A Good Catch - LightNovelsOnl.com
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'What did you turn it round for?'
'The loose edge mustn't rest against the wall. It must hang out into the room.'
'Why?'
'Well, over time, a grease mark will appear on the new paint, from where people's hands have to touch the wall to pull at the roll.'
'Oh, I see,' said Jan, who didn't.
'It's something my mother did; once you know about it, you can't stop doing it.' Elizabeth smiled. 'Sometimes I do it when I'm out. At other people's houses. Or restaurants. Silly, I know, but it makes sense.'
Jan wondered if this woman had done it in her house. She'd have to check the b.l.o.o.d.y thing whenever she came round.
Elizabeth was straightening the towels now. 'Sweet bathroom,' she managed to say, whilst thinking the exact opposite.
Jan looked round with pride at the room she'd lovingly decorated. She couldn't wait for Jesse and Greer to see it. The bath, basin and toilet were in aqua blue and she'd chosen dear little tiles to put around the sink, each with a picture of a penguin at his ablutions. One cleaning his teeth, one having a shave and one her favourite lying in a bubble bath with a shower hat on his head.
'Isn't it?' She smiled with satisfaction. 'I never had an indoor bathroom when we first got married. Outdoor privy and a wash in the old Belfast sink in the kitchen. Used to put the boys in there too when they were babies.'
'That must have been ... difficult.'
'Well, it was fun really. We'd all dry off in front of the fire and Edward would dry my hair by brus.h.i.+ng it till it gleamed.' Jan reached up to her short crop. 'It used to be thick and had a wave but ...'Tis more practical to have it short, isn't it?'
Elizabeth thought of the monthly bill to have her expensively blond hair cut and coloured and said, 'Yes, it must be.'
Jan was on the tiny landing now and peeking into the master bedroom. ''Tis proper cosy. I love the colour. I'd never have thought of mushroom.'
'It's called Drizzle,' said Elizabeth, pus.h.i.+ng past Jan and stepping into the small but light room.
'Drizzle!' Jan laughed. 'How they come up with these names! I'd have done something like blue. Edward says bedrooms need to be blue. Calm, see. And in a marriage you need to stay calm.'
Elizabeth was twitching the duvet and smoothing it straight for the umpteenth time. 'This has a warm feel, don't you think?'
'Oh, definitely.'
Elizabeth checked her slim gold watch. 'They'll be here soon. It's nearly time.'
Jesse and Greer were met at the airport by the same driver who'd dropped them off four weeks before. 'Welcome home, Mr and Mrs Behenna. How was the trip?' he asked as he stowed the suitcases into the large boot.
Greer clutched at Jesse's arm. 'Wonderful, thank you. I can't believe we've been away for such a long time.'
'The sun's come out for you,' he told them, jumping into the front seat and starting the engine. 'The snow has all gone.'
Jesse felt the need to take charge. 'Would you drop us off at my parents' house, please, Fish Lane at the top of Fore Street?'
'Ah, no, sir. I have another address I have been asked to take you to.'
Greer clapped her hands with glee. 'Is it our new home?'
'Can't possibly say, Mrs Behenna,' the driver said, looking at her in his rear-view mirror.
'It is! How exciting.' Greer took Jesse's arm and snuggled in. 'We're going to our new home.'
The yellow of the early February sun lit the moors as they drove west towards Trevay and the sea. Driving down the hill and into the village, past the peeling grandeur of the old Great Western Hotel, the newlyweds wondered whether the driver would turn left or right along the estuary road. He turned left towards the heart of Trevay. Greer clutched one hand to her chest and the other to Jesse's arm. 'I wonder where it is? Will it overlook the harbour, do you think?'
Jesse frowned. The creeping, suffocating certainty that his life was not his own any more was seeping into his psyche. He was in the control of others. He wanted to order the driver to stop the car and let him out so that he could run as fast as he could away from Trevay.
'Dunno,' he muttured.
The car went past Fore Street and followed the harbour road round towards the Golden Hind. The driver indicated left and turned into Cobb Lane. Greer leant forward and pointed saying, 'Look, look!' On the right Jesse saw a house with ribbons and balloons on the gate. Both sets of parents were waving.
Greer was bouncing on the seat with excitement. 'It's Pencil Cottage! I've wanted to live here since I was a little girl! Look, Jesse, isn't it wonderful?'
Jesse looked at the house he'd walked past, and never given a thought to, for almost twenty years. Pencil thin and squeezed between two regular-sized Trevay fishermen's cottages, this was his new home.
The car rolled to a halt and the faces of Elizabeth and Jan peered in through the back windows, grinning. The driver jumped out and opened Greer's door for her. She fell into her parents' arms, where she was showered with hugs and kisses and questions about the honeymoon.
Jesse climbed out and walked to the boot of the Range Rover to help with the bags. 'I'll do that, sir,' said the driver. 'I think you're needed to carry something else over the threshold.'
Jesse looked over his shoulder and saw Greer and both sets of parents waiting expectantly for him.
Standing in the front room, Bryn spoke first. 'Now then, young Jesse, please accept Pencil Cottage as a wedding present. It'll keep you both warm till you can afford your own place. The company has paid for it and it should be a nice little a.s.set for us. When the time comes for you to need a bigger house, the company will sell this and I'll split the profit with you. That way you'll have a tidy deposit for a proper family home.'
Jesse experienced three emotions. One, grat.i.tude that this should be happening to him; two, fury that this man had, in one fell swoop, totally emasculated him, and three, the feeling that his b.a.l.l.s were being squeezed in an ever-tighter vice.
His father stepped towards him wearing a tight smile. 'Welcome home, son. Your mother and I couldn't be more proud of the both of you.'
The house might have been thin on the outside but, inside, it went a long way back and up. The front door opened immediately into the sitting room, which was traditional, warm and inviting. Elizabeth had kept it all white with simple furnis.h.i.+ngs, knowing that her daughter would want to customise the entire house. It led into a smart galley kitchen, which in turn led out to a tiny concreted yard with raised flower beds full of prettily nodding daffodils.
Greer wriggled with joy. 'I bet this is a suntrap. It feels warm right now!'
Back in the house she pointed out the dishwasher, television, the large framed wedding photo on the mantelpiece that Jan had had printed especially, and the view from the front window.
'Wait till you see upstairs,' Jan said, longing for Jesse to see her handiwork in the bathroom.
'Yes, you'll love the bedroom, Greer,' said Elizabeth, leading the way before Jan could get ahead of her.
Jesse's muscles were beginning to tire where he was attempting to smile with genuine pleasure. Greer kissed his nose and galloped up the stairs ahead of him.
'Oh, Mummy!' gasped Greer as she saw the bedroom. 'It's so glamorous!' She called out to the landing: 'Jesse, quick. In here.' Jesse ducked his head under the low latched door and absorbed the pinky-brown walls, frilly bed linen and heavy Austrian blind at the window. Greer gripped his arm with eyes wide. 'Isn't it stylish?'
Jesse nodded slowly, mystified.
'He's overwhelmed, Mummy.' Greer went to her mother and hugged and kissed her.
Jan, desperate for Jesse to see the bathroom, pulled at his arm. 'I've got something to show you too.'
The bathroom was much more to Jesse's taste. 'Oh, Mum. 'Tis lovely.'
Jan beamed with happiness. 'Look at the penguins!'
Jesse smiled. 'I like them.'
'I knew you would, and come here.' Jan pushed the loo lid shut. 'Sit here and look at the view!'
He sat. Through the tiny square of the tiny window straight ahead of him, Jesse could just make out his father's flags.h.i.+p, The Lobster Pot, bobbing gently at anchor in the harbour. Jesse laughed then and shouted out to his father on the landing, 'Dad, I'll be able to make sure you're working hard from here.' Edward laughed too. 'Aye. But I've checked it out and I can see you doing your business on that toilet if I get my binoculars out.'
Everyone but Greer and Elizabeth laughed heartily.
'Well, now. I've got tea and sandwiches ready, if you want some,' said Elizabeth, heading back downstairs. 'There might even be a bottle of bubbly in the fridge.'
'What's that bleddy 'orrible paint Betty's put on your bedroom walls?'
Edward had taken his shoes off and was sitting in his favourite armchair back at the family home in Fish Lane. The three Behennas had left Pencil Cottage on the pretext of collecting Jesse's bits and pieces.
'Edward.' Jan looked at her husband sternly. 'That's the latest, most stylish colour. And don't call her Betty. She prefers to be called Elizabeth, as you well know.'
Edward made a grumbling noise. 'She was Betty when we was all at school together.'
Jan ignored him. 'So, son, we missed you. What was Gran Canaria like?'
'Hot. Nice.'
'Food good?'
'Not bad. Mind you, I could have murdered a pasty.'
Jan brightened up. 'I've got some ready to heat up if you want one.'
'Go on then.' Jesse smiled at his mum as she went to the kitchen.
Edward, making sure she'd left the room before he spoke, asked under his breath, 'So, everything all right in the bedroom department?'
Jesse squirmed a little. 'Fine.'
'Ah. Good. Only some women-'
'Dad. Please. It's fine. She's fine ... and that's all.'
'Well, that's all right then.'
'Yes.'
At Pencil Cottage, Greer and her mother were unpacking her suitcases in the bedroom.
'How was the honeymoon, darling? Was he kind to you?' asked Elizabeth delicately and without making eye contact with her daughter.
Greer was embarra.s.sed. 'Yes. He was lovely.'
'He ... didn't make things uncomfortable for you?'
Greer folded a bikini and put it into one of the new drawers, then sat on the bed. 'A bit. I think I just have to ... get used to it.'
Elizabeth moved a pile of underwear and sat next to her daughter. 'It's not easy at first, but it gets better. It makes men happy. And in time it'll make you happy too.'
Greer looked into her mother's eyes. 'I do love him.'
Elizabeth patted her hand. 'That's all you need.'
Downstairs the phone rang and they could hear Bryn answer. ''Ello, Mickey ... yeah, they're home safe and sound ... right, yeah, we'll meet you there. Ten minutes? Rightyo.' He called up the stairs. 'Get your coats on, that was Mickey. He and Loveday are going down the Hind. They want to welcome you home with a couple of drinks.'
The Golden Hind was thick with tobacco smoke and the heady scent of Cornish beer.
Loveday really hadn't wanted to come. 'Let them have their first night in their new home by themselves, Mick,' she'd pleaded.
Mickey was incredulous. 'They've just spent four weeks on their own. If I know Jesse, he'll be desperate for a beer or two and some male company.' He added as an afterthought, 'And Greer will want to see you as well. She'll want to tell you all about her posh hotel and that.'
'That's what I'm afraid of,' replied Loveday gloomily.
'That's my girl.' Mickey put his arm around her. 'We'll have a great night.'
Mickey and Loveday got to the pub before anyone else and Loveday stationed herself on one of the Dralon banquettes on the far wall. From there she could see who was coming in and out of the bar. As the place filled up, it would be harder for anyone coming in to spot her first.
Mickey got her a cider shandy and a bag of pork scratchings. 'There you are. I'm going to wait at the bar. I'll send Greer over as soon as she arrives.'
Gee, thanks, thought Loveday. Her heart was beating so fast that she could feel the pulse in her neck. Waves of perspiration hit her every few minutes. She felt sick. Had Jesse told Greer what had happened between them? Was he filled with the same longing to see her as she was to see him?
She jumped as the pub door opened, but it was a group of locals trooping in to fill the s.p.a.ce with laughter and a blast of cool February air.
Her nerves were raw. What would she say to him? What would he say to her?
The pub door opened again, and again it wasn't Jesse or Greer. At least the bar was filling up and she'd be very hard to find when if he came in.
She pulled at the opening of the bag of pork scratchings. Her hands were slippery with sweat and she couldn't get a good grip. She put the bag to her mouth and ripped it open with her teeth. The entire bag split from top to bottom and its greasy contents spilt itself all down her good T-s.h.i.+rt. She almost cried. 's.h.i.+t s.h.i.+t s.h.i.+t,' she said under her breath as she tried to pick the larger lumps up and brush the powdery residue off her clothes and onto the floor.