Sweet Seduction

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Sweet Seduction Page 31

by Jennifer St George


  ‘She,’ Gabe stabbed his finger at Charlie, ‘can’t go on.’

  ‘What?’ Abigail’s eyes bulged with astonishment. ‘Gabe, she has to go on. We’re live for goodness’ sake.’

  ‘Forget it,’ he said harshly.

  ‘What if I tell the truth?’ Charlie asked softly.

  ‘Will someone please tell me what’s going on?’ Abigail wailed.

  ‘Trust me,’ Charlie implored, grabbing his arm.

  ‘Trust?’ He pulled free. ‘Damn it, Charlie, for all I know you’ve got four kids and a dog in Australia.’

  The theme music blared across the set and the audience clapped on cue.

  Abigail danced with agitation. ‘Come on.’

  ‘I’ll confess everything,’ Charlie implored.

  ‘No,’ Gabe said. Charlie would be derided across the country. But then, what did he care? She was nothing now. Why not let her self-destruct on national television? ‘Fine. But after tonight, don’t come near me again.’

  He turned away from the woman with whom, just a few moments ago, he’d thought he could spend the rest of his life.

  Charlie knew she’d lost Gabe but she would not stand by and let the show – and his career – be ruined.

  Abigail dragged her to the edge of the brightly lit set and miked her up. ‘Good luck,’ she said, before propelling Charlie into the light.

  Charlotte Wentworth walked onto the set, blinking back tears. As she took up her position, she pressed her teeth hard into her lips. She needed the pain to make her focus. She couldn’t think about herself now; she must ensure Gabe’s reputation remained intact. She took a deep breath and checked her ingredients and equipment. The theme music ended and the audience applause died away as Jasper walked onto the set.

  ‘Welcome to the grand final of First-Class Chef,’ Jasper said. Tonight . . .’

  But Charlie didn’t hear another word as a shock of blonde hair caught her attention. There, sitting in the front row of the audience, was Sophie Eddington-Smythe. Her immaculately made-up face beamed with malicious triumph.

  All Charlie’s fears left her in that instant. Sophie was behind Paul’s sudden appearance. Of course. Her revenge for not winning Gabe. Sophie wanted to destroy Gabe and take Charlie down with him.

  Charlie forced a dazzling smile onto her face and saw Sophie’s grin lose a little of its gloss. Charlie knew exactly what to do.

  Jasper arrived at her station. ‘So, Charlie, talk us through your entrée.’

  Charlie’s mind worked faster than it had ever done in her life. The silence stretched just a little too long. Jasper’s eyes widened.

  ‘Jasper, tonight I’m going to start with Accidental Liar’s Terrine.’

  The judge blinked at her. ‘Sorry?’ He frowned. ‘Run that past me again.’

  ‘Accidental Liar’s Terrine. This is how you make it.’

  Jasper looked at her as if she were quite mad.

  ‘First you take a lump of Ignorant Little Rich Girl Minced Chicken and add a handful of Billionaire Mixed Herbs and stir in engagement.’

  She glanced up into the control room. Her recipe had already caused a commotion. Abigail shouted into a mike and production staff raced down from the control area. But Gabe sat still, staring at her through the glass.

  ‘Then, add a touch of Cheating Fiancé Vinegar, to give everything a kick.’

  ‘A kick . . .’ Jasper added unnecessarily.

  ‘Yes, then the Ignorant Little Rich Girl Mince is a little lost without a touch of Runaway Billionaire Pepper. So you season with that next.’ She noticed Emma in the front row with Rupert and Amelia sitting quietly next to her. Rupert held the Snoopy toy on his lap. She looked away quickly. Emma’s shocked expression nearly de-railed her train of thought.

  ‘You pack the mixture into the mould and cover with some “I didn’t plan on meeting you foil” and pop it into the oven to cook.’ She turned and placed the tin in the oven.

  ‘You weigh the mixture down a little with “I can’t come clean” weights and cook until the mixture is set.’

  Jasper gave a little cough. ‘How did you come up with that recipe?’

  ‘From experience. I lied a few months ago. I didn’t think it would hurt anyone, but I was wrong.’

  ‘What was the lie?’

  Charlie took a deep breath and faced directly into the camera. ‘I’m not Charlie Brown, the catering assistant from Brisbane. My name is Charlotte Wentworth. I’m the heiress to the Wentworth diamond fortune. Well, I was – I’m not sure I am now.’

  The audience took a collective gasp.

  Abigail dropped her clipboard, the sound echoing across the studio. Chaos obviously erupted in the control room as people jumped from their seats.

  All except Gabe, who remained in his chair, unmoved.

  Charlie looked away quickly as her voice threatened to break. ‘I met a man in Italy and I lied about my identity. For once in my life, I wanted to be liked for who I was, not for what I was worth.’

  Abigail indicated wildly for the audience to remain quiet. The hushed whispers ceased.

  ‘I ran away from Australia, like a child, when I found my fiancée cheating on me with his secretary. Then I met a wonderful man on a beach in Italy.’

  She began chopping parsley.

  ‘I lied to him. It seemed so harmless at the time, but things snowballed out of control.’

  Charlie looked out across the gaping faces of the audience. One or two women looked away when she met their eyes, but several gave her encouraging smiles. It was enough to risk a look up to the control box.

  Gabe hadn’t stirred, but his gaze locked on her face.

  Her breath caught in her throat.

  ‘So you justified the lie then?’ Jasper brought her back to the job at hand.

  ‘I suppose so. I didn’t think it would matter. I was only planning to be Charlie Brown for a few days. But that doesn’t make it right. I had several opportunities to come clean but I didn’t.’

  ‘What happened next?’ Jasper asked, clearly intrigued.

  Charlie noticed some audience members sit forward on their seats. ‘Well, I liked being Charlie Brown more than being Charlotte Wentworth.’

  She picked up a huge pot and placed it on the stove then poured a generous splash of olive oil into it. ‘Next on the menu, InTooDeep Bouillabaisse,’ she said.

  ‘It sounds difficult to make.’

  ‘Actually, you’d be amazed how easy it can be,’ she said in a rueful tone.

  Then Jasper turned to the camera. ‘We’ll be right back after this break. But now, get on the phones and cast your vote. Who is Britain’s First-Class Chef? If you like Accidental Liar’s Terrine, vote for Charlie by calling the number on your screen now. That’s 1800 C H A R L I E. Write that number down and we’ll be right back.’

  When Abigail gave the all-clear signal, the whole studio went crazy.

  Charlie stirred her bouillabaisse. Jasper began firing questions at her. Abigail ran over to listen and the crew had trouble keeping the audience in their seats.

  In the control box, Gabe huddled in an animated conversation with a group of the production crew. Charlie tried to block out everything around her. She whipped a glance at Sophie, who looked decidedly less jubilant.

  Tracey ran up and touched up her make-up. ‘Wow, Charlie, the phones are going crazy. It’s amazing.’

  Charlie nodded. She knew everyone would be calling in to vote for Tim, the other finalist. They’d be making very sure she didn’t win.

  ‘Well, Tim deserves to win,’ she said. ‘He gave up his job for this show.’

  The make-up artist stopped brushing powder from her face. ‘You have my vote,’ she whispered.

  ‘Really?’ Charlie was grateful to have one ally in the room.

  ‘Yes. My boyfriend cheated on me last year. It makes you do crazy things.’

  ‘Yeah.’ Charlie nodded. ‘Sure does.’

  Gabe’s voice came across the intercom. ‘Clear the
set, we’re back in three.’

  Charlie couldn’t read anything from his tone.

  ‘Okay, everyone, five, four, three . . .’ Abigail counted out the last seconds.

  For the next few minutes, Charlie was left to finish preparing her main meal as Jasper spoke to Tim about his dish. It sounded fantastic.

  Jasper came back just as she was preparing to add the seafood to the pot.

  ‘I hope that’s local seafood, Charlie.’

  ‘Of course. Britain has wonderful produce if you know where to find it.’

  ‘I’m a little nervous to ask, but can you tell us the background to this dish?’

  She drew in a deep breath. ‘When I falsified my identity, I knew I’d have to confess sometime. But every day there seemed to be more reasons for keeping quiet.’ She deveined the prawns as she spoke. ‘I was falling in love with the man I’d met in Italy and I thought if I told him the truth, he’d despise me for lying.’

  ‘So you maintained the lie.’

  ‘Yes, but never in a million years did I think I’d end up on national television.’

  ‘Come on, Charlie, you’ve been on this show for ten weeks. Ample time for you to tell the truth.’

  Her stomach clenched. She dragged in a breath.

  ‘You’re right,’ she conceded. ‘But for the first time in my life, I was actually succeeding at something on my own terms. I’ve led a privileged existence all my life.’ She threw all the seafood into the bouillabaisse. ‘But when I ran away, my family and fiancé cut off my money,’ she continued. ‘For the first time, I had to survive on my own. Getting a spot on this show is the most important achievement of my life.’

  She glanced up at the audience. Absolute silence.

  ‘Before this, I was nothing. I know it was selfish, but I just had to achieve something without my father making a phone call first.’

  ‘Do you think your family will be proud of you?’

  Charlie shook her head. ‘After this, my family will disinherit me.’

  ‘You’re in the grand final of the top cooking show in Britain. Any parent would be proud, surely?’

  ‘I’ll be lucky if my father doesn’t manage somehow to have my Australian passport cancelled.’

  She plated up her meal and peppered it with parsley.

  ‘There you go, my In Too Deep Bouillabaisse.’

  ‘Okay, Britain, the lines are open for just twenty more minutes. Back after the break for dessert and then we announce the winner of First-Class Chef.’

  Just ten minutes later, golden confetti was floating down around Charlie and the studio audience screamed her name. Jasper presented her with a golden trophy.

  She wanted to enjoy this incredible moment, but Gabe’s stony face told her everything she needed to know. He’d make good on his promise. He never wanted to see her again.

  The applause faded.

  Gabe’s voice finally hit the intercom. ‘That’s a wrap. Great job, everyone.’

  Charlie tried to leave, but was swamped by the crew and members of the audience all clamouring for her attention. By the time she’d signed nearly a hundred autographs and answered dozens of questions, the control booth stood empty. She looked wildly around the studio, but she couldn’t see Gabe anywhere.

  ‘Charlie, what are you doing?’ Abigail took her arm.

  ‘What?’ she asked, dodging around a camera to find a better view of the back of the studio.

  ‘The press are here. They’re waiting in reception to interview you.’

  ‘Send Tim out.’

  ‘They want you. You’re front-page news again.’

  Charlie couldn’t think of anything worse. ‘I just need a minute, okay?’ Charlie pleaded.

  ‘Sure, sure. I’ll let them know you’ll be out soon.’

  ‘Where’s Gabe?’ Charlie asked.

  ‘Oh, he’s gone.’

  Charlie stopped dead. ‘What?’

  ‘Some hot-shot US movie executive watched the show,’ Abigail said excitedly. ‘He’s read Gabe’s script and wants to talk. He’s only in town tonight. Isn’t it great?’

  Charlie couldn’t answer. She had to find Gabe. She had to explain.

  ‘I’ll be back in a sec.’

  She retrieved her mobile from her dressing room and called his number. Straight to message bank.

  She closed her eyes and remembered.

  ‘I never want to see you again.’

  Chapter Fifteen

  Gabe found a corner table in the British Airways first-class lounge and took in the view across the tarmac. At least the weather had cleared so it’d be a smooth take-off. He noticed an open magazine on the table. An old image of Charlie stared up at him. The show had wrapped two weeks ago and still the nation’s fascination with her hadn’t waned.

  ‘Drink, sir?’ a uniformed waiter asked.

  ‘No thanks,’ Gabe replied.

  He eased back in his chair. An American network had already talked about Emmy chances.

  ‘Oh, darling, fancy seeing you here.’

  Gabe’s expression hardened. Sophie – the last person he wanted to see. He threw her a look that could kill, but, as was her style, she ignored it and took a seat opposite him. Her short, skin-tight dress rode up her thighs.

  ‘I see you’re already trading on your new success,’ she said, crossing her legs. ‘I’m off shopping in New York. Where are you off to, darling?’

  Without a word, he picked up the broadsheet newspaper from the coffee table, flicked out the pages and held it high, blocking Sophie from view.

  ‘Now, that’s just not nice,’ she said, tapping the top of the paper, her red nails flashing. ‘Particularly after everything I did for you.’

  He let the paper drop. ‘What in hell’s name are you talking about?’

  ‘If Charlie hadn’t been unmasked, do you think your little cooking show would now be in such demand?’

  ‘What do you mean, unmasked?’

  ‘Funny,’ she said, ignoring his question, ‘if I’d achieved such notoriety, I’d have ensured I was front-page news for weeks and definitely negotiated a spread in Hello. Instead, what does that moron do? Disappear.’

  Gabe bristled at Sophie’s derogatory reference to Charlie.

  ‘If she thinks playing hard to get is the way to go, she is hopelessly ill-informed,’ Sophie said. ‘Hope you’re not the one advising her.’

  ‘I haven’t seen her since the grand final.’ At first Charlie had called his mobile obsessively, but after a few days, nothing. Sophie was right, Charlie was gone.

  The press had been inundating his office with interview requests and other television offers for Charlie had been pouring in.

  ‘I mean,’ Sophie went on, ignoring the fact Gabe had even spoken, ‘she hasn’t been on any of the morning shows or talk shows. I read somewhere she decided to leave England and go back to where she’d been happy, or some such nonsense.’

  She flicked her hand to emphasise her point.

  ‘So, your talent was wasted on that girl,’ she said. ‘If she doesn’t act soon, she’ll miss her chance. I’d never let that happen.’

  ‘Did you ever consider that Charlie might be different from you?’

  ‘Well, you’ve got that right, darling. I’d never let an opportunity like this go without exploiting it.’

  Gabe looked at Sophie’s picture-perfect face: expertly plucked eyebrows and immaculate make-up framed with salon-pampered hair.

  ‘You’re right,’ he murmured. Charlie’s nothing like you. He’d been so angry he’d never thought about it before. Sophie chattered on, but he wasn’t listening.

  If Charlie had wanted fame, she’d be here in Britain on every talk show in the country. Instead, she’d simply vanished.

  He stood up. An uncomfortable feeling crept up his spine.

  Sophie’s voice filtered back.

  ‘So, if I hadn’t called Paul Forsyth, he’d never have turned up for the final and you wouldn’t have the hit that you do.’


  ‘What did you say?’

  She looked at him in surprise as if she were suddenly aware she was actually in a conversation with someone. ‘I called Paul Forsyth. I thought Charlotte had had you all to herself for far too long.’

  ‘It was you?’ A number of people glanced in their direction as his voice carried across the lounge.

  Sophie look affronted. ‘Of course, darling.’ But her voice had lost some of its gloating quality. ‘I wanted to protect you.’

  It was as if a fog had been lifted and he could see things clearly for the first time.

  ‘You mean, Charlie had what you wanted and you couldn’t stand it.’ His voice simmered with barely checked rage. ‘So you decided to destroy her.’ He shook his head. ‘Destroy us,’ he said, more to himself. Anger boiled inside him. Sophie had done it again. Manipulated him and he’d played right into her hands.

  He thought of the words he’d thrown at Charlie before she’d walked onto live national television. He rubbed his brow and shame washed over him.

  And after all that abuse, what had she done? Appeared on live television and confessed everything. She’d sacrificed herself for what? The show? She could have walked out the studio door any time and avoided the whole ordeal.

  ‘For goodness’ sake. Don’t be so melodramatic,’ Sophie said, clearly embarrassed at the scene Gabe was making. ‘Everyone’s just out to get what they can. Charlotte’s no different.’

  But she was. What had Paul said? If she walked onto that set, she would lose everything? She’d turned her back on all that money for him and what had he done in return?

  He folded the newspaper and thrust it into Sophie’s chest. ‘Here, read this. It might be the last time you read a paper without your name being dragged through the mud.’

  ‘Gabe!’ Sophie spluttered.

  He picked up his hand luggage and headed for the exit. He’d rather sit in the crowded departures hall than share a room with that woman.

  ‘Ladies and gentlemen BA0238 departing Heathrow for Los Angeles is now ready for boarding through gate A7.’

  Gabe headed for gate A7. He stopped and expelled a long slow breath. What was he doing? Why was he going to America? The chance to make this movie was a long shot. A very long shot. Years of work and it could still come to nothing.

 

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