The California Club

Read The California Club Online

Authors: Belinda Jones

Tags: #Romance, #Romantic Comedy, #Travel, #Food; Lodging & Transportation, #Road Travel, #Reference, #General

THE CALIFORNIA CLUB

 

 

 

Belinda Jones

PRAISE FOR BELINDA’S BOOKS

“Fast-paced, enthusiastic, good-hearted… a wise & witty read about the secret desires deep within us.'
Marie Claire

 

‘There’s something about Belinda Jones's writing that takes you away to whatever beautiful setting she's evoking and holds you there right until you reach the last page.’
Daily Express

 

'Great gags undercut with genuinely moving emotion - this is a cut above most romantic comedies. A gem.'
Woman's Own

 

'Definitely worth cramming in your suitcase.'
Cosmopolitan

 

'A deliciously entertaining beach read.'
Heat

 

'Fun, romantic and set in various exotic locations, it's the perfect escapist read for summer days.'
Closer

 

'A sparkling read.'
OK!

COPYRIGHT

Copyright ©Belinda Jones 2014

Cover Design by Jarmilla Takač

Published by Notting Hill Press

Formatted by Polgarus Studio

 

The moral rights of the author have been asserted.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without prior permission of the publisher.

NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR

I think The California Club is my biggest-selling novel to date because of a) the aspirational setting and b) the appeal of a club that would grant you one sun-kissed wish, causing thousands of readers to ponder, ‘What’s my dream?’

You might ask yourself the same question as you tour San Diego, Los Angeles, Yosemite National Park and beyond, and perhaps by the end of the book your answer will change and surprise you!

Enjoy the read!

 

Belinda xx

DEDICATION

For Tony Horkins

(for showing me just how fabulous unrequited love can be)

Table of Contents
Chapter 1

Elliot.

I've been carrying a torch for him so long people mistake me for the Statue of Liberty. In fact just last month I celebrated a whole decade of unrequited love. But now look at me – standing at London’s Heathrow airport about to jet off with His Handsomeness for two weeks of swaying palms, candy-colored convertibles and airbrushed skies.

Shame he's bringing his girlfriend.

Elise.
That's right – Elliot and Elise. The two Es. Shouldn't be allowed.

It would all be fairly unbearable were it not for the fact that I am to be joined by two fabulous allies – Sasha and Zoë. They got me through the first meeting with Elise and they can get me through this. Not that this was supposed to be an ordeal. The original plan was a two-week romp over to California to visit our beloved friend Helen and stage a grand sandy reunion of our old gang: the Brighton Beau-Belles.

For the record, we comprise one beau (Elliot) and four belles (Helen, Sasha, Zoë and me – Lara). Categorically no Elises.

The five of us were drawn together one brow-moppingly hot summer by The Seaflower – Brighton's most wincingly chintzy B&B. I'm allowed to say that because it belonged to my mother. Belonged. Past tense. As of a week ago it belonged to me. I may as well continue using the past tense because, before I can so much as change a lace doily, I am about to lose it. That's got to be the ultimate definition of carelessness – losing a six-guest-room building. And I got off to such a great start – inheriting it without my mother even having to die and just at a time when I fancied a career change.

I'm a Home Stylist which sounds rather bogus, I know, but in reality I make a decent living shopping with other people's money and providing one-of-a-kind finishing touches once the interior decorators have done their utmost. Whether you're after a Regency mud-scraper or Warhol original, an antique Venetian mirror or functioning Sodastream to ruin the look of your Tikki Bar, I'm your woman.

The thought of getting my hands on the B&B – ie: ripping out every carpet and cornice – thrilled me, as for nearly twenty-two years I've been planning a stunning re-design from the depths of my ever-metamorphosing bedroom. Every year since I was eight years-old, my mother has given me a birthday present of a Room Makeover Kit - pot of paint and a new duvet cover in the lean, younger years and then hard cash ever since I was big enough and tough enough to haggle at a flea market.

Each spring I'd create a whole new environment for myself – running the gamut from space-age tinfoil to Zen bamboo. But not this year. This year I'm going to be thousands of miles from home, staying in someone else's hotel, assessing their knick-knacks.

I was hoping we'd be checking in to the hotel where Helen works as head pastry chef – the legendary Hotel Del Coronado, set on a tiny island across the bay from San Diego. It's where
Some Like It Hot
was filmed and still attracts big movie stars today – the day Helen called to say Brad Pitt had just checked in was the day we finally quit our assorted procrastinations and booked our flights.

I don't know why she's got us staying elsewhere as I'm sure she could have wangled us a reasonable room rate with her keen negotiating skills. That's how she got out to America in the first place, on a business exchange with a tech company in Arizona. How she ended up fluffing meringues by the seaside is beyond us all.

Helen has always been the executive among us, even at the age of twenty when she decided to use the B&B as a case study for her Business Studies degree course. That's how we met.

It was an auspicious start – within a matter of months she'd taken over from our accountant, neatly trimming back our overheads and plumping our profits. She was a natural – so smart, so quick, so ambitious – and as the rest of the group began to form Helen easily filled the role of Mother Hen, though never in a clucky, fussy way. It was more that she was the hyper-organized one. Yes, she can come off a little bossy at times but she always has our best interests at heart as she chivvies us along, hell-bent on us reaching our full potential.

‘Oop!’

I step out the way of an outsize family struggling with an over-stacked trolley (which will almost certainly topple over and flatten at least one of their three tots before they reach the check-in desk) and survey the airport concourse for signs of Zoë. I arranged to meet her half an hour early so I could break the news about the B&B to her first. For all her in-yer-face bravado she's going to be the most devastated about losing it. It was her home for seven years, after all.

 

 

Zoë turned up at The Seaflower just shy of midnight one Tuesday in June with a distinctly pink chin and the man responsible for her stubble rash lurching behind her. He was much older – twenty-five, I think. Doesn't sound that old until you consider that she was fifteen at the time. They were both drunk and not the least bit interested in hearing about the coffee-making facilities. The next morning she woke to find him gone, leaving a soggy condom (actually a blessing – teenage pregnancy runs in her family) and an unpaid bill. As a schoolgirl with only a Betty Boop purse-full of coins to her name, this presented her with something of a dilemma.

My mum threatened to call her parents but the look on Zoë's face made me intervene. Mum was late for the hairdresser's anyway so she left the situation in my inexperienced hands. I'd seen enough soaps to know that all problem-solving began with a nice cup of tea and so I took her through to our private living area and reached for the large brown glazed teapot and even made use of granny’s crocheted tea cozy. Something about the clichéd homeliness of it all prompted Zoë to spill her heart out.

She told me all about her volatile, racist stepfather (who seemed permanently furious with Zoë that her real father was black) and her cowering, in-denial mother. She had no one to stand in her corner and I could only imagine what her stepfather would do if he found out what she'd been doing last night, and with whom.

Being five years older than her and having always hankered after a younger sister, I adopted her on the spot. And then my mum did the same for real a year later. The three of us lived in giggly, girlie companionship until the day Zoë decided her destiny lay in Hemel Hempstead. Not an obvious relocation destination for someone hoping to be ‘discovered’, but at the time she had a more pressing reason for moving – her youngest cousin on her blood father's side was diagnosed with dyspraxia (formerly known as the clumsy child syndrome) and in her efforts to gather every scrap of information on the subject she so impressed the MD of the Dyspraxia Foundation that they offered her a job at their HQ in HH. It was just answering enquiries and general office admin but considering Zoë had barely attended school she felt this was her big break.

It was a real wrench watching her leave, not least because I felt like she didn't need me any more. But I understood that she had something to prove to herself – her mother and stepfather barely set a skanky toe outside Brighton's notorious Whitehawk Estate and she has always felt a keen need to
not be like them
. Well I reckon the 'Have a Beautiful Day!' cheeriness of California has got to be about as far from their miserable mindset as possible – must remind her to send them a postcard.

‘Lara!' A clattering of mule heels and jangle of charms announces Zoë's arrival.

Since I saw her last, her springy brown curls have been ironed straight and interlaced with multi-colored extensions, hanging in chunky layers past her shoulders like a carwash brush. Gotta love her – she's full-on drag queen glamor 24/7.

'Did you see him?' she yelps, releasing me from an overexcited embrace.

I take a moment to recover – Zoë's hugs always put me in mind of those junkyard compressor machines that can turn a tank into a battered metal sheet in one crunch.

'Did I see who?' I ask, setting my shoulder back in its socket.

‘David Duchovny! He's over there at the First Class desk.'

Normally we don’t give any credence to Zoë's star-spotting – to her every man in a tuxedo is Pierce Brosnan, every grey-haired gent drinking red wine is Anthony Hopkins and every petite brunette eyeing the security cameras is Winona Ryder. Even if we're at the Churchill Square mall. But in this location, it actually seems feasible.

'He's so sexy, isn't he?' she continues, leering over at his sleepy, stubbly face.

I roll my eyes – considering she's only twenty-five, Zoë is partial to a strange array of retro crushes. I blame the repeats on Living TV.

'I think it's a sign!' she decides.

'Of what?' I laugh.

‘That I'm going to shag a celebrity!’

‘Well, law of averages, it's going to happen sooner or later.'

'I'll have you know I've been very restrained lately,' she sniffs.

'No more single fathers, child psychologists or male nurses?' I check.

'No, I've cut right back!' Zoë looks pious.

'Conserving your energy for this trip?'

She nods eagerly. Men of America beware.

'So what did you want to talk about?' she tilts her head expectantly.

Suddenly I can't do it. The timing is all out. She's hyped up about the trip and I don't want to see the work-of-art that is her eye make-up streaking on my account. Maybe it's best I wait until we're all together?

'Lara?' Zoë tries to prompt a response.

'I just wanted to make sure you'd get here before Elliot and Elise – you know how I feel about seeing him with her …' It's only half a lie – I am genuinely queasy at the prospect.

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