A Village in Jeopardy (Turnham Malpas 16) (10 page)

BOOK: A Village in Jeopardy (Turnham Malpas 16)
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‘And I am too for seeing you.’

‘Tea, Dad?’

‘Yes, please.’

Beth got out another mug, poured him his tea and then sat down again in the chair on the other side of the Aga to her mother. ‘Everything all right in the village, Dad?’

‘Apart from three people leaving in a hurry and we don’t know where two of them have gone, yes, I suppose you could say everything’s fine.’

‘Who’s left?’

‘Johnny has gone home to Brazil we assume, leaving Alice desperate. Marcus has gone to London to see about his book being published. Before you ask, he has finally got a publisher and I understand from Alice he has taken all the money from their joint bank account. And now Dottie.’

At the mention of the third missing person Beth’s attention was immediately focused. ‘Dad! Where’s she gone?’

‘That’s it, we don’t know.’

‘Why has she gone?’

‘All because Willie made an unfortunate remark in the pub the other night and Dottie took serious umbrage and went away very first thing the following morning.’

Beth, who had depended on Dottie right since her first coming to clean at the Rectory said, ‘Right! I’ll be back for my tea. Don’t throw it away.’

‘Where are you going?’

‘I’m going next door to see Willie, of course. I’m not having this.’

The door to Willie and Sylvia’s cottage was propped open so Beth marched in full of anger to get to the bottom of what Willie had said to make Dottie leave the village.

Willie was watching
Countdown
but when he heard Beth’s voice he immediately called out, ‘You’re home, love! Come in, come in.’ He found the remote, switched off his programme, delighted that she had called. ‘Well, Beth love, how nice to see you. Sit yourself down. I was thinking the other day about how you and Alex used to love to come here for your tea and we’d have a game of Snakes and Ladders or Ludo or something. Didn’t we have some fun? Eh?’

‘Willie! Dottie’s gone. What on earth did you say to her?’

Willie was alarmed by the anger in her voice, he who’d always felt like her substitute grandfather.

‘It wasn’t anything much, just caught her by surprise.’

‘So, what was it? It must have been serious for her to run away; she’s not the running away kind. She’s strong, and she knows how to talk to people and I need her back, here in Turnham Malpas.’

Willie shuffled about a little, straightened the newspaper and put it in the magazine rack, asked her if she wanted a cup of tea and said Sylvia wouldn’t be long, he didn’t know what was keeping her.

‘Was it about her being a prostitute when she was younger? Because I know all about that.’

Willie had to be truthful to this girl he’d known since the day she was born.

‘Well, I’m afraid it was. I shouldn’t have said what I said, but I did. It was nothing but the truth and I’m so sorry about it, you’ve no idea, but she didn’t give me the chance to apologise. She went the very next morning before I’d even got up. How do you know about what . . . she was like when she was a younger woman?’

‘She told me one day.’

Willie was horrified. ‘Told you? She’d no business to.’

‘Well, she did. Now all you can do is tell me anything at all that you know about her cousins. I know she has lots of cousins.’ Rather threateningly Beth added, ‘It’s the least you can do. Given the circumstances.’

‘There’s the one who lives in Little Derehams, but I don’t know her name; there’s another one called Irene what lives on her own and always wants Dottie to go live with her because she hates being lonely.’

‘So where does she live?’

‘Somewhere Bristol way, I think.’

‘You don’t know any more than that? Do you think Sylvia might know?’

‘She might, but I doubt it. The Fosketts have always bred like rabbits. Dottie once added up how many cousins she had and when she got to eighteen she had to stop, but she said there were many more.’

‘When Sylvia comes home I’ll ask her. We’ve got to find her; I can’t bear her to be sad. I’m surprised at you, Willie, saying something about her past life to her. You should be ashamed.’ Beth sat down to wait, saddened by her lack of progress, and Willie reluctantly had to decide that she had grown up since she’d gone to Cambridge, and he came to the conclusion she wouldn’t be wanting a game of Ludo, not no more. He sighed for past happiness.

Sylvia didn’t know where Dottie might have gone either. ‘You see, love, it all happened so quick. She just went. I’m real sorry about what Willie said. Will you forgive him? He doesn’t want to be at odds with you, nor Alex for that matter.’

‘We can’t do nothing; we’ve got to try to find her. You’ve no idea how she helped me, when I came back from Africa in such a state, more than any other person except Dad. Only Dottie could talk to me without tiptoeing round me as if I was a piece of Royal Worcester; I needed her and it’s the least I can do after what she did for me. So, I’ll be back.’

‘Right, Beth, but remember me and Willie love you no matter what. I sat with you either side of the Aga in your Mum’s kitchen feeding you, and your Mum feeding Alex, or vice versa, when you were hardly big enough to have left the hospital and I love you as if you were my own. Don’t fall out permanent, will you?’

Beth turned back to smile at her, whispered ‘Thanks,’ and went home.

It was just as she was getting into bed that night she remembered once Dottie being without her phone at home due to the lines coming down at the bottom end of the village in a storm, so she’d asked Caroline to ring her cousin to tell her she’d no phone. Caroline had put the cousin’s number in her phone and promised to ring when she had a minute at the surgery. Beth decided she’d check her mum’s phone first thing in the morning. By the time she woke, however, Caroline had already gone to the village hall to help organise the coffee morning so Beth had to wait.

 

The most ecstatic person in the crowd at the coffee morning was Alice, because at eight fifteen that very morning the postman had delivered a letter postmarked Rio de Janeiro through Alice’s door.

She thrust the envelope open and began to read, her eyes filling with tears. ‘My dear Alice’ it began. Her heart missed a beat.

 

I am a fool to run away from the very beat of my heart and come back to meaningless, stupidly endless, mind-numbing work in an office that revolts me with its plush, excessively expensive furnishings and assistants behaving more like slaves than real people. It is all so sickening to me since I met you. Somehow while living near you my values have undergone an almighty change. I no longer revere the extravagant lifestyle I had before I met you. I long to come back to you. I left because I could not believe that someone wanted me only for myself and not my wealth and position. All my life I have lived amongst moneyed people, and it is hard to find someone so genuine that they love you for yourself and not for your status and what your personal wealth can do for them. I’d heard those very same words of yours before several times, and I didn’t believe you meant them. It felt like a well-repeated old story
.

But now I know it wasn’t. You are the most genuine person I know and realise, with your high principles about marriage and fidelity, what it cost you to say what you did. If you say yes to a proposal of marriage from me I shall come back to Turnham Malpas immediately and make a life for the two of us. To marry in the church where my ancestors were christened, married and buried for generations, and God willing to have our own children christened there, is all I want. To be married to you, Alice March, for I yearn for you every moment
.

It is what I want more than anything in the world and I long for your reply. I know there are hurdles to overcome, namely a divorce from Marcus, but perhaps if his book gets published . . . he won’t mind too much
.

All my love, my dearest
,

Johnny

 

Alice folded the letter, opened it, read it again, folded it and held it pressed to her cheek. So after all the pain she’d gone through and now . . . this. Oh! Johnny, oh! Johnny! I love you! More than life itself. It had taken only one small phrase from Johnny to rid her of Marcus and frankly one small phrase was all he deserved. Alice glanced at the clock; she’d be late for accompanying the dancing group! Help! But her heart sang as she raced upstairs, sang louder when she recollected she’d no need to listen for Marcus tapping away at his computer any more because Johnny would see to that for her. One glance in the bathroom mirror and Alice recognised the face of a woman in love and she rejoiced.

At the dance recital Alice accompanied the group with more vigour and enthusiasm than in any of the many rehearsals they had done. They were Irish and danced with such speed and delight that when she finished playing Alice felt as exhausted as the dancers. The crowd in the church hall clapped and clapped and begged an encore. Luckily they’d got the music for another one that Alice had familiarised herself with just in case. The roof almost lifted off the hall at the end of their exhibition of Irish Dance and Bridget, who’d planned it all, was thrilled. Alice got a hug and a kiss from her. ‘Oh! Alice, I’ve never heard you play so well. Are you sure you haven’t got Irish blood in you?’

‘Not that I know of. Right! I’ll go get us a drink.’

‘Sure the drinks are on me; here, take this,’ said Bridget, holding out a twenty-pound note.

‘I don’t want that, I did it for the flood fund!’

‘Well, put the whole note in their money box and tell them to keep the change, then.’ Alice got another hug, then Bridget dashed off to make some announcements about the raffle and spur everyone on to buy from the stalls. Her rallying tone had the desired effect and everyone who came endeavoured to find
something
to spend their money on. There were plenty of quality things to choose from. Bridget had even got an Irish Tourist Board company to come from miles away and give a percentage of all the money they took for their souvenirs and traditional handcrafts to the cause. Little Derehams and Penny Fawcett had both had collections to help swell the fund too.

Caroline did well on her nearly new stall, though Sylvia, who had pledged to give her a hand, felt uncomfortable after Beth’s difficult visit the previous day. ‘I’m so sorry about Willie and Dottie. Heaven alone knows where she’s gone.’

‘Look, don’t worry. Willie shouldn’t have reminded her, but he did only say the truth . . . but he still shouldn’t have said it. Beth’s very close to Dottie, after . . . you know . . . Africa and all that, so I do wish for her sake we could find her.’

‘I tell you what; I could go see her cousin in Little Derehams. She might know where she’s gone. In fact she might be here. When we have a quiet moment I’ll go have a look round.’

‘Thank you, Sylvia.’

It was the turn of the village school choir to perform next and their parents had turned up in droves to support their children. A space was cleared for the choir to assemble themselves with Bridget announcing their programme of songs, and the recorder recital too. The next ten minutes were exceedingly special to everyone, not just the parents.

Kate Fitch, the headteacher, was profusely thanked for the children’s excellent performance and she said a few words. ‘Thank you! Weren’t the children wonderful? They’ve worked so hard to entertain you, and I love them all. My staff and I are delighted to have the children invited to perform and contribute to such a worthy cause.’ Caroline noticed that Kate’s husband Craddock was there, but not looking his usual bright self. His complexion, always pale at the best of times, appeared drawn as though he had worries he needed to keep to himself, but the smile of appreciation he gave Kate was genuine enough. Business in Turnham Malpas as elsewhere was going through a bad time and Caroline did wonder if business worries were beginning to affect him. She caught his eye and he came across to speak with her.

‘Caroline, my dear, how are you? Looks like you’re doing well with the nearly new?’ He kissed her on both cheeks. ‘Are you keeping well? You look full of life.’

‘I am, despite the years going faster and faster.’

He smiled ruefully. ‘I know the feeling. Bridget’s doing well with this flood victim’s fund. She’s good at rallying people, isn’t she?’

‘Yes.’ Caroline laughed. ‘Has she been rallying you?’

‘Just for a donation.’

Caroline got the impression that maybe Craddock Fitch wasn’t quite as willing as he usually was to hand out the money that had flowed in all directions in ever increasing amounts since he first came to live here. They’d all benefited in one way or another. She caught him watching Kate behaving in her accustomed efficient headteacher way as she collected together the school recorders; she saw how precious Kate was to him and she was glad. Still there was this surprising underlying feeling that he . . . in a matter of weeks it seemed he suddenly looked his years. How odd.

 

About eleven thirty Beth arrived. Still niggling at the back of Caroline’s mind was what Beth had said about not being happy at Cambridge and it worried her. Maybe a gap year would have been better for Beth, whereas Alex appeared to have taken everything in his stride.

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