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Authors: Mark Mills

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‘Twenty-eight.'

‘Her skinny lines make her look longer.'

Lucy dropped into the deep cockpit, running her hand along one of the benches before gripping the tiller and staring up at the tall mast. ‘Oh, Tom, you're a lucky man.'

‘I thought we'd sail the rest of the way to Le Rayol.'

‘What about the car? My luggage?'

‘Pascal's going to drive it over.'

She smiled, aware now that she'd been set up. ‘I'll have to change my clothes first. I can hardly go to sea dressed like this.'

‘There's a shirt and some shorts down below. No standing headroom in the cabin, I'm afraid, so you'll have to crouch.'

The mainsail was already rigged, and while Lucy changed, Tom rigged the jib.

‘Good work,' came a voice from behind him as he was finishing up. Lucy was barefoot and wearing an old cap tilted at a rakish angle.

‘Thanks, Skipper.'

Her face lit up. ‘Really?'

‘Take her away. There are winches for both halyards, so any half-decent sailor should be able to handle her solo, even in a blow.'

Her eyes narrowed at the challenge.

They slipped the lines and backed the sloop out between the pilings into the harbour. Tom made to paddle the stern around.

‘Stand down, bosun, if you know what's good for you.'

Lucy raised the tall jib so that the wind brought the nose around and the boat began to make gentle headway.

‘So, tell me more about your antidote to Hugo Atkinson,' she demanded.

‘Well, he's American, and he's a painter.'

‘A good one?'

‘Good enough for Yevgeny and Fanya to take him on.'

‘That sounds suspiciously like a no.'

‘He's of the wilfully modern school. You know the sort of thing . . . a bowl of fruit can't be allowed to actually look like a bowl of fruit, it has to look like it's been hurled to the floor, trampled by a battalion of the Welsh Guards, scooped up with a shovel and dumped back on the table.'

Lucy laughed. ‘Well, obviously Yevgeny and Fanya see something you don't.'

‘Large profits, I suspect.'

Yevgeny and Fanya Martynov were an eccentric couple, White Russian émigrés who ran a thriving Left Bank art gallery in Paris devoted to the
avant garde
. They had summered in Le Rayol for the past four years, following their purchase of a pseudo-Palladian villa up on the headland towards Le Canadel. They operated an open-house policy for artists of all kinds, and the steady stream of painters, sculptors and photographers passing through La Quercia was always a welcome source of entertainment.

‘They've put Walter in the cottage so that he can work in peace.'

‘Walter?'

‘He's not as stuffy as he sounds, and he knows how to swing a tennis racquet.'

‘Have you played him?'

‘Four times now.'

‘Vital statistics?'

‘Won three, lost one.'

Lucy threw him a look.

‘Mid-twenties, although he looks older, probably because he's on the portly side.'

‘Portly?' said Lucy, unable to mask her disappointment.

‘Pleasingly so. Well-fed rather than fat. What else? He's not tall, but you wouldn't describe him as short . . . well, some might. And he still has most of his hair, which is dark and rather wiry.'

‘He sounds . . . intriguing.'

‘No he doesn't, but he is. I've got to know him rather well over the past couple of weeks.'

Lucy brought the sloop about, falling in behind a forty-foot cruising ketch motoring towards the harbour mouth.

Beyond the breakwater, the wind piped up nicely, but Lucy seemed in no hurry to run up the mainsail. Her gaze was fixed on the ketch beating to windward at a fair lick, under full sail now.

‘I think that's enough of a head start, don't you?'

She cranked the winch, raising the mainsail.

The moment the ketch's skipper saw them coming he began barking commands, not that it made any difference. The
Albatross
cut through the chop as if it didn't exist, her big canvas sheets sucking every available ounce of energy out of the air. While the crew of the ketch scrambled about her topsides, trying to trim up properly, Lucy barely moved a muscle. When she finally did, it was only to offer a demure little salute to the skipper as she overhauled him.

‘Judging from his expression, I would say he hates you.'

‘It wasn't me,' grinned Lucy, her flushed face a picture of pure contentment. ‘The helm's so balanced I could have tied off the tiller and taken a nap.'

They fell off, running dead before the wind to the eastward, making for Le Rayol. While Lucy put the sloop through its paces, getting to know its limits, Tom sat back and enjoyed the view.

There were any number of spots along the Riviera where the mountains collided with the sea, but for a short stretch east of Le Lavandou it seemed almost as if the two elements had struck some secret pact, Earth and Water conspiring together to create a place of wild, primitive beauty. The high hills backing the coast fell away sharply in a tumble of tree-shrouded spurs and valleys which were transformed on impact with the sea into a run of rocky headlands separated by looping bays. Dubbed the Côte des Maures – a reminder of a time when the Saracens had held sway over this small patch of France – the exoticism of the title seemed entirely appropriate. The beaches strung out along the shoreline, like pearls on a necklace, were of a sand so fine and white, the waters that washed them so unnaturally blue, that they might well have been transported here from some far-flung corner of the tropics.

‘Stand by to gybe!' called Lucy.

‘Ready.'

‘Gybe ho!'

They both ducked the swinging boom as the stern moved through the wind, bringing them round on to a port tack run. Lucy steadied up the
Albatross
. ‘She feels like a big boat but responds like a small one. How's that possible?'

It was a rhetorical question, and Tom smiled at her wonderment.

Only one thing was missing from the moment: Hector. He should have been there with them in the cockpit, or, as he often liked to do, standing steadfastly at the bow, snout into the wind like some canine figurehead.

Tom had spent the previous evening walking the twisting coast road either side of Le Rayol, checking the verges and ditches, sick with fear at what he might find. He pushed the memory from him, steering his thoughts towards a far more pleasing prospect: that Hector had finally found his way home, and that as they sailed into the cove below the villa he would come bounding out of the trees behind the boathouse on to the little crescent moon beach, barking delightedly.

It didn't happen.

They tied up at the buoy where the rowboat was already tethered and waiting for them. The
Scylla
, Tom's old knockabout dinghy, lay at her anchor nearby.

‘So,' he asked, ‘what do you make of her?'

‘What do you think I make of her! She's the closest thing to perfection I've ever helmed.'

‘That's good, because she's yours.'

Lucy stared, unsure if she'd heard him correctly.

‘Your twenty-first birthday present. A week early, I know, but I couldn't wait.'

Lucy was speechless.

‘She comes with free transport to England . . . I might even sail her back myself. Should ruffle a few feathers down at the Lymington Yacht Club,' he added with a smile.

Lucy didn't smile. In fact, her face creased suddenly and tears filled her eyes.

‘Hey . . .' Tom moved to take a seat beside her, slipping a tentative arm around her shoulders. ‘What's the matter?'

She shook her head as if to say that she couldn't explain. He thought perhaps he'd made a big error, wildly misjudging the appropriateness of such a gift.

‘I don't understand,' choked Lucy. ‘Why me?'

‘Because I love you, of course.'

This set her off again, worse than before, and it was a while before she composed herself enough to ask, ‘How can
you
say that so easily?'

She was wrong. He had only ever spoken those words to one other person, a long time ago.

‘Does Mother . . .?'

‘Don't worry,' said Tom. ‘She knows.'

‘But she doesn't approve.'

‘She thinks I spoil you.'

Lucy wiped at the tears with the back of her hand. ‘She's right, you do.'

‘Godfather's prerogative. Besides, I don't have anyone else to spoil.'

He hadn't intended it to sound so self-pitying, and her response threw him.

‘What about your lady friend?'

‘My lady friend?'

‘The one who lives in Hyères.' He glimpsed the familiar spark of mischief behind the watery sheen of her eyes. ‘Leonard told me about her.'

‘That's not like him.'

‘He was defending you. Someone at dinner said he thought you were a homosexual.'

‘Oh?'

‘Leonard put him straight.'

‘So to speak.'

Lucy smiled weakly at the joke. ‘Do you buy your lady friend boats?'

‘She has other admirers for that sort of thing.'

Lucy looked at him askance. ‘You mean you share her?'

Tom hesitated. ‘That's not how I think of it.'

‘How can you share her?'

‘Get to my age then see if you ask the same question.'

‘You're only thirty-nine.'

‘It feels older than it sounds.'

It was a few moments before Lucy replied. ‘Well, I hope I'm still asking the same question when I'm thirty-nine.'

‘So do I,' said Tom softly. ‘So do I.'

Lucy laid her head against his shoulder, sobbed a couple more times then said, ‘Thank you for my beautiful present.'

He kissed her on the forehead. ‘It's my pleasure. Now pull yourself together, Captain – whatever will the crew think?'

They parted company just behind the boathouse, where the path bifurcated.

‘Are we seeing you later?' Lucy asked. ‘Not tonight. You have house guests.'

‘Really? Who?'

‘I'm not sure you know them. They're friends of your mother's psychoanalyst.'

‘Oh God . . .'

‘They're not so bad. I had them over for dinner last night. She speaks as much nonsense as the time allows her, and he perks up no end if you get him on to Phoenician pottery.'

‘Thanks for the tip,' groaned Lucy.

‘Until tomorrow.'

Lucy set off up the steep pathway through the trees, making for the house that her parents rented every July. Standing proud on the promontory, just back from the bluff, it was so hemmed in on its three other sides by Tom's land as to make it almost part of his property. With any luck, by the end of the summer it would officially become so. He was deep in negotiations with the owner, a retired thoracic surgeon from Avignon eager to convert his holiday home into hard currency which he planned to fritter away before he died; anything to prevent it falling into the hands of his two feckless sons.

He was a charming old boy, but he drove a hard bargain. He knew that the British pound went considerably further in France than it did back home, and he understood the notion that something could amount to more than the sum of its parts.

Tom might already own a substantial patch of the coastline directly east of Le Rayol, but the last remaining parcel at the heart of his kingdom must surely be a thorn in his proprietorial side, and therefore worth considerably more to him than the marketplace might suggest.

That was Docteur Manevy's thinking, and Tom couldn't fault it, or even begrudge the old fellow for it. If he'd learned anything during his five years in the country it was that no Frenchman could abide the idea of being taken for a ride.
‘Ne pas être dupe'
was the inviolable code by which they led their lives, and Tom had grown to embrace the theatre that accompanied most negotiations.

He would continue to play up his role as the impecunious author of travel books, Manevy would bleat on about the scandalously small government pension he received, and eventually they would arrive at an agreement satisfactory to both of them. That was the way of things. One had to remain patient.

As for the house itself, Venetia referred to the place affectionately as ‘the Art Nouveau eyesore'. Like the castle in
Irene Iddesleigh
it was ‘of a style of architecture seldom if ever attempted': a clumpy, three-floored structure devoid of any obvious charm, and which the architect, for reasons known only to himself and his original client, had chosen to orientate facing inland, turning a dumb mask to the stunning sea-view. Tom's own house – an imposing Art Deco villa verging on the ostentatious – dominated the other headland flanking the cove, and together they stood like two watch-towers guarding against a seaborne invasion.

A crease in the rising ground ran north from the cove, deepening as it went, bisecting Tom's land from the water's edge almost to the railway line. This was the route he now took after parting company with Lucy.

While most of the fifteen-acre plot was carpeted in cork oaks, pines and palms, the narrow gulley was a shady world bristling with ferns, hostas, petasites and other plants that favoured the dark and the damp. In summer, the ground was dry and firm underfoot, but for much of the year it was positively boggy with spring water. Le Rayol was known for its springs, a rare asset along this parched stretch of coast, and – miraculously, like the widow's cruse – his well never ran dry. It stood at the centre of a deep dell near the head of the gulley, where the rocks rose sheer on three sides and the inter-locking branches of the trees overhead provided a welcome canopy against the sunlight.

‘Hector . . . Hector . . . Come on, boy . . .'

The words echoed back at him, hollow, futile.

Hector would often come here to cool off when the mercury was nudging ninety degrees, but he wasn't here now.

BOOK: House of the Hanged
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