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Authors: Jenny Harper

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BOOK: Mistakes We Make
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He checked his thoughts. Why was he thinking of Molly? She was no longer available to him, had not been his since the invidious, slithering descent of their marriage into – what? – indifference? No, not that, never that. Yet he’d not noticed how badly they had let things slip. He blamed her long hours. Event management sucked up time. She’d never been there for him when he’d arrived home, late himself, stressed and unhappy. They’d become strangers.

And then there’d been her affair.

The kettle boiled, its whistle emitting a thin shriek.

‘Tea, Adam? Or coffee?’

‘Tea. Please. Can I help?’

He jumped up. Action, any action, was better than sitting here wallowing in unpleasant memories.

‘If you fancy cake, there’s some in the tin over there.’

He remembered the tin. Auntie Jean’s cake tin, the cream one with the pale green lid. There had always been something delicious in that tin. How many times had he and Hugh sneaked down in the middle of the night to raid it? Giggling like girls and sure their exploits would not be found out if only they were quiet enough. As if Jean would not notice that half her biscuits had disappeared, or that the cake had ragged edges!

Emptiness grabbed at him. It was a day for unexpected emotions. He’d grieved for Hugh briefly, but in the course of his busy life, he had not
missed
his cousin. Now, in this kitchen, the beating heart of Hugh’s childhood home, he felt the lack of his presence with an acuteness that shocked him.

‘Lemon drizzle cake?’ He turned to his aunt. ‘You remembered it’s my favourite? I can’t believe you’ve made time to bake. You are a wonder.’

The warmth in his voice was real, and something of his tone clearly reached his aunt. She smiled. ‘Geordie still gets pleasure from it.’

‘Geordie gets pleasure from what?’

Adam spun round. His uncle was standing in the doorway, upright, smiling, but so gaunt that it took all Adam’s self-control to keep the shock off his face. The old collie, Caro, padded in at his feet.

‘My baking.’ Jean’s tone was light. She dropped a hand on the dog’s head. ‘Hi, Caro, you all right? Dogs have never been allowed past the kitchen in this house, but—’

‘—but she refuses to leave my side,’ Geordie finished. ‘You’d think I hadn’t much time left, eh?’

Adam walked across to his uncle and took his hand, scarcely daring to shake it for fear the fragile frame would unknit and collapse in front of him.

‘Here, let me help you to a chair.’

‘I may be dying, but I’m not helpless yet,’ Geordie said, his smile so like Adam’s father’s that Adam almost winced. How could two brothers look so alike and yet be so different? ‘And yes, your baking does give me pleasure, Jean. I’ll take a piece of that cake. How’s that lovely wife of yours, Adam? No bairns yet?’

Adam sucked in his breath sharply. Had he really been so out of touch with his uncle and aunt that they didn’t know about his separation? He cleared his throat.

‘Erm ... she’s still lovely. But I’m sorry to say that the marriage didn’t work out the way we thought it would. We’re living apart.’

He lifted his mug. He didn’t want to look at their faces, because he didn’t want to see surprise or disappointment. But his words fell into silence, so that in the end he had to look up. Jean and Geordie were not looking at him, they were looking at each other. He could not read their expression, but the intensity of the exchange caught his throat.

At last Geordie said, ‘I’m sorry to hear that, lad. Don’t tell me what happened. I don’t want to know. And I won’t lecture you about the “for better or worse” thing that we used to think was important. I imagine your mother’s done that already.’

Adam stared at him miserably. He could find no words to answer his uncle.

Jean said bluntly, ‘Is there someone else?’

‘Not for her, not now.’

‘And for you?’

‘No.’ The answer, out before he could consider it, surprised him.
So what of Sunita?

Geordie lifted his sliver of cake and nibbled at it. ‘Work going well?’ His face was skeletal, but his eyes were still bright and his mind was clearly as active as ever.

This man, Adam thought, had the courage to do what I failed to do. Disliking the law, Geordie had defied his own father, taken out a hefty mortgage on the farm, and left the partnership to follow his dream. Easier, perhaps, with a brother – or at least, it must have seemed so at the time.

‘It’s a challenge,’ he said, a sense of loyalty preventing him from telling the whole truth.

‘Aye, I imagine it is. So’s farming.’

‘You’ve stopped the dairy?’

‘Had to. The price of milk plummeted. But you’ll know that, you’re not daft.’

‘I know. It’s a shame though, I always loved the cows.’

‘We miss them too. We were thinking of getting a few again,’ Jean said. ‘There’re some farmers making more of a success of the dairy business by not selling the milk. They add value to it instead.’

‘I can see how that could be done.’ Adam’s mind had leapt ahead of her words. ‘You’d have to process it in some way, make yogurt, or cheese or butter. Premium products. Maybe organic – could you go organic here, or would that take years?’

‘We’ve been organic for twelve years.’

‘Oh. That’s great. So—’

‘We can’t do it now, not with Geordie—’ Jean gestured at her husband.

‘I’ll be leaving her in the lurch,’ Geordie said. ‘Can’t be helped, but it leaves the farm—’

Jean said, ‘I might have to sell it.’

Adam stared at her, aghast. ‘Sell it? Sell Forgie End?’

‘What other option will I have? I can’t farm the place on my own, not even with help.’

‘No. I suppose not. I can see that.’

He had a sudden vision of Molly in wellies and dungarees, her golden hair blowing in the wind, looking at him and laughing.
Ridiculous
. Even if they’d still been together, Molly had her own career. Ambition had always driven her, and her ambition was most certainly not to be a farmer’s wife.

‘Anyway, that’s our problem.’

Geordie said, ‘I’d like to see your father, Adam. Make my peace. Does he know I’m ill?’

An image of James Blair, his face a mask of stone, rose in front of Adam’s eyes. He’d invited himself to his parents’ house for supper, knowing that pleading his case would be easier with his mother there. ‘He’s
dying
, Dad,’ he’d said.

‘See him, James.’ Rosemary had rallied to Adam’s side. ‘Don’t go to your own grave with this rift on your conscience. He’s your brother.’

But his father had simply turned and left the room.

‘He knows,’ Adam answered.

‘Ah.’ Geordie’s smile was rueful. ‘I see.’

Adam was filled by a surge of anger. It was so
stupid
. Whatever had happened between them, Geordie was dying now. Simple humanity demanded reconciliation.

‘I’ll get him here, I promise,’ he said impulsively. ‘I’ll work on him.’

‘Don’t make promises,’ Geordie said, ‘that you can’t keep.’

‘I’ll keep it,’ Adam said grimly.

He left soon after, full of nostalgia and longing, anger and sadness, assuring them he would return soon and vowing to bring James. It had been a difficult morning – more difficult by far than he had anticipated – and things didn’t get any easier when he finally made it back to the office.

‘Shereen James is pregnant,’ his father said abruptly, not even looking up. ‘We’ll need to get cover. Any ideas?’

Shereen James was a junior secretary, but she was smart and knew the business well.

‘We could get someone from an agency.’

‘That’ll be expensive,’ James Blair growled. ‘Bloody maternity legislation.’

‘Don’t,’ Adam said warningly. ‘Prejudice is out of the ark, Dad. Women have rights, babies need their mothers. We’ll just need to get on with it.’

‘We should have employed a man.’

‘And don’t ever repeat that sentiment outside this room.’ Adam, shaken by his morning’s experiences, was in no mood to put up with his father’s waspishness. ‘This partnership has painstakingly built a reputation for fairness and gender equality and that’s important for our continuing business as much as it is just and proper.’

James Blair looked up and gave a sudden smile. The smile, somewhat rare, changed his face when it came, showed a glimpse of the man Adam knew his father could be. Stress affected them all.

‘Hmmph. Well – any suggestions?’

‘What does Agnes think?’

Agnes Buchanan, chief cashier at Blair King, had been with the firm since she’d left school, heaven knows how long ago. Forty years? There wasn’t an employee off sick or a paperclip ordered but Agnes knew about it and had calculated the effect on the balance sheet. James always referred to her as ‘our rock’ or, in private, and with a drink in him, as ‘the rock of ages’.

‘She suggested Sheila Huffing, the girl who left a couple of years ago to have a baby, but apparently she’s not keen to come back to work.’

Adam had an inspiration. ‘There’s that girl who left last year. Caitlyn ... Caitlyn Murray? I never did understand why she moved on. Some family problem, I think.’

‘Was she any good?’

‘I’ll check. I know people were sorry she left.’

‘Fine.’

James looked down at his papers again, his tone a dismissal.

Adam stood and watched him. He looked so like his brother, or at least like the Geordie Adam remembered before the weight fell off. Was this the moment to tackle him about the visit again?

No. Not at work. There were too many distractions, too many stresses.

‘I’ll get on to it right away,’ he said.

Chapter Eleven

––––––––

M
olly’s father, Billy, lived in a small bungalow in the Edinburgh suburb of Fairmilehead. South of the city centre, high on a slope just below the Pentland Hills, it had been an ideal home for the two of them after her mother Susan died. Logan had been twenty-one and already at university, Molly just fourteen. At first she’d moaned about leaving Hailesbank, but it was more convenient for Billy’s work and she’d soon adapted to the change.

Molly drew up outside and turned off the ignition. Billy kept the place neat. He had been a watch and clock repairer and was by nature meticulous. Precision was his hallmark. He had been forced to learn other skills after Susan died. Cooking – well, he’d never quite mastered that because multi-tasking was not his forte. The carrots would be perfect, but fifteen minutes before the potatoes were soft enough and a full half hour before the meat was ready. He’d managed the laundry. The ironing took him ages, but Molly’s school shirts had always looked brand new. And, to her surprise because she’d thought he’d dislike the inevitable dirt, Billy had really taken to gardening.

She surveyed his work. Neat stone steps up to the front door, three shallow terraces on each side of the path, planted out with alpines and heathers, their colour split by strips of perfectly mown grass. How long would he be able to go on gardening? Or cooking or ironing, for that matter? He was only seventy today – not old by any means, but all those years of close work had taken their toll. Billy’s sight was failing and he’d been told that total loss of vision was probable.

Molly opened the car door and stepped out. They were due at the restaurant by one and she wanted a chat with her father first.

‘Happy birthday, Dad! You’re looking terrific!’

Billy Keir grinned at his daughter, his eyes huge behind his thick lenses. ‘Thanks, love. You don’t look so bad yourself.’

Molly examined him. He’d always dressed neatly, though in recent months she had begun to notice small signs of neglect – a spot on his shirt front, a loose thread on his cuff, tell-tale evidence that worried her. Today, though, he had clearly made a supreme effort. He had donned his best suit, his white shirt looked as though it was straight out of the packet (it probably was) and the burgundy and dark green diagonal-striped tie he’d picked, though on the dull side for Molly’s taste, was knotted perfectly.

‘Logan and I have got you a present,’ Molly said, stooping to kiss his cheek – her father was a good six inches shorter than she was, ‘but we’ll give it to you at lunchtime, if that’s OK.’

‘Very mysterious.’ Billy beamed at her. ‘I hope you haven’t gone to too much expense. I’m an old man, you know. I don’t need anything.’

‘Maybe you don’t
need
anything,’ Molly said, taking his hand and leading him through to his kitchen, ‘but you
deserve
to be spoilt. And today, spoilt is what you’re going to be. Coffee? I wanted a chat before we leave.’

‘That sounds ominous.’

‘Not ominous. Just something I need to sound you out about.’

‘Spit it out, love, forget the coffee. It’ll only make me want to pee,’ Billy said, lowering himself stiffly onto one of the tall stools by the breakfast bar.

Molly sat.

‘I’ve been offered a job,’ she said. ‘Well, more than a job really, a chance to have a stake in a marketing company. Become a director.’

‘Molly Keir! That’s wonderful!’ Billy’s hand shot out and he grasped her arm. ‘My little girl, a company director. Heavens to Murgatroyd. Who would ever have thought it?’

Molly’s heart swelled at his reaction. She’d known he’d be proud of her. The next bit was harder.

‘I haven’t accepted the offer yet. There are a couple of problems.’

The magnified eyes gazed at her questioningly. ‘Oh yes?’

She sipped the steaming coffee. It was too hot and she blew across the surface to cool it down. Here goes.

‘The first thing is investment. Barnaby wants me to put money into the business.’

‘I can lend you some. How much do you need?’

‘Oh, Dad.’ Molly smiled at her father. If he knew just how much Barnaby wanted, he’d probably keel over. It was probably as much as the bungalow was worth, certainly considerably more than any savings he was likely to have. ‘A lot. It’s really kind of you, but I’ll have to look elsewhere. There’s my share of the house—’

Her voice tailed away. If she was going to accept Barnaby’s offer, talking to Adam about releasing equity from the house was the only real option.

Billy’s expression darkened, and Molly knew what he was thinking. Her father had always liked Adam, right from the first day she’d brought him home.

BOOK: Mistakes We Make
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