Tags:
Fiction,
General,
Romance,
Contemporary,
Love Stories,
australia,
Fiction - Romance,
Romance - Contemporary,
Romance: Modern,
English Light Romantic Fiction,
Sydney (N.S.W.),
Surrogate mothers
wrong direction.
Before he could think of a way to extricate himself from this trap of his own making, Mattie smiled slowly.
‘Coffee sounds good,’ she said and her smile deepened, revealing an enchanting dimple. ‘Your place or mine?’
He couldn’t help returning her smile. She was cleverly letting him off the hook, placing them back on their correct footing. As flatmates. For one more day.
‘Try my place,’ he said smoothly. ‘It’s very handy—just around the corner.’
A breeze was blowing in from the harbour and it buffeted them as they walked home, making it hard to talk. When they reached the flat, Brutus was as eager to see Jake as he was to see Mattie. Jake laughed as he gave the little dog a scratch behind his silky ears.
Mattie offered to get the coffee started, but she wasn’t at all surprised when Jake announced that perhaps he would go into the city for a bit, after all. She wasn’t surprised, but she was disappointed, which was utterly silly. She knew she didn’t want to get involved with him. But she also knew she was the kind of girl men left behind when something better came along.
She waved him off with a bright smile. ‘Have a good evening.’
‘You too.’
‘And if you take Roy out tomorrow, I hope you have a good time.’
‘Thanks.’
Jake paused on the front step and looked back at her as she lifted a hand to hold back her windblown hair. She twisted a strand lightly around one finger and tucked it behind her ear. There was nothing flirtatious about the gesture, but Jake seemed to be transfixed. His gaze scalded her as he stared at her hand, and then at her hair, at her ear.
His interest was so intense that Mattie couldn’t breathe. She swayed against the door frame and her legs threatened to give way. She’d never really understood what swooning involved, but she was certain that if Jake had touched her at that moment she would most definitely have swooned.
But Jake gave a slight shake of his head and the possibility vanished. ‘Would you come?’ he asked.
‘Pardon?’ Mattie felt dizzy and confused. What was heasking? Surely he wasn’t inviting her to go out with him for a fun-filled night on the town?
‘Tomorrow,’ he said with a smile. ‘When I take Roy out, will you come too?’
Whoosh! It was like having a bucket of cold water dumped on her head. A chilling dash of reality. Now Mattie knew without a shadow of a doubt that Jake hadn’t followed her to the café tonight because he liked her new hairdo, or the way she looked in her best silk blouse. He hadn’t shared a table with her because he fancied her.
And he wasn’t interested in taking her out now. The unflattering truth was—Jake was the same as everyone else in Mattie’s life—he needed her help.
Sooner or later, everyone turned to Mattie Carey for help, but this time, for her emotional health, she knew she must say no. She shook her head. ‘Sorry.’
He frowned at her. ‘Don’t tell me you have another appointment. What is it this time? A manicure?’
She looked down at her hands. ‘I…I need to get on with my book.’
‘Couldn’t you spare just one day, Mattie?’
His dark eyes were shining with sincerity, but she refused to be taken in. After one meal with him, she was already a mess. If she spent a whole day in his company, she would fall completely under his spell, and that was unwise. It was worse than that. It was ridiculous. Perilous.
She’d tried one long-distance relationship and she was still flinching at the memory almost three years later. She never wanted to embark on another, especially not now when she was on the verge of becoming pregnant with someone else’s baby.
‘It would be a pity if you couldn’t make it,’ Jake said,watching her closely. ‘I know Roy would really enjoy your company.’
At the mention of Roy she started to weaken. Poor old fellow. Was she making a mountain out of a molehill? Jake was simply asking for help to entertain an old man.