thrust it back into his breast pocket. “I had a wager with the boys in the office. Harmless bit of fun, that’s all.”
“I
so
don’t want to know,” she snapped.
“Ah — I believe this is yours.” His eyes met hers, gleaming with amusement as he handed over the foil-wrapped, raspberry-flavoured condom.
Holly opened her mouth to explain, but nothing came out.
“Never mind,” Alex told her. “I
so
don’t want to know.” He raised his brow. “I’d say we’re about even on the embarrassment scale, wouldn’t you?”
Holly managed — only just — to nod. Mortified, she shoved the condom back in her bag, murmured her thanks, and fled towards the door.
“Ms James, before you go…”
“Yes?” Holly turned around.
“Have you never thought of pursuing a job as a serious journalist? Your talents are obviously wasted on
BritTEEN
.”
As her surprise gave way to anger, Holly’s mouth opened and closed like a trout just landed out of the water. Before she could form a reply, he spoke again.
“Oh, and one more thing before I throw you out…”
“Yes?” she snapped.
“Off the record—” he paused “—that means I can say something, but you can’t publish it — I do approve of sex on a first date. Absolutely. But having said that,” he added grimly, “I’m referring to responsible adults, not teenagers with spots and raging hormones. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m busy, Ms James. I haven’t time for any more of this nonsense.”
Before Holly could object to this latest insult — nonsense,
really
? — he wished her a curt “good afternoon” and ushered her out, shutting the door firmly after her.
Alex returned to his desk to get ready for his next appointment. As he leaned forward to press the intercom button a pink marabou feather floated in the air where Holly James had stood and drifted, slowly, to the floor.
He went around his desk and bent down to pick it up. It was soft, like the downy back of a newly hatched chick.
“Silly girl,” he murmured, and shook his head.
Absently he thrust the feather in his pocket, then turned back to his desk and pressed the intercom button. “Send in the next appointment, Jill.”
“How can I help you, Mr Russo?” Alex asked the famous chef when they were both seated a few minutes later.
“How can you help me? You can make me more fucking money,” Marcus replied succinctly. “That’s how you can help me.”
Alex was taken aback, but managed a polite smile. “You’ve come to the right place. Making money for my clients is, after all, my job.”
Marcus grunted. “I’ll give you the CliffsNotes version of my finances, then, shall I? I’ve expanded too quickly and my company’s losing money. I’m behind in payments to my suppliers, and I owe the bank seven million pounds. And to top it off, my wife has upped sticks and left me.”
“I’m sorry.”
“The bottom line, Mr Barrington,” Russo finished, “is this: my new restaurant, Brasserie Russo, has to succeed, or else my company goes under. And I refuse to let that happen.”
Alex leaned back in his chair. “Well, Mr Russo, I’d recommend you file bankruptcy and restructure your debts. Then we’ll need to make your investments work harder for you.”
Marcus grunted. “And how do we do that?”
“I’ll work out an investment strategy best suited to your needs. Decide how risk-averse you are, and go from there. And I’d suggest you find ways to cut costs in your current business operations, if you haven’t already. Have you any property you can liquidate and divert into stocks?”
Marcus shook his head. “I owe a seven–million-pound overdraft to my bank; if I sold my house today, they’d take every fucking penny.” He eyed Alex. “I just signed a deal with ITV to do a reality show,
Chefzilla
. The cameras will follow me at work and at home.” He frowned. “Of course, if I’d known my wife would do a runner, I wouldn’t have agreed to do it. We start