The Wedding Surprise. Trish Wylie
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‘You worried about it?’
‘Oh, no. We tell massive porkies to each other all the time. It’s a sort of family hobby of ours.’
Mick laughed. ‘Mine too.’
She risked a massive insurance claim by glancing into the lens for a second, ‘I was kidding, Mick.’
‘Oh, me too.’
She laughed. ‘Seriously. My family is close. Really close.’ Her expression changed. ‘After Liam died they were there to hold me together. On the days when I couldn’t get up they brought me food in bed. When I couldn’t stay still my father even took up jogging to keep me company.’
Glancing back at the camera, she smiled sadly. ‘Where one of us ends the other begins. It’s just the way we are.’
‘That’s a rare thing, all right.’
‘Yes, it is.’
She wove her way through the traffic, her mind focussing on the task of not hitting another vehicle. But as they got out of the city and headed towards the suburbs her mind went back to a darker time than the sunny autumn day they were currently in.
‘Do you still miss him, Caitlin?’
The softly voiced question caught her off guard. It had been a long time since anyone had asked. She thought about it a while, played snapshots of memories across her mind, and smiled wistfully as she answered. ‘I miss the sound of his voice sometimes.’
The sound of the camera filled the silence.
‘You tend to think that someone the same age as you will just always be around. Especially when it’s someone you love.’ She continued smiling, eyes on the road ahead but her mind reliving he past. ‘Liam was always the one who lived for the moment. He used to say life was too short to just stand still.’
She glanced at the camera again. ‘Maybe he knew.’
She made the turn into her street and parked in front of her house. Switching off the engine, she glanced up at the windows. Was he looking out at her, Aiden Flynn man of mystery?
‘Aiden’s different from Liam?’
The question raised a small laugh. ‘Like night and day.’
‘Aiden?’
‘In the kitchen—and aren’t you supposed to yell “Hi, honey, I’m home”?’
She smiled as she walked through the living room to the open kitchen/dining room. ‘I’ll remember next time.’ Her eyes roved over the mess on her normally immaculate kitchen surfaces. ‘What are you doing?’
He quirked an eyebrow at the question. ‘I was hungry.’
‘So you thought it would be an idea to massacre my kitchen?’
‘It would have been perfect when you got home.’ He pointed an accusatory finger at her. ‘You’re early.’
She watched as he nodded at her crew.
‘I told them I had a headache.’
Concern crossed his eyes. ‘You’re sick?’
Caitlin’s eyes focussed on the spoon suspended in mid-air as he stared at her. In slow motion drips of red something dripped onto her cooker. ‘No.’
‘Getting quite good at this lying thing, aren’t we?’
‘I don’t think that actually counts as a lie.’ She continued watching the dripping. A small pool formed on the surface. Whatever it was, it had better wash off.
‘I guess it’s all about degrees of lying.’ He watched her face as he thought out loud. ‘What constitutes a big lie and what’s a fib.’
‘A fib, in theory, doesn’t hurt people. It may even save their feelings, depending on the situation.’ Her eyes searched for the nearest cloth. ‘What is that stuff you’re dripping all over the place?’
Aiden waved the spoon as he looked at it. ‘I’m making cheese on beans on toast.’
Her eyes moved up to lock with his. ‘You’re making what?’
‘Cheese on beans on toast.’ He grinned, white teeth peeking out from the shroud of his beard. ‘C’mon—you haven’t heard of it? And you call yourself a chef?’
‘I cook food that tastes good.’
‘This tastes good—’ He waved the spoon again and small splatters of red appeared on his white T-shirt. ‘Believe me.’
Frowning at the modern art piece her cooker was rapidly becoming, she retorted with, ‘I’m quite sure the air in my mouth tastes better than that.’
‘Well, I wouldn’t know that, would I? What with you refusing to kiss me and all…’
Caitlin refused to rise to the bait. ‘That had better get washed off before it becomes glue.’
Aiden glanced at the camera between them and winked, then studied the telltale flush that touched Caitlin’s cheeks. ‘You know you’re going to have to do it at some stage.’
‘You made the mess; you clean it.’
‘I wasn’t referring to the mess.’
‘I was.’ Her chin rose as she stared him straight in the eye.
Aiden stared right back. ‘It has to happen for all this to be convincing.’
An eyebrow quirked. ‘Next you’ll be suggesting we sleep together for the sake of realism. I didn’t sign up for that kind of a show.’
The male hormones in his body transmitted a very vivid mental image from her words, and Aiden frowned. Six months alone had made him a raging sex maniac all of a sudden?
‘Honey, you’d better watch that head of yours doesn’t get too large for the doorways in this place.’
‘I am not kissing you while that beard is there, so you can forget it!’
‘You’re prejudiced against beards for some reason?’
‘As a matter of fact, I am.’
‘Because…?’
He waited patiently for an explanation, filling the time by stirring the bubbling beans in the saucepan in front of him.
When there was no explanation volunteered he glanced at her from the corner of his eye. ‘Well?’
Caitlin was annoyed by how easily he made her angry. She was usually cool, calm and collected. Occupational necessities when restaurants were full and head chefs were yelling in hot kitchens. But Aiden could raise a spark in her from a glance, a single statement—from several spots of tomatoey sauce on