Read Interrupted Romance Online

Authors: Topsy Baxter

Interrupted Romance (20 page)

BOOK: Interrupted Romance
13.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

A waitress, who looked too tired to be interested in the people in front of her, took the coffee orders.
 
The conversations around the table waned as she did this.
 
David asked what type of coffee she'd like.
 
She asked for Vienna coffee as she'd always liked the cream on top.

She stood up, surprising David and the others, excused herself and headed towards the table on the other side of the room.
 
Never before lacking in determination to go after something she wanted, Dafna approached Adam's table with butterflies in her stomach, but a firm step.

Standing beside Adam, she placed her hand on his shoulder.
 
His cousins looked up at her, one of them recognised her instantly and smiled.
 

Before he could say anything, she said, "Hello, Adam.
 
How have you been keeping?"

"Dafna?"

"Yes.
 
I saw you at the concert, but lost you in the crowd.
 
Did you enjoy it?"

"Yes, I did.
 
I thought the performance of Beethoven's symphony stole the show.
 
What did you think?"

"I agree, it was marvellous," she lied, not having heard it at all.
 
"Well, I won't intrude on your evening.
 
I just wanted to see how you are."
 
Turning to the others at the table, she said, "Excuse me for interrupting your evening."
 
To Adam, she said, "Adam, could we meet one day this week?
 
I'd really like to talk to you."

"OK.
 
That's OK with me," he said.
 
"When would suit you?"

"How about Sunday for lunch?
 
I could pick you up at your mother's place - about midday?"

"Fine.
 
I'll see you then," Adam said.

Dafna walked back to her table, quietly pleased with herself.
 
He hadn't said he didn't want to see her.
 
In fact, he sounded very happy that she had spoken to him at all.

David was waiting for her to return.
 
He'd been watching her talk to the dark man, resting her hand on his shoulder as though she knew him well.

"Who was that?" he asked, as soon as she was seated again.

"That man saved my life some months ago.
 
He was blinded as a result of his actions.
 
I know him very well," she said to David.

The rest of the party at the table had heard this exchange and perked up their ears about him saving her life.
 
They clamoured for more information.
 
Quietly, Dafna gave them a brief rundown of the events that took place at the airport, the injuries both suffered, the recuperation.
 
She left out the part about Adam staying with her at her mother's home, or that she had stayed with him in his mother's home.
 
She didn't mention their close relationship either.

She was relieved when everyone decided it was time to go and they all stood up to say their farewells before moving towards the door.

CHAPTER 22

Dafna woke late the morning following the concert.
 
It had been a late night by the time David had brought her home.
 
She'd invited him in for coffee, hoping he wouldn't accept, but he did.
 
He was curious about Adam and had questioned her several times about him.
 
At first, Dafna tried to avoid the questions, changing the subject, but finally decided to tell David more than he wanted to know.

She told him about the difficulty Adam was having; the waiting on the operation which may, or may not, restore his sight; the mood swings as a result of the pain; the weeks and months of not knowing if he would ever see again or work again.

"And," David said, after a pause, "you forgot to mention that you love him."

Dafna gasped in astonishment.
 
David went on, "You are wearing your heart on your sleeve Dafna.
 
I realise now why you were so distant tonight.
 
And when you went over to his table and put your hand on his shoulder, I think I knew then.
 
You looked beautiful tonight - it's a pity he couldn't see you."

David kissed her softly on the lips and turned on his heel and walked out, closing the door quietly behind him.

And so, Dafna lay on her side in the morning light, watching the movement of the curtain, thinking about the previous night and David's words before he'd left her.
 
Considering the fact that she'd hardly spoken to him all night, he'd been very understanding with her.
 
She smiled then, when she remembered that it was only the day after tomorrow that she would have lunch with Adam.
 
It was something to look forward to.
 
She recollected how calm he had sounded last night.
 
Something had changed him again.

Feeling as though a weight had been lifted from her shoulders, she threw back the covers and jumped off the bed, moving quickly into the kitchen to boil the jug for coffee.
 
It wasn't a working day and the sun was up… what a day for the beach!

Following breakfast, Dafna showered and dressed quickly in shorts and sleeveless blouse, which covered her brief bikini, anxious not to lose a minute of this wonderful day.
 
She packed a towel, sunscreen, floppy hat, and a book to read on the sand.
 
Then, slipping her feet into comfortable sandals, she left the building and began walking towards the beach.
 
It was almost nine o'clock when she set out, with the still-rising sun behind her, warming her back.
 
She hummed a popular tune as she strode along, her dillybag swinging from her shoulder.
 
A few people turned to watch her jaunty stride as she passed them, and one young fellow actually whistled at her.
 
She smiled in delight.

The sand was already becoming crowded when she finally walked down the steps to the beach.
 
Plenty of bathers were in the water, some swimming, others playing and splashing about.
 
Children lined the edge of the water, busy with buckets and spades, or holding boogie boards and watching the little waves washing into the shore.

Dafna looked about for a spot near the back of the beach, against the wall, where she could sit up and lean against it while reading the book.
 
It would also be a great vantage point to observe the activities on the beach.
 
A few minutes of walking along the sand proved fortunate, as she found her vacant area.
 
Not far away was a large family gathering, complete with picnic mats and baskets, which had rigged up a rope on poles to act as a net for beach volleyball games.
 
They were in full swing, with a vigorously contested match under way as Dafna slipped off her shorts and blouse and sat down on her towel.
 
Each of the contestants, men and women, looked very fit, as though they did this often.

The wall area was still in shade, and would remain so for another hour or so and then the midday sun would come over and start to cook the people sheltering there.
 
Dafna wanted to swim first and read later.
 
She smoothed plenty of sunscreen over her already lightly tanned body and moved across sand, which was starting to heat up.
 
She increased her walking speed and stepped into the shallow water, only to gasp at the sudden coolness, which was a shock to the system after the early heat of the day and the sand.

A child playing nearby saw her hesitate and laughed up at her saying, "Go on in, lady, it's really nice today."

Dafna laughed back at the child, laughing at herself really, for showing cowardice at the thought of getting that cool water all over her body.
 
She waded further out, standing on tiptoe as the waves rolled in towards her, dropping back onto her feet as they passed.
 
Taking a deep breath, she plunged into the next wave, feeling the shock of the change in body temperature.
 
However, as she swam out she became accustomed to the feel of the water and began to enjoy herself.
 
The child was right, it was nice in!
 
Swimming slowly up and down the beach, the water supported her weight and she gently bobbed about in the swell.
 
She rolled onto her back and floated, looking up at the clear blue sky streaked with puffy white clouds.
 
Apart from the lack of surf it was almost like being at the beach in Sydney, she thought.
 
There, too, summer was all sun, heat, sand, blue skies, just like this.
 
It was this comparison of beaches that reminded her that Sydney also had some of the most dangerous sharks swimming off its shores.
 
Hastily, she dropped her legs and started swimming back into the shore, mindful of a danger she used to ignore as a young child.

The small waves weren't exactly suitable for surfing into the beach, so Dafna had to swim all the way, all the time hoping nothing was swimming along with her.
 
She was reliving a teenage horror of sharks, ever since reading the book 'Jaws'.
 
It had been years before she was brave enough to watch the movie!
 
Now it tempered her enjoyment of swimming at the beach.
 
She'd forgotten all about it until she thought of Sydney's beaches.
 
'Damn that,' she thought.
 
It was fun up until then.

Before she reached the shallows, she had already recalled reading about the large hammerhead shark caught off Israel's coastline some months earlier.
 
And then there had been that television interview with an Italian fisherman and his son, who had been terrorised by a great white shark.
 
The man had had the presence of mind to use his movie camera to show what that shark was trying to do to his boat.
 
The boy was screaming in terror for this father to take them home, away from the shark.
 
It was unheard of that a great white had made its home in Mediterranean waters.
 
They usually swam in mostly colder seas.
 
But the film proved that theory wrong.

Swiftly, she walked out of the sea, squeezing water from her hair.
 
She walked back to where her belongings were waiting for her.
 
In the shade, she patted the towel over her body, renewed the film of sunscreen, wiped her hands and sat down against the wall.
 
With sunglasses protecting her eyes from the glare, she leaned back and watched as families arrived and set up camp, impatient children waiting to be rubbed with sunscreen before running, shrieking, down to the water's edge.
 
Parents followed with less haste, and she realised, they were just as reticent as she had been to feel the cool water on their skin.
 
Children never seemed to bother about the coolness, they just ran straight in and began swimming and playing.

With the book in her hands, Dafna relaxed and stretched her legs out in front of her to catch the first of the sun's rays as it moved overhead.
 
Not long after, she buried her feet in the sand to prevent them from burning.
 
It was going to be a very hot day on the sand.
 
She threw the towel over her legs about half an hour later to protect them, and settled back with her book again.

The sound of a bell ringing woke her from a short doze.
 
It was an icecream vendor moving along the sand, doing a roaring trade, ringing a bell as he went, exciting all the children who heard it.
 
Dafna could feel that she'd burnt a bit during her little nap and stood up to go back for another swim to cool off, as well as to wash sand off her skin before reapplying sunscreen.
 
With surprise she noted that the big clock on the dressing room wall was showing almost two o'clock.
 
She was hungry, hot and thirsty.

A quick swim to cool off in the shallows, where she stayed within a large group of other bathers, and she ran back to her spot near the wall to dry off.
 
Pulling her shorts and blouse over her swimsuit, she picked up her towel and other belongings and went in search of a cool drink.
 
There was a kiosk not far from the beach, where she was able to quench her raging thirst and buy a sandwich.
 
These she took into the small park, which was the buffer between Netanya's beach and
Kikar Haatzmaut
.
 
Dafna sat under a shady tree to enjoy her mini picnic, again watching the passing parade of people of all shapes and sizes, tourists and locals, listening to the sounds of several languages.
 
Predominant amongst them were the Scandinavian languages and she guessed that a large contingent of Swedes, Danes and Norwegians had come to Israel for their holidays.

Her skin was tightening up from the sunburn, so Dafna decided to call it a day and head for home.
 
In any case, she was rather hoping Adam would call her this evening and she wanted to be there when/if he did.
 
It would take about half an hour to walk home, so she pulled her floppy hat down to shade her face and set off.

Once back in her apartment, Dafna showered and washed the salt and sand from her hair, relishing the feeling of comfort and well-being that followed.
 
She dried her hair, smoothed her body with moisturiser, inhaling the perfume, then dressed in panties and a brightly-coloured kaftan before stretching out on the lounge chair.
 
There was a light breeze blowing through the apartment, kissing her glowing cheeks and forehead, cooling them a little.
 
She had seen how pink her skin was and knew she would have to do something about it before it peeled.

BOOK: Interrupted Romance
13.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Unsevered by Traci Sanders
Flirting With Disaster by Ruthie Knox
Midnight Sun by Jo Nesbo
The Hidden Beast by Christopher Pike
Zombie Dawn Apocalypse by Michael G. Thomas
Circuit Of Heaven by Danvers, Dennis
Her Two Dads by Ariel Tachna
The Phantom of Pemberley by Regina Jeffers
La noche de Tlatelolco by Elena Poniatowska