lover who had honed discrimination to the finest pitch.
I ran my hand along a shelf. Years of thinking, tasting, making mistakes were racked up in these shelves. A lifetime of inching forward towards true understanding, true knowledge, true feeling.
I wanted to do the same.
A movement behind me made me turn round. Leading off the main shop was a second, even more dimly lit room with no window. A woman was holding a bottle – carefully, almost tenderly.
It was Meg.
‘A good one,’ she held it out for my inspection, ‘but not outstanding. I think that is what your father would conclude.’
I glanced at it. A 1988 Pomerol. ‘I disagree. This is outstanding.’
‘Oh, no,’ she said. ‘Trust me. I
How can I trust you, I wanted to throw at her, when you step so carelessly on what is mine? My husband, my wine, even my daughter. How can you trust a trespasser?
Meg raised an eyebrow. Even
I turned away. In the street, the tourists plodded up and down, clutching plastic bags with interesting bulges. They were taking home olive oil and local pottery and, some of the better-off, jewellery. They would take with them the scent and taste of Italy. Afterwards they would go to a supermarket or shop, hunt out inferior oil or
Behind me, Meg was saying. ‘Your father was right about most things. Would he have advised me to find somewhere else to live?’
21
On the way back to Casa Rosa, Meg and I spoke only when necessary. I went to bed early.
After the day’s heat, the sheets were a cool, fresh contrast. I read, I made notes and, occasionally, I glanced up at the wooden casket on the shelf. Would my father approve of what I had done? I wasn’t sure. Maybe he would have felt that you have to hang on to the bits and pieces of a family, whatever the cost.
I put out the light and settled to sleep. I felt the relief of the patient who, after illness and incapacity, has taken a first step.
A noise on the stairs followed by a cautious footstep on the path outside made me sit up. I swung my legs out of bed and pushed open the shutters. ‘Meg?’
Moonlight streamed into my bedroom and illuminated the thin figure on the path below. Meg had twisted up her hair into a sexy caramel knot and she was wearing her new high heels. The light played tricks, for she looked so young and pretty that I caught my breath. She raised an arm and the bracelets on her wrist emitted a faint, high shiver of sound.
I leant on the sill. ‘Don’t go,’ I begged, for I had a good idea where she was heading.
She laughed without humour. ‘Jealous?’
‘I so am jealous.’ I mocked Chloe’s vernacular.
She shook her head. ‘Not convincing, Fanny. You’ll have to do better.’
Her voice was husky with excitement. I clutched at my nightdress. ‘Wait. I’m coming down.’
The cotton flapped round my legs as I ran out on to the path. Meg was searching in her shoulder-bag and I grabbed at the strap. ‘It’s not worth it. Stay.’
‘But you’ve told me to go. You have made… everything quite clear.’
In a final effort, I tugged hard at the strap and Meg swayed a little on her high heels. ‘But it doesn’t mean you have to throw everything away. Don’t be silly. Please, please, stay here. We’ll talk… I’ll listen to you… whatever.’ Meg shrugged and I threw in quickly, ‘Think of Sacha. Think of Will.’
‘I am thinking of them,’ she said. ‘Very much.’
‘I was unkind.’
‘Go back to bed,’ she said, an adult addressing a troublesome child. ‘I’m going out for a little diversion. I know
‘Do you want me to go down on my knees? I will, you know, if that’s what it takes.’
Meg fiddled with her bracelets. ‘I must make you understand, Fanny. It’s all right. I’m in control. But…’ she seemed to be searching for an explanation, ‘I’m not the only woman to have fallen from grace, and to have inflicted these wounds upon myself. But, at times, I’ve felt so alone. That’s what makes me so crabby and selfish, I guess.’ She nodded her head. ‘I appreciate the knees bit though, Fanny. I know what it would cost you, and I’m tempted to take you up on it.’
I forced Meg back into the kitchen and made her sit down. ‘Talk to me. Come on. You can talk to me.’
She seemed both surprised and gratified. ‘I’ve tried.’ Her mouth tightened and she fiddled with the bracelets. ‘OK. Confession time. I’ve tried very hard to absorb myself in other things. Clothes. Part-time work here and there. An occasional lover. Charity, or whatever those women do who have too much time on their hands. But apart from Sacha, and you and Will and Chloe, nothing burrowed very deep. My mind had been blown.’
‘I’m listening.’ I put on the kettle and the gas-ring glowed and bubbled.
Meg seemed fixated by the glow. ‘But you are right, Fanny, it is time to make changes, and to think differently. When we go home, I will look for somewhere else to live.’
‘Close to us,’ I said.
Her eyebrow flicked up. ‘No need to go mad.’
‘All right, at a decent distance.’
She smiled at me. A car drew up outside the house. Its engine revved, its door opened and shut. Meg gathered up her bag.
‘You’re not going?’
‘Sure, I am,’ she said. She got up, put her hand on my shoulder and kissed my cheek, a light, cool touch. ‘We’re quite good friends really, aren’t we? In the end? I like to think so, Fanny.’
I kissed her back. ‘Of course.’ Then I held her tight, and the breath of her forgiveness stole over me.
‘That’s straight, then. That’s
‘Shall I come with you? Why don’t I? Give me five minutes.’
‘No, Fanny. I am on my own now. Remember?’
Defeated, I went back upstairs. I heard voices, doors banging, and the car accelerating down the road.
I opened the shutters wide to let in the night.
I meant to wait up until she returned but I fell asleep and was woken by a light pulsing through the room.
There was an exchange in Italian outside on the path, followed by a knock on the door. I reached for a T-shirt and pulled it over my nightdress. With each step down the stairs, my heartbeat accelerated.
Italian policemen, I noted in a stupefied way, were always immaculate, even at that time of the morning. The male one had a perfect crease on his shirt sleeve and an equally perfect one ironed into his trousers. His belt buckle gleamed and his hair was brushed and beautifully cut. ‘So sorry, Signora,’ he said. His female colleague had long blonde hair and a tiny waist. She stepped forward and took my hands in her tanned olive ones.
‘Where did you find her?’ I asked eventually.
‘Outside the church.’ The policewoman was calm and professional. ‘We think she tripped and hit her head on the tethering stone by the fountain. But we are not sure if that is what killed her. The doctors will tell us.’
The woman paused, then asked, ‘Did the
I bit my lip. ‘In a way, yes, she did.’
Later, about ten minutes or so, when I had brought my knees under control and fought my way into some clothes, they escorted me down the path and handed me into the car.
A hush fell as I was led through the police station to the morgue at the back. The policewoman touched my arm. ‘Hold on to me if you want to,’ she said.
My nails dug into my skin.
At the policewoman’s nod, the sheet over the figure on the gurney was pulled back.