Page 90 of The Mistletoe Pact

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‘So I’m thinking maybe we carry on like this for a while,’ Hannah said – Dan had Katie one full day each weekend and for the occasional evening – ‘and then once I stop breastfeeding you could see her a minimum of one evening a week and have her to stay over one night every weekend? And have her for at least a couple of weeks’ holiday every year? Would that suit you?’

‘Yes,’ Dan said. ‘Thank you so much.’

‘No, thankyou. You’re an amazing dad.’

* * *

Dan was still in such a state of euphoria that he genuinely wasn’t that pissed off that he was going to be seeing EviewithMatthew that evening. Angus had won a wine tasting for eight at a London wine merchant’s, and he and Sasha had invited Max and Greggy (who they were staying with), Evie and Matthew, and Dan and Angus’s brother Rory, who also lived in London, to join them. Dan hadn’t really wanted to go, because of Evie and Matthew, basically, but he hadn’t felt like he could say no, especially now that things were so good between him and Max, because he wanted to keep them that way.

He arrived about fifteen minutes later than the others, due to the longer-than-expected handover chat with Hannah, and walked in to see the seven of them sitting round a table, with one spare chair, for Dan, obviously.

Evie was telling an anecdote – something to do with spiders and her classroom – and she was gesticulating and laughing almost as much as she was talking. She looked gorgeous, as always.God, he’d messed up not asking her out when she was single.

He frowned. The man she was sitting next to really didn’t look like the man Dan remembered as Matthew. It wasn’t like Matthew was etched in Dan’s mind but at the same time he did quite clearly remember talking to the two of them – and not enjoying it – and Matthew had definitely been tall and blond (and annoyingly handsome), and this man was shorter and dark.

‘Hi, Dan. This is Jimmy, my flatmate,’ Rory said. Looked like Matthew wouldn’t be coming given that there were no more spare chairs. Excellent. Probably playing more golf.

Dan said hi around the table, trying not to smile too much at Matthew’s absence.

An hour and a half later, they’d all shifted positions round the table and Dan was sitting next to Evie, who was completely ignoring the host – who’d been a sommelier at a couple of very fancy restaurants before setting up this business, and sounded like he really knew his stuff and was currently talking about vineyards in Armenia and Turkey – and was busy re-tasting the six different reds they’d tried so far.

‘I always like the cheapest ones,’ she said happily. ‘Which I think you’ll find is this one because it’s the nicest.’ She finished one of the glasses.

‘Wasn’t that the one he said was served in the Ritz Paris and is incredibly rare, like the grapes only develop once every twenty years and are trampled by foot by princes and unicorns?’

‘Nope. I really like it, so I think you’ll find it’s Chateau Lidl at best.’ Evie picked up one of her other glasses, took a sip and sucked her cheeks in. ‘Thiswill be the expensive one. One mouthful of that and I can feel a headache coming on. Seriously. I know my stuff. I can rank them in order of price based on what I like.’

Their host raised his voice and said, ‘So now I’d like to play a little game. I’d like you to rank them according to price. There’s a prize for the winner.’

‘Yessssss,’ said Evie. ‘Finally, my life skills come into play. I’m going to get them all right.’

‘There’s no way you will.’ Dan closed his eyes and re-tasted all of his and started to arrange them in order.

When he’d finished, Evie looked at his and compared them to her own. ‘You’re rubbish,’ she said. ‘You’ve only got two right.’

‘I’m genuinely quite good at this,’ Dan told her. It was only fair to warn her. ‘Currentlyyouonly have two right. You’re welcome to copy me.’

‘No way,’ said Evie. ‘I want that prize.’

‘And let’s go,’ said their host.

Five minutes later, Evie was bowing and clutching her prize: a bottle of rosé. ‘Six out of six,’ she crowed.

‘I’m genuinely impressed,’ Dan said when everyone had finished clapping and she’d sat back down.

‘Always works. Nicest the cheapest, worst the most expensive. I’m a very cheap date.’

‘So what’s Matthew up to this evening?’

‘We split up,’ Evie said.

‘Oh, no,’ said Dan, trying really hard to sound sincere. ‘Are you okay?’ He really wanted to ask what had happened.

‘Yep, fine, thank you.’ Evie gave him a small smile and said, ‘So which was your favourite of the wines?’

They spilled out onto the road outside the wine merchant’s at about eleven, all saying how much they’d enjoyed the evening.

‘Tubing it home?’ Dan asked Evie. Max, Greggy, Sasha and Angus were going back together to Max and Greggy’s place in North London.