you to continue with a certain amount of travel, to other comparable resorts. For . . . research purposes.â Roxanne looked at him suspiciously.
âHas this job been tailor-made for me?â
A smile flickered over Nicoâs face. âIn a way . . . perhaps yes.â
âI see.â Roxanne stared into her glass of orange juice. âBut . . . why?â
There was silence for a whileâ then Nico said in a deadpan voice, âYou know why.â
A strange pang went through Roxanne and she closed her eyes, trying to rationalize her thoughts. The sun was hot on her face; in the distance she could hear children shrieking excitedly on the beach. âMama!â one of them was calling, âMama!â She could live here all year round, she thought. Wake up to sunshine every day. Join the Georgiou family for long, lazy celebration mealsâ as she once had for Andreasâs birthday.
And Nico himself. Courteous, self-deprecating Nico, who never hid his feelings for herâ but never forced them on her either. Kind, loyal Nico; she would die rather than hurt him.
âI canât,â she said, and opened her eyes to see Nico gazing straight at her. The expression in his dark eyes made her want to cry. âI canât leave London.â She exhaled sharply. âYou know why. I just canâtââ
âYou canât leave him,â said Nico, and, in one movement, drained his espresso.
Something was ringing in Maggieâs mind. A fire alarm. An alarm clock. The doorbell. Her mind jerked awake and she opened her eyes. Dazedly, she glanced at her watch on the side of the bath and saw to her astonishment that it was one oâclock. Sheâd been in her bath for almost an hour, half dozing in the warmth. As quickly as she could, she stood up, reached for a towel, and began to dry her face and neck before getting out.
Halfway out of the bath another practice contraction seized her and in slight terror she clung onto the side of the bath, willing herself not to slip over. As the painful tightness subsided, the doorbell rang again downstairs, loud and insistent.
âBloody hell, give me a minute!â she yelled. She wrenched angrily at a towelling robe on the back of the door, wrapped it around herself and padded out of the room. As she passed the mirror on the landing she glanced at herself and was slightly taken aback at her pale, strained reflection. Hardly a picture of blooming health. But then, in the mood she was in, she didnât care what she looked like.
She headed for the front door, already knowing from the thin shadowy figure on the other side of the frosted glass that her visitor was Paddy. Barely a day went by without Paddy popping in with some excuse or otherâ a knitted blanket for the baby, a cutting from the garden, the famous recipe for scones, copied onto a flowery card. âSheâs keeping bloody tabs on me!â Maggie had complained, half jokingly, to Giles the night before. âEvery day, like clockwork!â On the other hand, Paddyâs company was better than nothing.And at least she hadnât brought Wendy back for a visit.
âMaggie!â exclaimed Paddy, as soon as Maggie opened the door. âSo glad to have caught you in. Iâve been making tomato soup, and, as usual, Iâve made far too much. Can you use some?â
âOh,â said Maggie. âYes, I should think so. Come on in.â As she stood aside to let Paddy in, another contraction beganâ this one deeper and more painful than the others. She gripped the door, bowing her head and biting her lip, waiting for it to passâ then looked up at Paddy, a little out of breath.
âMaggie, are you all right?â said Paddy sharply.
âFine,â said Maggie, breathing normally again. âJust a practice contraction.â
âA what?â Paddy stared at her.
âTheyâre called Braxton-Hicks contractions,â
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