‘But you said ...’ Maddy’s throat constricted with emotion . . you said that you thought you might, um ...’
‘Love you. I know. But it could still happen, couldn’t it?
Give it a couple of weeks and I might realise I can’t stand the sight of you. Or you may decide you never want to see me again.’
Right now, that seemed about as likely as deciding that your favourite sandwich was cat food and mustard. ‘And if we don’t?’
‘If we don’t, it’s officially a disaster. We’ll just have to run away together.’ Kerr drew her towards him once more, his dark eyes fixed on hers. ‘We’ll have to find somewhere where Marcella can’t track us down. Join up with the VSO or something, and devote the rest of our lives to helping homeless smelly old tramps in Siberia. It’ll be vile, but at least we’ll be together. God,’ he pulled a face, ‘I really hope it doesn’t come to that. Talk about an incentive to get you out of my system.’
‘Maybe we should write down a list of our had points, to get the ball rolling,’ Maddy said helpfully.
‘You know, I could go off you really quickly if you told me lots of completely hideous things about you.’
‘You think? Like what?’
‘Oh, like if you watch Sky Sports all the time. And get really worked up about football. And you hate dogs. And you’re really irritatingly tidy. Or if you only change your socks once a fortnight. And you tell bad jokes all the time and expect me to laugh at them over and over again.’
Actually, this was easy, all she had to do was remember all the things that had annoyed her about previous boyfriends. ‘Or you’re proud of the fact that you’ve never done the washing-up in your life, or you play with model train’s, or you think it’s funny to mock people with speech impediments, or like to pretend you’ve got a huge spider in your hand when you know perfectly well someone’s terrified of spiders—’
‘Stop, stop.’ Kerr held up his hands in protest. ‘Jesus, what kind of men have you been associating with? That’s the most appalling list I’ve ever heard. Do you seriously think I’d do any of those things?’
‘Well, no.’ Maddy was embarrassed.
‘Apart from the spider trick, of course.’ He nodded matter-of-factly. ‘I’ve done that.’
‘Really?’
‘When I was about sixteen. But if you think it would help, I could do it again.’
‘No thanks. How about you?’
‘What puts me off girls, you mean? God, loads of things.’ Sliding his arms around her, Kerr said,
‘Girls on diets, girls asking if their dress makes them look fat, girls reading out your horoscope even though they know you aren’t interested, girls who think spending a fortune on clothes and manicures makes up for not having a personality, girls who eat crisps with their mouths open, girls who pee in other people’s gardens then expect to be rescued when they can’t climb back over the wall – OK, not true,’ he said as Maddy shot him a warning look, ‘I love it when girls do that.’
‘Where can we go?’ said Maddy.
‘I told you, anywhere in the world. Actually, Siberia’s bloody freezing. How would you feel about Barbados?’
‘I mean here, while we’re secretly seeing each other and doing our best to hate each other. Every time we go out I’ll be terrified Marcella might see us, or friends of Marcella might see us and tell her.’
She gestured in desperation. ‘Or friends of friends, and God knows there must be thousands of them around. Don’t you see, we can never go anywhere.’
‘ Fine.’ Kerr shrugged, unperturbed. ‘We’ll just have to stay here and make our own entertainment.’
‘But it’ll be like being stuck in a prison cell,’ wailed Maddy. ‘It’ll be boring!’
‘I’ve been called a lot of things in my time. But never boring. Anyway, why does it have to be?
We can play card games. Watch documentaries on the TV. Make Airfix kits, do giant jigsaw puzzles ...’
He was teasing her. Maddy squirmed with pleasure as his hands settled around her waist, his thumbs idly stroking her back. She was getting the distinct impression that the jigsaw puzzles he had in mind comprised two pieces.
‘This isn’t going to work.’ She held her breath as his warm mouth brushed her collarbone.
‘OK, you’re right, let’s forget it.’ Abruptly spinning her round, Kerr marched her back to the hall, yanked open the front door and
‘Noooo!’ shrieked Maddy.
He closed the front door.
‘Think it might work after all?’
She exhaled slowly. Kerr, having successfully called her bluff, regarded her with amusement.
‘Maybe.’ Trembling again, Maddy leaned back against the wall.
‘Sorry. Not good enough.’
‘OK. We’ll do it.’ What choice did they have, after all? The alternative – not seeing him again –
was unthinkable.
‘Wise decision.’ Smiling, he kissed her again. Feeling as though her whole body was on fire, Maddy wrapped her arms round his neck and kissed him back. Twannggg, went her bra strap and for a split second she thought Kerr had unfastened it.
‘That definitely wasn’t me.’ Raising his hands, he protested his innocence. ‘I didn’t do that.’
Bugger, he was right. With impeccable timing, Maddy realised, her left shoulder strap had chosen this moment to snap.
‘Sorry, it’s an old bra.’ Wryly, she added, ‘The excitement must have been too much for it.’
‘You see? That’s one of the things I like about you. What colour is it?’
‘Um ... sort of coffee coloured.’ Mocha, actually, but Kerr was only a man. He wouldn’t understand.
‘And what colour are your knickers?’
Oh, the shame. But since modesty clearly wasn’t an option, Maddy said, ‘Black.’
Anyway, with a bit of luck he’d find this out for himself before too long.
‘Do you know how much I love it that you’re wearing a brown bra and black knickers?’ Kerr said happily.
Brown? The horror. Unable to help herself, Maddy blurted out, ‘Mocha.’
There was a difference.
‘Whatever. I just ... all my life, whenever I’ve been out with girls and undressed them for the first time, they’ve always been wearing brand new super-lacy matching bra and knickers. It’s so contrived, it makes me feel as if I’ve been set up. The situation just doesn’t feel spontaneous any more.’
‘If you feel that strongly about it, you could always try not undressing them,’ Maddy pointed out.
‘It doesn’t put me off that much. Anyway, I’m just saying it makes a refreshing change, and I really like it that you aren’t the kind of girl who meets a new man and rushes out to buy a sexy new bra and knicker set.’
‘This isn’t going to work,’ said Maddy. ‘I’m supposed to be putting you off me.’
‘Sorry, but you haven’t.’ Kerr’s eyes glittered. In fact you’ve failed, with flying colours.’
‘But I did buy a sexy bra and knicker set! This morning! It’s at home, I was going to wear them tonight, but Bean found them under the sofa,’ Maddy babbled, ‘and then Marcella saw them and started teasing me about having a new man, so—’
‘Nice try.’ Kerr tilted her face up to meet his and slid the broken bra strap down over her shoulder.
‘In fact, excellent try. But you can’t fool me.’
Chapter 15
‘OK, I need you to know something. I’m not normally the type of girl who jumps into bed with someone on the first date,’ said Maddy an hour later.
‘No?’ Grinning down at her, Kerr said, ‘You did it very well.’
‘I just don’t want you to think I’m a complete slapper, because I’m not.’ She ran her hands through her drastically rumpled hair. ‘But this is different, because putting it off would only have made us want each other more. So by sleeping together as soon as possible we’ve got all that breathless anticipation stuff out of the way, which made it the right thing to do, don’t you agree?’