knowâ¦â
âWell, not really, but itâs none of my business anyway.â
âYes, it is! I mean, youâre the closest thing I have to a relative. At least, a relative of my own age. I have a couple of aunts in Cornwall but theyâre in their nineties.â She wrinkled her nose, considering the dilemma of her relativeless state, then her face cleared slightly. âItâs just thatâ¦you knowâ¦Callum and I⦠Well, heâs pretty busyâ¦work and suchâ¦â
âWhy donât you tell him to make some time for you?â
Stephanie shrugged and chewed her lip. âItâs not as easy as all that.â
Destiny inclined her head to one side and listened. The waiter efficiently cleared their table, routinely asking whether everything was satisfactory, to which she replied, honestly, âThere wasnât enough of it.â
âI shall tell our head chef,â the man said with an expression that told her that he had no intention of doing any such thing.
âI mean,â Stephanie said in a rush, âCallumâs so overpowering and he hates women who nag. When we first started going out, he used to say that he loathed women who were demanding.â
âSo what?â Destiny frowned, trying to work this out in her head. âIf you donât demand certain things, how on earth do you ever get them?â
Another helpless shrug. âThing is, we met at a business do that Uncle Abe had hosted before he and Mum divorced, and he sort of swept me off my feet to start with. You wouldnât believe the women who would love to be seen with himâ¦â
âI canât see why if heâs that intolerant.â But she could. He drew stares from other people. He was physically commanding. He had the sort of personality that compelled other peopleâs attention.
âOh, heâs so rich and powerful and awe-inspiring.â
âI donât think heâs awe-inspiring. Actually, sometimes he irritates the life out of me.â
âBut youâd never let him know that, would you?â
âYes. Why not? Heâs not going to chop both my arms off if I say whatâs on my mind.â
Stephanie looked at her as though she had suddenly discovered that she was dealing with a madwoman.
âAnyway,â Destiny said hastily, âtell me about this wonderful house I shall be going to see on the weekend. Has Callum told you about his offer?â Which he hadnât, unsurprisingly, so she spent a few minutes telling her stepcousin the details.
âSo what will you do?â Stephanie asked, while Destiny wondered why her fiancé had chosen to withhold such important news from the woman he loved. âIf heâs made such an offer, then you know heâll expect you to accept. He never compromises when it comes to business.â She giggled nervously. âOr anything else, for that matter.â
âI donât care what he expects. I shall have a look around and come to my own conclusions.â Now, from her stepcousinâs expression, she was listening to someone from another planet speaking in forked tongue. Destiny gave a little sigh, plunged into an unrevealing conversation about Henri because she knew that it would distracther stepcousin, and left the restaurant half an hour later wondering what exactly was the nature of the relationship between Stephanie and Callum. Was it any wonder that she had no time to read over here? There was far too much drama in her everyday life to leave much room for a bit of mindless escapism.
Whatever the dress code was for a trip to a country houseâ her country house, as Derek had explained in length on the telephone the day beforeâDestiny didnât care. She packed comfortable clothes. A spare pair of jeans, two tee-shirts, flat walking boots, a pair of wellingtons. She had worked out that she now possessed roughly twice the amount of clothes she had ever
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