Authors: Judy Astley
âSo how're you two getting on?' April, on the phone, sounded gleeful for gossip.
âOK, so far. The odd tetchy moment but we're surviving,' Jay told her sister. âAre you coming down for the do?'
âWouldn't miss it for anything. I want to see how the Club King is with Delphine. Do you think he's one of those people who has two completely separate lives?'
Jay laughed. âWell if he does I hope he's good at
keeping
them separate.'
âHey but,' April sounded halfway serious, âdon't you think you should say something to her?'
âMe? Are you mad? What could I say? “Oh, by the way Delphine, did you realize that bloke you're marrying, he's got an interest in the kind of dancing that would melt your collection of formation medals.” And suppose we're wrong?'
âWrong? He's inviting your cleaners to audition for him, how can we be wrong?'
âTrue, true, but . . . Delphine's happy. Maybe she always will be. How can we spoil it for her?'
âHow? Come on Jay, she's spoiled things enough for you over the years . . .'
âYes . . . but that was then. Honestly, unless she does something really, really terrible then I'm not going to be vindictive.'
âOK, your call. But I'd say . . .' and April giggled, âI'd say that making you wear pale peach could arguably come under “really, really terrible” . . .'
It was going OK so far. No real arguments, no more than a few fizzing comments. You weren't sure till later if they were bitchy or not. Maybe that was what ten far-apart years had done to the two of them. Jay and Delphine had grown up enough to get on reasonably well together.
Jay was conscious of trying hard. She cooked meal
after meal, pulling out all the stops she'd got as if she had something to prove. She told herself she was just doing her best to be a good, welcoming hostess, but it was a strain. Even Greg had started wondering if it was ever going to be all right just to slob out with a takeaway Chinese again.
Jay took Delphine to the Swannery to have a look round.
âI can't believe you're moving into somewhere you've never seen!' Jay said as they drove over there. âIt seems odd that I've been inside and you haven't. I wouldn't have thought it was . . . well wait till you see it.'
âI know what you mean,' Delphine said as they wandered from room to stylish, minimal room. âIt needs warming up a bit. A lot more colour perhaps but . . . no clutter, no
bits
.'
âI just wanted to ask you though . . . these paintings . . .' Jay led her cousin up the metal spiral staircase to the office area. âAre they actually . . .'
âOriginal? No,' Delphine told her as she admired the Picasso. âCharles was married before, to an artist. She specialized in exact copies, for people who have to store the real things for insurance purposes. Sad really, I mean if you've got a genuine version but you have to hang up a fake, it sort of cancels out the pleasure of owning the real thing.'
She looked out of the top window, down to the outside terrace that ran all the way along the length of the sitting-room windows. âThe outside's a bit bare too. I'm going to fill it with plants. Tubs and tubs of traditional English roses and bulbs.'
âNot hanging baskets though.' Jay couldn't keep her voice from showing how appalled she felt at the thought. Win, whose garden was a hymn to concrete and gravel, was keen on hanging baskets (cats couldn't dig in them and they didn't need weeding). She bought
four fully planted, ready-to-flower ones at the garden centre each spring, two for the front porch, two for the back door.
âOh I don't know, I can just see it. Six mixed baskets of petunias and fuchsias. Multicoloured.' She looked at Jay's stricken face and laughed. âJoke! You don't know me at all now, do you?'
Probably not, Jay conceded privately, but, looking round this gloriously minimal place, she'd be willing to put money on it being up for sale within six months, during which Delphine would be wheeling Charles round a selection of plushly carpeted show homes out in the various small towns of Surrey.
The girls were coping very well without her, Jay realized. Dishing the Dirt was at last functioning exactly as she and Barbara had always planned. Strange that it had taken the reappearance of Delphine for that to happen. Just shows, she thought, organization is the better part of method. Anya and Katinka really could run the show almost on their own; each one, for this couple of weeks, had been designated to be in charge of two other girls and simply get on with the job with no fuss, no problems. She was in charge, but from a distance. She was, at last, not having to be âhands on' as Charles would so succinctly put it.
Delphine had gone to the Registrar's office, to make sure that all the relevant official details were intact. There was only so much you could do from Australia and by way of your future husband. She had to take her various documents along in person and had made Win feel useful by taking her along as well.
Jay lay on the sofa, relishing being completely alone in her own home for a couple of hours. Daffodil and Cicely were thumping about in the kitchen, miaowing a lot and bickering away over a catnip toy. Rory and Ellie were at school, Imogen was at a lecture and Greg
was out at a site meeting. Just before lunch she and Delphine were due at the Body and Soul spa hotel a couple of miles away for a weekend of pampering and pre-wedding bodywork. She closed her eyes, relishing the absolute relaxation. Then the doorbell went. Pat from across the road was on the step, looking keyed up and eager-eyed.
âPat! Hi, how are you? We're not on for an extra Conley class this morning are we?'
âNo, not that . . . you know what you said about painting the “k” out of my name on the old school wall?'
âYes . . . but . . .'
âWell I've got the paint! And a day off! And I've checked with the caretaker, there's no-one in the hall this morning. If you've got a spare half-hour . . .'
And so here they were. Two properly grown-up, otherwise responsible women sneaking into council premises with Waitrose carrier bags that concealed brushes, gold paint and sandpaper.
âIf we were blokes no-one would bat an eyelid,' Pat said, peering into her bag and searching for the right brush. âWe should have overalls and a ladder, just to be on the safe side.'
âWe're righting a wrong,' Jay reassured her. âThey can't argue with that.'
The two of them worked at the name. It wasn't as easy as they'd first thought. Changing âPatrickia' to âPatricia' meant a lot of moving of letters. Somehow, over more than an hour's careful concentration, they removed the âk', then obliterated the âc' and the âi', replacing them carefully with the gold paint so they took up the right amount of space.
âNot a bad morning's work,' Pat said, standing back and admiring their efforts. âWe could almost set ourselves up as calligraphers.'
âIf there was any call for it that was at ground level. I'm not going up beyond first floor. But you're right, it's not bad at all.' Jay agreed. âWe've done you proud. But a whole morning â oh God.' She looked at her watch. âLook at the time!' Delphine would have been back at least half an hour. No-one was home. She'd be sitting on the doorstep fuming.
And she was. âWhere the hell have you been?' Delphine said as Pat screeched up in her car and dropped Jay off. âI was only gone an hour and you didn't think to leave a key, did you?'
âEr . . . sorry about that. Been painting the local school hall.'
âOh, you do that as well, do you? I'll keep you in mind for the flat. I'd love to see you up a twenty-foot ladder. That ceiling â I'd rather like it pink. Now â are we going to get ready for my wedding or not?'
This was going to be harder than he'd thought. The house was full of people all the time. Mum had gone into domestic-efficiency overdrive in the days since Delphine had got here. She was either doing unusually fancy things with food or she and Delphine were all over the house surrounded with magazines, talking about wedding outfits and the best place to get shoes. And even if he had the place to himself he could hardly stash all this food away in the kitchen fridge. Someone was going to notice four boxes of Marks and Spencers chicken in white wine sauce, a big bag of rocket and Parmesan salad, two packs of dauphinois potatoes and four individual sticky toffee puddings. Worse than that, someone was very likely to eat them and then he'd be stuffed â this lot had cleaned out his bank account.
In the end, after hiding the food under a rhododendron in the front garden where it would stay more safely chilled than if he hid it under his bed, he
retrieved it quickly for fear of foxes and cats dragging it all out, and went down to the basement to see Imogen.
âWhat's it for?' she asked, eyeing the contents of his carrier bags with a look that was too much like sheer greed.
âI'm doing a sort of dinner. Not here, at someone else's house. I just wanted it all to be out of . . . well out of Mum's way, you know?' He trusted she'd get it, understand that whatever he was up to she was being asked to keep it to herself. She knew what it was like â it wasn't that long ago that she was starting to go out with Tristan and sneaking him into her bedroom at all hours of the night, and then out again before the house got under way in the mornings. He'd known about that and never told, and she knew it. She owed him.
âOK. For Friday is it? Tris and me'll try to keep our hands off it all, but you know, sticky toffee pud . . . well that's going to be tempting.'
âOh Moggie, please just don't, right?'
She laughed. âDon't panic. I'll keep it safe for you. Hope she's worth it.'
Rory grinned at her, feeling embarrassed. âOh she is. Well, I don't know. I think she might be.'
Oh God, Samantha looked fantastic. Rory didn't think she was wearing a bra â how could she be with a halter-neck dress, unless it tied up round her neck and got tangled up with the dress-strap bits? If she was, and he was required (well he could dream) at some point to delve about inside the clothing, he hoped he'd be up to sorting out the underwear thing. The great naked swathe of skin on her back was just so gleaming and strokable he was finding it almost impossible to stop himself running his fingers across it. Shelley had, as Hal had so inelegantly put it, scrubbed up nice as well. She didn't seem to mind his clumsy compliment and
both girls had gone giggly and swung in towards each other as they laughed, the way they always did. Why did they do that, he wondered, as he slid the dish of chicken into the microwave? Why did they always lean against each other as if they might fall over? Or did they do it for effect? Their hair, both of them with plenty of the long blonde stuff, it sort of swung together for a moment, like something you just wanted to get hold of.
âFabulous place.' Samantha wandered around, holding her glass of champagne and looking as if the flat was just made for her. She so fitted in. She'd so fit in if she was lying naked under the crisp white sheets on that huge bed. Then she said, âWhose is it?'
Tricky one to answer, that. âUm . . . someone in the family.' he shrugged. That would do. It wasn't even a lie, well not exactly.
âAnd don't they mind you using it?' Shelley chimed in. What was this, cross-examination time? Couldn't they just sprawl on the sofas and look model-ish?
âNo, it's cool. I told you.'
Hal wasn't saying much. He wandered round and had a look but then completely relaxed and just started in on the beer, seeming pretty much at home. That was the great thing about blokes, they didn't have that stupid curiosity that girls had. Girls had to ask, had to probe, had to know every last bit about everything.
âCan we smoke in here?' Samantha asked, looking at the massive windows. âOr should we go out there?'
Shit. One thing he hadn't got, the key to the terrace doors. He wished he had, he really didn't want to leave this place with the stench of fag in the air. That sort of thing stayed for ever. He'd have to look in the kitchen cupboards and find some air-freshener.
âIt's fine,' he had to tell Sam. âYou can smoke in here, no problem.'
They must be mad, Ellie thought. Completely stupid, stonking crazy. At first she'd thought it wasn't true. It couldn't be, Rory wouldn't do anything as blatantly idiotic as that. But Tasha had that light in her eyes that always glowed when she was really believing the thing she was saying and there was no way Ellie could pretend to herself that they were wrong.
âEveryone's going,' Tasha told her. âYou have to come, it'll be rad.' And she did have to go. How else could she be sure they wouldn't just wreck the place? She felt responsible, even though she told herself she definitely wasn't. She tried to phone Rory but he'd turned his mobile off. She could, she thought, just stay at home, watch telly and go to bed. Homework was a possibility even, but no way would she be able to concentrate on it, not while she knew what was going on out there, this party up at the Swannery. Good thing Mum and Delphine had gone to the spa for the night, otherwise she'd have felt she ought to tell them. She wouldn't have wanted to but she'd have felt she should and she'd have spent all evening being twitchy, waiting for the disaster that would have to happen and then the disappointed fallout. Instead, there was only Dad to deal with.
âAll right if I go round Amanda's?' she said casually over their pizza supper (which she could hardly eat).
âSure. Want a lift?' Greg asked.
âNah, 'sfine. I'll get the bus.' He wouldn't argue â there was football on Sky. He'd mentioned it that morning when he'd told Jay and Delphine that he wouldn't have time to miss them.
Ellie raced out of the house and round the corner before her dad got the chance to look out of the window and see that she was heading the wrong way if she really was going to Amanda's. She wondered if she
should have dressed up a bit. But what was the point? She was on her way to stop the party, not to join it.