‘It’ll be fun, you’ll see.’ Emma tugged on Tash’s hand gently. ‘Come on, we hardly ever go out on girly nights any more. And, besides, aren’t you dying to find out what Millie has done with the old chapel?’
‘Yeah. Suppose.’ Tash had gone to school with Millie. Although not close friends, they often bumped into each other at events to promote businesses in Berecombe. Tash admired Millie’s work ethic and was a regular at her café. Scuffing her foot on the sandy prom, she noted that the hem of her trousers was already getting frayed. She should have worn her heels but Adrian didn’t like her in them. She was already a good four inches taller than him in bare feet. Something he hated. ‘Lead me on then, girlfriend.’ She shook her finger at Emma. ‘But I warn you, if it’s boring or the wine is undrinkable, I’m out of there.’
Chapter 2 (#u0ee4413c-6578-5a00-810f-014c39848260)
The book group was being held in the new extension to Millie Vanilla’s Café. When Millie had bought up the old seaman’s chapel next to the café, the town had been agog to see what she had planned for it. There were some who voiced disappointment when it had been announced it was going to be an extension to the café and a bookshop. They’d hoped for a Rick-Stein-style fish restaurant. After all, it hadn’t done Padstow’s tourist industry any harm, had it? The builders working on the continuing refurbishment of the newly launched Henville Manor Hotel had moonlighted and, after a few short months, the refit was complete.
Even the most ardent Rick fan had been won over. A wide glass walkway had been built to connect the original café building to the chapel’s side door. The whole of the west side of the building had been removed and replaced with two-storey-high windows which looked over the harbour and the sunsets. Even the terrace had been extended right around both buildings to create a huge open space. In the pinkening light of the sunset, with the bunting fluttering and people milling about in front, it looked wonderful.
Despite her preoccupation with Adrian, Tash gasped as she walked in. She’d only ever walked past the building before and had ignored it in its boarded-up state. When she’d heard it was on the market her interest as an estate agent had been pricked, but as soon as it had gone up for sale it had been snapped up. Not long after she’d heard Millie and Jed had bought it and she’d joined in with the rest of Berecombe in wondering just what they had planned. They’d done an amazing job in a very short space of time, she thought, as she looked around in awe. Running around the inside, giving access to the upper floor, was a wide walkway, wider where it butted up against the double-height window. There, low leather chairs and sofas had been arranged to make a cosy reading space – that’s if you could tear your gaze away from the stunning sunset. There were bookshelves everywhere, with old-fashioned sliding ladders dotted about. The part nearest the glass corridor was set up as an extension to the café, with scrubbed pine tables and benches. A few people had gathered there, clutching wine glasses and chatting.
Amy Chilcombe, the bookshop’s manager, greeted them. ‘Natasha, Emma, how great to see you. Come on over and grab some wine. I’ll introduce everyone once we’re all sitting down in the reading area.’ She caught Tash’s glance and her huge blue eyes blinked nervously. ‘Not all the stocks of books have arrived yet. The grand opening isn’t for a while.’ She nodded to the far end of the building, where some makeshift screens had been put up. ‘And the children’s area is still under construction too.’
‘Just as well you’re not open yet then, isn’t it?’ Tash said and received a sharp elbow from Emma.
‘Be nice,’ her friend hissed.
Tash apologised. ‘Sorry Amy. Came out sharper than intended. I’m in a foul mood.’ Things between them could be awkward and she never really understood why Amy was so nervous around her. True, Tash’s first boyfriend had dumped her to go out with Amy but that hadn’t ended well either. If anything, she and Amy should have bonded in female solidarity against unreliable men but it had never happened. She attempted a friendly smile. ‘We’ll get a glass and then where do we go?’
Amy blushed and cast a worried look at Tash. ‘The reading area is up there, on the mezzanine level.’ She pointed to the comfortable-looking area that Tash had spotted earlier. ‘I hope we’ve got room for everyone. More have turned up than I anticipated.’
‘Probably just want to have a nosey around,’ Tash said, without thinking. ‘You know what people are like in Berecombe when there’s something new.’
‘But they might stay on for the book group,’ Emma added, more helpfully. As Amy went to greet two men who had just walked in, she rounded on Tash. ‘What has got into you tonight? Would it hurt to even try to be nice? You know how shy and unconfident Amy can be.’
‘I thought I was being nice? I can’t help it if Amy jumps like a cat whenever I’m around,’ Tash retorted, immediately regretting it when she saw the hurt look on Emma’s face. She should have stayed at home. She couldn’t seem to snap out of her mood.
‘Sometimes I feel I just don’t know you any more, Tash.’ Emma paused, on the verge of saying something else, before she decided not to. ‘I’ll get us some wine, you go on up. I’m not sure you’re fit company for anyone tonight. I don’t know why you bothered to come.’
She turned away before Tash could apologise. Tash stared after her friend for a second and then made her way to the spiral staircase before she could change her mind and go home. The image of Adrian lying on their bed grinning had her running up the stairs and tripping on her long trousers.
‘Careful.’
Tash would have fallen had the owner of the voice not grabbed her arm. A man was coming up the stairs behind her.
‘They shouldn’t put such dangerous stairs in a place like this,’ Tash said. ‘I could sue.’
The man smiled. ‘More haste, less speed.’ He pointed to the hem of her trousers. ‘And I think any case for damages might have failed on the grounds of personal negligence,’ he added, mildly.
She followed his look and saw the hem of one leg of her palazzo pants had completely unravelled. ‘Well, this evening started off badly and is just getting worse.’ Turning away, she took the rest of the stairs more carefully. She flopped onto the nearest chair, annoyed to see him take the one next to it. Just what she needed. Another arrogant man, telling her what to do. She had it at work, she suffered it at home and now had to endure it in her free time too.
‘Why, because of a hem coming down?’
She ignored the remark.
He held out a hand. ‘Kit Oakley.’
Tash gritted her teeth and then remembered Emma’s comment about not being fit company. ‘Natasha Taylor,’ she offered, grudgingly.
‘Oh,’ he said, raising his eyebrows. ‘The estate agent.’
‘Yes. And before you say anything, some of us are quite human.’
‘I believe some of you are.’
Tash resisted the barb. She was tired of the jokes, the criticism her profession received. If only people realised how hard they all worked. Then a thought stopped her. ‘Hang on, Oakley? I sold a bungalow belonging to a Mrs Oakley last month. Over Southleigh way.’
Kit grinned. ‘My mother. She said you worked tirelessly.’
‘Yes, it all got a bit tricky just before exchange. Problems over a questionable access, I remember.’ Tash relaxed a little. She loved talking about work. ‘Glad it went through though. She’s lovely.’
‘I’ll tell her. She’ll be delighted.’
‘Where’s she gone to?’ Tash was curious. Mrs Oakley had always been welcoming and they’d shared a pot of tea once, but she’d not mentioned where she was moving to. ‘All I knew was that it was a no chain sale.’
‘Moved in with me, for my sins.’ He raised his eyebrows again. ‘I’ve bought up a ramshackle of a place with land. It’s on the outskirts of Colyton. Mum’s got the lodge.’
‘Oh, the old Fairbairn farm?’
‘You know it?’
‘Only farm big enough around here to have a lodge house.’
‘You’re good!’
‘It’s my job.’
They smiled at one another warily, stowing their weapons and sensing a truce.
Emma arrived, carrying two glasses of wine. She handed one to Tash without a word and then settled in the chair next to Kit and began chatting to him.
So much for Emma being nervous, Tash thought as she grinned. She sipped her wine which, to her relief, was delicious and found herself studying the man next to her. She couldn’t say he was good-looking, not in any conventional sense. Actually, not in any sense. He was very tall and she could see he had a well-muscled build even though it was disguised under a pair of baggy jeans and a grey hoodie. A powerful nose separated deep set eyes and he had a scrubby beard, a slightly darker brown than his hair. Clearly he felt he could dress up, Tash thought to herself sarcastically. He and Emma suddenly looked at her and, for one second, she was worried she may have said it out loud. An unaccustomed blush stole over her cheeks and she finished her wine in one gulp. She really was in no fit state to be out.
Chapter 3 (#u0ee4413c-6578-5a00-810f-014c39848260)
The chairs and sofa in the reading area gradually filled up. Millie welcomed everyone, said they were all invited to the grand opening in a few weeks’ time and then explained she was handing over to Amy who was going to run the group.
‘Thank you, Millie. And thank you for providing the wine and the sandwiches and coffee for later.’ Amy’s hands fluttered. ‘Perhaps we could go round the group and tell each other who we are and a little bit about what we do, what we like to read? I know most of us know one another but it might help those of us who don’t. Know one another, I mean.’
Emma rescued her. ‘Great idea, Amy. Shall I go first?’ She beamed at the group. ‘I’m Emma Tizzard and you all probably know, I work with Natasha at Hughes and Widrow, the estate agent’s up in town. I absolutely love to read and I’ll read anything. I’m working my way through the Poldark series at the moment. The main problem is time.’ She looked around. ‘It’s probably something we all battle with. Finding the time to read.’ A few nodded. ‘Well, that’s me…’ She tailed off and looked to Kit.
‘I’m Kit Oakley,’ he said after clearing his throat. ‘Just moved into the area. I’m in the middle of setting up the farm I’ve just bought. Like Emma, I love to read and will read anything too, although I don’t sleep much so finding the time is maybe easier. Reading at night means I get through an awful lot of reading material.’
There were one or two murmurs of sympathy and then Tash realised it was her turn. ‘I’m Natasha, although most people call me Tash. As Emma said, we work together at the estate agents. I’m the manager. I live up on the new estate on the edge of town and I don’t have much time to read at all but when I do I like something escapist, a good beach read.’ There was no reaction to this at all. Sod them. Tash stopped talking and turned to the woman next to her.
‘Well, you all know me,’ she began, stoutly. ‘I’m Biddy Roulestone, used to be Treeby, as I’ve not long married.’ One or two giggled. Biddy glared and they shut up. ‘I like a good biography or a bit of Dickens and I’m partial to erotica, as long as it’s well written, that is.’
Tash smothered a laugh. She knew Biddy by reputation. Pete, her manager before his promotion, had dealt with Biddy when she’d bought the huge house on the hill. She’d been a cash buyer. He claimed he’d never recovered from the experience.