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Authors: Helen Fielding

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“Er, well, Rosie's just come back from Nambula where she's been working in a refugee camp. They have seven thousand malnourished refugees about to descend on their camp and no supplies. They need an airlift of food quickly. The idea is that we should do a one-off live performance of a specially written speeded-up
Hamlet
using all these names, and on either side we do an emergency appeal. It might seem a bit derivative but—”

“Keep going, lad, keep going.”

Oliver glanced up at him for a second, nonplussed.

“The problem is, if it's going to be worth doing we have to get it on the air in an unfeasible amount of time, actually within the next two or three weeks.”

“Ah. I'm with you. Bit of a bugger that. Yeah. Bit of bugger. Naah, forget it. Too short notice . . ”

“It
is
possible to do it in the time,” I said. “We've been offered a sponsored flight to get the food out to Nambula, and Nambulan Airways could give us some free flights if we wanted to take a crew and some artists. It would save thousands of lives, maybe tens of thousands of lives.”

Oliver was sitting there like a sack of potatoes. I trod on his foot. He jerked upright. “I wondered about putting it in the
Soft Focus
slot,” he mumbled. “Also there's a mobile satellite dish sitting in Nairobi at the moment.”

“If we leave it longer than that it will be too late,” I said. “We've got twenty thousand already in the camp, starting to go under because we haven't enough food, and when the others arrive . . .”

Vernon's bloated face grew troubled. “Kiddies in a bad way, are they?”

“I just wish you could see it.”

He looked away misty-eyed. The cunt tickler trembled. Vernon sat for a while, fingering it.

“It always gets to the children first, that's the worst of it.”

“We'll do it,” he said. Then he jumped to his feet. “We'll do it. Get that dish up there. Get 'em on the phone. It's only fartarse and fannying about for Global Whatsit.”

Oliver looked as though he was trying to swallow an oyster which was still in its shell.

“Get a banner done—THANK YOU CAPITAL DAILY TELEVISION—get the little pickaninnies to hold it up.”

I opened my mouth to speak and shut it again.

“Get Kate Fortune out there in a little safari suit. What about Tarby? What about Monkhouse? What we need, boy, is someone with heart.”

Oliver was rubbing the back of his neck.

“Forget the
Soft Focus
spot. That load of old fartpantsbollocks. This is mainstream. Get those kiddies right up against the mid-evening surge, where everyone can see them. Don't want a dry eye in the house. Might even do it myself, if you're lucky.”

He plodded into the center of the zebra-skin. He stood there deliberating, tugging one end of the mustache pensively.

“Now,
that
might just be a very good idea. I'll do it myself. I haven't been in Africa since nineteen forty-two. I fancy a trip. Might even say a few words while I'm at it.”

He turned to me. “Don't you worry, luvvie. I'll see it right for the kiddies. Right, lad. Get on the phone. Call Ian Parker in OB Ops. Tell him Vernon Briggs told you to call and I want that satellite out of Nairobi and on its way to that camp, with a crew, this time tomorrow. Leave the slot with me, son. You go and get your cast list smartened up. We don't want any more of this Alas, Poor Yorick brigade. Get me some decent names on board, then we'll be up and running.”

Come on, Oliver, I thought. Make a stand. Tell him what we're trying to say. Tell him it's not supposed to be a tear-jerking jamboree. But he sat completely mute. It was extraordinary.

“Cat got your tongue, lad? Come on, step to it.” Vernon opened the door and gestured us out. “I'll see you same time tomorrow, see how you're doing. Put your dick back in your pants and get moving.”

Oliver attempted to saunter out, followed by me.

“Don't you worry luvvie, leave it with me,” said Vernon and slapped me on the bottom.

Halfway down the corridor I burst out laughing. “What are we going to do?” I said, helpless. “It's great that he's behind it, but—”

“I know,” said Oliver, starting to laugh as well. “We can't have him directing it out in Africa.”

“Not through his cunt tickler.”

“Don't worry,” he said. “I'll handle him.”

“But that's what's so funny,” I said. “You can't,” and collapsed again.

“Come on, let's go for a drink,” he said, grinning foolishly.

So we did. We talked, and it was nice. Friendly. Equal.

*

When I got home I was very happy. It was all going great. Vernon was behind the broadcast now. Oliver was back to sanity for the time being. The sponsorship was in place. SUSTAIN thought they could get the first lot of food on tick till we raised the money. The scripts were coming in. The celebrities were being helpful. I'd been home for an hour, having a bath, eating cheese on toast in the kitchen. At nine o'clock I went to put the television on and saw a message from Shirley on the mantelpiece.

CATHERINE KELLY CALLED FROM THE DAILY NEWS
.

Catherine Kelly was Oliver's contact on the paper. I'd seen her for an interview the day after I first saw Oliver in his office before Charitable Acts existed. I'd told her all the details of the Kefti story, and she'd been very interested, but nothing had appeared.

I picked up the phone and dialed the
News
.

“You want Catherine. Hang on, I'll just get her. Sorry, she left five minutes ago. Can I give her a message?”

“Just say Rosie Richardson returned her call.” I left the office number.

The next morning I rushed to the newsagent's as usual and leafed through the
News
excitedly. Nothing, nothing, nothing. Then I opened the center page and nearly dropped the paper. There was a
full-page spread with a picture of me in evening dress, together with a cartoon of a giant-fanged insect, superimposed over a photograph of starving African children. The headline was:

I'LL MAKE THE STARS HELP,
SAYS JILTED LOCUST HEROINE

“Actually, can you make that twenty Rothman's as well.”

Beneath the locust was a picture of Oliver with his arm round Vicky Spankie and at the bottom of the page tiny pictures of Julian, Liam, Dinsdale and Barry.

I immediately thought of all the phone calls I'd made to the celebrities the previous morning. Don't talk to the press, I'd said, don't steal the thunder before the launch. Oh, no. Where
had
they got the photo of me? I was wearing the black shepherdess bridesmaid's dress. It must have been that awards ceremony I went to with Oliver. Oh, shit.
Shit.
What had happened? I'd told her about Kefti but nothing about the celebrities. There weren't any celebrities involved at that stage.

The former live-in lover of TV's
Soft Focus
chief Oliver Marchant, 38, flew into London this week in a dramatic mercy dash to save the lives of thousands of refugees threatened by a terrifying locust plague of biblical proportions. Rosie Richardson, 37 [I was
not
37, I was 31], was devastated 4 years ago when Marchant refused to marry her and ended their relationship. [Where had they got all this?] Swearing never to return to England, she left to work in a refugee camp in Nambula, East Africa, where she has remained ever since. In recent weeks, though, the camp has been dogged by terrifying swarms of locusts many miles across, blotting out the sun, pancaking down on the refugees and their crops. Frustrated by the inaction of the aid agencies, Richardson left the camp vowing to return to England and extract her pound of flesh from the lover who had spurned her.

“When I got back I found it terrible trying to adjust to the luxury here compared to the poverty I had come from,” said Richardson.

(I never said that. Oh dear, maybe I did, but that was only half of what I said, and I was talking about the first time I got back in eighty-five. Also, that wasn't in the interview. It was when we were just chatting before she left. What else had I said?)

Still reeling from the trauma of seeing an elderly friend, Libren Aleen, lose 26 children in the famine, Richardson said, “These rich stars have a duty to help.”

(Maybe I had said celebrities
feel
they have a duty to help.)

“They are given so much wealth for their talent. This is their chance to give something back and I'm going to make them do it.” [Never said that.]

After training as a relief worker in Basingstoke, Richardson became a worker for SUSTAIN, running the 20,000-strong camp in Safila in the East of Nambula . . . refugees displaced from Kefti [fine, fine . . . ] defying death in a perilous lone journey deep into the war. “The UN are completely incompetent,” says Richardson. [Oh,
God
] . . . furious with SUSTAIN's refusal to believe her story and send more food she made her dramatic resignation and caught the next plane to London. “The celebrities and the British public are all we have left to rely on.”

It got worse.

At first Marchant, who friends say complained at being “harassed” by Richardson after the relationship ended, refused to help, saying the plan was impractical at such short notice. But Marchant's current girlfriend,
Last Leaves of the Indian Summer
star Vicky Spankie, 26 [she was
30 if she was a day], was moved by Richardson's plight and persuaded Marchant to help.

Vicky Spankie. It must have been her. They had most of the names of the celebrities, bar Kate Fortune and Corinna. It
must
have been the wretched Spankie. I peered more closely at the African picture. It wasn't Nambula or Kefti. It looked as though it might have been Mozambique. There was a quote from the UN at the bottom saying they were still verifying the reports and everything possible was being done. And then another quote.

SUSTAIN spokesman Eamonn Salt confirmed yesterday that Richardson was no longer employed by the agency. “SUSTAIN personnel are strictly forbidden to enter Kefti for reasons of security and diplomatic relations. Any defiance of this edict by an employee would be treated with the utmost seriousness.” Neither SUSTAIN nor CDT, where TV hotshot Marchant is program controller [Vernon wasn't going to like that], claimed any knowledge of the Charitable Acts appeal today.

Friends of Marchant's expressed concern that Richardson was using the crisis as a means to win Marchant back from TV's Vicky. “Of course everyone wants to help the starving Africans,” said one, “but sometimes you mistrust people's motives.” The two stars are expected to marry early next year.

CHAPTER
Twenty-two

I
lit a Rothman's and nearly choked. I walked back to the flat in a daze.

The phone was ringing when I got in. I sat down at the kitchen table and let it ring. It stopped and then started again. Brrr brrrr. Brrr brrrr. Brrr brrrr. Brrr brrrr. I took the little bugger off the hook. A faint noise, like a car burglar alarm, started. Then a voice said, “Please replace your handset.” Dooweedooweee. “Please replace your handset.” I replaced my handset. The phone rang immediately. I bent down and unplugged it, lit another cigarette, choked, put it out, laid my head on my arms and wanted to cry.

Get a grip, I thought suddenly. My shoulders are narrow, but my bottom is broad. I wiped my face with a piece of paper towel, shoved the
Daily News
in the bin and set off for work trying to look tough.

The phone was already ringing when I got into the office.

“Is that the Jilted Locust Heroine? Welcome to the Famous Club.” Oliver.

“Shut up. It's horrible.”

“Horrible? Don't be ridiculous. You just see what happens. All publicity is good publicity, remember?”

“But I've told all the actors not to talk to the press. They'll think I was just trying to get all the attention for myself.”

“I think you'll find they're smarter than that. Now calm down.”

The phone rang again.

“Rosie Richardson, please.”

“Who's calling?”

“Pat Wilson,
Express.

“Could you call the press office, please?”

“I just did. They told me to call this number.”

“Could you—could you call them back and say—”

“No. I'm not playing musical telephones here, love. We want an interview with Rosie Richardson today, and a photo. Have you got a number?”

“I'm sorry, you will have to call the press office, this is a different . . . this is not, I can't help you.” Gulaaarg.

“All right, if that's the way CDT wants to play it. I'll remember that. Bye.”

The phone rang again. “Hello, it's
Woman's Hour
here. Could I—”

I had a brain wave. “I'll just transfer you to the press office.”

The phone rang again. “Hello. Is that Rosie Richardson?”

“You need to talk to the press office. I'll just transfer you.”

“This
is
the press office.”

“Ah.”

At that moment Oliver put his head round the door.

“Oh dear. . .sorry. Yes. . .yes. . .oh dear. . .I see. . . yes. . . Melissa. Could I just interrupt one second . . . yes, I'm sorry . . . oh dear.”

“Give it to me.” Oliver took the phone from me.

“Oliver Marchant here. What's the problem? Yip. Yip. Yip. So what's the problem?” He rolled his eyes at me. “Which is exactly what, as a press officer, you are hired to do. Yes. Was there anything else? Fine. Bye.”

The phone rang again. He picked it up. “Hi. Yip. Yip. Oh, come on, Corinna, for God's sake. It's happened to you often enough. Of course she didn't do it deliberately. Yep. Yes, I think it probably was something to do with Vicky. OK. I'll tell her. Fine. See you tomorrow.”

“Corinna sent her sympathies,” he said, “after a little persuasion. Now don't give it another thought.”

The phone rang again. I picked it up this time.

“Hello, is this Charitable Acts?”

“Who's calling, please?”

“Hi. Good to speak with you. My name is Mike de Sykes. I represent Nadia Simpson.”

There was an expectant pause.

“Nadia Simpson?” I mouthed at Oliver.

“Supermodel.”

“What?” I whispered.

“Very famous.”

“Oh, hello. What was it you wanted?” I said into the phone.

“Actually, we're very surprised you haven't rung us.”

“I'm sorry?”

“Give it to me.” Oliver was trying to take over again. I shook my head and held him back.

“You did realize Nadia is Nambulan?”

“She's Nambulan,” I mouthed. Oliver threw his head back and laughed. “Born in Huddersfield.”

“Shhh. Shhh . . . No, I didn't, actually.”

“Look, Nadia wants to help. Nadia is very upset at what's happening to her people. The girl is destroyed. Now, listen, have I got something for you! Nadia Simpson is telling me she's ready to go out to Nambula.”

“Oh.”

“She wants to come to Nambula,” I mouthed.

Oliver slit his throat both ways with his finger.

“I'm going to bring Nadia in to see you this afternoon. She's got a window at three, OK?”

“It'll have to be the end of the day, I'm afraid.”

“Make it the Groucho. Six-thirty.”

“Six-thirty, Groucho club. Fine, I'll be there.”

Oliver shook his head. “You're wasting your time.”

The phone rang again. He bent forward and pressed buttons.

“Gwen, take Rosie's calls for a while, will you? Thanks.”

He sat on the side of my desk. “Now, my little jilted locust heroine. As the story is out, we'll go with it. Fix a press call for
Thursday—for either ten or three in a conference room here. I'll have a word with Melissa so she can help you. I'll brief the celebs if you give me all the stuff. And we'd better get moving on this Africa broadcast and sort out who's going out there. I've had Kate Fortune on the phone about it twice already. She's got the hide of a Timberland boot, that woman.”

*

“It was
my
idea,” a bald man in horn-rimmed glasses, between me and the bar, was whining loudly. I was watching the scene in the mirror, as London's smarter media types gathered in the Groucho club for their end-of-the-day drinks, sinking into soft dark armchairs, and asking each other how they were.

“I thought it was Jeremy's idea. Hi, Roland, how are you?”

“Roland, hi. How are you? Jeremy put in the initial treatment. But it was my idea. We were in here. We were sitting with Rory, where Jerome and Simon are now. And I'm saying, ‘What about social workers? Twelve-part series Inner London, housing project, battered babies, deportation, solvent abuse,' and with Jeremy it was like, ‘Oh, God, yawn yawn, wor-
thee.
'—Hi! How are you?— Then, next thing, Jeremy's taken it to Jonathan, and suddenly it's, like, he's got the commission, and it's all happening. I mean, I seriously feel justified in ringing Jonathan up and saying something. The point is—Hi! How are you?—it was
my idea.

“Voilà.”
Mike de Sykes, a small, plump man in a white suit placed our drinks on the table. “Nadia won't be a moment. Just popped downstairs to freshen up. Ah, here she is,” he said, looking up at the door. “The girl herself. You're gonna love this girl, Rosie.”

Nadia was a very beautiful girl, with sculpted Arabic features, but there was something about the way she had done her hair, scraped back severely from her face, then ringleting down weirdly from two high bunches, which reminded me of a sheep. A few minutes later, we were deep in conversation. Well, I say deep . . .

“So Mikey's saying,‘Nadia, you should go to Nambula.'And I'm thinking, Why? And I'm pissed at him. You know? Then I see the pictures. And Mikey's saying, ‘Nadia. These are your people.' And
I'm looking at these pictures, of these children that are dying, and I'm thinking, This feels real, you know? This just feels so real. These are my people. And then I'm saying, ‘Mikey I think I'm going to Nambula.'”

“Nadia's a very caring girl,” said Mike, grabbing a handful of Twiglets and shoving them into his mouth.

“And Mikey's saying, ‘Nadia, it's not enough to weep.'And I'm looking at these pictures, and I'm thinking, I really think I am, you know? I'm going to Nambula.”

“Which pictures were these?”

“The ones in the
News,
hon,” said Mike, grabbing another handful of Twiglets. “Nadia was just destroyed when she saw those pictures.”

“If it's the same article I'm thinking of, there was only one picture and it wasn't of Nambulans. I think it was taken in Mozambique, though no one was to know.”

“Nambula's part of Mozambique, huh?” said Nadia.

“No. No. It's a separate country to the north. About two thousand miles to the north, actually.”

“So they put a picture of someone else instead of my people?”

“Nadia, don't get upset.”

“I am upset, Mikey. You're saying, don't get upset. I am upset. This is real for me, you know? They put a picture of this Mozambique, instead of my people. This is why I have to go to Nambula.”

“Were you born in Nambula?” I asked.

“This is what I said to Mikey. I wasn't born in Nambula. Why am I going to Nambula?”

“But your parents are Nambulan?”

“‘Mikey,' I said, ‘my mother is British, my father is British,'” and the accent was mid-Atlantic, “‘so why am I Nambulan all of a sudden?'”

“Your father is Nambulan, hon. His father was Nambulan.”

“So your grandfather was Nambulan?”

“Her grandfather was Nambulan. Nadia feels very close to the Nambulan people.”

“But you realize the people we're trying to help are Keftian?”

“Huh? Mikey, I don't get it.”

“Wait a minute,” said Mike, jutting out his chin aggressively. “You're telling me these people who are starving are not Nambulan?”

Half an hour later, Nadia was beginning to come to terms with the Keftians' infiltration of her people. “I'm really bored with my life, you know?” she was saying. “I really want to change my life. This feels real to me, you know? And I figure if I go out there and we take the pictures then something good will come.”

“What do you actually want to do in Nambula?” said a voice behind me. It was Oliver, standing with a smirk on his face. What was he doing here?

“Hey! Oliver Marchant. Sir. The main man. Let me get you a drink, sir,” said Mike, jumping to his feet. “Oliver Marchant, this is Nadia Simpson.”

“Pleased to meet you. Go on, go on, don't let me interrupt,” said Oliver, drawing up an armchair and motioning to the waiter. “Large Scotch, please, Hannes. Anyone else? Go on, Nadia.”

“Nadia wants people to be aware of what's happening.”

“And what is happening?”

“People are suffering,” said Mike.

“Why?” said Oliver. “Come on. It's important. This is a political issue.”

“Huh?” said Nadia, suddenly nervous. “I don't want to get political. I'm not a political person.”

“Nadia's not a political girl.”

“I'm not a political person. But, you know, I figure it's not enough just to, like, get upset.”

“It's not enough just to weep,” encouraged Mike.

“I know, she wants to weep in front of the cameras,” said Oliver, laughing. “Well, that's sweet, but I'm afraid it's not that sort of program.”

Nadia looked rather hurt and very young.

“But it's great that you want to help,” I said hurriedly.

“Wait a minute. I don't get this,” said Mike. “I don't get it. Nadia Simpson is saying she will give up her time, and go out to Nambula
for you, waive her fee, expenses only, and you're saying, don't call us we'll call you?”

“Precisely,” said Oliver, leaning back with his Scotch. “We have a lot of artists wanting to take part, and we're choosing carefully. If performers are going to stand up on television, in a refugee camp, with messages for the public, then they ought to be informed, and have something responsible to say.”

“Come on, Nadia,” said Mike, getting to his feet.

“But Nadia does want to find out about it,” I said.

“Come on, hon. I'm not having you spoken to like this.”

“Hey, wait, Mikey, I wanna talk to this lady. I wanna talk to the lady. OK, Mikey? I wanna talk to the lady.”

She rearranged the sheep hairdo. “People like to be negative, you know? People like to be negative about doing good. I don't know why they like to be negative, when people are doing good. They like to be negative.”

“They like to be circumspect,” said Oliver.

“Come on, Nadia. We're wasting our time with these people. We're out of here.”

Mike was helping her to her feet, leading her towards the door.

“But you said, go to Nambula.”

“You're going to Nambula, hon. You're on your way to Nambula.”

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