Avoiding Mr Right

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Avoiding Mr Right Page 3

by Sophie Weston


  Luc Henri’s eyes passed over the dark-suited, middle-aged man without interest.

  ‘Eavesdrops? I think you must be mistaken. He’s probably waiting for someone.’

  She shook her head.

  ‘No. He came in not long after us and chose this table deliberately. He’s just been pretending to read that newspaper. He didn’t turn the pages once.’

  A shade of annoyance crossed Luc Henri’s face. But all he said was, ‘Then he can’t have had a very entertaining morning.’

  He looked at his watch, then raised a finger at the waiter for the bill.

  ‘Thank you for my breakfast,’ Christina said at once, retreating into formal manners. ‘I ought to be going.’

  At once he said imperiously, ‘No.’

  She paused, one eyebrow raised at his tone.

  He smiled faintly. ‘At least let me lend you some money to cover tonight’s lodging.’

  Christina looked at him levelly. ‘Lend? You mean give, don’t you, if we’re not going to meet again?’

  Luc stared at her, his brows twitching together. He said something explosive under his breath. It did not sound polite. ‘I can afford it.’

  ‘Ah, but can I?’ she retorted.

  His look was quizzical suddenly. ‘No strings.’

  Christina’s heart missed a beat. She shook her head decisively. ‘Thank you, no. I should be able to crash on someone’s floor tonight. It won’t take long to get a job. I’ll ask around the waterfront cafés tonight.’

  He said quickly, ‘Think of me as a brother. I would hope someone would do as much for my sister—or my niece when she’s older.’

  Christina looked at him levelly. ‘I don’t feel like your sister. Or your nice.’

  A little flame leaped into his eyes. She saw that she had made a mistake. She pushed her coffee-cup away from her and stood up quickly.

  ‘I’m grateful for the offer, truly I am. But when I set out on my own I promised myself I’d pay my bills as I went. I always do. So, thank you, but no.’ She held out her hand. ‘It’s been interesting meeting you. Have a nice life.’

  He stood up as well. His face was thunderous suddenly. If she had been his employee she would have quailed at that expression, she thought. She was grateful that she did not work for him.

  Luc’s face darkened. He flicked open his wallet and pulled out a thick sandwich of notes.

  ‘Don’t be stupid,’ he said curtly. ‘Take the money.’

  The man at the next table did not know where to look. Out of the corner of her eye Christina caught his expression—half wretchedly embarrassed, half fascinated. She found that she sympathised with him. Luc Henri clearly was sublimely unaware of the scene he was making, or did not care what people thought of him. In contrast, the poor man at the next table was acutely aware of both. It made her all the more furious with Luc Henri.

  She leaned forward across the table, glaring. ‘Try listening. I am not your sister,’ she hissed.

  ‘If you were I would have drilled some sense into you by now,’ Luc Henri flung back between his teeth. He was clearly in a right royal rage and saw no reason to curb his temper.

  ‘You don’t surprise me in the least,’ Christina said with poisonous sweetness. ‘“sense” being anything that agrees with you, I take it?’

  He drew an angry breath. Then, even as she watched him, she saw him catch hold of his retort and wrestle it down like a man struggling with a wild animal. He closed his lips tight on whatever it was he had been going to say.

  ‘You are an education, Miss Howard. My powers of argument seem to be deserting me,’ he said thinly at last. ‘Please be sensible...’

  Christina stood her ground. ‘Don’t patronise me,’ she said quietly.

  They stood sizing each other up over the table like duellists. Then he smiled. It was not one of his dazzling smiles. It was more like an insult.

  ‘You needn’t worry that I’d expect payment in kind,’ Luc Henri drawled. ‘Women come to me of their own free will.’

  The man at the next table gasped. So did Christina. She felt her face flame. It did not sweeten her temper one iota. But it made her forget briefly that they were in a public place and that, unlike her arrogant opponent, she minded making a spectacle of herself. The anger coursed through her like a forest fire, but she wiped the expression off her face and gave him her most demure smile.

  Leaning forward, she twitched the notes out of his hand. The man at the next table shuddered and backed his chair away with a scream of steel-tipped legs across the concrete.

  Luc Henri’s eyes had narrowed to slits.

  ‘Not me,’ Christina said gently.

  The narrowed eyes dared her, blatantly. Christina smiled. She stepped back and, with a quick little movement, tossed the notes high, high up into the air.

  They were still falling on the startled patrons as she threaded her way between the tables and left.

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHRISTINA plunged along the street, her heart beating furiously. How dared he? Oh, how dared he? Interfering! Ordering her around! Lecturing her as if he were the head of the family and she a tiresome teenager! Pressing his money on her as if she were some scatterbrain who did not know where she was going to sleep tonight! As if he had the right!

  Here her outraged musings brought her up short. The interfering Mr Luc Henri might not have any right to lecture her but there was no doubt that in one way he was right. She had not got anywhere to stay tonight. Christina grinned suddenly. She would end up on a bench in the bus station if she did not start making some calls right now.

  In spite of Luc Henri’s patent scepticism, it was not difficult. Christina was a girl who took friendship seriously and people responded in kind.

  Sue Stanley was waiting, the door already open by the time Christina arrived at the top of the steep stairs to her studio. They hugged. She yawned widely.

  ‘Oh, hell,’ said Christina in quick comprehension. ‘Night shift last night?’

  She was a nurse. She nodded and led the way inside.

  ‘I’m sorry.’ Christina was remorseful. ‘I didn’t mean to get you out of bed.’

  Sue chuckled. ‘Somebody has to. Mr Right still hasn’t put in an appearance.’ She hefted Christina’s bag squashily onto a rough wooden chair and led the way to the small kitchen. ‘What about you?’

  Christina made a face. Her mother had spent half her life waiting for Mr Right to come and rescue her from the problems of everyday life. Meanwhile it had been her young daughter who had tried to manage their disorganised life, until her mother had died. The experience had given Christina a strong distaste even for joking about that mythical beast.

  Sue knew her very well. She grinned. ‘No guy made a dint in the armour yet?’

  ‘And not likely to.’

  Sue shook her head. ‘You’ll find out one day,’ she prophesied.

  For no reason at all that she could think of, Luc Henri’s imperious face slipped into Christina’s mind. She remembered that odd, intent look in his eyes. Involuntarily she shivered a little. It was not an unpleasurable shiver.

  That startled her. Luc Henri had nothing to do with her, she reminded herself. She would never see him again. She did not even want to see him again. Did she?

  She said with less than her usual calm, ‘That’s nonsense and you know it.’

  The balcony was a blaze of coral and scarlet geraniums in terracotta tubs. Sue led the way outside. Christina sank down onto the top step of the fire escape and looked round with pleasure.

  She found Sue was looking at her measuringly. ‘Who is he?’

  Christina stiffened faintly. ‘Who is who?’

  She had first worked with Christina three years before on a boat attached to an archaeological expedition. All through the summer they had shared their confidences, their crises and their nail scissors. As a result they knew each other very well.

  Now Sue was looking at her shrewdly. ‘Whoever kicked you out this morning.’


  Christina relaxed again. ‘You’re on the wrong track, Sue. I came off a boat, that’s all. Then I found the bank wouldn’t let me have any cash until the weekend.’

  She stared. ‘You? But you’re always so efficient about money.’

  ‘The bank seems to be less so—some administrative hitch,’ Christina said drily.

  Sue could believe it, though she was less convinced that a man was not the cause of Christina’s present predicament. She said so.

  To her own, furious incomprehension, Christina blushed. Sue did not even pretend not to notice. ‘I knew it,’ she said gleefully. ‘Tell me, what’s he like?’

  ‘You’re not exactly tactful,’ Christina complained.

  Which of course convinced Sue that her deductions were correct. ‘Oh, tact,’ she said dismissively. ‘No fun in that. Tell me about this dangerous heartthrob of yours.’

  In spite of herself Christina laughed. ‘Why would he be dangerous?’

  ‘If he wasn’t dangerous, you wouldn’t notice him,’ Sue told her with brutal honesty.

  Christina was a little shocked. Disturbed too at how well Sue seemed to know her.

  ‘What do you mean?’

  Her friend sighed. ‘Chris, I’ve seen it too often. Most of the time you just don’t seem to notice. Strong men paw the ground with lust and you treat them like brothers. Or another girlfriend.’

  Christina was moved to protest. ‘Nonsense.’

  ‘It isn’t, you know. A man is only going to get you to notice him if he picks you up by your pigtails and hauls you off to his lair.’ She sighed. ‘You’ll get it too.’ She sounded envious.

  It did not amuse Christina. Sue saw it and, good friend that she was, stopped teasing.

  ‘Nothing to do with me if you like your men dangerous. Anyway, I can’t sit out here in the sun all day. I’ve got to get to the market before all the decent vegetables go. Make yourself at home.’

  She went. She left Christina restless and uneasy.

  Was Sue right? And if so, why had she never said it before? Had the encounter with Luc Henri, brief as it had been, awakened something dormant in Christina which Sue, who knew her so well, recognised? It was not a palatable thought.

  It had to be nonsense, of course. He was a high-handed man who was used to having his own way. She hardly knew him. What she did know she didn’t like. It was a relief to know that she was highly unlikely to meet him again. And yet...

  There had been something, hadn’t there? Something between them, tense but unspoken. Something she had never felt before. It had made her tingle when he’d looked at her, so that she’d been aware of him to her bones. Christina’s mouth dried as she thought about it.

  This would never do. Life had to be managed. It was no good letting yourself be distracted by fantasies of a man you did not even know.

  She armed herself with a pen and her address book, installed herself at the pay-phone in the dark little hall and began the business of managing her life again. Nobody offered her a job on the spot but she got enough tentative interest to restore her spirits. It almost succeeded in banishing Luc Henri’s disturbing image.

  When Sue came back with her purchases the evening breeze was beginning to stir the hot city air. Christina was on the balcony. She had pulled on a cotton top and her long, bare legs were already turning to their habitual summer gold. Sue came to the French window and looked down at her.

  ‘You look wonderful.’ She sighed, flopping onto the sill. ‘I wish I was a natural blonde with legs to my eyebrows.’

  Christina scrambled up. ‘No, you don’t. It wouldn’t go with your wardrobe. Coffee?’

  ‘I’d sell what’s left of my soul for some.’

  ‘You’ve got it.’

  She went inside and busied herself with the ancient percolator.

  Sue called out, ‘Any luck with jobs?’

  ‘There’s a four-day tour to Ancient Sites that needs a guide. Not really my scene but if I can’t get anything else...’

  ‘Did that take all day?’

  Christina took Sue’s coffee out to her and sank onto the fire escape, cross-legged.

  ‘No. I did a few sketches.’

  ‘The Christina beachwear collection?’

  The teasing was affectionate. Sue knew all about Christina’s Italian course in design and how seriously she took it. She worked at it in the winter, using the proceeds of her summer jobs to pay the substantial fees and her modest living costs.

  Now Christina grinned. ‘Maybe. The sun out here is certainly inspirational.’

  Sue stretched. ‘Mmm. I love this place. With sun like this who needs to work?’

  ‘Those who like to eat,’ said Christina prosaically. ‘Speaking of which, I ought to go down to the harbour tonight. I might pick up a job from one of the captains.’

  She looked at Sue apologetically. They both knew that that was where masters looking for crews were likely to be found. Yet it seemed rude to go out and leave her friend the first night she was staying with her. Sue read her mind easily. She grinned at her over the rim of the mug.

  ‘Fine. I’ll even come with you. As long as you’re not on your own, the harbour’s fun. I can do with some fun to set me up for my next stint at the hospital.’ She stretched again. ‘I need to shower and change. Then, look out, Athens.’

  They did not get to the harbour area till ten. The night was clear but crisp this early in the season. A few of the fiercer stars shone through in spite of the competition from neon streetlighting and the smog bubble engendered by the city. The cafés were loud with talk and recorded music. The smell of barbecued meat, garlic, wine and humanity filled the dusty streets.

  ‘Mmm,’ said Christina with pleasure. ‘Costa’s first, I think. Lots of the captains hang out there. Aldo Marino may be looking for a crew, Jackie said.’

  Christina was well-known in Costa’s busy little café. As they threaded their way between the wooden tables, several of the diners raised a hand in greeting. Costa himself interrupted his work to greet Christina with a smacking kiss.

  ‘Aldo? Don’t think so,’ Costa told them. He went back to shovelling Greek salad busily into individual bowls without stopping. ‘There’s always Demetrius.’ He nodded in the direction of a morose-looking man at a corner table. ‘If you’re desperate,’ he added frankly.

  ‘You’re not that desperate,’ Sue said firmly. ‘The man’s a cheapskate. Skimps on everything.’

  At the back of the café a bouzouki player was looking at Christina with undisguised appreciation. He flashed her a brilliant smile and began to sing a love song with distinctly suggestive lyrics. Christina laughed at his bold eyes but she shook her head.

  It was not like the way Luc Henri had looked at her, she thought involuntarily: that had turned her still and watchful, had caused some small, cold excitement to unfold. The bouzouki player was never going to be able to make her blush in a month of Sundays. Luc had done it with a word.

  What’s happening to me? she thought, startled. Do I take the man with me everywhere I go?

  Sue plucked at her arm. ‘Come on. Let’s try the Blue Taverna.’

  Recalled to the present, Christina jumped. ‘Oh, OK.’

  ‘Good evening,’ said a soft voice.

  Christina whirled, her heart pounding as if a deadly enemy had suddenly caught up with her. Luc Henri was standing there studying her. A small smile curled the handsome mouth. It was another of those smiles that did not reach his arrogant eyes.

  Christina’s heart sank like an anchor in still water. She had not the slightest idea why. She straightened her shoulders and tried to pretend that she did not care.

  ‘Oh,’ she said. ‘You.’

  He gave a little bow.

  From the far side of the room, a cheerful Australian voice called, ‘Sue. Where’ve you been hiding? Over here, gorgeous.’

  ‘Geoff,’ said Sue. She hesitated, took in the quiet elegance of Luc Henri’s appearance, and decided that Christina did not need a
chaperon with such an eminently respectable personage. ‘I’ll see you at the flat,’ she muttered, and disappeared among the crowded tables.

  Christina, who had never in her life thought that she needed a chaperon, felt suddenly, alarmingly alone. The friendly crowd and the noise somehow made it worse. She swallowed.

  Luc Henri was looking at her with a cynical expression that she did not like at all. He did not speak. Christina cleared her throat.

  ‘Time and place seem to have caught up with us, then,’ she said flippantly. ‘What are you doing at Costa’s?’

  ‘I could ask the same. Except that it’s obvious.’

  His tone was pleasant enough. There was nothing she could take exception to in the words themselves. So how did she know that he was insulting her, and that he was coldly, furiously angry? Was it the cold glitter of his eyes? Christina glanced round. No one else showed any signs of noticing anything untoward. In fact, no one else was paying any attention to them at all.

  ‘I’m sorry, I don’t understand,’ she said.

  He gave a bark of laughter. It did not sound amused.

  ‘Cruising. Isn’t that what they call it?’

  Christina’s brows knitted. ‘What?’

  He made an angry gesture with his hand, embracing the whole café-the bouzouki player, Costa’s beefy geniality and even the harassed waiters.

  ‘You make the most of your natural assets, I’ll say that for you. A smile, a lot of long, bare leg and the odd promise of a kiss. It’s a potent inducement, even if I can see that. Is that what you meant when you said you could look after yourself?’

  For a moment Christina was so stunned that she did not think she was understanding him properly. When she realised that he meant exactly what she thought he meant, she went white with temper.

  ‘I think you’re calling me a tart.’

  He gave that harsh laugh again. ‘Oh, no. I respect tarts. They’re honest working women in their way.’

  ‘What the hell do you mean by that?’

  His eyes looked her up and down in a brief, insulting flick which considered and then dismissed her. She took a step backwards as if he had hit her. Her face flamed. He saw it and smiled.

 

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