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Take a Chance on Me Page 2
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Johnny grinned and pulled a face. ‘Not so great. Temperamental creatures, women. They can be pretty hard work.’
They. Just to let her know how popular he was, subject to the attentions of hordes of besotted females. Cleo smiled politely, registering lack of interest, and said, ‘What’s going to happen to Ravenswood?’
‘Sell it, I suppose. If I can.’ Johnny shook his head. ‘Just stick it on the market, ASAP. Not the ideal time, of course, but you never know. Someone might come along and see the potential. And it’d be great if we could find a buyer before Christmas. There’s an opportunity to bag the apartment below mine if we can get a quick sale. I could turn it into a fantastic gallery.’ He stopped and looked at her. ‘Why are you asking? Might you and your chap be interested in putting in an offer?’
Oh yes, that was so on the cards, what with Ravenswood being a seven-bedroomed, detached house with a garden bigger than a football pitch. Although when it was that size, you didn’t call it a garden; it was referred to as the grounds.
‘I could mention it to Will.’ And start buying extra Lotto tickets. ‘How much will you be asking?’
He shrugged. ‘I’ve got a couple of estate agents coming over tomorrow to look the place over and come up with a valuation. I’m pretty out of touch, but somewhere around two and a half, at a guess.’
Two and a half million pounds. Cleo envisaged the number, all those zeros rolling across the paper if you were to write it down. Did Johnny have any idea what an inconceivably huge amount of money that was? And the casual way he said it, as if it were completely normal…
Ah well, maybe she and Will would give it a miss after all. ‘Well, good luck. I’ll leave you to get on.’
As she made to move away, he said, ‘This chap of yours. Does he work in private health insurance?’
‘What? No! Why?’
‘Just curious.’ A smile lifted the corners of Johnny’s mouth. ‘He just looks as if he might, that’s all.’
Ooooooh…
‘Oh dear, look at you.’ Abbie greeted her sympathetically. ‘I saw you talking to Johnny. Been getting under your skin, has he? Here, have a sip of my Malibu.’
Cleo could always rely on her sister to make her feel better. Abbie was looking lovely today, her fine honey-blond hair falling in waves to her shoulders and her gentle face glowing thanks to the subtle application of makeup she generally didn’t wear but liked to save ‘for best.’
Then again, sisterly sympathy only went so far. ‘I’ve got a better idea. Why don’t I have my own drink? Seeing as Lawrence is paying. Which means Johnny is. In fact, let’s make it a great big one. Dry white, please.’ Cleo signaled to Deborah behind the bar. ‘Lovely, thanks. Honestly, he doesn’t change, does he?’ She knocked back some much-needed wine. ‘Two and a half million pounds he’s going to be asking for his dad’s house. He wondered if Will and I might like to make him an offer. And he’s keen to get it sorted before Christmas because he wants to buy another apartment in New York and turn it into a gallery. I mean, does he even care that Lawrence has just died? As far as he’s concerned, it’s a nice little windfall coming along at just the right time… God, it’s enough to make you spit.’
‘Is this a diatribe?’ Tom, Abbie’s husband, looked pleased with himself. ‘Ha, there’s a word I’ve never used before. But it is, isn’t it? Definitely sounds like a diatribe to me.’
Cleo smiled, because Tom was looking so smart in his dark funeral suit and a bright blue shirt that matched his sparkling eyes. It always seemed strange to see him out of his work clothes of dusty polo shirt and jeans. Even his short brown hair had been given a trim in honor of Lawrence’s funeral. ‘Oh yes, it’s a diatribe. Some people just deserve one.’ She nodded and took another glug of wine.
‘But you liked him once,’ said Tom.
‘What?’ Cleo froze. ‘No I didn’t!’
‘You must have done. If you didn’t fancy him, why would you have said yes when he asked you out?’
Oh for crying out loud. To his left, Abbie was suddenly engrossed in a loose thread on her bronze shirt. Her heart beginning to thud in double-time, Cleo said, ‘I don’t know what you’re talking about.’
Tom was actually laughing now, wagging a finger at her. ‘Come on, I know it was a while back, but you still did it. Johnny LaVenture asked you out at the school disco and you agreed, then—hey, mind my drink!’
‘Tom.’ Abbie, who had given him a nudge, shot him a warning look. ‘Shut up.’
Staring at them open-mouthed, Cleo said slowly, ‘Oh my God, you know about that? Both of you know?’
It was her deepest, darkest, most shameful adolescent secret. All these years she’d kept it buried, telling herself that, OK, she’d made an almighty fool of herself, but at least her family didn’t know.
Except… she looked from Abbie to Tom, then back again… it rather looked as if they did.
‘Honestly, you’re such a blabbermouth,’ Abbie scolded.
‘Hey, it was years ago.’ Tom’s grin spread across his face as Ash approached them. ‘What does it matter now?’
‘What are we talking about?’ Ash, whose nosiness knew no bounds, looked interested.
Cleo blurted out, ‘Don’t tell him!’
‘The time Johnny LaVenture told Cleo he was crazy about her and she agreed to go out with him.’
Brilliant, thanks a lot.
‘Oh right, at the school’s end-of-term disco.’ Ash nodded solemnly.
Right, that was it. Ash had only moved into the village three years ago. Facing him, Cleo’s voice rose. ‘Does everyone know about this?’
‘Well, yes. Although I thought it was supposed to be a secret. You weren’t meant to know that we know.’
Cleo swallowed. What had taken place had been enough to mentally scar a girl for life. In fact, she was fairly sure it had mentally scarred her for life. She’d gone along to the end-of-year disco with no expectations other than drinking a few alcohol-free shandies, dancing with her friends, and having a fun time. When Johnny LaVenture had come up to her and asked to speak to her outside, she had initially refused, but he’d practically begged until curiosity had got the better of her and she’d eventually given in. Then, once they were outside, Johnny had haltingly confessed his true feelings for her. He’d only teased her so much, it transpired, to cover up the fact that he really liked her, but now he could no longer hide how he really felt. And as he’d been telling her this, his beautiful dark green eyes had gazed beseechingly into hers, his trembling hands had stroked her shoulders. Cleo, hypnotized by the declaration and scarcely able to take it in, had leaned back against the rough exterior wall of the girls’ changing rooms and been unbelievably moved by the admission; he must have been plucking up the courage to say this for months.
Then, Johnny had falteringly asked her out on a date the following week, and although she didn’t really want to go out with him, she’d known she couldn’t refuse. It would shatter his confidence. Sixteen-year-old boys had easily bruised egos; it would be too cruel to turn him down… just one trip to the cinema, then she’d gently suggest that they’d be better off as platonic friends…
So she’d smiled up at Johnny and said yes, of course she’d go out with him, and at the back of her mind, she had also taken great satisfaction in the knowledge that Ha, all the bitchy girls who’d sided with him and called her Misa would have to be nice to her now.
It had been a heady moment, the kind of turnaround any downtrodden sixteen-year-old could only dream about, but it had actually happened and it felt… God, it felt fantastic! Not only was everything going to be all right from now on, but she hadn’t retaliated, poked fun at him when she could so easily have done, or said something mean. And now he looked as if he was about to kiss her. Well, one little kiss wouldn’t hurt, would it? To be honest, she could use the practice. Tilting her face up to his, Cleo closed her eyes, encouragingly puckered her lips, and waited for—
A snort of laughter directly above her head wasn’t what she’d been waiting for, but it was what she heard. Followed by a chorus of muffled giggles, a scuffling noise, and the kind of clattering sound you’d get if someone standing precariously on the loo in the cubicle below the open window had just lost their footing and fallen off.
Someone was eavesdropping. Several someones, from the sound of it. This was what the girls in her year were like. Not what you’d call mature. Still, did it really matter if they’d overheard? Putting out a hand to reassure Johnny, Cleo said, ‘It’s all right, don’t worry about them,’ and wondered why he wasn’t looking at her anymore.
The giggles turned to shrieks of hysterical laughter and the head of Mandy Ellison poked through the open window. Crowing with delight, she opened her horrible big mouth and yelled, ‘Ha ha, I can’t believe she fell for it, you were brilliant!’
Bewildered, Cleo turned to Johnny. ‘What does that mean?’
Half-smiling and backing away, Johnny said, ‘Sorry, she bet me a fiver I couldn’t do it.’
Everyone was scrambling up onto the loo seats now; along the row of windows, more heads popped out. Everyone was laughing harder and harder. As the realization sank in that she’d been well and truly set up, color flooded Cleo’s cheeks.
Johnny shrugged and raised his hands, absolving himself from blame. ‘I never thought you’d say yes.’
She was torn between wanting the ground to swallow her up and an overwhelming longing to burst into tears. ‘I only said it because I felt sorry for you!’
‘Ha ha ha ha ha! Yeah, of course you did,’ jeered Mandy Ellison.
‘It’s true. I don’t fancy him!’
‘But you seriously thought he fancied you,’ Mandy sniggered. ‘Like that’s ever going to happen, Misa. Ha, you’ve just given us the best laugh we’ve had in months. And all for a fiver.’ As she said it, she grinned at Johnny. ‘Bargain.’
By the time Cleo’s dad had arrived to drive her home, she’d been hanging around outside the school for over an hour. Inside, the disco was about to end.
‘All right, love? Didn’t expect to find you out here waiting for me. Had a good night, have you?’
How could she tell him? The last thing she wanted was her family feeling sorry for her. ‘Not bad.’ Buttoning up the hurt and humiliation, she said off-handedly, ‘Got a bit boring towards the end.’
‘Oh, that’s a shame.’ Her dad gave her a teasing nudge. ‘But did you dance with any boys?’
‘There wasn’t anyone I wanted to dance with. They’re just a bunch of losers,’ said Cleo.
Now, here in the front bar of the Hollybush, the shame was every bit as acute as it had been all those years ago.
Cleo looked at Ash, Tom, and Abbie. She said, ‘Who told you?’
Ash shrugged and pointed at Abbie. ‘You told me, didn’t you? A couple of years back.’
‘Tom told me,’ said Abbie, ‘straight after it happened.’
‘Honestly, why do I have to get the blame for everything? Everyone was having a laugh about it in the pub the day after the disco,’ Tom protested. ‘Stuart Ellison told us about it. His sister Mandy was there when Johnny did it. It was just a bit of fun.’
Cleo resisted the urge to rip every last freshly-trimmed hair from Tom’s head. So all this time she’d been the laughingstock of the entire village. And like one of those well-kept secrets you never imagine could actually be kept secret, she’d had no idea.
What’s more—talk about adding insult to injury—the chances were that if you were to ask him about it now, Johnny himself probably wouldn’t even remember that evening at the school disco when he’d earned himself the easiest fiver of his life.
Chapter 3
The For Sale signs had been up outside the house for over a week now. Having instructed his solicitors to take care of everything, Johnny had flown back to the States the day after the funeral. Busy cleaning the windscreen of the Bentley she was due to take out again this afternoon, Cleo paused as, across the green, two cars slowed to a halt outside Ravenswood.
It wasn’t nosy to watch them, was it? It was being neighborly, making sure the place wasn’t about to be burgled. Although it had to be said, the couple emerging from the maroon Volvo didn’t look like your archetypal burglars. And the other chap, even from this distance, was visibly an estate agent. Of course, where Johnny was concerned, it would be just typical that the first people to view his old family home would fall in love with it at first sight and buy it on the spot.
Cleo was kneeling across the Bentley’s back seat vigorously vacuuming under the driver’s seat when someone pinched her bottom.
‘Oof!’ She collapsed, rolled over onto her side, and pointed the vacuum nozzle like a pistol at Ash. ‘Don’t do that.’
His eyes danced. ‘Can’t help myself. If I see a cute little backside sticking up like that in front of me, I just have to pinch it.’
He was home from work. The downside of hosting a breakfast radio show might be the inhumanly early starts, but the upside was that it was all done and dusted by ten o’clock and he was back at Channings Hill by eleven. Switching off the vacuum cleaner and picking up her polishing cloth, Cleo said, ‘Pass me the beeswax. How’d it go today?’
‘Bloody brilliant. If you’d bothered to listen to it, you wouldn’t have to ask.’ When it came to his radio show, Ash’s modesty knew no bounds. Since taking over the breakfast slot three years ago, having been poached from a smaller commercial station in London, he had conjured a seventy percent increase in listening figures. He was the star of BWR, much loved by his ever-growing audience. As well as local listeners, fans from all over the world were now tuning in to hear him online. On his show, he exuded confidence, wit, and irresistible charm. Women and girls of all ages adored him and Ash played up to this, reading out his fan mail and regaling listeners with indiscreet stories of his wild, testosterone-fueled, Hollywood-style love life.
In reality, out of the studios, his confidence melted away. Actually, that wasn’t true; in the company of friends, people he knew, he was fine. But plant a new and attractive woman in front of him and Ash completely lost it every time. It was like watching a dementor suck the life out of him. Along with the vanishing confidence went the easy wit and charm, their places usurped by clunky awkwardness as, in front of the astonished audience’s very eyes, Ash Parry-Jones shed a dozen years and reverted to being a cripplingly shy, overweight, and unattractive teenager. And no amount of cajoling could snap him out of it, though Cleo had certainly tried. As Ash himself freely admitted, success was the best revenge and, career-wise, he’d achieved that in spades, but it would have been nice if he could have undergone the kind of physical transformation achieved by Brad Pitt when he’d guest-starred in Friends as the once-fat dorky one from school.
Sadly, this hadn’t happened to Ash. He may have lost some of the excess weight that had haunted his adolescence but there was still plenty left; he would never be lithe. His solid frame was always going to be chunky. His hair was fairish, messy, unremarkable. And looks-wise, he had the kind of face that gave the impression of having been put together using leftovers—a wonky nose, double chin, wayward eyebrows, and slightly asymmetric ears. Cliché it might be, and again Ash was the first to point it out, but his was a face perfect for radio. Of course there were photos of him on the internet for those curious enough to track them down, but the vast majority of his listeners had no idea what he looked like. Which meant that girls attracted enough to his radio persona to deliberately seek him out, ended up getting a terrible shock.
‘I couldn’t listen to your show. I was on a job,’ said Cleo.
Ash raised his wayward eyebrows. ‘On the job?’
‘A job.’ She flicked the polishing cloth at him. ‘It was really sweet, actually. A married couple celebrating their golden wedding anniversary. Their children clubbed together to send them on a fantastic holiday as a surprise present. And this morning, they thought they were being picked up by an ordinary taxi.’ Clients like these, thrilled and excited to be taking possibly the first ride of their lives in a limo, were the kind Cleo loved the most. They made up for the silent high-flying businessmen who took the service for granted, the ear-splitting racket generated by over-excited children leaving junior school for the last time, and having to control groups of wildly inebriated women having bachelorette parties. This morning’s lady, bless her, had burst into tears in the back of the Bentley. Through the sobs she’d hiccupped, ‘Oh my days, whatever did I do to deserve a family like mine? I’m the luckiest woman in the world!’
‘And just think how much more they’d have enjoyed the journey if they’d been allowed to listen to my show.’
‘You never give up, do you? You’re nothing but a ratings tart. If you want to be useful,’ said Cleo, ‘you could make me a cup of tea.’
‘Excuse me.’ Ash tapped his chest. ‘This is a future global superstar you’re talking to.’
‘Nice and strong, not much milk, two sugars.’
He ambled inside, returning five minutes later with the mugs of tea. Classily, he’d given her the one featuring the bikini-clad woman whose bikini disappeared when the mug was hot. As Cleo settled herself on the wall separating their adjoining front gardens from the road, the three visitors emerged from Ravenswood. They stood chatting together for a minute before the estate agent jumped into his car and with a cheery wave drove off. The remaining couple surveyed the village before climbing into their Volvo, the tall man opening the passenger door for his alarmingly spindly-legged wife.
‘Do you think they’ll buy it?’ said Cleo.
‘Might do. She looks like a flamingo.’ Ash narrowed his eyes. ‘Not to mention a Radio 4 listener.’
The immaculate maroon Volvo pulled away in stately fashion, made its way past the pub, then, instead of turning left out of the village, carried on around the green towards them at a menacing ten miles per hour. Watching it, Ash hummed the theme tune to Jaws.