‘Yes. Yes, all right, Octavia, I’ll come. In the cause of our
joint commercial futures. How does that sound?’
‘Fine,’ she said. ‘Thank you very much.’ Somehow it
didn’t seem quite the moment to tell him she was seeing a
solicitor about divorcing him.
‘Darling, don’t cry. Please, don’t cry.’
‘I can’t help it,’ said Louise, and she couldn’t. ‘I just hate it there so much, I want to go home so badly. I don’t see why they won’t let me.’
‘I’m sure they have their reasons.’
‘Yes. Getting more money out of you,’ she said, blowing
her nose, trying to smile at him.
‘Nonsense! I have far too much respect for them to think
that. Dr Brandon is a very highly qualified, highly respected
psychiatrist. There is no way he would keep you there
unless he thought it was really necessary. You have been
quite - ill, you know, darling.’
‘Yes. Yes, I know. It’s just that I get so homesick.
Perhaps if you spoke to Dr Brandon, or to Sandy, even. I
don’t think Sandy wants me home, either.’
‘What nonsense. He misses you terribly, of course he
does. Look, I will ring Dr Brandon in the morning, see
what he says. How would that be?’
‘That would be lovely,’ said Louise really lovely.’
Time was running out on her; she had to get home very
soon…
‘I want to ask you something,’ said Tom. He had appeared
at her study door; it was quite late.
‘Yes?’
He looked rather nervous; Octavia wondered wildly if
he was going to make it easy for her, tell her he wanted a
divorce, had seen his own solicitor. She sat back in her
chair. That would be marvellous: really marvellous.
‘It’s about — well, about the morning you went away. I
know it sounds silly, but — are you sure you had your
mobile phone up at your father’s house?’
‘Yes. Quite sure. I went there straight from the office.
Why on earth do you want to know that?’
‘Oh, I’m just querying the bill. It came in while you
were away.’
‘Well, that’s your answer. But where it went after that, I
have no idea. I didn’t use it on holiday, or even that
morning. Okay? Now can I get on, please?’
‘Yes,’ said Tom, ‘you can get on.’
‘I’ve had a letter,’ said Nico Cadogan, ‘it just arrived. By hand.’
‘From?’
‘Miller.’
‘And?’
‘Oh, nothing too important in it. Just that he’s declaring
a bid tomorrow for the company. He’s called a press
conference. At the bank, at noon. That’s all. I wouldn’t
mind quite so much if he actually wanted it. But he doesn’t.
He just wants me. Or rather my head. On a plate. God,
Tom, I could kill the bugger.’
‘Please don’t before tomorrow,’ said Tom.
Felix Miller was just about to go to bed when the front
doorbell went. Damn. Mrs Harrington had forgotten her
key again. She was always doing it, in spite of having at least
three of the things. Stupid woman.
He hauled himself out of the deep leather chair in his
study and walked through the hall. ‘Just coming, Mrs
Harrington,’ he called, fumbling slightly with the two locks.
‘We shall have to find somewhere we can keep a key for
you. There we are, now …’
But it wasn’t Mrs Harrington. It was Tom Fleming.
‘Evening, Felix. Can I come in?’ He looked rather
cheerful; and very spruce, beautifully dressed as always, with
a bottle of what looked like claret in his hand. He held it
out. ‘For you.’
Felix glared at him. ‘I have no intention of asking you
into this house, and certainly not of accepting anything
from you.’
‘Pity. Because I intend to come in. Whether you ask me
or not. I have a — proposition for you. And I think we
might share this bottle while I outline it.’
‘I have no interest in any proposition of yours,’ said
Felix, ‘and that information is all I wish to share with you.
Good night.’
‘Felix, this concerns Octavia. I would advise you very strongly to listen to me. Very strongly indeed. It’s about you. You and her. You and her, and a certain misunderstanding,
just before she went away. Felix, do let me in,
there’s a good chap. You don’t want to hear me out on the
doorstep, I do assure you.’
A streak of panic went through Felix; he felt slightly
dizzy. He put out his hand to steady himself on the
doorframe. He could see Tom had noticed it as a sign of
weakness, and cursed it.
‘Well,’ he said finally, ‘well, you’d better come in.’
‘It’s very simple,’ said Tom, setting two of Felix’s rather
fine claret glasses down on the dining-room table, ‘very
simple indeed. Really. Where do you keep your corkscrews?
Oh, yes. Right. Now let me just pour this out and
then - no? Well, it’s awfully good, you know. You’re
missing a treat. Margaux, ‘ninety-six. Now where was I?
Oh, yes. This takeover of Cadogan Hotels.’
‘I thought you’d come to talk about Octavia,’ said Felix.
He felt very panicky now. There was a nasty lump in his
throat. Against his will, he took a small sip of the Margaux.
It was extremely good; even in his sick anxiety he could
appreciate that.
‘I have. And about the takeover.’
‘I’m afraid I fail to see my connection whatsoever
between the two.’
‘Well, you will. Now, you’re making the announcement
at this press conference tomorrow, I understand?’
‘I’m afraid I have no intention of discussing any of it with
you. So—’
‘Pity, Felix, you’re obviously not going to make this easy
for me. Or yourself. Now please listen to me, very
carefully …’ He leaned forward, and his dark blue eyes
were very brilliant suddenly, full of menace. Felix swallowed
hard; he could feel his heart thumping, his hands
sweating.
‘Right,’ said Tom. ‘I don’t want you to announce your
takeover bid for Cadogan Hotels in the morning. I want
you either to cancel the press conference or find some other
pretext for calling.it.’
‘Oh, really?’ said Felix. ‘And how do you imagine you
are going to persuade me to do that?’
‘Quite easily. Actually,’ said Tom. ‘You can’t have
Cadogan Hotels. You really can’t, Felix. I’m very sorry.’
‘And why not? How exactly are you and Cadogan going
to stop me?’
‘Oh, Cadogan has nothing to do with it. He has no idea
I’m here. Nobody has. Fortunately for you.’
‘Are you threatening me?’
‘Yes. I suppose so. Now then, Felix, this is it. Unless you
pull out of that bid in the morning and find a feasible reason
for doing so, I shall tell Octavia what you did just before she
left the house that morning. When she was going to
Barbados.’
‘What do you mean?’ said Felix. He felt dizzy again.
‘I think you know what I mean. That you first lied to me
and told me she’d left when she hadn’t. And then you hid
her mobile phone, so that I had no way of contacting her
once she’d left the house. Or of telling her that I wasn’t in
Tuscany with a new mistress, as you had so carefully
encouraged her to think, but in London, desperately trying
to get hold of her. Now, how do you think that would
make her feel about you, Felix? Do you think she would still see you as her knight in shining armour, her perfect and beloved daddy, the source of all goodness, who can do no
wrong, and who shields her from any evil that might come
her way? Eh? What about it, Felix? Do you think she’d love
you quite as much after that?’
‘Darling, don’t be so upset. Please. I’m sure something can
be done.’
‘I’m sure it can’t.’ Megan looked at her mother, tears
streaming down her cheeks. ‘That was last chance.
Stopping them knocking the house down.’
The letter stated quite unequivocally that, in the opinion
of their inspector, the Department of the Environment had
to inform Megan that Battles House, while being an
interesting example of its kind, was of no real architectural
value and could not therefore be considered for listing.
‘So it’ll go. And the land will go and the wood will go
and they’ll build their horrible houses and shops and it’s not
right. It’s just not right.’
‘Look, why don’t we tell Octavia?’ said Pattie. She didn’t
actually feel very hopeful about that either, but it was a way
of diverting Megan from her misery. ‘She’ll know what to
do next.’
‘I don’t think there’s anything we can do next,’ said
Megan. ‘It’s down to chaining ourselves to trees and things
now. We must tell Sandy. He’ll be very sorry.’
‘Sandy’s coming to tea tomorrow,’ said Pattie. ‘You can
tell him then.’ She smiled at Megan.
‘Mum! You’re blushing. You really like him, don’t you?’
‘I do, yes.’
‘He’s very good looking. I’m not surprised.’
‘Now, Megan, don’t be ridiculous,’ said Pattie primly. ‘I don’t like him in that way. Anyway he’s married.’
‘Of course I want her home,’ said Sandy. He felt himself
flush; he forced himself to meet Charles’ slightly reproachful
eyes. ‘But not unless she’s really better.’
‘But it seems she is. I’ve had a word with Dr Brandon,
and really, he feels she could leave early next week. But I
think a call from you would help. To confirm that you
could cope, take a week off, settle her in properly. Apparently, you rather gave Louise the impression that might be difficult. Which — upset her, I’m afraid.’
‘Well, I’m sorry about that,’ said Sandy. He was finding it
very hard to speak.
‘She’s so very vulnerable at the moment,’ said Charles.
‘And she misses you and Dickon so much. She needs all the
love and support we can give her. So — I wonder if you’d
have a word with Dr Brandon. Tell him how much you’d
like to have Louise home. There’s a good chap. I know it
would be best for her.’
‘Have you heard anything from Felix Miller?’ said Tom
casually.
‘No,’ said Nico. ‘Why on earth should I? Today of all
days.’
‘Oh.’ He was mildly disappointed — that would have
been the best, the most dramatic outcome — but not really
surprised. ‘Oh, I just thought you might. As today’s the
day.’
‘Indeed. Today is the day.’
He looked ghastly, Tom thought, white and exhausted,
drained of his vitality. He felt a surge of vast sympathy for
him.
‘Nico, would you excuse me a minute, I just want to
make a couple of calls.’
He went into his office, spoke to a couple of financial
journalists, one at The Times, one at the Mail. Was the press
conference called by Felix Miller still on?
It was. A sliver of unease went through Tom. Maybe this
wasn’t going to work after all. It had been a huge gamble
but he really had thought it would pay off. Had thought
that the spectre of being revealed to his daughter as an outandout
baddie would have frightened Felix into silence.
Suddenly he saw that it could easily not frighten him at all.
He could lie his way out of it. He could lie his way out of
anything. Just the same — surely, surely he would be afraid
that Octavia would at least half believe it. He had his own
mobile phone print-out, showing the time he had called her
that morning; she wasn’t stupid, wasn’t that blind. Even to
Felix’s faults. There was also the fact that it was Felix who
had first put the idea of the Tuscan holiday with Lauren
into her head. It would be a huge risk for him to run.
Surely, surely he wouldn’t do it.
Tom felt himself beginning to sweat. This was going to
be a long morning.
Pat Ford was very tired. Tired and upset. This whole thing
was beginning to get her down. The tension, the waiting,
keeping it from the patients — especially sharp-eared and
-eyed old Lucilla Sanderson. She was beginning to think it
just wasn’t going to happen, that she would be trapped at
Bartles House for the rest of her life, with the endless stairs,
the eccentric plumbing, the impossibility of attracting staff.
And the last straw that had laid itself on her increasingly
narrow back this morning had been when Mrs Tims, one of
the two cleaners, had given notice. ‘I’m going to have to
leave, Mrs Ford. The work is just too hard. Those floors are
murder. And it’s the hours as well, what with the journey
and everything. I’m sorry, but I really can’t stay any longer.
I can get better-paid, easier work in Felthamstone.’
When Mrs Tims had left the office, Pat Ford sat down at
her desk and burst into tears. She was so tired, it hurt.
Suddenly she decided she had to know. Or try and find out.
One way or another. Even if the news was bad, knowing
would help.
She got up and shut the office door; and then did what
Mr Ford had always forbidden her to do — she phoned Michael Carlton. He was such a nice man, so helpful and
reasonable. Surely she could at least ask him if he knew
anything yet, when they might at least be able to look
towards moving. If ever.
Mr Carlton was out, his secretary said; she was very
sorry, could she help?
‘No, I don’t think so,’ said Pat. A fresh wave of weariness