in to other peopleâs conversations, he should walk down the hall and give Dani some privacy now. But his feet wouldnât move.
âBut our mother is dead. How can she file the request when sheâs dead?â
He heard her sigh.
âBut how can I find him if I canât get the paperwork from you?â
Silence while whoever it was talked some more.
âIâm in Aucklandâwhat if I came into the office?â
Whoever it was, he was letting her down. Alex couldnât stop bending forward a fraction so he could see her through the gap in the hinge of the door. Her head was bent, her fringe hiding her eyes. From her slump he guessed the answer sheâd just got was another negative.
âIs there any other way I might be able to find him?â She listened for a while. âIâve already put messages up on the Internet.â She was silent as she listened, and clearly not happy. âOK. I understand. Thank you for your time.â
She put the phone down and buried her face in her hands, elbows thumping onto the desk.
Alex straightened and counted to five before walking on the spot for a few paces and then opening the door. âAre you ready to leave?â
Her head snapped up. âAlex. I didnât know you were here.â A flush mounted in her cheeks. âI was using the phone but it was a local call.â
âItâs fine to use the phone.â He was dying to ask more but she stood quickly and became busy pulling on her jacket. OK, heâd bide his timeâbut heâd find out what the deal was. She didnât suit the defeated look.
She said nothing until they were belted into his car, but then she launched a hit. âI thought you said Cara was pregnant.â
Alex winced. Yeah, he should have seen this one coming. âShe is.â
âNot exactly due next month, though, is she?â
âNo.â More like seven or so months. Cara had told them a couple of weeks ago, too effervescent to keep the news to herself any longer. Sheâd bounced off the walls when sheâd blabbed it, while her husband had been all teasing protectivenessâwarning that she wasnât to work too hard. Ironic when he was the CEO of one of the countryâs biggest accountancy firms and worked dog hours as bad as both Alex and Lorenzo.
âSheâs had terrible morning sickness.â Alex said, amazed at his inventiveness. Then he panicked, knowing the way women talked to each other. âBut donât mention it. Sheâs very private. She doesnât want us to think she canât cope.â
âOh.â Dani nodded. âOf course. And is that why she works part-time hours at the moment?â
âYes.â Lying was allowed when it was to help someone, right?
Â
âYou nearly ready?â Alex hollered.
Dani gave herself one last despairing glance in the mirror and fully regretted declining the use of the stylist.
Styleâof the Carlisle standard. Could it be bought? Fashioned from the rawest of material? The dress was good, she knew it was goodâit fitted perfectly. But the body beneath wasnât perfect, and there was no glitz or glam to dazzle the eyes and blind them to those imperfect bits.
She turned her back on her image and walked down the stairs to the lounge. He wasnât there. She took the few steps into the kitchen. He had his back to her. His perfectly fitted, perfectly pressed suit gleamed blacker than ink and oozed expense. He looked lean and long and definitely strongâcould his shoulders be any broader? Then he turned around.
It took several moments before she could drag her gaze all the way up his body to his face. Even so his mouth was still hanging open, still another beat before he shut it. The surprise written all over him stung. Had he really expected her to walk in wearing some ill-fitting off-the-rack budget-chain number?
She was so glad sheâd packed it. Sheâd laughed