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he rarely drives down from London in his Ferrari to see them. And when he does he never stays long.’

      ‘Do you disapprove of his car, too, then?’ she asked, smiling.

      He looked down his nose. ‘Only the colour.’

      Sarah laughed, then looked at him thoughtfully. ‘Do you see much of your family?’

      Alex shrugged. ‘I check on my grandfather most days, just to make sure he’s still there. He thinks he’s immortal, but in the natural way of things even he can’t live for ever.’

      ‘How about your father?’

      ‘I see him when I visit the London office.’

      Sarah slanted a glance at him. ‘So you’re filial and Dan is not. Is that your only objection?’

      ‘No.’ He thought it over. ‘I just don’t like him. I never have. He’s the type who measures success by the material possessions it buys him.’

      ‘But he’s entitled if he’s worked hard for them, surely?’

      Alex turned to look at her. ‘I’ve worked hard, too. Damned hard. I still do. Just because I was born a Merrick it doesn’t mean I had everything handed to me on a plate. Once I was old enough I slogged on building sites or in warehouses every school holiday and university vacation unless I was on a cricket tour. And I always got landed with the hardest, dirtiest jobs.’ He stretched out an arm and flexed it. ‘I didn’t get these muscles behind a desk, Sarah. And there was no gap year for yours truly, either. I went straight from Cambridge into the firm. Not,’ he added emphatically, ‘that I minded. It was always what I wanted to do. Still is.’

      ‘I can relate to that. Because I’m doing exactly what I’ve always wanted to do,’ said Sarah. ‘And my school holidays were spent on building sites, too. But not because I was made to. Dad couldn’t keep me away.’

      Alex couldn’t help touching her bare arm. ‘But your muscles are a lot prettier than mine.’ He raised her hand to his lips, and on impulse kissed each finger. ‘What’s wrong?’ he asked, as he felt her tense.

      ‘You say you want to be friends, but you behave more like a lover. Or at least,’ she added with scrupulous honesty, ‘how I imagine a lover would behave.’ None of the boyfriends she’d had in the past had practised subtlety as foreplay.

      ‘You’re a very appealing female, Sarah Carver, and I’m your average male, so I want to touch.’ Need to—even crave to, more like it. He batted the thought away and smiled down at her. ‘But all I ask for is friendship. Unless you’re seized with overpowering lust for my body and sweep me off to bed right now, of course.’

      Sarah’s gurgle of laughter entranced him. ‘How would I drag you up there?’

      ‘And, having got me there, would the platform be up to it if I threw you down on the bed?’ he said, grinning.

      ‘Are you criticising my carpentry, Alex?’

      He shook his head vigorously. ‘I wouldn’t dare.’

      ‘Besides, I thought I was the one throwing you on the bed.’

      ‘Let’s change the subject,’ he said, clapping a hand to his heart, ‘before I get out of hand and risk our friendship before we even get it off the ground.’

      ‘OK,’ she said cheerfully. ‘What shall we talk about?’

      Alex took her hand again, instead of putting his arm round her as he badly wanted to. ‘Tell me what Miss Property Developer has in mind for her next project. Purely as a friend,’ he added piously, ‘not as competition.’

      ‘Oh, I know that. You made it clear that my kind of project is just chicken feed in the eyes of the Merrick Group,’ she reminded him tartly.

      ‘Only to set your mind at rest,’ he assured her. ‘So talk to me, Sarah. I’m interested.’

      ‘Curious, you mean!’ she said, laughing, secretly only too happy to talk at length about her plans for the barns at Westhope Farm.

      Alex listened intently, made constructive comments and suggestions, and even offered Sarah any help she might need.

      ‘For free?’

      ‘Of course,’ he assured her. ‘What else are friends for?’

      It was late before Alex forced himself to his feet. ‘It’s time we were both in bed.’ He eyed the sleeping platform and grinned. ‘But for various reasons not, alas, together.’ He took her hand and kissed her cheek. ‘Now we’ve agreed to be friends, let’s have dinner tomorrow night.’

      Sarah had to admire his style. ‘Why not? Where?’

      ‘You’ll probably laugh,’ he said, the crooked smile much in evidence.

      ‘Try me.’

      ‘I’d like to go back to Stephen’s place and have you all to myself this time, without Oliver Moore watching me like a hawk, or Dan smirking at me. Just you and me, Sarah. Two friends enjoying a meal together.’

      In bed later, Sarah tossed and turned, unable to sleep. Her first business triumph would have been enough to keep her awake, but Alex’s visit was adding to her insomnia. His visit had been such a welcome interruption to her evening it was hard, now, to believe she’d ever looked on him as the enemy. It would be good, more than good, to have him as a friend. In fact, given the slightest encouragement, she would look on him as a lot more than just a friend— She shot upright as her phone rang.

      ‘Hi,’ said Alex.

      Sarah subsided against her pillows. ‘Hi.’

      ‘Did I wake you?’

      ‘No.’

      ‘The glow of your first success keeping you awake?’

      ‘That’s only part of it.’

      ‘So what else is on your mind?’

      ‘I’ve realised I’ve agreed to a truce with the enemy,’ she said bluntly.

      Alex’s laugh sent a tingle down her spine. ‘Only I’m not the enemy any more, Sarah, am I?’

      ‘No,’ she admitted, after a pause. ‘Which is pretty hard to believe.’

      ‘I’ll help you work on that tomorrow. Now, I’ll tell you why I rang.’

      ‘Not just to say goodnight?’

      ‘That too. But I was on my way to bed before I remembered we still haven’t settled about what to do with your furniture, Sarah.’

      She groaned. ‘Not again! I got so carried away with all my talk about barn conversions the furniture went out of my head. I’ll contact my storage people and ask them to fetch it.’

      ‘Why not store it down here? You can use one of our container units for a very reasonable fee—much cheaper than in London.’

      ‘Oliver paid for the storage. My only outlay was getting it transported down here.’

      ‘Where it might as well stay, ready to use in future when the barns are finished.’

      ‘That depends on what you mean by a reasonable fee!’

      ‘We’ll discuss it tomorrow over dinner. Goodnight.’

      ‘Goodnight.’ Sarah closed her phone, then went straight to sleep with a smile on her face.

      CHAPTER SEVEN

      SARAH WOKE next morning to a feeling of well being. And this, she admitted, was not just due to her success on the first rung of the property ladder. Her new relationship with Alex was the icing on the cake—and the cherry on top. Even if he was a Merrick. He was a clever lad all round, she conceded, as she got ready for her trip with Harry. Alex was obviously

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