Her Secret Affair. Arlene James
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“Mom, I have just as much family as you do,” Chey pointed out.
“But you don’t have anyone of your own,” Louise said gently.
“You should talk. Daddy’s been gone for twenty years, and in all that time, you’ve never even looked at another man.”
“When you’ve had the best—” Louise began a familiar litany.
“I know that you loved him,” Chey interrupted, “and it just proves my point. That kind of love is very rare.”
“All your brothers and sisters are happily married,” Louise pointed out, “and here you are, thirty years old without even a steady boyfriend. A woman as pretty and bright as you ought to have a husband.”
“Mother, please, not now,” Chey pleaded impatiently.
Georges appeared just then, a sheet of paper in his hand. “Sugar, would you look at this invoice? I can’t make heads or tails of it, I swear.”
Louise subsided immediately, grasped the handle of her purse with both hands and looked down. “You have work to do,” she said softly, rising to her feet. “What shall I tell Kay and Sylvester, dear?”
Chey managed a smile. “Tell them I’ll be there, of course.”
Louise beamed. “Of course you will.” She reached across the desk and cupped Chey’s cheek in one worn hand. “Come for dinner soon, will you?”
Chey nodded, warmed despite her irritation. “Soon, Mama.” She placed her hand over her mother’s and hugged it briefly between her own palm and her cheek. She stood and smiled her mother through the door, then braced her hands flat against the desktop and bowed her head. “Thank you, Georges.”
He wadded the piece of paper in his beefy fist, not at all to her surprise. The invoice had never been written that Georges Phillips could not decipher. It was part of what made him so valuable to her.
Solidly middle-aged and decidedly rotund, he was an odd combination of flamboyance and distinguished style. At the moment he wore a vanilla white suit and matching silk ascot with a flame-red shirt on his stocky, yet graceful body. His thinning, dark blond hair was combed back ruthlessly, allowing the silver of his temples and winged brows to challenge his blunt nose and plump mouth for dominance of his round face. His physical appearance and droll manner of speaking always put Chey in mind of a slightly slimmer, fitter Alfred Hitchcock, albeit one given to sometimes absurd sartorial splendors. Unfortunately, he was as astute with people as with billing invoices.
“Don’t thank me,” he told her snippily. “I didn’t do it for you. I did it to spare that old dear’s feelings. She’s concerned about you.”
“Well, she has no reason to be,” Chey protested. “Why can’t she understand that I’m perfectly happy just as I am?”
“Perhaps because your lifestyle is completely foreign to her,” he suggested, “and just possibly because you aren’t as happy as you want everyone to think.”
“I am so!” Chey refuted hotly.
“Sugar, this is Georges you’re talking to. I know you better than you know yourself—and so does your mother, I suspect.”
“You wish,” Chey retorted sourly. “Just because you’ve been married countless times doesn’t mean that everyone has to trip down the aisle after you.”
“Four,” he corrected primly. “You have more fingers than that on each dainty hand, and don’t change the subject. Honestly, Chey, if you weren’t married to this business, you’d have a personal life like your mama wants. You’d have a man, a husband.”
“Maybe I should just marry you,” she retorted. “That would be good for business and get my family off my back, too.”
He made a face. “Not my style, darling. It’d be like marrying my sister.”
“Georges! Do you have a sister?” she teased, knowing perfectly well that he was one of three brothers.
“Don’t be cute. And if you want your family off your back, then find a man and fall in love!”
“You should know better than anyone that it’s not that easy,” she insisted.
“At least I try,” Georges said huffily, putting his round chin into the air.
“And you’ll keep on trying,” Chey said drolly.
“We’re not talking about me,” he said, pursing his cherry-red mouth.
“No, we’re talking about your boss,” Chey pointed out dryly, “the person who signs your paycheck.”
“The person who would be lost without me,” Georges added confidently.
He was right, darn him. She’d be lost without him as her assistant and friend, but he was wrong about the other. She had no intention of ever marrying. It would be unfair. Her career was much too important to her and left no room for the depth of dedication necessary for marriage and especially parenthood. Her family and friends didn’t understand that, however.
Chey sighed and slumped back in her chair. The position gave her a new perspective on the picture on her screen, and she immediately leaned forward again to tweak the placement of a certain element in the room design. For days now she had done little else but work on the Fair Havens project, and this was the final preliminary design.
“What do you think of this layout for the master suite?” she asked Georges, who walked around to lean over and study the computer screen.
“From a decorator’s perspective,” he finally said, “I love the claw-foot tub. From a man’s perspective, give me a real shower stall.”
“But the whole room is effectively a shower stall,” she explained. “It uses special waterproofing so curtains and stalls aren’t necessary.”
“He’s still standing in a bathtub to take a shower,” Georges pointed out. “I wouldn’t like it. Okay, so the shower stall is not a period piece, but we can make it look period.”
Chey sighed and reached for the mouse. “You’re right. Let’s try this.” She deleted the claw-foot tub and quickly inserted a partially sunken, built-in tub-and-shower combination of faux marble.
“Oh, that’s good,” Georges commented. “The faux marble keeps it lightweight for a second-story installation, and this particular design eliminates the need for curtains and doors. And it has the right look.”
A chime sounded, alerting them that someone had opened the front door. “I’ll go,” Georges said, turning away from the desk.
Chey nodded absently, muttering, “Thanks. I want to get this faxed over to Fair Havens.”
She manipulated the computer mouse and clicked. The expensive, photo-quality printer spooled up and began to spit out a black-and-white, computer-generated sketch.