Read The Boy in the Olive Grove Online

Authors: Fleur Beale

Tags: #Teen & Young Adult, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Literature & Fiction

The Boy in the Olive Grove (8 page)

‘Good to see you, love. We need to talk business.’

Iris opened her mouth, but I put a hand on her arm and she shut it again.

‘We don’t need to, Dad. I’ve had a meeting with Beverly and she brought me up to speed.’

Iris gave me a narrow look, but Dad didn’t appear to notice anything unusual about a banker rolling out in the weekend to talk to an eighteen-year-old.

‘Ah,’ said Dad. ‘Good. Now all we need is a plan.’ He stirred in the bed, and got busy looking old and worn and tired all over again.

‘It’s all under control. And don’t worry about Bernie. I won’t sack him. I promise.’ I picked up his hand, holding it in both of mine. ‘Dad, I don’t know if we’ll be able to turn the factory round, but I promise you I’ll do all I can to save it. On one condition.’

Iris tensed up again. Dad hovered between hopeful and tired. ‘And that would be?’

‘You’ve got to let me make the decisions. Just till you’re well again. You’ve got to trust me. I know that’ll be hard. I’ll make mistakes. It’s inevitable. But I’ll try my hardest, and the only reason I’m doing this is to save your stupid life, so if you’re going to worry anyway then the deal’s off.’ I sniffed and wiped my eyes. Bloody parents.

He narrowed his eyes at me this time. ‘Hmmm. Fair enough. Fair enough. Iris, love — what do you think?’

She kissed his cheek. ‘I think she’s a chip off the old block. And I’m warning you, Charlie: If I see you worrying despite Bess working her fingers to the bone, I’m going to tell on you.’

‘You women!’ Dad said, settling back and ceasing to look old and tired.

Chapter Ten
 
 

THAT NIGHT
,
I retreated to my room. Mum wasn’t talking to me, and her disapproval filled the air. It scared me to realise just how much I’d relied on Hadleigh to reassure me that I wasn’t the awful person she made me out to be. If only he’d contact me — it mightn’t change our mother, but I’d feel much less alone. All I could do was keep on sending the messages.

Getting on like a house on fire(!) with Iris. Can do with warmth, you wouldn’t believe the toxic sludge around here.

I stopped, wondering whether to tell him the full Iris story. What the hell — the mood I was in, I might as well go for broke.

Re yr ideas re the reason for my binge — Iris has got a theory that blasts yours out of cyberspace. Nuff to say it involves her and me in a past life. Apparently I was a mean, nasty bastard who burnt wives when he got tired of them. Hads, I wouldn’t believe it for a second except that she told me what I’d seen in my head before I said even half a word about it. Freaky, bro.

Btw, dad’s done a deal with the bank to keep the factory
going till Xmas. Prob means they’ll have to sell the house to pay the money back. Hasn’t told Iris but I’m going to. You are well out of it, Hads. You’d have chains on your soul by now. So don’t come home till things have got sorted or gone belly-up. I’d quite like to hear from you though. Nah, scrub that — I’m desperate to hear from you. Sorry again for you know what. Love you.

 

IRIS WOULD’VE SAID
something by now if Dad had told her about his deal with the bank, so I guessed she still didn’t know about it. It wasn’t my place to tell her, I knew that, but if I was in her shoes I’d be steaming furious at being kept in the dark. It looked like it was up to me to enlighten her. I texted:
Can I come to dinner tomorrow? Pls!

A reply shot back immediately:
You are welcome any time. xx

I shelved the tangles of my current life and immersed myself in the familiar world of my friends via Facebook. I only went to bed once I’d fully caught up with my previous world.

The next morning there was still nothing from my brother. I thought Mum would greet that news with silence, seeing she wouldn’t want to criticise him, but as usual I could never second-guess her. ‘Your brother will have his reasons for not staying in touch. You should respect that.’

I gaped at her, imagining the hell that would erupt if I tried the incommunicado trick.

She put a bowl of strawberries on the table. ‘He’s a young man. I’m delighted he’s so independent. I’ve no patience with mothers who demand constant news of their adult children.’

I got my mouth shut. She was a star, no doubt about it.

‘I’ll be at the factory all day today, Mum. Iris has asked me to dinner tonight, so you won’t have to bother about cooking for me.’

‘Kindly do not mention that woman’s name in my house.’

‘Sure, Mum. I’ll refer to her as the woman whose name must remain unspoken.’ I ate the strawberries without savouring them. When I mushed a few on my plate, they ran red with blood.

I couldn’t get to the factory quickly enough. The first thing I did was boot up the computer and open Eddy’s promised email. I sat back, amazed at what he’d produced. I reached for the phone. ‘Hey, man, these are fantastic!’

‘Thanks, boss. One problem, though. We need to get brochures printed. Not sure what that’ll cost or how long it’ll take.’ He sounded despondent.

I wasn’t in the mood for despondent. ‘How about we put them on a computer. A tablet would be even better. You could take that around to show clients.’

I waited while the cogs ticked away in his brain — didn’t have to wait long. ‘Right. I’ll try it. Don’t have a tablet, though. Have you got one?’

‘Mum has. Meet me here in thirty.’

‘Right you are, boss.’ No despondency now. He seemed to find me being his boss hilarious.

But now came the really tricky part — wrangling the tablet from Mum. Luck was with me: she was deep in the garden. ‘Forgot something,’ I called, rushing inside and stuffing it in my backpack. Sneaky, but I knew pigs would be jetsetting all over the sky before she’d lift a finger to help Dad and the woman whose name must not be spoken.

Eddy, driving a surprisingly tidy Honda, turned up two minutes after I got back. ‘Wow! Look at you!’ He’d got the haircut already. ‘Turn around. Let me admire the rep standing in all his glory before me.’

He grinned, and shuffled his feet in
embarrassment
. ‘You get the tablet?’

‘Stole it,’ I told him. ‘Do your best not to lose it or break it. Come on, let’s upload the images now, then you can get going. Which shops are you going to, any ideas?’

‘I’ve been thinking about that,’ he said. ‘There’s a couple in Hamilton. One each in Matamata and Cambridge. I think I should head for Auckland tomorrow.’

‘Report back when you’ve done the rounds today. We’ll have a better idea by then whether the tablet is a goer or a dead duck.’ I took Dad’s credit card from the safe. ‘Have this. You’ll need petrol. Get a receipt.’

That suppressed hilarity again. ‘Yes, boss.’

I waved him goodbye. He was right to go instead of me. If he found me hilarious, then for sure no shop owner worth a peanut would take me seriously.

While I waited for the others to arrive, I searched online for turned products Bernie could make, but I found none we could integrate into our furniture
production
. I gave up and typed in
past life experiences
. Who would have thought? Cyberspace is swarming with those who claim to have lived before, and those who, for a fee, offer to help you find out who you’ve been. I scanned the case studies and letters from grateful clients. Most of them seemed to have been in the French Resistance or the American Civil War. How unimaginative is that? You’d think they’d at least vary the script.

The squeaking door jerked me back into the sanity of ordinariness. Alton and Maurice came in, with Clint, the blueprint for his handsome son, a minute behind them.
Stop it. That way, madness lies
.

‘Finish the fence today, boss?’ Maurice asked.

Ah, yes. I had a factory to run.

‘We could do with a gate,’ Alton said.

‘Been thinking, ’bout that. Bernie could make a gate. Put turning into it.’

Wow! Something positive from Clint! I threw my arms around him, kissed his cheek, and managed not to wish it was his son’s. ‘Clint! You’re a marvel! That’s a fantastic idea.’

He smiled. ‘Ring him up, Bess. He’s a bit down, to tell you the truth.’

‘Can you do it, Clint? He can’t hear me. Makes no difference how loud I shout.’

‘Sure, boss.’ Clint went into Dad’s office and came back with the phone up to his ear. He hardly raised his voice as he explained to Bernie what was happening — it must have been something to do with pitch, because Bernie heard him all right.

We all heard his reply.
‘I’ll be right there. You can rely on me.’

‘Will he be able to design the gate as well as build it?’ I asked.

Clint laughed. ‘Just wait and see. He’ll be happy as a pig in clover. I reckon there’s a good couple of weeks’ work there for him.’

The men took themselves off to build a fence. Alone in the empty workshop, for a few moments I could indulge in a dream where it was Nick out there working, and not his father who looked so like him.
Idiot.

I went into the office and put two of the unsold tables on Trade Me. Bernie turned up just as I finished. The squeaky door announced his arrival, and I ran to hug him, bellowing, ‘Bernie, it’s so good to see you. Thanks for coming in.’

We laughed, both of us fully aware he couldn’t hear a word I said. I took his arm and we went outside. I called, ‘Clint, can you tell Bernie what we’re after?’

I hung about, trying to work out why Bernie could hear Clint’s voice perfectly. Yet another unsolved mystery in my life.

At the end of the day, Bernie strode off looking jaunty and purposeful. I watched Clint get into his car and thought about his son. Nick had the same strong bone structure, same swarthy colouring, the same dark eyes. He’d been such a rotten kid, so full of himself, and his sense of humour was pathetically basic. Who could have known he’d grow into a
drop-dead
dreamy, sensitive man? I didn’t blame Lulu for attaching herself to him. Lucky cow.

I locked the place up, doing my best to lock up thoughts of Nick and Lulu as well. I concentrated instead on how I’d break the bad news about the house to Iris. I drove there, trying to think of a gentle way to do it and came to the conclusion that there wasn’t one.

She was home, in the kitchen and singing along to Elvis. Better than Abba, I guess. She looked happy, she sounded happy. Dad’s heart must be mending, just when I was about to put a crack in hers.

She shut down the noise, then kissed my cheek. ‘He’s so much stronger today, Bess. It’s all thanks to you, you darling.’

I pulled a stool up to the bench. ‘Would you say it was justice? I burn you in one life, save your husband in another?’

‘You could go back to take a look for yourself,’ she said. ‘You never know, Charlie might be in that life too.’

I held up my hands. ‘No. Not doing it.’

She didn’t look surprised. She wasn’t offended either. ‘Those pictures haven’t reappeared?’

‘No, thank god. Look, Iris, there’s something — has Dad talked to you about money?’

‘Ah,’ said my stepmother. ‘No, he hasn’t. I’ve suspected for a while that business hasn’t been the best. He, of course, refuses to talk about it.’

‘I’ll tell you everything, but you might need a slug of gin.’

Iris put a hand over her heart. Damn, now it was me scaring
her
. I jumped in before her imagination could come up with something even worse that what I had to tell her. ‘He’s borrowed sixty thou from the bank. This house is the security. First repayment is due the second week of the new year.’

She didn’t reach for the gin. She made a cup of mint tea and all the time she was doing it she said nothing.

‘Iris?’

‘It’s not good to become attached to things. To places. But bugger it, Bess — I love this house! It’s got such a positive atmosphere. Good bones and good vibes.’ She gazed out the window. ‘My garden too. There’s a lot of love gone into that soil.’

‘I’m sorry. I promise you I’ll do everything I can think of to save the business. I’ve had one of the guys out there today, scouting for work—’

Oh my god, Eddy still had the tablet. If he took it to Mum’s house the floors would run red with my blood.

Iris seemed to be in a place far away, so I snuck into another room to use the phone to warn him.

Sure, he said, he’d bring the tablet to Iris’s house, no sweat.

That was it, no hint of how he’d got on or when he’d be here.

Back in the kitchen, Iris was still gazing out the window.

‘Iris? Are you okay? Are you going to tell Dad that you know about the loan?’

She sighed ‘A good question, and I’m not sure of the answer yet. Anyway, there’s nothing I can do about it right now. Let’s just get on with organising dinner, shall we?’

I set the table, fuming over Eddy’s non-appearance. If he’d gone straight home to his mummy and was busy feeding his face instead of letting me know how he’d got on, I’d bloody deck him. Half an hour later, though, he rolled up the driveway.
Give him the benefit of the doubt. Be nice, Bess.

Getting out of a small car when you’re a tall bloke looked to me like an exercise in reverse origami.

Before I’d sorted out which question to ask first, Iris was there asking him if he’d like to stay for a meal.

‘Would I ever! Thanks, Iris. I was going to open the baked beans when I got back to the flat.’

He noticed my swiftly concealed astonishment.

‘I’ve been flatting for a couple of years now,’ he told me, his hand patting the air above my head.

‘Bully for you, you great big adult.’ I beamed my most admiring smile at him. ‘Now, how did it go today?’
Tell me, tell me. And make it good news.

He shrugged. ‘Not great. I visited Charlie first up, got him to check the figures. He gave me a few pointers about what to say to people.’

‘He didn’t tell me you’d been in,’ Iris said. ‘How do you think he was looking?’

‘Better. He doesn’t believe we can save the business, though. Didn’t say as much, but you can tell.’

‘So what happened today?’ I swear if he didn’t tell me soon, I’d choke it out of him.

Iris shooed us to sit down at the table. Eddy put the tablet in front of me. ‘This worked great. But I didn’t get any orders. Not even a nibble.’

‘Shit.’ I hadn’t realised how much I’d been hoping — expecting really — that everything would fall into place. ‘What did they say? Did they give a reason?’

Eddy looked uncomfortable at that, but Iris said, ‘Tell it like it is, Eddy. We can’t fix it if we don’t know the full story.’ She gave me a meaningful, fiery
witch-type
look as she said that.

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