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Rival Attractions & Innocent Secretary(7)



The trouble was that, over the years of her father's illness, looking  after him, running the business and trying to keep their often turbulent  relationship on an even footing had left her with no time for  soul-searching … or redecorating.                       
       
           



       

She had never particularly thought of herself as the home-building type,  and certainly she had no desire for a house which emulated the glossy  magazine perfection of Adam's and Vanessa's.

But somewhere between the unwelcoming starkness of this house and the  over-luxurious fussiness of Vanessa's there must be a happy medium.

Mrs Higham, who came in twice a week, kept the house reasonably clean,  and every now and again when she could find the energy she herself spent  the odd weekend thoroughly cleaning those rooms which were not in use.  Mentally contrasting her large kitchen's lack of visual appeal and  warmth with the comfortable cosiness of Sophy's tiny terraced-house  kitchen, she acknowledged that something would have to be done.

Whether she stayed in the house or not, it was idiotic not to make any  attempt to make it more welcoming. During her father's illness she had  never had the time to spare for studying her surroundings with a  critical eye, but now that she had … Yellow would be a good colour for  this room, she decided musingly-a soft, sunny yellow to welcome the  bright spring sunshine.

Another minute and she'd be rushing off to town to buy paint and  brushes, Charlotte acknowledged ruefully. What was coming over her? She  had never felt this almost nest-building urge to improve her home  before. It must be the unexpected balminess of the spring sunshine, she  told herself, firmly refusing to give in to her sudden desire to get to  work on the kitchen almost immediately.

She had work to do. There would be time to spare for redecorating later  in the year. If Oliver Tennant succeeded in taking her business away  from her, she'd have plenty of time for playing with colour schemes and  pots of paint.

When her father had originally opened his office in the local town, he  had bought a small three-storeyed Tudor building, sandwiched in between  its fellows down one of the old cobbled streets that ran off from the  market square.

The site had advantages and disadvantages. The street had now been  designated a conservation area, which gave it an appealing visual charm,  an old-worldliness that suggested that within the building might be  found the kind of thatched-roofed, rose-smothered country cottage of  people's dreams. The street was also a draw to tourists and visitors who  came to the town, which meant that there always seemed to be someone  standing outside the old-fashioned mullioned windows staring in at the  details of properties for sale. Against that, the cobbled street outside  was now a pedestrian-only thoroughfare, with handsome black and gold  painted bollards at either end of it to deter any driver tempted to use  it as a short cut. This meant that any would-be clients had to make  their way to the office on foot. In the past, when they had been the  only estate agency in the area, this had not mattered, but now, with  Oliver Tennant opening up …

His offices were on the outskirts of the town, not centrally placed like  hers, but they were housed in the very large and popular shopping  complex, purpose-built to accommodate the needs of the modern shopper  and his or her car.

Charlotte was frowning as she parked her own car on the municipal car  park on waste ground behind the Town Hall. Today was market day, which  meant that the market square would be closed to parkers.

Sheila Walsh, who had been her father's secretary-cum-office-manager and  who had been with them for ten years, welcomed her into the office  above the reception area with a smile and a cup of coffee. Sheila was a  married woman in her late forties with two grown-up children and a  husband in the police force. She was a sensible, attractive woman to  whom tact and discretion were second nature. Charlotte had found her  help invaluable when she had first returned home to take up the reins of  the business. She might have the qualifications, she had acknowledged,  but Sheila had something far more valuable. She had experience and a way  of dealing with people that Charlotte envied.

It had been at Charlotte's insistence that her father had agreed that  Sheila should be promoted to 'office manager' and be given a salary and a  percentage of their profits commensurate with the amount of work she  did for them.

Without Sheila there was no way she could run the business as  successfully as she did, Charlotte recognised, thanking her, and sitting  down so that they could both go through the post.

'The new place opens up officially today,' Sheila commented. 'I wonder what he's like …  the new man,' she mused.

Unwillingly Charlotte told her, 'I met him last night at Adam's and Vanessa's dinner party.'

It was part of Sheila's skill that she never probed. She waited now in silence, her eyebrows slightly raised.

She liked working with Charlotte. Initially, on hearing that her boss's  daughter was coming home to take over the business, she had been  uncertain as to whether or not she would stay on, but once she had  realised how much Charlotte genuinely valued her, and how soft-hearted  she really was beneath her rather austere exterior, she had put all her  reservations to one side, and, as she told people quite genuinely now,  her work brought her immense pleasure and satisfaction.                       
       
           



       

It saddened her that so many people misjudged Charlotte. Even her own  husband had remarked, after first meeting her, that she was rather  formidable. Sheila often wondered compassionately how it was that, while  a woman could so easily see through another woman's armour to her  vulnerability, a man was completely deceived by outward appearances and  manners. Men were like children really, she often though scornfully;  they always went for the gooey, heavily iced cake, not realising that  once the icing was gone all they were going to be left with was stodgy  and often unappetising sponge. Women were far more enterprising, far  more aware; they knew that the very best things in life were often  concealed by the most unappealing of exteriors.

Sheila Walsh was a traditionalist and made no apology for it. She loved  her work and found it stimulating and rewarding, but it was her marriage  and her family that formed the bedrock of her life. Without Rob to go  home to at night, to talk over the events of the day with, to fight with  and love, her life would be very arid.

Although Charlotte was older than her own daughter, Sheila acknowledged  that she was inclined to feel a motherly protectiveness towards her. She  was constantly urging her to buy new clothes, to go out and enjoy  herself. Charlotte was such an attractive-looking girl in reality, but  she tended to put men off with her brisk put-down manner. And yet one  only had to see Charlotte with the children of her friends to realise  what kind of woman hid behind her rather formidable exterior.

Sheila had got to know Charlotte very well over the last six years, and  now, seeing the faint flush that stained her skin and the way she  shifted her gaze, as though not wanting Sheila to look too penetratingly  at her, Sheila became extremely curious about Oliver Tennant.

She had more intelligence than to ask too many questions, though, simply  listening while Charlotte told her almost hesitantly about the dinner  party.

'That Vanessa is an absolute bitch,' Sheila denounced roundly when  Charlotte discovered that she had told her far more than she had  intended to about her own chagrin and embarrassment during the evening.  'I can't see why men are too stupid to see through that kind of woman.'

'Sheila, do you get many male clients …  well … making a pass at you?'

Sheila stared at her, not knowing what had motivated such a question. 'Some,' she acknowledged cautiously. 'Why?'

Charlotte wondered what Sheila would say if she told her that, far from  making passes at her, the majority of men she showed round their  properties seemed more intimidated by her than aroused.

'Oh … oh, it's nothing,' she fibbed, conscious of the uncomfortable colour  suddenly staining her skin. Quickly changing the subject, she said more  firmly, 'There's something I wanted to discuss with you this morning.  Now might be a good time.'

Willingly Sheila agreed, listening intently while Charlotte outlined her  thoughts on the possibility of their employing Sophy on a part-time  basis.

'I haven't said anything to her as yet. I wanted to discuss it with you  first. The burden of training her in the office routine would fall on  you. I know at the moment we're busy enough to merit taking on extra  staff. With summer round the corner, this is our busiest time of the  year, but … '