After the One Cass Lester (best books to read for young adults txt) đ
- Author: Cass Lester
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âReally? It would be much more prestigious having it at the Avalon, plus you could invite all the hotel guests, too. Youâd probably raise a lot more money.â
âTrue,â admitted Charley. What she didnât admit was her fear that if the event moved to the Avalon, Tara would completely take it over.
Will was head down at the kitchen table deep in work when Angie got home.
She went over to kiss him, âStill hard at it?â
He wrapped his arms round her waist and held her to him. âGovernorsâ meeting.â
She grimaced on his behalf and then pulled away to head upstairs to check on the children. Not because she didnât trust Will to have put the kids to bed; she did it because she loved them and she wasnât going to beat herself up for that.
Baa-Baa, Finnâs fluffy sheep, had fallen out of his bed. She picked it up and gently popped it under the duvet next to him. Then, adoring the way he crooked his forefinger over his nose as he sucked his thumb, she stroked his cheek softly before crossing the room to Eliotâs bed. Eliot had taken his mega truck into bed with him. The truck had sharp edges so she carefully edged it out from under his arm and put it at the end of his bed. Then she ran her fingers lightly through his curls. Across the landing, Beth had fallen asleep reading, with her bedside light on. Angie eased the book out of her grasp and put it in her book bag for the next day. When she switched off the lamp Beth stirred. âItâs all right, lovely. Back to sleep.â
She went downstairs, made a pot of tea and sat down at the table next to Will.
âHow was the meeting?â he asked, gratefully taking the mug of tea Angie handed him.
âLovely. Lots of crisps!â
He chuckled before going back to his paperwork.
âActually⊠can I quickly ask you something? Tara wants to make the Prosecco Night a much bigger event this year. Could we use the school hall?â
Will shrugged lightly. âItâd be fine by me, but it canât be a school event, sorry. Itâd have to be a PTA thing. Youâll have to ask them.â
âNoooo!â groaned Angie. âDonât make me talk to the PTA. That Felicity Whatshernameâs an absolute nightmare. Canât you ask her?â
âNo, I canât. Anyhow sheâs not that bad. Sheâs just a bitâŠâ Will struggled to find the right word.
âPatronising⊠bossy⊠condescending?â
Will raised his eyebrows at her.
âOnly trying to help,â she protested.
âMotivated,â finished Will, tactfully.
Angie sighed. âOkay. Iâll talk to her then. If I must.â Felicity Whatsernameâs going to eat me alive, she thought gloomily.
The following afternoon Tara sat at the Reception Desk of the Avalon, stressed to the nines and struggling to keep her temper, when Charley arrived to drop off fifty top-of-the-range pamper bags for a hen party.
âYou okay?â she asked.
âNo. Iâm having a complete pig of a day wrangling the Hen Party from Hell, plus, Rent-a-Git said âNoâ to holding the Prosecco Night here.â
âYou werenât really expecting otherwise, were you?â pointed out Charley, trying to conceal her inner relief.
âNo,â sighed Tara, âBut he was just so sodding pompous about it.â
Sheâd spent a frenetic morning dealing with the never-ending stream of must-haves, donât-wants, and canât-eats of the Hen Party from Hell. When sheâd finally managed to grab five minutes with her manager, and pitch the fundraiser to him, his little eyes had initially lit up greedily. Heâd rapidly bought into the idea of a room full of women buying bucketfuls of Prosecco and demolishing a small mountain of bar snacks to mop it up, even offering to pitch the event to Head Office himself, until Tara poured cold water over his fantasy.
âNo, you donât quite get it. They donât buy the Prosecco from the hotel, we bring the Prosecco.â He looked at her blankly. God, it doesnât take much to confuse his tiny little brain, does it? she thought, before explaining slowly, as if to a five-year-old child, how a charity fundraiser worked. âWe will bring the Prosecco, some nibbles, and a range of Prosecco-themed products, all of which the women will buy from us. The money we raise goes to the Hospice. All the hotel has to do is provide the room and the parking.â
âSo, whatâs in it for the hotel?â he asked.
âKudos, and a lot of good publicity.â
He thought about it for less than nanosecond before spluttering, âNo way! You canât bring your own food and drink to the hotel! Iâm not asking Head Office if we can do that. Itâs a completely unacceptable request,â he finished highhandedly.
âItâs for charity!â Tara had countered. âFor a hospice for the dying.â
âAbsolutely not. And thatâs my final decision,â he said, all too evidently enjoying asserting his authority over her.
Tara seethed. For a brief moment she thought about going over his head and contacting Head Office herself, but realistically she knew that if they refused, the obnoxious little berk would never let her live it down.
âSeriously, Charley, you have no idea what a nightmare it is working for such a complete and absoluteâŠâ
âJerk?â suggested Charley.
âArsehole,â finished Tara, bitterly.
Charley hesitated, as if she were deciding what to say, or maybe whether to say anything at all. Then leaning across the desk, she bent her head closer to Taraâs, and lowered her voice. âTara. Will you listen to yourself? The man is an arsehole, an utter arsehole, and heâs making your working life miserable.â Tara rolled her eyes, but Charley didnât give up. âLook, I know you keep joking about him, but honestly, now Iâve actually met him, and Iâve seen how unhappy you are here, Iâm not sure itâs actually very funny.â
Tara shook her head lightly, dismissing Charleyâs concerns. âDonât worry, I can deal with a little prick like him. Youâve just caught me on a bad day.â Which was partly true, but what was also true was that the
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