But she was not going to look a gift horse, or in this case Fazire’s magical genie horse in the mouth as the whole reason Nate asked her out had to be Fazire’s magic.
The only thing she could think to say to Victor was, “Thank you.”
Victor inclined his head and she could swear he was laughing at her, not, however, unkindly.
This was the weirdest situation she’d ever been in, in her whole entire life.
Not that she had been in very many weird situations; she’d lived a pretty sheltered life.
That was, of course, if you didn’t count the fact that one of the “adults” participating in her upbringing was a real-life genie which she didn’t count because, as it was all she’d ever known, she found it the most natural thing in the world.
But there she was, staying with people she barely knew although she felt like she’d known them forever. She was taking advantage of their kindness although her mother and especially her father, who thought politeness and good manners were practically more important than oxygen, taught her not to take advantage of anyone. And she was going out on a date with their son although somehow it seemed that she was their daughter and they were unbelievably proud she was going out on a date with the tall, dark, handsome, popular captain of the football team.
Unsure of what to do, Lily just stood there.
She’d never been on a date in her life.
She’d dressed in one of the outfits she’d bought the day before while out shopping with Laura. She couldn’t afford it but she adored it so she charged it as well as everything else she bought yesterday. If her mother knew she was using her credit cards on anything but necessities, Becky would have a brain haemorrhage.
She wore a straight, pencil skirt in the palest pink that was boldly patterned around the hem in vermillion and orange. She topped it with a tight-fitting, pink cotton camisole and a lightweight cotton vermillion cardigan that she left open at the front. Laura had loaned her a pair of her shoes (what Lily didn’t know was that they were Danielle’s and if she had known she wouldn’t have worn them, she’d had the same reaction to Danielle as she’d had to Jeffrey), red, spike-heeled sling backs.
She looked straight from the fifties without the scarf. A Pink Lady with even more attitude.
She felt like an idiot.
She had absolutely no idea she looked stunningly chic.
She picked up the small, sleek, matching red bag Laura had loaned her.
“Is everything all right?” Victor was watching her closely.
“I…” She started again and stopped then she looked at him hopelessly. She didn’t know him as far as she could throw him but somehow she trusted him enough to tell him, “Victor, I don’t know what to do.”
Her voice was so quiet she was surprised he heard her. But he did and he walked into the room.
“What do you mean?” He looked slightly bewildered and his usually very controlled face showed it.
She tucked the bag under her arm and brought her hands up, her fingers fidgeting then she studied her manicure.
“I’ve never been on a date,” she confided to her hands, her voice even softer.
“Bloody hell,” Victor cursed, “you must be joking.”
Her head came up and her hands went out. “Do I look like I’m joking?”
She meant her appearance, what she considered her bizarre Pink Lady outfit, just her. She was, she knew from all the teasing at school, years and years of teasing, no raving beauty and she never would be. She’d lost weight, she wasn’t blind, she could see herself in the mirror and read a clothing label but regardless of that, she’d never gained any confidence.
“How old are you?” Victor’s eyes had narrowed.
“Twenty-two.”
“Bloody hell,” he repeated.
“That isn’t helping,” she tried to joke but she sounded as scared as she was.
“You must have grown up in a convent school, am I right?”
She was surprised at this response but answered honestly, “No, just a small town in Indiana.”
He came forward.
“Same thing,” he said dismissively, his hand went to the small of her back and he guided her resisting body firmly to the door. “You just go downstairs, smile at Nathaniel and after that, I promise, Nathaniel will take care of the rest.”
She relaxed enough to let him guide her down the hall. “Why do you call him Nathaniel when everyone else calls him Nate?”
There had been much talk of Nate. It seemed Nate was a popular topic of conversation with just about everyone. Her first night with Jeffrey who, Lily thought, might not like Nate very much; the next day when she met Danielle who talked about Nate quite a lot and liked him a whole lot more than their brother; at the party last night where everyone mostly wanted to know where Nate was in order to talk to him; and all day that day, a day she spent with Laura and Danielle out to lunch and shopping in stores where she couldn’t even afford to buy a hair clip.
Lily was trying to keep her mind on other things, anything other than her date with the man of her dreams, the man of her most fervent wishes, the man she’d been reading about in her romance novels for years. A man come alive and now, taking her out to dinner.
But try as she might, she couldn’t stop herself from asking about him.
“Nathaniel is the name of a gentleman, a genius, a man of means and power. Nate is just a name. And my Nathaniel is a Nathaniel,” Victor said it with such pride that Lily couldn’t stop herself from turning and smiling at him.
“You know, I think you’re right,” she told him and Victor beamed his approval at her words.
“He prefers Nate, to my and Laura’s everlasting annoyance,” Victor confided in a mock-whisper.
They were walking down the stairs by this time and she tilted her head back and laughed at his comment. And she found at that moment that she very much liked this intense man. He reminded her of her father. And therefore, being Lily Jacobs, she told him so (in a manner).
“You’re a very kind man, Victor, thank you for all the kindness that you’ve shown me.”
He stopped nearly to the bottom of the stairs, abruptly and in deep surprise. He turned to stare at her as if her words were audacious.
“I…” It was his turn to stammer and she found herself uncomfortable with his loss of control. He seemed a man who needed to be in control at all times.
She was however, confused. He had to know he was kind, for goodness sake, it wasn’t as if she told him he was Superman and she thought he could catch bullets with his teeth.
He found his control and she was happy for that as he seemed to need it, seemed to wear it like armour.
Then he remarked, “I must say, Lily, I’m delighted your purse was snatched.”
“What?” she said somewhat loudly on an effervescent giggle.
“If it hadn’t been, we may never have met you,” he explained, taking her hand and patting it in a fatherly gesture that seemed entirely out of character for him.
“What’s going on?” Jeffrey was slouching against the wall of the entry, his arms crossed on his chest, his face registering his unhappiness.
Lily and Victor finished descending the stairs and at the sight of Jeff, Lily felt a twinge of guilt she didn’t quite understand. She also noted that there was a difference to how Jeffrey stood with his shoulder against the wall than how Nate did it. Jeff’s was an insouciant slouch while Nate’s was a predatory lean.
“Lily and I were sharing a private moment,” Victor stated, his voice somehow shut off.