‘I feel a bit mean. Can’t we find some arresting Provencal fisherman to bed her down?’
‘Never get near her,’ said Nicky and started to kiss Cable again.
They were so preoccupied they didn’t notice her stumbling past.
She met Matt coming out of the Roulette Room. He was looking pleased with himself.
‘I’ve just won nearly three thousand francs,’ he said.
‘How much is that?’ said Imogen, desperately trying to sound normal.
‘About ?300. I’ve been good and cashed it in.’ He looked at her closely.
‘Hey, what’s the matter?’
‘Nothing, I’m fine,’ she said.
‘Cable and Nicky, is it?’
She nodded — impossible to keep anything from him.
He took her arm. ‘I think you and I had better have a little talk.’
He led her to a deserted corner of the beach. They sat down on the warm sand. A huge white moon had turned the sea to gunmetal; the waves were idly flapping on the shore.
Matt lit a cigarette. ‘All right lovie, what happened?’
Stammering, she told him.
‘I don’t mind him kissing her so much,’ she said finally. ‘I mean she’s so lovely anyone would want to. But it’s just his using the same words.’
‘Cliche, cliche, cliche,’ said Matt scornfully. ‘But then you can’t expect someone who hits a white ball across a net year in year out to have a very extensive vocabulary, can you?’
Imogen had a feeling he was laughing at her. ‘But Nicky’s clever. He speaks five languages,’ she said defensively.
‘A sign of great stupidity, I always think,’ said Matt. ‘Hell, I’m not trying to put Nicky down. I’ve nothing against people with IQs in single figures. I just think you should know some home and away truths about him. I bet I know how he picked you up.’
‘We were introduced,’ said Imogen stiffly.
‘No, before that. Wasn’t he playing in a match, and he suddenly picked you out in the crowd, and acted as though he’d been turned to stone? Then, I suppose, he missed a few easy shots, as though he was completely overwhelmed by your beauty, and flashed his pretty teeth at you every time he changed ends.’
‘He must have told you,’ said Imogen in a stifled voice.
‘No such luck, sweetheart. It’s standard Beresford pick-up practice in tournaments, all round the country. Quite irresistible, too, when combined with those devastating good looks. He never does it if there’s any chance he might lose the match.’
‘Then why did he bother to bring me on holiday?’
‘For a number of reasons, I should think. Because you’re very pretty, because he’s got a jaded palate, and you’re different from his usual run of scrubbers. Because he couldn’t make you in Yorkshire, and he always likes to get his own way and, finally, because he hadn’t met Cable then.’
‘And what chance have I got against her?’ sighed Imogen.
‘You still want him, after hearing all that?’
Imogen nodded miserably. ‘I’m a constant nymph,’ she said.
Matt sighed. ‘I was afraid you were. Well, we’ll have to get him back for you, won’t we?’
Outside her bedroom he took her key and unlocked the door.
‘Now baby, lesson one. Don’t cry all night. It’ll only make you look ugly in the morning. And if you’re still smarting about the purple sprouting Brocklehurst bit, remember that Cable’s real name is Enid Sugden.’
He smiled, touched her cheek with his hand, and went. Imogen undressed and lay on her bed for a few minutes in the moonlight. Fancy Cable being called Enid. She giggled, then her thoughts turned to Matt.
Was it Jane Austen who said friendship was the finest balm for the pangs of despised love? She got up, locked her door and fell into a deep sleep.
It was after ten o’clock when she woke next morning. She found Matt drinking Pernod on the front, surrounded by newspapers, his long legs up on the table.
‘You’re going brown. Isn’t it a pity one can’t have the first drink of the day twice?’ he said, ordering her a cup of coffee.
‘How is everyone?’ she said.
‘Grimly determined to enjoy their fortnight’s holiday. Yvonne running herself up as usual, Cable in one of her moods — I’m not sure which one. They’ve all gone water skiing.’
‘Didn’t you want to go?’ said Imogen anxiously. It was bad enough that Nicky should annexe Cable without Matt being left with Nicky’s boring girlfriend.
‘After my performance on the boat coming over — you must be joking. You and I are going to take a trip along the coast.’
It was a perfect day. The mistral had retired into its cave. The air was soft. And as they drove along the coast road, the smell of petrol mingled with the scent of the pines. She still felt upset about Nicky, but for today she was determined not to brood.
‘Where are we going?’ asked Imogen.
‘St Tropez,’ said Matt.
Oh, God, thought Imogen as the wind fretted her hair into an even worse tangle. Everyone will look like Bardot there.
Matt parked the car on the front. In the yachts round the Port, the rich in their Pucci silks were surfacing for the first champagne of the day. Matt steered Imogen through a doorway, up some stairs, into a hairdressing salon.
‘To kick off, we’re going to do something about your hair,’ he said.
Imogen backed away in terror. ‘Oh, no!’ she said. ‘They’ll chop it all off.’
‘No they won’t,’ said Matt, explaining to the pretty receptionist exactly what he wanted them to do.
‘It’ll look great,’ he said, smiling at Imogen reassuringly. ‘I’ll pick you up later.’
‘
When Matt came back, he didn’t recognise her. He gave her one of those hard, appraising sexy looks that men only give to very pretty girls. Then he said, ‘My God!’ and a great smile spread across his face.
Her hair hung in a sleek bronze curtain to her shoulders, parted on one side and falling seductively over one eye.
‘Very pretty, little one,’ he said, walking round her. ‘You don’t look like Judge Jeffreys after too much port any more.’ But the expression in his heavy-lidded eyes belied the teasing note in his voice.
‘Let’s go and have some lunch,’ he said, tucking his hand underneath her arm.
He led her down a labyrinth of alleys smelling of garlic, abounding in cats and washing, to a tiny dark restaurant, which was full of fishermen. The food was superb.
Imogen watched Matt slowly pulling leaves off his artichoke.
‘What does
Matt looked up. ‘Lots of sex appeal. Why?’
Imogen blushed. ‘I just heard someone saying it about someone.’
As always he drew confidences out of her, as the sun brings out the flowers. Under that exceptionally friendly gaze, she was soon telling him about the vicarage, and her brothers and sister, and what hell it had been to be fat at school, and how difficult it was to get on with her father. He’s a journalist, she kept telling herself, he’s trained to ask questions and be a good listener. He’d do the same to anyone. But she found herself noticing that his eyes were more dark green than black, and there was a small scar over his right eyebrow.
‘You’re not eating up,’ he said, stripping one of her langoustine, dipping it into the mayonnaise and popping it into her mouth.
‘I was wondering what the others were doing,’ she lied.
‘Bitching I should think. Yvonne told me this morning that it takes all sorts to make a world. Really someone should write all her sayings down in a book so they’re not forgotten.’
He ordered another bottle of wine. Two of the fishermen were staring fixedly at Imogen now. She wondered