Strictly Come Dating (The Kathryn Freeman Romcom Collection, Book 3)

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Strictly Come Dating (The Kathryn Freeman Romcom Collection, Book 3) Page 1

by Kathryn Freeman




  Strictly Come Dating

  Kathryn Freeman

  One More Chapter

  a division of HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd

  1 London Bridge Street

  London SE1 9GF

  www.harpercollins.co.uk

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  First published in Great Britain by HarperCollinsPublishers 2020

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  Copyright © Kathryn Freeman 2020

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  Cover design by Lucy Bennett © HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd 2020

  Cover images © Shutterstock.com

  * * *

  Kathryn Freeman asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work

  * * *

  A catalogue record of this book is available from the British Library

  * * *

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins.

  * * *

  Source ISBN: 9780008365868

  Ebook Edition © August 2020 ISBN: 9780008365851

  Version: 2020-07-31

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Epilogue

  Thank You for Reading…

  You Will Also Love…

  About the Author

  Also by Kathryn Freeman

  One More Chapter...

  About the Publisher

  Chapter One

  Maggie took a look around the room, her mouth curving in an unconscious smile. God, she was blessed. Her daughters, Penny and Tabby, sat cross-legged on the floor, their hands wrapped around slices of pizza, laughing with Hannah, the nanny who’d become a close friend. On the armchair was Alice, Maggie’s closest friend, and the twin sister of Sarah, whose house they were all currently occupying, and who sat next to Maggie on the sofa. Both her friends sported vibrant sequinned tops that put Maggie’s tame black effort to shame. Also with them was Alice’s daughter, Rebecca, who was nine like Penny.

  Everyone was waiting in front of the TV for their programme to start.

  Some more patiently than others.

  ‘I’m bored of this.’ Seven-year-old Tabby turned her nose up at the show currently trying its hardest to entertain them. ‘How much longer?’

  ‘Five minutes.’ Maggie gave her youngest an indulgent smile. ‘Just time for you to demolish that last slice of pizza and wash your hands.’

  Tabby frowned. ‘Washing hands is for before you eat.’

  That was Tabby. Always ready to argue any point. ‘True. It’s also for after you eat if your hands are covered in pizza goo. It stops the goo ending up on your clothes.’

  Her daughter glanced down at the pretty rainbow tutu she was wearing, and gave her a toothy grin. ‘I guess.’

  A few minutes later, Penny lunged for the remote control on the coffee table and sent the volume shooting up. ‘It’s about to start!’

  Instantly Sarah’s living room was filled with the distinctive toe-tapping, body-wiggling theme tune for Strictly Come Dancing. Yes, tonight, was the now traditional Saturday night Strictly Fest. The only people missing from their usual gang were Jack and Edward, Alice’s husband and eight-year-old son, who’d chosen to go ten-pin bowling, as they did now and again. In Edward’s words, watching dancing was okay, but bowling was better.

  As they settled in for an hour of the best entertainment Saturday nights could provide, eyes glued to the sixty-inch-wide screen, the front door opened, then banged closed, and a man walked into the room.

  ‘Bloody hell, that’s loud. Are you trying to give the neighbours a heart attack?’

  All of them turned to look at the intruder. Tall, athletic-looking, with sharp cheekbones, tanned skin and shaggy blonde hair, he wore black tracksuit bottoms and a white T-shirt. On his left wrist were several braided leather wrist straps. Further up his arms were… muscles. Maggie couldn’t help but notice them: the corded muscles of his forearms and the bulge of bicep as he strained to carry the gym bag he’d flung over his shoulder.

  His eyes settled on the girls, and he winced. ‘Ah, didn’t see the kids. Sorry for the bad word.’

  ‘We’re trying to watch television,’ Alice answered him pointedly. ‘So butt out.’

  The intruder tutted. ‘That’s not very friendly.’ Then he frowned at the television. ‘Strewth, is that Strictly Come Dancing? I can’t believe it’s still going. Haven’t viewers had enough of watching people prance about in lycra and sequins by now?’

  Tabby stood up and placed a finger on her mouth. ‘Shh.’

  Maggie bit into her lip to stop herself from laughing. Probably she should reprimand her daughter for being rude, and to a stranger too, but what she really wanted to do was high-five her.

  Looking more amused than annoyed, the man flashed Tabby a grin. ‘Hello, I’m Seb. What’s your name?’

  Tabby huffed, raising her eyes to the ceiling. ‘I’m Tabby. But you’re not allowed to talk while we’re watching the dancing.’

  ‘Oh, okay.’ He nodded towards the double doors that divided the sitting room from the kitchen. ‘Am I allowed to get myself a drink?’

  ‘I suppose. If you’re quiet.’

  His lips twitched. ‘Yes ma’am.’

  Seb. Maggie ran the name around in her head, and realised who the guy was. ‘Your brother’s staying with you?’ she whispered to Sarah.

  Sarah nodded, eyes fixed on the television where Tess Daly was coming into view. ‘I’ll tell you later.’

  A loud crash from the kitchen made them all jump.

  ‘What the hell?’ Sarah let out a strangled noise of sheer exasperation.

  ‘Oops.’ Seb’s face appeared, framed by the double doors, looking anything but sorry. ‘Don’t worry, everyone, no need to leap up and check on me. I haven’t hurt myself.’

  Alice stood, grabbed the remote control and pressed pause. ‘For God’s sake, Seb. What have you broken?’

  ‘Hey, relax. It was just a glass. I’ll clean it up. You guys can get back to your programme.’

  ‘Well, as you’ve already disturbed us, I guess I might as well make the introductions. Everyone, if you haven’t guessed already, this is Seb, our annoying baby brother.’ Alice swung her eyes over to Seb. ‘And brother dear, the people whose evening yo
u keep interrupting are Maggie, our friend from uni days, her children, Tabby and Penny, their nanny, Hannah. And I assume you recognise your niece.’

  Seb winked at Rebecca before skimming his gaze over the rest of them. When it connected with Maggie’s, she experienced an unexpected jolt. Wow, even from this distance, she could see his eyes were a vivid blue. Together with the tan, the sun-bleached hair and the laid-back appearance, it gave him a sexy surfer vibe. If he hadn’t come across as such a dick, she might have been tempted to try and set him up with Hannah. The girl could do with a bit of excitement in her life.

  ‘Ladies.’ Seb bowed his head. ‘And my sisters. I apologise for interrupting what is clearly an… absorbing evening of entertainment. From now on I promise to keep the noise down. I wouldn’t want you to miss anything… crucial.’

  Sarcastic bugger. Maggie swallowed her words. After all, he was Alice and Sarah’s brother.

  ‘Oh, bugger off.’ Alice, as usual, said what others were thinking. ‘Just because it isn’t twenty men running around a field getting sweaty doesn’t mean it isn’t entertainment.’

  ‘I think you’ll find it’s twenty-two men, though I suppose you could argue the goalie doesn’t run, so—’

  ‘Seb.’ Alice ground out the word.

  ‘Shut up. Got it.’ He waved a hand at the television. ‘Carry on. I’ll be quiet as a monk in here.’

  Maggie had to bite into her lip again. There was nothing about the six-foot-plus, brash male that suggested he could mimic a monk in any way.

  ‘God, he’s annoying,’ Sarah muttered as he closed the doors.

  ‘Hey, I heard that,’ came a shout from the kitchen. ‘You guys missed me really though. You’re just too stubborn to admit it.’

  Sarah rolled her eyes, but Maggie didn’t miss the smiles she and Alice tried to hide. Seb might be the annoying younger brother, but he was clearly loved.

  Holy fuck, how many pieces could a glass shatter into? Seb brushed yet another shard into the dustpan, his eyes searching the floor for stragglers. He didn’t want to be responsible for any of the party in the living room getting cut feet. Especially not the cute little firecracker sat on the floor with his niece who’d told him to shush.

  He’d not expected to find a house full of women when he’d come back from his workout. Not that he was against the idea – he was all for the other sex. No, it was more that, after only three days being back in his home town, crashing in Sarah’s spare room, he felt the life slowly being strangled out of him. And coming home to a house of females watching dancing on the television only reinforced the direness of his situation. He ached for the sea, the surf, the freedom he’d left behind.

  A life where he hadn’t been introduced as ‘our annoying baby brother’. Where nobody asked him when he was going to ‘grow up, knuckle down and get a proper job’. Yep, those were the very words his father had said to him this morning. Thanks, Pop, way to make me glad I’ve given up my life in sunny Oz and moved back to the dreary UK.

  It hadn’t helped that his dad had looked so terribly ill. Always on the chubby side, he’d lost weight since the heart attack that had nearly killed him a week ago. Now he looked unwell, his skin a horrible grey colour. A man on borrowed time.

  Seb pulled himself up short. Nope, he wasn’t going to wallow. What he needed was a distraction. He glanced towards the closed double doors, smirking at the sound of Bruno Tonioli giving his usual flamboyant feedback. Jeeze, how old was the guy now? He’d been a judge on the programme back when Seb had been forced to endure it at boarding school.

  Decision made, Seb tucked the dustpan and brush back under the sink, opened the doors and squeezed himself on the sofa between Sarah and the fair-haired woman he clearly remembered Alice saying was Maggie.

  ‘Excuse me, ladies.’ He shuffled his backside further back.

  Sarah narrowed her eyes. ‘Really?’ she hissed. ‘You’re going to watch this with us?’

  He gave her a sunny smile. ‘Well, you obviously enjoy it. Thought I’d see what all the fuss was about.’ He glanced at the television. ‘Where’s the old guy?’

  The girls on the floor turned their heads towards him, Tabby giving him that evil eye again.

  ‘You’re meant to be quiet, Uncle Seb.’ His niece did at least smile when she said it.

  ‘Sorry, Beccs.’

  ‘Rebecca,’ Alice muttered.

  He smirked, knowing Alice hated it when he shortened his niece and nephew’s names. ‘Look, just put me out of my misery and tell me what happened to the old dude. You know who I mean. He was the funny one.’

  ‘Bruce Forsyth passed away.’ Maggie angled her head and gave him a rather cool look.

  ‘And a great loss he was, too.’ See, he wanted to add, I knew that. ‘I always had a soft spot for him. But I was talking about the other dude, the one who used to say seeevvvvveeeeerrrrn!’

  ‘Len Goodman left in 2016.’ This time Maggie didn’t bother to look at him, and maybe he was still the immature kid his family had him down as, because her polite formality made him want to wind her up. Ruffle her feathers a bit.

  ‘That’s a real shame,’ he replied, ignoring the deep sigh from Sarah on his other side. ‘I seem to remember he was quite a character.’

  ‘You used to watch it then?’ He had Maggie’s attention again, and had to admit the way she arched her brow, the wintry grey of her eyes, the subtle beauty of her face… she was quite intimidating.

  ‘I had no choice. At boarding school, it was watch that, or watch nothing.’ Immediately he regretted the words. It wasn’t bad enough his sisters calling him baby brother, now he was making himself sound like a schoolboy still. ‘Of course, that was a long time ago,’ he added, which, yes, on reflection, just made the whole kid vibe Alice had started even more obvious.

  ‘I suppose it depends how you define long.’ Maggie gave him a small smile before turning her attention back to the TV screen.

  It left Seb to sigh inwardly and decide to keep his mouth closed for a bit.

  ‘She looks like a fairy princess,’ Tabby piped up five minutes later.

  Seb wondered what her dad was like, because she certainly didn’t get her chatty genes from her mum. They shared hair colour, and the same eye shape, only Tabby’s were a pretty hazel, not a wintry grey. ‘I thought we weren’t allowed to talk?’ he couldn’t resist saying.

  She rolled her eyes in that way kids have of making adults feel two feet small. ‘You can if it’s about Strictly.’

  ‘Right. So I can say she might look like a princess, but he looks like a…’ Dick, prat – he wasn’t sure what was appropriate for a kid of Tabby’s age. ‘He looks like a turkey wrapped in tin foil.’

  Tabby, bless her, started to giggle, and Seb felt a rush of warmth, and of gratitude towards her. One bright spot in an otherwise pretty shitty day. Her eyes sought out her mother’s. ‘Can he say that?’

  Maggie smiled at her daughter – not the watered-down version she’d given him, but a really lovely smile. ‘He can say it.’ When she turned to him, the smile dimmed though the grey of her eyes was less frosty. ‘But we don’t have to agree with him.’

  Alice, lounging on what Seb liked to think of as his armchair, even though he’d only lived at Sarah’s for three days, snorted. ‘People rarely agree with Seb. Usually because he enjoys being deliberately provocative.’

  ‘Hey, it’s not my fault you’re so easy to wind up.’ Intrigued, he glanced back at Maggie. ‘You really think the silver get-up looks good on him?’

  ‘I think,’ she replied in that slow, careful way she seemed to have, ‘for a man to carry off a suit like that, he has to be really confident in who he is. And that is highly attractive.’

  So, she fancied the pro dancer, did she? Seb instinctively looked down at her hand – slender and graceful, much like the rest of her – and noted the absence of a wedding ring. ‘I guess you could see it that way.’ What was so special about being sure of who you were, though? Couldn’t a guy be
attractive while he was still trying to find himself? ‘Or maybe he was just too chicken to say no to the costume department. Hang on, make that too turkey.’

  ‘Seb.’ Sarah’s sharp tone had him swivelling his attention to the woman on his other side. ‘Don’t you have some place else to go? Somewhere your conversation and schoolboy humour might be appreciated?’

  Usually he’d shrug the comment off. He wasn’t by nature insecure; he was a reasonably good-looking guy who had no problem getting on with people. So yeah, normally, he’d laugh that snide comment off and say something like sure I have, but tonight I’m generously sharing myself with you. After all, it’s what Sarah was expecting, because that’s what they did. Needle each other.

  Tonight though? Yeah, tonight he wasn’t in the mood.

  Rising to his feet, he gave Sarah a mock salute and strode out of the room. He’d take a shower and head back out to the pub. A place where he didn’t feel judged. Where he could talk to guys about offside rules and penalty shootouts, rather than costumes, posture and hip movements.

  Chapter Two

  The show was over, the girls fast asleep on Sarah’s bed upstairs. Sarah had opened a bottle of wine, which Hannah and Alice were helping her drink. Maggie was tonight’s designated driver.

 

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