While she was gone, he nervously leafed through an entertainment magazine from her coffee table collection, trying not to strain to make out the low murmur of her words drifting from the kitchen. When she returned five minutes later, he abandoned the magazine. She plopped down on the cushion next to him, a bemused expression on her face.
"Have you ever noticed," she said, "that whenever something bad happens, the universe somehow manages to right itself by making something good happen?"
Thinking about how Tricia had been a bad thing for him, and Jilly was such a good thing, he answered, "As a matter of fact I have noticed that."
"Well, it's been proven true once again. You'll never believe who that was on the phone."
"Based on your expression, I'm guessing it was the folks at Publishers Clearing House and you're their newest millionaire?"
"No." She flashed a grin. "Although that would be great. It was Joe, that nice man we met at Galini Vineyards."
Matt's brows shot up. "What did he want? Did you win a free bottle of wine in his monthly drawing?"
"No, and all I can say is it's a good thing you're sitting down. Turns out Joe's last name is none other than Galini. He doesn't just work the winery-he owns the place." Excitement all but glowed from her. "But the incredible part is that he also owns Tribiletto Vineyards in Italy."
Matt simply stared. "Tribiletto, as in the Tribiletto Vineyards-one of the foremost wineries in the world?"
"The very same. He left the day-to-day operations of Tribiletto to his sons, and started Galini Vineyards as his pet project, hoping to get a foothold in the United States. He called to say that he was very impressed with us-he liked our 'sense of fun and sincerity.' He's looking to go national with the local Galini label, and wants to tie it in with the Tribiletto label. What he needs is a good ad campaign, and he asked if we would be interested in meeting him for lunch next Wednesday at the Trigali Grill on Fifth Avenue-his company owns the restaurant, by the way, and he said it could also use some updating in its advertising." She was practically bouncing in her seat. "Think of the business this will bring to Maxximum! How's that for a rebound from David Garrett getting the Millenium account?"
"I'd say the universe has definitely been realigned. Well, except for one thing."
"Oh? What's that?"
"You and me."
She went perfectly still. "You and me?"
"Yeah. I'm afraid we're still off-kilter. But as I was about to tell you before the phone rang, I want to fix that."
"What did you have in mind?"
He entwined their fingers and gave her hand a light squeeze, encouraged when she squeezed him back. "About our affair… how would you feel about continuing it?"
An expression that morphed from relief to unease flickered across her face. "I don't think we can deny that doing so would make working together… difficult-"
"Exactly," he broke in, unable to hide his relief. "Which is why I don't think we should continue our affair."
Jilly felt as if she'd been stabbed through the heart. His words echoed through her mind, filling her with a hurt unlike anything she'd ever before experienced. And he looked… happy? Forcing a breath into lungs that felt as if they'd been steamrolled, she murmured, "I… see." A total lie, because she didn't see at all. "Then why are you here?"
"To give you this." He reached into his shopping bag and pulled out a wrapped box the size of a paperback book, only deeper. Handing her the package, he said, "Open it."
Hoping he wouldn't notice her shaking fingers, she untied the bow. He didn't want to continue their affair, but he'd driven all the way to her house and brought her a present? Good grief, and they said women were hard to figure out?
Setting the ripped wrapping paper on the coffee table, she opened the gift box, then pushed aside several layers of gold tissue paper to reveal a hand-size ceramic statue of a snowman. A snowman holding an arc of mini snowballs. Jilly's eyes goggled as she read the message spelled out on those little white balls: I Love You.
Certain she'd developed a freakishly sudden need for reading glasses, she carefully lifted the statue from its nest of tissue, then turned it toward the light. She sucked in a sharp breath. Holy smokes, it really did read I Love You.
Her gaze swiveled to his. "I don't understand."
He raked his hands through his hair. "Damn. Not the three words I was hoping for." He studied her face, and clearly she looked as stunned as she felt because he said, "I've surprised you."
"Surprised doesn't even begin to describe what I'm feeling." Hope raced through her, barreling over her confusion. "I mean I don't understand how one minute you can say you don't want to continue our affair, yet in the next give me this. What do you mean?"
He shifted closer to her, then cupped her face between his hands. "I mean I love you. With all my heart." He leaned forward and kissed her so softly, so tenderly, with such restrained passion that Jilly's insides turned to syrup. When he pulled back, she had to struggle to catch her breath. Who the heck had stolen all the oxygen from the room?
His serious gaze searched hers. "You said that surprised doesn't begin to describe what you're feeling. Any chance you'd like to deal me in on what you are feeling?"
Jilly looked at him, so earnest and handsome, his heart in his eyes. And the floodgates of her own heart simply opened. He'd laid his cards on the table, and it was time for her to do the same. "I feel that I haven't been able to stop thinking about you for so much as a minute. I feel that you're all the things I've ever wanted in a man, all tied up in an incredible package. And I feel like the luckiest woman on the planet because I just found out that the man I love loves me back."
He briefly squeezed his eyes shut and murmured something that sounded like thank you, God. When he opened his eyes, he smiled. "And just how do you know that you're the luckiest woman on the planet? Have you met every woman on the planet?"
"I don't need to. I just know." Pressing her hand over the spot where her heart slapped frantically against her ribs, she perfectly mimicked his earlier response. "In here."
"You love me."
She turned her face and pressed a kiss against his palm, which still rested against her cheek. "Very much."
"You have no idea how glad I am to hear that." He nodded toward the snowman's box. "There's something else in there."
"More presents?"
"’Tis the season, you know."
As if in a daze, Jilly set her snowman on the table, then fingered through the tissue paper until she found a small silver key. Holding it aloft, she asked, "What is this-the key to your heart?"
"Something like that." Again Matt reached into his shopping bag then gently placed the item he withdrew onto her lap.
She stared at the shoebox-size metal strongbox, completely mystified. "What's this?"
"It's the best strongbox on the market, completely fireproof, and virtually indestructible. A must-have for hiding all those valuables you don't want to risk falling into the wrong hands."
Okay, so it wasn't the most romantic of Christmas gifts, and clearly he was the sort of guy who preferred to buy his holiday presents at the hardware store rather than Victoria's Secret, but she could live with that. Practicality was good. She smiled. "Thank you."
"You're welcome. But don't thank me until you open it."
Jilly's heart tripped over itself. Clasping the key, she inserted it into the silver lock. Then drawing a deep breath, she lifted the lid.
Everything in her stilled as she stared at the contents. The entire bottom of the strongbox was covered with a layer of chocolate-covered marshmallows. White chocolate letters, scrawled across the top of each marshmallow, spelled out the question, Will You Marry Me?