A Trick of the Light Ali Carter (best books to read now .txt) đ
- Author: Ali Carter
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Susie, I know youâll be on the road south when you get this but Iâd really like it if you called. We need to talk. Toby x
I chucked the mobile back and started the car. Oh heck, the engine let out an unpleasant roar as I missed the gear. Grrr, Toby, itâs all your fault, your unbelievably manipulative text has got under my skin.
I looked at the dashboard. Itâs just after two. If in a moment of clear thinking he was going to call me, it would have happened in his lunch break, which is over now. Phew, I really donât want to talk to him and for at least the next three to four hours heâll be too busy working for anything else.
Radio 4 played for a change. Two theologians were discussing the meaning of Good Friday. Blast, Iâd completely forgotten itâs a public holidayâŠToby wonât be in the mortuary today. But a split second of thought and I concluded â he was never going to call me. His text was a fine way of turning the tables. The ball was in my court. Heâd made darn sure if we never speak again then itâs all my fault.
I give up. Stuff him. I donât need you in my life, Toby.
I turned the radio off â debating Good Friday isnât my kind of thing. And as I drove in silence, munching up the miles in the fast lane, I pin-pointed everyoneâs reason for being at Auchen Laggan Tosh. I have to make sure no one else was acting with Ewen. I canât just assume he was in it alone.
I remember a similar case of art fraud Iâd heard of before. It happened in Ireland years ago, when a chauffeur faked a Canaletto under his employersâ noses, selling the original and hanging the copy. Not that I think MhĂ iri, Donald or Stuart are involved. Employee teaming up with a family member, no, I donât think so.
Very quickly names began to fall off the suspectsâ list. Janeâs mission was to steal the necklace, Felicity her veil. They cancel each other out. Minty was a pawn in her fatherâs plan and Giles, not the sharpest tool in the box, was sent by his mother to practise his art in the hopes heâd get at least one A at A Level. We can set them both to one side. Shane and Lianne were awarded scholarships so couldnât possibly have orchestrated their place and had Rupert been involved I have absolutely no doubt he would have accidentally let it slip. So, we can put him to bed too. Fergus has far too much pride in his art collection and surely wouldnât have risked exhibiting the copies. Heâs not a part of it. Louis, I fanciedâŠbut now I know he has a girlfriend Tobyâs words, âI donât think you should trust that manâŠheâll hurt youâ, couldnât be more on message. We are a good team. But I bet you heâd never see it like that. Did Louis really pay over the asking price to get his place? Or had Ewen whispered he was a friend in Zoeâs ear and she accepted him to keep the peace?
Bring, bring. Bring, bring. My mobile rang through the loudspeaker. A Sussex number flashed up, I better answer. I was just passing Birmingham on the M6 Toll, making good progress, well over halfway and predicting Iâd be home just before seven.
âHello?â
âSusie, is that you?â
âYes.â
âItâs Lavender Bell.â
âLavender, hello. How nice to hear from you.â
Lavender is a friend, well, an absent friend really, of my motherâs. Going back to when they were teenagers â that period in life when one has a large group of unidentifiable muckers. Mumâs often talked of her but hasnât seen her for many years, the reason being my parents got married very late for their generation, and by then their contemporaries had drifted away. They were out of step. Almost all of their friends had entered into the complacent stage of marriage, done with popping out children and no longer keen on spending time with those in nappies. When I was born Mum had plenty of eccentric spinsters around to keep her vaguely sane, but I do feel a bit sorry for her, looking back.
Anyway, shortly after Iâd made the move to Sussex, three years ago now, Mum told me Lavender lived there too. Something to do with her marrying a banker and bankers apparently â according to Mum â like to settle in Sussex. Propertyâs expensive, this boosts their image and thereâs nothing like a national park to make them feel they own the land. Mum passed on my number to Lavender and ever since sheâs invited me for dinner twice annually. Full points to her for trying and nil points to me for genuinely never being able to go.
âSusie,â she squawked, âI left a message about dinner on your landline. Iâm sure youâve put the date in your diary and just forgotten to let me know?â
One, I donât have an answering machine, but there was no point going into that right now, and two, I couldnât possibly refuse againâŠ
âIâm sorry,â I said out loud in the car, âIâve been away. But Iâm heading home now.â
âOh, jolly good. That means youâll be able to come.â
âWhen is it?â
âTonight.â
âTonight?â I yelped but it fell on deaf ears. Literally. Many of Mumâs age group are by now.
âYes, come for seven forty-five, no need to wear anything dressy.â
âI might notâŠâ
She cut me short. âI know you might not know anyone but donât worry about that. Theyâre very nice. There is someone I think youâll get on particularly well with, a much younger friend of mine, George, Georgina Foss. Iâm sure youâve come across her? She
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