Saturday 28 April
‘But, Daddy, I don’t understand.’ Camilla was looking at him with eyes that were huge and anxious. ‘Why do
you
have to keep it confidential, when it was them who libelled you?’
Simon brushed away the idea with a complicated hand gesture that felt right but looked weird as he gazed down at his own limbs.
‘It was the agreement. You always have to give a little to get a lot. They’re pulping the remains of the edition, and they’ve undertaken not to reprint it, or repeat the libel anywhere else, or to discuss any details of the settlement.’ He smiled at her and saw her lips quivering in response. ‘I want them to stick to the deal, so I’d better do my part, hadn’t I? I can’t tell you anything else.’
She frowned. ‘Dan says he can help you go public. He’s got this fab PR agency. And he’s sure you’ve got to do it to stop the talk. Already people who know he’s my boyfriend are looking at him sideways, he says. And all because of what that bitch Beatrice Bowman wrote about you.’
‘Camilla, stop it. And please tell Dan Stamford not to interfere.’ Seeing her shock, he quickly added, as though to an ignorant child, ‘And make sure he doesn’t talk to anyone else. If I break the terms of the agreement, that leaves the way open for them to say anything they want. I can’t have that, now can I?’
As she shook her head, her long soft hair swung gently across her face, hiding it from him.
‘Daddy?’ she said, more tentative than he’d heard her for years.
‘Yes, sweetheart?’
‘Daddy, Dan said the only reason you won’t go public is that …’ A tear slipped over the edge of her eye and slid down her cheek, carrying a smear of mascara with it. She wiped it away with her hand, then wiped that on the seat of her jeans. ‘I can’t say it.’
‘Fine. Then don’t worry about it either.’
‘But I can’t not. I mean, I have to. Daddy, Dan says he thinks you’re afraid of publicity because it
was
you. He’s wrong, isn’t he? You weren’t
that
Baiborn? Tell me you weren’t.’
He’d been shaking his head ever since she’d started the question, but she didn’t seem to understand. So he tried a laugh, but that didn’t help either.
‘Sweetheart, you’ve gone mad. Of course I’m not.’
She was backing away, taking one tiny step at a time, as though she thought he wouldn’t notice if the steps were small enough.
‘Camilla!’
Now it was her turn to shake her head. She was at the door and had it half open before she found her voice again.
‘He’s right, isn’t he? You always look like that when you’re lying. It was you. All these years, and I … You … You killed all those children, and threatened the other man and let him spend more than twenty years in prison. How
could
you?’
He opened his mouth, but no words emerged. His tongue felt like rubber and his jaw wouldn’t move. He forced out the syllables of her name. But she was gone.
Bee had left the celebration dinner to go home to Silas, finally persuaded that whatever they might believe about Simon Tick
and his part in the bombing of X8 Pharmaceuticals, they had no evidence that could trigger an official investigation. But she was still unhappy that he was going to get away with what he’d done to the passengers on the bus, to Jeremy and his mother, and less directly to her. Trish was still struggling with much the same problem in relation to what she was convinced he’d done to David.
It seemed monstrous to both of them that Tick should get away with any of it. Trish knew that every time she saw his name in the papers or his smooth face on
Newsnight,
she would hate him all over again, but, without evidence, there was nothing she or anyone else could do. Caro had confirmed it.
She and Jess had gone too, and Trish had sent David to bed. When she went to turn out his light, she saw him lying under his duvet, hugging the signed copy of his favourite author’s new book, which Bee had given him.
Trish bent down to kiss him and went back to George, who was still sitting at the table. He looked up.
‘Sunday tomorrow. We can leave the washing-up,’ he said, idly twirling a single grape until it fell off its twig with a tiny squelch.
‘More wine?’ She sat down opposite him. ‘Or fizzy water for rehydration?’
‘Neither.’ Another grape followed the first. She wondered what the problem was. He knew she hated the wet fruity blobs he left when he maltreated a bunch of grapes like this, so he hardly ever did it these days. He was concentrating on the grape between his fingers, actually peeling it.
‘Hey, George?’
He looked up and presented her with the naked grape. His face looked quite unprotected below hair that was wilder than ever.
‘It’s not much of an apology, Trish, but I can’t think of a way of saying what has to be said.’
‘Haven’t you and I got past the stage of needing to say anything?’ she said.
The row was so far in the past – so much had happened since, and the two of them had learned how to be easy with each other again – that it seemed mad to bring it up now.
‘I don’t think so. I used to think like that, and kidded myself it was the only rational way of dealing with difficult emotions. Now I don’t. You’re owed an explanation after the way I ranted at you.’
‘Why?’
‘Because I trampled on things that matter, Trish. You know that Yeats poem, “tread softly for you tread on my dreams”?’
This was typical George: always retreating to poetry when his own words seemed too dangerous. She nodded, not at all sure what she was going to hear next.
‘Treading on other people’s fears deserves even more softness,’ he said, grabbing two grapes this time and making even more mess of the bunch. Trish braced herself for another rebuke for the risks she’d taken with David’s life and happiness.
‘But I trampled on yours with clodhopping great boots. And I hurt you. I know how hard you’ve had to work to get over the fear that you might crack up again. There’s no excuse for the way I used that, except my own …’
Again she waited, holding on to her impulse to finish other people’s sentences and decode their feelings. Whatever skill she might have had deserted her now. She didn’t know what he was getting at. And it mattered too much for her to make any mistakes.
‘Except my own fears,’ he said at last, as though he’d had to squeeze the thought out of the narrowest tube. ‘I felt …’ He stopped again and looked down at the two mangled grapes between his fingers. That gave him time, pushing the pulp off and then wiping his hands on one of the scrumpled napkins on the table. ‘I wasn’t really even talking about David when I
savaged you for making him trust you and then putting him at risk. You’ve got so far into me and my … self, really, that I’ve got no defences left.’
She frowned. ‘You don’t need defences. Not against me.’
‘If you ever dumped me, it would be me who’d crack up.’
‘George …’
‘I’ve got to finish this, Trish. I’ve been protecting myself against the knowledge of how much I need you. I haven’t felt as vulnerable as this since I was eight, and I hated it then. So it was
my
terror, and
my
need that made me hurt you. Not David’s. I was just using those. I’m sorry.’
‘George,’ she said again, but she didn’t know how to carry on. He’d always been the strong one, the one who knew everything and was confident of his place in the world. The magnitude of his surrender made her breathless.
He looked so scared – and so young – that she had to say something. She’d told him so often that she loved him, that he meant more to her than she knew how to explain, that all the familiar words seemed useless. At last, she leaned across the table to take both his hands and looked up into his dark-brown eyes.
‘George, I don’t do dumping.’
His solemn expression broke into a smile that spread and spread.
‘Trish … You … I … Oh, sod it, why is talking so difficult?’
‘Don’t worry,’ she said, letting go of his hands. As she pushed herself up from the table, she felt as though he had pulled the last of the life-long splinters out of her flesh. ‘We can do this one without words. Are you coming up to bed?’
‘If you want me.’
‘I want you.’