Forbidden Surrender. Carole Mortimer

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okay, Sara,’ he cut in dryly, ‘I realise I’m not the sort of man you usually go out with.’

      She blushed at his intended rebuke. ‘I didn’t mean that.’

      ‘But it’s true, isn’t it? You were like a child tonight, enjoyed each new experience with eagerness. Uncle Arthur told me you were a rich kid, in the executive bracket.’

      Sara bit her lip, knowing she had hurt him. ‘I did enjoy tonight, and I—I’m sorry if I embarrassed you with my enthusiasm. I didn’t mean to.’

      Eddie sighed. ‘You didn’t. You were a success, you know you were. Maybe that’s why I’m so annoyed—I was jealous of half the men there tonight.’

      Sara relaxed somewhat, back on territory she could handle. ‘You had no need to be. I always remember who took me on my date, and I always make a point of leaving with that person.’

      ‘So it’s still on for tomorrow, if Aunt Susan and Uncle Arthur don’t have any other plans for you? And this time I’ll take you somewhere I can have you all to myself.’

      She wasn’t so sure his single-minded interest was a good thing. She would be going back to the States soon, two or three weeks at the most, and it wouldn’t do for Eddie to become involved with her, not deeply involved. When she got back home she intended concentrating exclusively on her career, there would be no time for romantic involvement.

      ‘Sara?’ Eddie prompted.

      ‘I—er—What did you have in mind?’

      He shrugged. ‘A meal and then on to a club?’

      ‘It sounds lovely,’ she accepted, deciding she could deal with Eddie’s interest in her if and when it started to become serious. She liked him, he was fun, and there could be no harm in them going out together. ‘What time shall I be ready?’

      ‘Oh, about eight.’ He stopped the car outside the house.

      ‘Like to come in for coffee?’ she invited.

      ‘Not tonight, thanks. If I know Aunt Susan and Uncle Arthur they’ll have gone to bed long ago, and I wouldn’t want to disturb them. You’d better ask them for a door key for tomorrow, we could be late.’

      ‘Not too late, I hope,’ Sara frowned. ‘I need my beauty sleep,’ she added lightly.

      ‘I hadn’t noticed,’ he teased.

      She smiled. ‘I really don’t want to be too late. I—I don’t keep late hours any more.’ Since leaving the hospital she had taken life at a slow pace, retiring early and rising late.

      ‘Okay,’ Eddie sighed. ‘I’ll have you home by midnight—Cinderella. But I should still ask for a key, they’re usually in bed by ten.’

      She knew that, and for the last two nights she had done the same thing. ‘I’ll ask,’ she promised. ‘And thanks once again for tonight, I had a great time.’

      ‘Enough of a great time to kiss me goodnight?’

      She leant forward and kissed him lightly on the mouth. ‘Goodnight,’ she called before hurrying into the house.

      They had both been wrong; their aunt and uncle weren’t in bed at all, they were still in the lounge.

      ‘But it’s still worrying,’ Aunt Susan could be heard insisting.

      ‘You’re worrying over nothing,’ her husband chided her. ‘Just forget about it, it didn’t mean a thing.’

      ‘But, Arthur——’

      ‘Susan!’ he said sternly. ‘I think I just heard Sara come in, so let’s just drop the subject.’

      Sara shrugged to herself, coughing to let them know of her presence. Her mother and stepfather often had minor arguments, but they usually passed within a day or so, and she felt sure things were no different between her aunt and uncle, the middle-aged couple seemed very happy together.

      ‘Did you have a nice time, dear?’ her aunt asked as she came into the room.

      ‘Lovely,’ she nodded agreement.

      ‘Going out with him again?’ Uncle Arthur eyed her over the top of his horn-rimmed glasses.

      Sara blushed. ‘Tomorrow.’

      ‘Hear that, Susan?’ he turned to his wife. ‘Before you know it we’ll have a wedding on our hands.’

      ‘Arthur!’ she warned.

      ‘I’m not getting married for years yet, Uncle Arthur,’ Sara told him hastily. ‘I’m only twenty, almost twenty-one.’

      ‘Susan and I had already been married two years by that time.’

      ‘It was different when we were young, Arthur,’ his wife chided. ‘There’s so much for young people to do nowadays, places to see, that they don’t want to tie themselves down to marriage too young.’

      He raised his eyebrows, his eyes twinkling with mischief. ‘After all these years she finally tells me she married me out of boredom!’ He winked at Sara.

      ‘Go on with you!’ his wife scorned. ‘Where’s Eddie taking you tomorrow?’ she turned to ask Sara.

      ‘Out to dinner and then on to a club, he said.’ Her aunt and uncle’s interest in her evening out was nothing unusual to Sara, her mother had always been interested in such things too, and it was in fact quite like home sitting and chatting like this after an enjoyable evening out.

      ‘Better than a trip to a pub,’ Uncle Arthur teased.

      ‘I liked the pub.’ Sara had been quite disappointed that Eddie had decided not to take her back there.

      Aunt Susan stood up, putting down her knitting. ‘Well, I’m for bed. Arthur?’

      ‘I am too.’ He stood up, stretching. ‘It’s nice having you with us, love,’ he told Sara huskily.

      She moved to hug him, tears in her eyes. ‘It’s nice to be here. I wish now I’d come sooner, instead of waiting until——’ she broke off, stricken.

      Her uncle patted her shoulder awkwardly. ‘It’s all right, Sara. We’re your family now, for as long as you want us.’

      ‘Thank you.’ She kissed them both on the cheek before hurrying to her room.

      The tears flowed readily once she closed her bedroom door; the loss of her parents was still a raw wound. Without Aunt Susan and Uncle Arthur’s support the last few days she didn’t know what she would have done; some of the moods of depression she had suffered in the States had been very black indeed.

      After an exhaustive perusal of most of the museums the next day Sara didn’t feel up to going anywhere that evening. But she had told Eddie she would go out with him and she couldn’t let him down. If they were dining out he had probably had to book a table.

      ‘Oh,

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