Authors: Cathy Kelly
of those painted women.’
Ecstatic with pleasure, she slid her arm around his waist,
marvelling at his words. He preferred her to the other
glammed-up women in their designer clothes and designer
hairdos, he really did. And she believed him. She didn’t
bother sucking in her stomach so her waist would feel
skinnier. She didn’t need any of that pretence with Max.
As they arrived in picturesque Orange Square, the sun
was filtering through the fruit trees, gilding some of the
tables under the trees with sunlight, leaving others in
blissful shade. Max and Evie sat in the shade with glasses of
cool white wine and gorged themselves on mussels with
soft bread to soak up the juices.
‘I feel a bit guilty for leaving Rosie on her own,’ Evie
confessed. ‘I probably should be with her today. This
holiday is so special for her.’
‘Your first grownup holiday is always special,’ Max
remarked, ‘and it’s obvious how close you two are. But she’d
probably kill for the opportunity to swank around on her
own, without anyone apart from Cara, I imagine. Cara looks
enough like her sister for the pair of them to be a couple of
Club 1 8-30 girls, completely devoid of parental guidance, on
the lookout for talent. I daresay that would be Rosie’s dream.’
Evie thought about what he’d said. He was right, she
admitted grudgingly. Rosie would love to be able to
socialise without her mother and grandfather. It was just
difficult to let her daughter go.
‘It’s not easy,’ she explained. ‘I want her to be independent,
to be her own woman. That’s what I taught her. But …’
‘… letting go isn’t easy,’ Max said softly. ‘I guess there’s a happy medium. We should let Cara take her out one
evening, just to see how it goes. And I’ll take you.’
‘They’ll talk about us,’ Evie warned.
‘No, they won’t.’ Max stroked her cheek lovingly. ‘I’ll tell
Mother and Andrew to go for a romantic evening by
themselves and then we’ll slope off on our own for our romantic evening.’
‘It’s a deal!’
They were both silent as they drove along the road from
Marbella to Puerto Banus. To keep her mind off the truly
important matter, Evie was thinking that she hadn’t actually
bought anything, despite telling her father they’d been
shopping. Hopefully, nobody would notice. Nobody
appeared to. In the villa, everyone was slumped around the
television watching an old Chevy Chase video.
‘Cara insisted on getting it out of the video shop,’ said
Rosie by way of explanation as her mother sat down beside
her.
‘Shush!’ hissed Cara.
‘You must be feeling better,’ Rosie whispered to Evie.
‘You look great. I thought you’d still be in bed when we
got back.’
‘I slept a bit and then Max offered to take me for a drive
this afternoon when you lot weren’t back,’ Evie said. ‘I was
a bit bored without you.’
‘You were bored!’ giggled Rosie. ‘Try spending four hours
in the car with Grandpops and Vida alternating between
squabbling over the map, and then kissing and making up.
If Grandpops said “you should never let the sun set on
your anger” one more time, I’d have got out of the car and
hitchhiked. I thought we’d never get home!’
‘It is one of his favourite expressions,’ her mother
answered- ‘Although I think his ail-time favourite is “Oh,
Evie, you do fuss over me”!’ They both got a fit of the
giggles this time.
A fierce glare from Cara, who’d had a huge crush on
Chevy Chase in her teens, silenced them.
While everyone else enjoyed the movie, Evie sat quietly,
eyes on the screen but her mind a million miles away. Max
rarely spoke to her the rest of the evening, he was as coolly
formal as he’d been the day before. Polite but distant.
Well, she thought, he understood that she didn’t want
anybody else to know about their new relationship. But his
distant demeanour after their wonderful day made her feel
subdued, as if she’d imagined it.
It was only when she was going to bed that he got a
chance to speak to her privately. She’d gone into the
kitchen to get some water when Max pulled her gently on
to the verandah where they couldn’t be seen.
‘I’ve wanted to do this all evening,’ he said, his eyes
warm. ‘I’ve been going mad pretending nothing’s going on
when I want to sit beside you and hold your hand like
some besotted lover’
Relief washed over her.
‘You were barely looking at me,’ she said, insecurity
making her painfully honest. ‘I wasn’t sure what to think.’
‘Evie,’ he said, taking her face in his hands and gazing
adoringly at her, ‘I’m doing that for you. I’m free, I’m here
for you, but you’re engaged to be married and it’s up to
you to decide what to tell your family and when to tell
them. I don’t have the right to do that and,’ he grinned, ‘I daresay you’d murder me if I did.’
She nodded ruefully. ‘You’re right, it’s just that I thought
I’d imagined it all, that you hadn’t really spent this
wonderful day with me …’ She stared gloomily at her
feet, pink-painted toes peeking out of the cork sandals.
‘This,’ he whispered, lifting her face up, ‘is what I’ve
wanted to do all day.’
His mouth came down on hers, softly at first, lips gently
brushing against hers. Then his kiss deepened, his mouth
crushed hers and they clung together, tongues entwining
joyfully, clutching each other’s bodies as if their lives
depended on it.
For the first time, Evie felt herself melt into a kiss; she
gave herself completely up to Max and felt him give
himself to her. Perfect, sexy, delicious. Her legs felt weak at the strength of the body crushed against hers.
His mouth and hers melted together and she knew she
wanted more from him; she wanted to feel his body naked
against hers, spend hours getting to know every rib, every
silken inch of skin, every sinew …
‘Mom, are you out here?’
Jumping apart as if they’d been scalded, Evie threw
herself on to a lounger and Max rushed over to the
verandah wall. He was sitting, idly staring out at the pool,
when Rosie poked her head round the door.
‘Oh, hi. I thought you’d gone to bed,’ she said.
‘Really?’ Evie replied calmly. ‘I just thought I’d cool off
before going upstairs. Max had the same idea.’
‘No, I doubt if these flowers would grow in Ireland,’ he
said, as if he’d been interrupted discussing the Andalucian
flora at great length, instead of having his tongue down
Evie’s throat and his hands roaming seductively under her
T-shirt. ‘What sort of soil do you have in your garden,
Evie?’
She stifled an urge to snigger and replied: ‘Acidic. Great for rhododendrons.’
‘Honestly!’ Sighing with exasperation, Rosie hauled herself
on to the verandah wall, stretching out her long,
fake-tanned legs and admiring the leather mules she’d
bought in the mountains that afternoon after some thoroughly
satisfying bargaining. ‘Here we are in the most
romantic spot in the world and we’re all drearily stuck at
home instead of being out in some great club sampling the
real Spanish nightlife, with you lot talking about flowers!’
She snorted with frustration. ‘I hope we’re not going to be
doing this every night. I want to have some fun!’
Evie didn’t dare look at Max or she’d have broken into
hysterical laughter.
‘You and Cara should go out together some night,’ she
said. ‘On your own.’
‘Really?’ The surprise on Rosie’s sun-kissed face was
palpable. Bouncing over to her mother, Rosie hugged her
fervently. ‘You won’t regret it, Mum. I’ll be ever so well
behaved. I just need to get out, you know what I mean.’
‘I know,’ Evie said gravely. ‘Just be careful, that’s all.’
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
It was three o’clock, when all native Iberians were resting
and the sun was very hot. Evie knew she’d have to get into
the pool soon to cool down or risk turning lobster red, in
spite of all the sun protection cream she’d been assiduously
rubbing into herself.
‘Evie, is there any left in that bottle?’ asked Cara lazily
from her position on the lounger on the other side of
Rosie’s.
Without upsetting either her perfectly positioned sun
hat or the book balanced on her knees, Evie delicately
lobbed the blue plastic bottle of factor twelve over to her
sister. The bottle fell short and landed between them on
Rosie’s flat stomach, which was turning a coffee colour
after five days of intensive tanning.
‘Ouch!’ she yelped, waking up. ‘What do you want this
much protection for?’ she demanded, squinting at the
bottle. ‘I’m using factor four,’ she added with the pride of
the young and unwrinkled.
This time Evie did dislodge her hat and book as she sat up
in shock.’ Factor four!’ she gasped. ‘You’ll get skin cancer, you stupid girl. Put something stronger on immediately.’
‘Oh, Mom,’ groaned Rosie, lying down again. ‘Stop
panicking. I’m darker skinned than you. Like Max. He just
has to sit out for five minutes and he’s black.’
Evie was momentarily distracted by the thought of Max.
The only time she’d seen him sunbathe had been for an
hour the day before, his oiled body disturbing in its
half-naked glory. Compared to Simon, whose body was
angular and a little thin, Max was like an athlete: strong,
wide shoulders tapering down to a lean waist, and long,
muscular legs.
‘Where’d you get that scar?’ Rosie had asked, spotting a
jagged raised weal that ran from his left thigh down to just
above his ankle. Evie had wanted to ask but didn’t dare.
‘Mountaineering,’ he said, rubbing the scar idly. ‘It’s too
dangerous for me these days, I wrecked my knee and can’t
put that sort of pressure on it anymore. I’m supposed to
rest it a lot, although I still can’t cope with the idea of
lounging around all day resting, even in the sun,’ he joked.
He liked to sit on the verandah reading scripts and
drinking strong Spanish coffee, letting the sun tan him
naturally instead of baking himself beside a tan-obsessed
Rosie. Max preferred driving Evie around the coast to lying
in the sun.
Two days ago, they’d driven into the mountains to
Ronda, where the others had been the first day. They
hadn’t dared stay out for dinner this time and had come
home by four, to find everyone else splayed out by the
pool soaking up the sun. Yesterday, they’d left separately
for a walk and had met at the bottom of the hill near the
bull ring, spending several hours meandering along the
port and having coffee, talking as if they’d only just
discovered how to and were desperate to practise.
‘Your legs must be worn out,’ Andrew had commented
when Evie arrived back at the villa, purposely alone, with
Max killing time until he could waltz in.
‘I love to walk,’ she’d said breezily. ‘Did I tell you I’m
going in for the mini-marathon?’ she lied.
Today, Max had left the villa early to meet a friend who
lived locally and still hadn’t come back. Vida and Andrew
were having a siesta, or ‘bonk-esta’ as Rosie giggled when
the pair of them had sloped off to their room at half-two.
There was just Cara, Rosie and Evie by the pool,
luxuriating in the silence and the sun. And Rosie had no
intention of moving just when she’d got herself into the
most comfortable position possible, not even to fling the
sun lotion over to her aunt. ‘Come and get it,’ she said
sleepily.
‘You lazy thing,’ Cara muttered. She clambered off her
lounger and walked delicately on the hot terracotta tiles
towards Rosie.
‘She’s not actually burning,’ Cara reported back to Evie,
standing over her niece’s brown body which was just about
decently covered in a tiny pink gingham bikini.
‘See, Mum, I’m fine,’ muttered Rosie, eyes closed as she
lay in sybaritic bliss, adoring the sensation of the heat on
her flesh.
‘Maybe I’ll cool her down a little bit, though,’ added
Cara wickedly. Scooping up water from the pool, she
sprinkled it all over Rosie’s belly.
‘Ouch, you bitch!’ shrieked Rosie, leaping to her feet.
‘I’ll get you …’ The pair of them danced around in their
bare feet, flicking icy water from the pool at each other,
laughing and squealing as the drops hit their heated skin.
Evie grinned and retreated back to her book. She felt
utterly, gloriously happy. Lounging by this azure pool, the
people she loved most in the world with her and clear
blue skies over her head, she couldn’t ask for anything
more. Well … she could but you couldn’t have everything
in life, could you? She wanted Max. He’d never be
hers, but for these few wonderful days she could imagine
he was.
When they got too hot, the three girls pulled on clothes
over their bikinis, slipped on espadrilles, and wandered
down the road to the supermarket where they bought
mineral water and some of the juicy watermelon Rosie