“You know who he was, don’t you, Paula,” Lois said. Best not to beat about the bush.
“It was him, my Jack,” Paula said, her lip quivering. Her knuckles were white with the strain of keeping her hands steady. “He turned up at the hall this morning, when Mrs. Tollervey-Jones was out down the village. Luckily she came back before he could get at me. But he saw me, and he’ll try again.”
Then the strain was too much, and she covered her face with her hands. In a muffled voice she said that she would be going home now, and was really sorry that it had all come to an end before she’d had a chance to show what she could do.
“What d’you mean, come to an end?” Lois said. “Do you think I’d give you your cards just because of that? Blimey, what kind of a person d’you think I am? No, you just sit here and I’ll get Gran to make us a cuppa. Take it easy, Paula. You’re a New Brooms team member now, and we’ll stick by you.”
Reflecting that she sounded like a character from a bad movie, Lois went off to the kitchen to persuade Gran.
“ALL WELL?” SAID DEREK WHEN HE CAME IN FOR LUNCH. HE sniffed good smells and said he was starving. “Running up and down stairs on the new rewiring job has given me an appetite,” he said, patting Gran on her shoulder. She smiled, and said a bit of running up and down stairs would not do Lois any harm.
“She’s been sitting at her desk all morning,” she said.
“How did the meeting go, me duck?” Derek gave Lois a peck on the cheek, just to even things up.
“No so bad,” Lois said. “Bit hairy at the end, when the new woman-”
“Oh, yes,” interrupted Derek, “the new woman. Paula Hickson? Not trouble already?”
“No, not her,” Lois said hastily, remembering that Paula was a big mistake as far as Gran and Derek were concerned. “I meant Bridie. She’s back at work after her operation. Sort of a new start.”
“Nice try,” said Derek. “Anyway, what happened?”
Lois gave them the gist of Bridie’s story, and said that the others had looked a bit alarmed. “Not Andrew, of course, but the girls said they often have to answer the door, when clients are out, an’ that.”
Gran shrugged. “There’s always been tramps trudging round the villages,” she said. “I remember when I was a kid, one bright moonlight night I heard this terrible singing. More yelling than singing, it was. I got out of bed to look out the window, and there was this man, drunk as a lord, stumbling by in the middle of the road, and I was scared stiff! I shot back into bed and pulled the covers over my head. O’ course, it was just some poor old sod on his way to the workhouse.”
Derek chuckled. “You and Bridie Reading,” he said, “should set up as a double act as storytellers. You could have a tent on the playing fields for Soap Box Day.”
“If you want your dinner,” Gran replied huffily, “you’d better sit down and be grateful, in case I decide to give it to Jeems here. At least dogs don’t answer back.”
IN A DESERTED BRICK BARN ON A FIELD OUTSIDE WALTONBY, JACK Hickson Sr. snored on a heap of dirty straw in a dark corner. He had managed to coax a sandwich out of a scared housewife up the road, and while she’d gone to make it he’d snitched a couple of bottles of Old Best from the outside toilet. Funny place to keep supplies, he’d thought, but very handy. Now he whiled away the warm afternoon in an alcoholic doze. The problem of where he would be next day had been postponed. All he knew was that he had to keep moving, but never too far away from Paula and the kids. Especially his namesake, Jack Jr.
SEVENTEEN
AFTER THE MEETING ANDREW YOUNG HAD SET OFF ON FOOT to find Gavin Adstone’s wife, Kate. There was nobody at home, and as he had not made an appointment he decided to wander about for a while. She couldn’t have gone far, as a car was parked in the open garage.
Andrew had met Gavin in the pub a couple of evenings ago, and in the course of conversation had mentioned his interior décor business. Gavin had said that his wife had been talking about giving the cottage a makeover. It was very dingy, he said, but as they’d been so busy with bringing up baby since they moved to the village, they hadn’t had time to think about what they would want to do about decorating.
Now he walked briskly around the village, turning back into Church Street, and if she had returned, he intended to say he had just been at a meeting in the village and thought he would look in as he was passing. There had obviously been some kind of family service in the church, and knots of young mothers with pushchairs and small hangers-on were grouped on the pavement. Andrew had no idea what Kate Adstone looked like, so kept going until he reached the cottage. He knocked at the door, and heard a shout from behind him. An attractive, dark-haired girl was running towards him, the pushchair bumping over the uneven pavement.
“Looking for me?” she gasped, out of breath as she approached.
“Are you Kate?” Andrew asked.
He didn’t look like a salesman, Kate thought. He was dressed casually, had curly dark hair, and an open smile. “Yes, I am. Can I help you?” she said.
Andrew explained that he had met Gavin in the pub, and that as well as cleaning for New Brooms he ran an interior décor business, and wondered if she would like to have a chat. Gavin had said they might be interested in brightening up their cottage.
“We had talked about it,” she said. “He mentioned meeting you in the pub. But I think it would be best if you came when he was at home. He hates being left out! How about this evening? He usually gets back around half six. Would that be any good?”
“Fine,” replied Andrew, abandoning his plan for an evening with a takeaway and a film. “I’ll come around seven, shall I? Or half-past, maybe? We men always think better on a full stomach.”
As he made his way back to his car, still parked outside Meade House, Andrew remembered Bridie Reading’s dramatic story, and wondered who the poor sod was who’d been looking for work. It was a downwards spiral, being homeless, as he knew from his work in the Tresham shelter just up the road from his flat. No permanent address, so no job. Stealing money to buy alcohol and drugs was all part of the sad decline.
Andrew had been through bad times himself after his parents were killed in a car crash, and remembered only too well the awful lethargy that overtook him when he should have been out looking for a job, starting a new life. At least he had had money to tide him over.
“COME IN, ANDREW.” GAVIN ADSTONE SAID HEARTILY. HE STOOD at the door of his cottage, authoritative and welcoming.
Aha, thought Andrew, he’s been on a self-assertion course. First rule: establish who is boss straightaway, especially when someone is trying to sell you something.
“Hello,” said Andrew. “Lovely evening. Nice of you to give up some time to see me. I am sure we shall have an enjoyable discussion, and if nothing comes of it, no matter. I shall have gained a couple of friends, I hope!”
Kate appeared with small Cecilia in her arms. Andrew made a clown face at the little one and raised a laugh. “Three new friends, I should say,” he said. He had been on a course or two himself.
EIGHTEEN
I SAW ANDREW YOUNG IN THE PUB,” DEREK SAID. HE OPENED yet another junk mail envelope and added it to an untidy heap on the floor. “Talking to Gavin Adstone like they was old mates.”
“Perhaps they are,” Gran said. “And don’t expect me to pick up them leaflets.”
“Oops! Who’s upset you this morning?”
“My darling daughter, if you must know.”