Girls, Muddy, Moody Yet Magnificent (18 page)

BOOK: Girls, Muddy, Moody Yet Magnificent
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35

After I’d told Mum everything I’d just told Dad, all over again, and tried to get her to calm down, eventually she rang off. ‘We’re driving down through the night!’ she said dramatically. ‘We’ll see you tomorrow, darling. Let us know if there’s any change.’

‘Yeah, yeah,’ I assured her.

Once she’d rung off, I relaxed slightly. Chloe was snoring gently. The street seemed quiet. Then I heard footsteps on the stairs. They came closer: along the landing. There was a knock on our door. I leapt up and went to answer it. Suddenly I was horribly aware that there wasn’t a chain on it or anything. Never mind. If it was the axe-man, I’d just have to kick him in the masculine department. I opened the door a crack and peeped out. It was Lord Haddock himself, complete with the smell of stale cigarette smoke and the dismal moustache.

‘What’s going on?’ he demanded. ‘Why are there sheets in the bath?’ I remembered, with a sickening jolt, my earlier attempts at laundering.

‘Sorry, sorry,’ I said. ‘My sister’s been taken to hospital. We think she’s got appendicitis.’ He looked suspicious. ‘She was sick.’ He pulled a disgusted face.

‘Charming!’ he sneered.

‘I was only trying to wash them,’ I explained.

‘Typical! You young people,’ he grumbled. ‘You’re a law unto yourselves. And while I’m on the subject, we have a strict No Visitors rule,’ he went on. ‘And your friend who made such a racket hammering on the door pushed past me as if he owned the place!’

‘I’m sorry,’ I said. ‘But it was an emergency.’

‘So who else is in there with you now?’ he demanded.

‘Nobody!’ I snapped. I could do without this hassle. I opened the door wide and invited him to inspect the room, but I was really pissed off at his suspicious attitude and let him know it with a fearful scowl and sneer. He took a quick look. The tableau included Chloe snoring. It was the picture of innocence.

‘I’m not very happy about this,’ whinged the landlord.

‘I’m not very happy about it!’ I snapped. Poor Tam was dangerously ill and we needed support and understanding, not hassle. ‘My sister’s seriously ill and she could have died! And I’m trying to wash your goddam sheets! What more do you want?’

‘Don’t you take that tone with me!’ said Lord Haddock, in a quiet and deadly voice.

‘I’m not taking an attitude!’ I shouted. ‘My sister’s just been taken to hospital!’

‘Please keep your voice down,’ he murmured menacingly. ‘You’re disturbing the other guests. I can’t have this. I’m going to have to ask you to leave in the morning. I want you out by ten. I’m not having under-eighteens in here unsupervised. It always leads to trouble.’

And he turned on his heel and marched off, muttering, ‘Blasted kids’, before I could tell him it would be a pleasure to vacate this hellhole and I hoped his next guests would poo on the ceiling. I decided not to text Mum and Dad about us being chucked out of the B&B. They had enough to worry about already.

I didn’t sleep very well, with tortured dreams about Beast and Tam. Chloe was snoring and slurping in her sleep and muttering things. I kept jolting awake. Then, around 3 a.m., I’d just fallen into another of my light, tormented dozes when my phone buzzed. It was a text from somebody called Harry Hawkins.
Who the . . .?
I frowned for a moment, but then realised it was, of course, Beast.

HEY ZOE. TAM’S OK – THOUGH MINUS HER APPENDIX. SLEEP WELL.

I heaved a huge sigh of relief. It seemed poor old Tam was going to live. I was so relieved, I had a little cry.

At the crack of dawn (or eight thirty to be honest) I was awoken again by my phone buzzing. I grabbed it.

‘Zoe!’ It was Mum. ‘We’re at the hospital! Tam’s fine! She’s had her appendix out and she’s a bit groggy but she’s on the road to recovery.’

‘I know, yeah, thank goodness,’ I said. ‘Beast sent me a text.’

‘The surgeon says it was just in time,’ said Mum. ‘If it had been left any longer it could have been critical.’

‘God!’ I gasped. ‘Horrible!’

‘We’re going to have some breakfast,’ said Mum, ‘and then we’ll come round to your B&B. I don’t suppose they’ve got a spare room available, have they? Dad and I are going to need somewhere.’

I informed Mum that the only room likely to be available was ours, as we were being thrown out and had to vacate by ten o’clock. I also confided a few choice details about the accommodation, which made her realise that she would rather sleep in a ditch than between Lord Haddock’s grim, grey, horror-film sheets.

‘How ghastly!’ said Mum. ‘Don’t worry. We’ll find somewhere nice. You can move in with us.’

‘And Chloe,’ I reminded her.

‘And Chloe, of course,’ confirmed Mum, giving a martyred sigh. She has this act which suggests that Chloe’s mum is totally irresponsible, and if Chloe ever manages to grow up into a civilised adult, it will be my mum’s proud achievement, not Chloe’s mum’s. ‘We’ll find somewhere,’ she said in steely mode. ‘But it might be out of town.’

I felt so tired, I wouldn’t have cared if the accommodation was in Argentina. Mum rang off, hell-bent on locating croissants and a B&B with sanded wood floors, chic china washbasins and thick, heavy cotton sheets that smelt of lavender.

At this moment Chloe woke up. ‘Zoe!’ she croaked. ‘Did Tam get taken off in an ambulance last night, or did I dream it?’ Before I could fill her in on the ghastly details of the last few hours, my moby buzzed again. It was a text from Tobe.

SPENT LAST NIGHT ON THE STATION PLATFORM
, it said.
AVOIDING WEREWOLVES. DITCHED BY GIRLS WHEN THEY MET HANDSOMER AND RICHER GUYS. MET OLIVER WYATT IN TOWN WITH TERRIBLE GIRL CALLED MORGAN. WHAT’S THE NEWS FROM ZOELAND?

OH NOTHING MUCH
, I replied.
TAM IN HOSPITAL, AND WE’VE BEEN CHUCKED OUT OF OUR B&B. BEAT THAT!
Though shattered to find that Oliver had indeed brought a female companion, I was intrigued to hear that she was ‘terrible’, and I was kind of looking forward to inspecting her as soon as possible.

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36

‘I hate all men,’ announced Chloe as we packed our bags. ‘I knew Lord Haddock would turn out to be a total pig, just like Brendan and those horrible guys I got trapped with last night.’

‘What was the fight about?’ I asked.

‘Oh, nothing,’ sighed Chloe. ‘You know. Caveman stuff. All that testosterone.’

‘Beast did rescue us last night, though,’ I said. ‘It was great having a kind of army of guys on our side. And he was really, really sensible and focused. He was the only person who realised how ill Tam was. And he organised getting her to hospital and everything.’ Chloe stopped packing for a minute and frowned.

‘Was I asleep?’ she asked. ‘Did he see me asleep? Did I have my mouth open?’

‘No, no,’ I assured her. ‘We were totally concentrating on Tam, and you were right under the bedclothes, anyway, and . . .’

‘Not that I care,’ Chloe went on. ‘I’m not going to waste any time on men any more, and anyway, Beast is history.’ I couldn’t think of anything to say. ‘I’m going to give myself a makeover,’ said Chloe. ‘I’m going to become the Iron Maiden. I might even get a tattoo.’

If Chloe was going to redesign herself, I might just have to join in. I felt deeply dissatisfied with myself. I was so unfit, for a start. I began to plan a programme of running. I wondered how long it would take me to look good in Lycra shorts. Right now, I would look like an airbag.

We left the B&B in a taxi, and went to the hospital with all our luggage. There was nowhere else to go: we were homeless. We arrived at the hospital and found our way to Tam’s bedside, where Dad was sitting doing a crossword in a relaxed way.

I peeped at Tam. She seemed to be dozing. Her face was pale and there were several horrid tubes coming out from under the bedclothes. Dad gave me a big hug, and then hugged Chloe as well, just to be polite.

‘Mum’s gone off to look for a place to stay,’ he whispered. ‘Tam’s asleep most of the time. She’s going to be fine.’

‘What are those tubes?’ I asked.

‘Oh, just one to take the blood away, and one to take the pee away, and a drip line into the back of her hand to give her bacon and eggs straight into the vein – that sort of thing,’ mused Dad. ‘I expect there’s one supplying Calvin Klein as well.’

I was so glad it was Dad on guard at Tam’s bedside. His jokes made everything just slightly less tragic and gross. Mum’s so tense, she would have increased the stress levels by cleaning the floor with wet tissues, or something.

I stared at Tam. Her beautiful face was so white and there were shadows under her eyes. Her lips were a bit cracked and dry. There was a bruise on her hand where the drip went in. You could tell she’d been through something really awful. As I looked at her my heart kind of squeezed with anguish for a split second. My lovely sister was so fragile.

I didn’t care any more that she was so much more beautiful than me. I didn’t care that she could be irritating, that she manipulated Mum, that she behaved irresponsibly, that she was hopeless with money and reckless in love. I just wanted her to get better and never be ill again for the rest of her life. I’d happily take on her share of illnesses in future, and I made a mental note to God to arrange this, if possible.

‘So what are your plans for the holiday, Chloe?’ asked Dad, putting his crossword away politely even though I knew he would much rather finish it.

‘I’ve got plenty of plans,’ said Chloe firmly. ‘But they most definitely do not include meeting boys.’

‘Oh, right,’ said Dad. ‘Reassuring, I suppose. So what are these plans, then?’

‘Well, for a start, I’m going to the girls-only surf school,’ said Chloe. I was startled. I didn’t know anything about this. Presumably it was something Chloe had heard about last night, behind the silver door, before the fight had broken out. I would have to make it crystal clear that when it came to big waves, I’d be watching from the beach. ‘I’m going to look into fitness and yoga too,’ she went on. ‘I’d like to do yoga on the beach; I think that’d be really cool. Plus I’m thinking about getting a tattoo.’

Dad blinked slightly and raised his eyebrows a tad, but he didn’t comment. He was being tactful for once.

‘Only a henna tattoo,’ I added. ‘It’ll fade away in a few weeks.’

‘No, Zoe! A proper tattoo!’ said Chloe fiercely. I shrugged. Chloe’s mum has a tattoo, actually. She’s got the god Mercury on her left shoulder.

‘And what are your plans, old boy?’ asked Dad. I scratched my head.

‘I want to meet this girl called Morgan,’ I said. ‘Oliver Wyatt – he’s a guy from school and he was working on the farm with us – he’s got a girlfriend and apparently she’s awful.’

‘One can see how that might be an enjoyable project,’ said Dad. ‘But I’m not sure it’s realistic to build an entire holiday around it.’

Poor Dad! How little he knew!

After a while Mum reappeared, looking very tired but wearing plenty of lipstick as usual. She wears a special purplish-pink one in emergencies. She made such a fuss of me and Chloe that Tam woke up. Then Mum made a fuss of Tam, which seemed to set back Tam’s recovery for about a fortnight.

Eventually a nurse tactfully suggested that we should push off and take our suffocating love elsewhere.

‘I’ve found a flat,’ said Mum as we crossed the hospital car park. ‘There was a last-minute cancellation, apparently. We’ve been very lucky.’

She drove us across town, down through some snaky lanes and up another hillside, then out on to a cliff top with amazing views. She parked and we all got out.

‘Come on!’ said Mum with a grin, waving the keys. ‘It may be a bit extravagant, but I think we all need a little treat.’

There was an apartment building on the right, glistening white in the sun, with stylish blue window frames and shutters, a bit like a house in Greece or something. And there was a sign:
BLUE OCEAN FLATS
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My heart missed a beat. These were the flats where Tam had been going to take us with her married man! I tried to catch Chloe’s eye, but she was staring at the amazing views and didn’t seem to have noticed.

Mum led us friskily to the main door and on through into apartment No. 2. We entered and gasped. It was
exactly
the same one we would have stayed in! It was all there – the amazing cantilevered balcony, all metal and glass, with the stupendous view of the vast beach, where tiny people were running about like ants hundreds of feet below.

‘Nice kitchen,’ said Mum approvingly, stroking the granite worktops. She adores granite – sometimes I think she wishes Dad was made out of it. Dad had plonked himself down on the sofa. Thank God they didn’t seem to recognise the apartment as the one we’d originally been planning to stay in – after all, they’d only seen the briefest glimpse of the website, weeks ago.

‘Oh my God!’ gasped Chloe suddenly, ‘this is the apartment we were going to stay in with Tam, with Ed, before it all went wrong . . .’

Trust Chloe! I tried to shush her, but it was too late. In a split second Chloe realised she shouldn’t have opened her big mouth, and clapped her hand across it, looking guilty. Mum looked up sharply. Even Dad seemed mildly interested.

‘Who’s this Ed?’ pounced Mum. ‘And how did it all go wrong? And how in the world were you ever going to afford this place? I can hardly afford it myself!’

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