CHAPTER ONE
ROBIN had thought the day could not get worse, but when she saw who was sitting behind that desk she had to bite her lip hard or she would have shrieked with hysterical laughter. The sight of Robin was a shock to him too. It took a lot to shake Marc Hammond, but one of the heavy dark eyebrows raised a fraction as he gasped, ‘Good Lord!’
‘Good afternoon and goodbye,’ Robin gulped.
She was turning to leave when he asked, ‘Whatever made you imagine you’d be suitable for the job?’
Robin hadn’t exchanged a word with Marc Hammond for years. But the way he was putting her down now—a big man behind a big desk, so sure of himself in every way—brought back memories.
Last time she had seen him she’d been seventeen and tongue-tied. Now, a few years older, and after one heck of a morning, her self-control cracked. Rage flared in her, bright as her tumbling red hair, and she was across the room, gripping the edge of the desk, leaning over and facing him.
‘Because,’ she snapped, ‘the advert was for a companion-driver to an elderly lady and I reckon I’d be efficient on both counts, but I know you wouldn’t employ me any way, any time, so we have both wasted a few minutes.’
He was leaning back in his chair, chin in hand, watching her as if she was making a show of herself.
‘The old lady in question,’ he drawled drily, ‘has had more than enough excitement over the years. What she’s needing now is peace and quiet, and I don’t suppose there’s much of that around you.’
She should not have flared up. She should have stayed cool-headed. She made a belated attempt to retrieve a little dignity, straightening up, letting her hands fall to her sides, saying, ‘Sorry,’ although she had nothing to apologise to him for. ‘It’s been one of those days.’
‘Have a lot of them, do you?’ he enquired.
More than you, she thought. I bet not much goes wrong with your day, or your life. She shrugged. ‘Not too many. But no job, of course.’
‘No job.’
If he was doing the interviewing the old lady had to be somebody close to him. He’d never consider Robin, and she couldn’t have taken on work that might have kept her under Marc Hammond’s eye.
When he got up she remembered how tall he was. She was over average height herself, but as he came round the desk he was towering over her and she found herself backing towards the door. ‘I’ll see you out,’ he said.
‘No need. I know the way.’ The front door had been opened by a woman who looked like a housekeeper. The office where Marc Hammond had been waiting led off the hall, and Robin did not want him walking anywhere beside her. But he ignored her protests; he was seeing her out, and she bit back the urge to say, You don’t have to watch that I’m leaving empty-handed; I won’t pocket any of the silver.
The wide floor of the hall was of polished wood, there were rugs in dark jewel colours and the paintings all looked like pricey originals.
When Robin had turned from the road into a curving drive leading to a house with white pillars and three storeys of long white windows, she had thought, Wow!
The advertisement had had a phone number and she had been given this address. She hadn’t known who lived here but she had hoped it was the elderly lady who was advertising, because it had looked such a super place to work in. That, of course, was before she had known Marc Hammond was here. Now she couldn’t get out of the house fast enough.
He said nothing to her as they walked down the hall. He might have managed a goodbye when he’d opened the door, but just before they reached it somebody called, ‘Robin?’ and Robin whirled round as an elderly woman came tripping down the stairs with a wide, welcoming smile. ‘Robin? It is Robin?’ And the woman she knew as Mrs Myson threw her arms around her. ‘What are you doing here?’
‘I—I came about the job,’ Robin stammered.
‘You never. You did?’ She clasped her hands together and almost did a little dance. ‘But this is marvellous. Marc, how did you find her?’