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The Italian's Christmas Housekeeper - Шэрон Кендрик (2019)

The Italian's Christmas Housekeeper
  • Год:
    2019
  • Название:
    The Italian's Christmas Housekeeper
  • Автор:
  • Жанр:
  • Оригинал:
    Английский
  • Язык:
    Английский
  • Перевел:
    HarperCollins
  • Страниц:
    18
  • ISBN:
    9781474072687
  • Рейтинг:
    0 (0 голос)
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От заправки кушетки миллиардера... до День рождения под его простынями! Застенчивая домоправительница Молли Джонсон всегда пытается изо всех сил. Она стремнётся произвести впечатленье на возмутительно богатейшего гостя особняка Сальвио Де Дженнаро, но вместо этого несправедливо полемизирует своим работодателем! Нахоженная Всхлипывающим Сальвио, она печалится... самым поразительным опытом в своей жизни. Когда эта невообразимая встреча стаиваю Молли ее работки, Сальвио спасает ее с обворожительным предложением: приняться его временной экономкой-как разок к Рождеству! Немногое из того, о чем рассказывает " Конник без головы ", Майн Купер сам испытал, лицезрел или слышал от вернейших людей. Народился он в 1818 году в Шотландии. Отец его был священнослужителем и сына желал направить по тому же тропе. А Майн Купер ушел в океане. Перед ним, по его собственным словечкам, ожили странички из учебника биологии. Ему только того и нужно было: на деле перепроверить книги. Но как в закрытом море, как и в "море" людском он исделал для себя неприятное закрытие.

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Sinking her teeth into a large and very moist slice of chocolate cake, Molly gave a small moan of pleasure as she got her first hit from the sugary treat. She was starving. Absolutely starving. She hadn’t eaten a thing since that bowl of porridge she’d grabbed on the run first thing. Unfortunately the porridge had been lumpy and disappointing, mainly because the unpredictable oven had started playing up halfway through making it. Not for the first time, she wondered why her bosses couldn’t just have the kind of oven you simply switched on, instead of a great beast of a thing which lurked in the corner like a brooding animal and was always going wrong. She’d been working like crazy all morning, cleaning the house with even more vigour than usual because Lady Avery had been in such a state about their overnight guest.

‘He’s Italian,’ her employer had bit out. ‘And you know how fussy they are about cleanliness.’

Molly didn’t know, actually. But more worrying still was Lady Avery’s inference that she wasn’t working hard enough. Which was why Molly dusted the chandeliers with extra care and fastidiously vacuumed behind the heavy pieces of antique furniture. At one point she even got down on her hands and knees to scrub the back door porch—even if she did manage to make her hands red raw in the process. She’d put a big copper vase of scented eucalyptus and dark roses in the guest bedroom and had been baking biscuits and cakes all morning, so that the house smelt all homely and fragrant.

The Averys rarely used their Cornish house—which was one of the reasons why Molly considered being their resident housekeeper the perfect job. It meant she could live on a limited budget and use the lion’s share of her wages to pay off her brother’s debt and the frightening amount of interest it seemed to accrue. It was the reason she endured the isolated location and demanding attitude of her employer, instead of spreading her wings and finding somewhere more lively.

But the winter had made her isolation all the more noticeable and it was funny how the approach of Christmas always reminded you of the things you didn’t have. This year she was really missing her brother and trying not to worry about what he was doing in Australia. But deep down she knew she had to let go. She had to. For both their sakes. Robbie was probably having the time of his life on that great big sunny continent—and maybe she should count her blessings.

She took another bite of chocolate cake and did exactly that, reminding herself that most people would revel in the fact that when the Averys were around, they entertained all kinds of amazing people. Guests Molly actually got to meet—even if it was only in the context of turning down their beds at night or offering them a home-made scone. Politicians who worked with Lord Avery in the Palace of Westminster, and famous actors who spouted Shakespearean sonnets from the stages of London’s theatres. There were business people, too—and sometimes even members of the royal family, whose bodyguards lurked around the kitchen and kept asking for cups of tea.

But Molly had never heard Lady Avery make such a fuss about anyone as she’d done about the impending arrival of Salvio De Gennaro, who was apparently some hotshot property developer who lived mostly in London. Earlier that day she had been summoned into her boss’s office, where the walls were decked with misty photos of Lady Avery wearing pearls and a dreamy expression, in those far-off days before she’d decided to have a load of extensive work done on her face. A bad idea, in Molly’s opinion—though of course she would never have said so. Lady Avery’s plump lips had been coated in a startling shade of pink and her expression had been unnaturally smooth as she’d gazed at Molly. Only the hectic flicker in her pale eyes had hinted how excited she was by the impending visit of the Italian tycoon.

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