The Indecent Proposal (Short Story)
THE INDECENT PROPOSAL
LOUISE MARLEY
The Indecent Proposal
Louise Marley
Copyright: 2014 Louise Marley
This story is a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photography, recording, or any information storage or retrieval system, without permission from the author.
A shorter version of this story was previously published as An Indecent Proposal in the Belinda Jones Travel Club anthology Sunlounger.
Cover images: iStock by Getty Images
Also by Louise Marley
Novels
Why Do Fools Fall in Love?
Smoke Gets in Your Eyes
A Girl’s Best Friend
Breathless
Nemesis
Anthologies
Sunlounger: (An Indecent Proposal)
Sunlounger 2: (An Accidental Proposal)
Short Fiction
The Indecent Proposal
About the Author
Louise Marley is the author of five romantic suspense novels, all set in a fictional area inspired by the New Forest. They can be read in any order.
Her first published novel was Smoke Gets in Your Eyes, which was shortlisted for Poolbeg’s ‘Write a Bestseller’ competition. She has also written articles for the Irish press and short stories for women’s magazines such as Take a Break and My Weekly.
To find out more about Louise, please visit her website: https://www.louisemarley.co.uk
THE INDECENT PROPOSAL
LOUISE MARLEY
Chapter One
Ryan March Dumps Girlfriend, said the magazine cover. Sure enough, there was a photo of Ryan at the Grammys, looking his usual sexy rumpled self, cuddled up with some American singer called Destiny. And beside it was a photo of me, rumpled but not remotely sexy in pyjamas, bed hair and no make-up – because I had been stupid enough to open my door to the paparazzi at six o’clock in the morning.
Even I would have dumped me.
There ought to be lessons in dating rock stars. Never look anything less than stunning, and never open the door to the paparazzi before breakfast. Better still, never leave the house at all.
But I’d reckoned without my friend, Gina.
“Megan!” I heard her familiar voice shouting through my letter box. “I know you’re in there. Let me in right now!”
There was no point ignoring Gina. She was likely to keep yelling until I opened the door. So I did – just a crack, to check it was really her.
Whereupon she announced, “I’m not that bloody skinny,” and shoved the door wide open.
“I just wanted to make sure you weren’t the paparazzi,” I said.
Gina rolled her eyes. “There are no paparazzi. There was just the one photographer who got lucky. Get a grip. You’ve been dumped, so what?”
“That’s fine for you to say, your love life hasn’t been plastered all over the Internet. My pyjamas now have their own Twitter account.”
“Please don’t tell me you’ve been Googling yourself?”
“Absolutely not.”
It was an outrageous lie and we both knew it.
“You need to move on,” she told me, slightly more gently this time, “if only for your self-respect. It’s been what, three months?”
“Two months, three weeks, six days,” I said dolefully.
“I can’t bear to see you moping about like this. I’m supposed to be visiting my father at the weekend; you can come with me, if only to get you out of the house.”
I was pretty sure my mouth had dropped open. Gina was half-Italian, which meant her father lived in –
“Sorrento? I can’t go to Sorrento! I have a deadline! Some of us have to work for our living.”
Gina worked in the London office of her father’s company, which meant she didn’t really work at all.
“You don’t appear to be working terribly hard right now,” she retorted. “You’re sitting in the dark like a little mushroom, feeling sorry for yourself.”
“I have to keep the curtains drawn because of the photographers.”
“There are no photographers. It’s old news, everyone has moved on – well, everyone except for you.” Her gaze flicked towards my laptop lying closed on the table and I squirmed, knowing what was coming next. “How much of that book have you actually written?”
“I’ve got as far as chapter six – ”
“You were writing chapter six last week. Come to Sorrento. Bring your laptop too, if you must. Judging from the amount of dust on the thing, I expect it would like a holiday.”
In the end I had to agree. It was the only way to get rid of her. But when Gina had gone, I took out the well-thumbed magazine I had hidden beneath the sofa and looked again at the photo of Ryan cuddled up to the beautiful Destiny. He looked so happy.
Happy without me, the rat!
Two months, three weeks, six days … Three very long months. Oh hell, Gina was right. It was time to move on.