Read Miranda's Big Mistake Online
Authors: Jill Mansell
âYap yap,' said Miranda when Fenn arrived at the salon an hour later.
âI knew it.' Fenn raised his eyebrows at Bev. âShe's finally gone barking.'
âGod, you're slow,' Miranda protested. âIt's Friday, isn't it? Tabitha day. You said I could be your guard dog.'
Tabitha Lester, known in the salon as Try-it-on Tabitha, had been a hugely successful actress back in the seventies. Now past her sell-by date but steadfastly refusing to admit it, she spent her days having face lifts and fat Hoovered out of her thighs, and her nights tottering along to film premières on the arms of embarrassingly young men.
She also had a massive crush on Fenn, who had once gone to her house alone and had barely escaped with his leather trousers intact. Since then, his regular trips to Tabitha's home in St John's Wood were strictly chaperoned, much to her disgust and his relief.
Miranda loved going too. If Tabitha Lester was willing to pay silly money for a house call, she didn't mind at all. The house was vast and decorated in wonderfully over-the-top Hollywood style. They were always plied with Hollywood-type food, and Tabithaâin an attempt to weaken Fenn's defencesâwas forever opening bottles of pink champagne.
âI don't know why you don't sleep with her,' said Miranda, feeling quite Hollywoody herself in the passenger seat of Fenn's gleaming black Lotus. âJust make a hash of it, be completely useless. Then she won't pester you any more.'
âIs that your bright idea for the day?'
âIt's a brilliant suggestion!'
âRight.' Fenn nodded. âWe're talking about the queen of the tabloids here. That'll do my reputation the world of good, won't it? I can just see the headline: “My Quickie with Crimper Fennâa Wizard with Scissors, Crap in the Sack.”'
âYes, but no one would believe it,' Miranda protested. Fenn's girlfriends tended to be supermodels and he was generally regarded as one of London's most eligible bachelors.
When you were a gorgeous heterosexual hairdresserâand a very successful one, at thatâwell, you could do no wrong. You were officially a great catch.
âI'd rather not take that chance,' Fenn remarked, âif it's all the same to you.'
***
âFenn, you're looking wonderful as usual,' Tabitha exclaimed, greeting them on the doorstep. Drawing him inside, she confided, âDo you know, I had the most amazing dream about you last night. Quite, quite naughty.' As she spoke, she winked at Miranda and jerked her head in the direction of the kitchen. âDarling, it's Cook's day off. There's a Charentais melon in the fridge and a mountain of Parma ham. Why don't you help yourself while Fenn and I head on upstairs?'
âLater,' Fenn said firmly, meaning in half an hour when Tabitha's head was shrouded in foil and she couldn't pounce on him. âI need Miranda to help me get started.'
âYap yap,' Miranda murmured as the three of them trailed up the staircase, Tabitha clutching an unopened bottle of champagne in one hand and the hem of her sea-green négligé in the other.
For someone with five walk-in wardrobes stuffed with clothes, Tabitha appeared to spend an awful lot of her time wafting about in see-through nighties.
The master bedroom had been redecorated since Miranda's last visit, the ankle-deep turquoise shag pile having been replaced by ankle-deep ivory shag pile. The wallpaper, ivory and gold, matched the damask hangings artfully draped around the four-poster bed.
âThis is nice.' Glancing inadvertently upwards, Miranda saw that the mirror was still there on the ceiling.
âI know.' Tabitha smiled meaningfully across at Fenn. âI've got great taste. Oh, sorry, darling,' she went on as Miranda pulled out a chair and something metallic half buried in the carpet went clunk. âJust pop them in that drawer, will you? Good girl.'
As she dropped the slim but efficient-looking gold handcuffs into the drawer, Miranda didn't dare look at Fenn. If she did, she knew she would burst out laughing. Biting her lip and gazing out of the window instead, she watched a bronzed figure in black shorts dive into the swimming pool below.
Although he was some distance away, she couldn't help thinking he looked familiar.
âMiranda, put some towels down around the chair,' Fenn instructed. âWe don't want bleach on the carpet.'
A second splash heralded the arrival in the pool of another figure, paler and fleshier than the first, and wearing multicolored trunks. By the look of things, Tabitha had found herself a couple of toyboys.
âMiranda. Towels.'
âFor heaven's sake, Fenn, give the girl a break,' Tabitha chided good-naturedly. âShe's just admiring my young friends.'
âSorry, Fenn.' Miranda tore herself away. She was sure she'd seen the one in the black shorts somewhere before.
âRelax. Don't let him bully you.' Tabitha settled herself comfortably on to the chair.
Fenn, laying out the contents of his case, raised an eyebrow in disbelief.
âYou're kidding. Miranda bullies me.'
âOh, I love a man who knows his place,' Tabitha said with a smirk. The kind of smirk that signified,
especially when he's handcuffed to a four-poster
.
âFoil, please, Miranda.' Fenn was beginning to sound slightly desperate.
âCome on, let's open this first.' Patting his arm in a soothing manner, Tabitha handed him the bottle, managing to brush her wrist against his thigh en route. âYou do the honors. Popping the cork is a man's job.' She winked again, saucily, at Miranda. âPoor Fenn, all on edge this morning. He looks as if he could do with a drink.'
Retouching Tabitha's bombshell-blonde highlights took three-quarters of an hour. By the time the last few greying roots had been painstakingly painted and wrapped in foil, the furious growls emanating from Miranda's empty stomach had reached bear-like proportions.
âGo on, run downstairs and get some food inside you.' Waving her empty glass at Fenn, Tabitha indicated that she was in need of a refill.
Miranda glanced at Fenn, who nodded. For the next twenty minutes he was safe; even Try-it-on Tabitha wouldn't risk dislodging the dozens of little foil packets and wrecking her hair.
Besides, if Miranda didn't eat soon they were going to need earplugs.
The kitchen door, leading out on to the sun terrace, was open. As Miranda crouched in front of the fridge, drooling at the sight of Parma ham, marinated mushrooms and punnets of strawberries, she could hear the sounds of shouts and splashing outside in the pool.
She was carrying a ciabatta loaf and the Charentais melon over to the table when a wolf-whistle behind her made her jump. Twisting around, she lost her grip on the melon, which slid out of her hand and went bowling across the floor.
âHey, great idea!' It was the paler of the two men she had seen from the window earlier. Scooping it up, he grinned at her. âWater polo!'
âYou can't take that melon,' Miranda protested. âTabitha just asked me to cut it upâ'
âI am a representative of the Melon Liberation Front,' the intruder declaimed, spinning it basketball-style on the tip of his index finger. âThis melon'âdripping water all over the tiled floor, he began to back awayââshall Be Free!'
He was out of the door in a flash. Miranda, who had spent the last hour daydreaming about melon, skidded across the wet floor after him.
Racing on to the terrace, she was just in time to see the melon sailing through the air. It landed with a splash in the pool and was promptly leapt on by the other man. Shaking his blond hair out of his eyes, he held the melon triumphantly aloft.
âDon't let her have it,' yelled his friend. âShe's a murderer.'
âLook,' Miranda tried to sound reasonable, âyou can't play water polo with a melon.'
âWe aren't playing water polo,' said the blond one, âwe're playing watermelon.'
Grinning broadly, he lobbed it over Miranda's head, where it was neatly caught by his friend. Miranda, beginning to feel stupid, moved towards him.
The melon flew over her head once more.
âLook, you can play too if you like,' the blond one offered. âYou can be on my team.'
He was by far the better-looking of Tabitha's two toyboys. What was more, he was still tantalizingly familiar. If his hair wasn't plastered to his head and he had clothes on, Miranda thought, she was sure she'd recognize him.
âDo I know you?'
âOf course you do. I'm the other half of your watermelon team. Come on,' he said persuasively, âjump in. The water's fantastic.'
âLook, I'd love to play watermelon with you'âshe was still trying to humor himââbut I just can't.'
Big mistake.
âNo such thing as can't!' The one in the multicolored trunks, having loomed up behind her, lobbed the melon back into the water. Grabbing Miranda around the waist, he lifted her into his arms and raced to the edge of the pool.
Right up to the last second, she was convinced he'd stop.
He didn't.
With a monumental splash, they landed together in the deep end. Miranda shuddered as the icy water caused every cell in her body to contract with shock.
By the time she had swum back to the surface, the better-looking toyboy was treading water next to her.
âWell, that's a relief. For a minute there I thought you couldn't swim.' His green eyes were alight with laughter, his tone conversational. âThought I was going to have to rescue you.'
He was still clutching the melon. Miranda made a grab for it.
âOh dear, I can see I need to explain the rules of watermelon to you.' Effortlessly, he whisked it out of her reach. âYou see, we're on the same side. You're meant to tackle the opposition, not me.'
Miranda's teeth began to chatter. Keeping afloat fully clothed was no picnic either.
âThis p-pool isn't heated. You l-lied to me.'
âI didn't.' He grinned, his teeth dazzlingly white against his tanned face. âI told you the water was fantastic, I didn't say anything about it being warm.'
âI am going to get into so much trouble for this.' Miranda glanced fearfully up at Tabitha's bedroom window. No sign of Fenn's outraged face, thank goodness.
âOh, come on, you're in now.' Her teammate held the melon towards her in enticing fashion. âJust one game.'
âI've got my shoes on.'
âTake them off.'
âI'm still wearing all my clothes!'
He didn't say anything, just grinned at her. His eyes were extraordinary, Miranda realized now that she was close enough to tell, an intense greeny-blue with yellow flecks.
âHey, you two! Are we playing watermelon or not?'
The one in the multicolored trunks had by this time clambered out of the pool. âOver here!' he bellowed, pointing to his forehead.
âDon't!' Miranda clapped both hands over her eyes as her teammate took aim. âYou'll knock him unconscious.'
âNothing knocks Johnnie unconscious.'
He was right. The melon came off worse. The force of the impact split it in half, and seeds and juice exploded in all directions like shrapnel.
âOuch,' said Johnnie, scooping a lump of orange melon flesh off his shoulder and popping it into his mouth.
âYou killed it,' Miranda said sorrowfully. âI'm reporting you to the MLF.'
âToo late,' murmured her playing partner as Fenn appeared on the terrace. âLooks like they're already here.'
Miranda sat huddled on one of the kitchen chairs with a towel around her shoulders and a spreading puddle of chlorinated water at her feet. Her teeth chattered dramatically against the rim of her coffee cup. Her hair, which had been subjected to a cruelly brisk towel-dry by Fenn, stood out in spikes.
âI can't take you anywhere.'
âIt wasn't my fault,' Miranda protested. âBlame melon-head. He was the one who threw me in.'
âBut why does it always have to happen to you?' Mystified, Fenn shook his head.
âI don't know. Stuff just does.' Even as a child, Miranda gloomily remembered, her despairing mother had called her incident-prone.
âThose naughty boys,' said Tabitha, appearing in the doorway with an armful of dry clothes. âI'm going to give them a good talking-to. Here you are, darling, pop upstairs to my room and get yourself out of those wet things.'
In Tabitha's bedroom, Miranda peeled off her sodden clothes, dried herself and changed into a white sweatshirt and leggings. Sitting on the edge of the bed to pull on a pair of pink angora socks, she felt something crackle behind her and pulled out a copy of the
Daily Mail
from under the rumpled bedspread.
Tabitha had even left it lying open at the gossip page, which was handy. One sock on and one sock off, Miranda leaned over to find out exactly what Daisy Schofield had been up to on Wednesday night.
There was a knock on the door.
âAre you decent?'
âAs I'll ever be.'
The bedroom door swung open. Her teammate, now fully dressed and with his blond hair slicked back from his face, said, âIs your boss furious with you?'
âNo, but I'm not too thrilled with you.' Miranda recognized him at once with his clothes on. She pointed an accusing finger at the photograph in the paper. âWhat were you doing on Wednesday night with Daisy Schofield?'
He grinned.
âAre you sure you want to know?'
No wonder he had looked familiar. Miles Harper, Formula One racing driver, had burst on to the motor-racing scene less than a year ago, but the publicity he attracted was unrelenting. With his extravagant good looks, undoubted talent, and laid-back personality, he was every advertiser's dream.
âI'm not interested in gory details. I meant,
why
was she with you?'
âProbably because she fancies me.' Miles Harper winked. âOh dear, don't tell me you're jealous.'
âDaisy Schofield was meant to be at a cocktail party. She cancelled, said she was ill. Or rather you did,' Miranda pointedly remarked, realizing that the mystery man who had spoken to Elizabeth Turnbull on the phone must have been him. She frowned. âYou lied. Wasn't that a bit of a mean thing to do?'
âYou went to the party, I take it?'
âYes.'
âWas it dull?'
Miranda hesitated. She'd been okay; she'd met Greg. But if she hadn't, it would have been crashingly dull.
âThere you are then.' When she didn't immediately reply, Miles Harper shrugged, unconcerned. âThat's why she didn't go.'
âBut she was a celebrity guest.' Miranda wanted to make him understand. âYou wouldn't like it if you organized a charity event and nobody else bothered to turn up.'
âOh.' He had the graceâat lastâto look ashamed. âI didn't know it was for charity.'
Miranda wasn't sure whether or not she believed him.
âAnyway, what are you doing here?' Changing the subject, she wriggled the angora sock on to her foot. âWhen I saw the two of you in the pool, I thought you were Tabitha's latest toyboys.'
Miles laughed.
âJohnnie dragged me along, that's all. He's an old mate of mine and Tabitha's his godmother. Five minutes after meeting her,' he went on, âI realized the middle of the swimming pool was the safest place to be. I'm telling you, that woman has seriously wandering hands.'
âWeren't you scared she might jump in after you?'
âShe told us her hairdresser was on his way over, so she mustn't get her hair wet. That,' he told Miranda with a crooked smile, âwas when I dived in.'
âIf you can handle a Formula One racing car, I'd have thought you could cope with a middle-aged nymphomaniac.'
Miles considered this for a second.
âThe difference is, Tabitha doesn't have brakes.'
Downstairs once more, with her soggy clothes bundled into a Harrods' shopping bag, she was formally introduced to Johnnie, Tabitha's godson. He dutifully apologized for giving her a ducking. Miranda in turn admired the splendid bump on his forehead, inflicted by the melon. Then it was time to roll up the sleeves of her borrowed white sweatshirt and help Fenn with the defoiling of Tabitha.
âAunt Tab, we're off.' Johnnie poked his dark head around the bathroom door as Miranda massaged conditioner into Tabitha's scalp.
âHave fun, you two. Don't do anything I wouldn't do.' Tabitha's head was bent over the basin. âAnd where's Miles? I haven't had my goodbye kiss yet.'
âHis manager called. He's outside, on the phone.' Johnnie's wink indicated that Miles had legged it to the sanctuary of his car. âBy the way,' he addressed Miranda, âwe're off to a party at the Unicorn Club tonight. Miles wondered if you'd like to come along.'
Astonished, Miranda stopped massaging. She felt her cheeks go pink with pleasure.
Miles Harper was actually inviting her to a party?
Well, maybe not asking her himself, but getting his friend to invite her.
Golly, was that exciting or what?
She had been beaming idiotically at Johnnie for a couple of seconds before her brain clicked in, reminding her why she'd been in such a good mood this morning and why she was already looking forward to tonight.
Talk about rotten timing.
âI'd love to.' Miranda's insides crumpled with regret. âI mean, I would have loved to. But I can't, not this evening. I've alreadyâ¦er, got something on.'
âOkay.' Johnnie sounded unperturbed. It clearly didn't bother him either way.
But it bothers
me
, Miranda thought frustratedly.
âWhat a shame, it would have been great.' She plastered a bright smile on to her face. âMaybe another night? I mean, I'm usually free. In fact,
any
other evening and I'd definitely be able to make it.'
She clamped her runaway lips together. Oh dear, how desperate could a single girl get? Now she sounded like Bev.
Johnnie, nodding, checked his watch and backed out of the bathroom door.
âOkay, right, see you around.'
âYou blew it,' Tabitha said flatly when he had gone. âDarling, you must be mad. With people like Miles Harper, you don't get a second chance.'
Miranda poured an extra dollop of conditioner into her hand and gloomily resumed the scalp massage. Typical. Six whole months since her last boyfriend, and now this had to happen. Maybe it was God's way of punishing her for pinching Greg from Bev.
âSo what is it you're doing tonight?' Tabitha persisted with annoying cheerfulness. âFlying over to LA for the première of the new Tarantino movie? A cozy dinner for two at the Ritz with Leonardo DiCaprio?'
âI met this chap on Wednesday night,' Miranda mumbled. âIt's our first date.' She couldn't bring herself to say they'd probably go for a couple of lukewarm beers and a limp pizza.
âWould I have heard of him?'
âNo. He works in insurance.'
âGood grief.' Tabitha burst out laughing. âAnd you turned down Miles Harper for that!' Rather heartlessly, in Miranda's view, she went on, âI only hope he's worth it.'
Remembering suddenly how unreliable men were and how often she had been let down in the past, Miranda wondered if Greg would even turn up tonight.
Feeling distinctly uneasy, she murmured, âSo do I.'