Page 16 of Artistic License


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She was apprehensive that the barbequed ribs would be accompanied by a delicately probing interrogation, but was spared any mortification by her mother’s tact and her father’s single-minded cheese obsession. He came in directly from the storerooms, where a batch of their prizewinning aged cheddar had just reached maturity, and was so excited about it that he accepted Mick’s presence at the table without question. He’d brought Carl Hanning, one of the owner-operators of Silver Leigh, with him, and the three men were soon engrossed in a conversation that spanned the rudimentaries of aging cheese and the intricacies of grape harvests. She was taken completely by surprise when Mick revealed that he had a stake in a vineyard in California. What a London-based security consultant wanted with a winery investment in Napa, she had no idea. There was apparently no end to the man’s hidden depths.

Sophy watched Mick’s blunt features become progressively animated and lively, and thought again how attractive he was. Their eyes met when he was midway through a sentence and he faltered for just a second. As he regrouped, tugging a pen and notebook from his pocket and drawing a series of quick diagrams for his engrossed companions, he sent her a sexy flashing grin.

He so rarely smiled that way that she was starting to feel quite proprietary of those dimples.

Marion cleared her throat softly. Sophy ceased ogling Mick long enough to find her mother watching her with an expression that passed over speculation and landed straight on smug.

“Soph, why don’t you give me a hand with the pudding?” Marion suggested, smiling blandly.

Mick immediately broke off his conversation and started to rise, but she waved him down.

“No, please, don’t get up. We won’t be a minute. Sophy.”

Sophy had heard her name spoken in that particular tone countless times throughout her life and it acted directly on her well-trained arms and legs. They tended to move in the direction indicated without waiting for the rest of her to concur. Stifling a resigned sigh, she followed her mother through the patio slider and into the kitchen.

“Which is the pudding?” she asked, going directly to the fridge and opening it. “Is it the pavlova or is that for the weekend? Oh. Please tell me it’s the brownies.”

“It’s the brownies,” said Marion, leaning back against the table, relaxed and watchful. “The pavlova is for tonight. Megan Custer is coming for tea.”

“Oh God, is she?” asked Sophy, momentarily diverted by dismay. She pulled out the pan of brownies, dropped it on the counter and began to sift through the bulging freezer compartment for ice cream. “Great. Last time I talked to her, she asked me if I encountered more depravities at the bar or in my “work”, in inverted commas, as an artist. And she criticised me for not doing more volunteer work, which I think is bloody cheek considering that the most she does for charity is to donate her husband’s old shirts to the Salvation Army.”

“Mick seems very nice,” said her mother, totally disregarding her tirade.

“Jesus, Mum,” said Sophy, picking up a knife and beginning to mark an even cutting grid on the brownies. “Subtle.”

“You could have given me a bit of warning,” Marion complained lightly. “If I’d known you were bringing someone, I would have made something special.”

“Your food is always special,” Sophy said absently. She cut a careful slice, eyed it with dissatisfaction and began to make amendments. “And you thought I was bringing Dale.”

Her mother made a rude noise. She had been a primary school teacher before she’d had Sophy and the first time she’d met Melissa’s new boyfriend, she’d said that she recognised the type and they never changed. They would be charming trouble from the new entrants’ classroom to the retirement home.

“I had no idea you were seeing someone,” Marion pressed. “Sophy, give me that knife before you chop off a finger. Brownies are square; they don’t need to be sculpted. You didn’t mention it when I saw you last Monday.”

“I hadn’t met him last Monday,” said Sophy, surrendering the knife and going to hunt out the dessert bowls. “And I’m not seeing anyone. I met Mick last week; he’s been the perfect model and I hope we stay friends. End of.”

“Hmm,” said Marion. She said nothing further, but her silence communicated volumes.

When the dessert bowls had been scraped clean, she wasted no time in deflecting both Mick’s move to do the dishes and her husband’s offer to take him on a tour of the storerooms.

“You would lose track of time and he’d miss his meeting,” she said firmly to Gregory, and smiled at Mick and Sophy. “Why don’t the two of you take Jeeves for a walk by the stream? It’s a gorgeous day outside. No need to spend it cooped up in the factory.”

She was going to have words with her mother later. Where they landed on the scale between “butt out” and “thank you” remained to be seen.

“Great family,” Mick said as they walked beneath the weeping willows, following the winding path of the stream through the back paddocks of the vineyard. It was achingly hot and Sophy wished she’d thought to change out of her dress and into a pair of shorts. Mick wore long pants with his tee, but he was apparently one of those people who remained cool and clear-skinned, could likely wear linen on a boiling day and still emerge unwrinkled, and probably never sweated through his deodorant. It must be genetic. Sophy was most like her dad in appearance – her mother was a tall blonde with less boobs and butt – but she had definitely inherited Marion’s intolerance for extreme temperatures and her propensity toward untidiness. It was a bit cooler under the melancholy droop of the trees, however, and she enjoyed the feeling of being at home. She supposed a childhood home would always offer a feeling of sanctuary, if a person were very lucky.

Jeeves’s habit of waiting until she’d switched his lead to her other hand before he weaved back to the opposite side forced her to tread an uneven path to avoid tripping over him. The third time that her hip and hand had brushed against Mick’s side, he’d hesitated before wrapping his large palm around hers in a firm clasp. She had been too embarrassed to look at him, but her fingers had given his a momentary squeeze in return. They walked on now, hands swinging lightly between their bodies. Ever insensitive to atmosphere, Jeeves vetoed the idea of an idle ramble and strained against his lead, only pausing to do unappetising things with rabbit droppings.

“I couldn’t ask for better parents,” Sophy said simply, scowling back at Jeeves as she pulled him away from his unsavoury snack. “I occasionally used to wish that I had a sibling, but the cousin I live with, Melissa, is the same age as I am and we grew up together. I can’t imagine being any closer to a blood sister or brother.”

“You might be considerably worse off,” said Mick coolly, and she glanced at him, startled.

At least six different questions hovered on the edge of her tongue, but she bit them all back. She’d decided it was best to keep things as casually friendly between them as possible, which necessarily meant keeping her nose out of his most intimate business.

Friends held hands, didn’t they?

She and Melissa had used to hold hands all the time.

Admittedly it had been on the walk to and from kindergarten.

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