ask him to pass on a message for Charlie to ring her. Any decent sister â and Charlie was, generally â would want to hear this sort of news straight away.
Guess whoâs been a complete and utter slapper? Me!
Some gossip was so momentous that it demolished all considerations of honeymoon privacy that stood in its path; by pure chance, this was exactly such an instance. Olivia knew she would enjoy gossiping about herself as much as she enjoyed gossiping about other people. More, even. She so rarely did anything that would shock anyone. How refreshing, to be a scandal-maker at her age â to do something indescribably stupid when, in forty-one years, no one had ever feared she might.
Could she ask Charlie not to tell Simon? Some people kept no secrets from their spouses. Would her sister become fanatical about sharing everything, now that she was married? Simon would disapprove, in the way that people who lacked life experience always disapproved of others having adventures they had so far missed out on. He would feel that in someobscure way, his and Charlieâs wedding day had been ruined, degraded, by their two witnesses ending up in bed together.
Olivia sighed as she realised the implications. For Simonâs sake, Charlie would have to be livid and wounded. She wouldnât see Oliviaâs one-night stand with Gibbs as something that had happened to Olivia, but as something bad that had happened to her all-important husband. Perhaps she would also object on her own account, and accuse Olivia of trespassing; Gibbs was police, and therefore belonged to Charlie and Simon, and not to Olivia, whoâd had no right to barge in to a world that wasnât hers, into which she was only invited from time to time, at Charlieâs discretion.
Had she hijacked the most important day of her sisterâs life? Was it unforgivable to cast oneself as a rival leading lady without consulting anybody, when one was supposed to be playing a supporting role? Olivia couldnât decide whether sheâd done a terrible thing to Charlie, or nothing at all. She would never know, unless she told Charlie what had happened; she couldnât work it out on her own, not without knowing what the reaction would be.
I ought to be feeling guilty about Dom, she thought, and about Debbie Gibbs. Theyâre the wronged parties here.
Gibbs was dressed. âIâm off,â he said. âYou can start thinking.â
âSo can you,â said Olivia, wanting a way of attaching him to her, now that he was going. âThink about me, I mean.â
âTo the exclusion of all else,â he said. âFor the foreseeable future.â
It sounded like a quote. Because it was, Olivia realised. He was quoting her.
Sam Kombothekra wasnât used to feeling guilty, but that was how he felt as he sat at a window table in Chompers café bar, waiting for Alice Bean. This was â or would be, assuming she turned up â an entirely unnecessary meeting, yet Sam had chosen it in preference to an afternoon at home with his family. He already knew the answers Alice would give to the questions he planned to ask her. He could have asked them over the phone, but heâd been keen to see her in the flesh, keener than he cared to admit even to himself. Few women were more legendary than Alice in the small world that was Spilling nick. Sam had heard from at least ten different sources that Simon Waterhouse had been romantically fixated on her several years ago. Sheâd been Alice Fancourt then.
Sam knew that her involvement with Simon (which, according to Colin Sellers, had been âa shagless waste of timeâ) had ended badly, that the two of them no longer spoke to one another. How much of the story would Alice tell him today? On the phone this morning, she had asked within seconds of Sam introducing himself if he worked with Simon. Sheâd suggested Chompers as the venue for this afternoonâs