Read Summer at Shell Cottage Online

Authors: Lucy Diamond

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Romantic Comedy, #Holidays, #Contemporary Women, #General

Summer at Shell Cottage (11 page)

‘Did you get to wear riot gear?’
Dexter wanted to know.

‘Did you fight any more stabbers?’
Teddy asked ghoulishly, bouncing up and down.

‘Dad, knock, knock!’

‘Who’s there?’
Vic replied.
‘Ted, gently, mate.’

‘Needap,’ said Libby.
‘Dad!
Are you listening?
Needap!’

Freya, who had just slid the joint of beef out of the oven to rest – she had done a full roast, Victor’s favourite – felt her spirits lift at the excited clamour of voices.
Thank goodness he was home!
She had missed him so much.
Everything seemed to have gone wrong without him there, propping her up.
‘Hi, love,’ she said, shucking off the oven gloves and
hurrying over to join the group hug.
‘Welcome back.’

‘Hey!
Great to see you,’ he said, leaning in to kiss her, the children still swinging from him.
‘Something smells good.
I’m starving.’

‘You smell good,’ she replied, pressing against him.
‘I’m so glad you’re home.
We’ve missed you, haven’t we, kids?’

‘Dad, Needap!’
Libby said again insistently.

‘Needap who?’
Victor replied and all the children fell about laughing.

‘Go to the toilet then!’
Libby told him in delight.
‘Go to the toilet, Dad, if you need a poo!’

He laughed too, feigning outrage.
‘You naughty little madam.
I’m shocked, Libby Castledine.
Shocked!’

‘So
are
there any presents?’
asked Teddy, who could be relied upon to repeat questions as doggedly as the Gestapo, especially if presents or sweets were involved.
The boy
was a shoo-in for a doorstepping journalist one day, make no doubt about it.
‘Presents, Dad!’

‘Let him take his shoes off, kids,’ Freya scolded, although she wasn’t really cross.
She smiled at Victor, so handsome and real and
there
in the hall once more, albeit
currently under siege from their offspring.
It was probably easier facing down a full-scale riot.
‘So you enjoyed it, then – the course?’
she asked.
‘It was worth
doing?’

‘It was brilliant.
We had such a laugh.
Some of the lads there .
.
.’
He grinned and then promptly stopped talking as if the rest of the sentence was not suitable for the ears of
children.
‘But we learned loads too.
And yes, Dex, we did have to wear riot gear, and long shields, and practise rescuing people from dangerous situations .
.
.’

‘Cool!’

‘What about the—’

‘Yes, Ted, I
did
have time to pick up a few little somethings.
Now, where are they?’

‘Can I have a
big
something?’
Teddy asked, still capering about with demented zeal.
‘Can I have the biggest?’

Freya went back in the kitchen to check on the Yorkshire puddings and make gravy.
‘I thought we could make a proper evening of it,’ she said as Victor came in, passing him a
just-opened beer.
‘I’ve done a roast and all the trimmings, there’s an apple crumble for afters, the fridge is full of booze and there are four episodes of
The Walking
Dead
saved up for us to watch.
I didn’t sneak so much as a minute of it without you,’ she added proudly.
In short, she had lined up the perfect night for them both.
Melanie who?
Elizabeth who?
She would not even
think
about them.

But to her dismay, Vic was shuffling his feet and not looking her in the eye.
‘Oh, mate – I thought I told you?’
he said.

Mate?
Since when had he started calling her ‘mate’?
She had a bad feeling all of a sudden.
‘Told me what?’

‘I said I’d go out with the boys tonight.
It’s Tony’s birthday and he .
.
.’
Victor looked bashful.
‘Well, he kind of wants me there as his guest of honour,
he said.’
An uneasy few seconds passed.
‘I thought you knew.’

Freya shook her head.
‘No.’
She might have been distracted recently, but she was pretty sure she’d have remembered her husband telling her he was going straight out the very
same night he came home after two weeks away.

‘Shit.
Sorry.
But .
.
.
well, we’re going on holiday tomorrow, aren’t we?
And we’re going to spend the whole fortnight together.
Yeah?’

The gravy was blurring before her eyes and she blinked, desperately trying not to cry in front of him.
She needn’t have worried.
He had turned his attention to his phone, laughing at some
text or other that had just come in.
‘You nutter,’ he said affectionately, typing a reply.
‘This bloke on the course, Dave, funniest geezer I’ve ever met.’

Freya opened her mouth to respond but found she didn’t actually feel like asking about Dave the geezer or hearing any hilarious stories.
She stirred the gravy grimly, trying to convince
herself it didn’t matter, and that he was right, it was only one more night.
No worries, mate.
Whatever.

It was only much later on, when he’d vanished out again in his favourite shirt and clean jeans, and the children were upstairs in bed, that she put her head in her hands and allowed
herself to cry softly in the silence of the empty kitchen.

Then she opened the celebratory champagne she’d bought specially, and drank the whole bottle herself.

The next morning brought with it a particularly vile hangover – a decidedly crap way in which to pack for one’s holiday.
Freya could vaguely remember a time when
she had planned holiday packing far in advance, with much consideration and attention to detail – laying outfits on the bed in order to put together a ‘capsule wardrobe’, as the
magazine articles advised, picking out jewellery, make-up, shoes for all occasions, several bikinis, toiletries in special fun-sized bottles .
.
.

That was back then, though, when she had time and head space to think about herself, and herself alone.
So far, this year’s abysmal packing list read as follows:

Clothes

Beach stuff

Swimming costumes

Paracetamol

Which was a sorry state of affairs in anyone’s book.

Victor – rather annoyingly – had leapt out of bed at eight that morning, bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, despite not crashing in until the early hours.
Superman that he was, he had
gone out for bacon and eggs, then proceeded to cook an enormous fried breakfast for the whole family.
Now he and Dexter had headed off to fill the car with petrol and check the tyres at the garage
while Freya set to work bundling the children’s clothes into suitcases, cajoling Libby into packing the books and toys she might want to take and trying not to combust with exasperation when
she saw that Teddy had turned his bedroom upside down looking for some long-lost dinosaur figures.

Deep breaths.
Relax.
Only calm, serene thoughts permitted from here on in
, she told herself.
On holiday the sun would shine and turn her pale skin from milk-white to double cream
– the soft gold of muscovado sugar if she was really lucky.
The fresh air would help her sleep deeply for once and she might finally shed those eye bags while she was at it.
She would swim in
the sea every day until her muscles ached.
And you never knew, she and Vic might actually manage a proper conversation too for a change.

Libby burst into the room just then, wearing a red polka-dot swimming costume, a Hello Kitty woolly hat, rollerskates and some enormous purple sunglasses, and whirled around in a wobbly circle.
‘READY!’
she cheered.
‘Ready for the holiday, Mum!’

Despite her previous despondency, Freya burst out laughing.
She caught hold of her daughter’s middle and rolled her closer in for a cuddle.
Never mind her troubles.
They would shortly be
heading off to wonderful Shell Cottage and getting away from it all.
She couldn’t wait to see Mum and spend some relaxing time together.
(Mum must be
really
relaxed, seeing as she
hadn’t responded to any of Freya’s calls or texts the previous week.)
Deep breaths, calm thoughts
, she reminded herself.
As soon as she reached Silver Sands, she’d switch
her phone off too – and her worries, while she was at it.

It was all going to be absolutely fine.
It
was
.

Chapter Thirteen

Olivia didn’t know it was possible to experience such desolation.
Since the bombshell of her husband’s betrayal had detonated so devastatingly, she had felt
hollowed out, numb with agony, and more alone than ever before.

Another woman.
Another
child
!
Another whole secret life behind her back, sneaking down to Devon on pretence of writing weekends.
His charade of needing to be alone every summer so as to
read through and work on his new novel in peace and quiet!
Had he even
been
on all those foreign book tours he’d claimed, or was he here the whole time, sleeping with this other
woman, raising this other son, in her beloved house?

She could hardly function with shock.
It was as if he had punched a hole right through her heart.
As a husband, Alec had been the most loving of men.
As a father, he’d been tender and
doting.
One of her favourite ever photos showed him gazing down at newly born Freya, nestled in his arms, with a look of complete wonder and adoration.
She couldn’t bear the thought of him
feeling like that about somebody else’s child.
That boy.
In some ways it was even worse than him sleeping with another woman.
Weren’t Freya and Robert enough for him?
Hadn’t
she
been enough as his wife?

As for Katie, doe-eyed, thirty-something Katie, ‘their angel’ as Olivia had always laughingly called her – the devil, more like – she could go to hell, along with that
son of hers.
The son of hers, Leo, who was the mystery beneficiary in Alec’s will, of course.
And there she’d been, innocently assuming it was a great friend of her husband’s,
some beloved colleague in the publishing world.
Oh, Olivia!
Silly Olivia.
What will we do with you?

Alec, Katie and Leo.
Their own little family a secret side-shoot branching off the main stem.
Katie, who was two years younger than their own daughter.
Katie, the housekeeper, who’d gone
above and beyond her job description when it came to extra-marital duties performed for the master of the house.
Katie, who had stood there in the kitchen –
Olivia’s
kitchen,
thank you very much!
– weeping inconsolably, sobbing that she never got to say goodbye, that Leo had been left without a father, that she’d loved him so much.
Olivia had felt precisely
nothing at the sight of such unchecked emotion.
If anything, her heart had frozen over, glistening with ice crystals.

‘I thought he’d gone quiet on me because of the new book,’ Katie snivelled.
‘I had no idea that .
.
.
that he was dead!’

Olivia had heard enough.
She could not stand there a second longer and listen to this woman speak about her husband as if she had any kind of claim on him.
As if she had any right to grieve!
‘Get out,’ she roared.
‘Get out of my house.
I never want to see either of you again.
Have I made myself clear?’

They went, both crying, the door banging shut behind them, and Olivia sank into the kitchen chair, put her head in her hands and burst into hot, gulping tears of her own.
No.
Not Alec.
How could
he?
How
could
he?

Three days later, and the scene had barely changed.
Her emotions may have fluctuated between shock, rage, heartbreak and despair, but the tears seemed to have flowed almost
ceaselessly.
Now and then she would drag herself from the chair in order to eat or sleep or make another pot of tea, but it would only take a glance at something beloved and familiar – the
red knitted jumble-sale tea cosy that Alec had worn on his head during a silly dressing-up evening; the watercolour of Bantham beach he’d given her ten years ago as an anniversary present;
the apple tree in the garden they’d planted as a sapling, which bore basketfuls of fruit every September – and the pain would come tearing back.

Olivia had never believed in any kind of afterlife yet found herself doing things that would deliberately annoy her dead husband were he to see her now.
She drank red wine straight from the
bottle and made a point of not wiping up the drops that spilled on the pine table.
She took his favourite green coffee mug and hurled it out of the back door so that it smashed into a satisfying
number of shards on the patio.
She took a saw to the apple tree, her fingers blistering as she hacked it down and then burned it, leaving only a broken stump.
And she threw his battered old panama
hat far out to sea – even if she did then have a stab of conscience about ocean pollution afterwards and ended up wading in to retrieve it.
She contented herself by trampling the crown of the
hat into submission, the straw splintering beneath her feet, then shoving it down into the fetid depths of the dustbin.
So there, Alec.
That’s what I think of you and your stupid hat.
And
good riddance to you both!

By the end of the week, she had reached the point of numbness.
She was all out of emotional energy and could no longer feel a thing.
A letter appeared through the door one morning addressed to
her in Katie’s handwriting but she deliberately didn’t open it, not wishing to reignite all those exhausting emotions.
Instead, she walked for miles along the coastal path, barely
noticing the scenery, just needing to get out, away from the house and everything that reminded her of Alec.
She ignored the elegant skirts and summer blouses in her wardrobe and took to roaming
the cliffs in a pair of ancient cut-off jeans, and an old surfing T-shirt of Robert’s she’d found in his bedroom.
She stopped brushing her hair and twisted the long silvery strands up
into a messy chignon, fastened in place with one of Libby’s butterfly clips, left behind at Easter.
Who cared what she looked like any more?
She didn’t.
She didn’t care about
anything.

It came as a shock to return from a long hike one day to see a dark green Peugeot parked outside Shell Cottage and to hear children’s high-pitched voices in the garden.
It took her a
moment to realize that the car belonged to Freya, and the children were actually Dexter, Libby and Teddy.
Goodness – was it really the weekend already?
She had lost track of time, forgetting
that the rest of her family were due to descend for their summer break.

Her mind raced, picturing the house room by room, and how it must have appeared to Freya and Victor as they arrived.
She had left the dirty crockery to pile up abandoned in the sink for days
now.
There were a
lot
of empty wine bottles too.
The broken mug was still there in pieces on the patio, making her snarl with triumph every time she saw it, but now she imagined her
precious grandchildren cutting their small pink feet on the smashed shards and felt terrible.
Had she even opened the living room curtains that morning?
The house probably stank too.
Yesterday she
had treated herself to a packet of cigarettes for the first time in years and had smoked almost all of them, enjoying the sensation of blowing plumes of curling smoke into the darkening sky.
She
could just imagine little Libby’s jaw dropping and the scandalized
‘Granny!’
when she saw all the discarded butts.

Oh dear.
And poor Freya would think she was losing her marbles, finding the house in such disarray.
How was she going to talk her way out of this one?

‘Mum!
There
you are!’
Here she came now, bustling from the house, her jaw noticeably tense even from this distance.
‘Where have you
been
?
I’ve been
ringing you and texting you for ages.
I even tried calling Katie to see if you were all right—’

‘Ha,’ said Olivia contemptuously before she could stop herself.

Freya looked startled.
Olivia was not normally a sarcastic sort of person who said things like ‘Ha’, particularly in relation to their darling housekeeper.
‘Mum .
.
.
is
everything all right?’

Olivia tried to pull herself together.
The short answer, of course, was ‘No’ but she couldn’t possibly tell Freya the news she’d discovered.
She’d always been such
a daddy’s girl, it would destroy her to learn of her father’s double life.
‘I’m fine,’ she said, then took a deep breath, forcing herself to smile.
‘Better for
seeing you,’ she said truthfully.
‘And where are those delightful grandchildren of mine?’
She hugged Freya, trying to act as normally as possible.
‘How was your journey?
Let
me make you a cup of tea.
Ahh.
I’m not sure there’s any milk left actually.’

‘We’re okay Mum, thanks, all fed and watered; we’ve been here since three o’clock.
And I brought milk, it’s fine.’

Olivia checked her watch: almost half past four.
Another day had slipped by practically unnoticed.
‘Oh.
Okay, then.’

There was an awkward pause then Freya gave a bracing smile.
‘Come and say hi to the kids and Vic, anyway.
They’re supposed to be getting their things together to go down to the beach
but seem to have been sidetracked by a horrendously competitive swingball tournament.
I’m expecting a full public inquiry to be called any minute if Teddy isn’t allowed to win.’
She put a hand on Olivia’s back and steered her gently towards the back garden.
‘By the way,’ she added, as they walked along the rosemary-scented path, ‘Katie sounded a bit
odd when I rang.
Said something about needing to come round and talk to us all at some point.
What do you think that’s about?’

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