by Karen Swan
They stopped by Florence’s gates as they passed, picking up the last of the seed bombs sitting in brown paper bags in the barrow. It hadn’t been refreshed today and some of them had dried out and cracked in the sun, beginning to crumble.
‘They look like truffles,’ Matt said.
‘I know, right?’ Ro smiled as she watched him sniffing one.
He wrinkled his nose, unimpressed. ‘And you’re seriously telling me this little nugget’s going to protect the town from the next hurricane?’ Scepticism hung off his words like cobwebs.
‘Indirectly. From small acorns . . .’
He heard the piquant note in her voice and relented. ‘Well, if you believe it, so do I.’ And he kissed her on the forehead as they pulled off their shoes and walked onto the sand. ‘So what do we do?’
‘Just throw them into the dunes and wherever they fall, they’ll sprout.’
‘Well, we should probably go along a bit, don’t you think? I bet most people chuck theirs for the first fifty metres and then nothing at all for the rest of the stretch.’
‘OK.’
‘Bloody hell, this beach is long,’ he said after a while, squinting into the sunlight, his feet unsteady in the deep, dry sand.
‘I know.’ She looked out over the water as they walked. The water was meek today, turning onto the beach in gentle roly-polies instead of the usual pounding that smashed the water like broken glass. The memory of the day Ted had waded into the surf with her – their first touch – swam in front of her eyes, making them fill with tears in an instant, and she looked away again quickly.
‘D’you want some?’ Matt asked, holding out the bag for her to take a handful of bombs.
‘No, you do it. I’ve thrown plenty of bombs this summer.’
His eyes met hers briefly – quizzically – before he started throwing them, succumbing immediately to the usual male prerogative to throw it like a cricket ball as far as he could. ‘Gotta get them along the back too.’
‘Of course.’
They walked haltingly along, making up for the long, slightly awkward silences with reassuring smiles. They were both tired and overtaken by events. But they were going to have to go back to the house – and her bedroom – sooner or later.
‘He’s not a pudding, by the way,’ Matt said, reaching for her hand and trying to draw her back into his orbit.
‘Who’s not?’
‘Hump. You called him a pudding.’
‘Did I?’ Ro frowned, unable to remember.
Matt grinned, squeezing her hand in his. ‘I’d have been home a lot sooner if I’d set eyes on him before. You know we spoke on Skype, right? You’d gone out.’
Ro smiled weakly at his light-hearted assumption that it was Hump who was his greatest threat. ‘Uh, yes. He mentioned it.’
She heard the flimsy link chain that kept strangers out of Florence’s garden rattling gently in the breeze just ahead. It was more an appeal to their manners than a strict enforcement of her rights to privacy, but everyone obliged. Well, apart from one . . . Was it really only last night she’d been standing here by torchlight with Greg and Bobbi, preparing to confront Brook?
‘It’s just like in the films, isn’t it?’ Matt said, looking at the rickety wooden bridge and platform that protected the dunes from the residents’ historic rights to access. It lay stretched above the sand like dinosaur claws. ‘Tch, how the other half live, right?’ Matt mused, stopping and staring at the gabled rooftop of Grey Mists. The roof was pretty much all that could be seen of the house from here.
‘Yeah,’ she nodded. He had no way of knowing it was Florence’s house, and she had no intention of telling him. The name brought too many associations for him – different ones for her – and she didn’t want the questions to start up again.
He looked up and down the beach. It hadn’t yet filled up for the day, and most people were walking down by the shore.
‘D’you know what? Fuck it, I’m going to be nosy,’ he grinned, scrunching the paper bag tightly in one hand and ducking quickly under the chain.
‘What? No, Matt! You can’t!’
‘Relax – I’m just having a look. No one’s around.’
‘Matt, stop it. Come back here!’ she said, ducking under the chain herself and running after him. But he was already bounding up the spindly wooden steps, two at a time, and cresting the top of the dunes, the house and garden already now on a level with him. ‘It’s private, Matt, for God’s s—’ She fell silent.
‘Shit, that’s embarrassing,’ Matt said, dipping his chin and turning away as he scratched his head. ‘What are the chances of someone being in the bloody garden?’
On a Saturday morning in late August? Pretty damn high, actually! She’d have told him that if he’d given her the chance. But she didn’t say a word. She couldn’t. All she could do was stare back at Ted standing stock-still on the lawn, wearing his trunks and holding a beach ball under his arm. She could guess where the children were from the splashes in the pool behind him.
‘Come on.’ Matt grabbed her limp hand, pulling her away. ‘Let’s just go.’
But her feet wouldn’t move, she felt as planted as an oak, and she almost tripped as Matt’s strength overrode hers, lurching her onwards suddenly. She turned back as Matt led her towards the steps, her hand in his. Ted was still watching, the ball bouncing to a stop by his feet now, Ella and Finn running across the grass with orange water pistols as water droplets flew off them like shaking Labradors – their family of three just as she’d found it and like she’d never been there at all.
Chapter Thirty-Five
The coffees were a hit, the flagels rather less so, and window-shopping was a complete misnomer for the brisk walk past the designer boutiques that Matt could ill afford after a six-month sabbatical (well, five and a half) from work.
They were home again within the hour, and on the way back she didn’t laugh at all as he pinged the bell against her bottom, her knuckles white as she gripped the handle-bars tightly. When Greg walked into the kitchen, fifteen minutes after they got home, he found them sitting at the kitchen table, steaming cups of tea beside them in the ninety-degree heat.
‘Hey,’ Ro said, her head jerking up as she heard the screen door close in the hall.
Greg walked in, his jacket slung tiredly over one shoulder. He looked startled as he saw Matt sitting with her, but seemed to guess his identity quickly, from their intimate body language.
Ro withdrew her hands from Matt’s grasp and sat straighter at the table. ‘Greg, this is Matt. Matt, my housemate Greg. Otherwise known as Gatsby . . .’
‘Gatsby, right . . . Pleased to meet you, mate,’ Matt nodded, as the two of them shook hands. Ro thought Matt looked faintly ridiculous in his pumpkin-coloured, three-quarter-length linen trousers, compared to Greg’s – albeit crumpled – Ralph Lauren Black Label suit. They smiled briefly, but Matt could see now wasn’t the time for small talk. Greg looked like hell.
‘You look terrible,’ Ro said quietly, as Greg threw his suit jacket over the chair. ‘Have you slept?’
‘I’ve been at the police station all night,’ he shrugged. ‘I figured Brook needed some support. He’s not taking it well.’
‘I’m not surprised. Neither ’s Hump from the looks of him.’
‘Poor guy.’ Greg shook his head. ‘He looked as sick as Brook when we walked back into the house. I think he’d really fallen for her. The only once since Mei.’
Ro bit her lip, knowing that for the moment at least, Hump’s heartbreak would have to fade into the background – as Greg’s had – in the face of Melodie’s darker desires. ‘So what’s she saying?’ Ro wasn’t sure she wanted to know.
Greg slumped back in the chair, one arm slung out along the table. He shook his head, a depressed look on his face. ‘I think it’s going to come down to plain old greed. She said she was trying to get back what her family had lost.’
Matt coughed lightly. ‘What had they lost?’
G
reg looked back at him. As Ro’s boyfriend, he was unspokenly, automatically, on honorary housemate status and entitled to full disclosure. ‘They’re one of the old families around here, but they lost their money in quite spectacular style. Everyone knows the stories and their name was mud for a long time.’ He looked back at Ro. ‘Erin’s family knew them and she said it was only when Melodie inherited what little was left and got Barrington Dredging turning a profit again that attitudes towards the family softened. She was an only child and always seemed the black sheep in her family . . . capable, driven. Ambitious in every sense, I think they said.’
Ro frowned. ‘But if everyone knew her family, then they must have known too that her name wasn’t really Melodie? Didn’t people think it was odd that she’d changed it from Samantha?’
‘No. It was just a nickname that stuck. There was never any reason to suppose there was more to it than that.’
Ro sighed.
‘What about Brook? Was he in on it?’
‘From the looks of him, I don’t think so. You can’t fake that kind of shock.’ Greg stared at his hands. ‘Personally, I think Melo—’ He stopped himself. ‘I think Samantha saw an opportunity in him and took it – secretly accessing his confidential material to identify which properties were uninsurable, while publicly encouraging his political ambitions to benefit her investments. Poor guy never suspected a thing, it seems. To be honest, I wouldn’t be surprised if that was why she married him in the first place.’
‘Maybe,’ Ro nodded. ‘She certainly never seemed to like him much. Florence, on the other hand – she was really worried about him after you left.’
Greg looked at her, weighing up the light insinuation – it made surprising sense – before shrugging. ‘Well, he’s going to need all the friends he can get in the next few months. It’s not going to be pretty. Samantha seems to have had it all worked out. When you take into account the over-dredging by the family company too: she was exacerbating local erosion on the one hand and slowly buying up the depreciated lots on the other – she played a long game. She was prepared to wait.’ He was quiet for a second and he rubbed a hand over his tired eyes as more facts fell into place. ‘Jeez, Sandy must have seemed heaven-sent to her. It delivered everything to her in one neat chunk.’
‘Thanks to Kevin.’
‘Yes,’ he murmured. ‘Bobbi . . .’ His voice trailed off, but Ro knew what he was thinking – how close Bobbi had come to real danger herself. His face darkened and he pushed himself away from the table and stretched his legs out, staring at his feet. ‘Did she say why she . . . y’know . . . Kevin?’ Ro asked, watching him brood.
‘Well, not in front of me, although obviously the police have been questioning her all night, so . . .’ He groaned. ‘Christ, who knows how she justified it in her head? Maybe he’d outlived his usefulness to her once she’d secured her ownership of the wharves? She didn’t want any witnesses? Or maybe because of his boasting on LinkedIn? That created a link to a company she’d gone to great lengths to keep hidden.’ He shrugged.
Ro fell still, remembering Melodie’s expression change as she’d described Kevin to her before the yoga class. She’d thought Melodie had disapproved of Bobbi’s overt materialism, caring about his car and job title over his distinctive gait, but . . . She went cold. Had Melodie been alerted to Kevin’s boastful indiscretions because of what she’d said?
Greg suppressed a yawn. ‘Mmgh, sorry.’
Ro winced, her attention drawn back to him. ‘Oh, Greg, what are you doing here talking to us? Go to bed.’
‘If only I could,’ he sighed, checking his watch. ‘But I’m competing this afternoon. I’ve only come back to get changed.’
‘Changed?’ she frowned. ‘Why? Where on earth are you going?’
‘The Classic. I’m in the showjumping class.’
‘The thing at Bridgehampton? You can’t be serious!’ she exclaimed. ‘You can’t possibly sit on the back of a horse and jump—’
‘Two-metre jumps on two hours’ sleep? I agree. But I have very little choice. I’m already committed.’ He rose wearily, patting her hand. ‘You’ll have to sleep for me.’
‘Oh, you’re back,’ Bobbi said loudly to Greg with her usual dismissive tone – normal service resumed – as she wandered downstairs towards the kitchen. ‘I was coming to check on Ro.’ She saw Matt as she rounded the door and gave him a dazzlingly friendly smile. ‘Oh, hey, Matt.’ The snub to Greg was all the more pointed by contrast.
‘It’s just as well you’re so damned loud,’ Greg said, talking over her so that Bobbi looked over at him in astonishment. ‘At least now I know you hate me because you’re crazy about me.’
Silence exploded around them all in a sonic boom. Ro dimly remembered the open window in Bobbi’s room yesterday – it was when she was closing it that she’d seen the necklace and everything had unravelled. Matt looked on nervously as he sensed the sudden tension.
‘I’m not crazy about you!’ Bobbi stormed.
Greg stared back at her, his hands stuffed in his pockets and his eyes absolutely and intently upon her, not fooled. He looked as calm as Bobbi looked shaken, and he walked over to her, stopping only inches away, his head bent to hers. ‘Well, then that’s a shame,’ he said quietly, his eyes scanning her beautiful, proud, frightened face. ‘Because you’re all I’m able to think about.’
No one in the room – Matt included – dared move as he carried on looking down at her, before he walked out of the kitchen and up the stairs. Bobbi stared open-mouthed after him.
‘Did he . . . did he . . . ?’ she whispered, her eyes locked and hopeful on Ro’s.
Ro grinned. ‘He did.’
Bobbi rushed over to the table and sat down where Greg had been sitting moments earlier, her hands clasped on Ro’s, seemingly oblivious to the fact that Matt was still there.
‘So then what should I do? I mean, what should I . . . ? Should I follow him?’
Ro was silent for a moment. ‘Yeah, you have to tell him how you feel, Bobs.’
Bobbi beamed, her eyes alive with delight. ‘’Cos when you know, you know, righ—’ She stopped mid-flow, a shaft of sunlight winkled into her eye by the pretty diamond sitting unobtrusively on the table between them.
‘That’s right,’ Ro smiled, looking back at Matt. ‘When you know, you know.’
Ro walked slowly through the crowd, pushing her hair back from her face with one hand and keeping down the hem of her dress with the other. There was a gusty wind making a mockery of silk wrappings today and half the women were scaring the horses.
It was hot, though, the breeze but momentary relief, and Ro stopped to watch as the horses in the exercise ring were hosed down, their blue veins bulging beneath velvety hides. She could see Bobbi sitting up in the stands, almost hyperventilating with excitement as she waited for Greg’s round and trying to hide it by being particularly fussy about the size of the woman’s hat in front of her. There was no question of her getting the coffees – her hands were almost continuously shaking with nerves. Ro looked down at her own hands, instinctively cupping the left in the right, as she continued putting one foot in front of the other. That was all she had to keep doing. She had done the right thing.
‘Ro!’ a voice shrieked, carrying over the rumbles of the crowd and snorting horses, and she turned just in time to see Ella – almost dropping her ice cream on the ground – breaking free from her grandmother’s grasp and running towards her.
‘Ro!’ she shrieked again, launching herself so that Ro had to scoop to catch her mid-air, catching a shoulderful of vanilla ice cream in the process.
‘Whoopsie!’ Ro laughed, squeezing her tightly as Florence approached with Finn, sleeping in his buggy with Boo.
‘You didn’t say you were coming to this,’ Florence smiled, putting on the footbrake. She looked exhausted. She had been through too much recently. ‘We could have come together.’
‘I-I didn’t know I was coming, to be honest.’ She swallowed, think
ing how much had happened even in the time since she’d left Florence at breakfast. ‘But I thought it would be better to stay busy . . . My housemate Greg’s competing.’
‘So’s Daddy! Daddy’s winning!’ Ella said, kicking her legs alternately with excitement.
Ro stiffened. Ted was here? He rode?
‘Ella, Daddy hasn’t ridden yet – don’t tell fibs,’ Florence said, leaning over and affectionately kissing the top of her head. ‘His team’s next.’
Ted and Greg rode on the same showjumping team? She remembered Greg’s quiet approval after Hump had spilt the beans about her and Ted last weekend, Ted’s attendance at the Southampton fundraiser – so then he wasn’t one of that crew’s ghastly social climbers? He and Greg were friends. Somehow that fact seemed like a further – albeit unneeded – character reference for them both.
‘Where are you sitting? Would you like to join us?’ Florence asked, intruding upon her thoughts.
‘Oh . . . uh, I’d have loved to, but we’re already seated. I’m just on a coffee run. But why don’t you sit with us? Bobbi’s just over there in the East Stand, behind the woman in the straw hat.’
‘We’d love to . . . Is Hump with you?’ Florence asked, concern clouding her face.
‘No. He said he wanted to be alone today.’
‘Yes, Brook’s the same, understandably.’
Ro fell quiet for a moment – knowing the emotional clean-up had begun for them all – before realizing Florence was looking at her. As they looked at one another, she instinctively sensed there was something unsaid between them. After everything they’d been through, there was only one secret remaining between them. But how could Ro tell it, to Florence of all people?
‘Uh, would you like a coffee? I’ll bring it over.’
Florence hesitated a second, before smiling. ‘That would be lovely.’
‘Daddy!’ Ella’s legs began waggling again as Ro held her, and she looked round to see Ted on the far side of the exercise ring, coming out of one of the horseboxes.