âDo you know anything about that, Jacob?' he asked mildly.
âOf course not, Grandfather.'
If he realized how much that word irritates me he wouldn't assume on a relationship of any kind, the old man considered. He does himself no good.
He shook the newspaper and tapped creases out before turning a page. âI see old Pettigrew has finally hung up his wig,' he remarked equably. âIt was a race whether he would collapse
in media re
or in a home for the mentally deranged. Only sixty-four; he should have been good for another twenty years.'
He darted a glance at the other two and maliciously hoped he'd plunged them into despair over the likelihood of his own longevity.
Maddie came back fussing over domestic shortcomings. Her aunt's complaints had obviously stirred her to reply in kind. The Barkers had been given a week's leave, which meant she was without chauffeur and cook. Since Matthew had expected them to stay on longer at Larchmoor Place, Mrs B hadn't left enough ready prepared in the refrigerator to last them all until she was back. The freezer cabinet appeared to be stacked with unrecognizable packages which were beyond Maddie's sparse catering experience. There was no alternative to traipsing into Windsor for dinner.
This meant she'd have to drive and forgo the wine, since Gus surely wouldn't, and Jake would insist on riding the Kawasaki. Claudia, enduring this recitation of minor hardships had been insufficiently sympathetic. It had rattled Maddie and sent the blood rushing up her neck to stain her face.
Sir Matthew rose and selected a cigarette from the box on the coffee table. As he straightened he fixed Jake with a grim, judgmental stare. âNow that the telephone has come free, you'd better ring back and express your abject apologies to Claudia for her disasters of the journey.'
âWhy? What's it to do with Jake?' Maddie shrilled, momentarily defensive.
âExplain, Jacob.'
âWhat the hell! It's no big deal. I'd run a bit low on gas is all. So I borrowed theirs.' He knew it was pointless trying to deny a charge when the old freak homed in on a
potential petty crime. He shrugged, turning his too-charming, Hugh Grant smile on his stepmother, but she was already too ruffled to be receptive.
âRight then. Do that. I'm most displeased, Jake.'
Bloody hell, he groaned inside. But she was his meal ticket. If it wasn't one old harpy it was the other. Now he'd have to cringe to Claudia who was totally charm-proofed. He'd need to hold the phone at arm's length. Or lay it down while he dropped his pants and mooned.
He sucked in his cheeks, breathed âSorry, Stepmama,' in Maddie's direction and tossed his head so that the wayward lock of hair fell further over his eyes.
âThat's a good boy,' she said, forgiving him readily.
Claudia was another matter. Her tirade reached Jake from a couple of yards away. It wasn't all on account of his actions, he guessed. Plenty else had upset the old scorpion and he was a convenient receptacle for her spleen. Which she was no slouch at.
âOK then?' he said brightly as she paused at last for breath. âWell, I'll send a cheque along to cover what I used. Cheerio then,' and he hung up.
With the purring phone still in her hand, Claudia crouched, shaking with anger, on the second stair up to the loft. From the sitting-room poured out Miranda's scales. Diminished sevenths. She'd been at them for over half an hour without cease.
Claudia stood up and brushed invisible creases from her skirt. She drew several deep breaths until she was again in control. Then she twisted the doorknob and went in to confront the girl. The music went on. She might have known it: Miranda was entranced. Claudia leaned forward and shook her by the shoulder. Her hands fell into her lap and she looked startled awake.
âThat bike of Jacob's,' her mother said coldly, âwhat is its licence number?'
Almost automatically Miranda reeled it off.
âI thought so,' her mother said with satisfaction. âThis time he has really gone too far.'
Miranda waited with bowed head until Claudia had left. Time now to turn to the Bach Preludes and Fugues. She left the sheet music on the floor where it had spilled. She didn't need it. She raised her hands and stared ahead, starting with the first one in C.
The temperature on Lido was again hovering over 38 degrees at breakfast. Giulia floated into the kitchen barely covered in a chiffon negligee and languidly waving a fan of finely woven palm strips. It was shaped like an Ace of Spades, with an insistently Venetian motif of black-edged eyeholes to double its use as a mask.
âToday,' she announced, âwill be a stinker.' She emphasized the slangy word with some pride. âSo what do you young people intend to do? Venice will be teeming with tourists, all sweaty and dripping
gelati.
I should not recommend it.'
Yesterday Franco had suggested a gondola trip up the Grand Canal. They would cross the lagoon by their own motor launch moored below her window, and this for Jess had been the most attractive part of the arrangement. Her ambivalent position here as guest-prisoner needed clarification. It was time she took over and made her bid for freedom.
Whether it ran counter to Charles Stone's plans for her barely mattered now. The game had been played his way long enough. She intended to introduce her own rules. Too bad if it momentarily peeved him. He'd said he admired her independence. Let him now live by his words. She looked forward to seeing his face as she walked in on him unannounced.
Her hopes were centred on the motorboat. However well Charles knew her, these people here couldn't have guessed at her longtime love of the internal combustion engine. Father had once claimed she was born with an adjustable spanner, not a silver spoon, in her mouth. Let her once take a trip with one of the boys at the controls and she would pick up on any of the boat's special eccentricities. Later she'd choose her moment, once she'd a plan for getting out of Italy.
Her new appearance made her current passport useless. Even if she passed through Immigration by nonchalantly waving its EC cover, it could still leave a trail to her which one of the boys might pick up on. Getting other false papers was out of the question. She'd need to give some thought to going stateless.
The Italian newspapers which she'd found in the house didn't make much sense to her, but the television news was easier. Last night there had been a heated discussion about the stream of illegal immigrants landing along the eastern and southern coastlines. The boats bringing them from Albania didn't have to return empty. Surely she could bribe some needy skipper to take her along?
Once she went missing the search for her would logically start at Marco Polo airport or on the westbound roads out of Mestre on the mainland. It would take some time before it occurred that she might head east, away from the direction of home.
âYou promised,' she reminded Franco, âthat you'd lend me your camera and today we'd do the tourist thing. Crowds don't bother me. It's all part of Venice in June.'
His gaze flickered to Stefano who shrugged. âGive the lady what she wants, of course. We'll make up a threesome.'
âAs you wish,' Giulia conceded. âSo I will phone the
Gritti Palazzo
and make sure you have a table for lunch on the
Terrazza del Doge.'
âWon't you come with us?' Jess asked her.
âThank you, no. It's cooler here on Lido. And I have little commissions to attend to. I will mail your cards for you when I go shopping. Then you needn't bother looking for a postbox. How many cards have you?'
âFour or five,' Jess said vaguely. âI'll bring them down.' She knew Giulia would destroy them. The one that really mattered was Eddie's. She'd find some way of posting that herself.
âComfortable shoes. That is important,' Giulia counselled,
having adopted the motherly role. âIt is not all gondolas. You will walk and walk and walk all day.'
Â
They left at a little before nine, Jess in a cotton trouser-suit of pale green, open-toed sandals and a floppy straw hat. The boys, accustomed to sunlight, wore shades, but only on the water. The boat purred away from the mooring, and Jess gave it full marks for maintenance. She had seen Stefano's hand hover over a key board inside a kitchen cupboard, but she was confident she'd be able to start the engine in any case. It would simply take a tad longer without the key.
She found she remembered the navigable lanes from her previous visit. They were clearly marked and a strict speed limit was adhered to, at least during daylight. It was only at night that, in bed, she'd heard the wide boys of Lido out racing, and the water slapping against the walls below as it sucked away at the foundations.
Stefano was cruising the waterbus lane, passing the jetties of
Sant' Elena
and
Giardini Biennale
where small crowds waited for transport to
San Marco.
At
Arsenale
he turned in under the archway and proceeded to an inner quay where Franco leapt out to tie up.
âAll history,' Stefano said sardonically, waving an arm to embrace the proud towers topped by their Venetian winged lions. âOnce from here we ruled the world, which the Mediterranean then was. In these shipyards sixteen thousand skilled workers could build and equip a galley in less than a day. Ask me what this place has now become. A show place, yet another gallery to hold things that have no purpose.'
âArt is its own purpose,' Franco rejoined without heat. It was obviously a familiar argument. He'd finished with the ropes and held out a hand to help Jess ashore.
âFrom now we walk. It is up to you to choose the route. I have a map here for you, but later you will get lost just the same. Probably more quickly if you consult it.' Stefano was
positively prancing alongside, searching her face with dark eyes full of mischief.
She knew he was right. Everyone eventually got lost in the narrow, wriggling alleys. If she'd wanted to impress the boys with how streetwise (canalwise?) she was here, she couldn't. In fact that would be undesirable.
âAt risk of boring you, because you've done it a hundred times, it has to be the Doge's Palace first and then San Marco. After that there's the Peggy Guggenheim collection, the
Accademia,
Rialto Bridge, the fishmarket,
La Fenice â¦
But I think you both had better sort out the order for me.'
âI leave it to my cousin to escort you to the Doge's dungeons,' Stefano offered, âwhile I sit in the piazza like an English gentleman and enjoy a Grappa. When you reach the top of the palace you may wave to me and I will deign to acknowledge you.'
âSo kind,' Jess said. âCome on, Franco. I suppose we queue to get in.'
Â
Giulia had been right about comfortable shoes. One of the sandal straps was rubbing up a blister before they had completed the first two visits. Jess thought regretfully of her scruffy old trainers left at home in the narrowboat. A pharmacist supplied a neat dressing for her and they met up with Stefano for cappuccinos.
After crossing the Grand Canal to the
Accademia'
s cool shade she set a more leisurely pace through the lofty rooms full of Old Masters, until at a little before one they took a waterbus back to
Santa Maria del Giglio
and lunch at the
Gritti Palazzo
which overlooked the dazzling lagoon.
âI rather think,' Jess said sadly, âthe Guggenheim will have to wait for another occasion.' The combination of artichoke-stuffed turbot,
vitello veneto
and heady wine against the gentle background of Vivaldi's music was soporific. When their gondola came she was ready to stretch voluptuously on the velvet cushions and rest her head on Stefano's ready shoulder for a dream progress the length of
the crowded Grand Canal. On their return journey, making way for a Japanese wedding procession in four floral-wreathed gondolas, they pulled in near the Rialto Bridge.
âJust one thing more,' Stefano insisted, brushing her ear with his lips. âBoutiques. You cannot spend a day in Venice without shopping. It is what modern Venice is for after all. Just five steps on land and we will show you Aladdin's cave.'
Nothing could dissuade him from buying her a carnival mask which she admired: a delicate upper-face covered in white and silver sequins and edged with cocks' tail-feathers dyed peacock blue. Then Franco led her into a glassware boutique where she chose an emerald-green paperweight with an orange and black twister at its centre.
She knew that when she finally left Venice she would be leaving these gifts behind. That could be taken as an insult, which she didn't intend. For a moment, as Franco steered them back across the lagoon to Lido she was almost tempted to give up on the idea. Yet the way she was kept as an ironically honoured hostage was demeaning. She owed them for that.
Besides, just after the gondola had delivered them back to the piazza San Marco she had hit on a possible method to get away. In the little gardens where they sat a while before walking back to their boat, a group of backpackers were lying on the grass with cans of fruit juice and ice creams. Three had little Union Jacks sewn on to their gear. When two of the girls got up and moved off towards the public toilets she made her own excuses and trailed some way behind.
High partition walls enclosed the utility and she waited for them until they were fixing their makeup, screwing their mouths to take on fresh lipstick. âHi guys,' Jess greeted them, âhow long you here for?'
The redhead darted her a look that meant back-off. âLong enough to piddle, is all,' she sneered.
The other shrugged an apology. âLeaving tomorrow,' she said. âHeading south.'
âWould you do me a favour?'
They exchanged streetwise glances. âIt will cost you,' said the redhead.
âJust to post this card to my boyfriend in England. I gotta coupla fellows waiting outside. Eyeties, and they're the jealous kind. Here, see.'
She produced the postcard addressed to Eddie and a five Euro note.
âTen,' said the redhead.
âYou're sharp, but OK.' She handed them over. âYou travelling by train?'
âNuh. Got offered a lift in a carrier's truck, four of us, down to Bari.' Since the commercial transaction they appeared to trust her more.
âLike to make that five? I'll pay my way with the nosh.' Again the girls looked at each other. It's on, Jess decided. They take me for a sucker.
âMaybe. Depends.'
âOn what?'
âIf you can get up early. Five-thirty at Piazzale Roma. It's at the far end â¦'
âI know it. I'll be there.' This was the perfect pick-up point for joining the mainland. She was really in luck.
âWhat about the fellas?'
Jess put her nose in the air. âPlenty more where they came from. Same in Bari, for that matter.'
The girls grinned. âSee yuh then,' said the dark girl.
âOn the dot,' the other warned, âor we go without you.'
âCool,' she told them and watched as they shouldered their bags and went off. She waited another two minutes, renewing her makeup, then slipped out to rejoin Franco and his cousin in the shade of the little gardens.
âWe did buy you a cornetto,' Stefano said mockingly, âbut you took so long making yourself beautiful that I did you a service by eating it myself.' He showed the tip of his tongue
and made a suggestive licking movement while holding her eyes with his own. Franco had turned away a moment before and missed seeing her repugnance.
Â
âIt's been a wonderful day,' she said as the powered boat headed back towards Lido. âThank you both. I shall always remember it.'
This time Franco was at the controls and as he smiled back at her his attention was taken by something beyond. Stefano, picking up on it, swivelled in his seat and grunted. âLook,' he said, pointing back inland to distant flashes over the northern mountains. âIt's going to be a noisy night. Heat's been building all day. When the storm hits the lagoon it will be really spectacular.'
At present the water was like sheet silver. Not a breath of wind, unnaturally calm. She'd never known a storm here but she guessed it wouldn't make for an easy escape.
Â
The distant flashing continued for over two hours with no accompanying thunder, then a little after seven it rushed down from the heights to strike with demon fury. From a breathless stillness all hell broke loose. Torrential rain lashed the lagoon and the shutters of the room they ate in clanged against the outer walls while all the candles streaked sideways and went out. Through the darkness the boys struggled to fix the shutters across and close the tall windows. They had to shout to be heard above the buffeting of the wind.
Giulia was muttering, hunched in her chair. âDear God,' she said, âthis could go on all night.'
So much for my plans, Jess thought. I'd end a drowned rat to venture out in this. If I wasn't struck by lightning.
She knew that, curiously, the safest place to be in an electric storm was inside a car, totally surrounded by metal. Fibreglass adrift on water offered no protection at all. The escape had to be put off. There was no chance of keeping her rendezvous with the girl backpackers. All that duplicity
for nothing. Except that they might have the decency to post that card to Eddie. Even then, in view of the relaxed Italian postal system, she reckoned he'd not receive it for another four days.