Authors: Cathy Kelly
Nancy letting any furry friendly creature dirty her clothes
with a wet, questing nose or dirty paws.
‘Now,’ he added, ‘let’s welcome Zelda, glamour queen of
the pop scene, and certainly the most beautiful creature to
emerge from Limerick in a long, long time.’
- Nancy’s face tightened. She was from Limerick, if Olivia
remembered correctly. And she hadn’t imagined it: Theo
was sticking discreet little barbs in Nancy’s peach-dad side
every chance he got.
She didn’t waste any time getting her own back.
‘Zelda,’ she cooed, welcoming the nervous young singer
on set with a saccharine smile. ‘Sit beside Theo. He’s
perfectly safe,’ she tittered. ‘Poor dear wouldn’t know what
to do with a pretty girl like you.’
Theo joined in her giggles. ‘She’s only jealous, Zelda,’ he
said confidingly, ‘because I haven’t chatted her up for
years. Not since they stopped paying me to, anyway! Only
kidding, Nance, my pet,’ he added, blowing a kiss to his
co-presenter, who sat there, a smile welded on to her stony
face.
If Theo had it all his own way during the Zelda
interview, flirting and excluding Nancy totally, she was
determined to make him pay when she held court during
the abandoned animal story.
‘Isn’t it terrible the way people treat animals?’ she said
at the end of a heart-rending piece of footage narrated by
the cats’ and dogs’ home representative who sat nervously
between Nancy and Theo on the sofa. ‘Not that you’d
understand this, Theo.’ she said tearfully. ‘He eats veal,’ she said dramatically to the camera.
‘I don’t,’ hissed Theo, rattled. Not adoring children, old
people and animals was death to any television personality’s
career, he knew. Eating veal was like being found to
enjoy slapping little old ladies or, even worse, like a
newspaper splashing your fondness for leather, peephole
undies all over the front page.
‘You do,’ Nancy said. Then, noticing the look of horror
in the producer’s eyes, relented a bit. ‘Or is it somebody
else I’m thinking of?’
‘Must be somebody else,’ Theo snapped. “I love calves - I
love all animals.’
‘Except little fishies,’ Nancy said with her famous winning
smile. ‘You do eat fish, I’ve seen you.’ She faced the
camera: ‘Meat is murder, viewers, but fish is justifiable
homicide!’
Giggling as if she’d just made the most hilarious joke,
Nancy patted the animal expert on the knee. Aware of the
knife-edge tension on set, he jumped.
‘Don’t mind our teasing,’ she cooed. ‘Darling Theo and I
love teasing each other. I pretend to destroy his reputation
and he does the same to me. It’s so much fun.’
‘It doesn’t look much like fun in my opinion,’ Olivia
whispered to Kevin.
‘The viewers think it’s a howl,’ Kevin said softly. ‘They
don’t realise that pair would have each other’s eyes out if
they got the chance. It’s hard to tell which one of them is
capable of throwing the bigger queenie fit.’
Five minutes later, as she stood in her gleaming television
kitchen, Olivia reflected that whatever Kevin’s job
description was, it didn’t cover half the things he did. Not only had he prevented her from murdering Nancy, he’d found her something to wear and kept her so amused with
tales of Theo’s and Nancy’s long-running feud that she
hadn’t had a moment to be nervous about her first live
appearance.
‘You’ll knock’em dead,’ he said, utterly blase.
And she did. From the first moment Theo introduced
her to the viewers - and Olivia had sent up a silent prayer
of thanks to Linda Byrne for making sure it was Theo and
not Nancy who introduced her - she’d felt as if she was
freewheeling down a mountain on a superb bike, heart
lifting joyously with the thrill of it all.
For that first appearance, Theo hung around to help her
in case she got stage fright. But in the end, it was Olivia
who took charge, smiling at his efforts to grate cheese
without grating his thumbs into the bargain.
‘I’m hopeless at this,’ he admitted, sad face incongruous
above his happy lamb jumper.
‘No, you’re not,’ insisted Olivia kindly, the way she
would to a shy second year who was nervous about
cooking. ‘I’ll do that, it’s tricky. Why don’t you arrange the
Spanish sausage on top of this pizza? You’re the artistic
one around here.’
All in all, she and Theo made a far better team than
Theo and Nancy, Olivia decided. Her ten-minute cookery
slot was relaxed and fun. She and Theo chatted with the
easy amiability of people used to each other’s company.
‘It’s delicious,’ he mumbled at the end, as he bit into a
succulent slice of pizza decorated with goat’s cheese and
red onions.
Nancy, who’d been off having her inch-thick makeup
touched up during the slot, appeared beside them suddenly,
like a malevolent cloud dressed in Escada, and
proceeded to look at the assembled pizzas as if they were
decorated with rats’ entrails instead of chorizo, mushrooms
and tuna fish.
‘Goodness, what a lot of pizza.’ she remarked disdainfully,
poking at the most cheese-laden version with a fork.
‘All appallingly fattening, no doubt,’ she added maliciously.
‘Not the sort of thing our viewers want to be stuffing their
faces with.’
Olivia saw her chance and went for it. ‘I don’t find them
fattening, Nancy,’ she said pointedly, and cut a piece from
the cheesy one in question while patting her own tiny
waist. ‘I can eat what I like.’
Under her sunbed tan, Nancy’s face whitened with rage.
Olivia: one, Nancy: nil.
Kevin was still giggling when Olivia joined him behind
the cameras.
‘She walked into that one,’ he squealed delightedly.
‘She’ll never forgive me,’ Olivia pointed out. ‘Although
Theo seemed to like it. He gave me a hug and said “well
done” when we went to the advert break, and I don’t think
he was simply referring to the cookery slot.’
‘Olivia, you were brilliant.’ Paul Reddin arrived from the
seclusion of the control room to give her a congratulatory
hug. ‘You have this incredible screen presence. Everybody’s
going to be watching you and talking about you soon, and
wondering where we found our marvellous TV newcomer.’
As it happened, quite a lot of people were watching her
already. In Wentworth Alarms, Evie and Lorraine had
abandoned their room for the sales office where, perched
on the same swivel chair, they watched the show on an
elderly television set normally only dragged out of its
hiding place for the Grand National when the entire
company all pulled a horse’s name out of an envelope in
an office sweepstake.
Watching Olivia’s lovely face become animated as she
laughed and joked with Theo Jones, while expertly dicing
and slicing at the same time, Evie felt a lump of pride in
her throat. Olivia looked so beautiful, so competent, so
utterly charming. She was wonderful, just wonderful.
‘Don’t cry,’ Lorraine said, seeing Evie’s little face tremble
and water collect in her huge hazel eyes from the
emotion of it all.
‘I know it’s silly,’ she said tremulously, ‘but I’m so proud
of her. Olivia’s always lacked confidence, even though it
was unfounded, but to see her doing this … she deserves
to do so well!’
‘Bleedin’ hell, is she your friend?’ asked one awestruck
sales exec, rooted to the spot with lust at the sight of
Olivia’s exquisite face and elegant figure clad in a lilac top
which was marginally too small for her and, therefore,
sensationally clingy. ‘She married?’
‘Cedric! You’ll never guess who’s on the telly …’
By the end of Olivia’s cookery slot, Sheilagh was
mentally figuring out what she’d wear to go into Navan
town and casually ask people had they seen her Stephen’s
wife on the television that morning? Her new red blazer
and navy pleated skirt, she decided, and the cream court
shoes. So suitable. Her mind already working overtime,
she could imagine the conversations: ‘I’m getting a few
last-minute things for our trip. Cedric and I are going to
Dublin for a few days for a party to celebrate Stephen’s
wife going on the television. Oh, didn’t you know? Well,
we don’t like to blow our own trumpets. Yes, with Nancy
Roberts and Theo Jones. I believe Nancy is wonderful, just
loves Olivia. Merciful hour, would you look at the time! I
must rush. They won’t start the party without us, we
can’t be late!’
Cedric’s roar interrupted her fond imagining. ‘Did you
hear that?’ he demanded, puffing up like an outraged
bullfrog. ‘They said Olivia de Were - bloody de Were. Not
MacKenziel Is our name not good enough for her? I’m
going to have words with Stephen! There’ll be war, I’m
telling you.’
‘I think we should go to Dublin,’ Sheilagh interrupted.
‘Stephen’s away,’ snapped her husband.
‘We’ll phone him,’ she said. Then, as it occurred to her
that her beloved son had kept this whole television thing a
secret from her, she added, ‘I want to find out why he
never told us Olivia was going to be on the television.’
A hundred miles away, unaware of all this, Olivia was
treating herself to a manicure in the beautician’s on the
basis that her hands were always going to be on show on
the programme and needed to look nice. And she’d
decided to treat herself. This wasn’t Stephen’s money she
was spending, she thought, luxuriating in that fact. It was
hers.
She was meeting Evie for a late lunch in half an hour,
and then she was going to take Sasha to the zoo as a special
treat. Stephen was away so there was no need to think
about what complicated dinner she’d have to cook for him
later. She and Sasha could have a McDonald’s in Stillorgan
on the way home and spend a relaxing evening watching
telly. Bliss.
‘You were brilliant.’ yelled Evie when they met in The
Orchard car park. ‘We all watched you and there’s one
sex-mad sales executive who wants to know if you’re
married, single or otherwise available!’
‘Probably otherwise available when Stephen finds out,’
giggled Olivia. ‘Was it really all right? I was so nervous in
the beginning and then it just gelied.’
As Evie only had half an hour to devour her sandwich,
they hurried inside. After ages spent discussing the ins and
outs of television, Olivia suddenly said she must remember
to phone Max and tell him how she’d got on.
‘He’s a lovely guy,’ she added.
‘Is he?’ Evie sounded brittle.
‘He is. And he really likes you, Evie. At that lunch, he
wanted to talk about you all the time,’ Olivia protested.
‘I’d rather not talk about him, if you don’t mind,’ her
friend said shortly.
‘OK.’ Olivia decided that something obviously had gone
on between Max and Evie, something very odd. She’d been
sure there was a spark between them but perhaps she’d
been wrong. In any case, Max must have made his feelings
plain to Evie and she’d rejected him. It must all have
happened badly, although Olivia could hardly imagine
Max messing up something like that. He was so polished,
so sure of himself. But you never knew. The most polished
people sometimes made a complete disaster of things.
The little red message light on the answerphone was
flickering frantically when Olivia let herself and Sasha into
the apartment that evening. Tired after a thrilling afternoon
looking at lions, chimps and a baby goat, finishing up
with a Happy Meal and a fudge sundae at McDonald’s,
Sasha padded into her bedroom to show her beloved
teddies the new fluffy elephant she’d picked in the zoo
shop. Equally happy and equally tired, Olivia shrugged off
her jacket and decided to boil the kettle for a reviving cup
of tea before listening to her messages.
So she at least had something hot and sweet to cling
to when Stephen’s irate voice came on the line: ‘What’s
happened, Olivia? I’ve just got some message that my
father is looking for me urgently and there’s a problem
to do with you. What the hell is going on?’ He’d rung at
half-tour. The second message, which he’d left at half-six,
just moments before Olivia had opened the front door,
was much more to the point: ‘My father tells me you’re
a bloody television star! I can’t believe this,’ he hissed.
‘Did he get it wrong? I never thought the stupid eejit
would lose his mind totally but he must have. Ring me
back and tell me. I mean, I’m here trying to sort things
out and …’
Being cut off didn’t stop Stephen. He’d rung back two
minutes later to continue in the same vein.
Clutching her cup convulsively, Olivia shut him up by
deleting the messages. He knew. Oh, Christ, he knew. And
in the worst possible way, at that. He would kill her,
absolutely kill her. Nobody hated humiliation more than