card?’
‘Of course I haven’t talked to the Mail,’ said Gabriel Bingham. ‘I have my principles. And, no, I haven’t seen it.
And I haven’t talked to a single journalist since we last met.’
‘Oh. Well, I’m sorry I misjudged you, but who else
would have talked about my speech?’
‘Anyone who was at the meeting — a local stringer who
knew about the interview with Pattie David, I suppose.’
‘Yes, maybe!’
‘I’m about to go to the House. I shall go to the press
gallery and study this article which has caused you such
distress. I can’t imagine what it might say. I’ll phone you if I
can throw some light on the matter, having read it.’
‘Octavia, if this is some kind of revenge, it’s extremely
destructive. To us all.’
‘Tom, it’s not supposed to be anything. It’s simply an
attempt to stop something terrible from happening.’
‘Well, you might well have dealt a body blow to Fleming
Cotterill in the process. I’d call that fairly terrible in its own
way. I’ve got to go, I’ll speak to you later.’
‘I won’t be—’ she said, but he had put the phone down.
It was not even midmorning when Gabriel Bingham
walked up to the press gallery at the House of Commons.
There was nobody there; it looked, he thought, rather like
a stage set before the actors arrived, the long row of phone
boxes empty, the desks bare, the whole place utterly silent.
He went over to the newspapers, found the Daily Mail, flicked over the first few pages, and then found it. And read it. Twice.
‘Well,’ he said aloud and finally, ‘well, well, well.’
There has been a reprieve (one Jeni Thomas informed
him) for North Somerset beauty spot Barries Wood,
first reported in the Mail three weeks ago. The local
council has refused planning permission for a housing
development complete with shopping mall and community
centre, thanks to the efforts of local protestors.
‘We will not be resting on our laurels, though,’ said
Patricia David (photographed right, with other supporters).
‘The battle isn’t over yet. We understand the
developer is going to appeal, so we are establishing a
fund to fight this and will take it to the European
courts if need be. Nothing can be allowed to steal our
precious countryside from us.’
The developer, Michael Carlton, who is behind
the project, has already announced his intention to
appeal.
A surprise intervention came from charity consultant
Octavia Fleming. She has pledged her support to
the protestors and attended a meeting where she made
an impassioned speech, declaring that England and
what she called its ‘tender beauty’ must be saved from
the rapist tendencies of developers. Her consultancy,
Capital C, advises the charity Foothold, of which Mrs
David is the local chair. Ironically, Octavia Fleming’s
husband, Tom, has a public affairs consultancy, of
which Michael Carlton is a client.
The newly elected MP for North Somerset,
Gabriel Bingham, was also at the meeting. ‘I am not
necessarily on the side of the protestors,’ he said, ‘but
they invited me to this meeting and I wanted to hear
their views.’
Octavia phoned the Mail, and asked to speak to Jeni
Thomas. ‘She doesn’t actually work here,’ said the girl on
the newsdesk. ‘She’s a stringer from the West Country,
works at a news agency in Bristol.’
Jeni Thomas was friendly. She hadn’t been at the
meeting herself, had sent someone to cover it. ‘I was furious
he didn’t get a quote from you. I’m against the development
myself,’ she said. ‘I live near there.’
‘And who gave you the information about my husband,
and Michael Carlton being a client? Slightly embarrassing,
to put it mildly.’
‘That didn’t come from me. Apparently it was an
anonymous tip-off, direct to the Mail.’
Octavia suddenly felt rather sick.
‘My word,’ said Nico Cadogan, putting down his copy of
the Daily Mail. ‘Silly girl.’ His observation, at Ascot, that
Octavia was dangerously overwrought, seemed to have
been correct. But he wouldn’t have expected her to be
quite this reckless. Not to mention professionally destructive,
both to her husband and herself. Slightly worrying
altogether. He wondered what Marianne thought of
Octavia Fleming …
‘Well,’ said Gabriel Bingham, ‘I’ve read the piece now.
Carlton’s your husband’s client, is he? No wonder you
were careful to conceal your connections with the project.
Public affairs consultant, eh? Not just — how did you
describe your husband to me? oh, yes — interested in
politics. He can’t be very pleased.’
‘He isn’t,’ said Octavia. ‘Not that I care.’
‘I think it’s very brave, what you’re doing,’ he said
suddenly. ‘I wanted to tell you that.’
She felt absurdly pleased that he should say such a thing.
He hadn’t seemed to her the sort of man to dole out
compliments in any form.
‘Thank you.’
‘Do you want to come and have a steadying glass of bitter
at the House at lunchtime? Or even a thimbleful of
Bollinger?’
‘No,’ she said, although the temptation was considerable.
‘I’m off to see a friend. In the country. But thank you
anyway.’
‘Oh, well. Another time, maybe.’
‘Yes, maybe. Thank you.’
‘You think I’m crazy, don’t you?’ said Octavia to Melanie.
‘Fairly crazy, yes. And we’ve lost a patron too, which is a
pity. We’d better talk about that. You haven’t heard from
Mr Carlton?’
‘Not yet, no. I’m sorry, Melanie.’
‘That’s okay. I must say I think it’s very clever.’
‘Clever?’
‘Yes. Don’t get mad, get even, that’s what the lady said.
You’ve certainly got pretty even today.’
‘It wasn’t actually to get even,’ said Octavia. ‘I know it
looks like it, but it wasn’t, though I suppose Tom’s
behaviour made it easier. I just suddenly felt I wanted to do
what I thought was right, and that I was, well, free to do it.
I do care about the countryside so much and—’
‘Honey,’ said Melanie, ‘I don’t think you’re going to find
many people who’ll believe that. If they do, they’ll
probably be members of the Flat Earth Society.’
‘Octavia,’ Sarah Jane’s face was concerned as she looked
round the door, ‘I’ve got The Times’ features pages on the
phone. They want to do an interview with you, round the
theme of conflicting loyalties. I told them you probably
wouldn’t, but—’
‘You were right,’ said Octavia. ‘Thanks.’
‘And the Express phoned earlier, before you came in.
They wanted to interview you on much the same thing.
Shall I say no to that as well?’
‘Just tell ‘em all no,’ said Melanie. ‘Octavia, why don’t
you get out of London, go and see your friend now? I’ll see
you in the morning. I’ll just tell our friend Mr Carlton, and
everyone else, you’re unavailable. You can pick up the
baton tomorrow.’
‘Thanks, Melanie. For everything.’
Melanie seemed to be proving a more reliable friend than
she would ever have expected. Better in some ways than
Louise …
She was just leaving when Tom phoned.
‘Octavia, I beg of you, please phone Michael Carlton. It
might help. And it’s so important to me.’
‘I’m really sorry, Tom,’ she said, ‘but I don’t see why I
should. Or what good it would do. There’s nothing I could
tell him that would reassure him. Now you must excuse
me. I’m going to see Anna Madison.’
‘Octavia, I cannot tell you how much I feel that’s a
mistake. To go there today. You should stay in London.
For the next few days. It’s very important.’
‘Tom, Anna Madison is dying. Now that really is
important. Rather more than some client account.’
‘Octavia, I really don’t want you to—’
‘Goodbye, Tom. I may be late. I’ll sleep in the guest
room. In fact, I’ve moved all my things in there. Until we
can work out something permanent. Oh, and Tom—’
‘Yes?’
‘My father’s coming to dinner tomorrow night. You will
be out, won’t you?’
‘Yes, I’ll be out,’ he said. ‘You can rely on that. You’ll be
telling him, I expect. About what has happened.’
‘No,’ she said, contemplating and then rejecting the
horror of that conversation, ‘not yet. Don’t worry, Tom.
Your guilty secret is safe with me. Pity it wasn’t safer with
you.’
He sighed so heavily she could hear it down the line.
And then he said, ‘Be careful, Octavia. Please.’
It seemed a strange thing to say, she thought as she put
the phone down.
Marianne was sitting at the kitchen table, reading the article
in the Mail and trying to imagine what kind of madness
could have led Octavia into such a thing, when Zoe came
in.
‘Hi, Mum. I’m just off. Last exam. You reading the story
too?’
‘Yes. You know about it, then?’
‘Yeah. Nice one, Octavia.’
‘Zoe,’ said Marianne, ‘it’s a little hard on Tom, I think.’
‘Well, there are serious principles at stake here.’ Zoe
grinned at her. ‘I’m on her side. Someone has to stop all this
wrecking of the countryside.’
‘Yes, maybe. But she’s actually going a fair way towards
wrecking Tom’s business. Or at least that bit of it. Wives
ought to be supportive to their husbands,’ said Marianne.
She felt rather uneasy as she said it; she was playing the opposite of a supportive role herself to Felix at the moment,
increasingly impatient with his concerns over Octavia. Felix
couldn’t help his neurotic worries about his daughter, he
certainly wasn’t going to abandon them now, and in a way
they exemplified his two greatest virtues; his capacity for
love and his intense loyalty. The two things she had never
had from Alec, and that she valued so highly. And then she
was fecklessly encouraging the attentions of another man - a
dangerously conscienceless man — to hurt Felix. Having
dinner with him, for God’s sake. And he was also Felix’s
friend. She should cancel it. She would cancel it. It wasn’t
too late.
‘So how do you feel today?’ said Zoe’. ‘About Romilly?’
‘Oh, you know. Everything you might expect.’
‘What, chuffed, proud?’ Zoe was laughing.
She smiled reluctantly back. ‘A bit, I suppose. But much
more worried. Terrified, even. I don’t like that woman.
Not one bit.’
“Who, Ritz? Me neither.’
‘Really? I’m so glad. It makes me feel less neurotic’
‘I don’t think Romilly’s too sure about her either.’
The phone rang sharply. Zoe picked it up. ‘Hallo. Oh,
yes, hi. Sure. Yes, she’s here. Hold on.’ She covered the
phone, looked at Marianne. ‘Speaking of the devil … Ritz
Franklyn.’
Marianne took a deep breath. ‘Ritz. Good morning.
Thank you for a delicious dinner. What? Oh, she’s fine.
Yes, she loved it. I know, she was very excited. But - I’m
sorry? Oh. Oh, I see. Heavens. Already? Well - well, I
really don’t know. I’d better come and see you about it.
No, Romilly most certainly will not be there. She’s still at
school full time, you know, Ritz. I did make that very
clear. Oh, yes. Possibly tomorrow? I shall have to speak to
Romilly’s father as well about it. Yes, I’ll get back to you.’
She put the phone down and stared at Zoe.
‘Mum, what’s the matter?’
‘A cosmetic company, Christie’s, have offered Romilly a contract. Or rather are about to. Some Americans are coming over on Monday, want to meet her, but it’s a
formality, Ritz says. It’s for half a million dollars. They’d
want to shoot the campaign in New York. Zoe, this is
appalling. What am I going to do?’
Octavia was actually in her car when Louise phoned. She
sounded very tired.
‘Octavia, I’m so sorry. I’m going to have to put you off.
Some specialist’s coming to see Mummy, and I just think a
visitor on top of that, even you, would be too much for
her. Will you forgive?’
‘Of course I will. Don’t be silly. Maybe one day next
week?’
‘Yes, of course. I’ll let you know.’
‘Are you all right? You sound terrible.’
‘I feel pretty terrible. Still, how are you? I saw the piece
in the Mail’ The husky voice was almost amused. ‘That
can’t have helped things. Or did it?’
‘No. To put it mildly. Tom lost that account. The man
who was building the development, you know.’
‘Good,’ said Louise. She sounded more cheerful suddenly.
‘He deserves it, wouldn’t you say?’
‘I suppose so,’ said Octavia slowly. Just for a second she
felt a stab of discomfort, a sense of disloyalty; then she
realised Louise was perfectly right. Of course he did.
‘This is very awkward,’ said Aubrey. ‘We’re going to need
some cash very quickly. Carlton’s fee was just about holding
us together. If I fix a meeting with the bank, are there any
times you can’t manage?’
‘No,’ said Tom, ‘absolutely any time. Middle of the
night, if you like.’
‘Unlikely. Hopefully he’ll see us early tomorrow. If he