Authors: Cathy Kelly
his plate away and smiled at Evie.
‘Sorry to change the subject, but I know you’ve got to
get back to work. Do you know why I’ve asked you out?’
he asked abruptly, eyes boring into hers.
Evie could feel her pulse rushing along like a freight
train. She could imagine what he was going to say. Because I can’t stop thinking about you, Evie. Because I’m crazy about you. That’s why I want to spend more time in Ireland, to be close to you. I know you’re engaged but…
‘… I don’t know what you’d think about that,’ he was
saying.
‘Sorry, what?’ Evie reined in her imagination, which was
now on a windswept beach with herself and Max in a
clinch beside frothing waves and a sandy cove that was a
dead ringer for the one in From Here To Eternity.
One of Max’s eyebrows veered upwards. ‘I was telling
you about this idea I have for a summer holiday to bring both families together. I know you usually spend some time with your father during the summer and I thought
we could combine that with my gift to the newly weds.’
‘What gift … combine what?’ asked Evie stupidly. What
was he talking about?
A villa in Spain. I’ve booked a villa in the south of Spain
for two weeks at the end of July. It’s my wedding present
to Andrew and my mother but your dad is understandably
worried because you normally spend time with him for the
summer. Mother doesn’t want to upset things, she knows
their marriage was difficult for you to accept, so I thought
that if you, Rosie and Cara came with us, it’d solve lots of
problems.’
‘With us?’ Evie asked again.
‘Naturally I was going to go too. If you don’t object?’
There was that grin again, a wry grin, as if he knew what
she’d been thinking. Wrongly thinking.
‘I don’t know,’ Evie said coolly, recovering her composure
somewhat. ‘Where in the south of Spain?’ she asked,
as if she were intimately acquainted with every centimetre
of the Costa del Sol instead of only knowing it from
holiday programmes on TV.
‘Puerto Banus.’
‘Oh,’ she said in a blase tone, making a mental note to
look it up on the atlas when she went home. ‘I’ll have to
think about it.’ She drained her coffee cup in one go.
‘It’s a beautiful part of the coast,’ he said, as if reading
her mind, ‘and it’d be a wonderful chance for us all to get
to know each other.’
Evie eyed him suspiciously.
The amused expression disappeared from his eyes. ‘I
mean that,’ he said softly. ‘I’d love to get to know you better.’
The way he looked at her was like nothing she’d ever
experienced before. Those incredibly blue eyes roamed
over her face, drinking her in. The moment was unbearably
charged, incredibly seductive. Evie felt the rest of the
world melt away, as if there was no other sound or
movement around - just her and Max, his gaze fastened
on hers.
‘Rosie, Cara and me?’ she asked, deliberately misunderstanding
him.
‘Just you.’
‘Oh;
He was speaking in a very low voice now, the words
electric. ‘I know what you said last week at the wedding
but I wanted to see you again.’
She looked away, as if he could see inside her and know
she’d been longing to see him too. To talk to him, laugh
with him, touch him.
‘You never answered my note.’
‘How could I?’ she demanded fiercely. ‘You know about
Simon, how could I possibly meet you?’
They were so close now, both leaning across the table
towards the other, almost touching. Intimate, like lovers.
Evie didn’t know what she was going to do next. It was
heady, this feeling of being carried away with emotion.
That’s what Max did to her - changed her, made her like
someone different, someone who followed her instincts
and not a prepared script.
‘I know you’re engaged, Evie, but I can’t help the way I
felt about you the moment I met you. I thought you felt the same way too?’
His hand reached across the table to hers. She watched
it, fascinated. His skin was a golden tanned colour, the
strong wrist covered with surprisingly pale hairs for a man
with such a shock of Italianate dark hair.
‘Evie!’ shrieked someone. ‘Fancy meeting you here!’
Startled, she jerked back in her seat and looked up to see one
of Simon’s colleagues bearing down on them, a tray
jammed with a plate of chips and sausages in his hands. Younger than Simon but a partner in the firm, Phillip Knight was always promising Simon he’d play squash in
the evenings. But judging from the man’s vast stomach, it
seemed unlikely. Of all the people to meet now.
‘Phillip, how nice to see you,’ Evie said dishonestly.
‘Phillip works with Simon, my fiance,’ she added with
heavy emphasis for Max’s benefit.
She felt a tell-tale flush of guilt rise from her throat to
her face like a crimson tide. Phillip, though not the
brightest man she’d ever met, would be sure to mention to
Simon that he’d met Evie with Max and then where would
she be? Nobody with even a quarter of a brain cell could
misconstrue the body language between them. She grinned
inanely at Phillip, shock making her incapable of saying
anything else. OmiGod, omiGod, went a little voice in her
head over and over again.
Phillip stood there with his tray clutched to his vast,
pinstripe stomach, obviously waiting to be invited to sit
down at their table. Beautifully brought up and endlessly
polite, he wouldn’t have dreamed of plonking himself
down without being asked. Which was why Evie found
dinner in Phillip’s house such a nightmare. She was always
afraid she’d make a terrible faux-pas by using the wrong
family-crested knife for her bread.
In one swift movement, Max got to his feet.
‘Max Stewart,’ he introduced himself genially, ‘Evie’s
new …’ he hesitated, as if he had only just come up with
the notion ‘… stepbrother. Imagine that! Her father and
my mother have just got married and we’re hatching a
plan for the newly weds.’ He slapped Phillip on the arm, as
if letting him in on some wonderful secret.
The tray wobbled.
‘Phillip Knight,’ he said formally, still holding his tray.
‘Yes,’ Evie said brightly. ‘A wedding gift! Gosh, it won’t
be too long until it’s Simon and me getting hitched!’ She
got up and slapped Phillip’s other arm heartily. The tray
wobbled some more.
‘I’d love to stay, Phillip,’ she gushed, ‘but I’ve got to get
back to work and Max has got to …’ she faltered ‘…
pick up his wife from the …’
Both men were looking at her expectantly.
‘The hospital!’ she said triumphantly, it being the first
thing that had come into her head. And a wife. That was a
master stroke, she thought. Phillip couldn’t get the wrong
idea now.
She ignored Max’s face, which was a picture of barely
suppressed mirth.
‘Is she working in the hospital?’ Phillip said politely.
Evie blinked a couple of times. ‘No, she’s … er …
having a baby!’ Even better. What man would be flirting
with his stepsister when his wife was expecting?
‘Lovely. Congratulations,’ Phillip said.
Max took the tray from him and put it on the table.
‘Thanks,’ he said. ‘I’d better go. Mia hates to be kept
waiting. Especially,’ he glanced at Evie mischievously, ‘as
she’s the size of a house.’
‘Huge,’ supplied Evie, rounding both arms to make a
pregnant belly gesture that would surely signify a hippo
baby instead of a human one.
She pecked Phillip’s cheek, smiled as brightly as she
could and sailed away, Max in her wake.
He managed to stay silent until they reached the car
park. ‘Thanks for the pregnant wife,’ he said conversationally.
‘That was a neat touch.’
‘I thought so myself.’ Evie said lightly.
‘Did she have to be quite so enormously pregnant or, indeed, did we have to be married?’ he inquired. I’m only asking because Simon will hear about it and will probably
wonder what I’ve done with the said pregnant wife,
especially when I don’t bring her to Spain. I don’t want to
get a reputation as a complete bastard.’
‘I was desperate,’ hissed Evie.
‘I could see that. But why lie quite so outrageously?’
‘Phillip may be stupid but he’s not blind,’ she retorted.
And he’d have to be blind not to notice the way we were
sitting so close to one another, staring into each other’s
eyes!’ Evie shivered and didn’t know whether it was from
the shock of seeing Phillip so unexpectedly or the thought
of the conversation she and Max had been having when
he’d showed up.
‘Since you now have the perfect alibi for meeting me,
and since I’m officially “safe” because of my pregnant
missus, can we meet again?’ Max asked. ‘Before the quadruplets
are born, I mean.’
‘How can you ask that?’ Evie demanded furiously. ‘You
can see I can’t meet you.’
Max drove into Wentworth’s car park. The onlookers
weren’t at their posts, Evie noticed idly.
‘No, I don’t see that you can’t meet me,’ he said softly,
and turned the ignition off and faced her for the first time,
making her aware of how small the car was inside and how
disturbingly close they were. ‘If you don’t want to see me
again, that’s one thing.’ His face was in shadow, the hard
planes shaded in, making him look saturnine, devilish. But
if you’re afraid to take the chance, that’s different. You do
want to see me, don’t you?’ he asked, sounding strangely
vulnerable for a moment.
He reached out and touched Evie’s full bottom lip,
letting his thumb caress it gently. She closed her eyes
briefly, letting the sensation ripple through her. It was the
most erotic sensation she’d ever felt. Unexpected, unusual.
She could smell his skin, smell the warm, musky maleness
of him, could taste the saltiness of his skin. She almost
kissed his thumb as it rolled lazily over the plumpness of
her mouth. Then she pulled back abruptly. What was she
doing? What was he doing?
‘Who the hell do you think you are, touching me like
that, coming into my life and trying to screw it up?’ she
screeched at him.
A muscle moved in his jaw, just a tiny flicker.
“I don’t want to see you again,’ Evie said, her voice
growing hoarse.
He said nothing but just stared at her, his face dark.
‘It’s impossible for me,’ she said in anguish. ‘Don’t you
understand?’ She fumbled with the door and finally
opened it, dragging herself out of the car frantically.
Aware that she could be seen from the office, she tried
to set her face into some sort of normal expression. It was
almost impossible. Her pulse was pounding in her veins
and she wanted to cry, longed to cry. Smile, Evie, she told
herself. Don’t cry. Don’t look back. She knew he hadn’t
driven off yet, could feel him sitting quietly in the car
watching her walk into the office.
The muscles in her neck were corded with the effort of
smiling as she pushed the office door open and marched
straight for the stairs. Please don’t let anyone speak to me,
she prayed. Nobody did. She walked up the stairs to her
office slowly, her senses reeling. Had she done the right
thing by sending him away? She had, hadn’t she? You
couldn’t be engaged and about to be married and have
clandestine meetings with another man, especially a sexy,
single and utterly handsome man. She had done the right
thing, definitely. She was sure of it. But why did it hurt so
much, then? Why did she have a lump in her throat that made her want to sit on the floor and wail? Why did she want to run back down to the car park, throw herself into
Max’s arms and beg him to hold her tightly?
Lorraine’s eyes lit up when Evie walked into their office.
‘Wow, your stepbrother is something else,’ she said. ‘He’s
a stud. Can you have sex with your stepbrother? No, sorry.
Can I have sex with your stepbrother?’ She crowed with
laughter at the idea. ‘Craig need never find out, I won’t tell
him!’
Evie dug her nails into the palm of her hand and tried to
join in. Even to her own ears, her laughter was very forced.
She’d turned Max down for the second time. He’d never
come back, never bother her again, that was for sure. So
why did she feel so utterly depressed at the thought?
Simon positioned the jack under Evie’s rusty Fiesta and
expertly began to elevate the car off the driveway. He’d
taken his sweatshirt off and she could see the muscles in
his back ripple through the thin fabric of his T-shirt. All
that squash made him very lean. Probably too lean, she
thought. He was getting positively scrawny.
He’d never had a big appetite and he wasn’t using his
deep fat fryer as much since she’d remarked that she didn’t
want to be eating chips morning, noon and night when
they were married.
‘It’s lucky I noticed this nail in the tyre, Evie,’ he said,
only slightly out of breath after the job of unscrewing the
ancient nuts. ‘If I hadn’t, you’d have ended up with a flat