Authors: Jill Mansell
âYou haven't eaten your toast,' he said before she left.
âOh⦠I wasn't hungryâ¦'
When the front door had banged shut behind her, Caspar snatched up the toast he had so heroically resisted earlier. But it was too late, the butter had begun to congeal. The toast was soggy and stone cold. So much, thought Caspar, for being considerate and exerting self-control.
It didn't take much longer for his second good resolution to bite the dust. What had seemed such a great idea last night wasâin the cold light of dayâbecoming an altogether dicier prospect. As he went through the plan again and realized just how fraught with pitfalls it was, Caspar felt his resolve begin to drain away. By the time he'd finished the last piece of horrid toast, he knew for certain he couldn't go through with it. There were heaps of reasons why not.
Poppy was a friend, for a start, a cheerful tenant he'd be sorry to lose should the plan backfire. Also, any kind of goings-on between the two of them would be bound to upset Claudia. She would
hate
it.
The major stumbling block, though, was Poppy herself.
She
might not be interested. She might not want to be won over either. She might say no and mean it, and he would
really
hate that.
He would hate it even more if she laughed.
Damn, thought Caspar, why take the risk? Knowing Poppy she'd laugh her socks off. And even if she didn't, what could ever come of it anyway? He didn't exactly have the greatest track record in the world.
No, Caspar decided, the smart thing to do was to forget all about seducing Poppy, to put the idea completely out of his mind and simply think of her as one of the lads instead.
Far better to stick with the devil you knew.
Caspar sighed. It was seriously unlike him to change his mind like this; in fact, it had to be a first. But some weird inner instinct told him he was right to do so.
Bugger it, he might as well sleep with Angie Slade-Welch after all.
Poppy couldn't help feeling sorry for the women in Caspar's life.
Not Angie, who was quite old enough to take care of herself. But Poppy certainly felt for the girlfriends who so patently adored him and whom he treated so casually in return. Fibbing over the phone to them on Caspar's behalf was one thing; Poppy had had plenty of practice doing that.
But when the girls were nice and you had to deal with them in personâactually face to face, with that awful trusting look in their eyesâit was hard, sometimes, not to interfere.
If you had an ounce of compassion in your soul, it could be downright impossible.
Jake was out on a buying expedition when Kate Mitchell came into the antiques market. She waited patiently for Poppy to finish selling a Staffordshire stirrup cup to a middle-aged Swedish woman in a purple mac.
Poppy liked Kate, who was sweet-natured, friendly, and fragile-looking. When she discovered the purpose of Kate's visit she knew the time had come to start interfering like mad.
âI know it's only October, but I always buy my Christmas presents early,' Kate explained with an apologetic smile. âThe thing is, I'm a bit scared of antique shops but I knew if I came here you wouldn't let me be ripped off.'
â'Course I wouldn't.' Poppy thought what a shame it was that Jake couldn't be here to eavesdrop on such a compliment. âAnd we've got some terrific presenty-type things. Who are you buying for, family?'
âCaspar actually.' Kate's cheeks went a fetching shade of pink. âI don't have much money but I really want to get him something nice. In fact, I spotted something a moment ago while you were with the lady in the macâ¦'
Poppy's heart sank. Kate was leaning over the glass-topped jewelry cabinet pointing an almost translucent index finger in the direction of a diamond tiepin. The ticket price was four hundred pounds, which she knew perfectly well Kate couldn't afford.
Poppy also knew it didn't matter how nice a person
she
thought Kate was; Caspar was beginning to tire of her puppy-like devotion. A turkey had more chance of lasting until Christmas than this relationship did.
âA⦠tiepin?' Poppy hesitated, stalling for time. âUm, does Caspar
own
any ties?'
âIt's all right.' Kate blushed again. âI know he doesn't. It's kind of a private joke between us. You see, I was teasing Caspar, telling him he'd have to wear a tie one day when he got married.' Throwing caution to the wind she added in a rush, âSo I thought what a brilliant present it would be⦠and who knows, it might even prompt him to⦠well, think weddingy thoughtsâ¦'
Poppy felt numb. How embarrassing, and she wasn't even the one saying it.
âCouldn't you just buy him a tie?'
âCome on, unlock the cabinet,' pleaded Kate. âIt's okay, I know how much it costs. That doesn't matter.' Shyly she added, âCaspar's worth it.'
He's
not
, Poppy wanted to shout, but all she could do was unlock the cabinet and hand over the tiepin. She could hardly cram it into her mouth secret-agent style and swallow it.
âFour hundred pounds,' Kate murmured, gazing at the center diamond and turning it this way and that to catch the light. âFour hundred poundsâ¦'
This was what people did when they were too nervous to haggle. Normally, to put them out of their misery, Poppy would have said, âWell, for you, three fifty.'
âI know, and I'm afraid I can't drop the price.' She rolled her eyes. âJake can be so
mean
sometimes. If you ask me he's gone way over the top with this one. I doubt if it's worth two hundred, let alone four.'
âOh, but it's so beautifulâ'
âIn fact,' Poppy had an inspired thought, âI'm not even sure Caspar likes diamonds. I've got a feeling he thinks they're naff. What I know he
really
likes is topaz.'
Kate looked startled. âTopaz?'
âTopaz and silver. He was talking about it just the other night. According to Caspar it's a classic combination, like Laurel and Hardy⦠caviar and vodka⦠Pearl and Deanâ¦' Poppy waved frantically across to Marlene, whose stock of jewelry was more extensive than Jake's. âHey, Marlene! D'you still have that tiepin, the topaz and silver one I saw yesterday?'
Marlene nodded. Poppy turned triumphantly back to Kate.
âTake my advice, get him that one. It's a dream, Caspar will love it.'
âButâ'
âAnd don't be afraid of Marlene. The ticket says eighty,' Poppy beamed. âBe firm. Tell her you won't go a penny over forty-five.'
âG-goodness,' stammered Kate, backing away in the direction of Marlene's stall. âThanks, Poppy.'
âThanks Poppy,' said another quiet voice behind her.
Brimming with guilt she spun round. Jake was back from trawling the auction rooms and hadâquite unfairly, she thoughtâsneaked in the back way rather than through the glass double doors of the main entrance where she could have spotted him at once.
Poppy squirmed and wondered how long he'd been listening.
âLong enough,' said Jake, since the unspoken question was fairly obvious. He took off his glasses and rubbed them on the elbow of his threadbare black cardigan. It was a habit he resorted to when his patience was tried, usually by Poppy. That and the sorrowful look he gave herâminus the terrible glassesâalways made Poppy feel ashamed. It would be so much easier to bear if he'd only yell at her, call her an imbecile, give her a Chinese burnâ¦
âJake, I'm sorry, but I
couldn't
sell her the tiepin.' In the nick of time Poppy remembered to lower her voice. âThe poor thing's crazy about Caspar⦠she doesn't know he's about to dump her! And she's only an apprentice textile designer so she earns peanuts. Think about it, Jake, you
can't
stand by and let someone spend that much money when you know they're about to be ditched.'
Slowly Jake shook his head. He knew Poppy's intentions were good. He just wished they didn't have to cost him so much.
âOkay, I see your point. But Poppy, please. I have rent to pay, bills to settle'âhe paused for added gravitasââyour wages to find each week.'
Poppy looked miserable. âI really am sorry.'
âJust remember, we're here to try and make a living. Caspar French's love life isn't my concernâ'
He broke off as Kate returned. She was clutching the tiepin, now gift-wrapped.
âYou were right,' she told Poppy happily, âthis one's perfect, much more Caspar's style.'
Poppy still thought it was like buying a CD for someone who didn't have a CD player, but that was up to Kate.
âRight, well, I'll see you on Thursday,' Kate went on, âfor Caspar's preview night. You're going, aren't you?'
Poppy nodded. The Denver Parrish Gallery on Cork Street was showcasing the work of three artists, one of whom was Caspar. The exhibition was attracting a huge amount of interest and the preview night promised to be a glitzy affair.
âAnd you too?' Kate turned and smiled at Jake, who looked uncomfortable.
âOh no, I haven't beenâ'
âYes!' exclaimed Poppy, seizing the opportunity to make things up to him. âOf course you must come! You can be my partner. It'll be great, free champagne and all the pistachios you can peelâ'
âI can't.' Jake cut across her frenzied babbling. âI'm meeting someone on Thursday night.'
âHe wasn't happy with me,' Poppy confided later on that afternoon. Jake had popped out to the bank and Marlene had wandered over for a gossip. They were sharing a bag of Lemonheads. âPoor old Kate, she doesn't have much luck with men. I even caught her discreetly giving Jake the once-over. Didn't have the heart to tell her he was gay.'
âProbably gay,' Marlene corrected. âWe don't know for sure.'
âBet you fifty pence he is. Damn' âPoppy looked dismayedââis that the last one? We'll have to break it in half.'
The phone rang while Marlene was sawing energetically at the last Lemonhead with an Edwardian letter opener.
âHello?' said Poppy, picking it up.
âOh, hi.' A male voice sounded surprised. âUm⦠Jake not there?'
âI'm afraid he's popped out. Can I help you?'
âOkey-doke. If you could just pass a message on to him.' It was, Poppy realized, an extremely camp male voice. Like Bruno on helium. âTell him Ellis called and I'm ever so sorry but I can't make it on Thursday night after all. Something's come up'âhe titteredââso we're going to have to get together some other time.'
âGosh, this is a terrible line,' said Poppy, before pressing the phone triumphantly against Marlene's ear, âcould you say that last bit again?'
âOkay, okay,' Marlene grumbled two minutes later, âyou were right and I was wrong, Jake's gay and I owe you fifty pence.'
âNot to mention half a lemon sherbet.'
âConsolation prize.' Marlene popped both halves into her own mouth.
âPoor Jake, stood up by Ellis. Never mind.' Poppy brightened. âNow he can come along to Caspar's opening night after all.'
Thursday evening hadn't got off to the greatest of starts as far as Claudia was concerned. Her period was due, which always made her puff up like an blowfish. This meant the dazzling new black dress she'd bought three days earlierâbefore PMS had struckâwas showing the strain.
She began to feel better once she'd organized the narrow crisscross strapping across the back and trained herself not to breathe. Maybe she looked pretty good after all. The dress, from one of the new young designers at Hyper Hyper, had cost a bomb. Claudia gave herself an extra morale-boosting squirt of Arpège, checked her hair and make-up for the fifth time, and sashayed downstairs to the sitting room where Caspar, Poppy, and Kate were having a celebratory first drink.
âOh,' said Claudia, coming to an abrupt halt in the doorway.
âOops,' said Poppy, looking up.
âSnap,' said Caspar with a grin.
Claudia didn't know whether to stamp her foot or burst into tears. There was only one thing more galling than someone else wearing a dress almost exactly the same as yours, and that was discovering how much better they looked in it than you did. Damn,
damn
â¦
âWhen did you buy that?' Claudia blurted out, her tone accusing. More to the point, how could Poppy-the-pauper possibly have been able to afford it?
âOh dear.' Kate was looking worried. âI'm sorry, I lent it to her.'
Kate was even harder up than Poppy. Unable to help herself, Claudia declared, âMy dress cost three hundred and seventy-five pounds from Cher Balakiel at Hyper Hyper.'
âBlimey,' said Poppy. She looked at Kate in amazement.
âMine was twenty-four ninety-nine,' Kate confessed nervously. âFrom George at Asda.'
Claudia was unable to join in the cheerful banter in the taxi taking them from Kensington to Cork Street. She wished she hadn't been so stubborn now. All she would have had to do was run back upstairs and change into something else. It would have taken two minutes and then she could have put the incident out of her mind.
Instead, here she was, looking like half a book-endâthe
big
halfâat the beginning of an evening that was bound to end in tears.
âCome on, cheer up,' said Caspar as he helped her out of the cab. âIt doesn't matter, really it doesn't.' He gave her a squeeze. âImagine what it's like for men. Is their day ruined if someone else turns up at the office in a grey suit?'
It was Caspar's big night. Claudia didn't want to be a party pooper. She watched Poppy and Kate walk into the lit-up gallery ahead of them.
âI'm sorry, I justâ¦' She pointed helplessly at Poppy, with her red-gold hair swept up in a dashing topknot. Who needed a tan when you had skin like double cream? Poppy's coloring was the perfect foil for the intricately crisscrossed back and shoulder straps. Her figure was perfect. She was even wearing sheer stockings and black high heels.
âDon't be daft, you both look great,' said Caspar.
Claudia had spent years feeling inferior to her mother. Now it was happening all over again. She felt her lower lip begin to tremble.
âPoppy looks better.'
âOnly because we've never seen her tarted up before.' Caspar had been pretty startled himself by the transformation. âWhereas you always look smart. Let's face it, the way Poppy normally goes around she's hardly likely to be mistaken for Ivana Trump. I really thought she'd turn up tonight in jeans and Doc Martens.'
Claudia pulled herself together. She forced a watery smile.
âI wish she had.'
By nine o'clock the gallery was heaving. Among the guests were buyers, dealers, journalists, and a sprinkling of rent-a-celebs, the kind who would jet in from Surbiton for the opening of a jam jar.
Claudia was putting a brave face on things, but the fact that she didn't actually know anyone else there meant she was forced to stick with Poppy and Kate. Extra annoying was the way flashbulbs kept going off, but every time she turned to see if she was included in the picture, the photographer seemed to have been aiming at Poppy instead.
Caspar had been commandeered by the owner of the gallery who was busily introducing him to all the most influential journalists and buyers. Kate, happy to watch from a distance as her future husband was fêted by a Greek billionaire, was dreamily imagining the blissful life she and Caspar would lead when they were married.
Poppy was determined to enjoy herself. Taking an evening off from Kenda's Kitchen made it doubly important that she shouldâif you were losing a night's wages you
had
to have a good time. She just wished Claudia would lighten up, start smiling a bit. And where was Jake anyway? He'd promised to be here by nine.
Claudia saw Jake first, threading his way quietly towards them through the squashed-together crowds.
âGood grief, trainspotter alert,' she crowed. âHow on earth did
he
get in?'
Then she cringed, realizing who this must be, as the trainspotter touched Poppy's bare arm.
It was at moments like these that Poppy felt most protective towards Jake. This must be what it was like for mothers when their child was pushed off the swing by a bully. Dying to punch Claudia on the nose she said brightly, âHooray, you're here at last. Jake, you've met Kate already. This is Claudia, who's in a stinking mood, so don't bother speaking to her.' She beamed up at him. âAnd I'm Poppy, remember me?'
âJust about.' Jake smiled slightly. âYou've got makeup on. And you've grown a few inches since five o'clock.'
âCaspar said I had to look smart. These heels are murder. You don't know how lucky you areâ¦'
Poppy's voice trailed off. She was somewhat hazy on the subject of gay men. Were they more likely to dress up in women's clothes than straight men? Was Jake a bit of a closet Lily Savage? Poppy's mind boggled at the thought. You never knew, maybe he had a suitcase hidden under his bed crammed with suspender belts and stilettos. It would certainly explain his absolute lack of interest in boring old men's clothes.
âYes, I'm glad I'm not wearing high heels,' Jake said dryly.
Kate was peering at her. âPoppy, are you all right?'
Poppy was envisaging Jake in a figure-skimming Shirley Bassey number. She pulled herself together. So what if he was a transvestite in his spare time? He could wear whatever he jolly well liked.
Jake had in fact done that anyway, turning up in threadbare beige cords, his favorite green sweater with the holes in the elbows, and an equally ancient dark blue shirt.
Claudia, clocking each sorry item in turn, marveled at Jake's nerve. He certainly stood out among the expensive designer suits and arty-farty, natty-cravatty outfits favored by the other men in the gallery.
Nobody else was wearing a windbreaker.