Midnight Girls (48 page)

Read Midnight Girls Online

Authors: Lulu Taylor

Tags: #Fiction, #General

‘Of course, Lady Allegra.’ The barman instantly began work, handling the tools of his trade with practised ease as he mixed their drinks.

The girls were in the bar. It was still early for Colette’s, and there was plenty of room to sit down. ‘Let’s go over here,’ Allegra said, leading the way across the comfortable seating area and going over to one of the velvet banquettes. She looked elegant in an understated way in her black Burberry shift, nipped in at the waist with a big silver leather belt, and effortlessly graceful on towering Rupert Sanderson heels. She was perfectly made up, her hair long and supermodel glossy, and looked slender and toned.

I’m never going to look like that in a million years
, Imogen thought a little wistfully. Her own outfit – a Top Shop green and grey sequined cocktail dress which she’d teamed with high gladiator sandals that criss-crossed up her legs – had looked delightful and a little mermaidish in her bedroom, but somehow didn’t match up to the expensive simplicity of Allegra’s outfit. But she didn’t have that kind of money – not yet, at least.
Give me time. Ten years and I’ll be a partner and earning hundreds of thousands. Before bonuses
. ‘You look great,’ she said sincerely. ‘I love that dress.’

‘Thanks.’ Allegra smiled. ‘It’s part of the job, really. I have to project the Colette’s style all the time. It is expensive but David gives me a dress and grooming allowance to make sure I’m always perfectly turned out – it’s the kind of thing that matters to him.’

‘Do you mind spending your free time here as well?’ Imogen looked about her at the alcove they were sitting in. A vase of white peonies stood next to a brass lamp with a scarlet shade. Its soft golden light illuminated pictures hung frame to frame – portraits of dogs in this particular alcove. She took a sip of her drink, enjoying the tart taste of cranberry and lime with the slight burn of vodka underneath.

‘Not really,’ replied Allegra. ‘I spend most of my time in the office rather than the club, and anyway, if I didn’t want
to
spend my evenings here, I could hardly expect the members to.’

‘It’s so gloriously glamorous,’ Imogen sighed. ‘Why on earth does it feel so special?’

‘That’s what I’m trying to discover,’ Allegra said, sipping her drink. ‘I’m working out just what the secret is.’

‘Really?’ Imogen gave her a sideways glance. ‘That sounds intriguing …’

Allegra laughed. ‘The astute lawyer! I should have known you’d pounce on that.’ She raised an eyebrow at Imogen. ‘I’ll tell you over dinner.’

‘Oh, yes, please. And I’m starving, so the sooner the better.’

‘So …’ Imogen said, when they were tucked away in the dark dining room at Allegra’s special table, lit only by small tea lights flickering in the Venetian glass holders. ‘Do you have something up your sleeve you haven’t told me?’

Allegra was staring at the wine list. The candlelight played on her hair, illuminating the golden strands. ‘Would you like red or white?’ she asked evasively. ‘You can even go off-menu if you like. We have cases of wildly expensive vintages that aren’t on the list, kept exclusively for our most discerning guests. We can’t advertise them or we’d run out. In fact, we have the last bottles in the world of some vintages. Last week, we had a large family in to celebrate a birthday with a magnum of Château Haut Brion 1875. Seventeen thousand pounds a bottle! They got a taste for it and ordered another, which was our last, so then they moved on to the 1955 vintage, which is legendary, like liquid gold. Six thousand a bottle. They all got completely sloshed on fantastic wine. With the couple of magnums of champagne they ordered as well, the bar bill was ninety thousand pounds. Quite a tab, even for Colette’s.’

Imogen gaped at her.
Ninety thousand pounds?
‘I wouldn’t like to wake up with a hangover like that,’ she said weakly. ‘I was going to say red, but now I think I’ll just have water.’

‘The house red is perfectly delicious and only thirty-five pounds a bottle. We’ll have that.’ Allegra put down the wine list.

Imogen perused her menu and said carelessly, ‘Now, did I miss something or did you just cunningly change the subject?’

Allegra gave her a conspiratorial look and leant across the white tablecloth towards her. ‘I’ll tell you when we’ve ordered,’ she murmured.

Imogen ordered lobster croquettes followed by steak Diane. When she was tucking into her croquettes, she said, ‘So … what’s going on? I know you. Something’s on your mind.’

Allegra gave her an amused look as she broke off a piece of bread and spread some butter on it. ‘God, you’re good. OK, I’ve got a plan.’ She looked around the dark room, filling up now with members and their guests, and dropped her voice. ‘I want to expand.’

‘What? Colette’s?’ Imogen glanced about, wondering how the small space could be used any more effectively than it already was.

Allegra shook her head. ‘No. I’ve realised now that David is never going to be able to alter this place – and, in many ways, he shouldn’t. It’s an institution. Perfect as it is. But I’ve got a hankering to try something new, and I think I’ll be able to persuade him to invest in my plan.’ She smiled and her eyes sparkled with excitement. ‘A new club. One aimed at a different market from Colette’s but that will still offer the high-quality glamour this place is associated with: wonderful service, exquisite food, comfort and privacy – plus a bit of youth and modernity.’

Imogen was impressed. ‘Sounds like a wonderful idea,’ she said enthusiastically. ‘I’d join.’

‘It’s early days,’ Allegra said quickly, ‘and I haven’t yet sorted out all my ideas, but I really think I could be on to something. I’m sure David will be interested.’

Imogen frowned as she mopped up the sauce with her last exquisite morsel of lobster croquette. ‘Isn’t it a bad time to expand? Economically, I mean.’

‘It might be the best time,’ Allegra said quickly. ‘We’re in good shape, and we’ve got some cash to invest. And property is cheaper than it used to be.’

‘Well, I’m sure you know what you’re doing.’ Imogen’s grasp of economics was hazy but the main thing, she was sure, was for Allegra to find the money. If David had it and therefore didn’t need to borrow it, and if they were confident about the new venture, then that was fine, wasn’t it? Except that she’d always heard that the restaurant business was notoriously difficult and quick to fold when times were tough …

They finished their main courses and Imogen ordered the amazing dark chocolate and ginger ice cream.

‘It’s one of Colette’s signature dishes,’ Allegra said approvingly. ‘Much imitated and never bettered. Here, let me have a taste.’

‘Get your own!’ Imogen said with a laugh, batting away Allegra’s spoon with her own. ‘What did Romily always say? A moment on the lips, a lifetime on the hips.’

There was a sudden and awkward pause. Her name was rarely mentioned between them.

‘Do you know how she is?’ Allegra said abruptly, staring down at the table. Her hands had clenched almost involuntarily and the tops of her knuckles were white.

‘No,’ Imogen replied quietly. ‘We’re not in touch any more. I … suppose … we’ve all just drifted apart, haven’t we? I mean, she lives abroad, she’s got that glamorous
heiress
lifestyle, always in the papers, muse to a designer, all that nonsense … I think our worlds have become too different.’

‘Mmm.’ Allegra picked up her wine glass and took a long gulp of red wine. Imogen watched her, feeling sad as she always did when she remembered the way their girlhood friendship had disintegrated. She’d made it plain to Romily that she wouldn’t be forced to choose between her two dearest friends, and her subsequent rejection had meant that Imogen’s loyalty was now all to Allegra. But she’d agonised over what she’d been told. Had Allegra really done that terrible thing and deliberately set out to destroy Romily’s marriage? It was unforgivable if so. Imogen couldn’t bring herself to believe it – there had to be some kind of misunderstanding – but she also couldn’t bring herself to ask Allegra about it. So she let it lie between them, the unspoken question, burning a hole in their friendship that only she could see. Was this a chance to find out what had mystified and bothered her friend for so long? Imogen took a deep breath and looked over at Allegra, hoping her face didn’t give away her sudden nervousness. ‘Well, you know she got married …’

‘Yes, of course. You told me all about it and then I saw her when she was over in London. She was all of a flutter, very much love’s young dream. We had tea at the Ritz.’

‘Did you? You never said.’
Is she about to confess? To tell me what she did?

But Allegra remained clear-faced, calm and innocent. She shrugged. ‘Didn’t I?’

‘Did you know she got divorced after only six months of marriage?’ Imogen watched her carefully, staring into those navy blue eyes.

Allegra looked startled. ‘No, I had no idea. But why?’

‘He got the idea that Romily didn’t love him,’ Imogen said abruptly.

‘Really?’ Allegra appeared genuinely surprised. ‘I got the impression she was completely mad about him.’

I don’t understand
, Imogen thought, baffled.
She’s so plausible, there’s not a trace of guilt about her. But Romily was convinced Allegra was the one who recorded her. Could she have made a mistake?
She said sadly, ‘Well, he turned out to be more interested in money after all.’

There was a flicker of something like relief in Allegra’s eyes but she said nothing, only took another long sip of wine.

A pause settled between them and then Imogen said quietly, ‘I never understood why it went wrong between us. We swore we’d always be friends.’

Allegra looked up at her, a flash of steel in her dark blue gaze. ‘Yes, we swore we’d always be there for each other. Well … I wasn’t the first to break that promise.’

‘What?’ Imogen shook her head in amazement. ‘What do you mean? What did Romily do?’

‘Nothing, nothing.’ Allegra looked suddenly very sad. She gazed down at the snowy white tablecloth and her hand curled into a tight fist. ‘She did absolutely nothing.’

Chapter 41

ROMILY FLEW ON
the family jet to Heathrow with only twenty-seven pieces of luggage and Carlo, her bodyguard. The British driver met her off the plane in the Mercedes and drove her to the family house in London, a beautiful seven-bedroomed white stucco mansion in Chester Square, Belgravia. It was smaller than most of the family houses but one of Romily’s favourites because of the beautiful garden it overlooked.

Once she’d arrived, she summoned her London beauty therapist and masseuse for a full treatment to help her recover from her journey. When she was feeling relaxed and revitalised, she set up her office in a small room leading off the first-floor drawing room that had a charming view over the garden square, and worked on the details of her stay.

Here, there was no Monica to oversee her diary and field calls, but in many ways that made things a great deal easier. Such privacy was useful when it came to conducting the business she kept concealed from everyone closest to her.

She spent her first afternoon working, using the internet to check on progress, emailing her closest contacts and making all the necessary arrangements. There was a lot to catch up on and she felt energised and raring to tackle it all. The most important email she sent simply read,
I’m here
.

When she was satisfied with what she’d achieved, she shut down her computer and went to bed for an early night.

*

Bianca came over the next day. She’d arrived a few days earlier and was staying at the Dorchester.

‘Such a bore,’ she said as she arrived wearing tight black leggings, stiletto boots and a mustard yellow tunic layered with grey and black knits. ‘Mariah Carey’s staying in the hotel. The noise is dreadful.’

‘She’s not that bad a singer,’ Romily joked, leading her through to the drawing room.

Bianca blinked, puzzled. ‘No, I mean from her fans. What a fuss. They scream every time she leaves the hotel.’

‘Of course.’ Romily’s mouth twitched at one corner.

Bianca shook out her hair and walked up to a mirror on the wall, gazing seriously at her reflection. ‘This party tonight, at the Joshis’ house in Kensington Palace Gardens … you’re coming, aren’t you?’

‘Oh, yes …’ Romily looked as though she wasn’t bothered much one way or the other. ‘I’ll drop in for a while anyway. I won’t stay late. I’m so tired.’

‘Did you bring your pink leopard-print Jimmy Choo clutch?’ enquired Bianca, tearing herself away from her reflection.

‘I think so.’ Romily frowned trying to remember. ‘Would you like to borrow it? I’ll go and see if it’s been unpacked. The maid did most of it yesterday.’

She left Bianca in the drawing room and went quickly upstairs where she found the evening bag sitting neatly on its shelf in her dressing room. She took it back to the drawing room and was surprised to find that her friend had disappeared.

‘Bianca?’ she called, frowning, looking around the room. There was nowhere for her to hide – it was a simple square room in tones of white, off-white and oatmeal: cool and serene.

‘In here,’ came the reply, and Romily realised that Bianca was in the anteroom that led off the drawing room, the one she had chosen for her study. She gasped and sprinted across to the doorway, seeing Bianca inside bending over the desk with its open laptop and neat piles of papers.

‘What the hell are you doing?’ barked Romily, her face burning. ‘Get away from there!’

Bianca jumped and looked up, startled. ‘Sorry, darling, I just wanted to check something on the Chanel website …’

‘Get away!’ Romily dashed over and pushed her aside, slamming the laptop shut and gathering up the papers around it. ‘This is private.’

Bianca blinked at her in her usual bemused way and shrugged, unruffled. ‘Sorry, sweetie, didn’t realise.’ Then she saw that Romily was holding the pink leopard-print clutch and her face lightened. ‘Oh, wonderful! You’ve got the bag. That’s great.’

She took it from her trembling hand and wandered back with it into the drawing room, leaving Romily panting and shaking behind her.

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