Sweet Reflection (20 page)

Read Sweet Reflection Online

Authors: Grace Henderson

BOOK: Sweet Reflection
7.77Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“You are.” I continue, “I’d know that look anywhere. Actually it’s probably the same as mine. Out with it.”

“Oh darling, it’s nothing really. Just someone who I had a thing with a while back but I’m hoping there’s going to be something more. He’s good-looking, he’s wealthy and extremely successful. I just think we could be a good match, power couple. But we’ll see. Anyway tell me more about your man. I love a bad boy.” She says as she sips her coffee.

I struggle to keep the gushing out of my voice while I tell her all about James.

“He did the plans for our potential refurbishment. Actually you met him that night at the party. You talked to him, I think. James Dawson.” Just saying his name brings up the giddy-happy feeling that leaves a smile.

Her face drops and I’m left wondering if maybe I’ve overdone it with the whole ‘too smugly happy’ way in which I think I just spoke about him. I can’t help it, I’m not very good at hiding my emotions anymore. I feel like such a bitch, and her posture tells me she thinks so too.

“Sorry I don’t think before I speak sometimes. Are you okay?” I ask, worried that I’ve hurt her in some way. Maybe things with her guy aren’t going as well as she made out.

“Fine.” She says abruptly, “I just realised I have another meeting I have to get to. The details about the men’s formal hire company interested in some kind of deal are in there. Set up a meeting and we’ll discuss.” She drops the folder in front of me as she stands and there’s something unpleasant in her attitude that gives me an uneasy feeling. I spend the rest of the afternoon wondering what the hell I said that could have pissed her off, then come to the conclusion she’s probably just having a rough time of the month. Us women
are
renowned for that after all.

 

James

 

I’m pissed I’ve got to meet a potential client tonight. Lately I’ve been able to arrange all my meetings, and in fact my work, around seeing Laurel but this one was particularly insistent. He sounded like one of those jerks who’s used to getting exactly what he wants from everyone. Those people usually have more money than they know what to do with, so I decided to humour him. The address is a housing estate not far from me, so all in all it should take an hour, tops. I get out the car and look around. I can’t see that much detail in the dark, especially as they’re spread out, but the houses look like new builds which is baffling, because they’re usually done up pretty nice already, if you like bland cream walls and cream carpet. Maybe that’s why I’m here; he wants to put a bit more personality into it. The house is huge, I look up and see the double bay front, must be at least five or six bedrooms. Could be a nice quick money spinner if I play my cards right. I walk up the concrete steps to the house and notice there’s just one light on in a bedroom. I press the doorbell, and wait. And wait. And wait. When I finally think no-one’s going to answer, the door swings open and I’m cursing myself for being so stupid. Of course it would be her.

“What the hell, Alex? You’re seriously resorting to this?” I can’t believe she lied to get me here. Each time I see her she gets a little bit more cuckoo-crazy. And I’m having to stand in front of her watching her fuck me with her eyes, dressed in a too-revealing lingerie and robe that Laurel would look sexy as hell in. Now all I want to do is get back to her.

“Darling, just come in for a second. I need some advice. Business, I promise.”

Why I follow her inside I don’t know. I guess it’s because I want answers; why the hell she keeps on at me like this and why she can’t just stay away.

“So, who was it that called me today? It was a stitch-up?”

“Yes, a friend of mine. This is his house, I’m just borrowing it. I didn’t think you would come if I told you I wanted to meet with you.” She says, moving into the living room which I was right, has bland walls and cream carpet. She walks over to the sofa and pats the cushion next to her so I sit on the edge of an armchair nearer the door. May be rude, but at least I can have a quicker getaway if she tries anything.

“You have friends Alex? I am shocked. And yeah, you’re right. I wouldn’t have come.” I can’t keep the irritation out of my voice. She’s wasting my time.

“Now, now, is that any way to treat me? I know something Laurel might find very interesting, don’t forget. And Proposals has been doing so well lately. Did she tell you we landed the publicity deal with Belvoir Castle? A coup, I must say.”

Of course Laurel told me. She couldn’t stop talking about it for days, and she hasn’t stopped telling me how great Alex is and how much of a support she’s been and how she sees Proposals growing day by fucking day. But of course Alex doesn’t need to know any of that. As far as she’s concerned, we’re not together, or that’s what I keep telling her anyway.

“What do you want?” I ask stiffly. She gets up slowly, exaggerating the pouty lips and strut in her step that’s putting me in a very awkward position.

“I know your secret,” she says quietly as she leans in.

“What do you mean?” I swallow hard. It’s all going to the shitter if she means what I think she means.

“I saw your
girlfriend
yesterday.” And she does. Fuck. My attempt at protecting Laurel from the witch has clearly backfired. I didn’t think they had the kind of relationship where they shared their personal lives. Guess I should have known women talk.

“Now I don’t appreciate being lied to, but I’m willing to overlook it, for a price. I want you to come upstairs to bed.
Now
.” Her eyes narrow, and I gulp down as much air as I can before she licks her lips and presses them to mine.

 

 

Chapter Fifteen

 

Laurel

 

“They’re definitely ordered. I can assure you they will be here. I’ve never had this problem before. Give me an hour to sort this Sally. I promise I’ll do what I can to rectify the situation, I just need to look up the data. Yes. Thank you. Of course. I’ll ring you as soon as I know.”

 

I slam the phone down onto the desk and slap my forehead before letting out a string of curse-words, some of which I’ve never used before in my life.

“Laurel, what’s up?” Jess asks as she appears from behind the storeroom door.

My growl loudens as I try and think about how it all went so wrong.

“The Hunter dresses haven’t arrived. You don’t know anything about it do you?” I look up at Jess with hope in my eyes, longing, pleading for her to tell me it was all a mistake and she knows what’s going on, but her slow shake of the head has my head falling into my hands.

“This is the biggest cock-up of the century. Her wedding was going to be what made us. And now I’ve got a feeling she’s going to have to go elsewhere. She’ll tell everyone she knows and it will ruin us.” A tear falls and I feel like such a failure, but I lift my head and Jess is in front of me with her arm on my shoulder. “What can I do?” She asks sympathetically, and I’m thankful I have such a great team who really care about the store.

“Make a coffee?” I laugh through the tears and try to get my head back on straight. “I need to ring the supplier and it’s not going to be a pretty conversation.”

“You bet. Be right back.” I smile at her eager escape, who wouldn’t want to get away from a crazy, crying boss?

 

Another hour later and I’ve had three cups of coffee but I’m no nearer to finding out what went wrong. All the supplier knows is that they had a cancellation phone call from, lo and behold, Laurel Matthews, manager of Proposals. There’s no paper trail, there’s just a postal confirmation of the cancellation which is somewhere in Royal Mail’s hands as we speak. I know I didn’t cancel, there’s no way I would. Sally needed eight dresses and her Vera Wang and at the moment there’s none. The more I go over it in my head I start to doubt myself. Was it the day James came round with flowers and took me to lunch, and I accidentally phoned the wrong supplier because I was in too much of a daze? Was I too hung over after one of our nights out to think properly and again made the mistake of cancelling an order instead of placing a different one? It all seems so far-fetched, I don’t make mistakes like that. Ever. I’m organised and switched on and I love my job so much that I couldn’t imagine ever doing something like that.

 

I’m slumped back in the chair after my second phone call to Sally asking for another couple of hours, which she kindly agreed to, when the door opens and there goes my beating heart out of sync again. His tight jeans, tight polo and huge smile get those butterflies flapping away in my stomach, even through everything that’s going on here. Abercrombie models have nothing on my man.

“Hey babe,” he says and frowns when he sees another tear escaping.

“Hey, what’s going on?” His soft voice draws me to his open arms and he wraps me up tightly, stroking my back. “Why are you crying?”

“I’ve just had a shitty day. Sorry. I shouldn’t be crying. It’s pathetic really.” I say swiping the tears away.

“Right, sit down. Who’s here with you? Jess?”

I nod and he pokes his head round to Jess and asks her to take fifteen so we can talk. He makes me a coffee and comes back out to the showroom.

“Out with it then, babe. A problem shared is a problem halved.”

He’s sitting in the chair in front of the desk in the showroom leaning on his elbow and staring at me thoughtfully as I tell him exactly what I’ve found out so far. I don’t expect anything from him. He’s probably just thinking I’m a stupid blonde that can’t even run her own business, because I know how it sounds. It sounds like one, colossal fuck-up.

 

“I know how it looks, but I honestly didn’t cancel. And I’m just lost because if things like this are happening, I won’t ever make Proposals a success.” My voice is whiny and I need to get a grip on my emotions. I’m supposed to be level-headed, calm in a crisis, but I’ve never come up against something like this because if there is anyone I can usually rely on, it’s myself.

“So you can’t reorder the dresses?”

“No, the lead time is too long. Her wedding’s in two weeks.”

“Okay well there’s no point in dwelling on what went wrong until you’ve found the solution to these dresses first. That’s got to be your priority. Once you’ve done that, you can spend a bit more time on figuring out how to make sure it won’t happen again.” Mr Voice of Reason is of course, correct, but I don’t know how to fix this.

“She needs dresses. You know what styles and colours. Surely someone, somewhere, will stock them? You won’t make any money but at least you’ll fix the problem and have a happy customer.”

I think about that for a second and then a little light starts to swallow the darkness in my head. “Well…I guess, I don’t know, maybe. It may be a store across the country or something. That’s

nine dresses I have to find.”

He shrugs, “Yeah but you may as well try babe. It’s the only thing you can do. Do you have some kind of list which tells you stockists for each designer?”

I jump out the chair and reach into the filing cabinet for the brand directories and gather all the information for the dresses. All I thought about was the fuck up and I didn’t even contemplate there may be a solution. I don’t have much time, and I still don’t know if it will work, but he’s right, it’s the only thing I can do.

“Thank you, thank you, thank you.” I gush as I plant a big kiss on his cheek. “I lucked out with you, y’know.”

“I do know. And you’re welcome. Pass me a directory.” He gestures in front of me and my jaw drops in surprise. “You’re staying?”

He chuckles and digs his phone out of his pocket. “Of course. What kind of boyfriend would I be if I left my girlfriend in her hour of need? I’ll help you call.”

“Okay, bride comes first.
Please
find Sally her Vera Wang. Here are the details.”

 

Two hours later Jess has taken over the appointments out front and James and I are in my office at the back finishing up the phone calls. We have eight Bridesmaid dresses located, all in remote areas of the country but have yet to find the Vera Wang.

“That’s fantastic, thanks for your help sweetheart. Oh she will. Okay, speak to you soon. Bye.”

He swipes over the screen of his phone and places it on the desk, leaning right back in the chair.

“Sweetheart, hey?” I ask with a playful smirk on my face. All I can think about is how grateful I am.

James laughs and shrugs it off. “Worked didn’t it? Told her I wanted it for my fiancée and it was the dress of her dreams. So it’s being shipped to you today. Am I great or what?”

I walk round the edge of the desk and sit in front of him. He straightens out of the chair and opens up my legs to stand in between them.

“Did I mention how grateful I was for your help today?”

His hands reach up to grip either side of my face and his mouth comes so close to mine, I can feel his breath on my face.

“Once or twice, but you can say it again.” He says against my lips.

“I’m so, so grateful, and I think you deserve a very big reward.” Our lips touch lightly and he sucks on my bottom lip, then with a flash of his tongue, gently opens my mouth up to him. Our kiss only lasts for a minute but it’s enough to make me light-headed.

“Well I’m up for that. But not tonight. Because I have a date.” And then the happiness fades.

“Oh?” I reply, trying to sound more curious than annoyed. It’s not with me.

“Yep. I’ve got to be at her house at seven.” He’s being evasive on purpose, he knows I wanted more of an answer than that.

“Well?” I say, crossing my arms in front me.

“Well what?” He’s holding back a smile, and his head is cocked to the side, waiting.

“Explain, please.” My voice is stern and angry but there’s a little shake to it I do my best to cover with a clear of the throat.

He slumps back in the chair and cockily stretches his arms up behind his head. The polo he’s wearing rides up and a hint of his stomach peeks out that has me briefly forgetting why I was angry with him.

Other books

Davidian Report by Dorothy B. Hughes
Ghost in the Hunt by Moeller, Jonathan
Working With Heat by Anne Calhoun
Honor Bound by Samantha Chase
City of Secrets by Stewart O'Nan
Slocum #422 by Jake Logan
Lady Pamela by Amy Lake
Claiming the Cowboys by Alysha Ellis