‘I imagine so.’
Lydia looked up in time to catch his swift frown. If she puzzled him she was glad. He certainly puzzled her. What had he to do with Wendy Bennington? She hadn’t managed to discover any connection at all. It was a mystery—and mysteries really bugged her.
‘Shall I leave this on the side then?’
‘I’m sure that’ll be fine.’
Lydia carefully placed the tin at the back of the draining board and rinsed the spoon. ‘How’s Wendy?’
There was a small beat of silence while, it seemed, he evaluated her right to ask the question. ‘Better than she looked yesterday.’
Lydia glanced over her shoulder, a question in her eyes.
‘She’s had a TIA. A mini-stroke, if you like. She’ll be fine.’ His mouth quirked into a half-smile. It was a nice mouth, firm and sensual. ‘No permanent damage, but she’s been told to make some life changes.’
‘That’s…fantastic.’
His smile broadened and something inside her flickered in recognition. ‘I’d love to hear you try and convince her of that.’
‘When will she be home?’
‘Well—’ he stretched out the word ‘—that depends on who you speak to. She’s broken her ankle. It’s a fairly simple break, apparently, and doesn’t need surgery, but…’
Lydia looked around her and then down at the uneven floor levels.
Nick followed her gaze. ‘Exactly. She’s not going to manage here for a few weeks, however much she’d rather be in her own home.’
‘No,’ Lydia agreed. She placed the clean bowl back on the floor and picked up the other one. ‘So, who’s won?’
‘The cards are stacked in my favour. I’m here to pick up Nimrod. Hopefully lure him in with food.’
Lydia emptied the water into the sink and put in some fresh. ‘That’s the cat?’
‘Nimrod, the mighty hunter,’ Nick agreed, moving away into the hall, his voice slightly muffled. ‘I gather his namesake was Noah’s great-grandson.’ He reappeared moments later, carrying a cat basket.
‘Great name,’ she said, smiling at the incongruous sight of a city gent with rustic cat basket.
‘Certainly appropriate. He’s something of a killer cat. Wendy picked him up as a stray a couple of years ago, only he turned out not to be so much a waif as a con artist. If it moves, Nimrod will hunt it. There never was a cat more suited to life in the wild.’
Lydia laughed. ‘Good luck getting it into that thing then,’ she said with a gesture at the cat basket.
‘So Wendy’s warned me,’ he said, setting it down on the kitchen table.
She rinsed her hands under the tap. ‘I’m glad it’s all sorted. It suddenly occurred to me, after I’d left, that you might forget about…Nimrod. I was going to contact you today.’
‘How?’
She looked up, surprised by the abrupt single word question. ‘It wouldn’t have been too difficult. A call to your company…’
His nod was almost imperceptible, but she could see his attitude towards her change. ‘I thought you didn’t know who I was.’
‘I didn’t, but you have an Internet presence—’
‘And you checked.’
Lydia thought of Izzy and smiled, deciding that she wouldn’t tell him that her description of him had inspired her sister with a burning fascination to discover who had managed to rile her so much. There’d been little enough information to find, nothing he could object to.
He was thirty-six and divorced. His only child, a daughter, lived with her mother and he was hugely successful at what he did. Nothing particularly unusual in any of that.
‘Do you always pry into other people’s business?’
‘Pretty much.’ She looked about her for a towel on which to dry her hands. ‘It’s an occupational hazard. But, this time, you’ve got to acknowledge I was invited to pry.’
‘Not by me.’
‘By Wendy.’ She turned to face him. ‘Though I dispute the use of the word pry.’
His eyes narrowed. ‘Do you?’
‘She’s led an amazing life. Don’t you think it’s in the public interest to have that properly chronicled? What she’s achieved, particularly for women, is amazing.’
‘I think what’s deemed to be “in the public interest” is stretched beyond belief,’ he said dryly, ‘but that’s not to undermine what Wendy has achieved.’
‘Can’t argue with that, I suppose—but I’m not here as a representative of any tabloid paper. Wendy will have complete control over what I write about her and, as long as it’s truthful, I’ve no problem with that.’
‘No?’
‘Absolutely not.’
She sounded aghast, but Nick knew better. Confronting Lydia Stanford was like coming up against a snake in the grass. You could never trust her. Never.
Very early in her career she’d worked undercover to highlight the ill treatment of the elderly in care homes and, while you couldn’t question the validity of her findings…you had to be suspicious of her ability to lie. And lie convincingly enough for colleagues to trust her.
Wendy might be impressed by her ability to stick to her purpose, of owning a cause and staying with it, whatever the personal cost—but he suspected a different motivation lay at the heart of it. He suspected her only cause was herself—Lydia Stanford. And where was the virtue in that?
She carefully folded the towel and threaded it back through the loop. ‘So how do you know Wendy?’
‘You don’t give up, do you?’
Lydia smiled, her eyes the colour of topaz. Warm and beguiling. ‘It’s usually easier to give in and tell me what I want to know.’
He turned away as though that would stop him being drawn in. ‘She’s my godmother.’
‘Really?’
‘I have the rattle to prove it.’
She laughed. It was the kind of laugh that made him wish she was a different woman—and they were in a different situation. He ran an irritated hand through his hair. He’d been celibate for far too long. That rich throaty chuckle was exactly what could make him forget who and what she was.
‘Actually, that’s a lie. She didn’t give me a rattle. I received two engraved napkin rings and a boxed china bowl and plate set from the other two.’
‘And from Wendy?’
‘A copy of the Bible, the Koran and the complete works of William Shakespeare.’
He watched the way her eyes crinkled into laughter. She was dangerous. You could easily relax in her company, forget that she used anyone and everyone near her to further her career—even a vulnerable sister.
People often described him as ruthless, but he would never have taken something so intensely personal and used it to advance his career. Lydia Stanford might claim that her sister had made a complete recovery, but he doubted it.
Betrayal was painful—acutely painful—and when it came so close to home it was difficult to ever recover from it. He had personal experience of it and her Anastasia Wilson jacket was a visual reminder.