“There’s no need to get fired up,” said Linda, unruffled. “I wasn’t suggesting you’d done anything you shouldn’t.”
“Well, good,” said Robin, eating the scone without noticing it. “Because I haven’t. He’s my boss, that’s all.”
“And your friend,” suggested Linda, “judging by the way you talk about him.”
“Yes,” said Robin, but honesty compelled her to add, “it’s not like a normal friendship, though.”
“Why not?”
“He doesn’t like talking about personal stuff. Blood out of a stone.”
Except for one notorious evening—barely mentioned between them since—when Strike had got so drunk he could hardly stand, voluntary information about his private life had been virtually nonexistent.
“You get on well, though?”
“Yeah, really well.”
“A lot of men find it hard to hear how well their other halves get on with other men.”
“What am I supposed to do, only ever work with women?”
“No,” said Linda. “I’m just saying: Matthew obviously feels threatened.”
Robin sometimes suspected that her mother regretted the fact that her daughter had not had more boyfriends before committing herself to Matthew. She and Linda were close; she was Linda’s only daughter. Now, with the tearoom clattering and tinkling around them, Robin realized that she was afraid that Linda might tell her it wasn’t too late to back out of the wedding if she wanted to. Tired and low though she was, and in spite of the fact that they had had several rocky months, she knew that she loved Matthew. The dress was made, the church was booked, the reception almost paid for. She must plow on, now, and get to the finishing line.
“I don’t fancy Strike. Anyway, he’s in a relationship: he’s seeing Elin Toft. She’s a presenter on Radio Three.”
She hoped that this information would distract her mother, an enthusiastic devourer of radio programs while cooking and gardening.
“Elin Toft? Is she that very beautiful blonde girl who was on the telly talking about Romantic composers the other night?” asked Linda.
“Probably,” said Robin, with a pronounced lack of enthusiasm, and in spite of the fact that her diversionary tactic had been successful, she changed the subject. “So you’re getting rid of the Land Rover?”
“Yes. We’ll get nothing for it, obviously. Scrap, maybe… unless,” said Linda, struck by a sudden thought, “you and Matthew want it? It’s got a year’s tax left on it and it always scrapes through its MOT somehow.”
Robin chewed her scone, thinking. Matthew moaned constantly about their lack of car, a deficiency he attributed to her low salary. His sister’s husband’s A3 Cabriolet caused him almost physical pangs of envy. Robin knew he would feel very differently about a battered old Land Rover with its permanent smell of wet dog and wellington boots, but at one o’clock that morning in the family sitting room, Matthew had listed his estimates of the salary of all their contemporaries, concluding with a flourish that Robin’s pay lay right at the bottom of the league table. With a sudden spurt of malice, she imagined herself telling her fiancé, “But we’ve got the Land Rover, Matt, there’s no point trying to save for an Audi now!”
“It could be really useful for work,” she said aloud, “if we need to go outside London. Strike won’t need to hire a car.”
“Mm,” said Linda, apparently absently, but with her eyes fixed on Robin’s face.
They drove home to find Matthew laying the table with his future father-in-law. He was usually more helpful in the kitchen at her parents’ house than at home with Robin.
“How’s the dress looking?” he asked in what Robin supposed was an attempt at conciliation.
“All right,” said Robin.
“Is it bad luck to tell me about it?” he said and then, when she did not smile, “I bet you look beautiful, anyway.”
Softening, she reached out a hand and he winked, squeezing her fingers. Then Linda plonked a dish of mashed potato on the table between them and told him that she had given them the old Land Rover.
“What?” said Matthew, his face a study in dismay.
“You’re always saying you want a car,” said Robin, defensive on her mother’s behalf.
“Yeah, but—the Land Rover, in London?”
“Why not?”
“It’ll ruin his image,” said her brother Martin, who had just entered the room with the newspaper in his hand; he had been examining the runners for that afternoon’s Grand National. “Suit you down to the ground, though, Rob. I can just see you and Hopalong, off-roading to murder scenes.”
Matthew’s square jaw tightened.
“Shut up, Martin,” snapped Robin, glaring at her younger brother as she sat down at the table. “And I’d love to see you call Strike Hopalong to his face,” she added.
“He’d probably laugh,” said Martin airily.