Mistresses: Blackmailed With Diamonds / Shackled with Rubies. Robyn Donald
Читать онлайн книгу.What were you doing there all alone?’
‘Escaping. We’d all been out together, but I wanted some time to myself. So I changed my cufflinks and got away while they weren’t looking.’
‘You changed your cufflinks?’ I echoed, wondering if I’d heard right.
‘Sure. You noticed them, remember? You said the silver plate was wearing off.’
‘Well, they looked really odd—so cheap and tacky.’
‘That’s why I wore them. They belonged to Grandpa Nick, and he always swore that they brought him luck. I suppose they did, in a kind of way. He started the family firm.’
‘He founded the great Bullen empire?’
‘Lord, no! He wasn’t into founding empires. He enjoyed laughing too much. He was a wicked old so-and-so. ’
He gave a reminiscent grin that said everything about his love for his grandfather. It made me like him enormously. And when I say like I mean like. This was nothing to do with the sensations that had been giving me such a hard time almost since the very moment I’d met Jack. It was a warm, friendly feeling, as if I really knew him and we were part of the same family.
And in a sense we were—the family of people who adored their grandfathers—because I felt the same about mine.
‘All he had was a small grocery shop,’ Jack resumed. ‘My father went to work for him and then shunted him aside. Grandpa went into early retirement and, since my mother was dead, I got to spend a lot of time with him. He became my favourite person, and I think I was his, even more than his son. He admired my father’s abilities, but he was scared of him. I was a bit nervous myself.’
He fell silent while the waiter brought the next course and the next wine. When we were alone again I said, ‘Go on. Don’t stop there.’
‘Grandpa Nick and I were like a couple of kids, fooling around together. He never really grew up. I wish I could describe him properly.’
‘You don’t need to,’ I said. ‘He sounds exactly like mine.’
‘Really? Tell me about him?’
‘He’s never grown up either. Just like you said. Grandad has a child’s ability to see the world as he wants it to be, and he’s a great spinner of tales. When I was a little girl I thought it was wonderful, having someone who could dress the whole world up in glitter. I was furious when I discovered that other people call it lying, because it isn’t. It’s just fantasising, and when you’re used to it, it’s easy to sort out the truth.’
‘What did your parents say about his fantasies?’
‘I barely remember them. They died when I was two, and Grandad raised me.’
‘All alone? I mean, you didn’t have a grandmother?’
‘No, she was dead too. It was just him and me.’
I laughed suddenly, because things were coming back to me. Nice things that made me happy to remember.
‘This is what I mean about his stories. According to Grandad, a posse of social workers descended on him, trying to wrench me from his arms, and he beat them off at the door. Actually, his sister told me that he was visited by one friendly, understanding social worker, who had far too much on her plate and was relieved to mark this case “Solved”. When Grandad told her he could manage perfectly well she couldn’t get out of there fast enough.’
‘Did you have many other relatives?’
‘Loads. I was too young to realise why my parents had vanished, and I remember the family getting together a lot, and people crying. Grandad cried more than anyone, but he also cuddled me. Sometimes he cuddled and cried at the same time. We had a wonderful life together. We loved each other and we laughed a lot, and we were happy.’
I stopped because I was suddenly flooded with emotion as I thought of Grandad, how much I loved him and how wretched he was right now. It seemed terrible to be sitting here enjoying the high life while he—
‘What is it?’ Jack asked me.
‘Nothing,’ I said hastily.
‘You’re crying.’
‘I’m not.’
I knew he wasn’t fooled, but mercifully he didn’t press it. His manner simply became more gentle.
‘You love him very much, don’t you?’ he asked.
‘Yes,’ I said, blowing my nose. ‘You said you and Grandpa Nick were like a couple of kids, and that’s how it is with Grandad and me. He looks after me, I look after him.’
‘And it’s been that way for a long time, hasn’t it?’ he asked. ‘Since you were—what? Ten?’
‘More like six,’ I said.
‘Me too. I can’t claim as young as six, but I can remember helping Nick out with the books at the store, because he’d promised Dad he’d have them done by next day and he hadn’t even started them. He kept putting them off because he was hopeless at figures. I could manage figures OK. I don’t mean I was brilliant, but my mind worked that way. His didn’t. He thought it was rocket science. So I did the books, which didn’t leave me any time for my homework. So he came up to the school next day and gave them a sob story to get me off. I didn’t know where to look. I was so sure they’d see through him. But they didn’t. He did it so well.’
‘Oh, yes,’ I said, remembering my childhood. ‘He did it well.’
Now I really liked Jack. Having daft grandfathers, so alike that they might have been twins, was a true bond.
‘Nick was full of silly jokes and superstitions,’ Jack resumed. ‘He believed in lucky charms, and he had a dozen of them, all supposed to work for something different. The most important were the cufflinks. He was wearing them when he proposed to the most wonderful woman in the world, even though he reckoned he had no chance. But he was wrong. She said yes. So he decided they must be lucky, and he treasured them always. It meant a lot that he gave them to me. We both knew Dad wouldn’t have understood.’
‘Do they work?’ I asked.
‘Often enough to be hair-raising. Last night I went to the casino twice, the first time wearing a pair of my own.’
‘Solid gold?’
‘Please!’ he said in a scandalised voice. ‘Bully Jack doesn’t waste his time on gold. Solid platinum.’
I nodded sagely. ‘Twice the price.’
‘Right. Anyway I lost, which is what you expect in a casino. Then later I went back a second time, I was wearing Nick’s “lucky” links, and won ten grand.’
‘Aha! That’s how come you can afford me!’
He surveyed me wryly. ‘We passed ten grand about eleven-thirty this morning. And we haven’t even started on jewellery yet.’
‘Your grandpa sounds great. I can understand why you liked him so much.’
‘I loved him. Mind you, I blame him for everything. If he hadn’t started that store my Dad couldn’t have built it up into a chain and then left the lot to me. It was made very clear that I had to become a tycoon—whether I wanted it or not.’
‘And you expect me to believe that you didn’t?’
‘I wanted to be a vet. But the trouble with money is that if you have it you find that more keeps sticking to you, like mud. And people depend on you—the workforce, shareholders, your sister. You dream about getting out from under, but how can you when it’s going to affect them?’
‘I suppose we all dream of getting out from under,’ I mused. ‘What would your version be? Becoming a vet at last?’
‘No, it’s too late