Authors: Judy Astley
âWhat've you got in there then? Cleopatra?' Jenny froze, terrified, as Paul Mathieson, his vast Nikon suspended importantly round his neck, stalked down the middle of the road towards them from his own house.
âYes, that's right, just transporting a body or two,' Mrs Fingell told him. Jenny felt herself gasp involuntarily. Mrs Fingell winked. âAnd where are you going with that great thing?' she asked Paul, nodding towards the camera.
âOh just going to take some impromptu photos at the party. Official photographers are all very well for the formal stuff, but you can't beat the ones taken by a competent friend; more natural,' he said, proudly stroking the lens of his camera. Then he raised it to his eye. âWant me to take one of you two? Good light out here . . .'
âNo!' Jenny yelled, putting her hand up in front of her face melodramatically, then recollected herself. âI mean, don't waste it on us here, save it for the party. We'll be back there in a few minutes, soon as we've delivered the rug. Really good idea about the photos, I'll look forward to seeing them; we all will,' she flattered him, knowing his mind's eye was already looking ahead to an evening of neighbourly photo-viewing, complete with sherry and Carol's best finger-buffet. She prayed he wouldn't offer to lend a hand with the rug, wouldn't take over hauling it into Mrs Fingell's sitting-room and helpfully insist on unrolling George Pemberton's mortal remains all over the floor. Vanity, as Jenny had gambled, easily got the better of Paul and he eagerly strode off along the Close back to the party. âWhyever did you say that about transporting bodies?' Jenny gasped as they struggled on to the opposite pavement and along towards the Pemberton garden.
Mrs Fingell sniggered, irreverently. âI've always found,' she said, âthat when things are at their worst, if you just tell people the absolute truth they will never believe you. They don't want to.'
âWell, let's just hope he doesn't look back,' Jenny replied, but he didn't.
The really hard bit, as it turned out, was going back to the party and acting as if nothing had happened. Jenny suddenly wished, as she rejoined the celebrations, stuck a social smile on her face and delivered the wedding present, that she hadn't panicked and had simply left George where he had fallen and phoned for an ambulance. She could see that the adventure had made Mrs Fingell quite jaunty, and dreaded what truths she might try testing on everyone after a glass or three of champagne.
âOf course, you know what they say, don't you love,' Jenny overheard her confiding loudly to Carol Mathieson. âRed hat, no drawers!' Carol was looking in horror at the old lady's scarlet hat and blushing vividly as Mrs Fingell winked broadly at her.
Fiona Pemberton, securely unaware that she was now a widow, had got Daisy trapped against a fence and was talking to her in strong terms about her mock GCSEs. Jenny didn't have to hear every word to know that some of them consisted of âimportant not to slacken off at this stage' and âthorough revision now means less ground to cover later.' Nor did she have any doubts that the accompanying words in Daisy's mind were any different from âSod off you old bat, leave me alone.' Poor Fiona, Jenny allowed herself to think, surely she'll miss having the daft old man to boss around? Or would she celebrate, indulging in uncharacteristic frivolity, perhaps spending the long Easter holidays taking an extravagant cruise in the Caribbean and saucily plaguing the life out of gay young pursers?
No-one had noticed how much Ben had drunk. He'd lost count, accepting and losing track of glasses of champagne as trays came round and were offered. It was a noisy, busy party and the first one at which he hadn't, as neither child nor adult, felt hugely out of place. Usually when he was dragged along to this sort of thing, he found himself wishing he was still Polly's age and able to dash off and play daft games with any other available child. Adults were stiffly polite to each other and talked about education, au pairs, houses, the awfulness of Nassau and the best route to Provence, and any other teenagers usually skulked in corners as shyly as he did. This time, though, he was sparkling, witty even; some of the younger Welsh girls were laughing with, not at, him. He put that down to his success with Emma. If it wasn't for Polly's abrupt interruption, he'd have definitely, easily, he felt, got to what Oliver called third base with Emma. He felt almost as good as if he actually had, and there'd be other times, now they were actually seeing each other.
Bravely, buoyed up by the success of a joke-telling session with some of Sue's new in-laws, Ben stopped in the kitchen to chat to Carol Mathieson. âYou like jokes? Here's one,' he said to her. She smiled, because Ben was a nice boy deep down, she was sure of that. âCome out here and I'll tell you,' he said, emboldened by her smile and by the inflaming fact that her pearly silk blouse had enough buttons undone to show the edge of a pristine white, untrimmed, sensible bra. Carol followed him to the hallway, prepared to be daring as it was a party, and secretly a bit flattered that a good-looking teenage boy should seek her out.
Ben propped himself up against the stair-rail and leaned towards Carol. âWhat's the difference between a clitoris and a pub?' he whispered intimately into her ear. His face could feel the air whistle past him as Carol's shocked head whirled round to face him.
â
What
did you say?' she shrieked at him. âNo, don't repeat it!
Please!
' she ordered as Ben opened his mouth to say it again. He'd shocked her, he realized, which he had to admit was almost as exciting as the white bra.
âIt's only that men can always find their way to the pub,' he finished feebly, hoping that at least
now
she'd see the funny side. She didn't. What, he wondered was wrong? The Welsh girls had laughed like drains. He thought drunkenly about the words of the joke, perhaps he'd said it wrong. He knew it would come over better from a woman, but the idea of
him
telling it was to distance himself from the sort of men who hadn't a clue about women's anatomy. Oliver had told him it couldn't fail, but obviously it could, with knobs on. He was too drunk for intellectualizing. Carol was now tapping her suede foot and waiting for an apology. Or was she, he wondered. If she was
really
100 per cent shocked, surely she'd be in the garden by now, complaining to Jenny about the appalling way she'd brought up her eldest child. Ben moved even closer to her, intending to manipulate her into the cloakroom. He pushed gently at the door thinking Carol could be slid inside the small room before she knew what was happening, but instead the sudden roar of flushing water could be heard and the door was abruptly opened from the other side. Ben cannoned past Carol into a man who, from his size, was probably a reserve Welsh prop forward, before ricocheting drunkenly down to rest on the floor, his head jammed beneath the wash basin and a pink fluffy towel draped over his hair like Laurence of Arabia. Hopeless, he thought, bloody-sodding-useless-stupid-dickhead. He'd give up the pursuit of older women, he resolved, as he unwound painfully from his undignified position on the floor. People were looking and tripping over his great long feet. He would stick to Emma from now on, this was obviously a lesson. However, staggering up awkwardly from the floor, he caught sight of Carol in the cloakroom mirror. She adjusted her hair, put a finger to the corner of her mouth to remove a lipstick smudge and then winked naughtily at her own reflection. When do you ever know the right stuff about women, he thought, trailing unhappily into Sue's sitting-room to find a phone and ring Emma for comfort.
It was time for Sue and David to leave for their honeymoon in Italy. Jenny was feeling the effects of both champagne and shock, and knew that it could only be a short time before someone made the dreadful discovery of George spreadeagled sadly beneath his lilac tree. At least it wasn't raining. However awful George had been, Jenny could never have abandoned him under that tree to become pathetically sodden. Fiona Pemberton was still at the party, getting on extremely well in a corner with David's Uncle Matthew, who was a headmaster in Cardiff. Jenny had heard various snatches of their conversation in which they were comparing National Curriculum problems and the desirability of bringing back the 11-plus. She seemed oblivious to the fact that her husband hadn't returned. Perhaps she wasn't expecting him, or perhaps she didn't care. Either way, perhaps Uncle Matthew would be usefully available later to provide comfort for the new widow. Mrs Fingell was dozing in the dining-room, her feet up and her shoes off and her cherry red hat sitting on the table, complementing perfectly a bowl of scarlet tulips. I wonder what she's dreaming about, Jenny wondered.
In the garden, Polly sneaked up behind the stone bench and whispered delicately in the ear of Sean, Sue's younger son, âJust now, when you put your baseball cap on, I realized I'd seen you recently in our house. You were the one in the leather,' she told him.
âWhy are you whispering?' he asked her.
âBecause,' she went on in a mocking sing-song voice, âI know what you were doing!'
âNo you don't,' he told her in a way that confirmed to Polly that she did.
She went on, close enough for him to smell chocolate ice-cream on her breath, âMeasuring out that stuff that they all smoke, and selling it to Ben. He sells it at school, I heard about it; everyone knows. But they don't know where it comes from. Only I do, so far.' She held out her grubby little hand and requested with her most charming smile, âOnly a fiver.' The boy, digging into his pocket for some of his ill-gotten earnings, sighed and knew he was beaten, just for now.
The wedding guests filled the front driveway and overflowed the pavement into the road as Sue and David prepared to leave. Jenny hugged Sue and wished her luck and Sue threw her bouquet to one of David's pretty young cousins while everyone cheered.
âWe'll go home now, shall we?' said Alan, putting a cosy arm round Jenny and squeezing her gently. It was getting so near to the moment she was dreading, the inevitable scream when someone, Fiona most likely, discovered the body behind the tree. The Welsh contingent and some of the boozier neighbours went back into the house, turned up the music and seemed set to party on till dawn. But to Jenny, it felt comforting to be walking home along the Close with her entire family around her, even with Polly and Daisy trailing behind and squabbling.
âDid you get that message from the school?' Ben asked her. âI forgot to tell you old Jeavons was going to call. Sorry.'
âWho is old Jeavons? Please don't tell me you've been expelled as well . . .' she said anxiously, easily convinced now that it was always right to expect the worst.
âNo, no, he's head of music. The other bloke they've got has gone and got a record deal so they need a new music teacher fast. They'd got your CV.'
âWell that's brilliant! I'll give him a call first thing on Monday,' Jenny said, just managing to stop herself from saying that thank goodness at least someone in the house would be employed. Alan didn't need that kind of put-down, and in spite of everything, Jenny thought, didn't deserve it. Something was going right, at last, she thought, feeling like smiling for the first time in hours.
Ahead of them, still with his camera bumping heavily against his chest, Paul Mathieson proudly surveyed his territory. He walked, slightly unsteadily, along the middle of the quiet road, occasionally dashing to the gutter to collect stray litter, or peering over a fence to check whether a car door was actually lockedor not. Jenny felt her insides tighten painfully and she held her breath as Paul caught sight of a Snickers wrapper blown by the wind just into the Pembertons' lilac-framed gateway. Any second now, this would make Paul's day. Quite soon, less than half-an-hour away, the Close would be full of flashing blue lights, ambulances, police, stripey ribbon cordons, a weeping widow needing sherry and comfort. The balconies on the estate across the main road would be lined with gleeful sightseers, and there'd be pictures in the local (perhaps even the national) papers. Beside Jenny, Alan watched Paul and chuckled deeply.
âLook at the silly old sod, he's like the Queen inspecting the troops. Can't think why he bothers, nothing sinister ever happens in a place like this.'
the end
Judy Astley was frequently told off for day-dreaming at her drearily traditional school but has found it to be the ideal training for becoming a writer. There were several false starts to her career: secretary at an all-male Oxford college (sacked for undisclosable reasons), at an airline (decided, after a crash and a hijacking, that she was safer elsewhere) and as a dress designer (quit before anyone noticed she was adapting
Vogue
patterns). She spent some years as a parent and as a painter before sensing that the day was approaching when she'd have to go out and get a Proper Job. With a nagging certainty that she was temperamentally unemployable, and desperate to avoid office coffee, having to wear tights every day and missing out on sunny days on Cornish beaches with her daughters, she wrote her first novel,
Just for the Summer
.
For more information on Judy Astley and her books, see her website at
www.judyastley.com
.
JUST FOR THE SUMMER
SEVEN FOR A SECRET
MUDDY WATERS
EVERY GOOD GIRL
THE RIGHT THING
EXCESS BAGGAGE
NO PLACE FOR A MAN
UNCHAINED MELANIE
AWAY FROM IT ALL
SIZE MATTERS
ALL INCLUSIVE
BLOWING IT
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PLEASANT VICES
A BLACK SWAN BOOK: 9780552995658
Version 1.0 Epub ISBN: 9781446487495