Olivia's Enchanted Summer (3 page)

As she and Jack arrived back at the bus, an elderly woman walked by, dragging a small yapping poodle behind her.

“Excuse me,” said Jack. “You don't happen to know if there's a number 13 Jekyll Road?”

The woman looked surprised. “Goodness no, not for years. It burned down ages ago, when I was still quite young. It was a terrible tragedy.” The woman was clearly lonely and pleased to get the chance to chat. She talked on and on while Jack and Olivia nodded politely, although Olivia could tell her dad was eager to get away. Finally the woman concluded: “The house was never rebuilt. Lots of people are superstitious and don't want to live in a house with an unlucky number or on a plot with a bad history.”

They thanked the woman and got back on to the bus. Everyone could tell from their faces that there was no hope.

“So,” said Pablo, “what do we do now?”

“We go back to Calton Hill and consider our options,” said Jack.

“I'm not sure we've got any options,” said Alicia quietly but with such intensity that Olivia knew as soon as Alicia got Jack alone, she was going to give him an earful. She wouldn't like to be in her dad's shoes when that happened.

Chapter Four

Olivia walked along the tightrope, stumbled slightly and jumped off just before she lost her balance completely and fell. Normally, she loved walking the wire, and even if she was feeling down it always cheered her up, but her heart wasn't really in it today. What was the point of practising any part of her routine when she might never get to perform it? The day had curdled. The time on the Mound, the girl in the yellow dress and the boy-magician all seemed like a long-ago dream that had turned into a nightmare. She had spent some time poring over the Fringe programme in the hope of spotting the show the boy-magician might be in, but with no success.

Everyone's luggage was piled up in the
middle of the big top and the children were all sitting around, playing cards or reading. The sandwiches they had bought on the way back to Calton Hill lay half-eaten on the floor. Most people had lost their appetite and nobody could quite settle to anything. Eel, Aeysha and Georgia had tried to practise their excerpt from
Swan Lake
, which formed part of the show's witty, opening number, but like Olivia they couldn't concentrate and had given up.

Eel was now flicking through a book about famous ballerinas, and Georgia and Aeysha had just given up on a game of cheat with Will, Kylie and a Year Ten boy called Connor O'Toole, and come over to join Olivia. Everyone was very subdued. They knew that they might all be back on the train to London before the day was out unless they could find somewhere to stay. Olivia's phone bleeped with a message from Tom asking what the house was like.

Olivia sighed as she texted back:
House? What house? Turned out to be a figment of someone's imagination. That's the trouble with having a dad who believes everything he sees on the Internet. Disaster. Will explain all later
.

“What else did that woman say, Livy?”
asked Aeysha, who had been trying to quiz Olivia about the garages since they had arrived back at the big top.

“Oh, it was so sad,” said Olivia. “When the house burned down there was a family living there, and the mum and dad were killed. There was a little girl who survived. But the woman didn't know what happened to her. She thought she was sent to stay with an aunt or something.”

“How awful,” said Georgia.

Olivia shook her head. “I know. She'd be pretty grown up by now, of course. At least as old as Dad.” She paused, and added: “But I did see something interesting…”

“What?” asked Aeysha.

Olivia told them about looking through the garage window, and how she was certain that the girl in the yellow dress, her sister and the collie dog were living there.

“Why would they be living in a garage?” asked Georgia. “It must be really uncomfortable. Even though it's summer and warm and dry.”

“I don't know,” said Olivia.

“Maybe we should tell Miss Swan or your dad?” said Aeysha.

“I was going to tell Jack,” said Olivia,
“but I thought he had enough to worry about. Anyway, if they want to live in a garage, it's their business. I don't care. We'll probably never see them again. At least they've got a roof over their heads, which is more than we do.”

As soon as they'd got back to the big top, Jack had gone online and started trying to find an alternative place to stay. Alicia had rung the Fringe office and got a list of letting agencies and hotels, and she and Pablo and Georgia's mum, Lydia, had started to ring round. But it felt like every available house and flat in the city had already been let, and the bed-and-breakfasts and hotels were either full up or way too expensive. Jack was looking increasingly desperate.

“Well,” said Alicia, flipping her phone shut. “That's the last place on the list. They can't help us, either. I know it's tough, Jack, but we're going to have to make some kind of decision. I've got a duty to the children's parents to keep them safe and that includes making sure that they've got somewhere to stay. Unless you've got a better idea, I think we have no choice but to return to London. Perhaps we'll be able to come back in a few days' time if you've managed to find some suitable accommodation.”

Jack shook his head. He knew that if the Swans went back to London, they would never return and his dream of a Swan Circus would crumble to dust. He wasn't sure that his relationship with Alicia would survive such a disaster, either.

“Let's go outside and discuss it,” he said.

Olivia hadn't meant to eavesdrop. She had simply gone to one of the portaloos that had been set up a little way away from the tent, close to where the bus was parked. Alicia and Jack were leaning against the bus talking and they didn't see Olivia enter the little green cubicle. But once she was inside she realised that she could hear them quite clearly and she couldn't resist listening.

“Well, that's that,” said Alicia with a steely finality. “Either we go back to London, or you think again about my other suggestion. As far as I can see it's our only other option, but if you won't do it, Jack, I can't force you.”

“I can't do it,” said Jack. “Not after all these years. I saw Alfie's birth announced in a newspaper and that would have been the time to get in touch. He must be about ten now. I feel terrible that I've never even seen him, never
sent word, never tried to heal the hurt, say I was sorry for what I did and admit I was responsible for such a huge betrayal.”

“It caused a lot of pain,” said Alicia, so quietly that Olivia could barely hear her.

“I know that,” said Jack, sounding really upset. “It was the one thing that Toni and I never talked about, though we discussed everything else. We had no secrets from each other but that was the one thing that was out of bounds. It was too painful for both of us, and I felt too ashamed of what I'd done. And guilty.”

“You can't change the past,” said Alicia. “So maybe you could take this opportunity to put things right–”

Jack cut her off. “How could I possibly call up out of the blue and say: ‘Hi, I just happen to be in Edinburgh and I know I haven't seen you for years and I did a terrible thing but I thought I might move in with you for the rest of month, and oh, I'm sure you won't mind at all, but I'll be bringing twenty children with me, including Toni's and my daughters.'”

“If you can't do it, I could,” said Alicia quietly.

“Have you kept in touch all this time?”
demanded Jack hotly. “Did Toni know?” He didn't wait for an answer. “Don't meddle, Alicia. It was mine and Toni's business, not yours. What happened
happened
. I don't feel proud about how I behaved but I can't change anything now. It's too late.”

“It's never too late with family. It wasn't too late for us, remember,” said Alicia desperately.

Olivia opened the door of the portaloo and crept away. She felt like a thief who had stolen something that didn't belong to her. Secrets. But she could make neither head nor tail of it all. She was trembling slightly. What had her dad done that was so terrible, so awful that he hadn't even been able to discuss it with her mum and that he referred to as a betrayal? Everybody always said that her dad and mum's marriage had been a great love affair, just like in
Romeo and Juliet
. She remembered the Swan acting teacher, Sebastian Shaw, telling her about them during her first unhappy term at the school. He had said that it had been love at first sight but that their relationship had come at a cost. Olivia wasn't sure what he'd meant by that beyond the fact that it had temporarily estranged Toni from her mum. But what could Jack have possibly done
that made him feel so ashamed, and who was this Alfie person?

Olivia's brain was all of a whirl. Whatever her father had done, he wasn't prepared to risk it being found out even to save the Swan Circus. She suddenly felt a surge of anger towards him. It was his fault that they were in this mess. He had mucked up. Everyone knew that you had to take care on the Internet. Things weren't always what they seemed. Even Eel knew that and she was only eight. Olivia had always felt so proud of her dad. People often called him a real-life latter-day hero for his amazing high-wire stunts such as walking across the Niagara Falls. To her he was just Jack, her dad, and he could do no wrong. But now he'd landed them in this mess
and
he had a dark secret, too. She felt the scratchy, itchy feeling in her throat that she knew meant tears. She swallowed hard and stomped back into the tent and sat down by herself a little way away from everyone else. Aeysha looked up, surprised, but just then, Jack, Alicia and Pablo appeared in the tent doorway. They looked serious.

“Gather round, everyone,” said Alicia. The children all moved towards them. Alicia looked
at Jack. Jack cleared his throat. He looked really uncomfortable, his face chalky.

“We've explored every avenue, and I'm afraid it's bad news.” A great groan went up from the children. “I'm sorry, we've no choice but to go back to London.”

There were wails of disappointment and Eel wasn't the only one to burst out crying. Jack looked as if he might be close to tears, too.

“I'm so, so sorry,” he said. “I've let you all down.”

Eel ran towards him and gave him a hug, but Olivia didn't move. “Are you absolutely sure that you've explored every possibility?” she suddenly asked loudly. “Are you sure there isn't somebody you know who we can stay with, even just for a few days while we get sorted?”

Alicia glanced expectantly at Jack, and Jack stared at Olivia as if puzzled by the challenging edge in her voice.

“No, Liv, I'm sorry. There's nobody,” he said, and he averted his gaze as if he couldn't bear her scrutiny. Olivia felt hot and angry. What was Jack hiding?

“Please gather your things,” said Alicia. “If we hurry we might get the train that leaves in
forty minutes. I'll ring all your parents, and of course anyone who needs to stay at the Swan will be able to; there's plenty of room, though the work on extending into the next-door building is a bit noisy.”

Everyone began to collect their belongings in total silence.

“It's so sad our Edinburgh adventure has ended before it really began,” said Aeysha. “Your dad looks really cut up about it.”

Olivia shrugged, disappointment making her blood boil. “It's his own fault, he shouldn't have been so stupid. Everything's ruined because of him! Everyone thinks he's such a hero, and he is. But he's rubbish at all the practical stuff, and because he didn't sort it out properly we have to go back to London and the summer is totally spoilt.”

Georgia and Aeysha looked at Olivia in surprise. She was normally Jack's greatest champion. Olivia ignored them as she packed her rucksack miserably. It had been a long and exhausting day. Now she'd never know which show the boy-magician was in. She began to roll up her sleeping bag and wondered again about the rude, prickly girl in the yellow dress and her
sister. Why were they running from that man and why were they camping out in a garage? Camping out! She suddenly felt a surge of excitement like tiny pinpricks all over her skin.

“Wait, everyone, I've got an idea!”

Everyone turned to look at Olivia, their faces expectant.

“We could camp!” she cried, excitedly. “There must a campsite somewhere close to Edinburgh. Even if it's miles away, we could drive in each day. We've all brought sleeping bags. We'd just need to buy some cheap tents.” Even before she'd finished speaking, a buzz of excitement had started to go round the group, Kylie and Connor were high-fiving each other and Jack had his laptop open as he feverishly searched the Web.

“That's a brilliant idea, Liv!” said Jack, entering “Edinburgh” and “campsites” into a search engine without looking up. “You're a genius.” But Olivia didn't smile at his praise, and as she watched him there was a question in her eyes.

Other books

Echo Park by Michael Connelly
Most Secret by Nevil Shute
After The Storm by Claudy Conn
Nate Coffin's Revenge by J. Lee Butts
A Pigeon Among the Cats by Josephine Bell