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Authors: Sophie Hannah

BOOK: A Game For All The Family
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“And his dad? Does he have a dad living with him?”

“Yeah. His dad would notice, he said, but there’s no way he’d say anything.”

“Right. So the dad’s scared of the mum too?”

“I don’t know. George didn’t say.”

“Well, he must be, mustn’t he? Unless George is the one he’s afraid of. Is George scary?”

“George is the least scary person in the world. George is just . . . amazing.” Ellen sighs.

“It’s interesting,” I say. “A mother who would go ballistic if her son told her he’d lost his coat, but who, at the same time, doesn’t notice if he comes home with someone else’s.”

“She’s a weirdo.”

“What else do you know about her? What’s she a professor of?”

“Assyriology. Which has nothing to do with Syria.”

“I know.” I didn’t, but I see no need to admit to my ignorance. I bet Professor Donbavand doesn’t know how many times Peter Florrick had sex with hooker Amber Madison in
The Good Wife.
I do: eighteen times.

We all have our different specialties.

“Her name’s Anne,” says Ellen. “I
hate
her.” She clenches her fists in her lap. “If it weren’t for her stupid rules, George could email me and text me.”

I hear in her voice how much this boy means to her. Yet she hasn’t mentioned his name before today. Why didn’t she tell me about him? I must ask Alex if he’s heard the name George Donbavand, though I know what the answer will be.

“We could chat on Instagram, FaceTime each other, hang around together outside school,” Ellen goes on. “She won’t let him do
anything.

“Don’t worry,” I say. “George will soon be unexpelled. Does he have brothers and sisters?”

“One sister. Fleur. She’s older—first year sixth form.”

“Same rules for Fleur?” I ask. “No emails, no texting? Does the mother really not let them visit friends?”

“Really,” says Ellen. “She knows most parents let their kids use the internet, and she thinks George and Fleur would see bits of it if they went to other people’s houses. And no one can ever go round to their house because she’s always working on her
stupid
Assyriology and needs the house to be silent all the time.”

“What does George’s dad do?”

“Creeps around the house like a mute slave, George says, doing her bidding.”

“No, I mean work. What’s his job?” I hate myself for wanting to know this. What will the answer tell me? He’ll be a lawyer, or an architect, or he’ll work in a shoe shop. Whatever work he does, he’s an idiot who hasn’t realized that doing Nothing is the only way to save your soul.

“He also works at Exeter University,” says Ellen. “I don’t know what he does there.”

“Well, they sound like a screwed-up family.” Come to think of it, the Donbavands sound almost too dysfunctional to be true. “Did George tell you all this? Are you sure he’s not exaggerating?”

I look at Ellen to see why she’s not answering. She’s crying again. “And now George hasn’t even got school, or me to talk to. It’ll be even worse for him that Fleur’s still going every day. Though they’ll probably expel her next—for dropping a pencil on the floor or something.”

I nearly miss the unmarked crossroads ahead and have to brake fast. There’s nothing coming at us horizontally, so I drive on. Where is everyone? I’ve thought that so many times since moving to Devon. Why don’t Devonians clog up their roads all day long the way Londoners do? They can’t all be confined to their homes by Professor Anne Donbavand.

“Why would school want to expel Fleur?” I ask Ellen.

“Forget it,” she murmurs.

“I never forget anything. I’m like an elephant. Why would they?”

“Vindictiveness. Why do they want to expel George, when I’ve told them over and over that he didn’t steal my coat? That phone call, before . . .” She stops suddenly. Starts biting her thumbnail, something she hasn’t done for ages.

“The anonymous phone call?” I ask. “What, Ellen? You have to tell me.”

“I think it was school. Because of George.”

“School?”
I pull over to the side of the road, cricking my neck in the process. “You think someone at school is threatening me, telling me to go back to London? Who would do that?”

“I don’t know who. If I knew, I’d say the person’s name and not just ‘school,’ wouldn’t I?”

“But . . . if you’re saying it at all, you must have
some
idea.” Another unmarked crossroads I wasn’t prepared for. It would never have occurred to me in a million years to connect the two creepy phone calls with Ellen’s friend being expelled.

What the hell is going on here?

“Ellen, you need to tell me everything you know. This isn’t funny.”

“I don’t
know
anything.”

“Then tell me what you suspect.”

“I’ve told you! I think whoever’s calling and trying to drive us away is someone from school. One of the teachers.”

“And you also think the school wants to be rid of George
and
Fleur, and they’ll do whatever it takes to achieve that, even framing them for offenses they haven’t committed?”

“Yes,” says Ellen with feeling.

I’ve never heard anything so unlikely in my life. Yet my daughter believes it.

“Why?”

“Dunno.”

“Oh come on, Ellen, you can do better than that. I need to know everything before I go in there and kick off.”

“I don’t want you to kick anything!” She covers her face with her hands. “I want you to drop me off and go home! There’s nothing you can do. They won’t take George back, and we’ll have to put up with more horrible phone calls.”

It takes me a few seconds to work out what she means. “The horrible calls I’m getting are because you stuck up for George?”

She seems to be thinking about it. “I don’t know,” she mutters after a while. “I don’t know . . . everything.”

“Then tell me everything you
do
know, even if it’s not much. Please, Ellen. What are you keeping back?”

A long silence. Then she says, “You’re getting the calls because you’re picking up the phone. It’d be too obvious if they asked for me, but it must be about me. You haven’t got any enemies in Devon, have you? You haven’t been making a nuisance of yourself, calling the head teacher a crazy tyrant. I have!”

Then why haven’t I been summoned to the school for an earnest talking-to? None of this adds up.

“Whoever it is, she’s telling you to go back to London knowing you’ll take me with you,” says Ellen. “I’m the one they want gone. I’m the one sticking up for George—the only one!”

I can’t bear the idea of anyone thinking of Ellen as an enemy, especially when her only crime is loyalty to her friend.

We’ll leave Kingswear. Tomorrow. Stuff the new house and the new life . . .

No. That’s insane. What Ellen is saying is insane. There has to be another explanation. I love my daughter, but she might be wrong.

I can’t tell her what I’m thinking; it would only make her believe I’m against her too.

“Why would the school have it in for George and Fleur?” I ask. “Are they particularly difficult pupils?”

“No. But it’s not only the children the school gets landed with, is it? See exhibit A.” Ellen points at me, attempting a smile. “Angry parent on the rampage.”

“Right, so it’s not about George and Fleur, then? Them as individuals, I mean.”

“It’s about the Donbavands,” says Ellen. “They’re a particularly difficult family.”

Chapter 2

The Perrine Compromise, and Taking Turns

Perrine, the third daughter of Bascom and Sorrel Ingrey, was brought up in a way that could be called the very definition of compromise. Her parents—both of them equally, in full cooperation—made sure she did her homework so that she never got into trouble at school. They also encouraged her to play a musical instrument, and made sure she did the amount of flute practice that her flute teacher said would be ideal, but when after a year Perrine said she hated these lessons and didn’t want to play the stupid flute anymore, her parents let her give up.

When she got home from school, she was allowed to do what she wanted until dinnertime, unless what she wanted to do happened to be so ridiculous that it wouldn’t be a sensible choice. So, unlike her sister Allisande, who had once spent an entire afternoon squirting pink conditioner all over an expensive Persian rug without either of her parents making a move to stop her, Perrine was allowed to do whatever she wanted
within reason
.

Her diet consisted mainly of lean meat, healthy oily fish, leafy green vegetables, juicy fruits and fibrous wholegrain cereals, but once a week she was allowed a delicious chocolatey treat, and sometimes she got to eat chips or crisps, though not too often. She was allowed sweets at Christmas, and Easter eggs at Easter. (Lisette wasn’t. To this day, she thinks chocolate is evil and will not countenance its presence in her home. And Allisande wouldn’t know the difference between broccoli and spinach if her life depended on it.)

Perrine was made to tidy her room once a week, but didn’t get into trouble if it got a bit messy in between these times. (This was very different from the case of Lisette, who had been taught from day one that she must keep her room meticulously tidy at all times, and that anything found not to be in its proper place would be instantly thrown in the outside bin with no hope of it ever being retrieved.)

Up to a point, Perrine was allowed to choose what to wear. She wasn’t prevented from dressing up as a princess as Lisette was (because her Socialist father disapproved of any collaboration with the monarchy), but neither was she allowed to walk to the nearest shops in the rain wearing nothing but a black bikini, a pink string vest and flip-flops, as Allisande was when she was only nine.

Friends, acquaintances and members of the extended family were relieved when Perrine came along. “Finally!” they said to themselves and to each other. “Finally Bascom and Sorrel Ingrey are bringing up a child in a normal, well-balanced way.” All those people ought to have been more cautious in their celebratory banter. They ought to have kept in mind that, in spite of their extreme upbringings at either end of the strict-to-lenient spectrum, Lisette and Allisande were both very nice girls.

Perrine Ingrey, on the other hand, would not have been described by anybody as a pleasant child. She was sulky, selfish, prone to enormous tantrums, spiteful and dishonest. She never laughed or made anyone else laugh, and she didn’t have a grain of charm in her. She looked lumpy and had a lumpy, difficult personality to go with her looks. It was impossible to find any good in her at all, however hard you tried. Bascom, Sorrel, Lisette and Allisande all tried very, very hard, and, until Perrine was murdered, they never gave up, but it seemed that nothing could be done to improve Perrine’s character.

“How can this have happened?” everybody in the nearby villages and towns asked, when Perrine Ingrey and not one of her sisters was said to have murdered Malachy Dodd. “Isn’t she the third child?” they asked. “The one who was brought up normally?”

This proves that ninety-nine people out of a hundred refuse to use their brains most of the time. True, Perrine was brought up in a well-balanced way that was a model of compromise, but both of her parents were constantly frustrated because they were unable to do things entirely their own way. Neither Bascom nor Sorrel could think, “Ah yes, I am rearing this child precisely as I believe a child should be reared.” And neither of them could think, “I’m rearing this child in a way that’s the exact reverse of the method I think is best”—which is a far more calming notion than you might think, because you simply submit and follow someone else’s ideas, instead of feeling as if your way is making progress one minute, then being thwarted the next.

Unfortunately—and Bascom and Sorrel did not foresee this when they made their grand plan for three children—the Perrine compromise led only to constant foiling for both of them. Each parent was enough in charge of policy to feel frustrated at not being able to be more in charge. Surely you can understand this? “My thing ruined” is a far more upsetting prospect than “Not my thing.”

It is therefore no surprise at all that Perrine Ingrey was the problem child. Her character was fatally damaged by two disgruntled parents who felt constantly impeded. Anyone in that situation might grow up to be a monster. (I’m not sure if Perrine was a monster, or whether she was sick in the head. Is there a difference between the two? No one is sure to this day.)

Malachy Dodd’s regular visits were another compromise between Bascom and Sorrel Ingrey. They were for Perrine’s sake, to cheer her up. That was the only reason they happened every Tuesday and Friday afternoon, regular as clockwork. Bascom and Sorrel didn’t even like Mr. and Mrs. Dodd. They found them trivially suburban and unimaginative—the kind of people who buy each other cards with “Darling Wife” and “Darling Husband” printed on them by the card manufacturer, and who would rather buy an ugly house with storage space and a double garage than a beautiful dilapidated palace with a ballroom and secret passageways hidden behind bookcases but no off-road parking.

Still, if it would make Perrine less sullen, Bascom and Sorrel decided that they could put up with the company of the Dodds twice a week. They thought that perhaps Lisette and Allisande, being so close in age and such a devoted pair of sisters, made Perrine feel excluded. Malachy Dodd and Perrine were also very close in age. At the time of Malachy’s murder, they were both thirteen years old. Malachy’s family lived nearby, and so the plan involving these twice-weekly visits was hatched.

Perrine hated Malachy Dodd more and more with each visit. “How can you hate him?” Bascom (who believed passionately in rational discussion) asked his youngest daughter. “He seems good-natured and harmless to me. What’s wrong with him?”

“He always makes me cry!” Perrine complained. “Me and
only
me!” It was true that Lisette and Allisande both adored Malachy, which wasn’t fair because they didn’t need to be made any happier. Also, Malachy seemed to like them far more than he liked Perrine. This made Perrine jealous. Her envy was the beginning of her downfall. If she hadn’t been jealous, she wouldn’t have ended up becoming a murderer, and if she hadn’t been a murderer, she wouldn’t have gotten murdered.

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