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Keep Your Friends Close




  Keep Your

  Friends Close

  Also by Paula Daly

  Just What Kind of Mother Are You?

  Keep Your

  Friends Close

  Paula Daly

  Grove Press

  New York

  Copyright © 2014 by Paula Daly

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review. Scanning, uploading, and electronic distribution of this book or the facilitation of such without the permission of the publisher is prohibited. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated. Any member of educational institutions wishing to photocopy part or all of the work for classroom use, or anthology, should send inquiries to Grove/Atlantic, Inc., 154 West 14th Street, New York, NY 10011 or permissions@groveatlantic.com.

  The quotation from Lots of Candles, Plenty of Cake by Anna Quindlen is used by kind permission of the author.

  First published in Great Britain

  in 2014 by Bantam Press

  an imprint of Transworld Publishers

  Printed in the United States of America

  ISBN 978-0-8021-2320-6

  eISBN 978-0-8021-9232-5

  Jacket design by Gretchen Mergenthaler

  Jacket photographs: © Alin Dragulin/FogStock/IPN

  Grove Press

  an imprint of Grove/ Atlantic, Inc.

  154 West 14th Street

  New York, NY 10011

  Distributed by Publishers Group West

  www.groveatlantic.com

  14 15 16 17 18 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  For my sister Debbie

  Acknowledgments

  This book would not have been possible without the help of three people: my husband Jimmy, my sister Debbie, and great friend Zoe. Thank you all so much.

  I would also like to thank Jane Gregory, Rachel Rayner, Stephanie Glencross, Corinna Barsan, Nita Pronovost, Claire Ward, Dr Jacqueline Christodoulou-Ward MBE, Claire Morris, Alison Barrow and Sarah Day.

  ‘I fooled myself into thinking that House Beautiful should be subtitled Life Wonderful.’

  Anna Quindlen

  Seven Months Earlier

  ‘SO, WHAT’S BEEN on your mind this week?’ she asks him.

  ‘Besides the usual?’

  She tilts her head. Looks on with mild disapproval and waits for him to answer more appropriately.

  ‘Death,’ he says. ‘I’ve been thinking about death.’

  ‘About dying?’

  ‘Not dying per se . . . but wouldn’t it be amazing if we got to choose the exact time of our deaths?’

  Her expression is one of puzzlement. ‘Can’t we already do that?’ she asks.

  ‘I don’t mean suicide.’

  ‘But surely you don’t actually want to die?’

  ‘’Course not.’

  He’s lying supine on the couch. There is the beginning of a small paunch forming, a concertina of trouser creases at his groin. He turns his head towards her, glances her way briefly.

  ‘My youngest, Olivia, asked me what I’d do if I had three wishes,’ he says, ‘and it got me thinking. The one thing we’re really scared of, the thing that unites all human beings, is the fear of death. Wouldn’t it be great if you could just take death right out of the equation? If you could go through life knowing that everything’s okay . . . because you’re not scheduled to die for, say, another thirty years?’

  ‘Would you live your life differently?’

  ‘Maybe. Probably. Definitely. Wouldn’t you?’

  ‘We’re not here to talk about me,’ she says.

  He smiles. Touché.

  She uncrosses her legs.

  Her skirt slides a little higher and she sees a flash of desire revealed in his face, though for now she pretends not to notice.

  ‘How’s work, Cameron?’ she asks casually.

  ‘I don’t want to talk about work.’

  ‘Any particular reason?’

  ‘It’s not been a good month, and, hell, I don’t feel like talking about it today, not when I’ve got . . .’ His voice trails off.

  ‘Trouble with the workforce?’ she offers.

  He sits up. Swinging his feet to the floor, he puts his elbows on his knees and rests his chin on top of his now clenched fists. In the space of about a second he’s become edgy. Latent energy brought to the surface in a heartbeat. She’s touched one of his tender areas so now he begins reconstructing the armour. The defensive armour he supposedly comes in here to break down so he can feel. So he can love.

  At least that’s the general idea.

  But that’s not what actually happens.

  She plays him, the poor bastard. She asks the questions he can’t face. She toys with his problems for as long as he can stand it. Then she soothes him. Soothes him as only she can. Later she’ll fan away his gratitude, telling him it is what she’s here for. Showing him why it is only she that can help him on the long journey towards becoming himself.

  ‘Tell me about Serena,’ she says now. Her timing is exemplary, as always.

  ‘Much the same.’

  ‘Did you utilize the techniques we discussed? Did you stop trying to fix her problems? Did you really listen to what she had to say?’

  ‘It’s difficult.’

  ‘It can take time,’ she agrees.

  ‘Serena’s so wrapped up in the kids she doesn’t see me. I touch her and she flinches.’

  ‘Do you think she finds you unappealing?’

  ‘No,’ he says firmly, as though that’s not an option. ‘She just can’t find room for me in her day any more. I’m another thing on the list. She can’t stop running around after the kids. She puts everything she has into them.’ He pauses, rubbing his face. ‘Well, everything into them and the house.’ Sighing wearily, he adds, ‘I don’t know how to make her happy.’

  ‘You did suggest some help around the house?’

  ‘She won’t have it. Says they won’t do the job as well as her.’ He smiles briefly at his predicament. ‘Anyway, she wants to do it herself, so there’s not a lot more I can do.’

  She puts her pen down and leans forward. ‘But that means she has nothing left for you.’

  He shrugs sadly.

  ‘How does that make you feel?’ she asks.

  ‘Redundant,’ he replies. ‘Useless.’

  She makes her voice soft. Lowers it and gives it a gravelly quality she uses on occasion. ‘You know that you’re neither of those things . . . logically, you do know that? A man doesn’t get to your level of success by being redundant and useless. It’s simply not possible.’

  He looks away, unable to accept the compliment today. ‘I’ve tried to love her,’ he says, the words catching in his throat.

  ‘I know.’

  ‘I really have tried,’ he repeats, his eyes filling.

  ‘I know, Cameron. But she just won’t let you.’

  She rises from her seat and walks towards him, fingering the top button of her blouse. He closes his eyes and exhales. Exhales and tries to release the tension from his face, his shoulders, his fists. When he reopens his eyes she’s standing right before him.

  He looks into her face. ‘Is it time to let her go?’ he asks.

  ‘You’ve done everything you can.’

  Gently, she takes his hand and guides it beneath her skirt. Guides it up high along the inside of her thigh.

  1

  ARE YOU LIVING in the moment?

  M
e neither.

  I’m trying to. Really, I am. Periodically, throughout the day, I stop what I’m doing and say to myself, This is it. This moment is all you have. Enjoy it. Feel it. Embrace The Now.

  So, right now, in this moment, I’m embracing cleaning fake tan from the walls of an en suite. It’s a recently upgraded bathroom – solid marble wall tiles, twin Corian sinks – which one of the hotel guests decided would double up nicely as a St Tropez tanning booth.

  I’m ignoring the fact that she’s used the cream Ralph Lauren bath towels to home-dye her hair a deep magenta, and instead my attention flits between wondering what colour this woman would be in her natural state, and, if I were to nip home in the next hour, take a chicken out of the freezer, would it be defrosted in time for tonight’s dinner?

  I pile the ruined towels together in a heap in the centre of the bathroom and pour some bleach on to a toothbrush. I’m having real trouble removing the fake tan from the grout in between the tiles. This trick usually works so I set to, taking care not to splash any bleach on my suit trousers, all the while thinking: What am I doing in here? We have an army of staff for this.

  But they won’t attend to such details. You can train them till you’re blue in the face and they’ll still skim over the fine points, won’t do the necessary extras to keep this place looking truly exceptional.

  And that’s why our guests come back. Because Lakeshore Lodge is exceptional.

  If you’ve ever spent a night here, on your return, you’ll get a personal greeting from either Sean, myself or the general manager – and we will remember to ask about your family, your journey to Windermere. Waiting in your room will be a miniature bottle of pink Moët, a box of six handmade chocolates and an individually wrapped Cartmel sticky toffee pudding. As well as a handwritten card saying, ‘So pleased to see you again!’

  For us it’s about the extras. It’s all about making the guests feel as though they really matter. And it’s why we operate at 90 per cent occupancy, even when it’s the low season. Even during November, when it can rain for thirty days and thirty nights consecutively and the filthy grey cloud is so low in the sky you can almost touch it with your fingertips.

  There’s a knock on the bathroom door. I stop scrubbing with the toothbrush and turn.

  ‘Mrs Wainwright, I’m so sorry to bother you but there’s a problem in the junior suite.’

  Libby is one of the housekeepers. She’s been here for three years and is one of my best cleaners.

  ‘What is it?’

  ‘That Indian family we had in last night? They heated up curry in the bedroom.’

  I roll my eyes. Though this is not a major disaster, it happens from time to time. ‘Just get the windows open, Libby, give it an airing. The next guests aren’t due in until after eight tonight, so you’ve got plenty of time to give everything a good wash down.’

  Libby squints and knits her brows together at the same time. Something she does when she knows I’m about to shout at what she has to say.

  ‘What is it?’ I ask sharply. ‘Did they bring in extra bodies?’ I hate to typecast here, but it’s not unusual for additional children, babies . . . Grandma, to be smuggled in, unpaid for.

  Libby shifts her weight from one foot to the other. ‘They heated it up inside the kettle.’

  ‘The curry?’ I ask. ‘Inside the electric kettle?’

  She nods. ‘I think the element might be kind of screwed.’

  ‘Oh, for God’s sake.’

  I place the toothbrush by the side of the sink and begin kneading the back of my neck, swallowing the bark of abuse which was on its way out, as I have the beginnings of a migraine. It’s at the base of my skull and if I were to lose my temper fully right now, it would jump straight behind my eyes, meaning the rest of the day would be a write-off.

  ‘Well, that’s a first,’ I say softly, but Libby knows to keep her eyes low.

  Because I can be unpredictable at times like this.

  Often Libby will tell me the worst news: laundry room flooded, two housemaids called in sick . . . a rat . . . and I’ll take it on the chin. I’ll deal with it quietly and get on with the day. But other times I can go apoplectic over a dusty skirting board, a lone fingerprint on a mirror.

  I’m not easy. I can be kind of prickly and I’ve been meditating to try to keep myself more balanced. Sean says he can see a clear difference, but I’m not so sure I’m getting anywhere with it.

  ‘What should I do?’ Libby asks.

  ‘Go give the kettle to Sean. Tell him you need a new one from the spares store and tell him to check how many are left. He might need to order another batch. Tell him to look online and see if he can get a better price. Those glass kettles were stupidly expensive. Tell him to look at stainless steel instead.’

  ‘Okay.’

  When she’s left the room I call her back.

  ‘Libby? Second thoughts, tell him to stick with the glass. They’re classier.’

  Libby keeps her face impassive. Waits for me to change my mind another time.

  ‘You’re sure?’ she asks tentatively.

  ‘Sure.’

  It’s only when I’m rinsing the toothbrush and applying more bleach that I remember Sean’s otherwise engaged this morning. His mother is here.

  Penny, Sean’s mother, visits Thursday afternoons. She spends a couple of hours with Sean; he takes her out. They might have a jaunt over to Sharrow Bay at Ullswater, or perhaps take afternoon tea down the road at Storrs Hall. Anywhere, really. Anywhere that’s not Lakeshore Lodge – as Sean would face a constant stream of interruptions. And his mother generally demands his full attention. They normally return from their outing around 4 p.m., in time for the girls arriving in from school. Now, during the lighter evenings of British Summertime, Penny will stay for dinner. In the winter months she’s back on the road, heading for the village of Crook, before darkness sets in.

  Today is the first Wednesday in May. Not Penny’s usual day to visit, but she’s off to Nice for a few days with her photography club tomorrow.

  I crash through the front door just before five, carrying chicken breasts, a small bag of morels (which I had to swipe from the head chef), a bottle of Marsala, and two books of carpet samples I need to look at before six – when the fitter is calling to get my selection. The hotel’s conservatory carpet is showing heavy tread by the doorway and I should have made my choice by the end of last week, but the days have got away from me.

  ‘Natty!’ Penny exclaims, rising from the armchair as I enter the lounge. ‘You look dead beat! Sean, go and make your poor wife some tea before she topples over from exhaustion.’

  I place a kiss on Penny’s cheek. ‘You look really well from your trip,’ I say to her, and tell Sean not to bother with the tea.

  Penny is just back from visiting Sean’s sister in Fremantle and her skin is leathery. It’s a deep mahogany-brown. Penny has taken a lot of sun over the years, she’s rail thin, and, you know when they put wigs on skeletons on the TV and it looks kind of funny? That is Sean’s mother.

  ‘Lucy’s little ones all right?’ I ask, kicking my heels off as the phone rings out in the hallway. Sean goes to answer it.

  ‘Wonderful,’ she answers. ‘It’s a joy to watch her with them. She has the time, you see, Natty? It makes all the difference. All the difference in the world. She’s talking of having a third, now that Robert’s finally got the promotion.’

  ‘Another baby would be lovely,’ I say brightly. ‘Is she hoping for a girl this time?’

  Penny dismissively waves away my words with her hand. ‘Oh, she’s not bothered in the slightest. She simply loves mothering. I do worry if she’s getting a little too old for another child, though. But she assures me forty is not considered old these days.’

  ‘More and more women are having babies at forty,’ I say.

  ‘She wouldn’t let me do a thing while I was there, Natty. I don’t know where she gets her energy from, I really don’t. She’s still up with Alfie ha
lf the night.’

  ‘Nice for you to have a rest and enjoy the children.’

  ‘Well, of course, she’s still breastfeeding Alfie, so there’s not a lot to be done there, and Will is such a kind boy. I can hardly believe he’s five already. Where do the years go to? I just don’t know.’

  There is a subtext to this conversation. In fact, there’s a subtext to every conversation with Penny, which is probably worth pointing out here.

  I fell unexpectedly pregnant, aged nineteen and during my first year at university. Or perhaps, more importantly, during Sean’s first year at university. We both left our respective courses and returned home to Windermere, Sean giving up a degree in law, me a degree in radiography.

  It was a tricky time with Penny because in her eyes I’d ruined her son’s future. ‘Nineteen is far too young to be parents. What sort of life can either of you offer a child when you’re still children yourselves?’

  That’s how she put it, but again, there was a subtext, this one being that she’d spent goodness knows how much on Sean’s education at Sedbergh School, only to have him blow it on some silly local girl he should have got rid of ages ago.

  To her credit, Penny softened when Alice arrived. She became the doting grandmother and I was able to tolerate the constant digs about our recklessness because, simply, without my own mother, I needed her.

  ‘Lucy’s starting to wean Alfie,’ she says now. ‘You should see the lengths she goes to, Natty. She has the most wonderful piece of kit – an electric steamer. It keeps all the nutrients inside the vegetables. Then she purées them or pushes them through a sieve and freezes the lot in ice-cube trays . . . The work that’s involved, it absolutely amazes me. Like I said, though, she has the time. She can afford to do it properly.’

  I smile weakly because, the thing is, I went through all the same palaver when Alice was born. I was so set on proving everyone wrong, so set on demonstrating that it was not a mistake for us to have a baby, that I tried my damnedest to be the perfect mother. I, too, steamed and puréed. I, too, breastfed longer than anyone was really comfortable with. I, too, carried my babies everywhere to give them the full Continuum Concept experience.