pained expression.
But it had taken only one look at Romeâs face, at the hard implacability of his expression, to realise that the friendly chat he had intended having with his longtime friend was out of the question; Rome looked as approachable as a wounded bull-elephant!
Rome gave a dismissive shrug of broad shoulders. âObviously Audrey had decided differently,â he rasped harshly. âAnd, as I have learnt to my cost recently, there is absolutely no point in trying to stand in the way of a woman who has made up her own mind what she intends doing with her own life!â
The remark, Adam knew, could have been directed at Harrie and Danie as much as at Audrey, and their determination to marry the men of their choice with as little delay as possible. However, Adam sensed, rather than actually saw, Andieâs reaction to her fatherâs remark, could feel the tension emanating from her as she paused in her care of the roses.
Leading Adam to wonder about the decision concerning what she intended doing with her own life Andie could possibly have made recently for her to assume Romeâs remark was actually directed at herâ¦?
Seeing no immediate answer to his question in either Andie or Romeâs faces, he turned his attention back to Audrey; he would try and talk to Andie later on in the weekend. Tryâbecause that hadnât been too easy to do just recently!
âAnd what does Audrey intend doing with her life?â he prompted the other man.
âI have no idea,â Rome answered scathingly. âI suggest you ask her that yourself.â
âMeaning that you havenât bothered?â Adam countered, his expression deliberately innocent as the other man scowled at him.
âMeaning that Audrey has made it more than plain that itâs none of my damned business!â Rome snapped.
âHmm,â Adam murmured thoughtfully.
âWhat, exactly, does that mean?â Rome challenged hardly.
ââHmmâ?â Adam repeated, realising he was provoking the other man but knowing he had no choice if he was to get anywhere in this conversation at all. âIâve always thought of it as a pretty noncommittal remark, myself.â
âThen why make it?â Rome grated disgustedly. âYouââ
âDaddy,â Andie interrupted softly. âArenât you being justa littleâaggressive to your guest?â she said, once she had Romeâs full attention.
Rome looked far from pleased at the obvious rebuke. Adam couldnât say he was exactly overjoyed by it himself; since when had he been relegated to being Romeâs guestâ¦?
But he already knew the answer to that, he acknowledged heavily. He and Andie, although still polite to each otherâoverly so, Adam felt!âwere no longer friends, that easy camaraderie they had once shared no longer there. He knew the reason for that all too well, and regretted it more than he could say! More than he had ever regretted anything else in his life!
âI can take a little aggression,â Adam assured Andie lightly; in fact, he would relish it. His relationship with all of the Summer family had changed over recent months, necessarily so with Harrie and Danie, now that they were both married. But he had a feeling that if he were to speak as plainly to Rome as he wished to concerning Audrey, then he might jeopardise his friendship with the older man to such a degree that it would be irretrievable. Which meant his visits here would be a thing of the pastâ¦
Did he really want that?
Of course he didnât! His friendship with the Summer family had been his anchor for more years than he cared to think about!
But he couldnât just stand by and watch Rome make the biggest mistake of his life, either. He, perhaps more than most people, knew what it was like to love a woman who was completely out of your reach. As Audrey would be to Rome if he should let her
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley