nervousness she had felt earlier on.
âI gave you my potted life history when we last met. Or, should I say, when you last appeared uninvited at the house? And you promised to give me yours.â
Starters were brought to them, which she barely noticed because she was so busy concentrating on the man sitting opposite her.
Dominic caught her eye over a mouthful of smoked salmon and looked at her. âI thought youâd already summed me up. Or so you insisted on telling me every time we met. I thought you knew my potted life history.â
âWhere did you grow up?â
âGreece and England. Greece for the holidays, England for the schooling. I was boarded from the age of eleven.â
âWhat was it like?â School had been a nightmare for her. She had loved the work, had been good at it, but the necessity to bend to peer pressure had been acute and she could see, in retrospect, that she had wasted her education. Reading books and studying were things that had had to be done covertly. Not that her parents hadnât encouraged her, but she sailed past their lectures on the importance of a good education with the blithe disregard of someone who was the lynchpin of teenage social life. The prettiest girl with the cutest boyfriend.
Now she listened enviously as Dominic chatted about his own school experiences, making her laugh as he told her stories about the other pupils there. Even at that age, he had already learnt to take for granted the fact that hewould achieve at school, move on to university, reach the highest echelons of professional life.
And she found herself telling him about her own school days. The girls who had smoked behind the bicycle shed. The boys who had drunk. The truancy. The teenage pregnancy that had caused such a stir at the time. No knives, no actual violence, the school really hadnât been that rough, but a lot of giggling in the back at the cool kids who made a point of slouching in their chairs and making ridiculous remarks just to see how far they could push a teacher.
Somewhere along the line, she realised with a little start, they had managed to finish the first bottle of wine and were now well into the second.
She hadnât felt as relaxed as this in a long time. She ate her fish, told him that it was not really any better than fish and chips from a certain place she knew in Shepherdâs Bush.
âAnd will I get to make that judgement myself?â Dominic asked lazily.
âOh, no!â Mattie laughed, looked at him from under her lashes in a way that she knew was provocative. âItâll all go downhill if the posh set decide to descend on it.â But there was no rancour in her voice, and when he laughed she heard herself laughing along.
âI could dress down,â Dominic told her with exaggerated gravity. If a nuclear bomb had been detonated he would have been unaware, because all he could see was this exhilarating creature sitting in front of him, with her mobile, animated face and her expressive, slender hands.
âHah. I bet youâve never dressed down in your life before.â
âJeans? Sloppy shirt? Running shoes? I could do that.â He stroked his chin thoughtfully. ââCourse, it would require a shopping tripâ¦â He knew she would be amused, would laugh, and he wanted to hear her laughter.
He signalled for the bill, still keeping his dark eyes firmly fixed on her face.
Mattie regretfully thought that the evening was over. âI could get a taxi back to my place,â she said as he signed a credit-card slip. âYou donât have to drop me back.â
Dominic looked up at her and their eyes met with an understanding that sent a charge of electricity running through her.
âThis has a déjà vu ring about it,â he murmured, standing up and waiting as she followed suit.
âWe canâtâ¦â No use pretending that she couldnât read the intention in his eyes.
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