Read Rivals Online

Authors: Jilly Cooper

Tags: #General, #General & Literary Fiction, #Fiction - General, #Television actors and actresses, #Television programs, #Modern fiction, #Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945), #Cabinet officers, #Women Television Producers and Directors, #Aristocracy (Social class), #Fiction

Rivals (66 page)

    'You look like a Christmas cracker,' he whispered in her ear, as he fingered the ruched dress, 'and, my God, I can't wait to pull you.'

    Taggie giggled. She was slightly overwhelmed by how different Hazel had made her look and the sensation she seemed to be creating. Her only aim was to please Rupert. She wanted to show him that she had at last grown up. But as he stared at her, his face totally unsmiling, her courage failed and she gave the dress a desperate tug upwards. Then, just as she and Bas reached the Venturer table, the band started again.

    'Lady in Red,' said Basil in delight. 'How appropriate.' And, taking Taggie's bag from her and dropping it in front of Rupert in a curiously insolent gesture, he swept her onto the floor.

    'I can't dance,' pleaded Taggie, half-laughing. 'I truly, truly can't.'

    'You can with me,' said Bas, putting his hand round her waist. 'This is a nice slow one to start with. This song could have been written for you, you are so so beautiful. 'Never seen you looking so lovely as you do tonight,' he sang, never seen you shine so bright.'

    'I find all this lipstick a bit strange,' said Taggie.

    'Don't worry, I'll kiss it all off later.'

    Taggie blushed. He was at least five inches taller than her, and so supple and strong, and with such a Latin sense of rhythm, that Taggie was soon following him perfectly in time.

    'You dance beautifully,' he said, laying his cheek against her hair.

    'I can do it,' said Taggie excitedly. 'I can really dance.'

    'The lady in red is dancing with me, sang Bas gazing deep into her eyes, 'There's nobody here, just you and me.' What a good thing Annabel had such an exhausting day with the Belvoir.'

    'Lady in red, Lady in red,' sang Taggie dreamily and tunelessly, not knowing any of the other words. 'It is a most gorgeous song.'

    'And you're the most gorgeous girl,' said Basil, french-kissing her shoulder.

    'Very fast man across country, Bas,' said Henry approvingly.

    'Very fast man on the dance floor,' said Freddie. 'Don't they go well togevver?'

    Maud was looking extremely wintry. Cameron was watching Rupert. His face was like marble, but the tendons on the back of his hand, which was clenched round his glass, were like underground cables. He never took his eyes off Taggie as she and Bas moved round the floor. Then, suddenly, as the music stopped and Bas bent his otter-sleek head and kissed Taggie on her crimson mouth, his hand tightened on the glass so convulsively that it shattered. Amazingly he didn't cut himself, but there was glass everywhere.

    'My Auntie was so superstitious,' said Valerie, as a waitress rushed in with a dustpan and brush, 'that if she broke something precious she'd rush down to the bottom of the garden and smash two jam jars to break the run of bad luck.'

    'As Rupert's heart's just been broken as well,' said Cameron viciously, 'we only need smash one more thing.'

    'Shut up,' snarled Rupert, pouring a slug of whisky into a nearby wine glass.

    Declan shot him a warning look. Nor were matters improved by Bas arriving at the table with Taggie.

    'Haven't I done well?' he said smugly. 'Annabel dropped out, so the understudy took her place. I knew you'd be pleased, Maud darling,' he added blithely as he bent down to peck Maud's gritted cheek. 'You were just complaining yesterday Taggie never had any fun.' 'You look absolutely perfick,' said Freddie. 'Where did that gown come from?' asked Valerie accusingly.

    'Corinium wardrobe department,' said Basil, lobbing Freddie's roll at Georgie Baines at the next table. 'Suits her, doesn't it?' 'She looks great,' said Declan proudly. 'But make sure it

    isn't bugged.'

    'All the bug would pick up is the hammering of her heart because she's with me,' said Bas, squeezing Taggie's hand.

    Taggie glanced shyly across at Rupert, who was now looking at her with complete indifference. Suddenly she felt utterly deflated. Even with every stop pulled out, there was no way she could win him. But there was little time to fret. Next minute a thoroughly over-excited Henry had whisked her off to dance. They were just circling decorously when the band broke into 'Rock around the Clock'.

    'Ha ha ha," said Henry, suddenly galvanized like an over-adrenalized tarantula. 'I know this tune. There's life in the old dog yet.' And he flung Taggie across the floor with great energy.

    Every time he twirled her round he nearly pulled her out of her cracker dress. He'll discover a paper hat and a motto in a minute, she thought as she frantically tugged it up again, As soon as the band stopped, a young blood swooped and asked her to dance, and then another, and another. Each one took her telephone number and said they'd ring her.

    Great excitement, because it was regarded as highly symbolic, was caused at the Corinium table when Tony won a portable television on the Tombola.

    'He won't be needing that much longer,' growled Declan, who was getting increasingly worried about Rupert.

    Freddie had also vanished, ostensibly to fetch Valerie some lemon squash, but he'd been away for three-quarters of an hour, and James Vereker could be seen hunting everywhere for Lizzie as he tried to escape from Sarah. Bas claimed another dance with Taggie and persuaded the band to play 'Lady in Red' again. As he and Taggie danced past them, all the band stood up in salute to her beauty.

    Rupert was three-quarters of the way down his bottle of whisky when he was tapped sharply on the shoulder by one of his more forceful lady constituents.

    'I know this isn't the time, but could we have a word about the Swindon-Gloucester motorway?'

    She had a face the colour and texture of corned beef and it was now very close to Rupert's.

    'Bugger the motorway,' he said.

    The corned beef seemed to engorge and darken like the interior of black pudding.

    Getting to his feet, leaving her mouthing apoplectically, Rupert reached the dance floor just as Taggie and Bas were coming off. Grabbing Taggie's hand, he dragged her back. the floor. Alone in the centre, they gazed at each other. Slowly Rupert examined the huge, blackened, almost feverish eyes, the trembling ruby mouth, the quivering white breasts hardly covered by the crimson ruching. Adoring the way she looked normally in old clothes, with hardly any make-up, he detested this new grown-up, glamorous Taggie.

    'What's the matter?' she stammered, stepping back as though scorched by the disapproval in his eyes. 'I hoped you'd l-like it.'

    'You look like a complete tart,' he said viciously, 'and as you're with Bas, you're obviously going to behave like one.'

    Taggie gave a gasp of horror as, turning on his heel, Rupert walked straight back to the table.

    'What was that about?' taunted Cameron. 'I thought you liked little girls with bust measurements bigger than their IQs.'

    "I like them better than fucking American smart asses, snarled Rupert.

    Spitting with fury, passing heraldic shields, suits of armour and antlers of several kinds of deer, Cameron fled to the Ladies. Rupert was a bastard, an utter asshole. But as she looked at her reflection in the ancient, dusty mirror, which should have flattered her, she couldn't blame him for neglecting her. She looked awful, and the black dress she'd thought so sophisticated and understated had understated her so much she was practically invisible. Why the hell hadn't she worn her black suede dress? Savagely she daubed her cheekbones with blusher and emptied the remains of a bottle of Jolie Madame what

    a singularly inappropriate name over

    her wrists and neck.

    Coming out into the long gallery, she saw Tony emerging from behind a suit of armour and went sharply into reverse. He was too quick for her. Grabbing her wrists, he drew her into an alcove behind a huge urn filled with blue hyacinths. She tried to wriggle away, but he was too strong for her. Oh, why did that sweet, heady smell make her almost faint with longing?

    'I've missed you,' he said, as he regained his breath. 'I've never stopped missing you. I need you. Corinium needs you. Come back to us.'

    'Don't be fucking infantile,' hissed Cameron. 'After the dirty trick you've pulled on us?'

    'I'm going to bury Venturer,' he said evilly, 'and you'll go under too. You've just no idea what I've got up my sleeve.'

    Cameron tried not to appear fazed: 'You'll never get away with it. The IBA knows you're as bent as hell.'

    'By the time I've finished with Venturer I'll look like a shining white angel.'

    Drawing her towards him, he slowly fingered her rib cage, then pressed the ball of his hand up against her breast, at the same time running the other hand equally slowly over her bottom. It was an act of assessment - not of lust.

    'Dear, dear,' he sighed, 'you used to have such a beautiful body. Now you could do a commercial for famine relief.' 'Don't be disgusting.'

    'I'm just sad you've lost your looks.' The hand still rotated on her bottom. She shuddered, unable to stop the squirming, helpless, revolted longing. Tony always did this to her. 'I've been working, for Chrissake.' 'You always thrived on work. You're having Rupert trouble. I watched you tonight and last Friday.'

    Suddenly Cameron realized what the scent of the blue hyacinths reminded her of the

    much fainter smell of bluebells in Rupert's wood the first weekend she spent at Penscombe.

    'He's got the hots for Taggie O'Hara, hasn't he?' gloated Tony. 'Everyone's talking about it.'

    In the distance the band was belting out 'Mac the Knife'. It was as though Tony was turning it in her heart.

    'Bullshit,' she said with a sob, and fled away from him, hearing his laughter following her all down the long gallery.

    Cameron was so distraught, she didn't see Declan standing in the shadows of a high tallboy. Worried about her scrap with Rupert, he'd come looking for her, wanting to comfort and steady her. He was about to call out. The next moment he froze as he saw a man emerging from behind the urn. The glint of his huge signet ring as he smoothed his hair, and the almost orgasmic expression on his face as he passed, made him instantly recognizable.

    Declan went straight back to the Venturer table, but found only Maud and Freddie.

    'You was so dramatical in The Merry Widow,' Freddie was saying.

    Was I really?' said Maud, looking very happy.

    'What's hup?' said Freddie in alarm as he saw Declan's face. Sitting down, Declan came straight to the point.

    'I've just seen Cameron talking to Tony.'

    'Just saying 'ullo.'

    'No, it was a long and very intimate conversation. She was in tears when she left him. He looked delighted with himself.'

    'Shit,' said Freddie. 'It's Rupert's fault. He's been diabolical to Cameron all evening.'

    'What's much, much worse is that she and I have been working on the Dermot MacBride deal and the Royal Shakespeare negotiations all week. If she leaks those to him we're stymied.'

    'I still don't fink she's like that,' said Freddie. 'They was probably just reminiscing.' 'We're off,' said a voice.

    It was Bas with his arm round a somewhat tearstained Taggie.

    'You've only just arrived,' said Maud hysterically. 'I know, but we've got somewhere else to go on to,' said Bas.

    Suddenly there was a shriek of excitement as Henry rode a horse into the ballroom and round the floor, followed by hounds. He had snow on his shoulders and his black hat, and all the hounds had snow on their faces and their frantically wagging sterns. Everyone came rushing in to cheer them. There were terrific view holloas, as a hound trotted calmly up to the Corinium table and lifted its leg on the back of

    Tony's chair.

    'Wish that dog was a member of the IBA,' said Freddie. By the time the hounds had gone, Cameron and Rupert were back at the table. Rupert, Declan noticed, had snow on his hair too and was shivering uncontrollably. Maud, too, seemed suddenly terribly upset, particularly when Valerie pointed out how keen Bas seemed on Taggie.

    'Much better for him to find someone nearer his age,' she said smugly. 'Where are they, anyway?' 'Gone,' said Declan.

    'Where?' asked Rupert, looking up sharply. 'I don't know.'

    'Get your coat,' said Rupert to Cameron. He was waiting in the hall, glaring at a buffalo whose eyes were as glassy as his own, making no effort to conceal his

    impatience.

    'It's not easy extracting one's coat from underneath a heaving husband and someone else's wife,' snapped Cameron.

    Outside, the snow was already four inches deep. As the long dresses of departing guests trailed over the white lawn, flurrying flakes seemed to blur the great house and a party of whooping young bloods, all no doubt with Taggie's telephone number in their breast pockets, engaged in a snowball fight, Cameron felt she had gone back four hundred years.

    'I'll drive. You're drunk,' she said to Rupert as they reached

    the car.

    Careful, she told herself, as the Aston-Martin slid all over! the road like Thumper on the ice, he's reached that pitch of drunkenness that will erupt into violence at any minute. Having been beaten up by Tony, she was terrified of It happening again. But as they drew up outside the front of Penscombe Court, Rupert waited until she got out of the car, then slid across into the driving seat and set off in a tremendous flurry of snow.

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