Page 29 of Summer of Love


Font Size:  

‘I’ve got some work to do,’ she said, in the end.

‘Why don’t I run you home, then?’ Alex suggested. ‘My car’s still at the restaurant. You can get changed, we can swing past mine so I can do the same, then head over to the Mill together.’

There was absolutely no reason why Lily couldn’t just grab her own car when she got home and go to the Mill herself. But the idea of being apart from Alex when she didn’t have to… ‘Sounds great.’

‘And maybe we can grab dinner together later?’

‘Dinner, or a repeat of last night’s activities?’

Alex raised an eyebrow. ‘I have to choose one or the other?’

‘Definitely not. But I think we’re both expected for Sunday dinner at Cora’s.’ Lily let the sheet fall down to her waist. ‘Now, are you sure you have to meet Max right now?’

As Alex dropped his clothes and dived back into bed with her, Lily reflected that already flings seemed considerably more fun than relationships. Alex was crazy to want to give this up for commitment.

* * * *

In the end, Alex was over an hour late to meet Max.

‘I’d have thought, with your high-flying career in the City, you’d have been better at timekeeping.’ Max dropped two soluble painkillers into a glass of water and watched them fizz. Alex tried not to fidget while he waited for his new boss’s attention to return to him.

Max looked up, finally, and Alex wished he hadn’t. Staring at him with far too much knowledge behind his red-rimmed eyes, Max said, ‘But then, it was a long day yesterday. And a late night for us all, I’m sure.’

Alex swallowed. ‘A lovely wedding, though, don’t you think? The seaside setting…’

‘Very lovely,’ Max agreed, before taking a swig of water. ‘I looked for Lily at the end of the night, to say that very same thing to her. But it turned out she’d already left.’

Alex stared at the ceiling.

‘In fact,’ Max went on. ‘I heard from several reputable sources that she left with you last night. And that neither of you made it home to Felinfach.’

With a deep breath, Alex steeled himself. Obviously Max had appointed himself some sort of parental stand-in for Lily, so Alex needed to convince him that he wasn’t about to ruin her life or break her heart. That was just how these things went, right?

‘Look, Max –’

Max held up a hand. ‘I’m not her father. I don’t need details – God, I really don’t want details. You’re both consenting adults. I just hope you both know what you’re doing.’

A flash of memory filled his mind: Lily beckoning him back into bed, and the way his head had given up instantly on anything sane or sensible. And the memory was accompanied by the uncomfortable knowledge that he’d do exactly the same thing again. ‘So do I.’

‘This wasn’t exactly what I meant when I asked you to stop her going back to Edward.’

Alex raised his eyebrows. ‘Wasn’t it?’

Shaking his head, Max drained the rest of his painkillers. ‘And you know you’re going to give her mother a heart attack.’

Dropping into the chair opposite the desk, at last, Alex groaned. ‘She really doesn’t need to worry. Lily has no interest in me long-term. It’s just a fling.’ Even though it didn’t feel like one. Alex knew flings, and no fling in the past had ever felt this… comfortable. Compelling. Right.

But it couldn’t ever be anything more, and they both knew it.

‘Actually, I expect that would worry her more,’ Max replied.

‘Really?’

Max nodded. ‘She wants her little girl settled. Happy. Or at least with someone else taking responsibility for her.’

‘Lily’s twenty-six. I think she can take responsibility for herself at this point.’

‘Try telling that to Evelyn.’ Max sighed. ‘She’s convinced that unless Lily gets married, she’ll never settle down and live happily ever after. Crazy woman.’

Alex frowned. There was a fondness behind Max’s words that he wouldn’t have expected. ‘I didn’t know you and Evelyn were so close.’

Max smirked. ‘The number of times since Valentine’s Day I’ve had her in here, complaining about Lily neglecting her relationship with Edward because of the Mill, how it was holding up their wedding… And the woman likes to talk, you know that. So I now know more about the inner workings of Evelyn Thomas’s mind than I ever thought I wanted to.’

‘Well, next time you have one of your cosy little chats with Evelyn, you might want to mention that Lily has sworn off marriage,’ Alex said.

Eyebrows raised, Max said, ‘And is that the only reason you’ve let yourself get involved, by any chance?’

‘Nothing to do with me,’ Alex said, hands up in a motion of surrender. ‘Apparently the main driver seems to be the fact that people change. Including her. She doesn’t want to be tied to anything that stops her growing into the person she’s meant to be.’

Max rubbed a hand across his forehead. ‘God, never mind the wedding hangover, you two are more than enough of a headache on your own. Go on, get out of here and do some work. We’ll look at the books when my head isn’t so close to exploding.’

‘Sorry,’ Alex said, getting to his feet with a smile. ‘Just giving you the facts.’

‘I said I didn’t want details!’ Max called after him, as he headed down the stairs.

Outside, the bright blue sky seemed a little too vivid for the occupants of the Mill, after the wedding feast the night before: every person Alex waved to on his way to his studio was wearing sunglasses. Alex knew he felt far better than he had any right to – it wasn’t like he’d scrimped on the wine with dinner. And sleep hadn’t been the first thing on his mind the night before, either. But his muscles felt loose and relaxed, with only the occasional tw

inge. And it was hard to stop smiling with the memory of Lily’s body wrapped around his so vivid and fresh.

His phone rang just as the studio door closed behind him, and Alex pulled it from his pocket and pressed answer without even registering the action.

‘Hello?’

‘Alex. Bro. How do you fancy a wild boys’ night out tonight? You and me, no holds barred.’ Gareth’s excitement vibrated down the phone line, but something about it sounded wrong. Forced.

‘In Felinfach?’

‘I was thinking Manchester. We’ll book a hotel, make a real night of it.’

Alex blinked out at the sunlight through his window. ‘It’s Sunday, Gareth. Don’t you have work tomorrow?’

‘I’ll take it off. Call in sick or something.’

‘You’ve never done that. You wouldn’t even throw a sickie when I got those last minute tickets for the cricket on a work day.’ Alex settled back against his desk. ‘What’s going on?’

Gareth sighed. ‘Nothing. Just fancied a night out with my brother.’

‘Want to come over to Felinfach? Cora’s doing a roast. We could have a drink in the Bull and Frog after, catch up a bit.’ Because clearly there was something going on that Gareth needed to talk about. Lily would understand if he had to postpone their plans until a little later in the evening, wouldn’t she? So they might not make dinner. The rest of it was still on the cards…

‘Nah,’ Gareth said. ‘Not the same. Maybe another week, yeah?’

The phone disconnected, and Alex stared at it for a long moment.

‘Definitely something going on,’ he muttered. But since it meant he got his evening with Lily after all, he was prepared to put off worrying about it for another week or two.

Chapter Thirteen

Lily was finding a number of things hard today. Concentrating on the new catalogue proofs she was supposed to be checking. Not thinking about Alex, just across the way in his studio. Not thinking about how his body had felt against hers. Not grinning at the memory. Not imagining how good it would feel to relive it tonight…

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
Articles you may like