The Four of Us (46 page)

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Authors: Margaret Pemberton

BOOK: The Four of Us
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Finding Serena installed in her home, in her bed, had put an end to her pipe dream. She still couldn't quite grasp that Rupert could have been so uncaring of her feelings as to desecrate the one place that had always meant more to her than anything else: her home.

Only the beautiful Georgian rectory wasn't her home any longer. How could it be, with every room reeking of Serena's presence? And, worst of all, when everyone knew about it. And people did know, a distressed telephone call from the car to Olwyn had left her in no doubt of it.

‘Rupert told everyone that you'd walked out on him, tired of his philandering, and that Serena had moved in. The general attitude was that he was acting a bit precipitately, but as his affair with Serena has been common knowledge for yonks, no one was overly surprised,' Olwyn had said, full of concern for her. ‘What are you going to do now? Hole up in a hotel until your solicitor thrashes things out on your behalf? Or would you prefer to come and stay with me?'

It had been a kind offer, but if she'd gone to stay with Olwyn, everyone she and Rupert knew would be aware of it. It was a humiliation she couldn't even contemplate enduring.

Even worse had been the next two telephone calls she had made.

‘I know it's grim, Mother, but it isn't the end of the world,' Sholto had said, unfazed at the news. ‘Dad may have dug his heels in over the house, but he isn't going to be mean with the divorce settlement. Everything will work out OK in the end. You're better off being able to look around for something that will really suit you. Perhaps a swish flat in London or a house on the coast.'

That he'd thought her concerns were primarily financial had incensed her. Her father was a millionaire. If she'd wanted a swish flat in London, or a house on the coast, she could have had one – or both – any time she'd wanted.

‘And Serena's a brick,' he had added. ‘She won't make waves. Not now she's got her own way over the house.'

That Sholto had met her – that he was quite obviously approving of her – was a betrayal so great she'd thought her heart was going to give out.

Not wanting to hear another word from him, she'd severed the connection and had only then taken on board the fact that Rupert was insistent on keeping their home not because
he
felt fiercely about doing so, but because Serena wanted him to.

Almost apoplectic with distress, she'd speed-dialled Orlando's number.

‘Have you met her, too?' she'd demanded hysterically, seconds later. ‘Aren't
either
of you appalled at your father's behaviour? We've been married for thirty-two years and he leaves me for a … for a …' she'd been sobbing so hard she could hardly get the words out, ‘‘… for an oversexed
tart
and neither of you are up in arms about it!'

‘Lady Serena Campbell-Thynne can hardly be described as a “tart”, Mother,' Orlando had said, sounding vaguely amused. ‘And of course I'm pretty appalled at what has happened – as is Sholto. But it's been on the cards for years and Dad stuck by you all the time we were children …'

He'd made it sound as if Rupert deserved a medal for having done so.

Distraught at not getting the response she'd needed, she'd severed her connection to him, too, and then, still crying, she'd put her car into gear and driven away, having absolutely no idea where she was driving to.

It was only when, on the outskirts of Bath, she'd seen the signs for the M5 that she'd known where it was she was going. She was going to Cornwall. She was going to find Primmie – Primmie, whom she should never have lost. Primmie, who had always been the very best friend in the world to her.

At the bottom of the hill she was driving down were a harbour, a small car park and, wedged between a general store and a greengrocer's, a post office. She breathed a sigh of relief. In a place as small as Calleloe, she would probably have to go no further to find out where Ruthven was.

‘You can have my ticket,' a young girl said to her as she squeezed her way into the tiny car park. ‘I'm just leaving and there's still half an hour on it.'

It was a kindness that, in her overwrought condition, had her on the verge of tears again.

Appalled at how near to a complete breakdown she was, determined that she was not going to ever cry again, she parked her car. It was four thirty, she'd just driven all the way from Gloucestershire and she hadn't eaten since breakfast aboard the MS
Caronia
. Telling herself that it was no wonder she was in a fragile, jittery condition, she changed out of her driving shoes into her high heels and began walking back to the foot of Calleloe's precipitous main street, intent on going first to the post office and then into the nearest tea shop.

Outside a sophisticated-looking art gallery she paused before crossing the road, disorientated at the number of tourists thronging the area round the harbour. It was almost as if it were August, not September. There was a small ice-cream stall and another stall selling picture postcards and holiday souvenirs, both of them doing a roaring trade.

With seagulls screaming above her head, she moved forwards to cross the road – and left her right shoe behind. Tottering in an ungainly fashion, she tried to retrieve the shoe, but its stiletto heel was wedged in a crack in the pavement. A couple of mothers, pushing prams, awkwardly circumnavigated her.

‘You'll find it easier if you step out of the other shoe as well, dear,' an elderly woman said helpfully. ‘If you don't, you're going to fall over.'

With senseless panic bubbling up in her throat, Artemis did as the woman suggested. The pavement struck cold through her stockinged feet. As she bent almost double to tug at her shoe she felt unutterably undignified and, aware of the figure she must be cutting from behind, scorchingly embarrassed.

At last, with a suddenness that unbalanced her, the shoe came away in her hand, minus its heel.

It was the last straw.

Unable to think further than that her marriage was over; that her sons were unsympathetic; that she'd never felt more lonely or lost in her life and that she was going to have to either limp back to her car with one shoe on and the other off or wearing no shoes at all, she did what she had just vowed she would never do again.

She leaned her back against the plate-glass window, covered her face with her hands and burst into tears.

Hugo Arnott dropped the Sotheby's catalogue he had been studying, his concern immediate. He had registered Artemis's presence when, outside his art gallery, she had paused in order to cross the street. Blonde, statuesque, beautifully dressed ladies of a certain age were not the norm on the streets of Calleloe.

Always immaculately suited himself, to see someone as impeccably groomed and beautifully dressed as the woman in floral silk who had emerged from the car park had been, for him, a treat of the highest order. For a brief second he had felt himself to be in Rome or Milan; to be in a city where women still gave thought and care to their clothes and where formality in dress wasn't an anachronism, but something to be aspired to.

Then had come the heel incident.

His temptation had been immediately to go out and offer assistance and only the prospect of her taking offence had deterred him. He still hadn't quite recovered from a recent experience in London when, on a crowded tube train, he had risen to his feet to offer his seat to a young woman. ‘No, thank you, Grandad,' she had said rudely, rejecting his offer. ‘My legs aren't so old that I can't still stand on them.'

There had been sniggers from everyone within hearing and, though he didn't for one moment think a mature lady, dressed as the one outside his gallery was-dressed, would react to his offer of assistance in a similar manner, once bitten was twice shy.

Then she'd tugged her shoe free, wrenching it from its heel as she did so. As she reeled back against the window of his gallery, her hands to her face, he hesitated no longer. He sprang to his feet and, as fast as his rather corpulent bulk would allow him to, made for the door.

‘Can I be of assistance, ma'am?'

The American voice was a rich, deep baritone and through her tears Artemis saw a bear of a man, dressed in an expensively tailored pale grey suit and with a pink carnation in his buttonhole.

She tried to speak, failed, and vainly shook her head, the tears continuing to stream heedlessly down her face.

Taking no notice of what was obviously meant to be a ‘no'and not a ‘yes', Hugo withdrew a spotlessly white Irish linen handkerchief from his breast pocket and pressed it into her hands.

Artemis took it gratefully. ‘I'm sorry …' she said incoherently, quite unable to regain control now that she had so completely lost it. ‘It's just that … that my shoe heel is wedged …'

As a reason for such a torrent of tears it wasn't remotely adequate, and knowing it only made her more unable than ever to stop crying.

With deepening concern, Hugo gently took hold of her arm. ‘Would you care to step inside and sit down for a few minutes while I try to get your shoe heel free? There's a cobblers thirty yards or so away. It may be possible to have your shoe mended.'

Artemis nodded, wanting nothing more than to be no longer in full view of so many curious passers-by.

With his free hand Hugo scooped up her shoes and, with his other hand still beneath her arm, ushered her into the gallery.

To Artemis, it was like stepping into an oasis of calm. The carpet beneath her stockinged feet was deep-piled and rose pink. Oil paintings and watercolours in gold frames hung against walls that were covered in pearl-grey watered silk. Bach played softly. The chair he led her to was a nineteenth-century replica – or perhaps even an original – French giltwood arm chair.

She sank down on it gratefully, regaining control of her breathing, fighting for control of her tears.

‘A cup of tea is called for, I think.' Hugo hadn't lived in England for the past three years without becoming aware that tea was the acceptable palliative in every kind of crisis.

‘Thank you.' He was being so kind she could not bear the thought he might think she was in a state of collapse over something and nothing. ‘It isn't the shoe,' she said, mopping her tears with his handkerchief. ‘It's … my husband's just asked for a divorce and I've come to Calleloe to stay with a friend … though I'm not sure exactly where Primmie lives … and …'

As he looked down at the top of her head, he saw that her hair was naturally blond, as pale as barley in September, and then she lifted her tear-ravaged face to his. Looking into eyes that were a true china-blue, he registered the lift to his heart the word ‘divorce' had occasioned, decided he would mull over all it might mean a little later, at his leisure, and said, ‘Primmie? There can only be one Primmie and she lives a mere ten-minutes'car ride away.'

As she gasped in relief, he beamed down at her. ‘And she's obviously having quite a reunion party. My buddy Matt tells me there are already two other old friends staying with her. Kiki Lane, who used to be quite a popular singer in America some years ago, and an extremely glamorous, Ferrari-driving lady by the name of Geraldine.'

‘Kiki and Geraldine are here? In Calleloe? With Primmie?'

Artemis forgot all about her intention, three decades ago, never to speak to Kiki again. Too much water had passed beneath the bridge for that to matter now, when she was so in need of the friends of her youth.

Seeing the expression of incredulity and joy on her face, he said, ‘I take it that they are friends of yours, too,' happier at being the bearer of good news to her than he could remember having been for a long, long time.

‘Oh yes!' Rupert's betrayal no longer seemed like the end of the world. She might not have a husband any more, but she did have friends. Friends she couldn't wait to be reunited with. The realization that Primmie, Kiki and Geraldine were only minutes away was too much for her. Tears came again in a great, unstoppable flood.

Hugo wasn't in the least disconcerted.

He had other handkerchiefs. He had all the handkerchiefs this lovely lady was ever going to need.

Chapter Twenty-Six

‘It's so good to have you back in my life, Geraldine,' Primmie said, as, arm in arm, she and Geraldine walked along the silver silver of sand in the cove.

‘It's good to be back in it.' Geraldine's voice was heartfelt. ‘And now I am back, I'd like to make a difference, Primmie. I've got a sinful amount of money – quite literally – and I'd like to spend some of it on Ruthven.'

‘But in what way? I've got everything I need, Geraldine.'

It was coming up to six o'clock and there was a hint of approaching dusk in the light on the sea. Far out in the steely grey waters a freighter was making its way towards Southampton or Dover. A seagull, hoping for a tidbit of food, stalked them from a few feet away.

‘What about the children your aunt regularly invited here? This is such a perfect place for children to holiday. I know the ones coming in nine days'time are a one-off for you, but what if they weren't? Wouldn't you like to do what your aunt did, and have children at Ruthven regularly? The barn could be converted into a dormitory for them, and that way you would still have room in the house for bed and breakfast guests.'

‘Or for you and Kiki?'

‘Or for me and Kiki.' Geraldine looked away from her, out to sea, not wanting to say that it was unlikely she would be around for too much longer, and not wanting to talk about Kiki.

The freighter was fast disappearing out of sight, beyond one of the low-lying arms of the cove. Watching it, as it slid from view, she said, ‘You'd make me very happy, Primmie, if you'd let me arrange for the barn to be made into living accommodation and for the other outbuildings to be refurbished.'

As they began walking away from the beach, back towards the house, Primmie looked across at her with concern. ‘Well … if it means so much to you …' she said uncertainly, wishing that Geraldine would tell her what it was that was so clearly troubling her.

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