‘Ferdie, Laysander’s flatmate, orchestrated everythin’. They put me on an awful diet, took me joggin’ and made me act totally unconcerned whenever Larry rolled up. Ay gave Laysander some lovely clothes and a Ferrari and we hired jewels for him to give me. Larry was so mad with jealousy he came roaring back.’
‘It really worked!’ Georgie showed the faint flicker of animation of the dying castaway hearing the chug of a helicopter.
‘Far better than before,’ said Marigold, taking the smoked salmon out of its transparent paper and laying it on a blue plate from the Reject Shop, which had presumably replaced her plates Georgie had smashed.
‘You know how hopelessly undomesticated Larry was,’ she went on, searching among the spice shelf for red pepper. ‘Now he brings down his washing and even loads and unloads the dishwasher. Ay’m thinkin’ of writing Nikki a thank-you letter. And he’s become so marvellous in other ways.’ Marigold unearthed a tired-looking lemon from the bottom of the fridge. ‘Not just terribly loving and not being able to keep his hands off me, but he doesn’t rev up any more or shout at me if Ay map-read wrong and he gives me the remote control when we watch TV and smothers me in YSL. That’s why I’m looking so good and best of all I don’t have to go to Masonic dinners any more.’
‘Golly.’ Georgie found herself peeling off a bit of smoked salmon. ‘I wonder if it would work with Guy? How much did you pay Lysander?’ she asked. Then, bleating in horror when Marigold told her, ‘I can’t afford that!’
‘It’s worth it,’ urged Marigold. ‘You’ll never be able to pay back the
‘Did you sleep with him?’
‘May word, no,’ Marigold crossed her fingers. ‘He’s just there to rattle one’s hubby. Do give it a go. He was in Cheshire bringing some drain billionaire to heel and now he’s in Mayorca on some rescue mission. Ay promise he and Ferdie are brilliant.’
27
Feeling anything but brilliant, Lysander huddled in the only bit of shade on the burning deck of the motor yacht,
Bloody Ferdie had also pooh-poohed Lysander’s gloomy prognostications that he was bound to be seasick.
‘That was rowing boats at school. Large boats are quite different.’
Large boats turned out to be infinitely worse. The minute
It was Lysander’s first day up. A molten midday sun blazed down out of a royal-blue sky and he felt too dreadful even to watch Goodwood on satellite or crawl to the telephone to ring his bookmaker. His wracked stomach was even more concave than that of the bronzed deckhand in frayed hotpants who seemed to be spending an unnecessarily long time polishing the nearest life buoy.
‘It’s really kind, Gregor, but I honestly don’t want anything,’ mumbled Lysander.
He tried to concentrate on yesterday’s
Listlessly he gazed across a tie-dyed turquoise and navy-blue sea at the pine-spiked cliffs falling into the sea. They were so like hedgehogs he half-expected them to curl up, taking their tower blocks and hotels with them as the yacht approached. The buildings themselves were like the egg-box castles he used proudly to take home from playgroup for his mother who, to his father’s irritation, always put them in the drawing room. He always missed her more when he was feeling ill.
They were approaching Palma.
‘That’s
Raising his binoculars with effort, Lysander scoured the deck for Princess Diana or the Queen. He seriously admired the Queen, no-one knew more about racing. If she fell overboard he could dive in and rescue her, although in his weakened state he probably couldn’t swim that far. Perhaps Princess Diana could rescue him. She was supposed to swim every day. He imagined her firm hands on either side of his head, her soothing voice saying: ‘Not long now,’ as she towed him towards
‘Nice sounding man for you, Sandy.’
As Ferdie was the only person who knew he was on board, Lysander grabbed the telephone in a fury.
‘Gemmyoutofhere, you bastard. Where the hell have you been? I’ve been propositioned by every bum bandit in the British navy.’
‘Chill out,’ said Ferdie, who had an irritating addiction to modern slang. ‘What’s the state of play?’
Lysander told him, then after a long pause in which Ferdie outlined his next assignment, Lysander gave a whoop of delight.
‘Georgie Maguire, fucking hell,
‘Wait till tomorrow,’ said Ferdie, ‘then I can meet you.’
The following afternoon as the temperature soared into the nineties Ferdie was amazed to see Lysander sidling through the Nothing-to-Declare doors at Gatwick, smothered in an enormous camel-hair overcoat, swathed in long scarves, sending fellow passengers flying as his trolley, hopelessly over-loaded with duty-free, polo sticks and expensive suitcases out of which protruded shirt-tails and legs of boxer shorts, veered out of control.
‘Where’s the fucking car?’ he hissed to Ferdie.
‘In the car park.’
‘Well, take this trolley and move it.’
‘You OK?’
‘Move it, for Christ’s sake.’
Even when he was shaking like a leaf with sweat pouring down a yellowing face, people stopped and gazed at Lysander.
Hell, thought Ferdie, he’s picked up a fever, or worse.
It turned out to be worse. The moment they were alone and going up in the grey car-park lift Lysander parted his stifling coat to reveal a pink nose and a pair of totally crossed eyes. Tucked under his arm was a painfully thin, bedraggled, reddy-brown mongrel puppy who nevertheless managed to twitch its curly tail and stretch up to lick