at her. âI saw you dance JulietâNat dragged me along.â He gave her a look that reminded her of a naughty schoolboy. âThat sounded awful. Sorry.â
She tried not to smile back, and failed. âForgiven.â
âBut youâre wrong when you say youâre not spontaneous and creative. You took that choreography and filled it with life. You made it something unique.â
Allegraâs whole body began to tingle, warmed by Finnâs praise, then as suddenly as the pins and needles had started, they vanished.
âThat was a long time ago.â She looked at the mattress beneath her fingers, played with a thin leaf. âDonât you read the papers? Iâve burned out since then. Lost my spark.â
Finn didnât say anything and her stomach went cold, fearing his silence, but when she found the courage to meet his gaze she discovered heâd been waiting for her to do just that. He dismissed her comment with a word that shouldnât be repeated in polite company.
âI donât believe that. Not from what Iâve seen of you in the last two days. But it really doesnât matter what the papers think. Itâs what you think that counts.â
Allegra raised her eyebrows. What a novel concept.
Finn continued. âI think you need to stop waiting to see if ballet has finished with you and decide if you have finished with it. Itâs your choice, Allegra. Yours alone.â
Neither of them said anything for a long time after that. Finn left her to digest what heâd said in peace, and digest it she did. Who knew if it would agree with her?
I donât know about ballet, she silently told him, but youâre my choice. That one was easy. Took no effort at all.
When she sneaked a look at him again his eyelids were closed, and seeing him give in to drowsiness pulled her own lids down, too. She let them slide closed as she rolled over, but before sleep took over she whispered, âThank you, Finn.â
âNo problemâ was the mumbled reply.
And then Allegra wasnât aware of anything any more.
âDoesnât this make you wish we had a packet of marshmallows?â Finn was enjoying the contrast of the warmth from the fire on his face and front and cool night snaking up his back under his shirt. With a million childhood campfires swirling in his head he turned to Allegra, who was sitting on a log theyâd pulled close to the fire for a bench, looking at him with blank eyes. He poked the fire with the stick heâd been holding before dropping it into the flames.
âYou never went camping as a kid?â he asked, almost wondering if such a horror could be true.
She shook her head.
Wow. A deprived childhood indeed, despite her obviously cultured and privileged background.
âNot even once?â
She bit her lip and shrugged. Finn tried hard to find the silver lining. He liked silver linings; they protected a man from the depressing facts of life. His gaze roamed to the shelter, the fire, the moonlit beach and then he turned back to her. âAt least this week should go some way to making up for that.â
She smiled at that. âApart from the marshmallows,â she added quietly.
Right then and there, Finn decided to send a whole crate of marshmallows to Allegra when he got back to London. Then she could use her fire-making skills to roast them whenever she likedâif she ever managed to get the knack of it, of course.
âWho did you go camping with?â she asked. âYour parents?â
Finn nodded. âSometimes. But I used to spend a huge chunk of my summer holidays with my grandfather at his home on Skye. Weâd go camping and fishing and hill-walkingâ¦â
Allegra sat up a little. âAnd marshmallows were always essential kit?â
âAlways,â Finn replied, grinning. âGrandad would eat the pink ones and Iâd eat the white.â
She laughed. âWhy no pink
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