Read Operation Valentine Online
Authors: Loretta Hill
Four weeks later
Sarah Dubert rushed through the entrance of The Blue Saloon simply bursting with news. Her friends Mia and Amy were already seated at their favourite table, her gorgeous boyfriend Owen serving them drinks.
âHey!' Their eyes all lit up when they saw her. Owen put his tray down and pulled her into his arms for a quick kiss.
âSo how did it go?'
âAndrew Whenam has signed the deal. Penwick and Whenam are now officially embarking upon a joint venture. Their networking at my charity ball has saved at least one hundred and fifty of the three hundred jobs that were supposed to be cut.'
âYay! Well done!' Mia and Amy both clapped their hands ecstatically while Owen gave her another hug and kiss.
âAhem.' Amy coughed loudly as he seemed inclined to linger. âAnd what about your job? Did you manage to save that too?'
âYes,' Sarah nodded, âbut unfortunately Lucy is packing up her things as we speak.' Her mouth twisted. âI do kind of feel sorry for her. She did do a great job with the PR for the downsizing. But at the end of the day, I guess I pulled off the better coup.'
Mia laughed. âOf course you did. And it's okay to feel happy about it, Sarah. Sit down and have a drink.'
âHell, have four!' Amy protested. âThis is a cause for celebration.'
âHere, here.' Mia lifted her own glass.
âI finish up in an hour,' Owen murmured in her ear, his arm still deliciously around her waist. âSo if you want to do something later â¦'
âI'd love to,' she whispered back. âBut what about Chloe? Is she expecting you home early?'
âActually, no.' He grinned. âMy mum got back to town two days ago and they're having a girls' night in. Chloe's already told her all about you.'
Sarah blushed. âAll good things, I hope.'
âAre you kidding me?' He squeezed her. âYou know how much of a fan Chloe is of yours. Anyway, Mum is dying to meet you, so I was hoping you might come over for dinner on Saturday night. She'll be there. I'm cooking lasagne.'
âOooh, meeting your mother.' She tickled him in the ribs. âThat's a big step. Are you sure you're ready for it?'
âHell yes.' He laughed. âAre you?'
âI think I can handle it.'
As he turned to go back to the bar, Sarah slid into a seat across from her friends.
âMy, my,' said Amy archly. âHow times have changed.'
Sarah's ribcage filled with joy. She simply could not wipe the smile from her face. Today had been a triumph for her career. But the last month had contained some of the happiest days of her life. Owen was completely dedicated to her and she to him. She enjoyed having Chloe in her life now too. The young girl made her feel so
welcome, almost like she was a member of their family. It was crazy how tight they'd become so quickly.
âYou really have tamed the beast,' Mia observed as they watched Owen efficiently working the bar, politely ignoring the âcome hither' stares of his female patrons. âI've never seen a more reformed bad boy. I swear, I wouldn't believe it if I hadn't seen it with my own eyes.'
Sarah giggled self-consciously.
âYou may laugh,' Amy shook her finger. âBut I am so jealous. I want one for myself. You must tell us how you did it.'
Sarah grinned at her and said with a very good imitation of Amy's mathematician voice, â
Bigger pool, tighter net.
'
Amy blew on her fringe. âVery funny.'
âNo, I'm not joking,' Sarah laughed indulgently. âOperation Valentine was the best idea you've ever had.'
For her bestselling novels
The Girl in Steel-Capped Boots
and
The Girl in the Hard Hat,
Loretta Hill drew upon her own outback engineering experiences of larrikins, red dust and steel-capped boots. She is also the author of the ebook novella
One Little White Lie
, which was a no.1 bestseller on iTunes. Her new novel,
The Girl in the Yellow Vest
, was published in January 2014.
Loretta always wanted to be a writer. As a kid she filled pages of exercise books with stories to amuse her friends. Her father, who never wasted his time on fiction, didn't see much worth in this pass time and pushed her to pursue a âsensible' career. Fortunately, she had inherited some of his talent for numbers and decided to give it a go. She graduated from the University of Western Australia as structural engineer and took her first job with a major West Australian engineering company.
A few years later she met a lawyer at a Black Friday party hosted by a friend. She was dressed as the devil and he just came as himself. They are now happily married and living in Perth with their two young sons and infant daughter.
Despite her career in engineering, her interest in law and her journey into motherhood, Loretta continued to write. Not because she had a lot of time but because it was and always had been an addiction she couldn't ignore.
If you enjoyed
Operation Valentine
,
read on for a taster of Loretta's new novel
THE MAXWELL SISTERS
Sometimes your best friend may just be your sister â¦
Â
All families have their problems. No more so than the Maxwells of Tawny Brooks Winery. Situated in the heart of the Margaret River wine region, this world-renowned winery was the childhood home to three sisters, Natasha, Eve and Phoebe.
Today all three women are enmeshed in their city lives and eager to forget their past â and their fractured sibling relationships. Until Phoebe decides to get married at home â¦
Now the sisters must all return to face a host of family obligations, vintage in full swing and interfering in-laws who just can't take a hint. As one romance blossoms and others fall apart, it seems they are all in need of some sisterly advice.
But old wounds cut deep. Somehow, the Maxwell sisters must find a way back to one another â or risk losing each other forever.
Â
The Maxwell Sisters
is a heartwarming romantic comedy about three extraordinary women on a journey to find love and rediscover family.
Most recipients of the gold-gilded invitation were pleased and excited to receive it. A wedding in the heart of the Margaret River wine region. How decadent! They RSVP'd promptly, marked the date on their calendars and boasted about the upcoming event to their friends.
No one thought for a moment that such a welcome proposal would cause anyone to fly into a blind panic, least of all the sisters of the bride, who would no doubt be taking prominent places in the wedding party. But this was exactly how both women felt upon drawing the impressive card from its white satin envelope.
Fear.
Horror.
And more than a little desperation.
Natasha Maxwell received her invitation first. At thirty years old, she was the eldest of the Maxwell Sisters and currently unemployed. She was home when the postman pulled up outside her house in suburban Sydney. At the sound of his motor bike, she hauled herself up onto her elbows from a lying position on the couch and watched him through a large bay window. This gorgeous piece of architecture had been designed and constructed,
like the rest of the house, by the building company that employed her husband, a man she had not seen or spoken to in seven months. She peered across her flawlessly manicured lawn to where a terribly clichéd house-shaped letterbox was being stuffed with an oversized card. It wasn't her birthday and she had no expectations of parties in her future ⦠except one. She stiffened.
Oh no! It's here.
Already!
Natasha pushed the gossip magazine off her chest, where it fell, forgotten, onto the floor amongst myriad other discarded items that had been lying there for weeks. Chocolate bar wrappers, overdue rental DVDs and library books. The television was on and the usual daytime talk show nattered away in the background. She wasn't watching it. She just liked a bit of white noise playing because it made her feel less lonely. Her laptop was open on the coffee table so that she could hear and respond immediately to any job interview requests that might come through. Not that there had been any that day, or even recently. The market, along with her career, had taken a turn for the worse with no sign of recovery.
Swinging her legs off the couch, she sprinted to the front door. In a moment she was through, running across the lawn hoping to be proved wrong. Surely Phoebe intended to be engaged for just a little bit longer. It had only been three months since she'd called with the news. She remembered clutching the phone in fear as her sister's excitement filtered through.
âEngaged! Can you believe it, Tash? I never thought this would happen to me.'
Natasha had tried to be supportive and animated by the news. After all, what were big sisters for? Phoebe had been there for her when she got married, a gorgeous bridesmaid in dark green satin. Thinking back on that day, Natasha flinched. Everything was different now.
Her marriage was over.
But Phoebe didn't know that.
Natasha had made the deliberate decision not to tell anyone about it until she'd healed a little. Maybe once she'd got a new job, a few new and achievable life goals.
Then
, when she did reveal what she had been through this past year to her family, she wouldn't look like such a basket case. Because if there was one thing Natasha Maxwell couldn't be, it was vulnerable. Of all the Maxwells, she prided herself on being the one with her head firmly on her shoulders. The one who made the right decisions â always. She was a smart, dependable high-achiever who had it all.
At least she had been.
It had actually been quite easy to keep the change in her circumstances quiet. The rest of her family lived in Western Australia. So keeping up appearances was a matter of only a couple of vague phone calls a month. One to Phoebe and the other to her over-anxious Greek mum, who could make a drama out of anything, and often did.
In fact, her secret had been quite safe ⦠until Phoebe's announcement.
âCan you imagine it?' her sister had gushed when she'd called to announce the engagement. âA wedding. The whole family together again. Mum's going mental. It's been too long, Tash! I miss you guys.'
âI miss you too.' The answer was mechanical, almost wishful.
Phoebe didn't notice. âWe're going to have heap of fun. I can't wait.'
Natasha had to smile at her little sister's characteristic childlike wonder. She was the bubbliest, most optimistic person Natasha knew. Even as a child, she remembered Phoebe's school teachers remarking on how happy she was all the time. She was such a hopeful spirit. All she ever wanted was for everyone around her to enjoy life as much as she did.
âSo how's your fiancé taking all this?' Natasha asked.
âOh, you know, he's just his usual fantastic self. Happy to let me make all the big decisions â about venue, time, theme. He just wants to get married as soon as possible. I'm thinking March.'
That's only seven months away.
âReally? So soon?' She hoped Phoebe hadn't heard the tremor in her voice. After all, seven months was enough time to safely secure another job and get her head screwed on straight again.
Are you sure?
She'd already been at it for over four months with no such luck.
Natasha bit her lip nervously as Phoebe's voice became breathless. âI know it's fast, but we're just too excited, you know? I mean, this must be how you felt when you and Heath got engaged.'
Regret coiled like a snake in her belly and for a second she was robbed of words.
Luckily, Phoebe filled in the blanks. âWhen you meet the right person, you just don't want to wait.'
Natasha knew exactly what her sister meant. When Heath had proposed to her seven years ago, she had been light-headed with joy. One starlit night on a deserted beach, he'd whispered, âI can't see my future without you, Tash. Be my wife, will you?'
It had been the best day of her life.
She quickly shifted her thoughts away from Heath and said lightly, âYou're right, tie the knot quick before he finds out about the Maxwell “crazy” gene.'
There was a knowing giggle on the other end of the line. âSomehow I think he already knows about that.'
It had been a long-standing joke between the sisters, and indeed the entire town of Yallingup, that everyone in the Maxwell family tree had had a little bit of crazy in them â some personal idiosyncrasy or fanatical obsession that would set them apart from the norm. It usually manifested itself in their passions, making them go that one step further than any sane person would usually venture. Some Maxwells had destroyed their lives on a deranged punt while others had become amazingly successful.
Take their father, for instance. The owner and founder of Tawny Brook Wines â a worldwide success story. Johnathan Maxwell had always been crazy about grapes. His wine making neighbours said he was as mad as a cut snake because he refused
to use tried and true modern methods. No insecticides or machine harvesting. He believed that plant growth and fertility was irrevocably connected to the rhythm of the cosmos. He played music to his vines and let the moon be his guide. As far as the neighbours were concerned, the man was clearly unhinged but no one could doubt his methods worked amazingly well.
âSo I was thinking â¦' Phoebe's voice broke through Natasha's thoughts. âWill you be one of my bridesmaids?'
Natasha licked her lips nervously. âI guess so.' She didn't want to jump headfirst into this pool without a life jacket, but couldn't see another option.
There was a groan. âIs it my imagination or do you sound about as enthusiastic as a vegetarian in front of a steak?'
âSorry, I didn't mean it to come out like that. Of course I'm thrilled. I'm just a little distracted right now.'
âReally? With what?'
With the fact that the last thing she wanted to attend was a family event where every move she made and word she spoke would be scrutinised, especially by her over-protective mother. She had wanted more time to deal with her situation before allowing her family to wade in, and wade in they would whether she liked it or not. She knew they simply wouldn't be able to keep their opinions or recommendations to themselves.
âIs this about Eve?' Phoebe asked Tash, reminding her of the long-standing argument between herself and the middle Maxwell sister. An argument that now seemed so insignificant compared with everything else that was going on in her life. âNo, this is not about Eve.'
âBecause,' Phoebe said sternly, âin case you're wondering, I have asked her to be my bridesmaid as well and I expect you two to get along.'
âReally?' Natasha returned lightly. âBut she hates the limelight.'
âWell, I don't want anyone else,' Phoebe said firmly. âI want both my sisters standing by my side when I marry the man of my dreams.'
Natasha's mouth curled. âWhat did Eve say to that?'
Phoebe gave a defensive sounding snort. âWell â' she hedged.
âShe said she didn't want to, didn't she?'
âEve saying no?' Phoebe scoffed. âDon't be ridiculous. She said ⦠she said she'd rather bake the wedding cake instead.'
Eve was a sous chef at a top restaurant in Perth â so this offer wasn't exactly ungenerous. In fact, Natasha was rather impressed with this clever move because Eve had always been a âyes' girl. She didn't know how to say âno' to anyone. For her to make even the slightest hesitation must mean she really wanted out. A dull ache entered Natasha's already battered heart. Was the rift between them really as bad as all that?
âSo did you take her up on it?' she asked Phoebe tentatively.
âI said she could do both.'
Natasha's jaw dropped open. â
Phoebe!
'
âWell, I'm sick and tired of you two carrying on like this. It's high time you girls were forced to do something together so you can sort out your issues. I don't want to play piggy-in-the-middle anymore.'
âDo you really want to risk your wedding on that?'
âThat's exactly what I'm going to do,' Phoebe announced passionately, making Natasha both smile and cringe.
The ruthless optimist strikes again.
Phoebe definitely wanted âhappy'. And if she couldn't get it any other way she was going to get it by force.
âI just feel like if I can get the two of you in the same room again then maybe I can have my sisters back.' Phoebe's voice was small but hopeful. âEven without the terrible argument you guys had, we haven't been as close in recent years. Eve and I seem to have lost that bond we used to have. Do you remember how we were as kids, Tash? Nothing could separate us.'
âI know,' Natasha said sadly.
âDad used to say we were his best blend.'
âI remember.'
They'd always been so tight. When one sister was in trouble they'd all get together to nut out the problem. They were a bank
of secrets. A book of adventures. A catalogue for embarrassing moments. They even had secret phrase: âClub members only'.
She closed her eyes as Phoebe's soft voice sounded in her ears again. âSo why are you holding on to a fight you had nearly a year ago?'
Natasha sighed. It was really all about timing. Right after her massive argument with Eve, all the upheaval in her own life had started, including the complete and utter breakdown of her marriage. By the time she realised she was no longer talking to Eve, months had already ticked by and the chessboard pieces were all in different places. Anger had become silence. Silence had become habit. And now that it was so ingrained she didn't know where to start.
She cleared her throat. âI was kinda hoping Eve might make the first move.'
âCome on, Tash,' Phoebe replied crossly. âYou were the one making all the accusations at the time. You can't expect her not to have some pride.'
Natasha bit her lip. It was true, of course. She had told Eve she was a selfish coward who should face up to her responsibilities, not run away and hide from them. Now looking at her own life, she had to snort in derision. Talk about the pot calling the kettle black! âI ⦠I guess I do owe Eve an apology.'
âThat's the spirit,' Phoebe encouraged her. âMaybe when you and Heath fly to WA for the wedding, you can talk to Eve about it.'
The mention of her estranged husband brought reality screeching in like a train.
âHow is he, by the way?'
âWho?' Natasha muttered distractedly as the squealing in her ears diminished.
Phoebe giggled. âHeath, of course.'
âEr â¦' She swallowed. âBusy.'
She didn't know this for a fact but it was a good guess. When Heath's boss had suggested the transfer to Melbourne where
there was more work, it had seemed like a good opportunity for a trial separation. And it had been working well. They weren't fighting any more ⦠at least.
However, if she were truly honest with herself, it felt like the guts of her life had been ripped out. Natasha spent most of her days reliving scenes from her past. Old arguments they'd had when she either regretted saying something or wished she hadn't said so much. Her distraction had not gone unnoticed by the managing director of Gunnings Food Group, a confectionary company where she'd headed up the marketing department. âAs much as I like you, Natasha, I can't afford to continue to pay you if you can't get any work done.'
So she'd started making promises. Promises she couldn't keep. Poor concentration and a lacklustre campaign had eventually cost her her job. Now she was surviving on savings but telling all her friends she was too busy to catch up with them.
âTash, is something going on with you?' Her sister's voice was in her ear again like an annoying fly. âI feel like you're not listening to a word I'm saying.'
âOf course I'm listening.' Natasha tried to inject a little indignation into her tone.