Dead Romantic

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Dead Romantic Page 22

by Ruth Saberton


  “It took me ages to find,” Alex says with a grimace. “Rafe hoards heaps of shit in this house. You should see it, Cleo. It’d bring your neat-freak self out in hives.”

  “Isn’t that weird?” Rafe presses when I don’t reply. “I can’t explain it at all, except that maybe meeting you after all this time is a message from my brother.”

  “Couldn’t be any clearer even if I appeared right now and sang it,” laughs Alex – and then, when he sees my face, “Oh lighten up, Cleo! This is a good thing! Look at him; he’s writing again and he hasn’t had a drink in days. This is fantastic.”

  It is fantastic and I’m thrilled to see the light in Rafe’s eyes. I just wish I could tell him that yes, this is a message from his brother – who’s sitting right opposite me and looking as though he’s about to pop.

  “It is strange,” I agree, although strange hardly comes close to describing some of the events in my life lately.

  “Once I saw that article again it was as though a jigsaw piece had fallen into place. God knows where it is now, though; I can’t find it for the life of me. Maybe I dreamed it?”

  “Or maybe I hid it again just in case you got pissed and lost it?” says Alex. “It took me ages to find it amongst all your crap, bro!”

  Rafe’s eyes meet mine. I can’t look away. “Anyway, it doesn’t matter if I saw it or if I dreamed it. Just remembering it was enough.”

  “Enough for what?” I don’t understand.

  Releasing my hands, Rafe leaps to his feet and turns his full attention to the bank of recording equipment. “Enough for this! Once I’d seen the magazine piece I came in here and I started writing, and once I started I just couldn’t stop. And this is it! This is what I wrote.”

  The room fills with the most beautiful guitar chords, simple and in a minor key, yet rich and almost unbearably haunting. Then Rafe’s voice begins to sing, a deep voice as warm and as smooth as melting chocolate, and the hairs on my forearms stir.

  The song is about loss and grief and waking up with your cheeks wet with tears, your loved one always a dream away with each sunrise. With each line and each breath he takes, Rafe pours his heartbreak and pain into the notes rippling through the room. Then, several bars in, a piano melody begins, picking out the same notes – now transposed into a major key – chasing the rift over and over and filling the melody with warmth, like splashes of sunlight flickering across the landscape.

  Then I saw her

  The girl with the sunrise hair

  Her smile lets in the light

  Drying tears with her laughter

  Chasing away the night

  The music crescendos and then diminishes. Long after the final notes tremble into stillness the imagery remains with me: grief fades but love never leaves. Instead, love grows and sustains the memories until they soothe rather than sting. I’m thinking of Mum and the love she had for her family, and when I raise my hand I find that my own cheeks are wet.

  “I wrote it for you,” says Rafe quietly. “The you of now, not of ten years ago.”

  He’s left his chair and sits next to me on the sofa. I feel his energy and it makes me quiver.

  “Cleo, you’ve opened the blinds for me and you’ve let the first rays of light back in. I don’t know why and I don’t think I’ll ever understand how you’ve reappeared again, but it’s the truth and I’m so thankful for it.”

  “Time I left,” says Alex, but I hardly hear him or even notice him vanish, because Rafe is tenderly wiping my tears away with his thumb. Before I have time to think he’s cupping my face and kissing me so softly that I almost wonder whether I’m dreaming. Afterwards, my fingers rise to my lips and I stare at him. Rafe’s lips on mine have sent a shockwave through me. When he takes my hand and pulls me to my feet I don’t resist. Then he kisses me again, longer and deeper this time, and there’s no chance of any coherent thought. The museum, my job, Simon’s deceptions, paranormal experiences – none of these things seems important.

  Right now I’m nineteen again and on a snowy railway platform with a boy who turns my bones to water. To be quite honest, nothing else seems to matter very much anymore.

  Chapter 22

  “Cleo! What on earth are you doing here?”

  Susie couldn’t look more horrified to see me. Although it’s late morning she’s still wearing the bum-skimming Playboy tee shirt that doubles as her nightgown, and she has the remains of last night’s make-up sliding down her face. Her pink dreds are even more dishevelled than normal and right now they’re several shades lighter than her face. I don’t need to see the large pair of trainers discarded in the middle of the sitting-room carpet or the trail of clothes leading to her bedroom to gather that my best friend has been entertaining in my absence.

  “I live here, remember?” I point out helpfully, plonking my rucksack down by the door and heading for the kitchen. After my journey back from Taply I’m looking forward to a cup of coffee and maybe even a piece of toast before I head to the museum. I’m not confronting Simon on an empty stomach – and after a very late night with Rafe I need several shots of caffeine to keep my eyes open.

  Rafe. Just the thought of him is enough to make my stomach flutter and my lips curl into a smile. Even discovering a young man dressed in nothing but his boxers and sitting at the kitchen table eating Cornflakes out of the packet because the milk has all been used can’t chase away my good mood.

  “I didn’t think you were coming back until after the weekend!” Susie squeaks, shooting past me and lobbing jeans and a shirt at our masticating guest. “Put some clothes on, Dave, for heaven’s sake! Don’t just sit there.”

  Normally I’d be narked to find the milk gone, the place looking as though a bomb had gone off and Susie’s latest conquest ensconced in the flat, but this morning I feel as though I’m drifting along on a cloud of marshmallow. Nothing can upset me today. As the train had clattered through the frosty countryside I’d been unable to stop smiling. Even alighting at Marylebone and being confronted with Christmas in all its garish consumerist glory hadn’t managed to take the edge off my good mood.

  After Rafe had kissed me we’d stared at one another.

  “I hadn’t expected to do that,” he’d said finally, tracing the curve of my cheek with his hand, “but I’m very glad I did.”

  I’d been too alarmed by the racing of my pulse to speak. If it was going at this speed after just one kiss, what on earth would have happened if we hadn’t paused?

  Instead, my hand had stolen out to echo his gesture. The rough graze of his stubble against my fingers and the brush of his lips on my palm when he’d turned his head and kissed it had taken my breath away. In an all-too-rapid heartbeat, sensible Cleo had vanished – and when Rafe’s arms had slipped around my waist and pulled me close I’d been unable to think straight. I’d wound my fingers into his hair and touched my lips to his again, our kisses growing ever more urgent until we’d finally broken apart, laughing and breathless. Then Rafe had drawn me close again, slowly and tenderly this time, murmuring that he’d been waiting for me ever since that long-ago snowy Christmas. At that point I’d melted, just like the snowflakes had when they’d landed on our cheeks. Perhaps it was all nonsense springing from the euphoria of Rafe writing again – according to the press Rafe had been far from lonely during the past decade – but I was past caring. It was like being a teenager all over again.

  Or, more accurately, it was like being a nineteen-year-old on a lonely railway platform…

  Much later on, as I’d lain in Rafe’s arms, bathed in the blushed light of the rising sun, I hadn’t regretted a moment. It was as though I’d slipped out of myself, level-headed Cleo with her research and her well-organised life, and become somebody else. Who this new Cleo was I had no idea. She saw ghosts, took time off work and slept with rock stars. That really had been one big bang on the head: my world was now inside out and upside down. Did I wish it had never happened? That I had never seen Alex, or been drawn into a world that was a
bout as far removed from my sensible existence as possible? Life before my accident had been so safe and ordered; that was how I’d liked it. My father had been miles away, my attraction to Simon had mostly been an intellectual one – or so I keep telling myself – and my work had kept me busy. Aamon had been a research project rather than a gap-toothed boy who constantly wanted to play football, and I’d been able to walk down the street without seeing people who weren’t really there. There had been no danger of being hurt because I had kept myself so safe. Then again, there had been very little chance of taking a risk either.

  When Rafe had tightened his arms around me and pulled me closer, grazing my temple with his lips, I’d known instantly that whatever the cost was, I couldn’t regret a second that had led me to this moment. I could feel his heart thrumming against my own, beating together with mine, beating the same, and I never wanted to move. It had been almost painful to tear myself away from him, hence my late arrival back in London. Saying goodbye to him outside my father’s house had taken a supreme effort of will.

  “I’ve got to go,” I’d said finally. “I’m already really late. I should have been at the museum for opening time. That would have made finding Simon a whole lot easier.”

  “Do you want me to come with you?” Rafe had offered, his hands holding mind as we sat in the car. “This Simon sounds like a total prick.” His fingers had strengthened their grip and his eyes had narrowed dangerously. We’d talked late into the night, him excitedly about putting his new song out as a free download, me less excitedly about Simon taking my statue and generally behaving oddly.

  “If he’s prepared to steal your belongings, who knows what else he might do,” Rafe had warned.

  I’d smiled at this, unused to having a knight in shining armour. “Simon’s an academic, Rafe, not a Bond villain. He’s just got a bit carried away, that’s all.” I wink at him. “Professional academia can be pretty cut-throat, you know!”

  He’d whistled. “So I’m learning. And there was I just thinking you all dug about in holes and looked at relics! I didn’t think academic espionage went on.”

  “Haven’t you seen Indiana Jones?” I’d joked, and Rafe had grinned.

  “Now I have all sorts of exciting images of you cracking whips!” He’d leaned forwards and kissed me. “Now get out of this car and go to work before I kidnap you and drag you back to bed. No more playing hooky.”

  I’d watched him drive off, and only when the bright red car had turned the corner had I let myself into the house. Would I see him again? Or was this it?

  Calm down, I’d told myself firmly while I’d packed my things. You’re behaving like a teenager. Focus on work. The Assistant Director’s job. Your research. Simon’s unacceptable behaviour. But try as I might I couldn’t rip my thoughts away from Rafe Thorne. His scent, the texture of his skin next to mine, the warmth of his lips against the hollow of my throat, the weight of his body pressing into mine…

  “Cleo? Hello? I just said I’m really sorry about the mess and Dave is on his way out. Aren’t you, Dave?” Susie waves her hand in front of my nose and with a jolt I realise I’m in our kitchen rather than curled up on the sofa in Rafe’s studio with his arms around me and my mouth swollen from his kisses.

  Susie stares at me hard for a moment and then her eyes widen. “Oh my God! I don’t believe it! Cleo Rose Carpenter! You’ve been with a guy!”

  Have I got the word slapper written across my head or something?

  “I don’t know what you’re on about,” I bluff. “I’m just running late, that’s all, and I popped back here because I needed to change into my work clothes.”

  Susie puts her hands on my shoulders and gazes up at me, her brow crinkling for a moment as she stands on her tiptoes. “You’ve got a soppy look on your face that I’ve never seen before, your hair’s wild and you’re running late! You don’t fool me, Cleo Carpenter. Normally I can set my clock by you. And you’re not worried about the mess or my... err… friend? Something’s up and for once I don’t think it’s work.”

  “It’s fine about Dave,” I assure her. “I’m not your mum. How’s it going on Giraffe Ward?”

  “Don’t you dare try and change the subject! Dave, be useful: get dressed and fetch us some more milk. Cleo and I need tea.”

  Dave stretches and yawns widely, and once he’s dispatched Susie does her best to drag details, any details, out of me. There’s no way I’m telling her anything, though. She’ll be unbearable enough if she thinks there’s something going on; if she finds out it’s Rafe Thorne I’ve been seeing there’ll be no stopping her.

  And am I? Seeing Rafe, I mean? It’s not as though we’ve made any plans to see one another again. Maybe this was a one-off? A blip in our otherwise separate lives? Perhaps rock stars do this all the time.

  Duh. Of course they do. Sex and drugs and rock ’n’ roll, right?

  It’s shocking how this thought makes my heart lurch, and as much as I’d love to pour my woes out to my best friend I don’t dare because I don’t think I’ll ever stop. So no matter how much tea she brews or how many probing questions she asks, I still don’t give anything away.

  Eventually Susie gives up and when Dave returns, bearing milk, croissants and a big bunch of flowers, she’s sufficiently distracted for me to escape into my room and change. Ten minutes later I return in a black trouser suit, my satchel over my shoulder and with my curls tamed into a bun.

  The same curls that last night Rafe wound around his fingers, so that he could pull me closer and closer until we melted into one another…

  “Penny for them!” Alex chirps, at my side as I walk to work and matching me stride for stride. He gives me a cheeky sideways look. “Hmm, you look tired, Dr Carpenter. Didn’t you get any sleep last night?”

  “Not you as well. Can’t I get any privacy?” Then a dreadful thought occurs to me. “You weren’t–”

  “Ew! Of course not! Who do you think I am? Hank? Of course I wasn’t there! Give me some credit. I made myself scarce, don’t you worry.”

  I was worried. Having a ghost following me around is starting to make me paranoid.

  “So, is it on? You and Rafe?” Alex continues. He dances in front of me now, scooting backwards and grinning like a loon.

  “I don’t know,” I say. The sun is shining and above the grey rooftops the sky is bright blue. Hey, I’m smiling again. What’s up with me?

  “Well, I do.” Alex beams at me. “You were the key. I knew it. I always knew it and I can’t thank you enough. I know it hasn’t been easy for you and I know I’ve disrupted your life but,” he pauses and gives me a hopeful look, “maybe it hasn’t been all bad?”

  An image flashes through my mind, of Rafe’s eyes holding mine, his mouth just a kiss away and the moonlight silvering his hair. I know that just for this memory alone every disruptive second has been worth it a million times over.

  “No,” I say softly, “not all bad by any means, Alex.”

  I’m at the foot of the museum steps now. A steady stream of visitors moves up and down them. I pause at the bottom and let the human tide flow round me. The sun shines brightly, glancing off the glass doors and bouncing over the pavement. Yet its light trickles right through Alex, and my breath still clouds the air around me as goosebumps ripple across my arms.

  “Rafe’s writing again,” I say slowly. “He seems to be starting to accept that he isn’t to blame for what happened to you. You’ve succeeded, Alex.”

  Alex nods. “So why am I still here? Why haven’t I drifted into the light with an angelic chorus singing me to my eternal rest?”

  “I have no idea,” I say.

  I glance about and, when I focus, I know I’m seeing all kinds of things that aren’t really there, or at least that aren’t really there in the conventional sense. Take that Victorian gent doffing his hat to me, for instance. I guess in a weird way I’ve just started to get used to all of it.

  “Do you stay?” I ask. “Or do we need to get somebody to,
I don’t know, move you on?”

  Alex frowns. “I honestly haven’t a clue. Maybe it isn’t the right time yet? I have a feeling my journey isn’t over yet. Maybe there’s something else I have to do?”

  I sincerely hope not. I dread to think what other hare-brained schemes Alex might dream up. I’ll be a laughing stock by the time he’s finished.

  “And what about the others?” I wave my hand in the direction of a man on a penny-farthing who’s bowling merrily along, followed by a soldier on a horse. “Will I stop seeing them when you go?”

  “I have no idea,” says Alex. “But to be honest, Cleo, I don’t think you seeing ghosts has anything to do with me being about. Maybe this is something you have to deal with from now on?”

  “Great. Just wonderful.”

  “I think you had a dormant psychic ability and that wallop on the bonce awoke it. Didn’t your old man say that your mum and your grandmother both had the gift?”

  “It’s a gift I want to give back,” I grumble, but Alex has vanished and since there’s no point talking to thin air I mount the steps and enter the museum.

  Oh, it’s good to be back! Once in the foyer I feel like myself again, the confident and in-control Dr Carpenter. I nod hello to various colleagues, take a detour through the exhibitions just to check everything is in order, and then leave the public areas for the peace of the offices – if there can be such a thing as peace when Aamon is shrieking and cartwheeling down the corridor, followed by the yowling cat. I’m surprised just how pleased I am to see them both. Absence really does make the heart grow fonder, at least in their case.

  I don’t hold the same sentiment for Dr Simon Welsh, however. As I rap my knuckles on his office door I psyche myself up to ask him what the hell he thought he was playing at when he took my statue. How dare he help himself to my personal belongings?

 

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