Two Against the Odds. Joan Kilby

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Two Against the Odds - Joan Kilby Mills & Boon Cherish

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To grow.”

      “That’s…logical.”

      With difficulty, Rafe dragged his eyes back to the envelope. Opening it, he pulled out a handful of loose pieces of paper. “You must spend a lot on art supplies.”

      “They’re not all from buying art supplies. I’m never sure what’s allowable and what isn’t, so just to be on the safe side, I keep every receipt I get.”

      “O-kay. Every receipt?” he echoed faintly, feeling a sharp twinge in his stomach. He put the envelope down and opened his briefcase. He found that if he avoided looking at her, it was easier to concentrate.

      “I’ll go through them with you,” Lexie said. “But first, I’ve got to take a load of stuff to the thrift store. I’ve got to declutter. I can’t think.”

      “I’ll help,” Hetty volunteered, returning from the kitchen.

      “Thanks, Mum.” Lexie abandoned the receipts, grabbed her purse from the table and headed for the front door. She yelled over her shoulder, “I’ll be back.”

      Hetty took a seat at the table and gazed expectantly at Rafe. “What would you like me to do?”

      Rafe scanned the slips of paper in his hand and shook his head. Lexie had put receipts from different years in the same envelope. “You could start sorting these by year.”

      Murphy was doing the rounds of the living room, sniffing at every chair. Yin watched him through slitted green eyes from the arm of the couch. “Murphy, here.” The dog trotted over and lay at his feet under the table.

      Hetty started separating the receipts into piles. “I don’t mind telling you the family has been worried about Lexie’s finances. Ever since she quit teaching to paint full-time she’s had trouble making ends meet. But she refuses to accept help. She says she made the decision to be an artist, and she’s willing to live with the consequences. It’s nice of you to come to her house and do this for her.”

      “It’s my job.” He wondered if he should mention that Lexie would likely cop a fine. He felt bad about that—

      Not his problem. Feeling sorry for the taxpayer was how he’d gotten into trouble over his last audit.

      He heard Lexie return for another box. A moment later he heard her car start.

      Rafe called up the spreadsheet onto the screen. He pulled a calculator out of his briefcase and began entering numbers. When he’d done all he could, he reached for an envelope and began sorting. There were receipts for the hairdresser (not deductible), art gallery entry (deductible), a car battery (debatable)—

      “Do you live locally?” Hetty asked.

      “Sassafras, up in the Dandenongs. But I’m booked into a bed and breakfast just down the road.”

      “Myrna Bailey’s, right?” She waited for him to nod then went on, “Do you have family?”

      Rafe suppressed a sigh. What was it about middle-aged women that they had to know everything about a person? That they couldn’t sit at the same table without making conversation. “My parents live in Western Victoria, in Horsham. I have a sister in Brisbane.”

      “Do your parents farm?”

      It was a natural enough question given the location but he hated answering it. His parents, Darryl and Ellen, had moved to the country years ago, after Darryl’s accident, because it was cheaper than the city. Rafe always wanted to explain that although his father was in a wheelchair, there’d been a time when he’d had bigger dreams.

      “No, my father has a home-based business repairing clocks and watches.” He should go see them. It had been months since he’d last been out there.

      Rafe continued sifting through Lexie’s receipts. He came across an application form for an artist’s society. He noted down the amount of annual dues and saw she’d filled in her birth date.

      Before he could censor himself, he blurted, “Is Lexie really thirty-eight years old?”

      “Yes,” Hetty said. “It was her birthday last month.”

      Twelve years older than him. He’d figured she was older but not by that much.

      “She looks a lot younger.”

      “It’s the yoga and the meditation,” Hetty said. “Plus she has a naturally serene disposition. Nothing bothers her.”

      “The portrait she’s painting is bothering her.”

      “Well, yes,” Hetty conceded.

      Rafe sat back in his chair, still staring at the year Lexie was born. She could have easily passed for thirty. If that was the result of meditation and yoga maybe he ought to take it up. Or not.

      Twelve years.

      He added the art society annual dues to the column. Afternoon sun shone through the crystals hanging from the window frame, making rainbows on his page of numbers. There seemed to be crystals everywhere in the house. He’d noticed them in the kitchen, too. From below the table, Murphy snored.

      “Do you have a wife or girlfriend?” Hetty asked.

      Rafe stifled another sigh. “Never married. No girlfriend at present.”

      “You’re young yet,” she said comfortably. “There’s plenty of time to marry and have children.”

      The other thing about middle-aged women was, they wanted to marry a guy off and tie him down with kids before he’d had a chance to enjoy life. What was up with that?

      He stabbed at the keypad on his calculator. “How are you doing with the sorting?”

      “Don’t you like kids?”

      “I beg your pardon?”

      “I said, you have plenty of time to marry and have kids,” Hetty recapped patiently, as she dealt out receipts like playing cards at a bridge game. “You didn’t reply. So then I asked, don’t you like children?”

      How did she get child-hater from silence? There’d been nothing to say in response to her statement so he hadn’t bothered with meaningless chatter. “Kids are fine, I guess. As long as they’re other people’s.”

      Tamsin, his ex-girlfriend, had made him gun-shy. They’d been together nearly a year when she’d gotten clucky. Then he’d discovered she’d “accidentally” forgotten to take her birth control pills and the huge fight that ensued had killed their relationship. Fortunately, she hadn’t got pregnant.

      Feeling Hetty’s gaze on him, he could sense the questions forming in her mind. “I’ve got plans, okay? I’m not ready to get married or have children. Maybe in ten years I’ll think about it. But first I want to start my own fishing charter business.”

      “That’s interesting,” she said, leaning forward, chin on her palm. “When are you going to do that?”

      “Next year, if all goes well.” Then he pointedly began entering numbers

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