muttered. âMy missus would have confiscated certain parts of my anatomy and fried them up for breakfast if that had just happened with her.â
The taut little figure who was now beside Finn stiffened further and he winced on her behalf.
It wasnât that she wasnât feminine or attractive in her own understated, lean way. It was just that she wasnâtâ¦well, Anya Pirelli. And there was nothing that she, or the other three billion women on the planet, could do about it.
âIâm surprised Nat let you sign old Anya up in the first place,â Dave added, snorting dryly.
A quiet voice murmured beside him in the blackness, almost as if she was speaking to herself and hadnât meant to be overheard. âNat?â
âHis fiancée,â Dave said matter-of-factly. âBeen engaged a while now. Took his time asking her, though. How long was it youâd been together? Three years? Four?â
The completeness of the tropical night meant he didnât see the hearty slap Dave delivered to his shoulder coming.
âFive,â Finn said, noticing the defensive tone in his voice with no visuals to distract him. He really didnât want to get into this right now. Having to build a shelter in the pouring rain had been a lovely distraction from the gaping chasm that had recently opened up in his personal life, thank you very much. And what business of Daveâs was it, anyway?
He shouldnât be bothered by it, but people like Dave didnât realise that he and Nat hadnât had a traditional relationship. Their work schedules had meant theyâd been apart more than theyâd been together in five years, so it had been closer to one and a half years in normal peopleâs terms.
Dave sighed, his voice still tinged with good humour. âDidnât think there was a woman alive whoâd make old Finn here settle down!â
âIâm not settling anywhere,â Finn said quickly. And then he remembered his promise to Nat to keep quiet about the split and decided not to elaborate further. Settling down⦠Ugh. He hated that phrase, and probably would have reacted to it anyway. âI just felt Iâd reached an age when it was time to stop wandering around and put down some roots.â
Natâs comments from the previous evening started to swirl around his head, but he batted them away as if they were mosquitoes.
There was a mournful little sound from the huddled figure beside him. It started off almost like a moan but ended like a yawn. She must be exhausted. He and Dave were used to this relentless schedule, but it was hard on their guests. There wasnât much to do now but wait until the rain stopped and talk amongst themselves, but Dave was as subtleâand as discreetâas a foghorn, and the sooner they ended this topic of conversation the better.
âWe might as well try to get some rest,â Finn said.
All three of them shuffled until they were lying on the bamboo floor of the shelter. Finn was instantly still, but the other two fidgeted for quite some time. Hardly surprising, on a bed like this. Eventually, though, everything went still and quiet.
They werenât quite touching, but he could sense Allegra was as stiff horizontal as she had been vertical. How odd. He was sure her name was more familiar now he thought about it, that Nat had dragged him along to watch her perform when theyâd first been seeing each other.
Allegra Martin. That was her name.
He tried to sharpen the brief, fuzzy snatches of memory from that night. There wasnât much to go on. He couldnât remember where he and Nat had gone for dinner before the performance, or what either of them had worn, or even if theyâd gone home together afterwards, but he remembered Allegraâs dancing.
Despite the fact heâd moaned loud and long about being dragged to Covent Garden, heâd actually been struck by the unexpected beauty of it all.
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