then with a disbelieving eye-roll she placed her hand on his arm.
In the kitchen he told her to take a seat on one of the stools at the kitchen island.
He caught her gazing about the room, taking in the artwork and the furniture.
‘I’m guessing the villa was recently renovated?’ she asked as he swung open the fridge door.
He rifled through the contents of the fridge, reading the labels of the containers Luciana had left, finally settling on one lidded bowl, which he laid on the countertop. ‘It was renovated last year…’ Pointing to the bowl, he asked, ‘I’ve chosen ravioli di zucca e ricotta, pumpkin and ricotta ravioli, for us to eat—is that okay?’
Carly nodded, her gaze once again shifting around the room. She tilted her head back to gaze up at the modern chandelier he had commissioned a local artist to make, the almost translucent ceramic pieces engraved with images of the villa at different stages of the renovations. ‘It’s such a beautiful villa. Were you in charge of the renovation designs?’
Max busied himself filling a large pasta saucepan with water, pleased with her words, but unsettled at the truth that despite all his best efforts to make this villa a home—the endless hours he had put into the designs, the daily calls to the renovation team, the meticulous sourcing of just the right furniture and artwork—he felt nothing for it.
‘I wanted to keep the uniqueness of the existing villa intact so most of the original features were retained but some new windows were added to take advantage of the views, internally the walls of some of the smaller rooms were knocked through to create larger spaces. We also built a new boathouse down by the waterfront and the pool was made bigger.’
Carly stood from her seat and wandered around the open-plan dining room, taking in the décor and the nooks and crannies of this unconventional villa. ‘The renovations are beautiful—you’re seriously talented. What’s the history of the villa—has it been in your family for many years?’
Putting the saucepan on the hob to boil, he inhaled a deep breath before admitting, ‘No, we only bought it two years ago. When Marta became pregnant she decided that she wanted to move back here to Lake Como to be close to her parents. She found the villa when she was six months pregnant with Isabella.’
He waited for Carly to smile awkwardly at what he had said, to change the subject, but instead she nodded and said, ‘Marta clearly had good taste.’
He could not help but smile at that. ‘Well, she did agree to marry me.’
His heart lifted to hear Carly’s laughter. Shaking her head, she asked gently, ‘What was Marta like?’
Taken aback, he turned away from Carly, busied himself with taking oils and condiments from the pull-out drawer next to the hob. For so long he had pushed all thoughts of Marta away, the grief of recalling her too intense. But now, for some reason he found himself wanting to tell Carly about her. ‘She was smart…really smart—she was the only student in her law-degree year to be awarded maximum marks on a difficult course. And she was ambitious; she was specialising in intellectual property law. She loved being pregnant, being a mother.’
Emotion tightening his chest, Max took a tray from a cupboard and started to load it with glasses.
Carly stood and moved next to him. ‘You take care of the cooking, I’ll set the table out on the terrace. I know where everything is from preparing Isabella’s snack earlier.’
With the water boiling in the saucepan, Max turned the temperature down. When the water was simmering he carefully placed the handmade ravioli into it. He turned as Carly lifted the tray now loaded with cutlery and glassware. She smiled at him, a smile full of warmth and kindness. ‘You know, it sounds like Marta was an incredible person. And she was right to want the support of her family. Have you considered moving back here to Lake Como to get that support yourself?’
Max considered for a moment shrugging off Carly’s question with some vague answer but there was something about her open gaze that had him admit, ‘It’s Marta’s family who live here. I grew up in Rome. I’ve no family of my own since my mother died when I was nineteen. Marta’s family…they have never approved of me.’
‘Why?’
Trying to focus on keeping the cynicism from his voice, aware that he was speaking about Isabella’s grandparents, he answered, ‘My in-laws, the Ghiraldini family, own one of the biggest pharmaceutical companies in Italy. They’ve always been suspicious of my reasoning for marrying Marta.’
‘But you’re wealthy in your own right.’
‘Now I am. Not when we met at university. Back then I was nothing but a kid from the wrong side of the tracks with a mother who worked as a chambermaid and a deadbeat father who had disappeared from my life when I was three.’
Carly lifted the wooden tray closer to herself. ‘But now, with your success and having got to know you, Marta’s parents must approve of you.’
Max turned away to check on the pasta. He waited with his back to her, expecting to hear her footsteps as she went out to set the table, but after a while he realised she wasn’t going to leave until he answered her. Swinging around, he stared at her, his arms folded on his chest. Inside, he was on fire with emotion, but his answer came out in an icy tone. ‘Their daughter died when married to me. Why on earth would they approve of me now?’
‘But it was a car accident.’
The guilt inside him exploded in the quietness of the villa, in his jet-lagged exhaustion, in reaction to Carly’s softly spoken words, at the compassion in her eyes. Without meaning to, for the first time since Marta died he spoke out loud some of the torment living inside him. ‘I should have taken better care of Marta, made sure she wasn’t out driving late at night.’
He whipped around, grabbed the saucepan…but the handle was too hot. It scorched his palm. But he bit against the pain and continued on to the sink where he drained the pasta.
He tried to ignore Carly, who had come to stand beside him. ‘What happened on the night Marta died?’
He lowered his head, wanting to keep that night inside himself. But he was so tired of hiding it. He turned around, placed his back against the sink. The act of turning to face the villa for which he and Marta had cherished such dreams caused him almost to back out of speaking. But Carly’s steady blue gaze, the softness of her expression, brought him to say, ‘Isabella had woken just after midnight. Marta had fed her but Isabella wouldn’t settle. I took her downstairs, walked her in my arms. She would fall asleep but the moment I took her back upstairs and laid her down she started crying again. Marta got up and told me to go back to bed. I had an early flight to Munich later that morning. Marta left a note on the hall table saying that she was taking Isabella out in her car for a drive in the hope that she would settle. It was three in the morning. I was asleep. An hour later our intercom rang. It was the police. A taxi had driven through a red light and smashed into Marta’s car. Isabella was uninjured…but Marta…’
For long moments Carly closed her eyes. ‘I’m so sorry.’ She stepped even closer, her hand reaching against the countertop, inches from him. ‘It must have been such a horrible shock. You can’t blame yourself for it though.’
Carly was wrong. He was to blame. If he and Marta hadn’t argued that evening then everything would be different. He struggled to breathe against the shame filling his chest. No one knew of their argument. No one knew that Marta had died when they weren’t speaking to one another. Max hadn’t had the opportunity to say he was sorry, to hug her, to ask for forgiveness for not being there enough for her and Isabella. ‘If I had managed to get Isabella back to sleep, Marta wouldn’t have been out driving.’
‘If your roles were reversed, if it had been you who had gone out and been in an accident, would you blame Marta?’
‘Of course not.’
She tilted her head and gave him a sad smile full of care. ‘Why are you any different?’
Heat burnt on his cheeks. Her question, that until now he had never considered, hit at the core of his guilt. He had seen his mother struggle his entire childhood after his father had abandoned them and had sworn he would always protect his family. ‘It’s a husband’s job to care for and protect his wife, the mother of his child.’
Carly considered him for a moment. ‘Would Marta have agreed with that?’
He could not help but smile. ‘No. She would have yelled that she was a strong woman perfectly capable of taking care of herself.’
Carly smiled back. He knew he should end this conversation now. Already he had divulged too much personal information. But Carly’s compassion, her humour and intelligence in the midst of all he was telling her, was proving hard to walk away from.
‘I’m sure your in-laws will appreciate how well you’re caring for Isabella.’
At the mention of the Ghiraldini family again, he realised just how badly he needed a drink. ‘Yes, I’m caring for Isabella so well that I’ve been forced to employ a sleep consultant.’
Carly pushed the sleeves of her blouse further up her arms, clearly unamused at his attempt at dark humour. ‘There’s no shame in asking for help.’
She was wrong. He should be able to father Isabella without help. Frustrated with his own incompetency, frustrated at the thought of facing his in-laws tomorrow, at having to sit through Tomaso’s wedding which would bring back so many memories of his own wedding day, he turned and studied the pasta, which was now dried out and cold. He grimaced and looked towards Carly, who was scrutinising the pasta too.
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