Whiteout - Ken Follett [21]
“No.”
“Can’t you find him something? It’s your field, and he’s good.”
“Things are quiet—and people know he was sacked by his father.”
“Has he stopped gambling?”
“He must have. He promised Daddy he would. And he’s got no money.”
“Daddy paid his debts, didn’t he?”
“I don’t think we’re supposed to know.”
“Come on, Mandy.” Olga was using Miranda’s childhood name. “How much?”
“You should ask Daddy—or Kit.”
“Was it ten thousand pounds?”
Miranda looked away.
“More than that? Twenty?”
Miranda whispered, “Fifty.”
“Good God! That little bastard pissed away fifty grand of our inheritance? Wait till I see him.”
“Anyway, enough of Kit. You’re going to get to know Ned much better this Christmas. I want you to treat him as one of the family.”
“Ned should be one of the family by now. When are you getting married? You’re too old for a long engagement. You’ve both been married before—it’s not as if you have to save up for your trousseau.”
This was not the response Miranda was hoping for. She wanted Olga to feel warm toward Ned. “Oh, you know what Ned’s like,” she said defensively. “He’s lost in his own world.” Ned was editor of The Glasgow Review of Books, a respected cultural-political journal, but he was not practical.
“I don’t know how you stand it. I can’t abide vacillation.”
The conversation was not going the way Miranda wanted. “Believe me, it’s a blessed relief after Jasper.” Miranda’s first husband had been a bully and a tyrant. Ned was the opposite, and that was one of the reasons she loved him. “Ned will never be organized enough to boss me around—half the time he can’t remember what day it is.”
“Still, you managed perfectly well without a man for five years.”
“I did, and I was proud of myself, especially when the economy turned down and they stopped paying me those big bonuses.”
“So why do you want another man?”
“Well, you know . . .”
“Sex? Oh, please. Haven’t you heard of vibrators?”
Miranda giggled. “It’s not the same.”
“Indeed it’s not. A vibrator is bigger and harder and more reliable and, when you’re done with it, you can put it back in the bedside table and forget about it.”
Miranda began to feel attacked, as often happened when she talked to her sister. “Ned’s very good with Tom,” she said. Tom was her eleven-year-old son. “Jasper hardly ever spoke to Tom, except to give him orders. Ned takes an interest in him—asks him questions and listens to the answers.”
“Speaking of stepchildren, how does Tom get along with Sophie?” Ned’s daughter by his first marriage was fourteen.
“She’s coming to Steepfall, too—I’m picking her up later this morning. Tom looks at Sophie the way the Greeks regarded the gods, as supernatural beings who are dangerous unless pacified by constant sacrifices. He’s always trying to give her sweets. She’d rather have cigarettes. She’s as thin as a stick and prepared to die to stay that way.” Miranda looked pointedly at Olga’s pack of Marlboro Lights.
“We all have our weaknesses,” said Olga. “Have some more carrot cake.”
Miranda put down her fork and took a sip of coffee. “Sophie can be difficult, but it’s not her fault. Her mother resents me, and the child is bound to pick up that attitude.”
“I bet Ned leaves you to deal with the problem.”
“I don’t mind.”
“Now that he’s living in your flat, does he pay you rent?”
“He can’t afford it. That magazine pays peanuts. And he’s still carrying the mortgage on the house his ex lives in. He’s not comfortable about being financially dependent, believe you me.”
“I can’t think why he wouldn’t be comfortable. He can have a bonk whenever he feels like it, he’s got you to look after his difficult daughter, and he’s living rent-free.”
Miranda was hurt. “That’s a bit harsh.”
“You shouldn’t have let him move in without committing to a date for the wedding.”
The same thought had occurred to Miranda, but she was not going to admit it. “He just thinks everyone needs more time to get used to the idea of his remarriage.”
“Who’s ‘everyone,’ then?”
“Well,