Freya North 3-Book Collection: Love Rules, Home Truths, Pillow Talk. Freya North

Freya North 3-Book Collection: Love Rules, Home Truths, Pillow Talk - Freya  North


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wiping sweat from his brow onto his T-shirt. ‘My game, my match – your round.’

      ‘Let’s make it the best out of seven then,’ Richard said, slashing a ball against the court.

      ‘Fuck off,’ Saul laughed, returning the shot perfectly. ‘What would your wife say when I call her to say you’ve thrown yourself into Highgate Ponds with concrete in your pockets because you lost five–two?’

      ‘Yeah, yeah,’ Richard said, ‘you’re younger than me. Anyway, I have a cold coming. But next week I’m going to roast you, mate, roast you. Annihilation.’

      ‘I look forward to it,’ Saul said, slicing the ball and intentionally missing Richard by a hair’s breadth.

      ‘You won’t even make it to Highgate Ponds,’ Richard said, returning Saul’s ball impressively, ‘you’ll do the hara-kiri thing right here on court.’

      ‘And on that note,’ Saul said, ‘let’s go for a drink.’

      For a moment or two, both men just gazed at the pints of pale, chilled lager with unreserved affection before raising the glasses to their lips and taking a long, well-earned drink. They said ‘cheers’ to each other, chinked glasses and then downed what was left. ‘My round,’ said Richard, going to the bar at the Swallow and ordering sausages and mash for them both. ‘How’s Thea?’ he asked, on returning.

      ‘I had a set of my keys cut for her just today,’ Saul grinned. ‘And Sally?’

      ‘It’s our wedding anniversary this weekend,’ Richard said, ‘five years.’

      ‘Cheers!’ said Saul, with admiration.

      ‘Who’d have thought a crazy fling would lead to marriage,’ Richard marvelled wistfully.

      ‘Are you whisking her off to Paris?’ Saul enquired.

      Richard laughed but shook his head.

      ‘Venice?’ Saul tried. ‘Barcelona? Babington House? No? Well. I assume you’ve been to Tiffany’s.’

      ‘No,’ Richard groaned, ‘not yet.’

      ‘Mark Sinclair was telling me Alice buys her own jewels,’ Saul said.

      ‘Really?’ Richard responded, ‘but on his credit card probably. She has some fuck-off diamonds, that girl.’

      ‘No, she buys them herself,’ Saul revealed. ‘They’re fake,’ he said, ‘fake! How cool is that?’ He really was more impressed than he would have been had they been genuine. ‘She buys them for small change from the shopping channel.’

      Richard laughed. ‘Seriously? Bloody hell. She certainly wears them well. Perhaps I’ll ask her to order double – I’m sure I could pop them into a Tiffany box.’

      ‘Talking of Alice,’ Saul said, dropping his voice, ‘I’m working on a project with her – top secret. But I have an idea for a property section. I’m not talking estate agents’ advertorials. I’m not talking Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen makeovers. I was thinking of a section that is part DIY, part property improvements, part investment savvy. You know, kitchen extensions or loft conversions or knocking through – a how to, how much, how long.’

      ‘Sounds good,’ Richard nodded.

      ‘You’re an architect,’ Saul shrugged, ‘can I pick your brains?’

      ‘Cool,’ Richard nodded, ‘sure. What’s it called?’

      ‘Top secret,’ said Saul.

      ‘That’s a bit naff,’ said Richard.

      ‘The title is top secret,’ Saul said very slowly. ‘I’m not telling you the title because I can’t. I’m sworn to secrecy.’

      ‘Code-name?’ Richard asked.

      ‘Quentin,’ Saul revealed rather reluctantly.

      ‘Gay?’

      ‘No – as in Tarantino,’ Saul explained. And he and Richard proceeded to quote salient lines from Pulp Fiction until their sausages arrived.

      When Beth Godwin and Hope Johnson set up their Pilates studio in Crouch End, Sally Stonehill joined on a whim because there was an introductory offer on. Thea signed up on the recommendation of Lars, the Feldenkrais practitioner at the Being Well. Alice joined on account of the effect of Pilates on the physique of Elizabeth Hurley. Mostly, the three of them synchronized their sessions. It hardly mattered, though. They were so busy concentrating on engaging their pelvic floor and pursuing core stability that they barely said a word to each other apart from ‘great Pikes, Thea’ or ‘your reverse-monkey looked good, Alice’ or ‘I’m finished with the Reformer, Sally’.

      Invariably, if they’d been training together, they’d go for a meal afterwards, determined to consolidate the merits of Pilates with healthy salads or bowls of hearty soup and glasses of mineral water. Usually, though, there was some reason for a glass of wine too – from it being good for the blood, to it being necessary to toast one of the girls for something or other. However even the one glass of wine, when mixed with the endorphins of exercise, led to the inevitable ordering of chips. To share, of course. Just to pick at. And mayonnaise too, please. Who’s for ketchup? Anyone for HP Sauce?

      ‘A large bottle of sparkling mineral water,’ Alice ordered.

      ‘It’s my wedding anniversary this weekend,’ Sally remarked, with intent.

      ‘Is it? Right then,’ Alice responded, ‘a bottle of Sauvignon too, please.’

      ‘I’ll have the avocado and mung bean salad,’ Thea told the waitress with scant enthusiasm.

      ‘Grilled trout for me, please,’ ordered Alice, ‘no butter.’

      ‘I think I’ll go for the stir-fried veg,’ Sally muttered.

      ‘Anything else?’ the waitress asked casually.

      ‘Oh, one portion of chips,’ Thea added as an afterthought.

      ‘Actually, make that two,’ Alice said, ‘to share between the three of us.’

      ‘And some mayo, please,’ Sally called after the waitress.

      ‘Cheers!’ said Alice, raising her glass. ‘Here’s to you and Richard and to marriage in general.’

      ‘I’ll drink to that,’ said Sally, ‘here’s to my husband and five lovely years.’

      ‘Cheers,’ said Thea, ‘here’s to – chips.’

      ‘You’ll be next,’ Alice nudged Thea and winked at Sally.

      ‘I hardly see the boy,’ Thea remonstrated, tapping the prongs of her fork against the pad of her thumb before pointing her cutlery at Alice. ‘You have him working all bloody hours on your hush-hush project.’

      ‘How’s that going?’ Sally asked Alice. ‘Richard likes to think of himself as Editor of Architecture and Interiors or something. The prat.’

      ‘We’re launching next month,’ Alice said triumphantly.

      ‘Will there be a glamorous party?’ Sally asked hopefully.

      ‘Of course,’ Alice said.

      ‘And may lowly primary school teachers attend?’ Sally asked.

      ‘You may,’ Alice confirmed graciously.

      ‘And will there be room on the guest list for a sports masseuse?’ Thea asked.

      ‘God no,’ Alice laughed in mock shock, ‘but I might turn a blind eye to the girlfriend of the editorial consultant sneaking in.’


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