her hand. âPlease tell me thereâs Lanson.â
âDunno. Brother dearest ordered the booze.â
There wasâthank Godâand Izzy polished off her first glass while rinsing the used party glasses already accumulating in the kitchen. She took care of a second while chopping up a platter of out-of-season veg.
Their extended circle of friends fell like Brighton seagulls onto her choppings.
âGod, I love this stuff,â a tall brunette cooed, scooping a big dollop of dip onto some capsicum and then shoving the lot into her mouth and speaking past the crunching mess. âYours?â
âSpeciality of the man of the house,â Izzy said. And, no, dip wasnât an odd thing for a military man to be good at. No more odd than Alexâs weirdly nocturnal habits, anyway.
âTash, Sally.â She nodded, extending the platter for their grazing pleasure. âThanks for coming. Hi, Richard.â
âLove the pauperâs catering, Izzy,â he gushed, drowning a sprig of broccolini in dip. âVery on-theme.â
Huh. If being poor was so entertaining why hadnât she smiled more as a kid?
She shuffled forwards through the crammed-inguests, keeping herself and the veg creeping steadily towards the far side of the bright, eclectically decorated industrial conversion. Guests greeted and commiserated and dipped the whole way.
âSo whatâs next?â one of her downstairs neighbours shouted over the music and chatter.
âNot sure,â Izzy hedged. âConsolidation period?â
The pretty face folded. âOh, I assumed you had something already lined up.â
Nope. Not a thing lined up. Though reasonable that her friends would expect that, because that was absolutely what normal Izzy would do. The Izzy they all knew.
Corporate, clever Izzy.
Top of the class and best in her department Izzy.
But new Izzy, it seemed, was channelling her mother, all of a sudden. Choosing principle over plenty. New Izzy was all about the moment and dramatic, flourishing statements. And nothing about reality.
She paused against one of the apartmentâs large windows and caught her breath ready for another pass with the half-decimated tray. The sea of people momentarily parted andshe caught a glimpse of Toriâs distinctive tricoloured hair. She was perched happily in a manâs lap, her âtake meâ heels kicked back, his strong hands the only thing stopping her from toppling backwards onto the floor in front of all their friends. Not her boyfriendâs slim, pale, slightly creepy hands. These were strong, tanned, non-Mark hands.
Uh-ohâ¦trouble in paradise? Already?
The throng closed in once more, ending her worrying Tori sighting, and Izzy pressed on with her vegetables back towards the kitchen. Appeasing the masses.
Oohâ¦perhaps waitressing could be her new job. Apparently she had a knack for it and maybe the café down on street level would hire her, then sheâd have no commute costs. Of course there was the whole issue of zero appreciable waiting skills.
The only after-school job sheâd managed never to have in her long, exhausting childhood.
The final stick of courgette disappeared just before Izzy hit the kitchen doors. Of course it did. Because sheâd cut just enough for the size of the crowd sheâd unconsciously counted, and sheâd shuffled forward in subliminal accordance with the diminishing supply.
Quantities. Numbers. They were her thing. Estimates and value assessment and principles of return. Whether it was Broadmore Natáleâs investments or a pile of crunchy veg, the theory was much the same. Leverage all available resources and minimise waste.
Yawn .
No wonder sheâd left. Her job gave her a fantastic income and that gave her a fantastic, inner-city lifestyle, but there wasnât much else to recommend it. Not the fiddly commute, not the irritating, Godâs gift boss, not the groundhogday