Chris. Sally WentworthЧитать онлайн книгу.
see was a pretty, animated face. People had enough problems of their own without being bothered by those of a total stranger. She tried to hide them as she realised that there was nothing now to stay for; she might as well leave.
But perhaps Francesca noticed, because after looking at her she said, ‘But we don’t have to split up. Come and sit with Michel and me, Tiffany. And you too, of course, Mr Gallagher.’
‘Sure thing.’ Sam put a hand on Tiffany’s arm and began to walk along with them.
She shook him off, much as Francesca had shaken off the Count earlier, and gave him a look of cold dislike. But Sam seemed immune to that too, merely giving her a lazy grin as he strode along, making her have to hurry to keep up.
Tiffany felt dwarfed by the three of them and was glad when they found one of the large circular tables with some spare seats. But there were other people already there so she and Sam had to sit on the opposite side to Francesca and Michel. As the last guests came into the garden to take their seats, she saw that the caterer, watched by Calum, was hastily ordering a waiter to lay an extra place at another table. So now the Brodeys would know that they had an uninvited guest. Just great!
A trio was playing in the background, the food on the buffet was out of this world, but all Tiffany could hear was Calum’s voice asking Chris to introduce her, and all she could taste was chagrin at the way Sam had butted in before he could do so.
The table was too wide to talk across it to Francesca; the man on Tiffany’s other side was Portuguese and his English wasn’t very good. Sam chatted to her, but she was so angry with him that at first she didn’t answer. He glanced at her from long-lashed brown eyes, then concentrated on his food. As to be expected at a party given by a wine company, there were three wine glasses and a champagne flute in front of each guest. Waiters came to fill them with each course but it took a couple of glasses before Tiffany’s bitterness melted away and she thought, What the hell? Tomorrow can go hang, just like all the other tomorrows that have come and gone. I’m here so I might as well make the best of it.
Turning to Sam, she said, ‘Sorry.’
‘Did I mess something up?’
She gave a wry laugh. ‘Not really.’ Then she sighed. ‘No, there was nothing to mess up.’ She smiled at him. ‘Why don’t you tell me about America?’
‘America is a big country to talk about. Have you ever been there?’
‘A couple of times, when I was a young child, to Disneyland for holidays. But I haven’t been to—where did you say you came from? Wyoming, wasn’t it?’
‘That’s right.’
‘Isn’t that cowboy country?’
‘I guess you could call it that. There are certainly a lot of cattle ranges there.’
He began to tell her about it and she listened, at first politely, but then with growing interest. Sam had a way with words, could use them to paint a picture in her mind. He was amusing, too, so that for a while she forgot her troubles and lived in his world, which seemed infinitely preferable to her own. But then, few were not. She laughed at Sam’s description of a rodeo he had attended once and, feeling herself watched, glanced across the table. The Count and the other man beside Francesca were both momentarily occupied by the people on their other sides. She had her eyes fixed on Tiffany and Sam, her head slightly tilted as she contemplated them and listened to Sam’s deep tones. When Tiffany looked at her Francesca raised a suggestive eyebrow towards Sam, the question clear.
Tiffany shook her head the slightest fraction, letting her know she wasn’t interested. Although she could have been, could have really enjoyed Sam’s company, if he hadn’t shot her ploy to pieces. Even though he was good-looking and a pleasant lunch companion, she didn’t think she’d ever forgive him for that. It had meant so much—this last, desperate chance to earn some money.
Lunch came to an end; people began to get to their feet, to talk in clusters again for a while as they drank a last glass of port, deep amber-coloured this time, then drift towards one or another of their hosts to say goodbye before leaving. A feeling of fatalism stole over Tiffany: she had absolutely no idea how she was going to get out of the mess she was in. She had given it her best shot but it hadn’t worked, thanks to Sam. Excusing herself, she went in search of the ladies’ room, and found that a downstairs cloakroom in the house had been set aside for the purpose. Even the cloakroom took her breath away. There were beautifully draped curtains at the window, ornamental French hand-basins with gold taps, a dozen bottles of good perfume and hand lotion for the guests’ use. How the other half lived, Tiffany thought with irony, remembering the shabby, antiquated bathroom she had to share with a dozen others, and that covertly. By nature fastidious, she thought that that was perhaps the most difficult thing to bear.
She washed her hands and applied fresh lipstick, helped herself to a liberal application of perfume and went out, down the long, cool, blue-tiled corridor, into the sun again. The brilliant light dazzled her, so Tiffany stood for a moment in the doorway, letting her eyes adjust. She made an unknowingly attractive picture, framed by an arch of deep yellow roses that climbed the wall, and drew the eyes of several people still in the garden. Francesca was there, holding on to her cousin Chris’s arm, almost as tall as he, and laughing at something he’d said. And Calum Brodey was overseeing the distribution of glasses of vintage port, mainly to the male guests. He had just given a glass to Sam, who saw Tiffany and walked to meet her as she came into the garden.
Sam smiled, then got a whiff of her perfume. He leaned nearer, his nose close to the delicate column of her neck, and murmured, ‘Hey, you smell terrific.’
In that instant an idea leapt into Tiffany’s mind. There was no time to think about whether it was right or what the outcome might be. It was a chance and she immediately took it.
Raising her hand, she gave Sam a hard, loud slap across the face. He jerked in surprise, the hand holding his glass coming up in automatic defence, the contents flying out. But he had no chance to say anything because Tiffany exclaimed in well-simulated anger, ‘How dare you? You can take your disgusting suggestion and—and just go jump in that lake!’ she cried out, and pointed dramatically.
As she’d hoped, everyone within earshot turned to look. For a moment there was a stunned silence, then everyone seemed to move and speak at once.
Sam exclaimed, ‘What the heull…?’ but she ran a few steps away from him, in the direction of Calum who had started towards her.
He strode up to Sam, got between him and Tiffany, and said in a voice that was colder than ice, ‘My cousin will escort you to the gate.’ And he beckoned Chris over.
‘Now just a minute here, I——’ Sam began angrily.
But Chris put a hand under his elbow. ‘It’s this way.’
Sam was bigger than he was, in both height and breadth, and could probably have pushed Chris away, but he looked across at Tiffany, who was standing near Calum. For a second their eyes met and he must have realised what game she was playing. He hesitated, then, seeing the tense pleading in her blue eyes, he gave an angry, resigned kind of shrug and let Chris lead him away.
Francesca watched them go, a frown between her eyes, then came over to Tiffany. ‘Perhaps you’d better come inside with me.’
‘Thank you, but if I could just wait a while until he’s gone,’ Tiffany said in a distressed voice.
‘But your suit,’ Francesca said, pointing.
Tiffany looked down and saw that Sam’s port had spilled all down her. She gave a genuine wail of anguish. ‘Oh, no!’
‘Come into the house. I’m sure we can save it if we do something quickly.’
Calum added his voice. ‘Yes, please go inside, Miss—er——?’
‘Tiffany Dean,’ Tiffany said abstractedly, still looking down at her skirt and wondering how on earth she was going to explain this to the shop she’d hired it from.