Authors: Judy Astley
No, Jenny thought suddenly with pain, you need a name like bloody Serena for that kind of thing.
âI always think your girls have such pretty names,' Fiona went on, turning to Jenny. âPolly and Daisy â they always remind me of Victorian parlourmaids.' She gave a tinkling little laugh, and Alan said to Jenny with a grin, âWell there go our daughters' chances of a Nobel Prize for biochemistry. Doomed from the font.'
The party broke up when Laura, having served coffee very quickly after the cheese, became clearly fidgety. Any moment now, Jenny thought, she will be checking her temperature and going to splash on some more Giorgio. Fascinated, they all watched as Laura gazed lovingly into Harvey's unfocused eyes and crooned, âI don't think you should drink any more, darling.'
Bit late, Jenny thought, obeying the signals, and gathering her thoughts and her handbag together. George, amused and bloody-minded, sat back in his chair and started chatting amiably about half-hardy annuals, until Fiona stood up and stated briskly to him, âTime to go, it's getting late. Charming meal, you two, you must come to us soon.'
Alan repeated a similar version of the same words and suddenly the four of them were on the doorstep. Jenny, just about to turn off towards her own house, suddenly felt George's hand on her arm. Looking up quickly she caught George grinning slyly at her.
âYou could try advertising your flute lessons,' he said quietly. âThough you know what you might get instead of pupils don't you?' He had a very cunning look in his eyes.
âYes I know exactly what I might get,' Jenny told him quietly, and then added recklessly, âand it pays a hell of a lot better than bloody music.'
âThey won't be back till at least eleven,' Ben promised Daisy. âYou've got plenty of time to try getting out and back in again. You don't actually have to go anywhere.'
âI might as well, once I'm out. I'll go and see Emma for an hour. I don't intend to risk my life and then waste the effort.' Daisy pulled on a pair of ancient and terminally uncool trainers, hoping no-one out in the dark would recognize her in them. The Doc Martens wouldn't do at all, not for climbing out of her window down via the conservatory roof to the back garden. They were much too heavy and inflexible. On the night of Sophie's party, she'd have to change into them at Emma's. Even getting over the back fence would be difficult, with the mouldering compost heap, the honeysuckle threaded through with lethal blackberry thorns and the gate double-locked against intruders from the Common.
âYou look just like a burglar. Where are you going?' Polly, her face peering with intense curiosity round Daisy's bedroom door, couldn't bear to miss out if something was going on. âYou're not going
out
, are you Daisy?' she said with thrilled relish. âYou're still
grounded
! You're not
allowed
!'
âI'm not going out Polly, not exactly,' said Daisy, wondering what kind of a bribe it would take to get round Polly.
âNo, she's not going out,' Ben joined in quickly. âShe's just, er, just practising for, um, the Duke of Edinburgh award. She has to learn how to do some climbing, that's all. It's called an initiative test.' Polly looked disbelieving, so Ben tried appealing to her sense of conspiracy. âOnly don't tell Mum, because Daisy's trying to make up for being bad by doing this as a surprise. Think how pleased they'll be when Daisy gets a medal.'
Polly's expression was of deep calculation. âNo-one gets a medal for being able to climb out of a window,' she said, with a knowing look. Then she conceded, âI'll think about it. A Snickers bar would help,' she said eventually.
âI'll pick one up at the shop on the estate,' Daisy promised, opening her window. âNow don't forget, Polly, it's a surprise. OK?'
It looked an awfully long way down, really. Much further than it looked from down below. It had seemed such a good idea when she and Emma had discussed it at school. Now it seemed ludicrously Famous Fiveish, scrambling down the drainpipe dressed in camouflage black, to escape the villainous captors. Except that in this case the captors were her terminally insensitive parents. It would be more of a giggle if Ben would do it with her, but he had refused, saying that two of them would make too much noise, and besides, when he went to Sophie's party he intended to go the easy way, out through the front door. With immense care, Daisy put a foot over the window-sill and felt around in the dark for a foothold on the ridge pole of the conservatory.
âYou OK?' Ben called from the safety of her bed.
Daisy glared at him. âSeeing as I've still got most of me inside the room, yes Ben, I'm OK so far, thanks for asking,' she retorted with sarcasm. âYou should try this, it isn't that easy.' It was all right for him, she thought, lying there all limp and gangly like an abandoned string puppet. He was so long, he could probably step straight out of the window down to the ground, though he'd probably manage to knock out every pane of glass from the conservatory on the way.
âYou should try paying your train fares, then you wouldn't have to try this either!' he snapped back. âI'm on your side, remember.' And mine, he admitted to himself, knowing for certain that if Daisy made it to Sophie's party the next weekend, her desirable friend Emma would be sure to be there too.
Holding on to the loo window ledge and levering herself carefully across the conservatory roof, Daisy jumped down to the ground by way of the upturned pile of flower pots on the garden table. For a few moments she stood leaning against the wall, shaking with nerves and fear. It would be all right next time, she knew. It was only that first attempt that would unnerve her. Next time, she'd be down from her window as lithely as Biggles.
Daisy now wanted, really, to go back into the house lie around on the sofa for the evening and watch TV, but bravado, and the need to appease Polly, made her stride off up the road towards the shop on the corner of the estate. She felt more than slightly silly, dressed all in black and with her face streaked with charcoal from the barbecue kit. She was sure that anyone who saw her would think she was some kid playing Let's Join The SAS. But Ben had insisted, saying that she must minimize her chances of being seen, especially with the Neighbourhood Watch on constant alert.
She phoned Emma from the payphone on the corner and was quite relieved to discover she was out. It was nearly ten already, and if the parents got sudden food-poisoning at the Benstone's, or had a row with Harvey about the overall dismal quality of the British sitcom, they could be home any time now. Daisy hung around in the shadows outside the estate newsagent's until she was sure there were no hostile crowds of ragga boys inside who could mistake her, in her black disguise, for a Goth and beat her up, bought the Snickers bar and strode back down the Close, keeping tight in against the hedges and overhanging trees. As she climbed up to the roof of the conservatory again, using the terrace bench as a step-ladder, she started to relax. This is quite easy, she thought, just so long as the parents assume I'm in my room doing homework, I could get away with this.
She'll never believe me, Paul thought to himself as he peered down from the attic, eyes screwed up against the dark. She'll accuse me of crying Wolf, especially after last time, with the bomb that wasn't a bomb. Only his terror of Carol's scorn kept Paul from rushing straight to the telephone and dialling 999. And perhaps she was right, it might be as well to double-check.
He squinted down into the Close again, wishing his telescope and his multi-lensed Nikon camera had the wonderful kind of night vision that made such brilliant TV programmes about badger-watching. Then, when the police asked him to inspect a line-up of potential felons, he would be able to astound them with his unswervingly precise identification, or even an amazingly sharp photo. He would put together a Photo-fit picture that would have the villain skulking in his home, terrified to go out. He could just imagine it, the local police chief emerging from the courtroom and congratulating him personally: âWe dream of witnesses as observant as you, Sir.' There would be something in the local paper; he might be described as a community leader. Excited now, Paul made a note of the time in the file for number 14 (Collins). He then had another look down into the Close. The dark figure was still there, struggling a bit, halfway up the Collins's conservatory and heading for one of their bedroom windows. And Jenny and Alan, he knew, were at the Benstones, he'd watched them go earlier. Their poor defenceless children, alone in that house, at the mercy of a ruthless cat burglar. It was no good, even if he had to drag Carol up to the loft so show her, and so waste precious time, he would have to get the police. Wasn't that what Neighbourhood Watch was all about?
The police car, blue light whirling and making eerie shadows on the trees, passed Alan and Jenny as they walked up the Close towards home.
âHope it's not old Mrs Fingell,' Alan commented. âPoor old thing, all alone with that smelly orange dog, anything could happen.' Jenny hoped it wasn't her, too. Like everyone else in the Close, she put a generous amount in the annual Help the Aged envelope, and had once shovelled snow off Mrs Fingell's path (leaving it treacherously icy), but when it came to real helping, on a day-to-day shopping-and-mopping basis, they all quailed before the rank seediness of Mrs Fingell's existence. The Close residents who actually ventured inside number 21 tended to be those who, out of curiosity, or a desire to reconstruct original decorative features, wanted to see what their own houses had looked like in the days before modernization. Awestruck, they had all reported a magnificent claw-footed bath, original but crumbling cornices and an odour of pre-war squalor that quite took the breath away. Everyone who had been in Mrs Fingell's kitchen agreed that the council should provide her with at least a Home Help.
Jenny and Alan arrived at their gate at the same time as the police car which screeched to a halt beside them. Suddenly a far more appalling scenario than an injured Mrs Fingell sprang to Jenny's mind. Suppose David Robbins had really been an undercover vice squad member? Was she about to be arrested for keeping a disorderly house as the quaint old-fashioned charge called it? Or, as was more likely (the wearing of two false feet being quite an extreme disguise for even a plain-clothes cop) had he discovered that he could get services such as Jenny had provided for a quarter of the price and twice the expertise in King's Cross, and grassed on her in a fit of outraged consumer pique? Jenny felt prickles of perspiration and her heartbeat rocketed up to danger level.
âReport of attempted burglary,' a bearded policeman said, pushing past them and up their path. âGot a key?' he asked, as Jenny and Alan stood on the path unmoving and puzzled.
âYes, of course, but there are three people in there. Or at least there should be,' Jenny told him, shaky with relief but suddenly fearful that only vulnerable little Polly might be in the house, alone facing a ruthless team of professional robbers, Ben and Daisy having callously abandoned her for the sake of some unmissable teenage jollies.
âWe got someone round the back, they won't get away,' the policeman said with commendable confidence as Alan opened the front door.
âWhat's the matter, what's Daisy done now?' Polly in her Mickey Mouse pyjamas hovered at the bottom of the stairs, riveted by the sight of the policeman.
âWhy?' the policeman asked her, speedily picking up on a possible line of enquiry. âWhat has Daisy done before?'
âNothing!' Polly lied, spinning out the word into at least six emphatic syllables. She clutched her biggest Snoopy, looking suspiciously like, Jenny thought, an innocent little girl who was over acting the part of, well, an innocent little girl and determinedly justifying £70 per term spent on Extra Drama. She was also standing firmly on the bottom step, blocking any possible progress up the stairs.
The policeman asked her questions about what she might have heard, and Alan asked her where Ben and Daisy were. âOh they're upstairs doing some homework,' Polly said. âHave been most of the evening,' and then she added, âexcept when they watched telly,' as if she had realized she was going too far.
âWhat's wrong? What's happening?' Daisy and Ben appeared together at the top of the stairs.
âCome down a minute,' Alan called. âThe police think we've got burglars.'
âDo I have to?' Daisy hissed, âI'm doing a face-pack!'
âNo-one out there, Mick.' Another, younger, policeman emerged from the garden. âA pot with a plant in it knocked over, though. Bloke probably saw a cat clambering about. Sorry you've all been disturbed. We'll go and have a word with the informant.'
âCan you tell me who it is?' Alan asked.
âNot really Sir, we're not supposed to . . .'
âWe don't need to ask,' Jenny put in crossly. âBloody Paul Mathieson, I'd bet anything. Our over-enthusiastic Neighbourhood Watch co-ordinator,' she explained to the police.
âCan't be too careful though, can you?' the bearded policeman said.
âThat's the kind of thing
he
says,' Alan told him, glumly.
âYou've gone and done it again haven't you?' Carol, pummelling Estée Lauder Night Repair into her face, sat at her flounced dressing table and glared at Paul via the mirror. She wore a lilac chiffon scarf to protect her hair from the cream, and her eyelids were puffy from over-zealous application of make-up remover. Around her shoulders frothed an ocean of pink organdie frills.
She looks like an alien, Paul thought. If she suddenly took it into her head to go walking on the Common in the night, she'd be reported to the Parapsychology people and they'd be flocking from all over to get a look at her, trying to log a sighting in a book, like twitchers after a lesser spotted albatross. âNo, I haven't done it again,' he said wearily, sitting on the boudoir-blue, ribbon-threaded duvet and risking another telling off. âI really did see someone climbing into the Collins's house. Whoever it was must have hidden in the airing cupboard or something and sneaked away. At least they won't have had a chance to take anything; it will be all they could do to make an escape.'