Marrying Up
Page 1
By Wendy Holden and available from Headline Review
Simply Divine
Bad Heir Day
Pastures Nouveaux
Fame Fatale
Azur Like It
The Wives of Bath
The School for Husbands
Filthy Rich
Beautiful People
Gallery Girl
Marrying Up
Marrying Up
WENDY HOLDEN
Copyright © 2011 Wendy Holden
First published in Great Britain in 2011
Apart from any use permitted under UK copyright law, this publication may only be reproduced, stored, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means, with prior permission in writing of the publishers or, in the case of reprographic production, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency.
First published as an Ebook by Headline Publishing Group in 2011
All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Cataloguing in Publication Data is available from the British Library
eISBN: 9780755352432
HEADLINE PUBLISHING GROUP
An Hachette UK Company
338 Euston Road
London NW1 3BH
www.headline.co.uk
www.hachette.co.uk
To Noj, Andrew and Isabella.
Table of Contents
By the Author
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Chapter 61
Chapter 62
Chapter 63
Chapter 64
Chapter 65
Chapter 66
Chapter 67
Chapter 68
Chapter 69
Chapter 70
Chapter 71
About the Author
Reviews
Chapter 1
‘Miss! Miss!’ Squinting in the bright sunshine, the little boy with the trowel was waving at Polly. ‘I’ve found something, miss. It’s Roman. Definitely Roman.’
Polly grinned, got up from where she was crouched sieving soil and went over.
‘Let’s have a look, Kyle.’
The small, skinny boy with the buzz-cut hair proudly extended a filthy palm on which lay a small, dirty disc. He looked at her expectantly.
‘It’s a really interesting find, Kyle,’ Polly said. ‘But it’s not a denarius – a Roman coin – not exactly. It’s, um, actually a sixpenny piece dating from the nineteen fifties.’
Far from being disappointed, Kyle looked thrilled. ‘Nineteen fifties!’ he exclaimed excitedly. ‘That’s centuries ago! That’s, like, ancient, miss.’
Polly giggled. Probably she seemed ancient to eight-year-old Kyle, despite being only twenty-two. That time was relative was one thing you learnt as an archaeologist.
‘What’s it worth, miss?’ Kyle urged, his grubby face blazing with hope and bravado. ‘Millions?’
‘Not quite millions,’ Polly explained tactfully. ‘But it’s very pretty. And maybe it’s a good thing that it’s not Roman. Can anyone tell me why?’
The group of four children looked doubtful.
‘Well, what is it we’re digging up here?’ Polly waved a hand around the wide, shallow trench whose reddish earth they had been exploring.
‘Toilets!’ they roared in unison, smiling broadly.
Polly nodded, tucking a stray dark brown curl behind her ear. ‘Exactly. This section,’ she pointed at a low clump of narrow brown bricks, ‘used to be loos, and if it’s a Roman coin, someone must have lost it in the loo. And remember what I told you about Roman loos?’
‘Yes! Yes!’ Four hands pumped into the air. Polly looked along the row of eager faces before picking Hannah, whose cloud of dark hair hid a lazy eye. Polly, who’d had a squint herself as a child, knew what it was to be less confident than the rest.
‘They flushed,’ Hannah said shyly.
As everyone laughed derisively, Hannah went as red as her primary school sweatshirt. Polly leapt to her defence. ‘As a matter of fact, Hannah’s quite right,’ she said. ‘And well done for remembering, Hannah, because I did mention very briefly that some Roman lavatories, in the forts on Hadrian’s Wall for example, had a type of flushing system. But not this one here,’ she added. ‘So what else can you remember about Romans and toilets?’
The hands were pulsing in the air again. ‘Yes, Leo?’ Polly invited a chubby boy whose face shone with exertion and excitement.
‘You said,’ Leo took his customary deep breath before beginning a long speech, ‘that they used to go to the loo all at once, and sit in long rows and laugh and joke while they were . . . while they were . . .’ He tailed off, embarrassed.
‘Pooing!’ shouted Kyle irrepressibly.
‘Yuck!’ said Poppy, a forthright child with bright green eyes and a pixie face. ‘Fancy pooing with other people.’
‘Better than what usually happened,’ Polly riposted, going on to explain that for most Romans the communal loo was a large jar at the end of the street into which they tipped the contents of their chamber pots. As the children howled in disgusted disbelief, she thought, not for the first time, how the history of lavatories was the history of civilisation. She had never intended to end up specialising in it, but her initial interest in tessellated flooring seemed to have drifted towards the privy and somehow never come back. There were good reasons for it to remain there too; Roman plumbing systems, being one of archaeology’s less sexy areas, offered more opportunities for graduates.
How else, for example, would she have ended up here, in the gardens of the local stately home, after a pipe-laying project ended in historical discovery? Admittedly the dig had not unearthed the entire Roman palace foundations that Lord Shropshire, the landowner, had been hoping for. So far as he was concerned, a Roman villa, especially one this far north, would have been both a powerful tourist draw and a source of revenue, not to mention useful grants. Even a reality TV series had been mooted at one stage.
But once it became clear that nothing much beside the distinctly untelegenic lavatory foundations were to
be found, interest, as it were, drained away. Even Polly herself, expert though she was, could not quite explain why the usually logical and practical Romans had apparently decided to build a loo block in the middle of nowhere, miles from the nearest road or settlement. But archaeology was full of mystery; you often unearthed more questions than answers.
She had been called in by the local council, who had been left with the necessity of recording the find and making sure there was nothing else of note on the site. The connection had come through a lecturer on her university course who also happened to be the county archaeologist. Aware that Polly would be spending the summer at home, he had landed her the gig. The money – small though it was – was one benefit; another, more unexpected, was the pupils from the local primary school, which had taken an interest in the excavation.
Polly had never previously spent much time with children. She had been doubtful at first, imagining them rampaging on the ruins and throwing dirt at each other. In the event it was themselves they had thrown, into the project with gusto, listening to Polly carefully and treating the excavations with respect. They had quickly mastered the various skills, such as making drawings of any finds and plotting their position carefully on a chart before removing them.
And while they were only allowed to poke and dig in a safe area removed from the Roman brickwork, their small, strong fingers had nonetheless managed to unearth all manner of treasures. Kyle had spent the best part of one afternoon painstakingly drawing his find of a broken Matchbox car, while Hannah had sieved up a contact lens.
‘A bone, miss!’ Leo called now. ‘I’ve found a yuman bone!’
He was waving something large and pale in the air. The other children were crowding round, shouting in excitement. Polly hurried over. A burial site? Unlikely, but you never knew.
‘Miss? Miss?’ Leo gasped, his dirt-smeared face red with agitation as he handed the object over to her.
‘Maybe he got murdered in the loo,’ Kyle was theorising.
‘P’raps he’d been in too long,’ Poppy added. ‘People got fed up of waiting.’
Polly looked up from the bone, hating to disappoint them. ‘It’s a cow bone, I’m afraid. Probably from a beef joint. Not that old, either.’
There was a howl of disappointment.
A little later, Polly stood up and stretched in the hot afternoon sunshine. Archaeologist’s back was a professional hazard, and as courses of physio were expensive, prevention was definitely better than cure. She was in no position to run up unnecessary bills at the moment.
A couple were passing, some of the many elderly shufflers who descended on the gardens in the afternoon. The old man stopped. ‘Digging for gold, are you?’
The old lady whooped with laughter and dug her husband in his pastel nylon V-necked ribs. ‘He’s awful, he is. Always has to have his joke. Take no notice of him, love.’
Polly smiled tolerantly, resisting the observation that this was not his joke, it was everyone’s. At least ten people a day, all labouring under the delusion that it was wit of the highest order, asked if she was digging for gold. Others would enquire how long her university course was and then exclaim in rude amazement, ‘Four years? To learn to dig holes?’
‘Found anything good yet?’ was another sally.
‘Yes,’ Polly would reply. ‘Everything we dig up is good. Bits of rock, shards of pottery, it’s all good.’
‘Can I have a go?’ some people asked, their joviality masking their obvious real hope. These were the ones Polly liked best. Her own passion for her subject had been sparked by seeing archaeologists uncovering a stretch of Roman road. It had been raining, and she had watched, fascinated, as mud-spattered people dressed like builders combed cheerfully through sludgy trenches. It had been love at first sight.
As it had been with Jake. But at that happy, head-spinning stage, she had not known that rats of the worst kind lurked in archaeologists’ muddy pits. Love rats. She tightened her lips and rubbed her back harder.
As the old people moved off towards the garden café, she gazed across the lawns at the great pale stone mansion of Oakeshott House. The front unfolded in a succession of columns and windows, a carved baroque palace whose roof line bristled with muscular gods and horns of plenty. Beyond the house and gardens stretched the softly curving park, an enchanted valley whose grassy slopes rolled gently down to a broad silver river sliding slowly between banks of red earth topped with a rich fringe of green.
Perfectly positioned groups of mature trees stood about like guests at a garden party. Beneath them stood the deer; cinnamon, cream and ginger in the sunlight. A magnificently macho stag was standing in the middle of his women and showing himself off, antlers branching proudly from his head like a crown. Now who, Polly thought sardonically, did he remind her of?
‘Miss! Miss!’ Poppy was jabbing her hand wildly in the air. ‘Piece of Roman glass!’
Polly examined it. Roman it wasn’t; in fact it was an early twentieth-century medicine bottle. She laid it beside her own growing pile of excavated alcohol bottles. That the Oakeshott gardeners of the Edwardian period were prone to heavy drinking on duty was the picture she was starting to build up. The Oakeshott of the past, it seemed, was not today’s businesslike working estate cum tourist honeypot bristling with shops and cafés and run by its ducal owner with military zeal.
Polly had met the Duke of Shropshire for the first time yesterday; he had stopped by the dig and revealed nothing of his reported disappointment with the excavation. On the contrary, he had been charm itself. A tall, handsome man with grey hair and pronounced aquiline features, he had positively blazed with self-confidence yet treated the children with no hint of condescension. He had not missed a beat when Kyle had asked if he had a dungeon he tortured prisoners in. And when he had turned to Polly, His Grace had a definite twinkle in his eye.
‘You’re a very gorgeous archaeologist,’ he had said, rather suggestively, which had made her blush and the children nudge each other.
Polly had returned determinedly to brushing soil off bricks with a toothbrush and ignoring the occasional giggles from the small helpers in the corner. She could not quite shake off the feeling that the Duke had been laughing at her. Glamorous? Her? The squint had been corrected now, but the feeling of having had it could never quite be removed, nor the memories of being teased at school entirely eradicated. Every time she looked in the mirror, whatever she was wearing, however elegant her hair, it was Boz Eyes who looked back. And probably always would.
Archaeology was not glamorous either. It meant being out in all weathers, either broiled like a lobster in sunshine, as now, or fending off the lashing wind and rain in voluminous nylon boiler suits, your hair flattened by a hard hat and your face as raw as an Arctic fisherman’s. You got covered in mud, even in your ears and up your nose, your nails became split and your hands became roughened, hard and even bleeding. You ached constantly. Archaeology and drop-dead gorgeousness were, in Polly’s experience, mutually exclusive. Apart from in Jake’s case, of course . . .
‘Have the children behaved?’
Polly was glad of the interruption. An assertive-looking woman in a red dress had materialised at the side of the pit. It was the primary school headmistress, Mrs Butcher, come to reclaim her charges. Polly clambered to her feet, smiling. She liked Mrs Butcher and her obvious ambition for her pupils. She alone among the heads of local schools had spotted the potential a real live Roman dig offered the children and had moved like the wind to secure permission to visit.
Mrs Butcher’s state primary was obviously very short of money; the small numbers who visited Polly were governed by how many could fit into the headmistress’s car. Polly had once asked whether a school minibus would be a good idea, and Mrs Butcher had given a short laugh and said it would indeed, as would the equally likely prospect of a school opera house.
‘They’ve been great,’ Polly said, straightening up.
‘We’ve been learning all about . . . toilet
s!’ Kyle put in, to hysterical squeals from the others. He was silenced by one look from Mrs Butcher.
‘Sorry, Mrs B,’ he muttered, reddening as he tried to dust the mud from his knees.
‘Say thank you to Miss Stevenson,’ Mrs Butcher instructed in her firm, friendly voice.
‘Polly, please,’ Polly insisted. ‘They’re a very bright bunch,’ she added.
‘They are when you can engage them,’ the headmistress agreed. ‘When you can get them off the subject of their Xboxes and Nintendos.’ Her red breast heaved in a sigh.
Polly grinned. ‘The Romans can hold their own, though. Kyle couldn’t believe it when I explained that they had an empire and a republic, not to mention a senate. He thought all that came from Star Wars.’
Mrs Butcher’s warm brown eyes were rueful. ‘I wish we could do more about the Romans at school,’ she confessed. ‘But I have some very forceful governors – very forceful – and the curriculum committee insisted there was no point studying classical civilisations as they have no relevance to modern life.’
‘But,’ Polly began, as amazed as she was outraged, ‘they’ve every relevance. They’re the foundation of everything. They’re—’
Mrs Butcher held up one small, capable hand. ‘I know! And I agree. But there’s nothing much I can do – apart from bring the children here, of course. Even if it’s only a few of them.’
Polly’s burning indignation switched to a burning generosity. ‘Well I could always come to the school and give a talk or something,’ she offered. ‘Roman loos seem to go down well. As it were. Perhaps.’
‘That would be brilliant,’ Mrs Butcher agreed enthusiastically. ‘You’re a wonderful role model. It would be a real eye-opener for them to see someone young, fun and attractive who’s making a career out of an academic discipline. Most of the girls want to be Cheryl Cole.’
‘I’m not sure how much of a career it is,’ Polly said ruefully. ‘I’ve got to finish my degree, then somehow finance three more years of postgrad study with no definite job at the end of it. The only example I might be setting them is of a lifetime of debt and unemployment.’
‘No worse than they get at home, then,’ Mrs Butcher said robustly. ‘Some of our kids come from families who think it’s normal to be on benefits for your whole working life. I’ll find you an assembly slot. I’d better go,’ she added, with a mock-exasperated glance at the children, now skidding up and down the gravelled path bordering the lawn and sending arcs of tiny pebbles sailing through the sunny air. ‘Thank you again, Polly, if I may. I’m Aurelia, by the way.’