‘Yes?’
‘Your guest is here, Mr Fleming.’
‘Thank you,’ he said. ‘Please ask her to come up to the
room.’
He was not a religious man; but as he waited, in those last
few minutes at the door, he did find his brain forming what
in some ways resembled a prayer.
Octavia didn’t after all phone Louise. By the time she left
the pub and Gabriel Bingham it was already nearly ten
thirty. Much too late to disturb a stricken household.
Somehow it had been quite hard to finish the conversation
with Gabriel Bingham.
He had, she decided, a rather sexy mind: disturbing and
distracting. He was rather sexy altogether. Not good
looking, not conventionally charming, not her type at all:
but still sexy. She had enjoyed their conversation. He had
enjoyed it too; he had said so. She had been extremely
surprised, he had seemed to disapprove so strongly of her
and all she stood for; but, ‘I find you interesting,’ he had
said, as they stood by their cars.
‘As a social curiosity?’ she had said, and he had said yes,
that too, but he actually found her mind interesting and
talking to her an interesting experience.
It had seemed a rather surprising thing for him to say, after making it so plain he disapproved of her, but she had
found the words pleasing; they warmed and comforted her
after the earlier horrors of the day. She was not entirely
stupid, it seemed, not entirely worthless; a man, a hugely
intelligent man — he had been a Winchester scholar, she had
discovered, as the conversation slithered away from intellectual
challenge and into social exploration — had told her he
actually found her mind interesting.
‘In fact,’ he had said, looking at her rather solemnly, ‘I
find you interesting altogether.’
As she had pulled out of the car park, looked into her
driving mirror, she saw that he was watching her still, not
moving. And although he could not see her, she had smiled
into the mirror and felt, foolishly, that he would have
known.
Of the putative fiancee, there had been no word at all.
‘Now I want you to go easy on the sex in these pictures,
Jonty,’ said Ritz Franklyn. ‘I know she’s the ultimate in
sensuous virginity, and you’ll know it too when you see
her, but I don’t want the mother frightened off. She’s rather
sharp. Quite capable of pulling the plug on us if she thinks
we’re going to corrupt her little baby.’
‘Yeah, okay. That’s fine. I wasn’t actually going to have
her lying on the bed, playing with her pubes, Ritz. I do
have some sensitivity.’
‘You could have fooled me. The other thing is that I’m
going to try to get Christie’s along to the session. I want
them to see her before we go public with her. Get their
mouths watering, put her price up. So just act dumb if they
turn up, okay?’
‘Okay, but not Fido.’
‘No, definitely not Fido. He really would put the mother
off.’ Fido was their codename for George Smythe, managing
director of Christie’s; overweight, sweaty and famous
for his propensity for trying to mount, as Ritz put it, any
young and half-attractive woman who entered his orbit.
‘No, I’ve put in a call to Serena Fox. She has a lot of clout
there.’
‘Charles? Hallo, it’s Octavia Fleming here. Could I possibly
speak to Louise? Oh, I see. Nothing serious, I— Oh, well,
I’m so sorry. Give her my love. Look, I was just wondering.
Would it be all right if I came down tomorrow? To see
Anna? Yes? Well, tell Louise to ring me if not. Oh, and tell
her I’ve gone public on Bartles Wood. Made a speech
down there. Yes, she’ll know what I mean. And give Anna
my love as well, won’t you? My best love.’
Octavia put the phone down, dialled Tom’s direct line.
‘Tom? Hallo. It’s me. I just wanted to make sure you
would be home tonight. We do have to talk. It’s very
important.’
‘Yes,’ he said, ‘I’ll be there. Maybe not till about eight
thirty but—’
‘That’s fine. Oh, and tomorrow, I won’t be home till
very late. I’m going down to see Anna Madison.’
‘Oh really? Is that a good idea? When she’s so ill?’
‘Tom, it’s precisely because she’s so ill that I’m going.
She’s very special, very important to me.’
‘Well, if you think that’s best. Will Louise be there?’
‘I expect so, yes. She’s virtually living there at the
moment. Although she’s not well today herself, apparently.
I just spoke to her father. So, I’ll see you tonight, then?’
‘Yes. I won’t be late.’
‘Please don’t be.’
She felt, shockingly, almost excited at the prospect of the
conversation.”
Serena Fox was just putting the final seal on her brilliantly
red mouth when Ritz Franklyn phoned. Serena was the
creative director of Christie’s Cosmetics. She was forty,
darkly and dramatically beautiful, chic, brilliant and worth
every one of the hundred and fifty thousand pounds
Christie’s paid her each year. She was also a lesbian.
She liked Ritz; she had hoped for a while she too might
be a lesbian, or at least a bi; but a tentative, carefully coded
approach to her after an award dinner revealed that she was
wrong.
‘Serena, hi. You’re still on for tonight, aren’t you? Our
final?’
‘Yes, of course. I’m looking forward to it.’
‘Look, you don’t have a window in your diary at around
four this afternoon, do you?’
‘No, I don’t. Why?’
‘We have got this incredible babe as a finalist. I mean gorgeous. She is going to win. No doubt about it.’
‘Yes?’
‘Serena, I think she could be your girl. She’s so — perfect.
Untouched. Skin like you haven’t seen. Sheets of pale
blonde hair. And — wait for it — huge green eyes.’
‘Green!’
A girl with green eyes: that had been their ideal. So far
they had auditioned over a hundred girls; with blue, brown,
grey, hazel eyes. Not one pair of green.
‘Yup. Now look, I shouldn’t be doing this, and Jonty
will freak, but if you just happened to be around his studio
at four, you could get a preview. Revlon are coming
tonight. And Arden. They’re both looking too. You could
get in just that bit sooner …’
Serena put the phone down and told her secretary that
she would be going out for an hour that afternoon and to
move everything in her diary along to accommodate it.
Tom had only just reached the office when Octavia had
rung. When he switched on his voice mail and listened to
his father-in-law’s message, he knew his fears about Octavia
and her reasons for wanting to talk to him were very well
founded.
Felix Miller was contemplating calling his son-in-law yet
again when Octavia phoned. She sounded absolutely fine,
he thought: quite breezy and cheerful.
‘Daddy, hi. How are you?’
‘Octavia. Where on earth have you been? Why didn’t
you ring me yesterday? I was so worried about you.’
‘Why?’
‘Why? Because I heard you crying on the phone, that’s
why, hysterically. And because then you wouldn’t phone
me back, and because you were out last night. Are you all right?’
‘Yes, I’m fine. Truly. I’m sorry you were worried. I had
a bit of a bad morning. Very bad. Then I had to go down
near Bath, to a meeting.’
‘So why were you in that state?’
‘Oh, I’ve probably lost a client, an important one, and—’
‘Octavia, you don’t get hysterical because you lose a
client.’
‘I did. Yesterday. Look, I really can’t go into it all now,
but I will. I promise. Maybe we can have dinner one night.
I’d like to talk to you about it.’
‘Darling, of course we can. Any night. Tonight?’
‘No, tonight I have to be home. And tomorrow I’m
going down to see Anna. She’s very ill.’
‘Yes, I remember. What about Friday?’
‘Friday’d be good. Do you want to come to the house,
then you can see the children?’
‘Will Tom be there? I phoned him about you yesterday,
told him how worried I was, but he didn’t phone me back.’
‘Tom won’t be there, no,’ said Octavia. ‘Definitely he
won’t be there.’
She really had sounded all right, thought Felix, putting the
phone down; quite cheerful in fact, and very positive.
Maybe she had just been having a bad day. Still unforgivable
of Tom not to have phoned him.
‘Felix? Tom.’
‘Good morning.’
‘I’m sorry I didn’t ring you yesterday. I simply didn’t get
the message. I was out of town and my mobile was up the
spout.’
‘Not very impressive,’ said Felix heavily. ‘Suppose I’d
been a client?’
‘If you’d been a client, Aubrey could have talked to you,’
said Tom, his voice on the edge of rage. ‘Anyway, Octavia’s
perfectly all right. I’ve just spoken to her.’
‘As have I. Well, she sounded far from all right yesterday.
And if it was really about losing a client, she’s obviously at
the end of her tether, she shouldn’t be reacting like that.’
‘A client? She didn’t mention losing a client to me. But it
happens all the time. Part of life’s rich pattern, isn’t it? If I
had hysterics every time we lost a client, there’d be a world
shortage of Kleenex. Anyway, no doubt I shall hear in due
course. I must go now, Felix. Good morning to you.’
‘Bastard,’ Tom said heavily as he put the phone down;
interfering, sanctimonious bastard. What was it the Princess
of Wales had said about her marriage? That there were
three of them in it, and it was a bit crowded. He could
commiserate with her there. Only his was even more
crowded. There’d been three in his, from the very
beginning. And then four. Not for the first time, he
reflected that being forced to accommodate the third had
led him, almost inevitably, to allowing in the fourth.
Felix had forgotten, when he made the arrangement to
have dinner with Octavia, that he had promised to take
Marianne away for the weekend. She needed a break, she
had told him, her family was wearing her out, and if he
cared for her at all, he would think of some nice way of
distracting her. He had accordingly booked them on
Eurostar to Paris on Friday night, and into a suite at the
Crillon, her favourite hotel. Now he had either to cancel
Octavia, or postpone the trip to Paris. Postponing it would
be easier; they could leave early on Saturday morning
instead. Octavia might think she was all right, but she
clearly wasn’t. Losing a client was unfortunate, serious even,
but not grounds for having lengthy and noisy hysterics. No,
it was too important, their dinner, to cancel; she would be
relying on him.
He phoned Marianne to ask her if she would mind
postponing their departure until Saturday morning, and
explained why; and was extremely surprised and irritated
when she told him she would mind very much, so much
indeed that she would prefer to postpone the whole
weekend, and that not for the first time she was beginning to find the role of understudy to his daughter very tedious
indeed. Then she put the phone down.
Marianne sat in the studio, watching her daughter being
made love to. She felt rather sick. The fact that it was only a
camera lens working on her, arousing her, making her
aware of her sexuality, didn’t help very much. They were
being very careful of course; she was not so stupid that she
couldn’t see that. Ritz Franklyn had been courtesy itself,
assuring her that nothing would be done to Romilly in the
way of hair and make-up that Marianne would not be
entirely happy with, that she could have a say in the clothes
she wore for the pictures, that anyway all the girls were
being photographed first in jeans and white Tshirts, before
changing into a dress — ‘Most of them are long, and the
short ones really young looking.’
Marianne wouldn’t have said that the dress Romilly was
wearing was particularly young looking, although it was
very short; it was pale pink crepe, covered almost entirely in
overlapping pink and silver sequins, and Romilly’s makeup
was rather extreme, huge pink and silver arcs painted above
each eye, right up to her brows, and a large silver tear added
to one cheek. .She had looked so lovely though, that when
Ritz had asked if Marianne was happy with it, she had felt
she couldn’t possibly object; and then the straight fall of hair
had looked unhappy with the stylised make-up, and the
thick plait they had done and then wound up on top of her
head had clearly been so exactly right. They were very
clever, there was no doubt about that.
But the change in Romilly’s appearance was affecting the
photographer’s reaction to her, and indeed hers to him; he
had been gentleness itself on the first shot, in the jeans and
T-shirt, asking her about school, teasing her about her
exams, but as she had walked in from the dressing room,
taken up her position in front of the camera — and was she