The Rinucci Brothers: Wife and Mother Forever / Her Italian Boss's Agenda / The Wedding Arrangement. Lucy Gordon

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The Rinucci Brothers: Wife and Mother Forever / Her Italian Boss's Agenda / The Wedding Arrangement - Lucy  Gordon

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Evie sighed with profound gratitude.

      ‘I’m not sure that’s something you should rejoice about.’

      ‘It is from where I’m standing,’ Evie assured her.

      ‘Anyway, the point is that you just up and go when the mood suits you. I suppose that might be nice.’

      ‘It is nice,’ Evie said with a happy sigh. ‘But as for no mortgage—what I pay on that motorbike is practically a mortgage.’

      ‘Yes, but that was your choice. Nobody made you. I bet nobody’s ever made you do anything in your life.’

      Evie gave a chuckle. ‘Some have tried. Not with much success, and never a second time, but they’ve tried.’

      ‘Alec, David, Martin—’ Debra recited.

      ‘Who were they?’ Evie asked innocently.

      ‘Shame on you! How unkind to forget your lovers so soon!’

      ‘They weren’t lovers, they were jailers. They tried to trick me up the aisle, or soft soap me up the aisle, or haul me up the aisle. One of them even dared to set the date and tell me after.’

      ‘Well, you made him regret it. The poor man was desperate because you’d kept him wondering long enough.’

      ‘I didn’t keep him wondering. I was trying to let him down gently. It just turned out to be a long way down. I never even wanted him to fall in love with me. I thought we were simply having a good time.’

      ‘Is that what you’re doing with Andrew?’ Debra asked mischievously.

      ‘I’m very fond of Andrew,’ Evie said, looking up into the sky. ‘He’s nice.’

      ‘I thought maybe you were in love with him.’

      ‘I am—I think—sort of—maybe.’

      ‘Any other woman would think he was a catch—good job, sweet nature, sense of humour. Plus you’re in love with him, sort of, maybe.’

      ‘But he’s an accountant.’ Evie sighed. ‘Figures, books, tax returns—’

      ‘That’s not a crime.’

      ‘He believes in the proper way of doing things,’ Evie said in a tone of deepest gloom.

      ‘You mean about—everything?’

      Evie gave her a speaking look.

      ‘One day,’ Debra said, exasperated, ‘I hope you’ll fall hook, line and sinker for a man you can’t have.’

      ‘Why?’ Evie asked, honestly baffled.

      ‘It’ll be a new experience for you.’

      Evie chuckled. It was the happy, confident laugh of someone who had life ‘sussed’. She had her job, translating books from French and Italian into English. She was free to travel and did so, often. She had all the male company she wanted, and female company too for, unlike many women who attracted love easily, she also had a gift for friendship with her own sex.

      It wasn’t immediately clear why people were drawn to her. Her face was charming but not outstandingly beautiful. Her nose tilted a little too much and her eyebrows were rather too heavy, adding a touch of drama to her otherwise perky features.

      Perhaps it was something in the richness of her laugh, the way her face could light up as though the sun had risen, her air of having discovered a secret that she would gladly share with anyone who would laugh with her.

      ‘Time I was going,’ she said now. ‘Sorry I couldn’t help you, Deb.’

      They strolled to the car park, where Debra got into her sedate saloon and Evie hopped on to her gleaming motorbike, settling the helmet on her head. A wave of her hand, and she was away.

      She enjoyed riding through this pleasant suburb of outer London. Speed was fun, but dawdling through leafy roads was also fun.

      Then she saw Mark Dane.

      She recognised him from behind. It wasn’t just the dark brown hair with the hint of russet. It was the fact that he was walking with his head down in a kind of dispirited slouch that, she now realised, she’d seen often before.

      Mark had a bright, quick intelligence that pleased her. In class he was often the first to answer, the words tumbling over each other, sometimes at the expense of accuracy.

      ‘Take it a bit slower and get it right,’ she often told him, although she was pleased by his eagerness.

      But out of class he seemed to collapse back into himself, often becoming surly.

      No, she thought now. Unhappy.

      She slowed down and tooted her horn. The boy turned swiftly, glaring, but then smiling as he recognised the goggled, helmeted figure pulling up beside him.

      ‘’lo, Miss Wharton.’

      She uncovered her head. ‘Hallo, Mark. Had a busy day?’

      ‘Yes, I’ve been—’ He stopped, reading the irony in her eyes and gave up. ‘I didn’t exactly come to school.’

      ‘What did you do—exactly?’

      He shrugged, implying that he neither remembered nor cared.

      ‘It’s not the first time you’ve played truant,’ she said, trying not to sound like a nag.

      Again the shrug.

      ‘Where do you live?’

      ‘Hanfield Avenue.’

      ‘You’ve wandered quite a way. How are you going to get home?’

      Shrug.

      ‘Wanna lift?’ She indicated the bike.

      He beamed. ‘Really?’

      ‘As long as you wear this,’ she said, removing her helmet.

      He donned it eagerly and she checked that it was secure.

      ‘But now you don’t have a helmet,’ he said.

      ‘That’s why I’m going to go very slowly and carefully. Now, get up behind and hold on to me tightly.’

      When she felt him grip her she eased away from the kerb. It took half an hour to reach his home, which was in a prosperous, tree-lined street, full of detached houses that exuded wealth. She swung through the gates and up the drive to the front door, mentally preparing what she would say to Mark’s parents, who would be home by now, and worried.

      But the woman who opened the door looked too old to be his mother. Her eyes were like saucers as she saw his mode of transport.

      ‘What on earth—?’

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