Authors: Cathy Kelly
wasn’t clinging to some mini-skirted, perma-tanned blonde
but wrapped around her, Evie.
‘I’m sorry, we’re just kidding around. I know there’s
nothing worse than losing your luggage,’ he said gently, his
breath fanning her ear as he leaned close. ‘Mother hates it
normally, she’s just laid-back this time because she’s so
happy. The plane could have crashed and she’d be swimming
with the sharks in the Atlantic, saying, “So what? I’ve
got my overnight bag!”
Evie laughed, a hiccuping sort of laugh, and let herself
re,ax against Max’s comforting body. She loved the feel of him. Big and solid, like a bear, yet graceful with it. As if sensing that she’d let her defences down and was
relaxing, his arm wrapped itself around her, fingers tight
on her waist.
OmiGod! Her spare tyre! Evie sucked her stomach in
anxiously, wishing she could make her waist shrink. Why
hadn’t she stuck to the diet? And she must be hot and
sweaty. Could he smell her? She sniffed the air near herself
in horror, afraid she’d get a waft of BO. Why hadn’t she
brought any perfume with her - at least a quadruple blast
of Anais Anais would overpower him so that he couldn’t
smell armpits that hadn’t seen deodorant for hours.
‘Come on, let’s pick up the cars,’ Max said, oblivious to
her frantic sniffing and sucking in tactics. ‘There’s a guy
waiting around the front with them. We’ll stop off on the
way so you can buy some clothes and toiletries. I hate
borrowing other people’s stuff and I’m sure you do too.’
Evie nodded.
‘Lord, you smell great,’ he said, breathing in the scent of
her hair. ‘A sort of fresh, fruity smell.’
Evie flushed with pleasure and relief. ‘Apple shampoo,’
she volunteered.
‘Lovely,’ he sighed, kissing the top of her head. ‘I must
stink like a long-distance runner. Sorry. How about we all
have an hour in our rooms to beautify ourselves and then
meet up for dinner, my treat?’ He was walking her towards
the airport doors as he spoke, still with one arm around
Evie and the other steering his trolley as effortlessly as if he was steering a bowl of egg whites.
‘That sounds lovely,’ she said sincerely, and gazed up at
him. ‘Thank you, I was on the verge of screaming in there.
I don’t know why,’ she added.
‘Travelling makes people very, very strange,’ Max pronounced.
‘Look at that pair, for example.’
He raised his eyebrows in amusement as Vida and
Andrew ambled cut of the airport behind them, arms
locked, oblivious to the world around them. Max grinned
at the sight. ‘What are the odds that the sun has a
passionate effect on them and we don’t set eyes on either
of them until the end of the holiday?’
Evie giggled and realised she didn’t mind if her father
and Vida broke the wardrobe and the bed in their room
jumping passionately from one to the other.
‘That’s not a bet I’d win, so I won’t put any money on
it,’ she said primly.
‘Not a gambling woman, then?’ Max asked.
‘No, never could afford it,’ Evie admitted simply.
‘I’ll take you to the casino one night, you’ll love it. It’s
fun,’ Max promised. ‘And you can get dressed up to the
nines.’
‘If I have any clothes,’ she said mournfully, thinking of
her lost luggage.
‘If you don’t,’ he said, a wicked sparkle in his deep blue
eyes, ‘I’ll buy you something devastatingly sexy to wear.’
That was when Evie felt the electric shock vibrate
through her entire body. Something devastatingly sexy to
wear… And take off, she thought longingly. Now there
was a thought.
An hour later, she sat on the bed in her room, taking in
the details of its high ceiling, cool white walls, terracotta
tiled floor and creamy muslin curtains rippling in the
evening breeze. Richly carved Spanish wooden furniture
gave the room an opulent feel, while the cerulean blue
embroidered silken bedspread and soft cushions lent an air
of sheer luxury.
The blue and white tiled bathroom was bigger than her
kitchen at home and you could fit two people in the bath,
if you felt inclined to. That wasn’t even mentioning the balcony, which looked over an incredible vista, including a series of the prettiest white stucco villas set amid groves of
orange trees, before your eyes reached the gleaming waters
of the Mediterranean.
The balcony contained a sun lounger and a small white
painted iron table with two chairs which meant she could
practically live in her bedroom, drinking in the sun that
obviously bathed the balcony most of the day. It was a
glorious room, in keeping with the glorious white villa, the
most elegantly luxurious place Evie had ever stayed in her
life. From the moment she’d stepped out of the car and
breathed in the scent of the luscious crimson flowers that
covered the entire walled courtyard at the front, Evie had
felt as if she was living in a fairy tale.
She still felt slightly dazed by the whole trip, as if the
sparkling, vivacious woman who’d sat in the front of the
white Seat Toledo with Max had been a stranger. She
hadn’t been anything like the normal Evie Fraser, that was
for certain. She’d been relaxed, happy and confident. It
was like a drug running through her veins making her into
a different person. Or maybe Max was the drug. Then, to
arrive at this beautiful house set in the hills behind the
Puerto Banus bull ring. Enclosed behind a high wall and
with wooden gates, the villa looked like something from
the Hollywood Homes of the Famous tour she’d seen on
documentaries about Los Angeles.
Inside the gates, it was just as incredible: a verandah that
stretched around the whole building, loungers and tali urns
overflowing with succulent plants dotted at intervals
around it; a pool and blossom-filled garden not a million
miles away from the ones in Evie’s fantasies; and a giant
airy open-plan room that took up the entire lower storey
of the villa containing a raised dining area, a marble
miracle of a kitchen and a sunken seating area with huge
floral sofas, wooden coffee tables and a giant stone fireplace should you feel cold.
‘As if.’ Rosie had said with delight when she’d seen it.
‘Imagine being cold in Spain!’ she enthused.
Oil paintings hung on the walls, pottery and silver
treasures decorated each occasional table and the entire
place reeked of being loved and lived in. Remembering the
cramped one-bedroomed apartment she, Rosie and Cara
had shared many years ago, with its consignment of
cockroaches and a kitchen equipped for only the most
basic cooking, Evie stared around the Villa Lucia in awe.
This place must have cost Max a fortune. How could she
repay him?
She’d thought they were going to some squashed little
cottage where she, Rosie and probably Cara would have to
share a twin room with somebody sleeping on a camp bed.
This place was a bloody palace!
She stripped off her travel-stained clothes and stood
under the shower until she’d washed away what felt like a ton of grime. In fact, the opalescent pink soap she’d picked up in the local supermarket had a subtle musky smell that
she almost preferred to her grapefruit gel. And even
though she didn’t have her favourite apple shampoo, the
almond-scented one she’d bought was just as good.
Wrapped in a giant creamy towel, Evie sat on her
balcony and let the dying rays of the sun envelop her. She
loved the sensation of the sun on her face and sat, eyes
closed, face turned up skywards, for ages before suddenly
realising she only had fifteen minutes to get ready. As if on
cue, Cara marched into the room clutching several items of
clothing that all seriously needed ironing.
‘This is the best I can do,’ she said apologetically, sinking
on to the bed with her crumpled offerings.
Rejecting the peasant blouse in crimson because it was too bright, Evie held a sea green silk shirt up to her face and grimaced.
‘Makes me look hungover,’ she groaned.
Cara laughed. ‘Then I’d better not wear it tomorrow
when I plan to be really hungover. I’d look as if I was on
the critical list.’
Cara’s taste in tops was almost puritanical - lots of
high-necked things that didn’t cling. Her trousers were the
same, baggy and unrevealing in the extreme. As Evie was
so much shorter and of a totally different build, there was
no way most of Cara’s clothes would fit her. She’d look like
a child after an hour in an adult’s wardrobe because the
sleeves and hems were all way too long.
The only garment that wouldn’t make her look like a
precocious child was Cara’s new dress: a remarkably
revealing mid-length sleeveless brown shift in crinkly viscose, the sort of thing that wasn’t supposed to wrinkle,
which was fortunate given Cara’s packing technique of
cramming everything in higgledypiggledy and to hell with
the creases.
‘This new?’ asked Evie, thinking it was years since she’d
seen her sister wear anything with such a low-cut neck.
She’d bet it looked stunning on Cara.
‘Yeah,’ Cara replied, ‘I got it for the holiday, thought I’d
break out and wear something a bit different. I’m not sure
now. You’d be able to see my tonsils down the front.’
‘Don’t be daft. It’d be gorgeous on you, Cara. You should
flaunt yourself a bit more. I’m glad to see Ewan is having a
positive effect on you. I hate those bloody combats.’
Cara did not want to be drawn into a conversation about
Ewan. ‘Try it on,’ she urged. ‘It’s a weird length on me so
it’s probably perfect for you.’
The dress wasn’t the most flattering colour Evie had
ever worn, as the combination of brown hair and brown
dress was a bit overpoweringly chocolatey, unless you wanted to look like an eclair. But it fitted and certainly clung in all the right places, undulating around her small
waist and flaring out over her hips to end in a swirl around
her ankles.
‘Sorted,’ Cara said. ‘I can’t lend you shoes, I’m afraid.’
She held up one bare size eight foot ruefully.
Fifteen minutes later, Evie was tottering along in a pair
of what Cara had described as ‘Rosie’s fuck me sandals’
when she’d seen them.
‘She’s only kidding, Mum,’ a white-faced Rosie had
hastened to point out, before shooting her aunt a killer
look. ‘They’re fashionable, everyone’s wearing them.’
Everyone must have bunions then, Evie decided, after a
mere five minutes strapped into the shoes. It was like
wearing shoe boxes attached to your feet with chicken
wire. Still, they looked dressy and were about ten times
more suitable than the cream loafers she’d worn on the
plane. With lots of Olivia’s precious Lancome eyeshadow
in place and her hair shining after a quick blast from
Rosie’s hairdryer, Evie felt ready for anything.
However, any confidence she’d been injected with on
the trip from Malaga to Puerto Banus disappeared as if by
magic when she stepped into Ristorante Regina. The style,
glamour and effortless chic of the other female diners hit
her like a Force Nine hurricane. Tanned, beautifully made
up and looking as if they’d all just climbed out of Versace’s
window with a detour via Bulgari for jewellery, they made
her feel instantly out of place.
The men were just as bad, all elegant and exquisitely
dressed. Max blended in perfectly, handsome in grey
trousers and a cream polo shirt that showed off his golden
skin. Rosie looked glorious in a crimson mini dress, Cara
was bolshie as usual in black combats and the striking sea green shirt with her hair rippling down her back like a Pre-Raphaelite maiden, and Evie - well, Evie felt as drab as
a mallard’s wife in her dowdy brown dress. It had looked
OK in her bedroom; not marvellous, but not hideous
either.
Now, she wanted to rush into the nearest boutique,
throw her Visa card at the assistant and screech: ‘Find me
something suitable to wear! I don’t care about the cost’.’
And dump Cara’s dress in the nearest bin.
To make matters worse, their table wasn’t in some
gloomy corner where Evie could hide behind a potted
plant or at least blend into the background. No. Their party
was escorted to a table in the middle of the restaurant,
where all the other glamorous diners could watch them.
Feeling as if she had headlice and everyone could tell,
Evie slid into her seat and immediately pulled the peach
linen napkin on to her lap. She wished she could pull it
over her head so nobody could see her.
Max immediately sat beside her, smiling broadly. ‘You’ll
love this place,’ he said. ‘The food is exquisite and the
people who run it are so friendly.’
If she hadn’t been feeling so underdressed and out of place, Evie knew she would have loved it. The restaurant was so pretty, the walls a melange of peach and
terracotta, with flowers, flourishing plants, beautiful
glassware and sepia-toned movie-star photographs adding
to the effect. As it was, she hid behind her huge menu