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“If it hadn’t been for your father, I’d never have got anywhere. He was so good to me, encouraged me so much, gave me such a lot of help.”
Inside, Griselda’s starved heart warmed a little. She’d loved her father dearly – and the sneers of people like Cynthia Harleston had hurt her a lot.
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“I don’t hold with splitting up estates.”
“Not that Luke’ll want to farm it anyway.”
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Griselda’s visitors followed her ontot he balcony.
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They could all see it in their mind’s eye as well as in reality.
Jacob and Alice’s farm – but being run by a tenant farmer on a short-term lease. And then the old houses up on the Edge behind the farm. Road access, services, sewage, water – all the infrastructure was there, just waiting for someone to exploit it.
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“Tell me the whole story,” he said, and Griselda began.
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“It’s not like Luke to be so aggressive,” Flora said slowly. “I’ve known him all his life, and picking on a woman and her small child isn’t like him. Someone’s wound him up to do it.”
“What do you know about Lucilla? What has Alice said?”
Flora and Griselda both started telling him, piecemeal memories as they came across them. Jonathan stiffened like a bloodhound on the scent when they came to Lucilla’s account of how she’d lost her only child.
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“Mmm. Rowansford’s planning laws do say that. And one person opposing a big development scheme would soon have followers. I’d be one of them myself.”
“And you wouldn’t be the only one,” Archibald added. “The whole of the historical society would be with you, plus all the people with families who like to walk, sledge, play, explore up round that area.”
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Flora looked mildly alarmed. If she’d known what Jonathan knew about Lorraine’s mother, she’d have looked very alarmed.
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Lorraine had come up with a plan. “Use your enemy’s weakness against him, if you can. We know she lied. What effect will finding that out have on Luke? Can we use that?”
“He’ll hate it,” Flora said thoughtfully. “Alice and Jacob are so honest – and so was Sarah. And Luke’s like them.”
“Well, this might work then. We’ll see…”
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“Congratulations! Have you got a date for the wedding?”
“As soon as possible,” Lucilla said, smiling back at Alice. “As soon as possible.”
“So what brings you here?” Jacob asked, but Jonathan directed his answer at Lucilla.
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“Actually,” she said, “I lost my only child many years ago. His father took him from me – and I never found out where they went. I’ve had to accept that I probably never will.” Her big eyes were full of sorrow – Jonathan had to hand it to her, she was a brilliant actress.
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“But this is up to you Matthew. It is for you to choose. To ask you to face your mother again – I know that is hard, and I do not want to push you into something that will hurt you also. We can find another way if you do not wish to do this.”
Actually though, Matthew thought, he was really doing this for Bryony. Bryony who made his dad happy in a way he hadn’t been since Lucilla left them both. Bryony who had wept, remembering Sarah Barden, her friend from her childhood. His phone buzzed in his pocket.
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“Hello, Matthew,” Jacob said with pleasure, and Luke Barden smiled at him too. Alice was about to introduce him to Lucilla, who’d given him the sort of absent-minded smile you give to a stranger. But Matthew got in first.
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Matthew’s original script had just been “Hello, Mum.” And then they were going to take it from there. But Matthew had things he wanted to get off his chest – and finally, he had the chance to do so.
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“You walked out on me. Not a card, not a line, not a message. You dumped Dad because he wasn’t rich enough for you, but why did you dump me? You never got in touch. We stayed at the same address for six years afterwards, and you never even sent me a birthday card.”
That had hurt.
“Why? Why did you leave me?”
And the naked truth of what Matthew was saying was very evident to all round the table.
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Flora had been right – Luke really didn’t like it. His parents had never lied to him – and Sarah hadn’t either. And now the woman he’d dreamt of spending the rest of his life with had lied to him: big time. He looked at her, and it was as though a kaleidoscope had reformed its pattern before his eyes. Alice and Jacob rose from their seats, Alice heading for Jacob’s arms, deeply distressed, and the sight of his mother’s hurt made Luke angrier still.
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And Lucilla knew she’d lost this chance for some easy money, lost the edge she’d had in the situation. But where had that son of hers gone? And how come he’d appeared just at that moment?
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“If you’re looking for Matthew, he’s gone. And you’re not going to hurt him any more than you already have. And before you try anything else…we showed your photograph to the estate agents selling The Towers, Haslingfield House, Victoria House…Guess what. They all recognised you. That would make a good newspaper story, wouldn’t it?”
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It was some three weeks since Alice had discovered that the young woman she’d been ready to welcome as a daughter had in fact been trying to make a fast buck out of them. Flora and the others had been worried that the shock would knock her back, but surprisingly it hadn’t. Instead, she and Jacob were busy carrying on with their plans to spruce up the farmhouse – thanks in no small part to Anita’s help. They hadn’t seen or heard from Luke since that disastrous tea party.
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“What are you planning to make?”
“I’m going to re-cover that settee – I bought the fabric to do it a couple of years before Sarah died, and first I didn’t have the time, and then I didn’t have the heart. But it’s in a terrible state now.”
“Have you chosen a colour for the rest of the wall yet?”
“We’re still thinking about it! Probably green, though.”
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“You know I love helping you. And you’ve been so good to me – without your help, Amy and I probably would have been turned out of our house.”
“Well, if it hadn’t been for that, I think Luke would have married Lucilla – and I can’t believe he would have been happy. Jonathan told Jacob and me about her plans to buy up the rest of the property up on the Edge…”
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“I did it for Bryony as much as for me. Because Sarah was her friend, and she loves Jacob and Alice. And Mum wasn’t out to do them any good.”
Anita, though, was fair game. Flora and Archibald had impressed upon him how good Anita was for his parents, and he could see that, having been round to the house, having heard about the help that she was to them. (“And the help that you weren’t,” said the voice in his head.) But nothing was going to make him like her.
“Nothing at all. Nothing you could do or say will ever make me like you. If it hadn’t been for you…”
“You wouldn’t have found out that your girlfriend was trying to make herself a small fortune in property deals.”
Anita’s voice was as calm as his: this was no huge row this time. But she was giving as good as she got.
“Mum and Dad really like you – I can tell that. And, okay, I admit you’re not in it for what you can get out of it for yourself. Flora and Archibald told me that. So, see them as much as you like. It makes them happy, and that matters to me. And I’ll be polite to you, or I’ll hurt their feelings. Just don’t ever think that we’ll be friends.”