mother had taken it away, some of the pages had been
falling out and she’d said she’d mend it. So it would be in
her room.
He turned the handle cautiously, looked in; she was lying
on her back, she looked rather like the Sleeping Beauty.
Only she wasn’t going to sleep for a hundred years. He
wouldn’t let her. Just till breakfast. That would be quite
enough.
Octavia had spent the night at one of the motels on the M4.
Utterly anonymous, totally uninterested in her, caring for
nothing but that her credit card should be cleared, they
gave her a room number and handed her a key for it: it was
exactly what she needed, a mindless, faceless, unpeopled
environment. She made a cup of tea and lay down on the
bed and stared at the blank television screen. The room was
absolutely silent, the double glazing forming an impenetrable
barrier against the roar of the motorway, and absolutely
dark, the thick curtains lined with some kind of plasticised
fabric, a surreal womb in which she could escape from the
world.
No, no, not a womb, she thought, sipping the tea, she
would never hear that word again without feeling terror
and nausea. A tomb, that was more like it, it was like being
sealed in a tomb, but interred by her own choice, removing
her from action, demands, decisions. Here she could and
would stay; no one could find her, no one trouble her, until
she wished to be found and troubled. At that moment,
either seemed unthinkable.
Dickon was having a bit of trouble finding the Thomas the
Tank Engine book. It wasn’t on the table by the window,
nor was it on the chest of drawers. Dickon turned, looked
at the bed. Not there, not on the bedside table. But the bedside table did have a drawer; maybe she’d put it in there.
Only, opening that might wake her. Although she seemed
very asleep.
Gingerly, he went over to the bed, eased himself
between it and the wall; his mother slept on. He was next
to the bedside table now. If he could just — Dickon reached
out to the drawer handle, and the sleeve of Benjy’s pyjamas,
much too big for him, caught on the glass jug standing on
the table. It balanced dangerously on the edge for a long
moment, then in slow motion, tipped right over and fell
off. On to the wooden floor. And shattered. Loudly.
He stood, holding his breath, waiting for his mother to
wake up and be first frightened and then cross with him.
Only she didn’t.
Janet had slept badly. She wasn’t sure why; she normally
slept like the dead, as she herself cheerfully announced
every morning if asked, but she was restless, dreaming
fitfully; at five she got up and went downstairs to make
herself tea and found she was down to the last teaspoon of
leaves; she decided to borrow some from the house. She
slipped across the yard in her dressing gown and was just
tipping a handful of tea leaves into her tea caddy when she
heard the crash from the floor above, where Louise slept.
And after the crash a long silence.
It was the long silence that seemed strange; rather like
Sherlock Holmes’ dog that didn’t bark, as she explained it
to Derek afterwards. No exclamation, no footsteps, no
creaking of the bed even, just a dead still silence.
Janet went up to investigate; and found Dickon crossing
the bedroom floor, a deeply anxious expression on his small
face, and beyond him, Louise, waxy pale, totally still, her
body looking somehow oddly collapsed into itself.
Marianne had also, and most unusually, slept badly.
Normally, she slept like the proverbial baby; although
anyone who had had a baby, she always thought, would
have known what an absurd comparison that was. But the
night had been filled with anxiety, which filtered into what sleep she had: anxiety about her children, about Octavia
and Tom, about her relationship with Nico — not of course
that it was a relationship — about Felix. Finally at six, she got
up, made herself a cup of camomile tea, and was just
climbing back into bed when the phone rang.
It was Felix. ‘Marianne, are you awake?’ He sounded
terrible, hoarsely agitated.
‘I am now,’ she said, trying not to sound petulant, the
reproachful lie rising easily to her lips. God, he was
inconsiderate.
‘It’s Octavia. She’s disappeared.’
‘Felix, what on earth do you mean?’ An exaggeration, no
doubt.
‘I mean she’s disappeared. Nobody knows where she is.’
‘Felix, you’re going to have to explain this to me a bit,’
said Marianne, pushing her hair back wearily. ‘How do you
know she’s disappeared?’
‘Tom rang me. About a quarter of an hour ago.’
‘Tom?’ It clearly was serious; Tom must have been
driven to a desperation of anxiety to have rung Felix. ‘But
why?’
‘It seems that Charles Madison rang him. They’re
desperate to get hold of Octavia. Louise has taken an
overdose. She’s been rushed to hospital. Charles seems to
think Octavia might have some idea why she did it.’
‘Oh, my God,’ said Marianne very slowly. ‘Oh, Felix.
This is very, very terrible.’
Greatly to her surprise, at some point during the long,
timeless, strangely emotionless night, Octavia had actually
slept; she woke to see something resembling light coming
through the curtains. She was fully dressed still, lying on top
of the heavy bedspread. The radio clock by her bed said it
was half past six. Half past six: Minty would be waking, the
twins would soon be up, looking for her, wondering where
she was. They would be worried about her; it wasn’t their
fault, they didn’t deserve that. She tried to use the phone in the room, but it wasn’t connected, tried her own mobile, but it was run down. Damn. It would have to be the car.
She stood up, wincing at a stiff neck, a foul mouth, caught
sight of herself in the mirror, rings of smudged mascara
under her eyes, her hair pushed into a bizarre shape, and
almost smiled. What price stylish Octavia Fleming now?
She phoned the house; Caroline answered.
‘Octavia! Where are you? We were so worried. Tom’s
been trying everywhere. Even the police. He wants to
speak to you. And your father’s terribly—’
‘I can’t stop,’ she said quickly. ‘Tell Tom I’ll call again
later. And my father that I’m fine. And tell the children I’ll
probably be back tonight.’
‘Octavia, please speak to Tom. He’s—’
‘I can’t. Sorry.’ She snapped the phone back on its hook,
switched it off, and went back into the motel.
She supposed she ought to go home but she couldn’t
face it. She wanted to run away, disappear, never be seen
again by anyone who had ever known her; start again, with
a new identity, a new life.
Given the impossibility of that, she pulled out of the
service station and turned down the M4 in the direction of
Somerset and the cottage.
Tom was also on the M4: driving to Gloucestershire and the
hospital where Louise lay. Mad, beautiful, radiant Louise,
whom he had come at one point most dangerously near to
loving, and whom now he feared and dreaded beyond
everything. He would have said, indeed, that he hated her
now; but since Charles’ phone call, hearing his voice raw
with fear and misery, he realised that was far too
straightforward, too simplistic an emotion. What he felt for
Louise now had no name: there was hatred in it, to be sure,
but there was tenderness too, and remorse and regret, and
revulsion and desire. He kept seeing her face as he had
slammed the car door shut, driven away from her: distorted
with misery that he had once again refused her, refused
what she wanted, and at the same time, with an ugly elation
that she had finally touched him, hurt him with the story of Octavia and the baby she had discarded.
‘Leave me alone,’ he had shouted, the last thing he had
said to her. ‘Stay out of my life.’ And then, very slowly, ‘I don’t
— love — you. Understand that. For Jesus Christ’s
sake.’
For Jesus Christ’s sake. Amen. Was that the next thing he
would be saying to her? Or rather to her coffin? Was she
dying, was she dead? And if she was, then was it his fault,
his fault alone? Or could he at least share that guilt with the
demons she lived with, who had invaded her lovely body
and her tortured spirit? Should he have told someone,
sought help for her when he had begun to fear for her
sanity? He should; he knew that very well. Cowardice had
held him back, the fear of the consequences of going to
Sandy, or to Charles, telling them what he knew, revealing
how he knew it. Cowardice and hope. Hope that she
would come through, accept what he had told her she must
accept, see what he had struggled to make her see.
But he hadn’t; and the sweet, intense flirtation that had
begun with a dance at a party, extended to lunch, to wild,
winging afternoons in hotel rooms, and thence to magically
lovely stolen nights and days, had slowly darkened into
tears, dependence, demands, protestations of love, of need,
and finally declarations of hatred, and of revenge: and now
of the ultimate vengeance, laying her death at his door.
Barbara Dawson came through on his car phone.
‘Tom, where the hell are you? You have a meeting with
Bob Macintosh like now. He’s come down from Birmingham,
and—’
‘Tell Aubrey to see him. I can’t get back,’ said Tom.
‘Look, I’m dealing with a — a domestic emergency. Please
tell everyone that. Okay? Unless my wife rings. In which
case, find out where she is and get her to ring me on this.
Or my mobile. I don’t want to speak to anyone else.
Anyone at all.’
Sandy had been enjoying a bowl of milky coffee and a pain
au chocolat when his mobile rang, preparing himself for a
meeting with the manager of a big chain of autoroute cafes.
If he pulled this one off, he would be able to do some of the
things he had been dreaming of; buy a better house, a
decent car, put Dickon down for Eton, take Louise away
for a holiday. Somewhere sunny, somewhere glamorous,
the Caribbean or the Bahamas. A couple of weeks in the
sun would see her right; and then the promise of a move, of
being able to use her talents as an interior designer. She’d
cheer up in no time. No time at all…
This might be her now; he lifted the phone, smiled.
‘Hallo. Sandy Trelawny …’
Dickon was sitting on Janet’s knee in the kitchen when his
father phoned; he had hardly spoken all day. The terrifying
events of the early morning, seeing his grandfather holding
his mother like a limp doll, trying to force water into her
mouth, the ambulance arriving, sirens screaming, the men
rushing up the stairs, and then moving down swiftly, so
swiftly they seemed to be flying. Seeing his mother on a
stretcher, and being put into the ambulance and the
ambulance driving off again, hearing the siren moving out
of earshot. And then his grandfather hurling himself into his
own car, driving off, his mobile telephone held to his ear. It
had all been so horrible, exactly like a bad, bad dream. And
now he was afraid, so afraid, that she would die too, and
join Juliet and his grandmother. Janet kept saying that she
wouldn’t, that she’d be fine, but he was terribly afraid.
Dying was what seemed to happen to everyone he loved.
‘You mean you knew? Or you suspected it was Louise?
And you said nothing, nothing to me, or to—’
‘Felix, I didn’t think I should say anything to you. For
the hundredth time, it’s nothing to do with you. Or me for
that matter.’
‘I rather beg to differ, Marianne. If you had told me
might have been able to do something about the whole
thing.’
Marianne looked at him; thinking what an appalling
force for danger he was. He was pacing up and down her
drawing room, energised by rage and anxiety, gnawing at
his knuckles. He always did that when he was distraught.
‘Really?’ she said, surprised at her own courage. ‘And
what would you have done?’
‘Oh, for God’s sake. Spared her some of the shock at
least.’
‘You’re sure she knows?’
‘Oh, yes, she knows. Tom told me. God, that man has a
great deal to answer for.’
Marianne said nothing; but she thought of Louise lying
near to death, if not dead, in hospital, and of Octavia, hurt
and doubly damaged by this new deadly betrayal, and of
three — no, four children, desperately hurt, Dickon most of
all; of Charles Madison, who deserved no more pain at all;
of Sandy who deserved none either; and she agreed with
him. Tom did indeed have a great deal to answer for.
‘Felix,’ she said, putting her hand on his arm, trying to
defuse his rage just a little, ‘Felix, let’s try to think calmly
about this. About what we can do to help now. Rather than
what we should have done.’
‘What you should have done, you mean,’ he said, shaking