Выбрать главу

As Marcus predicted, Tab had terrible nightmares and ended up in Rupert’s bed. Turned on by the blue movie, Rupert and Cameron waited until she was asleep and then went downstairs and barricaded themselves into the dining-room.

‘I’ve never screwed anyone in here before,’ said Rupert. ‘Should we put mats down in case we scorch the table?’

In fact, twelve feet of polished mahogany is not the ideal surface on which to make love. Straddling Rupert, her knees aching, Cameron took a long time. She was just capitulating to pleasure when a bright red face, as apoplectic as any Mr Barrett of Wimpole Street, appeared through the hatch.

‘What,’ thundered Tabitha, ‘are you doing to my Daddy?’

‘I’m trying to keep him warm,’ replied Cameron through gritted teeth.

Things went from bad to worse the next day. Rupert went off to see his constituency secretary. Tab vanished to the stables and, despite Cameron sending repeated messages, didn’t return for lunch. Grimly setting out to collect her, Cameron found Tabitha, watched by an idling trio of grooms, jumping the new pony, which ground to a halt each time it came up to a large wall.

‘This pony don’t jump,’ yelled Tabitha.

‘Think of something really nasty before take-off, and then give him a good whack,’ advised one of the grooms.

Tab rode towards the wall with great determination: ‘I’m going to think of CAMERON,’ she howled, bringing her whip down on Biscuit’s quarters. The grooms screamed with laughter, and then cheered as Biscuit cleared the wall by a foot. Tabitha leapt off the pony, cuddling him and stuffing him with pony nuts. ‘Good boy, good boy.’

‘Lunch, Tabitha,’ said Cameron icily.

Even Tabitha looked faintly sheepish and ran on ahead back to the house.

There are a million children in England living with replacement parents, in fact one in seven is a stepchild, thought Cameron furiously, as she stalked back to the house. They can’t all be awful. Just fantasy. You’re doing research for a documentary on the in-coming stepmother, she told herself.

‘Where’s Daddy?’ demanded Tab as Cameron went into the kitchen.

‘Not coming back till later this afternoon.’

‘I don’t want any lunch till he gets back.’

‘Sit down,’ ordered Cameron.

‘I will if you sit down first,’ said Tab with a giggle.

Not looking behind her, Cameron collapsed heavily on to a whoopee cushion which Tab had slipped on to her chair, and which let out a succession of noisy farts. Tab screamed with laughter; even Marcus grinned. For Cameron the noise was too embarrassingly reminiscent of her encounter with their father on the balcony of her Madrid hotel.

‘You bloody children, stop winding me up.’

‘Don’t speak to us like that,’ said Tab coldly. ‘You’re not our mother.’

Cameron walked out of the kitchen and went and swam twenty lengths in the pool to work off her rage. Going upstairs, she discovered Tabitha must have changed at least four times that day and used the carpet of Rupert’s bedroom as a dirty clothes’ basket.

‘Tab,’ she bellowed.

‘Yes.’ Tab appeared from the television room, eating a Mars bar.

‘Pick up your clothes, OK?’

‘Mrs Bodkin picks them up.’

‘Mrs Bodkin is not here. Pick them up.

‘Bloody shan’t.’

Cameron moved towards her.

‘Don’t you touch me,’ hissed Tab, her little face a mask of spite. ‘Because of child molesters like you, I’m learning karate at school,’ and, clenching her fist in a black-power salute, she shot under Cameron’s arm, downstairs and back to the stables.

A blinding headache nudged Cameron’s skull. What was the name of that silent order Charles Fairburn disappeared to the day the franchise applications went in? She took a Valium and went down to the kitchen where she found Marcus trying to clear up lunch.

He had put the roasting pan undrained in the sink so the grease floated thick and yellow on the top of the water.

‘I’m sorry about Tab,’ he mumbled.

‘You make up for it,’ Cameron said, hugging him.

‘It’s not all her fault,’ said Marcus, fairly. ‘She’s used to Daddy’s total attention when she’s here, and Mrs Bodkin fussing over her. She looked after Tab when she was a baby, you see. When Tab says she wants lunch she’s given it, and if she doesn’t like it when it arrives that doesn’t matter much either. She’s just not used to a stranger saying, “Do this, don’t do that”.’

Cameron gazed at the sea of fat, feeling reproved. ‘I’m sorry.’

‘It isn’t your fault,’ said Marcus, busily sloshing water all over the surfaces as he wiped them down with a dripping dishcloth.

‘I’m not around kids that much. How d’you relate to Malise?’

‘OK. He’s strict, but he’s fair. He’s very old. His grandchildren are older than me.’

‘Would you like your parents to get married again?’

Marcus went green. ‘No, absolutely not.’

‘Tab would.’

‘Oh, Tab gets on much better with Daddy than I do,’ said Marcus bitterly. ‘And if she was here she could ride all the time.

As Rupert probably wouldn’t have eaten at lunchtime, Cameron decided to make him a nice dinner. Just the two of them; the kids could go to bed early. Marcus chatted to her while she cooked and, when she’d finished, offered to play the piano for her. He was just playing a Chopin impromptu quite magically when Tab charged in with Wham full blast on the wireless.

‘Turn it off,’ said Cameron sharply.

‘Why should I?’

‘Turn it off,’ yelled Marcus, but he stopped playing and shut the piano.

Immediately Tab grinned and turned off the wireless.

‘I’ve never been so bored in my life,’ she said moodily.

Cameron’s suggestion that she could unload the dishwasher was met once again with the cold blue stare.

‘I’m starving. What’s for supper?’

‘Spaghetti hoops.’

‘Yuk. What’s that cooking in the oven?’

‘Boeuf Provençal.’

‘My favourite thing. And there are kiwi fruits in the larder. That’s also my favourite thing.’

‘As you haven’t eaten anything I’ve cooked for you yet,’ said Cameron coolly, ‘you’re going to have spaghetti hoops cooked by Mr Heinz, and then you’re going to bed early. I want to spend some time with your father — alone.’

Rupert came home around half past seven, and amazed Cameron by backing her up. ‘Go up to bed both of you. Cameron’s looked after you all day and she needs a break. You can watch “Howard’s Way”.’

‘Tab’s been insupportable all day,’ Cameron was appalled to find herself saying as soon as the children went out of the room.

Later Rupert went upstairs and Cameron toured wearily round the house, picking up kids’ clothes. If she put a wash on tonight she could iron them first thing in the morning.

Rupert found Tab curled up in bed in a blue nightie, looking through a photograph album of when Helen and Rupert were married: ‘Wasn’t I a sweet little baby? Look at me riding on Badger’s back.’

Rupert was not to be deflected. ‘Why have you been so bloody to Cameron?’ he said, sitting down on the bed. ‘I told you to be nice to her.’

‘I hate her,’ said Tab calmly, ‘and all the grooms hate her, and they say Mr and Mrs Bodkin hate her because she’s so bossy. Even Beaver and Blue hate her.’

‘Rubbish! Beaver and Blue adore her.’

‘Shows how thick they are, then.’

‘I told you to be nice to her,’ repeated Rupert sternly.

‘It’s all God’s fault,’ said Tab, petulantly pulling the duvet up to her chin. ‘I prayed specially hard to him this morning to make me really nice to Cameron, and he did absolutely nothing about it.’