Read Escape for the Summer Online

Authors: Ruth Saberton

Tags: #Estate, #Cornwall, #Beach, #angel, #Love, #Newquay, #Cornish, #Marriage, #Padstow, #celebrity, #Romantic Comedy, #talli roland, #Summer, #Relationships, #top 100, #best-seller, #Humor, #reality tv, #Rock, #Dating, #top ten, #millionaire, #Humour, #Celebs, #Michele Gorman, #Country Estate, #bestseller, #chick lit, #bestselling, #Nick Spalding, #Ruth Saberton, #Romance, #Romantic, #freindship

Escape for the Summer (2 page)

Right. Standing here worrying wasn’t doing any good. She had to find out what on earth was going on. She checked her watch. Twenty minutes until she had to be back at her desk. Just enough time to nip into the bank and talk to somebody. Standing out here stressing wasn’t going to achieve anything. She was more than capable of sorting this out. It was bound to be a silly admin error on the bank’s part, that was all – nothing that a twenty-nine-year-old, (moderately) successful career woman couldn’t resolve.

Glancing in the shiny glass of the huge swivel doors, she caught sight of her reflection and was quietly satisfied. She looked every inch the professional with her neat ponytail and smart trouser suit, cut loosely to hide curves that would have been distracting somewhere as buttoned up as Hart Frozer Accounting. Her eyes were the same green as Cornish rock pools and she wore no make-up except for a sweep of mascara over her lashes and a subtle pink stain on her full lips. Why Zoe gave her such a hard time, Andi really had no idea.

Taking a deep breath she stepped into the revolving doors. It was probably just a clerical error, and putting it right would only take a matter of minutes.

Wouldn’t it?

 

Chapter 2

While her sister was facing a financial meltdown, Angelique Evans was tuning out yet another rollicking from her long-suffering supervisor, Dawn. As the other woman’s voice droned on, her glossy lips opening and shutting like a Botoxed goldfish, Angel found herself wondering what on earth had possessed her to call in sick because of a broken nail. In retrospect this had turned out to be a very bad idea indeed, even though it had seemed such a reasonable explanation at the time.

Angel couldn’t really see what Dawn was making such a song and dance about. She worked as a beautician at one of Knightsbridge’s most expensive and exclusive salons. WAGs and celebs were regulars, the wives of Russian oligarchs seemed to use it as a social club, and once even Pippa Middleton had graced the place with her presence. Standards had to be maintained at all times, surely? And snapping one of her acrylics would have meant Angel appearing at work looking well and truly below her glossy and groomed best. What sort of impression would
that
give the clients? And imagine if Pippa Middleton had chosen yesterday to reappear with her sister in tow? Then what?

Really, thought Angel resentfully, her boss should be thanking her, not giving her a bollocking. Some people just had no sense of gratitude.

“This is the third time I’ve had to warn you about your attitude,” said Dawn, fixing Angel with a stern look. The girl was impossible. She was consistently late to work, spent more time on her lunch break than she did with the clients and had her nose buried so deep in
Heat
that it was little short of a miracle her pretty face wasn’t permanently covered in newsprint. If it wasn’t for the fact that Angel was actually very good at her job, when she put her mind to it – not to mention that she was popular with the clients and her model looks added to the overall glamour of the salon – Dawn would have given the girl her marching orders months ago.

“I’m going to have to give you a final warning, Angelique,” Dawn told her. “Any more sickies, late arrivals or silly errors and we’re going to have to let you go. Do I make myself clear? Mrs Pamapov wasn’t very happy with her nails.”

Angel pulled a face. “I thought she said she loved red.”

“No, what she said was her mother was
dead
. She was going to a funeral, Angel. The last thing she wanted was bright scarlet acrylics.”

Angel felt most hard done by. She’d spent hours on those nails and she’d thought they looked brilliant. Why were people so picky?

“Her accent was really hard to understand,” she said sulkily.

“Then I suggest you listen more carefully in the future,” Dawn replied sharply. “You’ve got Mrs Yuri this afternoon for a facial. You know how particular she is and how sensitive she is about her mole. Whatever you do, don’t look at it. And for God’s sake, don’t mention it.”

Angel groaned. Of course, she wouldn’t be able to look at anything else. Mrs Yuri, the wife of one of the richest men on the planet, had a huge mole on her chin, complete with a curly hair reminiscent of piano wire. Angel had only seen it briefly and had been mesmerised. Why on earth the woman didn’t pluck it out or even have the darn thing removed was anyone’s guess.

“I’ll do anything rather than deal with her,” she pleaded. “Tell Angie I’ll do that Hollywood wax she’s dreading if she’ll swap.”

Hollywood bikini waxes (where everything came off) were every beautician’s worst nightmare – apart from dealing with Mrs Yuri, it seemed. Nobody was willing to swap and so Angel was stuck with the sensitive client. She didn’t have anything against demanding Russian women, which was fortunate since the exclusive salon depended on them, but she’d had a horror of moles ever since her mum had died of skin cancer. How on earth would she manage to ignore this whopper?

“Not a single glance or so much as a comment,” warned her boss. “Believe me, you won’t want Mr Yuri after you if his wife is upset.”

She wasn’t wrong there. Mr Yuri looked like a pig squeezed into a suit and overcoat, and always reminded Angel horribly of Napoleon from
Animal Farm.
Nope, Mr Yuri, one of the wealthiest men alive and rumoured to have links to the Russian mafia, was not a person she would care to upset. She’d be at the bottom of the Thames before you could say “Siberia”.

“So, mind on the job please, Angel. Any more errors and you’ll be looking at your P45. Do you understand how serious this warning is?”

Angel widened her eyes and thought very hard of the saddest thing she could possibly think of. At this point in time that happened to be the beautiful pink patent-leather Chloé bag she’d set her heart on, which had been left dangling out of reach in the designer section of Selfridges just because her latest credit card was maxed out. Having had a rather good education – which she did her hardest to conceal because, after all, nobody on
TOWIE
ever mentioned the Classics – Angel felt like a modern version of Tantalus, albeit one with waist-length blonde extensions and false lashes. True to form, the tears began to pool in her eyes. God! She
loved
that bag so much! If Andi were any sort of a big sister she’d lend her the money. It was only a few hundred quid after all. Andi was such a tightwad with her cash; she was bound to have some spare. But if she didn’t, somebody else might buy the bag and then it would be lost – forever!

At this thought a tear really fell in earnest, rolling down her peachy cheek like a perfect diamond and splashing onto the polished wooden floor.

Brilliant. Tears were one of the few things that had never failed Angel in twenty-seven years. Parents yes. Boyfriends definitely. But tears? Never. Angel might not have Andi’s economics degree but she was well aware of the effect that her looks and tears had on people. And so far, so good.

“I’m sorry,” she said, looking up through her double layer of Eylure’s best, in what she hoped was a winning Princess Diana manner. “I promise it’ll never happen again. I’ll come to work no matter what I look like. Even if my nails all break. Or my extensions fall out. Or I come out in boils or—”

“Yes, yes, Angel, I get the gist,” said her supervisor hastily, before Angel could continue any further.

Oops. Had she laid it on too thick? Used a shovel rather than a trowel? Making a mental note to ask her actress best friend Gemma for some emergency drama lessons, Angel crossed her slender fingers behind her back. Much as she craved fame and fortune, wanting nothing more than to sashay across a red carpet or have her own reality show, Angel needed her job. For now, at least. Her big break was just around the corner, she knew it, but since this morning’s post had brought with it two red credit-card bills, a thinly veiled threatening letter from her bank manager and a rejection from the latest series of
Signed by Katie Price
,
painting toenails and waxing unmentionables would have to continue for a little bit longer.

As Dawn, predictably softened by tears, proceeded to tell her exactly what was expected of an employee of Blush,
Angel zoned out again. Although her eyes were widened and she was nodding attentively, in reality she was a world away – somewhere where she wore designer clothes rather than her cleverly purchased eBay fakes, and ate at the finest restaurants in town. She went shopping with Posh, dined out with Jamie and Jules and had been socialising with Peter Andre. Well, why not? He only lived in Brighton, for heaven’s sake, and if those pesky security guards on the private estate – the only men she’d ever met who’d been immune to her charms – had let her through, Angel knew she would have had a brilliant time at his last celeb-filled bash. An agent would have been bound to sign her on the spot, if only she hadn’t been caught trying to scale the fence. She’d been plucked off it with absolutely no ceremony whatsoever. As if that hadn’t been bad enough, insult had been added to injury today when a sternly worded letter from the estate’s management had been delivered by hand, politely but firmly telling her to stay away unless she wanted to face legal action.

Lecture over, she returned to work and the demanding Mrs Yuri. As she prepared the treatment room for her latest client, Angel wondered whether dropping out of her degree had really been her smartest ever move. Sure, the lectures had been torturously dull and the other students about as exciting as watching the Sky Planner screen, but asking pampered women about their weekend plans was hardly thrilling either. And as for the razor-wire stabs of jealousy when they told her about their latest skiing holiday or Maldives jaunt, well those weren’t exactly pleasant either.

Oh God. She had to find a way out of this soon, surely? If Amy Childs could do it, then why not Angelique Evans? If only she and Gemma could have afforded to rent in Chelsea rather than Tooting Bec. She could have got herself a part on
Made in Chelsea
. Or maybe even met Prince Harry! Maybe the next time that Pippa Middleton came in…

“Angel, Mrs Yuri is ready for you,” Dawn announced.

Angel gritted her teeth, selected some relaxing panpipe music from the iPod docking station and checked that the products were all lined up and ready for action. Industrial strength cleanser to try to remove the caked-on foundation was a must, and a chisel would have been even more help. While Angel filled a bowl with water and laid out a heap of fluffy towels, Mrs Yuri shuffled into the room and heaved her bulk onto the treatment table.

Don’t look at her mole. Don’t look at her mole. Don’t look at her mole.

“Good afternoon, Mrs Yuri. I’m Angel and I’ll be doing your crystal scrub therapy facial today,” she said chirpily.

Mrs Yuri grunted. Not a talker then. Fine. Angel actually preferred it when her clients didn’t want to chat. It gave her more thinking space to figure out a way to find fame and fortune. Concentrating very hard, she began to massage dollops of cleanser into the jowly face.

Don’t look at her mole. Don’t look at her mole. Look at her mole. Look at her. Look at her mole.

Oh bollocks.

Angel couldn’t help it. She was looking at the mole. It was pretty impossible not to, really. She was just about to drag her gaze away when something caught her eye and made her heart bump painfully. Hang on. That looked awfully familiar. Was it the light in here, or was that mole looking a little sore around the edges?
It seemed swollen too, and not just in a usual mole type way but as though it was changing size.

“Vat are you looking at?” hissed Mrs Yuri. Eyes like boot buttons glinted beneath fleshy lids and she pinned Angel with a stare that the KGB would have envied. This was the point where Angel should fib and make something up about pores and indulge in some bland beautician jargon – but she couldn’t bring herself to do it. Instead, horrible memories were flashing across her mind’s eye. Drips, clumps of hair falling to the floor, the smell of antiseptic… The last time Angel had seen a mole that looked as irritated as this had been on her poor mum. How could she possibly lie about something she knew had the potential to be life threatening?

“Your mole,” Angel confessed. “It looks very sore. Does it itch? Has it been like this for long?”

“You are looking at my mole? How dare you be so insulting, you bold girl?” Mrs Yuri hissed.

“It’s not because it’s big or anything,” Angel said hastily, wanting to kick herself as the client went puce with rage. Great. Top marks there for tact. Why not just say it was the biggest, grossest mole ever? She took a deep breath. “I hardly noticed it! Honestly! It’s just that if a mole is sore or changes shape it could be an indication that there’s something changing or of melanoma.”

“Melanoma?” screeched the client. “What is this you call me now? Some new insult?”

Oh God. This wasn’t going so well. Why hadn’t she just kept quiet?

The answer was, of course, because if somebody had spotted Natalie Evans’s mole earlier on, Angel’s mother might still be alive. Angel tried again.

“Of course not. Melanoma is another word for skin cancer.”

“You are saying I have cancer?” Mrs Yuri screeched.

“No! No, of course not! I just think it would be worth getting a doctor to check it over. These things can be easily removed.”

Mrs Yuri leapt off the table as though scalded. “You tell me I should get my mole removed? Nobody in my whole life haff ever insulted me so much! Vait until my Anton hears about this!”

Her shrieks continued to increase in volume. Possibly they could even drown out the sound of the planes taking off at Heathrow. In any case, they were certainly more than loud enough to alert Dawn and several other beauticians who came running.

“What’s going on?” demanded Dawn.

“I just mentioned that the mole looks a little sore,” explained Angel desperately. “No harm done.”

“No harm done?” Despite being Botoxed to almost lethal levels, the client managed to show her shock. Rounding on Angel, she hissed, “You are rude bitch! You haff insulted me! Do you know who my husband is?”

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