con. The quality was frequently very poor. And children
wanted you when they wanted you; they didn’t save things
up to tell you, to talk to you about, cry over.
She sighed. She had always promised herself that one day,
when the business could stand it, she would work less, a
four-or three-day week, spend more time at home with
the children. Only clients were rather like children, they
also wanted you on demand. Most of their lives belonged to
clients, Tom’s as well as hers; no moment was sacred, no
corner safe from them. She sometimes thought, in her
wilder, more distressed moments, that if she woke up and
found one of them lying between her and Tom in bed, and
an earnest discussion going on about budgets or tactics, she
would not be in the least surprised.
And sometimes, when she was really tired, really low, she had thought that whatever happened to their marriage, neither of them could possibly afford to leave it, so inextricably entwined was it in their professional as well as their personal lives.
Octavia had sometimes been tempted to make up an
interesting story about how she and Tom had met; it had
been so extraordinarily dull, not good copy at all. Other
people always seemed to have been blind dates, or met in
operating theatres or on aeroplanes. Lauren and Drew
Bartlett, the neighbours who were hosting the children’s
party in France, had met through a shared divorce lawyer.
Louise, Octavia’s best friend, had had a flirtatious letter sent
over to her table by her husband at a ball. Melanie Faulks
had met her onetime husband doing a charity bungee
jump.
Octavia and Tom had met at a lunch party, nowhere
more original, more prophetic than that. She had seen him
across the room and thought how absurdly good looking he
was, and how well dressed (blue Oxford shirt, chinos and
very nice shoes, brown brogues, Octavia always noticed
shoes), and thought also that with looks like that he must be
vain and immensely conceited. But later, when she was
introduced to him (‘Octavia, this is Tom Fleming, he’s
something to do with polities’) and he was shaking her hand
and smiling at her almost diffidently, assessing her with
wonderfully dark grey eyes, and they began to talk, she
realised she was wrong, that he was very far from either
vanity or conceit, seemed actually slightly unsure of himself.
It was very slight, the unsureness, and he had a tendency to play upon it, but he was certainly far more likeable than she would have imagined. He also possessed that particular
genre of charm that persuades people they are much more
amusing and agreeable than they had realised; in Tom’s
company silent people talked, dull ones made jokes,
nervous ones relaxed. Octavia did not make jokes, but she
relaxed and she found it easy to talk.
She told him she had never met a politician before, and
he told her she still hadn’t, he was far from being anything
of the sort, thank God: ‘No, I work for one of those new
inventions, a public affairs consultancy. Which means we
dabble in politics a bit: try to influence politicians and civil
servants on behalf of our clients, that sort of thing. It’s
actually much more fun than politics, I think. What about
you?’
‘I’m a lawyer,’ Octavia said, ‘a corporate lawyer.’
‘That sounds very grand,’ he said, smiling. ‘Let me get
you some food while you tell me about it.’
‘Only if you tell me about public affairs,’ she said.
Afterwards she thought how prophetic it had been that
even their very first conversation should have been so
workbased. And how genuinely enthralling each of them
had found it. He asked her if she would like to have dinner
with him, took her phone number.
Flattered, but never expecting to hear from him, she was
amazed when three days later she came home to a
charmingly diffident message on her machine: ‘Octavia, I
hope you remember me. This is Tom Fleming. I wondered
if you were free one night next week. Give me a ring.’
They had dinner, enjoyed the evening enormously, did it
again, and then again; a month after the party, they were in
bed, Octavia having been seduced as much by Tom’s
interest in her and admiration for what went on in her head
as his initially tentative physical advances.
She was sexually inexperienced; had only had three
lovers in her twenty-four years (a one-night affair after a
drunken May Ball not included), indeed, had begun to fear
she must be frigid, so generally uninterested did she feel in
the whole business. She would read articles in Cosmopolitan about young women’s sex drives and wonder what was the matter with her, that she didn’t seem to have one - or that
if she did, it was certainly rather weak. Lying in Tom’s
arms, after what was really a very happy if not earth
shattering event, she told him so.
‘One man I went out with told me I was rather
forbidding. You don’t think that’s right?’
‘Not in the least. Rather the reverse. I think you are
lovely, extremely sexy and clearly not in the least frigid. But
then, I am clearly in love with you, and probably
prejudiced.’
He had, even in his everyday speech, a very elegant turn
of phrase.
Tom was extremely clever; he had gone to Oxford from a
good grammar school and got a First in history. This should
have freed him, but didn’t, from the entirely illogical sense
of inferiority he had from not having gone to public school;
he was, he told Octavia, going to be proving himself for the
rest of his life. She found this touching and baffling, not
least because he had done so well, and said so. He had
smiled and said that no one who had not been put down by
an Old Etonian in the nicest possible way on their first
night dining in College - ‘Which school? Ah. Don’t think I
know that one’ - could understand how much it mattered.
‘I know it’s silly, but I am silly. I can’t bear being second
best.’
His background was modest; his father had been an
insurance salesman, and his mother had devoted her entire
life to him. ‘I came a very poor second. I don’t think they
ever wanted children, certainly they never had any more.’
They had died within a year of each other of heart
disease: ‘Not a good prognosis for me, I’m afraid.’
Octavia was then twenty-four years old. Her own
background (adored only child of very rich man, Wycombe
Abbey and Cambridge) initially worried Tom, and he was
so nervous the first time she took him home to meet her father, he was physically shaking as he did up his jacket. No one would have known, of course. Watching him chatting
easily in the dark, heavy Hampstead drawing room,
carefully respectful, he seemed the embodiment of self
confidence and charm. It wasn’t until she was able to
reassure him, truthfully, that Felix Miller had pronounced
him ‘interesting and impressive’ that he relaxed, said he felt
himself able to continue their relationship.
As they grew closer, as it became clear Tom was
extremely important to her, his relationship with her father
darkened. Octavia, who had seen this happen before, was
terrified of the eventual outcome.
She was not just an only child, her mother had died
when she was two, giving birth to a brother, who had died
also, after three agonising days. She and her father had been
all the world to one another from that day; she adored him,
saw him as the source of all wisdom. Early boyfriends he
tolerated, or, rather, dismissed as unimportant. ‘He’s a child,
darling,’ he would say. ‘Very sweet, and of course you must
go to the party with him, you’ll have fun. But he’s not
nearly clever enough for you.’ Or ‘I suppose he’s all right. I
don’t exactly admire his manners. I think you deserve
better.’
She would say, immediately, that if he wasn’t happy
about whoever it was, she wouldn’t go to the pictures or
whatever, at which he would laugh and say, ‘My darling,
it’s not important. You’re not going to marry him, are you?
Just have fun. You’re young, you must have a good time.
Go.’ She would, with at least half her mind fixed on her
father’s judgment, and very often the first outing would be
the last. She accepted her father’s judgment in all things.
But Tom had taken Felix Miller on, in all his powerful,
manipulative jealousy, and, if he didn’t exactly win him
over, developed a modus operandi with him at least. There
had been one period - after the honeymoon of her father’s
relationship with Tom, before he had come finally to realise
that he must accept him - when Octavia had despaired. The
atmosphere whenever Tom came to the house was
appalling; her father aggressively, bullyingly brusque; Tom acerbic, icily polite.
When Tom had left, Felix would tear the occasion apart,
criticising every move Tom made, every sentence he
uttered. ‘Darling, you know what you’re doing of course,
but do you really think a man who interrupts you seven
times during lunch has any real respect for what you say?’ or
‘I can see he’s very witty, Octavia, but are you sure he has a
sense of humour? That’s rather different, you know, and a
marriage can’t possibly work without it.’ And of course she
was affected by it, by the criticism, she couldn’t help it,
would analyse the interruptions, the lack of humour.
Somehow, Tom won through, the darkest hour a
confrontation when Felix questioned Tom’s ability to
support her, to make his way in the world. Tom lost his
temper. He told Felix his attitude was intolerable and left in
the middle of dinner. It preceded the dawn of a grudging
acceptance. Like all bullies, Felix Miller respected, even
feared, courage. Tom had turned up the following morning
with a set of bank accounts, a client list, and a couple of
editorials in the Financial Times outlining the success and
rapid growth of the company he worked for over the
previous three years. ‘I want you to know this sticks in my
craw,’ he had said, glaring at Felix Miller. ‘I cannot stand
self-promotion.’ (This was not strictly true, Octavia
thought, hearing about it afterwards, but wisely kept her
counsel.) ‘But if you won’t accept my own assurances, then
I am driven to presenting you with other people’s.’
Miller never apologised, but from then on he stopped
fighting the marriage. There had been an unhappy
exchange with Octavia two nights before the wedding,
which Octavia had never told Tom about, and had sworn
she never would, when Felix had, in a last ditch stand, asked
her if she was really sure if she knew what she was doing,
and when she said she was, told her she was mistaken. ‘In
six months’ time,’ he said, pouring a brandy, looking at her
across the drawing room, ‘you’ll wish you were dead. And
don’t come running to me when it happens.’
Octavia stared at him for a moment, then went straight
up to her room, locked the door and lay on her bed, staring
out at the darkness, afraid, in spite of being so much in love
with Tom, such was her father’s power over her.
Later, when Felix Miller came and knocked on her door
she told him to go away, and when he ordered her to open
it, for the first time in her entire life she disobeyed him. A
note was pushed under it, in Miller’s copperplate hand,
saying he hadn’t meant to upset her, he’d been upset
himself, loving, caring about her so much. She still didn’t
go to him, but in the morning, recognising the enormity of
the gesture, she kissed him and said she hoped they were
still friends.
‘Friends! My darling Octavia, you are everything to me,
you know that, surely.’
‘I know,’ she had said. ‘I do know.’ But the whole
incident had frightened and disturbed her more than she
would have believed. And haunted her for the rest of her
life.
The wedding, of course, was wonderful; she came down
the aisle on the arm of a Felix Miller beaming with pride
and love, although many people remarked that his expression
as they left the church, walking behind her now up the
aisle, was markedly less happy. And he made a very
sentimental speech, probably all he could have done in the
circumstances, Octavia thought, saying how much he loved
her and all he wanted was her happiness. Tom’s speech had
a slightly sharper edge to it, and there was an awkward
moment when the best man referred to Octavia as moving
from the centre of one man’s life to another’s, but on the
whole, as Tom remarked as they drove literally weak with
relief towards the airport, en route to Felix’s cottage in
Barbados, it could have been enormously worse.
Their troubles were far from over even then; Felix
Miller’s determination to move in on his son-in-law’s
professional life, pushing clients his way, advising him on
business strategy, offering him backing, was a constant
crucifixion to both Tom and Octavia, and there had been endless conflict between the three of them. Octavia was