‘Well, I’ve taken a bit of a holiday and your father’s
having him next week — I’ve got to get some work done
then.’
‘Of course. Daddy’s coming tomorrow. Have you seen
him?’
‘No. Not yet.’
‘I’ll be home soon,’ she said quite firmly. ‘I told the
doctor I needed to get back. To look after you both. But he
said - well, not for a week or two.’
Sandy looked at her; he didn’t know what to do or say.
What could he say? That he didn’t want her at home, ever
again, didn’t want her near him, ever again? Simply to get
her hand off his arm, he stood up, went over to the
window.
‘I think I might go outside for a bit,’ he said, ‘leave you
and Dickon to have a chat.’
Outside was reality; the nightmare receded. He walked about the grounds rather briskly, avoiding people’s eyes.
Then he made for the gate, walked down the road a few
yards. The nursing home was on the outskirts of Bath, in a
wide tree-lined road. That was even better: there were
ordinary people walking about, leading proper ordered,
ordinary lives, not mad, lying fantasies. He found a
newsagent, bought some peppermints, ate his way through
the whole packet. They were oddly refreshing. He turned
back to the gates, walked purposefully towards them; but
when he got there, he stopped, had to make a huge effort of
will to go through them. Back into the madness.
‘Mrs Trelawny is very tired.’ The nurse’s face was
reproachful. ‘You shouldn’t have left her with the little boy.
Not really. You weren’t to know, of course. But another
time …’
‘No,’ Sandy said, ‘I’m sorry, I thought she and he well.
. .’
Louise was lying on the bed again, smiling drowsily.
‘Sorry, darling. So sorry. Come again very soon.’
‘We will.’
Dickon gave her a kiss, walked over to Sandy, took his
hand. ‘You’re all right, aren’t you, Mummy?’
‘Of course I’m all right. Just tired. Sandy, come and kiss
me goodbye.’
He managed it; but it was the hardest thing he had ever
done.
‘Oh, God! Oh, no. What am I going to do?’
Loud sobs came out of the girls’ bathroom; racked,
anguished, deeply distressed.
Zoe banged on the door. ‘Romilly.‘what is it? What’s
the matter?’
Very slowly the door opened; a tear-stained, white face
looked round it. ‘Look …’ She pointed to her chin; there
beneath the fine translucent skin, silky smooth, was an
undeniable ripple.
Zoe gazed at it very seriously. ‘Spot?’
‘Yes. Coming. Isn’t it? In two days it’ll be huge.’
It wouldn’t be huge; but it would be there. Zoe
understood. And sympathised. ‘And you’ve got your
session? Oh, Rom, what a shame. Is it your period?’
‘Yes. It’s just about due. Can’t you tell? Look at my
stomach, it’s huge.’
‘Yeah, right,’ said Zoe, glancing at the concave flatness
that was Romilly’s stomach. ‘Really huge. Rom, you’re
getting obsessed.’
‘I’m not! I’m not obsessed.’
‘It would hardly be surprising if you were,’ said Zoe.
‘Well, you have to say something, I think. Would you like
me to call Ritz?’
Romilly stared at her. ‘But what would you say?’
‘I’d tell them the truth. I’d say you were getting a spot, and did it matter?’
‘And then what?’
‘Well, then it’s up to them. It’s hardly your fault.’
‘No, but I’m still letting them down.’
“Course you’re not. In all probability they can retouch
the picture, so the spot won’t show anyway. But you should
tell them.’
Ritz was very good; she said of course she understood,
that it was nice of Zoe to let them know, and also helpful.
‘Is it her period?’
‘Yes. Yes, it is.’
‘It’s often a problem with very young girls. We should
have asked her, really.’
‘God, she’d have died.’
‘I’m afraid she’ll have to get used to that,’ said Ritz, and
her voice was harsher suddenly.
‘I see,’ said Zoe.
Her own voice must have sounded different, because
Ritz said hastily, ‘Sorry. That came out wrong. What I
mean is, she’ll have to get used to anticipating it, letting us
know — she can say she’s going to be away or something if
that makes her feel better. Anyway, it’s only Monday,
maybe by Friday …’
‘Yup. Thanks, Ritz.’
‘That’s okay.’
Romilly received the news that she was to go in for some
test shots on the Wednesday, ‘so they can decide for
themselves’, in a state approaching total anguish. She sat
down with her diary and spent the next half hour counting
not only days, but hours. Finally, she decided that it must be
all right, she was always a bit early, and tomorrow was the
full four weeks. And her back did ache a bit: and she did
have the swollen stomach. That had to go as well, though.
Maybe she should play it safe.
She reached into the back of the large dolls’ house that
still sat in the corner of her bedroom and pulled out the hidden stack of laxatives. She swallowed four; and then she could take four more at bedtime. That should work. God, it had to work. She had read in a magazine somewhere that the girls who swallowed laxatives to lose weight took a lot
of exercise to increase their efficiency; she put on her
cycling shorts and running shoes and set out along the street
in the direction of the park.
Felix Miller was unaccustomed to feeling unsure of himself.
He had always known precisely not only what he was
doing, but also that he was absolutely right in doing it.
From the earliest days at the bank, as one small piece of
shrewd judgment followed another and earned him the
gravitas to make larger ones: as his client list, carefully
harvested and still more carefully pruned, grew in stature
and status: as he married the right girl — rich, well
connected, dutiful: as he watched Octavia grow up into
beauty and brilliance and success: as his relationship with
Marianne proved emotionally fulfilling and sexually pleasurable:
as his own fortune grew beyond his wildest dreams
and his collection of fine paintings and sculpture soared in
value: as his own health and vigour continued unabated
into his late fifties: all these things he put down entirely to
his own ability to take hold of and run his life with skill and
intelligence.
The dark things contained within it — the death of the
perfect wife, the loss of a child, Octavia’s marriage to Tom
Fleming — he could set at the door of a malevolent chance,
unforeseeable, unpreventable.
Until now. He was being forced to recognise that the loss
of Marianne was actually very painful; and he was also, with
greater difficulty, beginning to accept that it was, if not
exactly within his control, then certainly not entirely
outside it. He had treated her badly, he knew. He had neglected her over the previous few weeks, he had been distracted from her needs, thoughtless of her concerns,
hostile to her unhappiness. He told himself that he had been
driven to it: that some of it at least was justified, that she had
seemed less than sympathetic to his anguish over Octavia, that she been less than forceful in her own response to the
situation. But he also knew that those things could be put
down to her own gentleness of spirit and her own rather
non-directional style of parenting.
And now, at least for a while, he had lost her.
That she should have left him for Cadogan, a man who
had betrayed a friendship in so many ways, he found doubly
painful. Cadogan had made his move on Marianne quite
ruthlessly at a time when she was vulnerable and unhappy,
and no possible excuse could be made for him. None the
less, it was he, Felix, who had made her unhappy in the first
place; and the sense that he could blame himself added to
his misery, his sense of panic. And casting about for a
scapegoat, as he had done all his life, one was very easily to
be found. A person who had caused him certainly indirectly
to be neglectful, blind to Marianne’s needs, and who had
made her receptive to the approaches of Cadogan. Tom
Fleming. The dislike he had always felt for Tom now
became a loathing that he felt physically, a putrid,
suppurating presence somewhere deep within him. He
could not bear it; it could not go on.
‘I’m having lunch with Tom Fleming tomorrow,’ said
Lauren Bartlett.
Drew Bartlett glanced up at her. He knew that hyper
casual tone very well. ‘Oh, yes? What on earth for?’
‘I think I might have persuaded Oliver Nichols to
consider appointing him after all. He’s joining us. And he’s
really up against it, poor old Tom. Company’s right back
on the ropes.’
‘Good Lord. Poor old Tom. And didn’t you say the
marriage wasn’t too hot either?’
‘Yes, I did. Poor old Tom,’ said Lauren.
She was meeting Tom and Oliver Nichols at the Pont de la
Tour. She had planned with great care: Tom at twelve
thirty, Nichols at one fifteen. In theory so that she could brief Tom, actually to try and find out how things really were between him and Octavia. She had always wondered why he didn’t have affairs: she had heard the occasional rumour, but generally he seemed to lead a blameless life. Too busy making money, she supposed. Like Drew. Lauren was totally confident of her husband’s sexual loyalty to her.
He talked big, he flirted loudly, but that was all. Out of the
social arena, he worked seven days a week, ten hours a day.
His company consumed his energy, on all levels. On their
increasingly rare couplings, he displayed less and less
confidence and skill; time and again recently, he had rolled
off her, saying he was sorry, and gone straight to sleep. It
suited Lauren well; in spite of her overt sexiness, the
pleasure she took in pursuit, she didn’t actually like sex very
much. It bored her. Few men had made her come; and
when she did she only enjoyed that for a short moment. It was a release, no more, quite removed from actual pleasure.
She preferred to fake it, and then lie there, clenching and
unclenching her taut, well-exercised pelvic floor, observing
dispassionately what seemed to her the rather pathetic and
unseemly spectacle of the male orgasm. She would enjoy
observing that in Tom Fleming.
He looked terrible, she thought, when he arrived. He had
lost weight, he looked drawn and pale; there were more
grey hairs amongst the dark brown. But he was beautifully
dressed as always, in a cream linen suit and black silk shirt;
he smiled at her, bent to kiss her.
‘You look lovely,’ he said.
‘Oh, please! I’ve put on about five pounds since I saw
you last week. Drew and I were staying with friends in the
country, nothing to do all weekend but eat and drink.
Anyway, I’ve been at the gym ever since. Diana was there
this morning. She looked fabulous.’
‘Diana who?’
‘Tom! The Princess.’
‘Oh.’
‘Yes. I really do think this man is making her happy.
Dodi Fayed, I mean. And she deserves it. She’s had a lousy
time. Now then, what do you want to drink? Champagne?’
‘I’ll stick to water, thanks. For now.’
‘How very disappointing. I was planning on getting you
deliciously drunk.’
‘Not at lunchtime, Lauren. Sorry.’
He smiled at her. She took it as encouragement. ‘Well, I
shall have to take you to dinner instead, then. How’s
Octavia?’
‘She’s fine. Thanks.’
Not prepared to admit anything, then.
‘She and her partner are doing marvellous things for our
charity day. I expect you’ve heard about it.’
‘No. I haven’t had much time even to talk to Octavia
recently.’
That was encouraging. ‘Well, it’s at Brands Hatch. In
early September. I’m hoping Diana will be there. With the
boys. They’re such fun, those two, especially little Harry.
What a charmer. Anyway, I hope you’ll be there.’
‘I don’t think so.’ He smiled at her, sipped at his water.
‘Tell me about your friend, Lauren.’
‘Oh, yes.’ The intimate chat was clearly not going to
materialise. ‘Well, he has just bought this chain of chemist’s
shops. He owns among other things a pharmaceutical
company. And I don’t need to tell you, that’s a minefield.’
‘Yes,’ said Tom slowly, ‘I can see that.’
‘He just needs a lot of advice. About presentation,
legislation, all that sort of thing.’
‘But I thought he’d appointed someone else.’
‘Well, nothing’s actually signed. Apparently. And he is
having second thoughts. So — over to you. But he can’t get
here till one fifteen. I did tell you that, didn’t I?’
‘No,’ said Tom, ‘no, I don’t think you did.’
‘Oh, I’m sorry. Well, we’ll have to fill in the time
somehow. Are you going away this summer … ?’
‘Mrs Trelawny doesn’t really take part in the group therapy
at all,’ said the nurse.
‘Oh, really?’ Dr Brandon frowned. ‘I thought she was
attending now. She’s become slightly more communicative
now the Prozac is beginning to take effect.’