Lots of Love (57 page)

Read Lots of Love Online

Authors: Fiona Walker

BOOK: Lots of Love
9.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Ellen waited.
Saul revved louder, the battered rusty metal grille of the old pick-up like bared yellow teeth. Fluffy was going demented in the back, contained by a chain tied to the roof of the cab, which rattled and strained as she tried to throw herself out to get at Ellen and Snorkel.
Ellen felt a muzzle glue itself nervously between her calves. She glanced around; but she was a hundred yards from the nearest house and there was no sign of life nearby or another car coming.
Fine. He could play games, she decided, but there was no way she was going to join in. Tugging at Snorkel’s lead, she set off along the lane again, in the direction of the pick-up.
Without warning it launched towards her as fast as it could accelerate.
‘Shit!’ Ellen leaped into the cow parsley, dragging Snorkel towards a dry-stone wall as the pick-up mounted the verge and headed straight at her. She could have jumped the wall in time, but she couldn’t leave Snorkel in its path so she did the only thing she could think of. She threw out her arms and dared him.
The hot radiator scalded her knees as the pick-up screeched to a halt just an inch short of them.
‘Just
what
is your problem?’ she raged, slamming her fists on the bonnet.
‘Didn’t you get the message?’ Saul yelled over Fluffy’s barking and the drum ’n’ bass. ‘Piss off back to London you interfering cow!’
Ellen marched to his window, not caring that Fluffy’s drooling hackles were just inches from her ear. ‘I am
not
from London.’
‘Yeah – no matter. We still hope you rot in hell.’
‘It was you!’ She rounded on him. ‘You left that bloody badger.’
‘Can’t prove it.’ He thrust out his jaw. ‘You should just get out of here. You were totally out of order speaking to old Gran like that. Nearly give her an ’eart-attack.’
‘You hadn’t done a stroke of work there for months.’
‘The mower was busted.’
Ellen couldn’t be bothered to start scrapping over garden equipment. ‘Well, Goose Cottage has just been sold, so if you wouldn’t mind cutting out the dead-wildlife routine and the dangerous-driving act, I’d be grateful. I’ll be out of your hair before you know it.’
‘Oh. Right you are. Ely got it, then?’ Suddenly he seemed quite chatty and amenable. Ellen would have laughed if she hadn’t been in such a foul temper. She eyed him angrily. ‘Did he give you a backhander to let it go to pot?’
‘I wouldn’t do nothing for that bastard,’ Saul snarled. ‘I just knew he was after it. Wedding present or summink.’ The bright blue eyes watched her face.
But Ellen couldn’t care why Ely had wanted it. ‘He didn’t get it. A new family will be moving in soon,’ she said wearily, ‘and I’m sure they’ll be happy to hear about the services you offer.’
‘That a fact?’ His boxer’s face twisted thoughtfully. Then he licked his lips and leaned out of the window. ‘Is it true Spurs Belling’s bonking you?’
‘Who said that?’
‘Everyone’s talking ’bout it. Gladys has bin telling all the biddies you two’ve been at it since you got here. Her ladyship’s in a right state. She wants you out of this village ’n’ all. I should watch your back.’ Giving her a menacing, broken-toothed leer, he put the pick-up into reverse, then belted away in a plume of black exhaust fumes.
‘It’s all your fault,’ Ellen told her mobile, when it rang as she trailed back from the organic gardens with her strawberries, having taken half an hour to extract Snorkel from the wild pack of children and animals. ‘Why don’t you have a silent alert?’ If the pesky little device hadn’t rung at the charity auction, she would never have got to know Spurs. Had Hell’s Bells not taken its trill ring as a bid, she would never have bought Spurs’ wishes at a knock-down price.
‘You could at least vibrate,’ Ellen told it, as she fished it out of her pocket. ‘Yup?’
‘Ellen?’
She clutched the phone so tightly to her ear that her earring tapped tunefully on the number four button. She had never spoken to Spurs on the phone before, and the sound of his voice deep in her ear made her sway into the verge. Her mobile was vibrating like mad now.
‘’Sme.’
‘This is Spurs.’
I know, she thought, as the goosebumps raged. I bloody know. ‘The answer’s still no.’ She managed to sound calm.
To her consternation, he just laughed, knowing immediately what she was alluding to. ‘I warn you, I’ll ask you again. What’s that noise?’
Ellen took out her earring to stop the four button intoning. ‘My mobile does that sometimes.’
‘I’m having a drink with Rory. He says he’s already asked Dilly up here tomorrow night.’
‘I know.’ She leaned over the stone wall and watched a herd of cattle drift aimlessly in the afternoon sun. ‘I’ve told her I’ll give her a lift to the pub.’
‘Good. Because I told Rory about your pantomime idea—’
‘It wasn’t my idea—’
‘—and he told me he thinks it’s fucking crap.’ He laughed, ignoring her interruption. ‘But he’s now come up with some thoughts that I have to admit are frighteningly camp, so we’re on for a bit of set-dressing at least.’
‘Spurs, I don’t want to play the back end of your panto horse any more.’ She kicked the wall.
‘What?’
‘You’re right – us trying to be friends would be like running in new shoes, only worse because we have nowhere to run except out of time.’
He dropped his voice: ‘At least try them for size.’
‘I don’t see that there’s any point. We’re being . . .’ she cleared her throat ‘. . . talked about.’
‘By whom?’
‘The entire village, as far as I can tell.’
There was a long pause.
‘Does that bother you?’
‘No, but then I’m not staying much longer, am I? You have more at stake.’
‘I don’t give a shit what they say about me.’ He let out an angry tut and muttered something at Rory in the background. ‘You still owe me dinner, and Rory here could use our help. You don’t get out of it that easily.’ The arrogant clip in his voice made it clear he had no intention of losing face. The slight slur to his voice was even more worrying.
Ellen watched two magpies rise up from the field and chatter into a tree. Far beyond it, bathed in hazy sunlight, was the Springlodes, perched high on the ridge. She could make out the huge house, which sat in a wooded park between the two villages. Somewhere, in that little cluster of stone dots to the right, Spurs was breathing vodka fumes into her ear.
‘Please, Ellen. Wear the new shoes.’ He had lowered his voice huskily. ‘I
need
you to keep me good. You’re my garden angel. My avenging angel.’
‘No!’
she shouted, sending the cows into a panic-stricken stampede across the field. ‘I’m
not
your good fairy or Dilly’s fairy godmother or Pheely’s
Guardian
-reading angel or anybody’s anything else. I just want an easy life, not a hard-luck story. You’re
so
wrong about me, Spurs. I don’t believe in fairy tales – I don’t even know most of them because I never heard them as a kid, just as I never went to pantomimes or played at make-believe.’
He started to laugh, offending her even more. ‘Are you serious?’
‘Yes. I never got to do that stuff. And I’m too old to start now.’
‘No, you’re not. We can do it together.’
An elderly couple on a tandem had wobbled into sight from a breakneck descent down the Hillcote one-in-four, both pale-faced and sweating as they cycled unsteadily along the lane towards Ellen.
‘I’ll come round at seven tomorrow,’ Spurs was saying.
‘Please don’t.’ Ellen tried to return the couple’s smiles, but she had to turn her face away as tears bobbled on her eyelashes.
Spurs breathed deeper in her ear. ‘I love you.’
‘Cut that out,’ she muttered, staring blurrily at the distant Springlode specks.
‘I’ll make everything better,’ he whispered. ‘I’ll make-believe everything better.’
It was only after she’d pocketed the phone that Ellen wondered how he had got the number. She’d never given it to him.
‘This is
such
a balmy evening, isn’t it?’ Pheely sighed as they took their customary walk around the village.
‘I know – it’s crazy,’ Ellen agreed, fanning her T-shirt.
‘I was talking about the weather.’ Pheely glanced at her. ‘I think it’s rather lovely that you and Spurs have rallied on Dilly’s behalf. She’s terribly chuffed.’
Ellen said nothing, pausing to reattach the loose corner of Fins’ Missing poster, which was drooping from the poop-bin post.
The cottages along Manor Lane were glowing gold in the late-afternoon sun, their little front gardens bubbling with colour, the swathes of honeysuckle climbing the walls curling open to waft sweetly across the lane. Swallows looped showily overhead, watched by a lean tortoiseshell cat lying bravely in the centre of the lane, batting its disapproving tail as Hamlet and Snorkel strained towards it on their leads.
‘And I think it’s terribly brave of you going out for a chummy meal with Spurs,’ Pheely was gurgling indulgently. ‘I’d be so hurt if somebody had given me the brush-off like that – I’d avoid them like the plague.’
Ellen glanced worriedly at the manor’s back gates. ‘We’ve come to an understanding.’
Pheely snorted. ‘If you understand him you’re doing a hell of a lot better than anyone else around here. We just stand under the big black cloud of doom that rolled in when he came back.’ She glanced up and looked rather disappointed that no clouds had conveniently appeared in the blue sky. ‘Everybody’s waiting for him to spontaneously combust.’
‘Why should he?’
She shrugged. ‘Something’s going on.’ She turned her huge eyes on Ellen. ‘Something brought him back here and whatever it is has made him a very meek boy. He even turned you down.’ She looked rather too pleased with the thought.
‘It wasn’t like that.’ Ellen cleared her throat awkwardly, glancing around.
‘Extraordinary.’ Pheely was shaking her head. ‘Maybe you’re just not his type.’
‘We might as well have been at it non-stop, for all the village thinks,’ Ellen muttered, noticing heads turning at the tables outside the Oddlode Inn on the opposite side of the lane.
‘Yes, the grapevine
has
been having a vintage season at your expense.’ Pheely laughed.
‘Why didn’t you tell me?’
‘What would have been the point? You ignored my warning that he was mad, bad and dangerous to know – you were hardly going to change your behaviour as a result of pensioner tittle-tattle.’
She had a point, Ellen thought, as they crossed towards the village shop and looked at the new cards in the window in case there was a ‘Found’ one describing a cat resembling Fins. But apart from someone advertising an old Fiesta, and yet another ‘friendly local family’ desperate for a cleaner, there was nothing new. Lily Lubowski moved conspicuously into view with a duster and glowered at Pheely over a display of local produce.
‘You do know,’ Pheely said idly, as she gave Lily a cheery wave, ‘that there’s another rumour going around claiming Saul Wyck tried to mow you down on the Hillcote lane last night?’
Ellen turned to her in surprise. ‘So lovely that whoever saw it came to help,’ she murmured bitterly, starting to harbour seriously evil thoughts about every inhabitant of Oddlode.
‘So it
was
you?’ Pheely was agog. ‘I thought it was just another case of him driving at ramblers. He and Reg have a competition going.’
‘Yes, it was me,’ Ellen confirmed. She told Pheely about her encounter with Saul. ‘He was the one behind the badger and the note. And I’m pretty certain it’s not just about firing his grandparents – I think Ely was bribing him to let the cottage go to pot. I wouldn’t mind betting Saul was one of the Shaggers too.’
‘How thrilling.’ Pheely’s eyebrows shot up. ‘To think that I’ve spent thirty years ruffling feathers in this village and I’ve never managed to elicit much more than disapproving looks. You have half the locals on a hate campaign after just a few weeks. I suppose that’s what you get for befriending Spurs. When you’re tarred with that brush, the ruffled feathers are bound to stick.’
‘Saul’s pranks had nothing to do with Spurs.’
Pheely shook her head wisely. ‘Around here, you only have to stop to talk to him in the lane and he’ll get the blame for everything from your bad double-parking to your anti-social bonfire. Believe me, the fact you two are in cahoots means that
you
are perceived as troublesome. And you
did
want to take him to bed, darling,’ Pheely reminded her with a naughty gurgle.
‘It would have been too messy,’ Ellen said flatly.
‘Oh, don’t be such a prude.’ She winked at Lily who was still glaring at her. ‘I love messy sex. It’s the threat of being thrown to the hounds after he’d taken his pleasure that would put me off Spurs. You had a lucky escape.’
‘That’s what he said about you.’
‘Was it?’ Pheely looked thrilled. ‘How sweet. I wonder if he still hankers a little?’

Other books

Ripped in Red by Cynthia Hickey
Heart of the Jaguar by Katie Reus
Why Men Lie by Linden MacIntyre
Samantha's Gift by Valerie Hansen
The Good Sister by Leanne Davis
Girl Wonder to the Rescue by Malorie Blackman