Postcards From… Collection. Maisey YatesЧитать онлайн книгу.
angry, determined, Maddy walked away.
MAX SHIFTED the wine bottle from one hand to the other and wiped his damp palm on the thigh of his jeans. He’d like to blame his clammy hands on condensation on the bottle, but the truth was he was nervous about the night ahead.
He could hear Maddy climbing the stairs to his sister’s apartment behind him, the heels of her boots striking the marble steps sharply.
Despite the fact that he and Maddy had lived together for nearly two years, she’d never met his sister. He’d gone to great pains to ensure that was the case—Charlotte was nothing if not perceptive. The last thing he’d wanted or needed was her guessing how he felt about his housemate.
Some things never changed, it seemed.
“I forgot to ask, how did things go with Yvette today?” Maddy asked as she drew alongside him on the landing.
He knocked on his sister’s door.
“It was good. Fine. She was a little nervous, but we’ll get there.”
She wasn’t Maddy. She didn’t have Maddy’s grace or style. But he also didn’t feel the stir of arousal every time he looked at her. Yvette was an attractive woman—but she was not the woman he wanted. Consequently, the morning had gone blessedly smoothly. And there had definitely been no need for cold showers afterward.
“Good. I’m glad it worked out.”
Maddy smoothed her scarf and tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. She looked nervous, he realized.
“You know, I’ve always wanted to meet your sister,” she said. “Does she look much like you?”
“She has dark hair. But she’s a lot prettier.”
“I doubt that,” she said. Then she bit her lip and looked away.
The door swung open and warm air rich with savory cooking smells swept out to greet them.
“Sorry. I was just taking the soufflés out of the oven. Come in,” Charlotte said.
They followed her inside and Charlotte gave Maddy a brief but thorough head to toe as they shrugged out of their coats.
“Charlotte,” she said, thrusting out a hand. “Max says you’re a dancer, Maddy. From Australia.”
“That’s right,” Maddy said, shaking hands. “Max and I used to live with each other back in the day.”
His sister’s gaze swiveled around to impale him.
“Max didn’t mention that,” Charlotte said.
Now Maddy was watching him.
“Didn’t you say you just took the soufflés out of the oven?” he asked.
“Merde!” Charlotte said. She took off down the hallway, her high heels skidding on the floorboards.
Max gestured for Maddy to follow his sister into the kitchen.
Half-chopped vegetables were lined up on the kitchen table on a large cutting board, while pots steamed away on the stovetop. Charlotte stood at the counter, frowning at a tray holding three ceramic ramekins.
“The soufflés sank a little,” she said critically. “I’m really not happy with this new oven.”
He inspected the ramekins. “I’m sure they’ll taste exactly the same,” he said. His sister prided herself on her cooking and he knew she would give herself a hard time for any small failure.
Charlotte rolled her eyes.
“No, they won’t. Being light and fluffy is the whole point of a soufflé. Don’t you think, Maddy?”
Charlotte turned to her guest, her interested gaze once again scanning Maddy from head to toe. The first opportunity he got, he was going to tell his sister to cut it out. Maddy was not his girlfriend, and she wasn’t there to be cross-examined by his nearest and dearest. Far from it.
“I suppose. Although, to be honest, I’m the last person you should ask about food. As Max will tell you, I can’t cook worth a damn,” Maddy said.
“Really? Max isn’t exactly great, either. Someone will have to learn to cook,” Charlotte said meaningfully.
Maddy looked confused for a beat, then her gaze darted to him questioningly.
“Maddy is only staying with me for a week or two,” he said.
“Uh-huh.” Charlotte looked as though she didn’t believe him.
“She has her career to get back to as prima ballerina with the Sydney Dance Company,” he clarified.
“Oh.” This time Charlotte looked convinced, if disappointed. He could almost see her thoughts and suppositions realigning themselves. God knew what she was going to ask next. He shot Maddy an apologetic look and she smiled faintly.
“So, how are you finding Max’s new apartment, Maddy?”
“Um, good. I mean, I didn’t see his old one, so I can’t compare, obviously. But it’s very nice. Lots of space,” Maddy said.
“I wouldn’t know,” Charlotte said, nudging Max in the ribs with her elbow. “My brother hasn’t invited me yet. How long has it been now, Max?”
“A few weeks,” he said repressively.
Charlotte raised an eyebrow and moved to the cutting board.
“Hmmm. Did you look at those course brochures I gave you the other night?” she asked as she started slicing an onion.
Max frowned for a moment, trying to work out what she was referring to. Then he remembered her thrusting them into his hands as he was on his way out the door with the camp bed. Brochures for degrees in psychology, teaching and occupational therapy, if he remembered correctly. He’d left them all behind in the taxi.
“Haven’t had a chance,” he said.
Charlotte had been trying to push him into a new career for a while now. He would have to tell her about his artistic ambitions soon, even if only to get her off his back.
“Maybe you can convince him to start thinking about the future, Maddy. I know he deserves a break after all those years of caring for Père, but he can’t float around forever, wasting his life.”
He felt Maddy bristle beside him and had a sudden premonition that things were about to go horribly wrong.
“I’d hardly call Max’s art floating around or wasting his life,” Maddy said stiffly. “He’s incredibly talented and the art world is going to fall on its ass in surprise when he has his first show.”
Charlotte’s knife froze above an onion.
“Max’s art? Sorry?”
Charlotte’s gaze shifted between him and Maddy then back again.
Damn. He should have seen this coming the moment his sister issued her invitation. Maddy had been modeling for him, after all. It was only natural that she’d mention it.
“I’m working on some pieces. Sculpture,” he explained. “Larger scale, like that figure I did last year.”
“And you’re going to have a show?” Charlotte asked. The knife still hovered, the point wavering a little in her hand.
“Yes. Hopefully. If I can get some interest,” he said.
“I see.” Charlotte sent the knife down into the onion with a thunk.
She was hurt. She had every right to be. They were close, she shared all aspects of her life with him. And he’d deliberately shut her out of his because he’d been cautious about openly acknowledging his ambitions.
“I was going to tell you. I just wanted to have more to show you before I did,” he said.
Maddy