Authors: Marika Cobbold
The therapist leant forward and looked sternly at me. âEither you want to get better or you don't.' He didn't wait for me to decide which I wanted before going on, âSo I want you to make at least two decisions every day. They don't have to be big ones, but they have to be firm.' He glanced at his watch and taking the hint I stood up immediately.
Anthony Peel smiled and shook my hand. âSee you next week, Esther.'
âThat', I said, âis surely in the hands of the Almighty.' I walked out of the office feeling that somehow, in spite of my best efforts, we hadn't really bonded.
As it was, I didn't see Anthony Peel again. I got home that day and poured myself a Whisky Mac, one part whisky, one part ginger wine. I had a couple more after that, then I wrote a piece on psychotherapists and faxed it straight to Chloe at the office. It came right back with
Unpublishable and probably libellous
written across it and the words
but thanks anyway
added at the end. Still, I decided, I had made a start; I had written a sharp, decisive piece, a little too sharp, perhaps, but it was erring on the right side, and I had the Whisky Mac to thank for that, not Anthony Peel.
In the next couple of days I drank a lot more and I wrote a story for
Modern Romance
. That too was returned.
Too explicit
, the comments read,
not to say pornographic. And quite frankly, I'm sure that none of our readers would even contemplate putting a razor blade
there!? Oh well, I thought, Rome wasn't built in a day.
âYou're drinking.' Posy wrinkled her tiny, perfect little nose at me or, as it seemed to me at the time, her two perfect little noses. Then her large eyes grew sad and brimmed with tears. âI can't believe Angus left like that just when you needed him most. I've written and told him exactly what I think of him.'
I wished I could do the same, but I didn't know what I thought of him. In fact, I thought about him very little. I had tried to ask Anthony
Peel about it. How it was that a man with whom I had slept quite a few times, a man whom I had watched Ingmar Bergman films with until he begged for mercy, a man I had spent a weekend
and
a bank holiday in a rented country cottage with, could up and quit my life leaving barely a trace in my heart.
âYou feel betrayed by his leaving?' Anthony Peel had asked. I had told him: âYes.'
âSo you're hurt?'
âAngry,' I had explained.
âYou're angry because you're hurt,' Anthony Peel had informed me.
I had contradicted him: âNo. I'm angry because he proved himself to be a spineless little shit and I can't believe I wasted any time on him.'
âSo you're hurt?'
âNo,' I had explained patiently. âI'm angry.' Then my time was up.
âBut you're drinking,' Posy repeated. I told her she was right and asked her if she would like a Whisky M. She said she wouldn't. âWhat's a Whisky M, anyway?' She sat down opposite me at the kitchen table.
âIt's a Whisky Mac with an ever-decreasing amount of Mac in it,' I elucidated, pouring myself one, six parts whisky, one part ginger wine.
âHow revolting.' Posy frowned at the glass in my hand. I was about to point out to her that she was not to blame the drink for being drunk, I mean, it didn't seem fair, when she handed me a letter. âRead this. Daddy showed it to me, it's from one of his constituents.' (Posy's father had been elected Liberal Democrat MP for Sunning and Tyne in the recent by-election.) The letter was handwritten and as I squinted at it, trying to decipher it, Posy snatched it from my hands.
âYou can read it when you're not pissed. I just thought it was the kind of story that might interest you. You heard about Stuart Lloyd's plans to build what he calls a People's Glyndebourne on his Kent estate?' I nodded but I soon stopped, it made my head hurt too much.
âWell, George Wilson and his sister Dora, both in their seventies, are the victims of these grand ideas. They own the cottage which is
being demolished to make way for an access road. It's all here in the letter.' She waved it at me. âYou want right and wrong, well you'll get it in this story. I told Daddy I'd get you on to it; power of the press and all that.'
âYou hate the press.'
Posy nodded. âI know. Who doesn't?' She had a point there. âBut you have your uses.'
âLike a kind of laxative suppository,' I suggested. âNo one likes it, but you're grateful for it when all other avenues are blocked.'
âIf you like, yes.' Posy gave me back the letter.
I read it a couple of hours later, having had nothing to drink but coffee and water. I went over to the office and looked up everything I could find on the Stuart Lloyd project and the Wilsons. I also got the name of the firm of architects: a European firm by the name of Keppel & Rooth. Back home again I phoned Posy's father and got some more information about the plight of the two old people.
âThree generations of Wilsons have been born in that cottage,' Posy's father said. âThe cottage might not look much to an outsider, but to George and Dora it's their whole life. George only managed to buy the place a few years ago; until then the family had been tenants. They're baffled, Esther. Old George came to my surgery and he said, “But we own the place now. It's ours. How can they just take it from us?” It's enough to make you weep.'
Next I called Chloe at home. I told her the basics and asked if the
Chronicle
would be interested in a story. She said they would if it had teeth. I told her it would have a serious mouthful. Which is how I came to be in Stuart Lloyd's office the following morning.
It was a Tuesday in late April and the kind of day which gives that month its bad name: blustery, wet, with moments of brilliant sunshine teasing through the clouds just long enough for you to put away your umbrella. Right now I was trying to get to see Stuart Lloyd at his office at Terra Nova Enterprises. His secretary was firm, which didn't surprise me, but polite, which did because I always imagined mothers up and down the country cautioning their small offspring never to be rude, unless, of course, they're dealing with a journalist.
âAs I said, Ms⦠?'
âFisher. Esther Fisher.'
âAs I said, Ms Fisher, Mr Lloyd is tied up in meetings all morning. I'm afraid you'll have to make an appointment. The next available one isâ¦' she ran a polished fingertip along the pages of a large desk diary â⦠two weeks Monday. Ten o'clock.' She looked up at me with the contented air of someone who'd just put a spoke in somebody else's wheel, but she remained polite. âSorry.'
âCome on' â I peered at the name plate on her desk â âMs Morgan. It's not as if I'm asking for a hip replacement. I just want two, no, five minutes of his time. I'll do this piece about the People's Glyndebourne one way or the other but would prefer to hear both sides of the story first. I like to be fair.'
âI'm sure that's very laudable, Miss Fisher, but as I said, Mr Lloyd is tied up.'
Just then the door to the inner office opened and a tall, fair man stepped out, followed by a shorter man with dark hair and a neatly trimmed beard, Stuart Lloyd.
âI'm Esther Fisher from the
Chronicle
.' I hurried forward, barring
their escape. âI'd like to ask you a few questions about your proposed building of an opera house on the land adjoining your estate, Dora and George Wilson's land.'
Helen Morgan rose from her desk. âI'm sorry, Stuart. She got past the front desk somehow.'
Stuart Lloyd flashed a smile at me before turning to his secretary. âThat's OK, Helen. I've got a minute.' He turned to the fair-haired man, who, I noticed, was gawping at me. âYou don't mind if I talk to Ms Fisher?' The man, a very good-looking man if he'd only shut his mouth, shook his head. Then he opened his mouth and laughed. Well, not so much laughed as giggled, high-pitched and abandoned. Dear oh dear, I thought, the man is a moron. A beautiful moron, maybe, but a moron all the same. Stuart Lloyd, however, didn't seem fazed by the noise â I suppose he'd heard it before â but I noticed Helen Morgan flinching at her desk. Just a small, discreet flinch, but a flinch nevertheless.
âEsther Fisher, I can't believe it.' The moron had stopped laughing. âNot Audrey Fisher's daughter?'
I nodded, mute.
âSo you're the cross English girl?'
Well, that was one way of putting it. âHow do you know?' Then I corrected myself. âI mean, how do you know of me? And my mother? Are you a friend of hers?' It wasn't impossible. Audrey had got a veritable little salon going in her room these days.
âWhat's going on here?' Stuart Lloyd looked at us both, a small frown on his bearded face. He was the kind of man, I thought, who liked to be in charge at all times, the sort who had probably remained in the driving seat even while making love in his first car.
âThis is extraordinary,' the blond man went on, ignoring Stuart Lloyd's question.
âYou two have obviously met before,' Stuart Lloyd said.
I shook my head. âNo, no we haven't.'
Stuart Lloyd looked confused, then took charge again. âLet's go into my office.' He waved us towards his door. âAnd Helen, could you bring in some coffee?' Helen nodded, but she didn't look pleased. She knew a snake was being let into the bosom of her office and now she
was asked to give it coffee too. I shot her an apologetic smile over my shoulder as I disappeared into the other room.
My mother's odd friend turned and gave me a heart-stopping smile, extending his hand to shake mine. âI'm Linus Stendal. Olivia's stepson. You must have heard about me? I've certainly heard about you. For years and years.'
âGood God!' It was all I could say. And who was gawping now? I clamped my mouth shut. Then I opened it again. âGood Lord! Don't tell me
you're
the architect.'
âThat's me.'
I took a deep breath. âI have to tell you both that my paper is entirely opposed to the building of the opera house on this particular piece of land and that we are doing everything we can to publicise the plight of George and Dora Wilson.'
Stuart Lloyd threw himself down into one of the two large cream leather chairs which flanked a glass-topped coffee table. Now he looked up at me with a small, tight smile. âWell.' He jabbed at his thigh with the tip of a pen. âAt least we all know where we stand.'
I glanced across at Linus Stendal who looked as if he had no idea where he was, let alone where he was standing. âBut if you've made up your mind,' Stuart Lloyd continued, âwhy bother to come to me with questions?'
âBecause I believe in giving both sides of the story, regardless of my opinion on the subject. I must give our readers the chance to make up their own minds with as much material as possible at their disposal.'
âAre you telling me that you actually believe things you write?' Stuart Lloyd shook his head.
I gave him a stern look. âYes, I do. I believe in all kinds of things and one of them is the right of two old people to remain in their home however inconvenient this might prove to be to you and your company.' Stuart Lloyd just smiled and went on shaking his head.
âI know I'm a journalist, Mr Lloyd,' I said. âBut I live by my principles.' At least I would if I knew what they were, I thought.
In the corner by the window Linus Stendal stirred and I felt his
gaze on me. âI live by my work,' he said in his faultless English. âThis is going to be a beautiful building.'
Stuart Lloyd was looking at me, his head a little to one side, his small dark eyes alert. âI tell you what. Seeing as you two almost know each other, why don't we all have lunch together. See if we can find some common ground, Miss Fisher. And I'd really like to explain what we're trying to do here.'
I wasn't fooled by that old âLet me take you into my confidence' trick. But I smiled and said, âLove to,' adding a â
Hej, hej
' to Linus. This was Swedish for hello and about as much common ground as I could muster for then.
On my way out I thanked Helen Morgan for her help. She had been absolutely right to find me a pain.
We went to an Italian restaurant right near the offices of Terra Nova Enterprises. Once seated, Stuart Lloyd made it clear there was no time to dither over menus, so I said I'd have what he had so as to be decisive and make someone else responsible, both at the same time. Stuart Lloyd ordered grilled vegetables for us, followed by cod in a herb crust. Linus looked at the menu as if it had some hidden depth that no one else had noticed, before ordering pasta with four cheeses, followed by breaded veal.
âYou eat veal?' I said.
Linus opened his grey, dark-lashed eyes wider. âShouldn't I?'
âDoing what you're about to do, I suppose you should.'
âI don't quite follow you,' he said in that almost too perfect English of his.
Luckily my glass of wine had arrived. I thought of giggling prettily and saying something like âGosh, am I the only one here drinking', but I was never very good at that kind of thing and anyway, I didn't want to waste time. I took a deep gulp from my glass of red house wine and said, âYou evict defenceless old people from their lifelong home and turn their land into a hymn to elitist culture, so it figures you should eat veal.'
âNow, now,' Stuart Lloyd said. âYou're being just a bit unfair there. Linus is the architect chosen to design my opera house. He has
nothing to do with acquiring the land. And I can't agree with your term elitist culture. The whole point with this development is to bring culture to people who might otherwise feel excluded. And the building itself, Linus's design, is a quite spectacular merge of art and functionalism. Think about it; that building will be there for countless generations to enjoy. Anyway, you're forgetting that it's the council who's evicting the Wilsons, not Terra Nova Enterprises.'