huge cabbagy blooms in palest buff tinged with yellow and apricot and with a scent that knocked her socks off on a fine summer morning. And Golden Showers, which, true to its name, shimmered over the honey-stone cottage walls with golden abandon.
âA difficult plant,â Tom had said about her Gloire de Dijon, âbut like a beautiful woman, worth the extra attention.â Which had left her wondering what on earth Tom knew about beautiful women who needed extra attention.
Sheâd taken a long look at her husband of five years (they had found each other later in life when she was in her fifties and he a couple of years younger), contemplating what it might be like to have been young and beautiful and courted by the handsome, dangerous Tom Knight. Her Knight in Shining Armor, sheâd called him when heâd finally suggested, after drinks in a pub on the Kings Roadâa place to which she was unaccustomedâthat perhaps their lives should be joined.
Not exactly at the hip, of course, heâd added jokingly. After all, Iâve got my life and youâve got yours. But it seems to me, Mollie, we get along very well. Weâve known each other a few years now, and you are exactly the kind of woman I need to add ballast to my life.
And sheâd smiled and flushed a rosy pink that he said matched her dress, and two months later she found herself âplighting her trothâ as she liked to call it, with this world-weary man with the eyes that said heâd seen it all and then some, and an expression in his taut, lean face that said, better not mess with me, fella, Iâm smarter and tougher and harder than you are.
Blakelys Manor had been her girlhood home, but all Miss Nightingale had inherited, after the tax man had taken his share, was the gardenerâs old cottage, crammed now with treasures from the Blakely Nightingalesâ exotic past. She and Tom had âhoneymoonedâ in that old cottage, which was to become their âtrue home.â Then finally, her home. Alone.
Sighing, Miss Nightingale sat up in the comfortable bed in the Marie-Antoinette room at the Hotel Riviera, bringing her thoughts deliberately back to her plans for the following day. And what exactly were her plans? she wondered as she pushed her plump feet into pink velvet slippers and shrugged a pink cotton robe over her Marks & Spencer lavender nightie. She smiled, remembering Tom saying how she looked like a summer garden in her favorite pastels, and how later sheâd worried about whether that was a compliment or not.
He was difficult to read, Tom was, or at least in the beginning he was. Later, though, heâd opened up to her. He enjoyed her simplicity, he said, and her uncomplex, unworldly approach, and thatâs when heâd begun to share his âother lifeâ as a detective with her. His real life, he called it. And of course Mollieâs own life became more exciting as she began to live vicariously through him.
It was at the cottage over after-dinner brandies in front of the fire on a bitter cold winterâs night, that she first coaxed the story of his latest case out of him.
It was a real toughie, he said worriedly, because it was a particularly gruesome murder and there was a dearth of clues. Plus it involved a child, something that incensed every cop who had to deal with such perversion.
Itâs the loss of innocence I keep thinking about, Tom said to her, brandy glass clasped between his big hands, staring into the flames leaping in the grate. I canât stop thinking about what the poor little thing must have gone through before the bastard finally killed her.
How do you know it was a man? she asked quietly. Tom turned and looked at her, his eyes narrowed into slits. Bloody hell, Mollie, he said, you know what? Youâre a bloody genius. Excuse the bad language. Then heâd gotten up and made a phone call or two, slung on his anorak, said goodbye and see you
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