pitched braying voice, thought that she must have been
quite pretty once, that really she was his least favourite sort
of person. Snobbish, prejudiced, foolishly worthy: then he
remembered the-‘small Megan, sitting in her wheelchair at a
previous meeting, handing out stickers at the door, her
large eyes fixed trustingly on her mother’s face as she spoke,
and felt ashamed of himself.
The hall — attached to a Methodist church — was only
about a third full; mainly with middle-class women, a
handful of husbands, and a small group of the local green
contingent — young men with beards and sandals, young
women with trailing hair and skirts and a lot of silver
jewellery.
Gabriel was suddenly jolted, with a force that he felt
physically, into a state of acute and pleasurable awareness,
half sexual in character, half cerebral, by the appearance of a
woman in the doorway of the hall: the woman he had met
three days earlier in the sunlit heart of Bartles Wood; the woman he had at once so disapproved of and enjoyed; the woman who had occupied a sufficient area of his consciousness
for him to know almost without looking at her that
her hair was dark and heavy, and swung just short of her
narrow shoulders, her eyes were large and very deep
brown, her jawline exceptionally well defined and set in
what seemed permanent determination; that she was small
and more than averagely slim, that she had very beautiful
hands; that her breasts were small - had he really noticed
them? Yes, it seemed he had - and her legs extremely good;
that—
‘Mr Bingham, could I introduce Octavia Fleming? She’s
involved with Foothold, a charity I am very close to, and
has become interested in our attempts to save Bartles
Wood. Octavia, this is Gabriel Bingham, our local MP.’
And ‘Yes,’ they said, at the same time and then she
laughed and he smiled. ‘We’ve met before.’
‘Where in God’s name do you think she’s gone, Marianne?
I really am terribly worried. If you could have heard her
this morning …’
‘Felix, I have no idea. I’m sorry. Doesn’t the nanny
know?’
‘Apparently not. Just said she’d gone out, that she was
going to be back very late.’
‘Well,’ said Marianne, ‘if Octavia is able to go out, there
can’t be anything very wrong with her. Now could I
suggest—’
‘That’s a rather naive assumption, I think. She could
be anywhere, anywhere at all, driving round, feeling desperate
…’
‘Had she been home?’
‘No.’
‘And Tom’s not there?’
‘He’s in Oxford. He’s always away, never at home when
he’s really needed …”
‘Felix, that’s hardly fair. Tom works terribly hard, he has
a very demanding business to run.’
‘I also have a demanding business to run. Even more so in the past. And if Octavia needed me, I made sure I was
there.’
‘But that was when she was a child, for heaven’s sake,
she’s—’ Marianne managed with great difficulty not to
finish her sentence.
‘That’s not the point. Anyway, as you reminded me
recently, she is now Tom’s responsibility. One he seems to
be totally neglecting. I have called him three times today,
told him how upset Octavia was, he’s ignored all my calls.
What’s going on?’
Marianne’s resolve snapped totally. ‘Felix, please stop
this. Octavia is Tom’s wife. When are you going to realise
that? So she’s upset. I get upset sometimes, you do,
everybody does. Just leave her alone, leave them both
alone. And while you’re about it, leave me alone as well.
I’m trying to have a peaceful evening.’
She put the phone down, finding herself enragingly near
to tears for the third time that day. It wasn’t like her, she
thought, blowing her nose, it wasn’t like her at all. Her cool
self-control seemed to have deserted her. She tried not to
think why.
‘Well,’ said Octavia briskly, as she and Gabriel stood rather
awkwardly outside together, ‘I suppose I’d better get back
to London.’
‘Where’s your car?’
‘There,’ she said, slightly shamefaced.
‘The Range Rover?’
She looked at him. He was smiling — just — but his eyes
were quite hard. Irritation sawed at her. ‘Look,’ she said, ‘I
think you’ve got me a bit wrong. I really do.’
‘And how do you think I’ve got you?’
‘As a rich, spoilt townie wife, playing Lady Bountiful,
taking up a rather attractive, trendy cause, and then roaring
back up to my London house and getting on with my own
expensive life.’
‘Well, that’s how it looks, I must admit.’
‘It’s so unfair,’ she said, trying to keep her voice calm. ‘I
really care about the wood. And I actually work very hard,
you know.’
‘Very commendable,’ he said, heavily polite.
‘Oh, stop it!’ she said, the strain and misery of the day
breaking over her. ‘It just might interest you to know, in
your pompous self-satisfaction, that my husband referred to
you as a Bollinger Socialist. Which on the surface sounds
actually quite fair to me. You went to Winchester and then
Durham. Hardly bastions of underprivilege.’
‘How do you know that?’ he said, genuinely astonished.
‘I looked you up. I was — interested,’ she said, irritated
with herself now, ‘having met you.’
‘And why on earth should your husband have a view on
me? What does he actually do, this husband of yours?’
‘Oh, he’s in — in marketing. What are you doing here
anyway?’ she said suddenly. ‘It’s the middle of the week,
you should be at Westminster.’
‘I had to come down to see a hospital consultant.
Nothing interesting, I’m afraid, old sports injury, and I’m
safely paired. I shall be back in the morning, and—’
‘Octavia! Good night, and thank you so much for
coming. And for everything. Your little speech was
wonderful, we thought. Really wonderful. Such passion.
And — and would it be all right now to tell people you’re
involved?’
Octavia looked at Pattie David, and then up at Gabriel
Bingham’s politely cynical face. Until that moment her
courage had been wavering. Even then she might have held
back; but behind the cynicism, which she devoutly wished
to confound, she recognised something else: recognised it
and greeted it with the same from herself.
‘Yes,’ she said firmly, ‘it would be perfectly all right.
Good night, Pattie. Good night, Mr Bingham. I’m sorry we
can’t talk more.’
She half ran forward, climbed into her car, revved it up,
drove rather fast out of the car park. She wanted to get
away: quickly. She pulled out into the road, turned sharply
left — she had come in from the right, she was sure — drove down the road to a crossroads, went straight over it and
found herself looking at sign that read ‘Felthamstone
Industrial Estate’.
‘Damn,’ she said, going into reverse, yanking on the
steering wheel to turn the car, and then finding the road
blocked by a rather elderly Golf. Gabriel Bingham was
getting out of it.
‘Good thing you’ve got power steering,’ he said, and
started laughing. ‘No, no, don’t look like that. I came after
you to say I was sorry, and also to put you on the right road.
I was extremely rude, and it was unforgivable. And Mrs
David was right, your speech was wonderful. It even
affected me, and God knows I should be immune to the
things. Now, could I buy you a glass of orange juice or
something before you set out for London? I’d make it
Bollinger, but of course you have to drive …’
‘It is a loathsome phrase,’ he said, setting a glass of tomato
juice in front of Octavia, settling himself beside her. There
wasn’t a lot of room on the bench; his long body was rather
close to hers.
‘Sorry. Bit of a,,squash. Shall I sit opposite you instead?’
‘No, it’s fine;’ she said, and meant it. ‘What’s a loathsome
phrase?’
‘Bollinger Socialist. We all hate it. And it is unfair. I can’t
help my background, any more than you can. All I’ve done
is see sense, moved away from it.’
‘And you never utilised it? You’ve never utilised your
education, your accent, your — your self-confidence, your
ability to express yourself?’
‘Yes, of course I have,’ he said, looking at her in genuine
astonishment. ‘I use them to get things done for the people
who haven’t got those things. That’s the whole point.’
‘And where do you live?’ she said. ‘Down here, I mean?
In a high-rise flat in Bristol city centre? In a squat in
Warminster?’
‘A squat in Westminster. During the week. But no
actually, I have a small house in Bath.’
‘Oh, really? In Bath? So not a high-rise, then. A
Georgian cottage is it, perhaps? Or a little terrace house?’
‘It’s a terrace, yes. You are a funny lot,’ he added,
shaking his head, smiling at her, ‘you Tories.’
‘Why do you think I’m a Tory?’
‘Well, aren’t you? What did you vote?’
‘I’m a Socialist. I voted for Blair, of course.’
‘That’s not—’ he said and stopped himself.
‘Not Socialism?’ she said, laughing, ‘Oh dear, Mr
Bingham. I hope that was the bitter talking. What a terrible
thing to say. I must tell my husband.’
‘That is not what I was going to say at all,’ he said, his
untidy face slightly pompous suddenly. ‘The fact is that
probably half the people who voted us in are Tories at
heart. Next time round they’ll go back to the fold. You
will, I daresay. Where do you live?’
‘Kensington,’ she said. ‘And don’t start again. Let’s talk
about Bartles Wood. How do you really feel about it? Off
the record?’
‘Off the record, I’m undecided. It’s a bit like the
grammar schools. Marvellous if you can enjoy them, worse
than nothing if you can’t. And this chap, Carlton, who’s put
in the application, you know, he’s talking about a
community centre with—’
‘Facilities for the disabled.’
He stared at her. ‘You have gone into it very thoroughly.’
‘Well,’
she said quickly, ‘I’m interested.’
‘And?’
‘I’ll believe in those facilities when they’re there and
being used — and what use are they anyway, so far from a
town centre? Anyway, what about you? What’s the official
party line on it?’
‘The rule of thumb is, permission gets granted where
there’s a need. There usually is.’
‘Oh, really? What about the Newbury bypass? Everyone
said a much smaller scheme would have done, they could have saved the water meadows. What about Bath?’
‘The Tories were in then,’ he said. ‘Absolutely not
guilty.’
‘Okay. What about Manchester airport?’
He smiled at her. ‘You really do mind about all this,
don’t you?’
‘Yes. I told you, I told you all in my speech, I love
England, I love the countryside, I love lanes and woods and
streams and hedgerows. Soon they’ll all be gone. Buried in
concrete boots. With lorries thundering over them. This is
such a tiny country. We have to do what we can to save it.
And you, Gabriel Bingham, you could do so much. If you
wanted to.’ She stopped and looked at him. ‘Do you want
to?’
‘I’m not sure. Politics isn’t about emotion, it’s about
facts.’
‘There should be emotion as well. Emotion and passion.’
‘Emotion gets in the way of truth. Politics is a science,
not a humanity.’
‘So you’re not going to let your heart rule your head?
Not even to a small degree? Over so important a matter?’
‘Now why do you think my heart believes in saving
Bartles Wood?’ said Gabriel Bingham, smiling at her.
‘I know it does,’ said Octavia simply. ‘I met you there,
remember?’
‘Yes, actually, I do,’ he said and the hazel eyes on hers
were thoughtful, thoughtful and very serious suddenly. ‘I
remember it very well …’
In the finest suite of the Buchan Hotel (slightly flashy, very
luxurious, on the edge of the Cotswolds), champagne on
ice, Tiffany necklace in its turquoise box by the bed, Tom
Fleming was waiting for the phone call that would tell him
his guest had arrived, unable to decide if he was in heaven
or hell. He looked longingly at the vast round bath, with its
Jacuzzi jets. That would relax him. But she would arrive
any moment, and he wanted to be totally ready for her, totally in control from the moment she arrived. It was difficult to be in control if you were naked and wet. Unless,
of course, you were both naked and wet. Later they would
undoubtedly both be in the bath, and that would be glorious. It would all be glorious — for a while. Meanwhile , he would have to wait.
He looked at the Tiffany box, with its white ribbon; he
I was a little worried about that, about so incriminating a
I present, but it seemed an occasion for grand gestures. He
[ had paid cash for it, as he always did. As he did for the
I hotels and the restaurants. And under the circumstances,
perhaps, worth the risk. Christ, he hoped it was going to be
all right …
The room phone rang fiercely through the silence.