“No.” Cherie sighed. “I suppose not. Well, there’s no point letting the reservation go. I’ll ring Sarah and ask her.”
“Duncan’s mum? Good idea,” Alastair agreed. “I’m sure she’d welcome a night out. Going through a divorce isn’t easy.”
“No. I’ll talk to you later, then. Goodnight.”
Cherie rang off and called Sarah. She hesitated when Neil answered. “Hullo,” she said. “Cherie here.”
“Cherie! How are you?”
“Fine,” she said. “Alastair’s just backed out of our dinner reservation. I thought Sarah might like to go instead.”
He paused. “I’m sure she would…but she’s gone to Bath for the weekend. I’m staying with Duncan until she returns next week. So Alastair backed out tonight, did he?”
“Yes, he’s working late again. Things are chaotic at the store at the moment.” She glanced at the clock. “If I’m to keep our reservation, I need to go. I won’t keep you.”
“You’re not keeping me from anything but an evening in front of the TV. Where are you off to?”
“Chez Rouge, a new French restaurant in Soho.” She paused and added, “Have you had dinner yet?”
“No. On the menu tonight at Chez Hadley is leftover roast and frozen Yorkshire pudding.”
“Why don’t you come along?” she said impulsively. “I’ve never liked sitting alone in a restaurant. I feel as though everyone’s staring at me, wondering who that sad woman is.”
“Oh, I doubt that. I’m sure they find you intriguing…a woman of mystery.” He paused. “Of course you know that if we dine together, tomorrow it’ll be all over Cavendish Avenue that we’re an item. Sure you want to risk it?”
Cherie didn’t hesitate. “I’m quite sure,” she said, and added, “Shall I meet you there?”
“No need. I’ll pick you up in fifteen minutes.”
“OK. See you then.” With a smile, Cherie hung up the phone and retrieved the pearl eardrop once again.
Perhaps this evening wouldn’t be a total waste after all.
The bill arrived on Wednesday, innocuously enough, in a thick cream envelope. Gemma Astley slit the flap, ready to add it to the pile of invoices for Rhys’s approval. As she scanned the page, her eyes widened. She hurried in to Rhys’s office.
He didn’t look up from his ledgers and spreadsheets. Gemma noticed that the black-framed eyeglasses he wore, hideous on anyone else, looked downright sexy. “Yes, Gemma, what is it?”
“You’d better have a look at this.”
He glanced briefly at the invoice she held out to him. “Yes, it’s a bill. Add it to the pile and send it to accounts payable.”
“Look at the amount.”
He frowned and looked at it more closely. The invoice listed one Missoni tank dress, £919.27; one Roberto Cavalli sheath dress, £372.32; and one Waterford Regency crystal chandelier, shipped to Draemar Castle, County Clare, Scotland, net cost—
Rhys paused, and dropped his pen. “Good God. Eleven thousand pounds…for a chandelier ?” He closed his eyes.
Natalie . This had to be her doing. No wonder she hadn’t shown up on Saturday afternoon to look at the store’s financial spreadsheets; she’d been too busy shopping for designer dresses and overpriced chandeliers.
“Gemma,” he called out grimly, “get me Sir Richard on the phone. I need to speak with him straight away.”
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