glanced off at the islands. âA burial at sea . . .â
It wasnât a question, but she sounded as if she was trying to make sense of it.
âYou know how much he loved the water.â
That was the truth. If Hector had been there now he would have been clawing impatiently at the sand, eager for them to join him in a bout of jumping off the rocks.
âYou could have taken the Albatross , you know. Iâm almost insulted you didnât.â
âThe thought crossed my mind.â
âWhy didnât you?â
âIâm not sure. Perhaps because it wasnât a boat he knew.â
She nodded, accepting the explanation. âOur secret, Lucy. I donât want anyone else to know.â
âWhy not?â
âI donât want his death hanging over the holiday.â
âBut it is.â
âYou know what I mean. Promise me. Iâm not sure I could cope with all the sympathy.â
âNot even from me?â
âNot yet.â
She nodded.
âSay it,â he insisted.
âI promise.â
Her voice cracked as she spoke the words, and he thought for a moment she might be about to break down in tears. She didnât, though; she just gripped his hands more tightly.
âAhoy!â came a distant cry.
It was Venetia, rounding the headland in the kayak, rocking wildly as she thrashed inexpertly at the water with the oar.
Lucy released her hold on his hands, discreetly manoeuvring away from him.
âAhoy!â Tom hailed back, waving.
But even at a distance he could see from the shift in Venetiaâs bearing that she had registered the moment. She knew that sheâd caught them unawares, intruding on something private. And Tom had little doubt that heâd be held to account for it before long.
Leonard and Yevgeny returned from Cannes just before midday, having squeezed in a quick nine holes before leaping into the car and racing back. They came bearing gifts and a whole batch of golfing anecdotes. The former went down far better than the latter.
âWhat is it about golfers?â Venetia declared. âThe bribes I can handle â in fact, I thoroughly approve of them â but the stories . . . My father and brothers are just the same. Do you really think that those of us whoâve never swung a club in our lives care a fig about âbogiesâ and âbirdiesâ and âdrives off the teeâ? I can assure you we donât.â
Yevgeny ran a hand over his bronzed pate, smoothing down the phantom hair, no longer there. For reasons that still baffled even Fanya, he had chosen to shave the whole lot off back in the spring. Whatever his thinking, it suited him; he had the right kind of cranium to carry it off.
âMy dear Venetia,â he chirped, âyou donât understand. There is no other game like golf ââ
Venetia raised her hand, cutting him dead. âYevgeny, I donât doubt youâre about to say something terribly profound, but it might have more authority if you werenât wearing those ridiculous chequered trousers.â
No one seemed sure whether to laugh or shout her down. Her sense of humour sailed perilously close to the wind at times. Yevgeny opted for a third way.
Unbuckling his belt, he let the trousers fall to his ankles.
âIs that better?â he demanded.
There was a stunned silence. And then laughter, wild and uproarious.
Yevgenyâs undershorts were adorned with little golf clubs.
Leonard was eager for a swim before lunch. It was the opportunity Tom had been waiting for, and he followed his friend into the water.
âMind if I join you?â
âOf course not. The headland and back?â
It was maybe half a mile across the bay to the headland separating Le Rayol from Le Canadel â a mere paddle for Leonard, but at the limit of Tomâs range.
Ever the gentleman, Leonard slowed his stroke so as not to leave Tom languishing in his wake. At one
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