Crow Stone. Jenni Mills
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Название: Crow Stone

Автор: Jenni Mills

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Зарубежные детективы

Серия:

isbn: 9780007284054

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ disappointed that I’d regained consciousness.

      ‘Groo,’ I said, or something like it. My tongue seemed to have got stuck to my bottom teeth.

      Miss Millichip’s face was very red, and radiating alarm. ‘Bryony, would you go and fetch the nurse? How are you feeling, dear?’

      ‘Unk. Ouughar. Arghright.’ I tried to sit up.

      ‘Lie back, dear. The nurse is coming. You fainted. Best be still for a bit.’ She drew a hand tenderly across my forehead. My hair flopped back off the side of my face. ‘That’s a nasty bruise. How on earth did you get it?’

      The nurse was concerned about the bruise too. She thought it might have had some connection with me fainting.

      ‘No. I must have done it when I went down. Hit my head on something, I expect.’

      ‘Don’t be silly. A bruise doesn’t come out that quickly.’

      ‘Well, maybe it happened when I bumped my head in the bath last night. I was rinsing my hair underwater and when I came up I banged against the hot tap. I didn’t know it had bruised, though. Is it really bad?’ I opened my eyes as wide as I could. ‘Have you got a mirror? Can I look?’

      She was almost convinced. ‘I think we should get you X-rayed.’

      ‘Oh, no. Feel. It’s fine. No hole in the head.’

      ‘You might have concussion.’

      ‘Honestly. I’d know. I’m fine.’

      ‘Have you got a headache? Did you have one last night or earlier today?’

      ‘Absolutely nothing. But …’ I allowed myself to look guilty ‘… I didn’t have any lunch today. It was stew, and I hate that. And I’ve got my period.’

      ‘Ah.’ The nurse thought for a bit. I could tell she didn’t much want to take me down to the hospital on the other side of town. She stared hard into my eyes. I stared back, praying they weren’t crossing.

      ‘OK, then. But I’m going to drive you home, and have a word with your mum. If you feel dizzy again she’s to take you straight to Casualty.’

      ‘There’s just my dad. He wouldn’t want you to worry. I can walk home on my own, really.’

      But I wasn’t going to get away with that. The nurse bundled me into her Morris Minor and drove me down the hill. Of course my father wasn’t going to be in. He wouldn’t be back for ages, but I didn’t tell her that. I said I’d go straight round to Mrs Owen’s as soon as I’d unloaded my books and made myself a jam sandwich, and I promised faithfully I’d pass on the message to my dad about taking me to Casualty if I had another dizzy turn.

      She drove away up the hill, probably glad to get the weekend started early. I watched her go, then went into the house. Jesus looked down at me with his big, sad eyes from the living-room wall. Now he was unhappy I was such a good liar. I hadn’t even started my periods yet.

      When my father came home at six o’clock, he brought with him a big brick of Wall’s ice-cream: coffee, my favourite. He pushed it tentatively across the table towards me. Our eyes met.

       Chapter Seven

      How much a girl’s taste in men changes over the years. When I was at university, we liked wispy, fairy-looking men. Not men like Martin–Martin was never wispy. He could never have fitted the bill, being gay and built like a prop forward. The men who were popular had no chests to speak of, were practically concave, with narrow little shoulders and bony wrists. They looked like stick men, malnourished, but we thought they were sensitive, intellectual types. Ha.

      I married one. Stupid. Martin told me not to.

      Then, later on, all the nice girls liked a stockbroker. Well, perhaps not literally. Most of them were wankers. But somehow the fashion changed to big butch shoulders, solid jaws, smooth well-cut suits, even a bit of a comforting tummy. Lots of business lunches; it told you he’d be a good provider.

      I missed out on that phase. I was still stuck with Mr Sensitive. Only by then that wasn’t the best description of Nick. We were still supposed to be living together, in the Chiswick house we could only afford with my money. But increasingly I was spending time in Cornwall, at the weekend cottage bought out of my overtime when I was on the oilrigs. I hated Nick’s clever media friends, I hated my job with Shell. So, suddenly it was a weekday cottage, and I was learning how mines work.

      By the middle nineties, rough was in. Horny-handed artisans. Muscles, cropped heads, even the odd tattoo. It wasn’t a bad time to be in the digging business. Lots of opportunities. Martin took most of them, but I had my moments. Mr Insensitive, as we should call my ex-husband, had now left for the west coast to write his media novel, witty and ironic, never completed. He thought of himself as living life in the fast lane, but it was only Aberystwyth.

      I’m thinking all this, sitting opposite Gary Bennett in the restaurant he’s chosen. This afternoon Gary had looked like Rufty-tufty Millennium Man in his hard-hat and faded navy sweatshirt, but tonight he’s staggered me by turning up in a suit, charcoal wool, well cut, well pressed. By comparison I feel scruffy, even if these are my best trousers, with a black cashmere jumper. It’s a relief to discover that he hasn’t bothered to clean the mud off the 4x4.

      His taste in restaurants doesn’t fit either. It’s not exactly my sort of place. Rather too much dark red velvet and wood panelling. We’ve been tucked into a cosy corner, so the waiter doesn’t have to pay us too much attention. The food’s OK, classic French, a bit heavy on the sauces, but what’s underneath tastes fresh.

      Gary’s chewing his way enthusiastically through steak au poivre, which is exactly what I would have expected him to pick off the menu. I’m toying with duck, and a very big glass of red wine. His hands have long, sensitive-looking fingers and he keeps his nails neat and clean. I can’t remember when I last filed mine: the usual mixture of lengths and serrated edges. I lay my fork on the plate and tuck my hands under the table.

      In a moment I’m going to have to say something, but I can’t think what. The conversation hasn’t been too agonizingly stilted so far–his time in Northern Ireland, with the Army, my two years in Canada–but it’s not exactly flowing. I’d better have some more wine.

      His head comes up from his steak just in time to see me reaching for the bottle. He halts his fork before it gets to his mouth, balances it carefully with its morsel of bloody meat on the side of his plate, and says: ‘Let me.’

      Glug glug glug. A lovely smell of blackcurrants comes out of the bottle. But I have a horrible feeling I’m not going to find it such a lovely smell in retrospect. It tastes like Ribena tonight, but it will be battery acid in my gut tomorrow morning. I try to put my hand over the glass, but Gary is intent on filling it to the top. ‘Whoa. You’ll get me drunk.’

      ‘You’re not driving. Someone’s got to finish the bottle.’

      ‘Let the waiter have it.’

      Gary looks outraged. I can’t think why: he told me the company’s buying this meal. Or do they have one of those miserly policies where employees have to pay for alcoholic drinks СКАЧАТЬ