The Road Trip: The heart-warming new novel from the author of The Flatshare and The Switch by Beth O'Leary (books to read now TXT) ๐

Read free book ยซThe Road Trip: The heart-warming new novel from the author of The Flatshare and The Switch by Beth O'Leary (books to read now TXT) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Beth O'Leary
Read book online ยซThe Road Trip: The heart-warming new novel from the author of The Flatshare and The Switch by Beth O'Leary (books to read now TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Beth O'Leary
I defy anyone to drive better than me in these conditions.
Addie slips her dress down one shoulder, then the other. I would say my eyes are on the road approximately twenty per cent of the time, and Iโve just remembered about all the wine I drank at lunchtime, but โ oh, no, Iโve forgotten about it again because Addie has dropped her dress to her waist and Iโm fixated at the sight of all that creamy pale skin. Her bikini is dark orange, two minuscule triangles, a few strings tied at the back of her neck, and her eyes are wicked and wide, mouth open in a laughing smile.
My throat is extremely dry; for a fleeting moment I wish Marcus could see this, a girl stripping in the passenger seat as I speed down a narrow French road with the sun in my eyes, then she touches my leg and I forget Marcus altogether. I am driving extremely dangerously, but quite frankly this would be the best possible way to go.
By the time we pull into the entrance to Villa Cerise I am so turned on Iโm shaking. I turn to Addie and meet the heat of her gaze square-on, and thereโs that teasing edge there, like a challenge, but thereโs a little vulnerability too. Her creamy skin has goosebumped in the cool breeze of the air con; I can see her nipples beneath the thin fabric of her bikini top. My breath is coming fast. I hardly know where to start. Her eyes move to my lips โ then, at a sound outside the car, she glances to the window.
Iโm just mustering the courage to place a hand on the bare skin of her thigh when she says,
โThatโs not Debโs car.โ
I pause with my hand over the gearstick and follow her gaze to the rental car now parked under the plane trees outside the villa. I stare at it blankly. Itโs not registering. Car, yes, I see that, but why could it possibly matter more than kissing Addie right this very moment?
โAre you expecting someone?โ she asks.
I let out an involuntary little moan of despair as she reaches to pull her dress back up, then try to disguise it as a manly clearing of the throat.
โUh, no.โ Reluctantly I return my gaze to the other car and try to slow my breathing. Is it โ my stomach drops, blood pounding โ but no, itโs not my father. I recognise the jacket slung over the back of the bench at the front of the house, facing out towards the fountains and the valley beyond. Itโs brown leather, Gucci, and my uncle Terence has worn it almost every day for all twenty-two years of my life.
โFor fuckโs sake.โ I kill the engine and press my forehead against the steering wheel.
โWhat?โ
โUncle Terry.โ
โYour uncle is here?โ
โHe was supposed to come. Before the familial dispute.โ
I straighten up, close my eyes for a moment, and then open the car door.
โDylan, my boy!โ roars a voice from the terrace. โI was beginning to think youโd absconded! O-ho, whoโs this beautiful young lady? Where did you find her?โ
Well, thatโs done the trick. There is no greater turn-off in this world than my uncle Terence.
โHello, Terry,โ I say wearily. โThis is Addie. She works at Villa Cerise.โ
โHi,โ Addie says, waving up at Terry. โAnything I can get you, sir?โ
I look askance at her. Sheโs wearing a new expression, a strange, plastic smile. This is her speaking-to-clients face โ Iโm pleased to see how different it is from the slow, wicked grin she gave me within moments of us meeting.
โDinner! Do you do dinner?โ Terry asks.
I cringe. โAddie isnโt . . .โ
โAbsolutely,โ Addie says smoothly. She adjusts her dress a little higher at the neck. โI can request a chef for you โ there are some fantastic local ones, Iโll fetch you the list.โ
I watch her go. Her hips arenโt swaying now. I am desperate with longing.
โPretty, that one,โ Terry calls down to me. โBut I expect youโre still smitten with the blonde from Atlanta?โ
I cringe again as Addie pauses in the doorway to the kitchen for a moment, one hand on the stone wall. Terry is out of date in all senses โ that jacket of his hasnโt looked good since the nineties, and Michele from Atlanta hasnโt been on the scene since Michaelmas term of third year, for Christโs sake.
โWhat are you doing here, Uncle Terry?โ
โI heard on the grapevine that youโd decided to go ahead with the family holiday!โ He grins down at me. โThree weeks of sun and wine with my favourite nephew? And none of the rest of the rabble? How could I pass that up? Come on up here, boy, letโs open a bottle to celebrate.โ
I drag my feet up the steps and across to the terrace. The pool lies at one edge, glinting pale blue; beyond the water, the vineyards look hyper-real under the sunโs glare.
Terry slaps me on the back. His receding hairline has retreated so far now that he just sports a small patch above the forehead and one of those around-the-ears styles that monks used to favour in medieval times.
โGood to see you, Dylan.โ
I grit my teeth. โYou too, Terry.โ
My family. Theyโre like a bad cold I canโt shake, a dreadful pop song I canโt stop singing. How do I get rid of them?
And, more immediately: how do I get rid of Uncle Terry?
NOW
Addie
The sunโs properly up now, starbursting on the windscreen, making me squint even with my sunglasses on. The road ahead looks kind of dusty through it, like everything needs a wipe.
Dylan hasnโt said a word for over half an
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