Authors: Cathy Kelly
man she’d thought she knew. No wonder she’d steered
clear of the male of the species for so many years,
preferring life as a single parent to the two-faced world of
dating. Simon had been the first man she’d Set close to
her. Max had been the second.
Well, one out of two wasn’t bad.
She swung her legs out of bed and sat down on the
balcony, her face bleak as she stared out at the sea and the
yachts dotting the shimmering blue horizon.
More than anything else in the world, she wanted Max
Stewart. She loved him with all her heart but he wasn’t
what he pretended to be. She wasn’t sure if he’d lied to
her or not, but he hadn’t told her the truth, that was for
sure. And the truth was so important to her. A wave of
guilt hit her as she remembered that she hadn’t told
Simon the truth.
Well, she would. From now on, she’d be the most
faithful, truthful wife ever and he’d never regret marrying
her. She’d make his life wonderful, be the perfect spouse,
go into Wife of the Year contests, anything to make things
the way they had been before.
The wedding was back on, she thought defiantly. And
Max Stewart could go hang! But not, she decided grimly,
before she saw what sort of women he really wanted to
spend the rest of his life with. She pulled the violet outfit
out of the wardrobe, broodingly aware that the infamous
Mia would be studying the opposition if she went to the
party. Well, Evie decided firmly, Ms Mia Koen wouldn’t
find her wanting.
‘How could you?’ Evie hissed, face proud and jewels
glittering in the firelight as she faced the dastardly Max. ‘How could you have another woman when you had my love?’
His swarthy face cruel and uncaring, Max advanced on
her, mouth set in a grim line. His eyes raked over her figure,
elegant in the amethyst ball gown, the corsets holding her tiny waist in to a slender eighteen inches. ‘Because I wanted you, I couldn’t help it. I admit it, she is to be my wife, but you and I can still be lovers. You want it, you know you do. You are the
most exciting woman I have ever known. Rut I must marry
her to save my family’s fortune.’
‘For your insolence, you deserve to die!’ hissed Evie, producing a tiny pearl-handled pistol from the folds of her silken
shawl. His cowardly face paled to the colour of his ruffled
shirt.
‘No!’ Mia ran in, heavily bleached hair piled up in a
ridiculous pompadour, wearing a vulgar, low-cut dress that
was a riot of gaudy colours, with paste jewels clustered heavily around her thick neck. ‘Don’t shoot!’
‘I must, he has dishonoured me,’ Evie said grimly, thinking
of the shame he could bring on her noble family.
‘No, Madame Evie,’ said a cool voice. I must shoot him for
dishonouring you.’ The Duke, elegance itself in his beautifully cut breeches, strode manfully into the room, his handsome face
making Max look overblown and coarse …
‘Mum,’ said Rosie, sticking her head round the door.
‘You missed a yummy lunch. I’m going to turn into a crab
if I eat any more of it. Are you coming down to the pool
for a last bit of sunbathing?’
Stretched out on her lounger, Evie turned the pages of her book listlessly and laughed as Cara and Rosie held races in the pool with Andrew doing the Olympic commentator
coverage:
And Cara Fraser has proved herself to be a champion swimmer today even though she stuffed her face with gambas pil pil at lunch,’ droned Andrew, in intense radio presenter style, ‘while Rosie Mitchell has just switched
styles into the … er, butterfly flop and is drowning everybody else around the pool.
‘Now, in a surprise move, ex-Olympic medallist Mrs
Vida Fraser is getting into the pool to show these youngsters
how it’s really done. Mrs Fraser, better known ;is
Esther Williams’s sidekick, has great hip movement …’
Andrew stopped when Vida and Cara managed to hit him
with the inflatable plastic whale Rosie had bought to
lounge on.
Despite all the high-jinks going on around her, Evie’s
misery never lifted. She kept her nose buried in her book
but didn’t manage to read a word all afternoon. Max was
out until six, when he walked down to the pool and threw
himself on to the lounger between Cara and Evie.
Instantly, Evie got up and collected up her things. ‘Well,
I’m going to get ready to go out. We’re leaving at … eight,
is it? I’ll meet you all at the car then.’ She ran upstairs and locked her bedroom door, just in case he tried to follow
her.
By ten to eight she was dressed in the violet ensemble,
which was, she realised glumly, the most beautiful outfit
she’d ever owned in her life. Her bare legs were golden
thanks to some of Rosie’s fake tan, so that when the
skirt’s thigh-high side split parted revealingly, at least she
wasn’t displaying acres of white flesh. The off-the
shoulder cut to the clingy little top meant you couldn’t
really wear a bra unless it was strapless and, lacking one,
Evie decided to go braless.
Tough titty, indeed, Mr Stewart, she thought mirthlessly,
dusting her shoulders with bronzing powder and noticing
that the outline of her nipples was ever so slightly visible
when the top was pulled close down around her body.
Once she’d pulled Vida’s heated rollers from her head, her
hair sat in perfect glossy curls.
It was as if she’d been given a make-over from Heaven,
only tonight the man she’d wanted to look beautiful for
wouldn’t give a damn. He’d have eyes only for his bloody
actress girlfriend.
Grabbing her handbag, she stomped downstairs and
joined Andrew and Vida on the verandah, completely
ignoring Max and the look of admiration on his face when
he clocked her in the clinging violet.
If Max thought it was strange that the woman who’d
writhed under him in ecstasy the night before was barely
giving him the time of day now, he never got a moment to
say so.
Evie sat in the back of the car with Vida after waving
goodbye to Rosie and Cara, who were planning their own
girls’ night out, a night that involved Rosie borrowing half
a ton of Olivia’s eyeshadow and a lot of Evie’s Poeme
perfume.
Andrew, Vida and Max chatted idly as Max drove out
the coast road.
‘Wait till you see this place,’ Max said. ‘Franz is obsessed
with Westerns and says he fell in love with the ranch
because it’s half Spanish villa and half like something from The High Chapparal. When he took me there the other day, I almost expected him to strap on a couple of six guns
and a stetson when we got home so we could round up
some steers. He’s a decent bloke, very sweet most of the
time, but on set he’s incredibly demanding.’
The car swung off the main road and headed into craggy
mountains, rose pink in the setting sun. ‘When we were
making the Strauss biopic, we finished shooting early, which never happens.’
How thrilling, Evie fumed silently. Was that before or
after your affair with nympho Mia?
They drove through the mountains for another half hour
before taking a side road oft into a dusty landscape. They
passed a small village and then, to the right, perched
perilously on a hill, saw a sprawling villa, gleaming white in
the evening with lots of stables and outhouses extending
behind it and tubs of blossoming flowers to the front.
Various cars were parked haphazardly on the drive, one
a stretch limo so long Evie imagined you could play tennis
in it. Mia’s car, she figured, feeling her stomach knot with
tension. Half-expecting a group of show business harpies
who all bitched relentlessly and looked like extras from a
rock video, Evie was surprised when the huge wooden
door opened and Franz appeared. Their host was a short
bald man with an enormous belly and a friendly, welcoming
smile. After kissing Vida and Evie as if they were old
friends, he ushered everyone into a house decorated in
typical Spanish style and yelled, over a background of
opera, for Luisa, his wife.
‘The others are here and there,’ he explained, shouting
over the noise, ‘but they wake up when the champagne
corks go bang!’
Luisa was grey-haired, motherly, and wearing an apron
over a very sedate flower print dress. ‘I’m cooking paella and everybody keeps stealing nibbles,’ she groaned, waving a giant spoon. ‘Come on, come on.’
The party was in full swing in a large room with a
balcony off it, although Evie reckoned by the state of some
of the guests that they were still partying from the
lunchtime session. They all looked very ordinary, no rock
star types or movie moguls waving cigars and Rolexes
around: just happy people red-faced from the sun, some
still in Tshirts and shorts, others more formally dressed in
summer dresses or polo shirts and casual trousers. Evie felt
as overdressed as a strippergram in an Eskimo suit.
Max was immediately swallowed up by the crowd,
delighted to see him and shouting ‘Max, over here!’ in a
variety of languages. Nobody was glamorous or desperately
exciting. Instead, they all looked like Evie had after
her first few days in Spain: tired but utterly thrilled to be
away from work and in a place where the sun shone
every day.
She soon found herself chatting to Franz’s favourite
cameraman, Lippo, who was supposed to be going home
the next day but had decided that he and his makeup
artist wife weren’t going back for another couple of days
because they were too worn out after a four-month
production on location in the Black Forest. ‘He works
non-stop,’ shrugged Lippo’s wife, Helene, before getting off
the couch to phone home and tell their teenage twin sons
the news that they’d return on Wednesday.
They’re nineteen and I’m afraid the house will be
wrecked by their partying when we get back home,’ Lippo
confessed mournfully.
‘I know the feeling,’ Evie said. ‘My daughter’s seventeen
but she’s with us on holiday. She’s out for the evening.’
Evie accepted a glass of water from Franz, despite his
attempts to get her to take alcohol. After her Martini
debacle, she was determined to remain as sober as a judge.
‘I worry myself sick about her but I think she’ll be all right
tonight. She’s with my sister who’s nine years older than
her and should be in charge, though when they’re together,
it’s like having two teenagers.’
The twins don’t sound too upset,’ remarked Helene
arriving back with a bowl of olives. The vacuum is broken
apparently, and I ask how they know because they never
use it!’
Marvellous paella smells coming from the balcony proclaimed
that Luisa’s dinner was finally ready.
‘We’re eating outside because the dining-room table
disappear when we move,’ Franz announced, leading
everyone out to the enormous balcony where places were
laid on two vast wrought-iron tables. Sitting with Lippo
and Helene, chatting and laughing and eating enormous
black olives, Evie began to relax and stopped worrying
about whether she was overdressed or not.
Max was chatting to Franz about work the whole time
and kept shooting her almost pleading glances, as if to say,
What have I done wrong?
Evie was on the verge of smiling back to say, Nothing, I
was just fretting about something that happened a long
time ago, when something caught Max’s eye. Or someone.
The chattering and laughing continued unabated as
Evie followed Max’s gaze and saw a woman slip quietly
into the room from the balcony and pick up a packet of
Marlboros from a coffee table. Her lustrous chestnut hair
was tied up in a casual knot and her heart-shaped face
dominated by the most perfect mouth Evie had ever seen
outside a lipstick commercial. Slanting, cat-like dark eyes
were ringed with thick dark Sashes and practically no
other make-up. Lighting up, she put the cigarette between
her perfect lips and inhaled deeply, with the finesse of a
young Bardot.
Mia wasn’t movie-star tall, the way Evie had imagined
her to be. In fact, she was petite and so delicately slim as to make every other woman in the room look like a 2,000passenger
cruise liner beside a sleek racing yacht built for
two. A minuscule white T-shirt stretched across her tiny
frame had ‘I’m Purr-feet’ written on it and she’d tied a
white sarong around her bronzed waist as if she’d only just
got out of bed and had flung on the first thing to hand in
order to cover herself. But Evie reckoned Mia would have
no problem sashaying around clad just in a bikini no
matter what time of the day or night it was. She looked
stunning and, from the way she gazed around the room in
predatory silence, she knew it. Evie loathed her on sight.
She glanced quickly towards Max, watched his Adam’s
apple contract as he gulped at the sight of Mia, and felt as
if she’d been punched in the stomach. Nobody could
remain unmoved by somebody as beautiful as that. And
Max almost certainly was moved. His gaze flickered back