Read The Mermaid Garden Online
Authors: Santa Montefiore
table by the window and ordered scones and tea. Jake was delighted
to see her tuck into the cream and jam with healthy abandon. “I like a
woman who’s not afraid to enjoy her food,” he said.
“Oh, I couldn’t deny myself this,” she enthused, licking a creamy
finger.
“You look very good on it, I must say,” he added, admiring her full
bosom as it strained against the stretchy fabric of her dress. “So, why’s a beautiful girl like you not married?”
She looked down at her ringless finger and sighed. “I’m divorced, ac-
tually, yet to find the right man. I’m an old-fashioned girl at heart. You see, I believe in Big Love—the kind of love that sweeps you away, like
in those romantic novels. There’s no point compromising. I’d rather be
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alone than with a man I don’t love.” She grinned as she thought of
Clementine and what she’d say if she could hear her now. “I want the
fairy tale,” she added firmly. “And nothing less.”
Grey motored the little fishing boat into the secluded bay. Seagulls
dropped out of the sky to swim beside it, hoping to share the spoils of the picnic Marina had prepared. The water was calm, the sky cloudy
but for patches of bright blue that gave them the occasional, fleeting
glimpse of heaven. The wind was autumnal, and Marina pulled her coat
around her shoulders and shivered, hugging Biscuit closer to her body
to keep warm.
Grey steered the boat onto the sand and switched off the engine.
He leapt out and pulled it farther up the beach, making sure that it
wouldn’t slip back into the sea. Marina handed him the rugs and the
picnic basket, and laughed as Biscuit jumped over the stern and began
to sniff the rocks excitedly. Grey gave Marina his hand and helped her
down. “So, this is it,” he said proudly. “The place I’ve dreamed of bringing you.”
“It’s lovely,” she enthused, taking a blanket and shaking it out onto
the sand.
“It doesn’t look like anyone ever comes down here.”
“Then it will be our secret place.”
“I like the sound of that.” He sat down beside the basket. “What’s
in here?”
“All your favorite things,” she replied, joining him on the blanket.
“Ah, bread, pâté, smoked salmon, cheese, and chocolate mousse.” He
laughed. “Darling, you think of everything.”
“Most importantly, the wine.” Snug in a cooler was a chilled bottle of
Sauvignon Blanc. Grey pulled out the glasses and poured the wine. He
raised his glass. “To absent friends,” he said meaningfully.
“To absent friends.” She took a sip. “I miss them, but in a happy way.”
“They sound like they’re having a wonderful time traveling around
South America.”
“That’s the great thing about e-mail. In my day we had only letters,
and they took ages to arrive.”
“You never told me you still have all the love letters I wrote you.”
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“I keep everything. I can’t help it. It’s in my nature to hold onto all the evidence of my life.” She grinned at him wistfully. “Probably because I’m always a little scared of losing it.”
“Clementine has a beautiful diamond engagement ring, thanks to
your magpie instincts.”
“It was strange seeing those pieces of jewelry again. They had meant
so much to me at the time. Now they are just pieces of jewelry.”
“But Clemmie will imbue them with her own associations, and they
will be special to her in the same way that they were once so special
to you.”
She took his hand. “Grey, darling, you’ve been wonderfully under-
standing through all of this.”
“Don’t forget how many years I waited for you to open up.”
“Patience, then, is your most admirable quality.”
“I’d have waited forever if I’d had to. But you know, it would have
been so much easier if you had told me at the start. I’d never have
judged you.”
“I know. But it was so raw, it was unspeakable. Now I can talk openly
about my son.” She smiled contentedly and took a deep, satisfied breath.
“My son—the words are very sweet on my tongue.”
“Who’d have thought, Rafa and Clementine? Your son and my
daughter.”
“I’m going to have to suffer your ex at the wedding in May.”
“She’s going to have to suffer the wedding being held at the Pol-
zanze; I think that’s worse.”
“And I’m going to meet Maria Carmela.” She trembled with excite-
ment. “She’s going to bring photos of Rafa when he was growing up.
How lucky that he fell into such a nice nest. I owe Father Ascanio
so much, and Zazzetta, who I’d always believed to be the bad guy.”
She took another sip of wine. “You know, my life has been so rich be-
cause I have lived twice. If it wasn’t for that one terrible twist of fate, I wouldn’t have met you, Clemmie, and Jake—or Biscuit,” she added as
the dog lay down on the rug and began to sniff the basket.
“Who’s to say what sort of people we’d be if we had never met?”
“That’s a very deep question.”
“Isn’t it good then that we have the whole afternoon to discuss it?”
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* * *
When they returned to the Polzanze, it was already getting dark. The
days were shorter now, the sunlight weaker, the grass strewn with crispy brown leaves and prickly conkers. Only the pigeons cooed on the rooftops as if it were still summer.
Marina gazed upon the house she loved so dearly and thought of
Dante, who had made it all possible; Dante, who was once again part of
her life. She could now remember it all with pleasure, and as she did so, memories buried deep beneath the rubble surfaced again like flowers,
finding their way through the debris into the light where she feasted
her eyes on them nostalgically.
There was only one beautiful rose that came up through the wreck-
age, thick with thorns. It gave her pain to look on it, so she ignored
it, even though it grew bigger and more alluring with each day that
passed. Until one wintry afternoon in December she strode into the
hall to find Jennifer on the telephone.
“Ah, here she is,” she said, making a face at Marina. “It’s for you.” She held out the receiver.
“Who is it?”
Jennifer shrugged. “I don’t know. She says she’s an old friend of
yours. Her name is Costanza.”
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Epilogue
Rafa and Clementine wandered around the gardens of La Mag-
dalena. It had been only two months since they had moved in,
and yet they already felt as if they had lived there all their lives. Maria Carmela had come for the summer, settling herself in the little mermaid garden to read on the bench where Violetta had liked to sit, and
Dante’s daughters visited often with their husbands and children, fill-
ing the pool once again with laughter. They had left Biscuit at the Polzanze with Marina, but La Magdalena was full of stray dogs and cats
Dante had rescued, and Rafa and Clementine loved them all.
The sun hung low in the west, turning the sky a translucent pink and
throwing inky green shadows across the grass. Crickets and roosting
birds squabbled noisily as they positioned themselves for the night. The scents of pine and eucalyptus hung thickly in the humid air, and Clementine breathed it in contentedly, savoring the smells of the foreign
land she had adopted. It wasn’t long before they came across the part
in the boundary wall where the stones had fallen away, leaving it low
enough to scale.
“I wonder why Dante doesn’t want this repaired,” said Rafa, strid-
ing forwards. He picked up a loose stone, tossed it into the air, and
caught it.
“It’s obviously special to him. Did you notice the look on his face
when he told us we could do whatever we liked to the house and gar-
dens, but that this wall has to remain exactly as it is?”
“I would guess it has something to do with Floriana,” said Rafa. “But
somehow I don’t feel we can ask.”
Clementine reached the wall and looked through the gap. Beyond,
the hills of Tuscany undulated softly in the orange light, and she could see the red rooftops of Herba in the distance and the tower of the
church rising above them. Suddenly, she felt the urge to climb to the
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top and sit there awhile. It was peaceful with the breeze in her hair and the sun warming her skin.
“Come and join me,” she said as she settled on the stones. “It’s lovely up here.”
Rafa scaled the wall and sat beside her. “You’re right, it’s a beauti-
ful spot.” He put his arm around her and gently pulled her close. They
watched the sun sinking slowly in the sky and the subtle changes in
color as the day gave way to dusk. It was then, in the face of such splendor, that he knew. His parents had sat on this wall in the same way and witnessed the splendor of sunset as they did. The ghosts of the past
were still here.
“Do you remember Veronica Leppley?” he asked after a while.
“Of course.”
“She once told me that I wouldn’t feel complete until I had found
my soul mate. Back then, I was searching for my mother. But now
I have you, I realize she was right. Finding Marina gave me a sense of
identity—I discovered who I really am and where I come from—but
finding you gave me a sense of wholeness. I feel you complete the circle.
Where I finish, you begin, and where you finish, I begin. Do you un-
derstand?”
Clementine lifted her chin and kissed his neck. “I totally under-
stand.”
“I love you, Clementine. I think we’re going to be very happy here.”
She sighed contentedly, remembering her yearning to run away but
unable now to recall exactly what it felt like. “I love you, too, Rafa,”
she replied, nuzzling closer. “There’s nowhere else in the world I’d
rather be.”
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The DAwcoMb-DevliSh GAzeTTe
“baffles” gentleman thief case drama
—new mystifying developments—
police baffled (again!)
The spate of burglaries in the Dawcomb-Devlish area, targeting
family treasures in stately homes and country house hotels, has
been dubbed the “baffles” case after the eponymous hero of the
movie, Raffles, who is a Gentleman Thief. but the case, which has
generated both fear and amusement across Devon, has confounded
the police. Now it has taken a dramatic turn.
if anyone thought the baffles case could not get any more mys-
terious, they were wrong. in a sensational twist, it seems the thief
was indeed something of a gentleman: he has started to return his
ill-gotten gains.
The first item returned was the silver from Mr. and Mrs.
Greville-Jones of cherry Manor, Salcombe. last Thursday, they
discovered their silver service, worth £20,000, laid up on their dining room table with a note that read:
Sorry the silver polishing took
so long. Baffles
. “it was as if it was laid up for one of my usual dinner
parties,” said Mrs. Greville-Jones.
Mrs. Powell of watertown Park, Thurlestone, found her dia-
mond ring on the windowsill:
This will put the sparkle back on your
finger. My advice, never take it off again! Baffles
, read the note.
The police, however, are unamused: “The perpetrator in this in-
cident may find this amusing,” said Detective inspector Reginald
bud, “but we regard this as a serious incident of breaking and en-
tering.”
one victim who wishes to remain anonymous commented:
“i leave my front door unlocked now to make it easier for him, and
my ten-year-old son leaves cakes and a glass of milk on the kitchen
table in case he’s feeling hungry. A bit like Santa claus.”
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