Girls Night Out 3 E-Book Bundle. Gemma BurgessЧитать онлайн книгу.
She has a boyfriend, Ollie, and yes, they were fighting in France but I don’t think they’ve broken up, have they? So why am I jumping to conclusions?
‘Abigail, I am so sorry, perhaps it was the oy-stare?’ says Andre, coming outside. His face is all worried concern.
‘Uh, perhaps it was,’ I agree. ‘Let’s go back to the office.’
The rest of the afternoon is agony. My standard uneasy Daveticipation was nothing compared to this.
I can’t help it: I’m in hell. I can’t even distract myself: there’s nothing happening in the markets. I can’t hold a phone conversation. I can’t read to the end of a sentence without thinking about what I saw, and I’m obsessively checking my phone. I even take my phone to the toilet with me in case he calls, which is hard, as it’s one of those office loos with no cistern so there’s nowhere to balance it, so I have to put it in my mouth while I pee. That’s probably really unhygienic.
I’m desperate to call Plum or Sophie for reassurance. But their inevitable advice will be to simply ask him what he was doing. I know that’s what you’re probably thinking too. But I can’t. I can’t confront him about having lunch with his ex-fling (ex-girlfriend? No, it was just a fling, right? That’s what Robert said, wasn’t it?). It sounds like I was stalking him, and he’ll ask why I didn’t come up and say hi right then and there instead of creeping away. If I bring it up now, I’m going to look like a fool.
Oh God. I want to cry.
I head home from work at 6 pm.
I go straight upstairs. Robert’s not home. Every step is difficult, and the house feels unusually cold. I have no energy. Angst is so draining.
I lie on my bed in the dark, fully dressed, and stare at the ceiling.
Worst case scenario: it will all end. I’ll go back to being single.
That wouldn’t be so bad, right? I started this thing with Dave knowing that it could end, that I had to stay in control and not become too smitten, too fast, that I had to be bulletproof . . .
But I’m not. I took a risk. I told him I wanted to be with him last night. I have to see this out.
Anyway, everything else in my world has changed. Everyone else is in love now. Robert is single, but as he said once, he’s multiple. Being the only single person in the group would not be fun. I’d be alone every night, with no wingwomen to go out with.
And anyway, I don’t want to be single. I want Dave.
I think I must be falling in love with him. This sick, nervous feeling can’t be anything else.
My phone rings from deep in the depths of my bag. Moving faster than I ever have before, I sit up and grab the flashing light in the darkness.
It’s Dave. ‘Hello?’ I say, answering too quickly.
‘I need you. Naked. My house, 20 minutes.’
‘Aren’t you going to feed me first?’ I say, on auto-witter whilst my mind races. He sounds totally normal. Not like he had an illicit lunch today or has anything to hide.
‘I’ve got something delicious for you to munch on,’ he says. ‘It’s very high in protein. Good for the skin, too.’
I pause. That’s normally the kind of absurdly obscene comment that would make me giggle. But I can’t. Fear has sucked the giggles out of me.
‘Oh, alright, I suppose we should eat before we eat,’ he grumbles. ‘See you at Odette’s in half an hour?’
‘Make it an hour,’ I say. I need time to prepare, physically and mentally.
‘Ah, the elusive Miss Wood. It’s a deal,’ he says, and hangs up.
I can hardly eat at dinner, or speak, but Dave doesn’t seem to notice. He goes on and on about his day, and his latest deal, and tells me I look gorgeous. I’m trying to keep my end of the conversation up, but I feel like a moth pinned to one of those Victorian wall-hangings. Fluttering with panic and unable to move.
‘I saw Bella today,’ he says, towards the end of our meal, as he pours me another glass of wine. At least I can still drink.
‘Really?’ I choke out, staring into my glass so I can avoid eye contact. ‘How is she?’
‘Great, fine,’ he says. ‘She was in London for a work thing, wanted to catch up. After a free lunch, I expect. She’s a bit embarrassed about being such a bitch in France, wanted to apologise. She and Ollie were having problems.’
‘Are she and Ollie OK now?’ I ask.
‘Fine,’ says Dave dismissively. He’s not interested in other people’s relationships, he’s told me that before. ‘If you’ll excuse me, angel, I have to use the – what is it you always say?’
‘The euphemism,’ I murmur.
‘And then I’m taking you home and I want you naked within minutes, if not seconds. Got that? You’re looking ridiculously delectable tonight.’
The moment he’s gone I nearly collapse with relief. They really were just having lunch! Nothing more! And he told me about it! He wouldn’t do that if he had anything to hide! Thank fuck.
I’m overwhelmed with adoration and relief. He is honest. He adores me and wants me. Not Bella.
Dave’s iPhone is, as ever, face-up on the table, and it buzzes with a text.
I glance down at it.
You can read texts on iPhones without opening them, and I can’t help that I can read upside down from years of sitting across from people in meetings. So I’m really not snooping. The second I read it, I wish I hadn’t. The text is from Bella.
Ha, enjoy. Am home safe. B
I’m frozen, staring at the text, till it disappears from the screen. It’s obviously a response to a text he sent her. Enjoy? Enjoy what? Dinner with me? Why the ‘ha’? It sounds sarcastic, doesn’t it?
Stop thinking about it, Abigail, goddammit, you crazy fool. You’re overreacting again.
A little wispy curl of insecurity winds itself around my chest and settles.
Dave returns and, before sitting down, leans over to kiss me. Our eyes meet as he pulls away and with a little grin, he puts his hand out to tweak my ear. I smile at him and remind myself that he wouldn’t be here if he didn’t want to be with me. He wants me, not Bella. Me.
‘This has been the slowest Christmas ever,’ I say. ‘Ever.’
‘I know,’ says Plum.
It’s December 30th. I’ve been in France for almost a week. Sophie left on Boxing Day to join Luke at his parents’ house in Bath, so it’s just me and my parents.
I’m lying on my bed – the bed that Dave and I were deliciously filthy in all those weeks ago – with my legs propped up against the walls. The shutters are half open, revealing a very dark grey sky. Plum’s at her parents’ house in Yorkshire.
‘I am so over my family,’ she says. ‘If I have to go carolling one more time . . .’
Plum’s family Christmases are very traditional. Carolling, church and long freezing walks. The only tradition we have is watching Annie on Christmas Day after lunch, with my parents singing along.
‘ABIGAIL!’ bellows my father from the kitchen downstairs, making me jump. No one bellows like my Dad.
‘Oh my God, this is like being six again,’ I murmur to Plum. ‘Yes?’ I call down sweetly.
‘There you are. I thought you were lost. Would you care for some soup?’