Authors: Cathy Kelly
‘Ace’ was the word of the moment, Evie thought,
shuffling back into the bathroom for her shower. She felt
anything but ace at that precise moment.
Sitting at her desk at nine on the dot, she still felt
spectacularly aceless. She felt terrible, in fact, and she was
damn’ sure that she looked it too, particularly as she’d
been too tired to wash her hair. Greasy hair, a ‘safe’ black
suit and a pale, exhausted face meant she looked as if she’d
just arrived from a funeral, a fact Lorraine remarked upon.
‘Lord, Evie, what were you up to last night?’ she
demanded, resplendent in an eye-catching red mini in
honour of the auditors’ visit. The last time they had been
at Wentworth Alarms, she’d spent three thrilling days
flirting with the junior member of the team, a Diet-Coke
guy lookalike.
‘Nothing exciting,’ sighed Evie, who wasn’t looking
forward to a day of the auditors’ demands combined with
Davis in the inevitable bad temper. Since he’d been
diagnosed with ME, he was only in the office on rare
occasions and then he was like a hungover JCB driver:
cross and determined to take it out on everyone.
‘You can tell me what you were doing,’ Lorraine said
saucily. ‘Your Simon doesn’t look like he’s a goer but he
must be. The silent ones are always the worst, that’s what
my mam says.’
The thought of placid Simon being described as a goer
brought a wry grin to Evie’s face.
‘I couldn’t sleep, that’s all.’
Lorraine winked. ‘I bet.’
The morning passed with interminable slowness. Davis
failed to arrive at work and when Evie rang him at home
the answer machine switched on every time. The financial
director, Davis’s nephew and proof positive that nepotism
was generally a mistake, did his best to help but only
succeeded in looking bewildered most of the time, and
asking Evie where everything was.
‘I wish I’d studied bloody accountancy,’ she hissed at
Lorraine finally.
‘I wish I’d stayed at home today,’ the girl answered
wretchedly. The Diet Coke guy from the previous year
hadn’t turned up. His replacement had the sort of bad
breath that could knock you out at fifty yards.
Neither of them had got anywhere near either the kettle
or the ladies’ loo all morning and when lunchtime arrived,
they were both shattered. At one o’clock, Evie leaned back
in her chair and decided for once to ignore her phone as it
rang incessantly.
‘I’m too tired to put on my lipstick,’ Lorraine said,
lolling in her swivel chair, her feet on the desk. ‘Will I
order us a pizza so we don’t have to go out?’
Evie was about to say ‘yes’ when the sales department’s
secretary stuck her head around the door.
‘Evie,’ she said, round-eyed, ‘your lunch date is in
reception. And he’s gorgeous. Who is he? We’re all dying to
know.’
Evie’s heart skipped a beat. She didn’t have a lunch date.
But she could think of only one person who’d have the
female staff of Wentworth Alarms in such a tizzy: Max
Stewart.
‘I can’t imagine,’ she said, trying to look nonchalant, and
picked up her still-buzzing phone.
It was the receptionist.
‘There’s someone waiting for me?’ Evie asked coolly.
‘Max Stewart,’ breathed the receptionist, with the same
reverence she reserved for speaking about Mel Gibson.
‘Tell him I’ll be down in ten minutes.’
‘Who is it?’ squeaked Lorraine, knowing something was
up from the way Evie’s eyes shone.
‘My stepbrother,’ she said as calmly as possible.
‘Stepbrother?’ Lorraine repeated incredulously. ‘You
never mentioned him.’
‘Didn’t I?’ Evie scooped up her handbag and wondered
if it would be a complete giveaway if she asked Lorraine
for a squirt of her perfume and a lend of some concealer to
hide the suitcases under her eyes. It probably would, but
who cared?
Trying to calm the excitement that bubbled up inside
her, Evie did her best to hide the ravages of a sleepless
night. At least she didn’t need blusher, she thought wryly;
her cheeks were already rosy from a mixture of pleasure
and embarrassment. Then she began to worry. What if
Simon rang and was told she was seeing Max Stewart for
lunch? What if he drove past unexpectedly and discovered
them in the pub?
Well, Evie decided firmly, she wouldn’t go out to lunch
with Max, it was that simple. He hadn’t made an appointment,
so she wouldn’t go with him. She’d make an excuse.
Squinting as she zigzagged her dark brown mascara
wand up her lashes, she realised that it wasn’t so simple.
She wanted to go. It would all be perfectly innocent, she
told herself. He was her stepbrother after all. What could
possibly be wrong with meeting him for lunch?
But as she hurried to the stairs, eyes shining and a
bounce in her step for the first time that day, Evie knew in
her heart of hearts there was nothing innocent about
Max’s visit - or about her reaction to it.
At the bottom of the stairs, she peered into reception
through the glass fire doors. Her heart swelled instinctively
at the sight of him. Max was sitting in one of the squashy
chairs, a giant thing she could never sit in comfortably
because she was too short.
He dwarfed it, long denim-clad legs sticking out across
the room. He looked casual today, wearing a tan suede
jacket with suede workmen’s boots. She could see that
much from behind the paper he was reading, his face set in
concentration.
Like a child gazing at a spaniel puppy in a pet shop
window, Evie stared at Max. The rock-breaker jaw was set
firm as he read, dark brows hid his eyes. He looked
different out of his elegant suit: less formidable, younger.
Then he saw her.
He unfurled himself and got to his feet. Evie shoved the
fire door open and hoped he didn’t realise she’d been
watching him for a few moments.
The receptionist and her lunchtime replacement were
staring at Max with unabashed curiosity.
‘Evie, your … guest,’ the receptionist said, her lip-glossed smile on full beam, obviously dying to be introduced.
‘Thanks,’ Evie said politely, equally determined not to
introduce her. She stood in front of Max but didn’t make a
move to hold out her hand.
‘Evie, how nice to see you.’ He smiled at her, a warm,
glinting smile that lit up his cobalt eyes as if somebody had
flicked on a button inside him.
Evie blinked. She hadn’t imagined how attractive he
was. He was devastating in the flesh, better than she’d
remembered, better than in her bizarre wedding dream.
‘I was in the area on business and thought I’d see if you
were free for lunch,’ he said.
‘Well, I wasn’t going to …’ began Evie, suddenly
remembering how she’d meant to tell Max where to go if ever she saw him again. ‘I have a lot of work to do this afternoon.’
‘Please, I’d like to talk to you.’
The way he said ‘please’ did it. A low, soft caressing
sound that slithered up her spine as if he’d just asked her
to take all her clothes off and get into a Jacuzzi with him
to play doctors and nurses.
She couldn’t resist. ‘OK.’
Max pushed the front door open and they went outside.
Evie could feel fascinated eyes burning into her back as
they walked towards Max’s car. She half-turned to look at
the office and saw Lorraine, the receptionist and the sales
secretary all peering out past the reception blinds like
spectators at a tennis match eagerly waiting for the umpire
to call a shot.
‘Do they always do that?’ Max asked innocently, looking
back too.
‘They’re waiting for the sandwich delivery man,’ Evie
fibbed. ‘He’s late and they’re ravenous.’
‘They’re probably wondering who I am,’ he remarked.
Evie laughed at his perceptive reading of the situation.
‘You have no idea,’ she said, shaking her head ruefully. ‘I’ll
probably be on the six o’clock news for going off with a strange man at lunch. Nearly-married woman seen getting into flash car with stranger - police alert!’
‘But I’m your stepbrother,’ he pointed out in a mock
innocent voice, opening the passenger door of the sports
car for Evie.
‘So you are,’ she replied sweetly, shutting her door with
a resounding bang.
‘Where’s a good spot for lunch round here?’ he asked,
driving out the gate.
‘I assumed you knew this area since you said you were
around on business?’ Evie asked suspiciously.
The laughing eyes crinkled up with amusement. ‘You’ve
caught me out, I’m afraid. I’ve never been in this neck of
the woods before. I came to see you. And not because
you’re my dear stepsister, either,’ he added in a tone that
made Evie feel very hot suddenly.
‘The pub at the roundabout is nice,’ she said, her voice
sounding an octave higher with nerves. ‘Turn left here and
take the next two rights.’
She sank back into her seat, eyes fixed straight ahead.
She didn’t even want to look at Max. What had she got
herself into? She should have sent him away, refused to
meet him, bluntly told him he had a nerve turning up after
she’d told him she was engaged. She’d never handle him,
he wasn’t like Simon: easily dealt with. Max was a whole
different kettle of fish. Piranhas, in fact.
‘Difficult day?’ he asked companionably, maneuvering
the car into a parking space.
Evie, who’d been expecting a different sort of conversation,
shot him a sideways look.
‘Yes,’ she said reluctantly. She was too edgy to be
comfortable.
‘The receptionist said you had the auditors in,’ he said,
still not looking at her as he parked.
‘Just as well she isn’t working for MI5,’ Evie said, raising
her eyes to heaven.
‘She was only making conversation,’ he said mildly.
‘I suppose.’
They joined the soup and sandwiches queue in the pub.
To cover up what she felt was an uneasy silence, Evie
found herself rattling on about the dreaded auditors and
how difficult it was dealing with them when her boss was
out of the office.
At first, her chatter was stilted but as they sat down with
their food, she began to enjoy telling him about her manic day. Max was surprisingly easy to talk to, or maybe it was that he really listened. He asked the right sort of questions
and was interested in her answers.
When she’d finished telling him about Tom, Davis’s
dopey nephew, he told her about a television production
company he’d once worked in where the boss appointed
his four sons as middle managers: ‘Each one more stupid
than the last,’ Max said, grinning. ‘None of them could
make a decision about making programmes and when you
got the four of them together, they just fought. They were
like crabs in a bucket - none would let the others do
anything independently. They’d drag him back in so they
could argue some more about where to get the paper cups
for the water dispenser or what colour to paint tie
conference room. Their father had this happy idea of
letting them take over the company when he retired but
after six months he fired them all.’
‘What happened then?’ asked Evie.
‘My partner and I bought the company and within a year
we’d turned it around so profits were up fifty percent. Then,
the four of them tried to sue us, saying we’d taken away
their birthright and that if their father had given them time,
they’d have turned a profit.’ He laughed at the memory.
Evie swallowed a bite of her sandwich. ‘Is that the
company you have now?’ she asked, eager to know more
about him but not wanting to appear too interested.
He shook his head. ‘I still own shares in it but somebody
else runs it. My new company is called DWS Productions.
We make mini-series. The old company makes technical
videos, there’s a lot of money in that. But producing
mini-series is more fun.’
‘I’d no idea that’s what you did!’ Evie exclaimed. ‘Your
mother never really explained what sort of producing you
did. I had visions of tacky game shows.’
He allowed himself to smile at the comment.
‘Mini-series, huh?’ Evie added. ‘What are you working
on now? What have you done?’
‘We’ve just finished a production about the famine and
now we’re in pre-production for a Gone With The Wind
type series, set in Ireland and Louisiana.’
‘You must travel all the time?’ Evie said, sandwich
forgotten. This was so exciting, far more thrilling than
stories about auditors and alarm companies.
‘I spent six months in Australia for the famine one, The
Wilderness,’ Max explained. ‘We made it primarily for the
American and Australian markets. The new one is more
European. My partner is going to handle most of the
American side of things which means I’ll have more time
to myself. I’ve travelled nine months of every year for the
past ten years. I need a break. I’m thinking of buying a
house in Ireland and putting down some roots.’ He pushed