The Rival

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by Charlotte Duckworth




  The Rival

  About the Auhor

  Charlotte Duckworth has spent the past fifteen years working as an interiors and lifestyle journalist, writing for a wide range of consumer magazines and websites. She lives in Surrey with her partner and their young daughter. You can find out more on her website: charlotteduckworth.com.

  Title

  Copyright

  This ebook edition first published in 2018 by

  Quercus Editions Ltd

  Carmelite House

  50 Victoria Embankment

  London EC4Y 0DZ

  An Hachette UK company

  Copyright © 2018 Charlotte Duckworth

  The moral right of Charlotte Duckworth to be

  identified as the author of this work has been

  asserted in accordance with the Copyright,

  Designs and Patents Act, 1988.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication

  may be reproduced or transmitted in any form

  or by any means, electronic or mechanical,

  including photocopy, recording, or any

  information storage and retrieval system,

  without permission in writing from the publisher.

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available

  from the British Library

  HB ISBN 978 1 78747 093 4

  TPB ISBN 978 1 78747 094 1

  EBOOK ISBN 978 1 78747 096 5

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters,

  businesses, organizations, places and events are

  either the product of the author’s imagination

  or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to

  actual persons, living or dead, events or

  locales is entirely coincidental.

  Ebook by CC Book Production

  Cover design © 2018 Andrew Smith

  www.quercusbooks.co.uk

  Epigraph

  Every mother is a working mother.

  ANON

  CONTENTS

  PROLOGUE

  PART ONE

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  PART TWO

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  PART THREE

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  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  PROLOGUE

  One mouthful at a time. That’s it. You can do it.

  The smell of my own milk in my nostrils, and something else in my ears: a voice. Gentle, infuriating, insistent. A hint of desperation.

  Please.

  The cold press of metal against my lips.

  Feeding me like a baby. Like a baby. I grab his arm, tell him how funny it is. Everything is back to front, mixed up. Everyone swapping places. Musical chairs!

  Eat, drink, sleep. That’s what the nurse keeps telling me.

  But the texture is wrong. Too lumpy. Something’s not right. It’s sticking to the roof of my mouth, clinging to the cracked skin on my lips. I spit it out, let it run down my chin. It’s obvious now. He’s trying to poison me. He’s on her side. Of course he is.

  She always gets what she wants. People like her always do.

  Ashley, a voice says. Funny, it sounds like mine.

  He shakes his head, pushes the food into my mouth once more.

  No. The spoon catches my teeth, sending a spike of pain shooting through my gums.

  It’s just us in here.

  PART ONE

  NOW

  SEVEN MONTHS LATER

  Helena

  It’s Tuesday. Again.

  The Tuesdays of my previous existence slipped by unnoticed. None of the loaded expectation of a Monday, the bitter-sweet bliss of a Sunday, nor the joyful anticipation of a Thursday. Instead, they simply vanished into the working week, absorbed by the busyness of life, eaten up by meetings and emails and Things To Attend To.

  Tuesdays are somewhat different now.

  There’s a poster in my therapist’s office. It’s hidden behind the door, as though she’s not quite sure if it’s in good taste. Colourful calligraphy reminds me It’s good to talk! every time the door is closed, barring my escape. Good for her, yes. Even now, I still drive the four and a half miles to her practice, once a week. I pay my six pieces of silver (ten-pound notes) and sit on her sofa (I am still a little disappointed by this – I had pictured a Le Corbusier for that money, at the very least) and I cry like a bereaved mother is supposed to. I cry so much that I hate myself. I cry until blood vessels burst under my eyelids, until I’m so full of self-loathing that I want to scrub myself out and start all over again. And at the end of my forty-five minutes I wipe my face, blow my nose and go home like a good girl.

  Tuesdays.

  Jack is waiting for my return, his face a backlit smudge hovering at the living-room window as I pull up in my car. He’s hoping desperately for a breakthrough, for a sign that I’ve made some progress. But I have nothing to give him. Instead, I step into the hallway, put my bag down on the floor and silently wrap my arms around him. He doesn’t ask me how the session has gone.

  Tonight, as usual, there’s something warm in the oven, waiting: comfort food – even though he knows I’ll only pick at it. We make small talk over dinner and then, despite the fact it makes me drowsy with the medication I’m on, I drink red wine in front of the fireplace.

  It’s not so much a fireplace as a brick-built fire area, complete with enormous tiled hearth, wood-burning stove and old rusty nails, left over from the previous owners’ collection of horse brasses. This is what you get for escaping to the country. An acre of land that leads down to a sad excuse for a river, with five bedrooms, two bathrooms, outbuildings to house your husband’s new carpentry business, and no neighbours for three-quarters of a mile.

  The perfect family home. Except for the people dying on my doorstep on a regular basis, that is.

  As we do every evening, we sit in front of this fireplace, in what people always describe as a companionable silence, but which is more often merely indifferent. Jack is reading. I know he wants to be watching TV really, a political drama on Netflix, something like that would do nicely, but he’s trying to be supportive, by providing the space for me to ‘open up’. Instead of talking to him, however, I am guiltily staring into that space, as I always do, counting the rusted horse-brass nails in the bricks, from top to bottom. There are eighteen, but I always count them carefully, in case I’ve missed one.

  Today I’m thinking how, in a previous life, I would have used these nails for something decorative. To hang pictures, perhaps? Me, Jack and our adorable brood. No, that would have looked too messy. What else, then? At Christmas, you could use them to hang a wreath from. Not a wreath, that’s the wrong word. Wreaths are for front doors and gr
aves. A garland. A beautiful winding garland, with holly and snowberries – it would twist all around the arched opening to the fire, creating a ‘centrepiece’.

  The week is stretching ahead of us, empty and cold. We haven’t lit the fire yet this year and my toes are chilly underneath my blanket. October is such an empty month. I wonder what we can do with a cold, dull weekend at the end of a cold, dull week, just the two of us here at home. A few weeks ago, my father made noises about coming to visit us this Sunday but, as usual, he hasn’t confirmed. I phoned his PA yesterday. She had no record of his planned visit in her diary.

  I swallow a large gulp of wine.

  Suddenly, Jack puts down his book. My eyes rest on the spine. It’s a biography of a racing car driver, Senna. I am vaguely aware that he died young but that he died doing what he loved. People were devastated at his death, lamenting it as a terrible waste, but I envy him. That’s the way to go. We all have to go at some point, so why not go like that? And after all, death is only sad for the people you leave behind.

  Jack is looking at me.

  ‘What are you thinking about?’ he says. In the dull light, his face looks more drawn than I remember it, and I give myself an inward kick for not noticing him more, the toll it’s taken on him too.

  ‘Senna,’ I say, because it’s true. I nod towards the book laid down on the arm of his chair. ‘I was thinking how much I envied him.’

  Jack shakes his head. He doesn’t know how to deal with this. In the old days when I was given to moments of self-pity he would write me off as being melodramatic, but I’m untouchable now.

  ‘Darling—’ he says, and I know he’s about to ask me how my therapy session went, but he thinks better of it and so he stops.

  ‘It’s fine,’ I say, giving a lopsided smile. ‘Sorry. I was being stupid.’ I adopt a sing-song voice, all feigned nonchalance. I pick up my wine glass, holding it aloft. ‘Don’t worry. Not going to top myself. Not this week when there’s still Malbec left in the cellar!’

  A flicker of disapproval passes across his face; his lips are set in a line. He knows the drinking makes my depression worse. I hate what I am doing to him.

  ‘I was only going to say that you had a phone call while you were out,’ he says. ‘But you looked so serious . . .’

  A phone call. The way he’s said it makes me think that finally, finally, she’s got in touch. There’s been an epiphany and she’s penitent, devastated, she wants to beg for my forgiveness. She wants to make it right, somehow, even though she knows she never can.

  But this is the Ash of my fantasies. She doesn’t exist, because she isn’t a real person. This isn’t how Ash is. This is someone far removed from reality, someone I imagined into existence when I met her, someone I credited with more than she could ever deserve.

  Suddenly, the wine tastes acrid and I put my glass down on the coffee table, watching as one dark red drip travels back down the inside of the glass.

  ‘Who was it?’ I ask. In the few seconds before he replies, I try to guess. Kate, perhaps? My father? Not my mother . . .

  And then, just as he tells me, I realize I already know. Of course it was him, he’s been trying to track me down for weeks. I don’t answer my mobile any more. Most of the time, in fact, it’s switched off. But I have seen the missed calls gathering, and I have listened to his breezy message.

  Jack lets out a great sigh. And I wonder if he knows, or if he’s just tired of dredging up the past, never knowing how I’ll react.

  ‘David,’ he says, and the name is somehow comforting; proof that my powers of deduction, if nothing else, aren’t as sodden as the rest of me. ‘He wants you to ring him.’

  THEN

  Ash

  I take a seat in the furthest corner of the reception area and pull out my notebook and pen. Today is a triumph and it isn’t yet 8.30 a.m. I begin to write.

  It’s your attitude not your aptitude that determines your altitude.

  It’s a secret, this notebook. Not even Gary knows about it. A few years ago I heard someone talk about morning pages. At first, I misinterpreted: mourning pages – thinking it was something you wrote to lament all you’d loved and lost. Self-indulgent. But then I read an article about them online – how they’d transformed people’s lives and mental health – and I decided, why not? Any excuse for new stationery.

  So I started. Just one page per day of rambling thoughts. Notes on the weather, my fitness, the condition of my skin, how Gran is. But lately I’ve become a little, I’ll admit it, obsessed with aphorisms. I have an app, and every morning at 6 a.m. when my alarm goes off, one flashes across my screen. A focus for the day.

  And today’s seems apt.

  I bring the pen back to the page as the running commentary begins in my head.

  Drum roll, please!

  The Life of Ashley Thompson: A Biopic

  An unwanted child. Brought up by her grandparents, she grew up in a home where a game of Cluedo was considered an intellectual pursuit. Where the only thing to read was Woman’s Weekly, and where crosswords were ignored but word searches were agonized over. But she rose above such challenges, secured her place at the London School of Economics (editor’s note: not Oxford, but that was clearly a case of prejudice – the interviewer heard her accent and wrote her off immediately), studied Business, gained a first with her dissertation on ‘Women Who Smashed the Glass Ceiling’, spent two years interning and working in a clothes shop to pay the bills, and now, here she is, the newest recruit for one of the biggest tech start-ups of the past five years. In a brand-new office. On the fifteenth floor, with floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking Granary Square.

  Kids, learn from Ashley: you can achieve anything, if you try hard enough.

  It’s your attitude not your aptitude that determines your altitude!

  I draw a border around it, the corners spinning off into elaborate curls. My handwriting, one of the few things that frustrate me, is not neat and ordered like my mind. It has too many flicks and twists, which is why I always write in capitals if I think anyone will see. It might look aggressive, but it’s better than the alternative.

  What else?

  Today is the first day of my new job. Before work I ran 10km and got a personal best, if you can trust the app I’m using, which I’m not entirely sure you can, as it seemed to lose me briefly somewhere between Colliers Wood and Tooting. I arrived at 8.15 a.m., but my manager isn’t actually in yet. So I’m waiting in the lobby to be collected. I need to get a photo pass to allow me in and out of the building. The woman on reception said the machine was broken at the moment but that an engineer was coming to fix it this afternoon, so hopefully I’ll have one before the end of the day.

  I pause, and cross the last two sentences out. Snore, snore.

  On the way in, I had two double espressos, which I now slightly regret. My hands are quite shaky. We shall see how the day pans out. I’ve already made great plans for—

  I’m interrupted mid-sentence by the sound of a chair scraping. I look up. A girl with stringy orange hair and uneven freckles has decided to sit opposite me, despite the other four tables in the waiting area being empty.

  She dumps her handbag on the table right in front of me. It’s a Mulberry, but it’s old, battered, almost an embarrassment.

  ‘Hi,’ she says, smiling. ‘Your first day, too?’

  Fake it till you feel it.

  I give her my broadest grin, closing my notebook.

  ‘Hello!’ A little too high-pitched there, Ashley, sort yourself out. ‘Yes. Exciting, isn’t it?’

  ‘I’ll say. I cannot believe I’ve got a job here – I keep having to pinch myself!’ She gives a small, almost apologetic laugh. ‘My little sister is such a fan of KAMU, she spends hours poring over all the product reviews and is obsessed with their editorials. I think she’s more excited than I am. Did you know they have a ping-pong table in one of the meeting rooms?’

  I wonder what I can add to this, but am saved from further conv
ersation by Helena’s approach. Today she is in skinny jeans, pumps and a Breton top, and I am disappointed. Somehow, the UK Creative Director of a Silicon Valley import shouldn’t be wearing jeans. And the Breton top? Does she think she’s Kate Middleton?

  She looks a bit like her, in fact. Not quite as thin, but with deep-set almond eyes. But blonde, of course. Her hair is long and curly and volumized. I suspect a weekly blow-dry in a Chelsea salon. I’ve seen the sort of places, watched the sort of women, on my many window-shopping trips down the King’s Road.

  ‘Ashley!’ she calls, hurrying towards me.

  What would her running commentary say? I know her story almost as well as my own; I did my research before my first interview.

  Helena Brenton (née Cawston), only child. Oxbridge with an MBA. Clever, then, but upper middle class, brought up in the Home Counties and educated at boarding school. Thirty-four. Recently married to a supremely eligible, supremely clichéd banker. Her father owns a chain of department stores, while her mother had a brief career as a model before Helena was born.

  I look up and smile at her, wondering whether to stand now or wait for her to reach me. Opposite me, Freckles grabs her phone and starts fiddling with it, downcast, as though she’s last to be picked for the netball team.

  ‘Helena, hello!’ That screechy voice again. But Helena doesn’t notice my voice, or my concern. Of course she doesn’t. Women like her don’t notice anything.

  ‘Sorry to keep you,’ she says, slightly breathless herself, but only because she’s rushed here. I’m an inconvenient chore, something she’s remembered at the last minute. ‘Our app crashed so I’ve been having crisis talks with our tech team. Shall we get a coffee before we go up? I’m desperate for one.’

  I search for an excuse. Another coffee would send me over the edge; into what Gary calls my ‘manic mode’. It’s not even two seconds before the escape forms on my lips.

  ‘Oh, I don’t drink it,’ I say, confidently, as I stand up, the lie suddenly not a lie as the idea plants itself in my mind. ‘I don’t drink any form of caffeine. It dehydrates and ages you. But I’ll have some sparkling water.’

 

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