Chapter Three In the morning, he told her he had physical therapy again in the afternoon, but before that, he wanted to take her to a museum in a nearby town that had a nice collection of some lesser-known eighteenth-century painters. They took off on the boat after breakfast. The museum wasn’t a large one, but the collection interested them both enough to keep them there through lunchtime. Though he had a lot more experience with that century’s artists, he solicited her opinions, agreed with some, and respectfully argued with others. In general, he treated her as a colleague rather than a student. They returned shortly after lunch. She hoped he’d be willing to forego his siesta in favor of making love again, but he told her he needed the rest to face the rigors of the physical therapy s

