‘Oh flaming Nora, what are you doing here?’ groaned Rita, opening the front door with a headful of fluorescent pink curlers and no make-up.
‘I came to apologize.’ Hugo modestly inclined his head and handed her a bunch of tiger lilies.
‘Blimey, no need to bow. I’m not the Queen.’ Grinning, she took them from him. ‘Come in. Sorry about the hairdo. Serves me right for thinking you were the milkman. Anyway, what have you got to apologize for?’
‘I didn’t know if I’d offended you the other night, inviting you out to dinner.’ Hugo followed her through the vast wood-paneled hall and into the swimming-pool-sized kitchen. He watched Rita fill a fluted vase with water and begin to arrange the flowers. ‘Do you remember what Poppy said, that you had the best husband in the world and that I couldn’t hope to compete? Well, I’ve been a pretty lousy husband in my time and I’m not even trying to compete. But I would very much like us to be friends.’
While not strictly true, it would do for a start. Hugo didn’t know why he should have been so instinctively drawn to Rita. She was hardly his usual type. But there was something about her, maybe something that reminded him of the women he had knocked around with back in the old days in Edinburgh, those lusty, straight-talking, honest-to-goodness real women he had known—and frequently bedded—before acting had changed his life and the fiendish Hollywood bug had bit.
Rita regarded him shrewdly, her head on one side.
‘Friends, eh?’
‘Purely platonic,’ Hugo assured her.
‘All the rage, is it, in California this year?’
He liked the way she made fun of him, refusing to be impressed by his fame. Although with a house like this, he thought dryly, why on earth should she be impressed?
‘Oh, absolutely. The latest thing. And so much less painful than body piercing.’
Rita cackled with laughter, stifled a cough and patted the pocket of her cardigan. ‘Bugger, I forgot.’
‘Forgot what?’
‘Gave up smoking yesterday. I keep thinking it’s time for a cigarette. It’s murder.’ She pulled a face. ‘Can’t see me lasting.’
‘In that case, what you need,’ said Hugo, ‘is the help and support of a friend. A non-smoking platonic friend,’ he added in his most beguiling tone, ‘to take your mind off the fact that you’ve given up.’
He took Rita, minus fluorescent rollers, to Little Venice. They ate lunch at The Glassboat, a floating restaurant moored on the Regent’s Canal, and listened to the jazz being played by a quartet out on the deck. The sun shone and the sky matched Hugo’s cobalt blue shirt. Rita’s dress, which was peony pink shot through with lilac, clashed exuberantly with the restaurant’s Rosie-and-Jim-style decor.
Hugo, as deft a storyteller as David Niven, told Rita how utterly hellish each of his marriages had been, and showed her the photographs in his wallet, of his three glossy ex-wives. He carried them with him at all times, he explained with suitable gravity, as a salutary reminder never to do it again.
‘Maybe I should carry a picture of a packet of Rothmans.’
To steer the subject away from cigarettes, Hugo said, ‘Do you have a photo of your husband with you?’
She shook her head.
‘Don’t need one. I can remember what he looks like.’
‘Tell me all about your happy marriage’—he refilled their coffee cups—‘and your perfect husband. I want to hear about Alex.’
‘He was a wicked old bugger and he made me laugh.’ Rita heaped sugar into hers. ‘But he wasn’t perfect. He was no Jane Asher.’
Hugo raised a quizzical eyebrow. ‘Would you have wanted to be married to Jane Asher?’
‘She’d be a whizz with homemade Christmas decorations.’
‘Ah, but sit her in front of a jazz piano and what would she do?’
Rita roared with laughter.
‘Stencil it.’
After lunch they walked along the canal path.
‘I want a cigarette.’
‘Here, hold my hand instead.’
‘Can I smoke it?’
Hugo took her hand anyway.
‘Try patches. They worked for my agent and he was a twenty-a-day man.’
Only a lifelong non-smoker, Rita thought affectionately, could think twenty a day was a lot.
‘I was a fifty-a-day woman.’ She looked depressed. ‘Anyway, why d’you suppose I’m wearing long sleeves? I’ve already got a week’s supply slapped on all over me. Underneath this dress I look like Mr Blobby.’
It was five o’clock when they arrived back at Rita’s house, almost five fifteen by the time she’d finished deactivating the elaborate security system.
‘It’s a bugger but you have to have it. D’you want a drink or is it time you were off?’
Hugo, following her into a sitting room so big you’d need binoculars to watch television, realized she wanted him to leave. Feeling distinctly put out, because he’d thought she was enjoying his company—and because nobody ever wanted him to leave anywhere—he made himself comfortable on an indigo velour upholstered sofa.
‘I’ll have a brandy, thanks.’
He watched Rita pour two incredibly small measures.
‘There you go. Cheers.’
Before Hugo had finished saying cheers back, her drink had vanished. She was hovering in front of him, willing him to drink up and go.
‘Well, thanks for today. It’s been great, really. I’ve enjoyed it.’
‘But,’ drawled Hugo.
Rita looked evasive. ‘But what?’
‘But it’s time I left? But it’s time for your bath? I don’t know,’ said Hugo. ‘You tell me.’
‘I thought you’d have other plans. Places to go, VIPs to see.’
‘No.’
‘Oh.’
She was jittering; he could see it. If he reached across and touched her it would be like resting his hand on the bonnet of a Volkswagen Beetle.
Hugo said evenly, ‘Why do you want me out of here?’
‘I d-don’t—’
‘Unless you have a secret lover tucked away upstairs.’
‘Ha ha.’ Rita laughed nervously.
‘Or, better still, a secret stash of cigarettes.’
‘You sod!’ She went bright red and covered her face with both hands. ‘Oh God, and after all your hard work. I’m so ashamed… what must you think of me?’
‘I think you’re human. And being with you today hasn’t been hard work. Go and get them.’ Enormously relieved, he added, ‘Now, can I stay?’
He insisted on peeling the nicotine patches off Rita’s arms first.
‘Otherwise you’ll overdose.’
‘Ouch!’ She winced; he was being careful but it still hurt. ‘This is worse than having your legs waxed.’
‘Sorry. Tenacious little buggers. There, last one. You can light up now.’
‘Bliss,’ sighed Rita, taking her first toe-tingling drag. ‘Right, we’ll have a proper drink this time.’ She grinned happily at Hugo. ‘You pour, I’ll forget to say when.’
The level in the brandy bottle went steadily down. Swathed in smoke, Rita relaxed visibly, regaling him with stories of growing up in the East End.
‘So when did all this happen?’ Hugo gestured around the sitting room, at the three chandeliers, the football-pitch sized carpet, all the gold-plated trappings of wealth. ‘And how did it happen?’
‘Property deals.’ Rita stubbed out a cigarette and promptly lit another. ‘Buying, doing up, selling on. That old routine. You know the kind of thing.’
‘Yes, but—’
‘And then two years ago,’ she continued blandly, ‘a high-risk deal came off. In Spain, it was. This massive company was so desperate to get their hands on our bit of land, we could pretty much name our price. Alex thought of a number, doubled it, and the daft buggers said yes. We made three million, overnight.’
‘Whereabouts in Spain was this?’
‘Barcelona.’
‘I know Barcelona quite well,’ said Hugo, who wasn’t an actor for nothing. If Rita could lie through her teeth, so could he. He’d make a far better job of it too. ‘Which company negotiated the deal?’
Rita’s eyes flickered. She tried to light another cigarette, then realized she already had one on the go.
‘God, I can’t remember. Los something…’
‘Loss of three million, I should think.’ Hugo leaned towards her, his mouth twitching. ‘Come on, you can tell me. What really happened?’
Rita looked even more agitated than when she hadn’t been allowed to smoke.
‘I can’t…’
‘If it helps at all, I asked Poppy when I rang her to get your address. She seems to think Alex was something to do with the Great Train Robbery.’
‘My Alex? He couldn’t have robbed anyone to save his life! Anyway, he got travel-sick on trains.’ Flustered, Rita tried to stub out her lighter. She sighed. ‘It wasn’t anything illegal, okay? Oh hell… the thing is, we made a pact never to tell anyone. It just seemed safer, easier… people can get so funny…’
She rubbed the ash off the gold Cartier lighter. Hugo was sitting there looking at her, not saying a word.
But he’s come up from nothing, thought Rita; he’s got money now, enough to appreciate the problems.
In fact, if anyone could truly understand why she and Alex had done what they had, it was Hugo.
‘People do get funny,’ she said again, psyching herself up to confess. ‘When you’ve got money and they haven’t, they treat you differently. If you’ve earned it, at least they can respect you for that. It’s when you haven’t earned it they really give you a hard time.’ She took a gulp of brandy; she’d started, now it was too late to stop. ‘Two years ago, me and Alex watched one of those documentary thingies on TV, about people who’d won tons of money and how it had fucked up—sorry, messed up—their lives. They didn’t know who their friends were anymore. They got hate mail. Death threats. They argued about how much to give to their relatives. Their marriages broke up, they wished they’d never won it… I’m not kidding, it was real Hammer Horror stuff, the scariest thing I’ve ever seen.’
Still Hugo didn’t speak.
‘Well, you can guess the rest,’ Rita went on. ‘We said right, that was it, no more lottery for us. Except Alex had already bought our tickets for Saturday’s draw.’ She paused then said simply, ‘Three days later, we won.’
Margaret McBride looked as if she’d won the lottery and lost her ticket. When Ben and Dina finally clattered into the sitting room that night, she greeted them with a disapproving glare and her arms tightly folded across her chest.
‘It’s one o’clock in the morning,’ she announced grimly, ‘and you promised to be back by eleven. It’s downright inconsiderate, that’s what it is.’
Dina, clinging to Ben’s arm, did her best not to giggle. Ben nudged her in the ribs and tried to look suitably apologetic.
‘Mum, we’re sorry, we didn’t mean to be late—’
‘But you are,’ his mother interjected, ‘and being sorry just isn’t good enough. Apart from anything else, the pubs shut at eleven. I can’t imagine what you’ve been doing for the last two hours.’
Dina couldn’t help it; a great snort of laughter escaped and she had to hide her face in Ben’s shoulder. If Margaret McBride knew what they’d really been up to, she’d have a heart attack. Making riotous love in the bus shelter around the corner simply wasn’t what respectable married couples did in their free time.
‘Margaret, it won’t happen again, I’m really, really sorry.’ Dina made an effort and pulled herself together. ‘There was a party at the pub, an after-hours thing, that’s why we’re late. How was Daniel, anyway? Did you manage to settle him all right?’
Her mother-in-law’s expression softened. Daniel was the absolute light of her life.
‘No trouble at all. Went out like a light.’ She looked proud. ‘He’s always a good boy for his Nan.’
‘I don’t know what we’d do without you, Mum,’ said Ben, because outrageous flattery always went down well.
‘The best baby-sitter in the world,’ echoed Dina, secretly sliding her fingers under Ben’s shirt at the back and running them up his spine. She stifled a grin as he squirmed and made a dash for the kitchen.
‘I’ll put the kettle on, shall I? Mum, fancy a cup of tea before you go?’
Margaret McBride hesitated, then smiled and nodded.
‘Just a quick one then.’ Now why was Dina giggling like that? Still, at least the girl seemed more cheerful these days. ‘So you enjoyed yourselves this evening,’ she said to her daughter-in-law. They’d apologized for being late; she couldn’t be cross with them for long. ‘Had a good time, by the look of you.’ Not to mention a few drinks.
‘Oh yes, we definitely enjoyed ourselves. It was brilliant.’ Dina realized as she said it that she meant every word. She nodded happily. Who would’ve thought you could have so much fun with your own husband? ‘We had the best time in the world.’