Rumor Has It (41 page)

Read Rumor Has It Online

Authors: Jill Mansell

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Humorous, #Romance, #Contemporary

BOOK: Rumor Has It
4.9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
    Tilly gulped. Oh dear, now she was imagining wild sex with Jack, which had to be totally inappropriate at a funeral…
Stop it
this instant…
    Hearing her strangled intake of breath, Max gave her a nudge and murmured, 'You all right?'
    She nodded, her mouth dry. Sunshine was streaming in through the church's west-facing stained-glass windows, casting rainbows of colored light on to the congregation. She forced herself to exhale slowly, then breathed in the mingled churchy scents of dust and sun warmed polished wood and ancient Cotswold stone. And speak of the devil, here was Jack coming into the church now. Tilly did her best to look as if she wasn't looking.
    Then again, was there really any need when everyone else was?
    Nodding at people he knew—but not at Amy, she noted—Jack made his way up the aisle then joined Declan from the Fox in a pew on the right. He was wearing a dark grey suit, white shirt, and black tie. Just the sight of him was enough to set off the usual reaction. Tilly wondered if it would ever stop. Life would be so much simpler, it really would. It couldn't be good for you, feeling like this about another human being and not allowing yourself to do anything about it.
    OK, breathe. Breathe. Of course it hurt, but wasn't keeping your distance safer in the long run? It indisputably was. And breathe again. This way was a million times less painful than the alternative.
    Anyway, never mind that now. The vicar was readying himself to begin the service. Here came Fergus and Erin, the last to enter the church, moving slowly together up the aisle like the very opposite of a wedding. Fergus, ironically, a widower now too. And Erin, being brave but biting her lower lip at the sight of Stella's coffin. When they'd seated themselves in the front pew, the vicar cleared his throat and signaled to the organist to stop playing.
It was time to say good-bye to Stella Welch.
There was a good turnout at the Fox afterwards, thanks to the funeral having taken place at three o'clock. By the time it was over, nobody felt the need to rush back to work; far easier to soften the blow of mortality with a few drinks instead. And it was a jolt, to think that someone you knew had died before reaching forty. God, forty was nothing at all. Suddenly, you realized it was no longer safe to assume that one day you'd be a pensioner. Anything could happen to anyone at any time. The prospect induced an atmosphere of almost wartime recklessness and Tilly, observing from the sidelines, saw Stella's single female friends visibly step up their efforts to flirt with the available males. An exotic-looking girl with waist-length black hair was currently monopolizing Jack. Fergus's fellow estate agents were being targeted too. Even Declan, hard at work behind the bar, found himself the subject of attention. Everyone was drinking that bit more rapidly than usual. Well, why not?
    As one of the barmaids approached with an open bottle of Moet, Tilly stuck out her glass for a refill. Kaye had volunteered to pick Lou up from school today, so it was allowed. She found her gaze sliding over towards Jack again.
    'All right, sweetheart? Penny for them.'
    Tilly turned, smiled at Fergus, and decided on balance not to tell him what had been occupying her thoughts. 'Just thinking that Stella would be pleased with all this.'
    'She would.' Fergus nodded in agreement. 'Most of it's thanks to Erin, getting everyone here today. She's been amazing.'
    'Of course she's amazing. She's my best friend.' Tilly gazed fondly at Erin, across the room talking to a portly white-haired woman in her sixties. 'You're lucky to have her.'
    'She feels guilty. We both do. No more warring solicitors, no expensive messy divorce. We can just get married now, whenever we want. And I
do
want, but Erin says we can't because it would look bad. She won't even discuss it, says she's not going to have people calling us Charles and Camilla… Oh hello, yes, so good of you to come…'
    Fergus had been buttonholed by the man who ran the antiques market a couple of doors up from Stella's shop. Slipping tactfully away, Tilly made her way over to Erin.
    'Well, if Fergus isn't going to be moving back into the house, I do hope it'll go to a nice family. We don't want any rowdy teenagers crashing around on skateboards.' The hectoring tone belonged to one of Stella's neighbors. Tilly recalled hearing her over the fence while she'd been taking her turn at feeding Bing.
    Erin was nodding, looking slightly trapped and anxious. 'I'll tell Fergus. I'm sure he'll do his best.'
    'And what about the cat? Who's having Bing?'
    Flustered, Erin said, 'Um… well, we're probably going to be—'
    'Stella wanted him to go to a good home,' Tilly leapt in. 'It was her last wish.'
    'Really?' The woman's chins quivered. 'Well, the reason I asked was because if you don't have a home lined up, I wouldn't mind taking him.'
    Since Erin was hesitating, Tilly said quickly, 'That would be fantastic, brilliant. Wouldn't it, Erin? The perfect answer. Just what Stella would have wanted.'
    When the woman had moved on, Tilly murmured triumphantly, 'There you go. Sorted.'
    Erin was worried. 'But what if that wasn't what Stella wanted? What if she was trying to say she wanted
me
to give Bing a good home?'
    'You just have.'
    'Oh, you know what I mean!'
    'You don't want a cat living with you.' Least of all Bing, who had that perpetual belittling, I-don't-like-you air about him.
    'I know, but if it was what Stella wanted, maybe I should try to—'
    'No.' Tilly shook her head very firmly at her. 'No, no,
no
. Listen to me. You've done enough for Stella. Ten times more than enough. You did more for her than she deserved, and now you can stop. Let someone else take care of Bing.'
    Slowly, like a leaf unfurling, Erin's shoulders sagged with relief. 'OK. I will. Thanks.'
    'You don't have to feel guilty.'
    'I know. Logically I know that.' Erin managed a wry smile, took a sip of wine. 'I just can't help it. Because I'm still here and Stella isn't, and I'm going to be living the life she wanted to live.'
    Marrying someone you love, having babies, watching them grow up and go on to have children of their own, staying married till death do you part… well, that was the fairytale existence for mil lions of people but how often did it actually happen? There were no guarantees. Look at Max and Kaye, Jamie Michaels and Tandy, and what about Jack and Rose?
    Tilly's gaze was drawn helplessly across the room. The exotic looking girl was still busily flirting away, flicking her long hair like a pony. 'Who's that talking to Jack?'
    'Oh, Stella used to belong to a fitness club in Cheltenham. I went over there on Wednesday night and told everyone the funeral was today. I think she teaches Ashtanga yoga.'
    Hmm. Bendy, then.
    Still watching them, Erin said with amusement, 'So it looks like Jack's got his evening entertainment sorted out.'
    She was undoubtedly right. Tilly determinedly didn't envisage the acrobatic and wildly improbable positions a yoga teacher might be capable of conjuring up. Then her attention was caught by the conversation taking place to the right of them, between a curvaceous blonde in an emerald-green summer dress and a reed-thin brunette in black.
    '…I mean, I know it's not the done thing to speak ill of the dead, but she could be pretty intimidating sometimes,' the blonde confided.
    Her friend said, 'You're not kidding. She scared the living day lights out of me.'
    Erin gave Tilly a tiny nudge, letting her know she was listen ing too.
    'Stella told me I should sue the surgeon who left me with a nose like this.' The brunette shook her head. 'I said I hadn't had a nose job. So
she
said wasn't it about time I got one?'
    'But if you tried to tell her she was being mean, she'd be really surprised.' The curvy blonde nodded in agreement. 'As far as she was concerned, she was just being honest. She was so
confident
, wasn't she?'
    'I'll tell you something else,' the brunette confided. 'My Auntie Jean always does my hair for me. She cuts and colors it in her kitchen. But when Stella asked me where I'd had it done, I knew she'd laugh if I told her that. So I said Toni and Guy.'
    Tilly grinned at Erin. Had Stella really been that intimidating?
    'Well, guess what I did,' countered the blonde. 'She wanted me to go along with her to that new health spa in Cirencester last year. I mean, you can just picture it, Stella looking amazing in a bikini, me and my cellulite wibbling around in my swimsuit, Stella pointing out my rolls of fat and telling me I should do something about them. Yeurgh, no thanks! So I said I couldn't go because I had to visit my granny in hospital in Dundee. But then Stella didn't go to the spa, which meant I had to hide in the house all weekend because I couldn't risk her finding out I was still here.'
'Nightmare,' agreed the brunette.
    'You're telling me. Then afterwards, Stella asked me how my gran was and I couldn't remember whether I'd said she'd had a stroke or a heart attack, so I had to pretend she'd had both. I mean, God, can you imagine? The wicked lies I was telling! And talk about tempting fate. How would I have felt if my gran
had
had a stroke?'
    'Awful.' The brunette shook her head in sympathy. 'Still, I suppose it was nice of Stella to ask after her.' Then she perked up. 'Ooh look, Declan's bringing out more of those smoked salmon thingies; let's grab some before they go.'
    They rushed off. Tilly frowned, feeling as if she was standing in the middle of a supermarket having forgotten something vital. She cast about in her mind, searching for a clue to jog her memory…
    'What's wrong?' said Erin.
    'I don't know.' It was like waking up and trying to cling on to a dream as it slithered away. If she could just concentrate hard and catch it before it evaporated completely… nearly there,
nearly there…
    And then it came to her. The connection she'd been strug gling to make. Not a definite answer to her question, but a possible explanation so bizarre yet so feasible that it might…
might
… just be true.
    My God. Could it be?
    Erin was staring at her. 'Tilly? What is it?'
    'OK, I need you to do me a favor.' The beginnings of a plan were ricocheting like a trapped fly inside Tilly's head. She checked out the gathering of mourners—yes, there was Deedee, there was Kirsten, there was thingummy with the red hair who was another one. 'When I tell you, don't ask any questions, just follow me, and go along with everything I say.'
    'Why?'
    'Because I've had an idea.'
    'About what?'
    'Wait and see.' Tilly knocked back her drink for Dutch courage. 'But if it doesn't work I'm going to look a complete berk.'
    'Fine. Just so long as it doesn't involve taking our clothes off,' said Erin.

Chapter 52

THEY DIDN'T HAVE LONG to wait. After twenty minutes, Deedee and her red-headed friend went off together to the loo.
    'Here we go,' Tilly murmured, nudging Erin in the same direc tion. She deliberately didn't look over at Jack and Max, standing by the bar. If she was wrong about this, she'd be laughed out of town.
    The cubicles were both engaged by the time Tilly and Erin got there. Unzipping her bag and taking out her makeup, Tilly said, 'The thing is, I've got a confession to make. I don't know why I lied to you, I just felt so embarrassed.'
    The great thing about Erin was she knew her so well; throw her a ball and she'd catch it. 'So now you're going to tell me the truth? Go ahead, then. I'm listening.'
    Tilly rattled through her makeup, choosing and uncapping a lipstick. 'You know I went out with Jack last week.' As she said it, she shook her head.
    Grinning at her in the mirror, Erin played along and said, 'Ye-es.'
    'And you know I said the sex was fantastic.'
    Erin pulled an Omygod face. 'Ye-es.'
    'Well, I was lying.'
    '
What?
You mean it was awful?'
    'No, no, I mean there was no sex. We didn't sleep together. I'm sorry.' Miming disbelief, Tilly mouthed,
Why?
    'I don't get it!' Erin rose effortlessly to the occasion. 'Why would you
lie
about something like that?'
    'Oh God, why do you think? Jack's so gorgeous, he's been out with hundreds of girls and he
always
sleeps with them. The thing is, we had a really nice evening together, I thought it was going to happen,' Tilly wailed, 'and it just didn't! He dropped me home, gave me a kiss, and said goodnight! I'd never been so humiliated in my life! I mean, to be the only one he wasn't interested in, how gutting is that? Total rejection!' Pause. 'So there, I'm sorry, but I was just so ashamed. That's why I lied.'
    There was silence then. Poor Erin, still utterly in the dark, searched Tilly's face for clues as to how she was meant to react but Tilly shook her head and pressed a finger to her lips.
    Wait.
    Wait.
    Oh God, had she just made a hideous mistake?
    Then they heard the sound of flushing and the first cubicle door slowly swung open to reveal the redhead. Moments later, Deedee emerged from the one next to it. They glanced sheepishly first at each other, then at Tilly. Tilly held her breath.

Other books

Inarticulate by Eden Summers
Haze by Deborah Bladon
The Virgin's Secret by Abby Green
A Silent Terror by Lynette Eason
TrickorTreat by Madeleine Oh
Royal Blood by Kolina Topel
Sleepless Nights by Sarah Bilston
Sons, Servants and Statesmen by John Van der Kiste