Authors: Sara Craven
income of our own. Mr Henderson made over a massive part of his personal
fortune and investments to finance the Trust.' They were standing by a
window looking into a big untidy back garden with an overgrown lawn.
Andrew sighed. 'You're going to work here, Catriona, so you might as well
know. Inflation has hit our income pretty hard. In fact there were hints that
we might have to do without help in the office, which is why, in a way, I was
surprised when you actually materialised.'
He smiled ruefully. 'But there will have to be cuts in other ways, and this I'm
afraid will mean goodbye yet again to aH-serts of alterations and
improvements I'd hoped for, although it's true to say I might not have got
them anyway.'
'But if the money was there . . .' Catriona was puzzled.
Andrew gave her a straight look. 'It's Mrs Henderson,' he said quietly. 'She
doesn't really approve of the centre and never has. She's quite open about
it—believes Heaven helps those who help themselves. And she doesn't
agree with the rather
ad hoc
way we rim things here. She calls the residents
inmates—not to their faces, I hasten to add—and feels I should summon
them for morning prayer and grace before meals.'
'But that isn't your province, surely.'
'In a way I suppose it is, from her point of view.' He dragged aside the collar
of his sweater, revealing the clerical collar beneath. 'I hope it doesn't put you
off.'
'Not in the slightest, although you're not like any minister I've ever met,'
Catriona laughed.
He quirked an eyebrow at her. 'I'll take that as a compliment, perhaps. Now
come and meet Jean. There'll be a fair crowd in the kitchen part of the house
and they'll eye you a bit at first. But don't try and push things and they'll
soon treat you as part of the furniture.'
Catriona did find the sudden silence that greeted her entrance with Andrew
rather unnerving. She was not used to being the cynosure of so many eyes,
but Jean's pleasant smile as she turned from the cooker wheare large pots of
an appetising-looking stew were simmering, soon compensated. She was a
slightly plump girl, in the way that good cooks often are, with softly curling
brown hair, and Catriona took to her at once.
It was soon arranged that Catriona should share the midday meal at the
centre in return for lending a hand with the serving and clearing away.
'I'm afraid you get roped in for everything in this place,' Jean said
apologetically. 'Have you had any nursery school experience, by any
chance?'
'Sorry, no,' Catriona laughed. 'Have you a lot of young ones in just now?'
'Yes, but it may not last. Things can change quite rapidly in a matter of days
as people readjust and move on.' Jean's tone was placid and Catriona
thought she was probably an ideal person to be in charge of such a fluid
set-up as this appeared.
Later, as she helped Jean set places at the long trestle . tables in the rather
bare dining room, she asked for some help in identifying the current crop of
residents.
'I could tell you their names, but I doubt if you'd remember. They'll start
approaching you themselves in a day or two and you'll probably get the
story of their lives along with their names—except for Mitch, that is.'
Catriona's interest sharpened. 'Who's Mitch?'
Jean laid a knife and fork rather precisely on the plastic table covering
before replying. 'That's just it. Who is she? She behaves as if she has
amnesia, but Andrew and I are not convinced. She doesn't show any of the
genuine symptoms. She arrived in the middle of the night three weeks ago
carrying a guitar in a case and that was all.'
'Does she play the guitar?'
'Not since she arrived, to my knowledge. If you go into the lounge you can't
miss her. She sits in the corner cuddling the darned thing. One of the
youngsters asked her to give them a tune soon after she arrived and she
nearly attacked him. Andrew had to step in fast.'
'That's quite an unusual happening, then?'
'Violence? Yes, thank heaven. When you consider what a mixed bag of
people we accommodate, it's a wonder that it doesn't happen more often.
Usually people welcome some sort of contact, however superficial, with the
other residents. But not Mitch. She's left severely alone now—and she
shows no sign of wanting to stand on her own feet or move on. It's a bad
sign, I'm afraid. We have had our tragedies in the past, but I don't want her
to be one of them.'
Jean's voice was serious and Catriona waited in silence for a moment or two
before asking, 'How do you know she's called Mitch?'
'We don't.' Jean lifted a tray of plastic beakers from a cupboard and began to
set one at each place. 'She had a nightmare one night soon after she came
here—woke everyone in her room screaming "Mitch, Mitch!" Wouldn't or
couldn't explain, of course, so we decided to call her that for reference
purposes.' She sighed. 'Andrew would like to put her in touch with Dr
Winters, the psychiatrist at the General, but he doesn't feel there would be
much point until we can make at least some sort of breakthrough with her
ourselves. She totally rejects the idea of any kind of treatment at the
moment, and we don't put pressure on anyone here—so checkmate.'
Catriona felt oddly curious about the enigmatic Mitch and was conscious of
real disappointment when the girl failed to show up for the midday meal.
After it was cleared away, she and Andrew began to make inroads on the
chaos in the office and she was amazed to find how quickly the time passed.
She got home before Sally, who was rehearsing a new play for a lunchtime
theatre club and had warned she might be late.
Catriona measured out spaghetti and assembled the ingredients for a
bolognese sauce, before deciding that a bath and a shampoo were what she
needed after her dusty afternoon. Half an hour later, she felt cleaner and at
peace with the world as she sat on the hearthrug in her old red dressing
gown, busying herself with hair-dryer and brush. When the doorbell
sounded, she groaned a little. Sally was prone to forget her key when other
considerations were paramount. She padded to the door and flung it wide,
gazing with astonishment at the young man standing awkwardly outside.
'Hello, Catriona,' Jeremy said eventually. 'I can see I've called at a bad time.
Can I come in?'
'I suppose so.' Catriona gave the belt of her robe a tightening tug and stepped
aside reluctantly to allow him into the flat.
He glanced around. 'Sally not in?'
'I'm expecting her at any time.' Catriona was amazed to find how controlled
her voice sounded in spite of the turmoil inside her. For weeks now she had
longed for this moment, had hungered for the sight and sound of him, and
now he was here.
He walked over to the fireplace and stood looking down at the rug. Catriona
had forgotten how attractive he was and she stood, her arms folded tensely
across her, watching him and remembering with fresh pain how happy they
had been together.
With a sigh, he pulled a packet of cigarettes and a lighter from his pocket
and offered them to her. She shook her head and he lit one for himself.
'Did—did you want something?' she asked diffidently, when he showed no
sign of breaking the silence. He turned and looked at her, the usually
laughing blue eyes dark with trouble.
'I shouldn't be here, Trina, and I know it, but I had to come. I've tried to keep
away ... I really have. I don't know what to say to you.'
'What is there to say?' Catriona asked wearily. 'It was my own fault, Jeremy.
Women's magazines are full of advice to girls not to take holiday romances
too seriously, and I did. You don't have to feel badly about it. . .' Her voice
tailed away miserably.
'But I do.' He came over to her and stood looking down into her face. 'I
wasn't just amusing myself. I loved you. I meant everything I said, and I
wanted to marry you . ..'
'I don't think you should say any more,' Catriona interrupted him. She felt
suddenly desperately uncomfortable. 'Don't forget you're engaged and . ..'
'Forget it!' He gave a short, mirthless laugh. 'I get little chance to do that.
Helen's been staying with us and she and Mother have done nothing but talk
about weddings and houses and furnishings until I could—break out.'
'Women like to talk of such things.' Catriona felt defensive about her own
sex. 'I'd have thought that was what you would have wanted too.'
'Me?' He shook his head. 'I don't know what I want, Trina. I had it all worked
out when I came back to London, but once I was back, everything started
to—crumble somehow. All there seemed to be was work and more work,
and when that eased off, Mother had Helen waiting.' He looked at her, his
mouth wry. 'I see it now. Why couldn't I see it then?'
Catriona lifted a hand and pushed it wearily through her still-damp hair. 'I
don't know what you want me to say,' she said unhappily. 'You've made
your choice, after all.'
'I think I had it made for me,' he said quickly.
'Then you must be a fool.' Catriona spoke sharply and without weighing her
words. 'It's a poor sort of man that lets his womenfolk decide his whole
future rather than stand on his own feet. .She was shocked into silence by the
expression on Jeremy's face. She could see at once that she had hurt and
offended him, and she realised with a pang that it was the first time that she
had ever been openly critical of him. It occurred to her, too, judging by what
Jason had once said, that open criticism by anyone of his actions had
probably been lacking in Jeremy's life up to now.
'I thought you'd understand at least.' He sounded wounded.
'There's not a lot to understand,' she spoke more pacifically. 'You did ask
Helen to marry you, after all, and people don't do that in this day and age
unless they're in love. If you're having second thoughts now, they'll pass, I
daresay.'
'I just don't know you like this.' His voice was genuinely perplexed.
'Perhaps I've had time to grow up a little since that summer in Torvaig.' She
tried to sound gentle, but some of the hurt of betrayal came through the
simplicity of her words.
'Is that what my dear uncle's been doing—helping you grow up?' he asked,
and she winced at the unexpected spite in his tone. This was a side of
Jeremy she had never seen before. She wanted to hit back at him, but she did
not know what to say. He was nearer the target than he knew, she thought
painfully.
'How did you come to meet him?'
'I was looking for you. Someone, your former landlady, gave me his
address.'
'Oh—yes, I'd forgotten.' He looked at her frowningly. 'But I still don't
understand ... I mean, you're hardly Jason's type.'
'Hardly,' she said. Her throat felt constricted. 'But then I did think I was
yours, and I was wrong about that too.'
He pitched his cigarette stub into an ash-tray and reached for her. 'Oh, Trina,
my sweet!'
She stepped backwards, trying to avoid his encircling arms in a kind of
panic. 'Jeremy—no! It's not right, please!'
He didn't listen. 'Trina, ever since that night I've been thinking of you—of
nothing else but you. Let me kiss you, sweetheart, please. I won't be able to
bear it otherwise.'
Even as his lips touched hers, Catriona heard, with her heart sinking, the
perennial cry of the spoiled child in his words. Oh, what was the matter with
her? She was in Jeremy's arms, his passionate kisses were raining on her
face. She should have been in the seventh heaven, and instead her
predominating impulse was to pull herself free.
'What's the matter?' He stared down at her, his face flushed, puzzled by her
lack of response.
'What about Helen? That's the matter,' Catriona said, but she was not even
sure that was true any more.
'I'll think of something. Sweetheart, you must trust me.' He tried to take her
in his arms again, but she evaded his embrace.
I did trust you, something inside her was screaming. Trusted you enough to
leave everything I knew and come hundreds of miles to this
concrete—prison of a city! Her hand crept to her mouth as if she had spoken
the words aloud. She knew she had been unfair to her new home and that the
changes in her life had certainly not been entirely for the worse. She thought
of the centre and the challenges it presented, and of Jean and Andrew with
whom she might become close friends. She thought of Sally's
companionable gaiety. And then her mind closed down, refusing to yield to
the next image which came unbidden and unwelcome, thrusting away the
dark sardonic face of the man who had taught her in one brief lesson the