It’s a Kind of

  Magic

  Carole Matthews

  First published in Great Britain in 2008 by Headline Publishing Group

  Copyright © Carole Matthews 2008

  This edition published by Carole Matthews INK Ltd 2015

  The moral right of the author has been asserted.

  All characters and events in this publication, other than those clearly in the public domain, are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  I’m going to dedicate this book to all my lovely readers. Thanks for all the kind emails and notes that you’ve sent me over the years to keep me going. They make my fingers type just that little bit faster. I really appreciate your support over the years – some of you have been reading the books as long as I’ve been writing them! That’s what I call dedication. Thank you so much.

  CONTENTS

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-One

  Chapter Forty-Two

  Chapter Forty-Three

  Chapter Forty-Four

  Chapter Forty-Five

  Chapter Forty-Six

  Chapter Forty-Seven

  Chapter Forty-Eight

  Chapter Forty-Nine

  Chapter Fifty

  Chapter Fifty-One

  Chapter Fifty-Two

  Chapter Fifty-Three

  Chapter Fifty-Four

  Chapter Fifty-Five

  Chapter Fifty-Six

  Chapter Fifty-Seven

  Chapter Fifty-Eight

  Chapter Fifty-Nine

  Chapter Sixty

  Chapter Sixty-One

  Chapter Sixty-Two

  Chapter Sixty-Three

  Chapter Sixty-Four

  Chapter Sixty-Five

  Chapter Sixty-Six

  Chapter Sixty-Seven

  Chapter Sixty-Eight

  Chapter Sixty-Nine

  Chapter Seventy

  Chapter Seventy-One

  Chapter Seventy-Two

  Chapter Seventy-Three

  Chapter Seventy-Four

  Chapter Seventy-Five

  Chapter Seventy-Six

  Chapter Seventy-Seven

  Chapter Seventy-Eight

  Chapter Seventy-Nine

  Chapter Eighty

  Chapter Eighty-One

  Chapter Eighty-Two

  Chapter Eighty-Three

  Chapter Eighty-Four

  Chapter Eighty-Five

  Chapter Eighty-Six

  Chapter Eighty-Seven

  Chapter Eighty-Eight

  Chapter Eighty-Nine

  Chapter Ninety

  Chapter Ninety-One

  Chapter Ninety-Two

  Chapter Ninety-Three

  The Cake Shop in the Garden

  Chapter One

  Leo Harper’s all-time favourite karaoke number was Madonna’s ‘Material Girl’. Which he was currently performing with a certain amount of panache. ‘Material!’ he crooned.

  ‘Go, Leo! Go, Leo!’ his audience chanted.

  Leo’s good friends, Grant and Lard, were always very encouraging of his vocal talents. This evening, they’d been plying him with strong alcohol since six o’clock to ensure that he was in fine voice.

  ‘Do “I’m Every Woman” next!’

  Leo held up his hand in modest salute. ‘Can’t. Can’t.’

  As well as being a thirty-two-year-old white, heterosexual male – which may or may not be relevant – his only other attribute was that he was generally known as unreliable. Leo worked in the City, but other than that he wasn’t entirely sure what the purpose of his job was, other than to make huge sums of money for other people while making a reasonable amount of it for himself. Grant and Lard worked with him, although they were both considerably better at whatever they did than Leo was. They had earnest discussions about bear markets and bull markets and, quite frankly, Leo didn’t really understand any of it. Because they were such good friends they covered up for all manner of his shortcomings and Leo loved them for it. He loved them very much. Leo felt he’d be more suited to being a . . . well, a something else. A singer, perhaps.

  Leo turned his attention back to his performance. ‘Material!’ He considered himself exceptionally good at doing the high-pitched bits and waggled his imaginary breasts in the style of Madonna. ‘Material!’

  A look of concern crossed Grant’s face and he shouted up at Leo through the cacophony, ‘Mind you don’t fall off the table, mate.’

  Oh. And Leo was on a table. In an unspeakably trendy wine bar somewhere in the depths of the City of London. He had no idea where, as he’d been brought here totally against his will. The bar was very Moulin Rouge. All chandeliers, red paint and gold-leaf mirrors. But no Nicole Kidman on a swing. Leo was at a leaving do – he couldn’t remember whose. Fenella. Francine. Fiona. Something like that. Anyway, Leo thought she was a lovely lass. J-Lo arse and unfeasibly short skirts. Wonderful combination. Brain the size of a planet. Bit scary. And she was leaving. As soon as she removed her tongue from the boss’s throat, if Leo wasn’t mistaken. If she wasn’t leaving she’d probably be sacked after her behaviour tonight so it was just as well.

  Leo had to leave too as he was late. Extraordinarily late. Winding himself up for a big finale, he gave ‘Material Girl’ all he’d got. The audience cheered – Leo loved a cheering audience – even though most of them were marginally more drunk than he was. At this time in the evening, the bar at which torture ended and entertainment began had been lowered somewhat. Easily satisfied, they howled for more. Leo bowed gracefully as he prepared to take his leave. Someone else’s tonsils would have to take the place of his.

  A shout went up. ‘Do “I Will Survive”!’

  Next to ‘Material Girl’, this was Leo’s best number. He also did a refreshingly original interpretation of ‘My Way’ – somewhere between Frank Sinatra and Sid Vicious. His ‘Tainted Love’ wasn’t half bad either – even though he usually had to say it himself. Leo shook his head in a self-deprecating way even as he basked in his own glory. ‘No. No. No.’

  He certainly wouldn’t survive if he didn’t get a move on. Besides, he didn’t do requests. Elvis didn’t. So neither did Leo.

  ‘Can’t. Can’t. Have to go. Emma’sh birthday.’ Was that his voice slurring?

  Emma was Leo’s girlfriend. For years. And years. On and off. More off than on. He had no idea why she put up with him. Leo wouldn’t, if he were her. But then he knew that Emma didn’t know w
hy she put up with him either. He couldn’t remember quite how they met but he was sure it involved him being wonderfully suave and sophisticated and sweeping Emma off her feet. She’d been the only lady in his life ever since. And he loved her, loved her, loved her. Even the ‘off’ periods had been very brief, therefore, not necessitating the finding of a suitable replacement. Which was nice. During the ‘on’ periods, however, Leo was a constant source of irritation to her. His darling Emma didn’t appreciate his singing talents. Nor his tardiness.

  Leo’s watch was very blurred, but he knew, instinctively, that it was telling him a bad thing. The hands should be pointing very differently if it was good, he was sure. ‘Shit. Shit. Late. Late.’

  In his haste to depart, Leo fell head-long off the table and landed in the arms of his true and trusted friends. His limbs were feeling very lovely. ‘Emma will kill me,’ he gasped before floating off to oblivion on a fluffy cloud.

  From faraway Leo heard his friends sigh patiently. Grant looked over his head at Lard and said, ‘She might not need to.’

  Chapter Two

  ‘Emma, darling, is that Vivaldi?’ My mother cocks her head towards the direction of some unseen sound system.

  ‘Yes.’ I take a sip of my champagne and try to smile at her.

  ‘How lovely.’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Very soothing. Relaxing.’

  ‘Yes,’ I say tightly. If I grip the stem of my glass any harder it will break. Already my knuckles bear an unhealthy white pallor.

  This is a fabulous restaurant. There’s no denying that. A firm family favourite. Whatever the celebration – anniversaries, the announcement of a new grandchild, the traditional Christmas gathering – a table is booked at Ranolfs. Thirtieth birthdays are no exception. And this is mine.

  Ranolfs has a hushed, genteel atmosphere that panders perfectly to my parents’ idea of having a good time. No rowdy pubs for the Chambers clan. No chain pizza places. No faux Mexican cantinas. No standing in line for buffet food. My father would rather saw off his own arm than queue up for a slice of roast beef. At Ranolfs a surfeit of waiters bustle about, unobtrusively catering to their patrons’ every whim. The maître d’hôtel – a starched and black-suited cadaver of a man – has been the same person for around a hundred years. Look back at the historical photographs on the walls and you can see that he features in all of them – in the same way that Jack Nicholson did in The Shining. Oak panelling lines the walls, the like of which you’ll never see in a Happy Eater. The starched white linen of each table bears an exquisite arrangement of highly-scented pastel roses. It’s rather like an exclusive gentlemen’s club – except that they grudgingly allow women in too. The lighting is subdued. Conversation is muted, quite probably frowned upon. Only the regular popping of expensive corks punctuates the light classical music.

  Next to my mother is my father. ‘I’m going to stop doing face-lifts,’ he announces to no one in particular. ‘The last woman I did ended up with a face like a smacked arse.’ He shakes his head in bewilderment. ‘Why they want to do it, I’ve no idea.’

  My father, Charles Chambers, is ‘old school’ – bluff, bigoted and bombastic. He’s a cosmetic surgeon of some note – if one acquires a reputation by giving eye-lifts to ageing soap stars and fading rock singers and daytime television presenters in the last desperate throes of their careers. Daddy might wonder why they all avail themselves of his services, but he doesn’t mind charging them rather handsomely for the privilege.

  ‘I’ll stick to Botox.’ He confirms this with a hearty swig of his champagne. ‘Better just to paralyse someone’s chops than cut bits out completely. You can be sued at the drop of a hat these days. There’s no fun in being a surgeon any more.’ Daddy, morosely, seeks succour in his alcohol.

  ‘How lovely,’ my mother says, patting her exquisitely coiffured and honey-coloured hair. She turns to me and places a hand on my arm. ‘What do you think, darling?’

  ‘Yes,’ I reply automatically, not taking in the question. I glance towards the door again. This is torture. And extreme humiliation. Leo should have been here two hours ago. And he wasn’t. As a consequence, my thirtieth birthday celebration dinner has been eaten in a tense silence. My unruly elfin haircut has been glammed up – though I feel like tearing chunks of it out. I’m wearing a fairytale floaty dress. And it has all been a pointless effort.

  ‘Emma,’ my father sighs theatrically. ‘Do stop looking at the door. It’s not going to make him get here any quicker.’

  I pull out my mobile phone. ‘Maybe I’ll just give him a ring.’

  Mobile phones are banned in Ranolfs and there’s a collective gasp around the table which would have been more suited to me having pulled down the top of my gown to expose my breasts.

  ‘You’ll do no such thing,’ my father says, snatching the phone from me.

  ‘He may have had an accident.’

  ‘I’ll make bally sure he does one of these days.’

  ‘Daddy!’

  ‘Face it, darling,’ Mr Chambers, cosmetic surgeon to the wannabe stars continues unabashed. ‘He’s let you down again.’

  ‘You don’t know that.’

  ‘I do.’ My father glances conspicuously at the one empty space at the table. The myriad of cutlery lies untouched, as does the neatly folded napkin in the shape of a fan. ‘He always does.’

  ‘Charles,’ my mother intervenes – as she does so often in our frequent father-daughter spats. ‘It’s Emma’s birthday. Don’t upset her.’

  ‘I’m not upsetting her,’ he protests, his voice drowning out the delicate strains of Vivaldi. ‘It’s the lovely Leo who’s not here. Again.’

  ‘Charles. Please.’

  ‘Why can’t you find a nice man?’ My father sweeps his arm expansively across the table. ‘A man like Dicky or Austin?’

  Dicky and Austin – the nice men in question – smile in a self-satisfied and distinctly unpleasant way. Dicky and Austin are, unfortunately in my view, married to my older sisters. The sisters who toed the line and found themselves suitable husbands and settled down early to produce the required number of grandchildren. While I, instead, found Leo.

  Chinless wonders – that’s the best way of describing my two brothers-in-law. Austin is a farmer; a gentleman farmer, possessed of acres of rolling farmland, fat, special breed sheep and his own brand of dairy ice-cream sold in theatres throughout the country. Arabelle, my eldest sister, is deemed to have married well. Even though she has to sleep with someone who is ruddy, rotund and sports an excess of nasal hair. Her three children range from angelic to the spawn from hell.

  Dicky imports antique carpets and sells them out of a quaintly over-priced shop in a pretty little town in the heart of the Cotswolds – the sort of place that is lined with similar shops but where you can’t buy a fresh vegetable or a newspaper. My brother-in-law spends a lot of his time in the third world, probably being extraordinarily obnoxious to people less fortunate than himself and ripping them off with unfair prices. ‘Fair Trade’ is not a term Dicky is familiar with. All his carpets are probably woven by the callused hands of small children for a few rupees and aren’t antique at all. But Dicky is loaded and that counts for a lot in my father’s world. Dicky is moderately passable in the looks department, if you discount the burgeoning businessman’s paunch, but he’s crushingly boring on every other level. Unless you’re interested in the intricacies of carpets, of course. My brother-in-law also has a problem with self-esteem. Far too much of it. The middle sister of the Chambers’ clan is Clara and, despite having two hyper-active school-age children, she still manages to conduct a long-term affair with their gardener – Darren – whenever Dicky sets foot on another continent. And, to be honest, I can’t say that I blame her.

  I, however, have been dating Leo for the last five years. Dating is the right term. I never know with Leo whether he’ll be around for the next week or not. It isn’t that he’s a womaniser or anything like that – Leo would have absolutely no
idea where to start when it comes to seducing a woman. I’m never going to find him locked in the understairs cupboard at a party with my best friend. He doesn’t have it in him. Leo might well lock himself in the understairs cupboard at a party – but that would be as far as it went. He’s clueless when it comes to women – and most other things. Utterly clueless. Which is extraordinary because he really is staggeringly good-looking and has cheekbones that most supermodels would kill for. Leo possesses an easy charm that he’s completely unaware of, and that’s his biggest asset. Women fall for it in droves. Why do we do that?

  I – for better, for worse – am no exception. I met Leo through a mutual friend on a day out to the coast. Leo was trying to windsurf and had nearly drowned himself after getting tangled up in the sail. I swam out from the beach to rescue him. Even though he was coughing and spluttering and had seaweed strewn in his hair, within minutes, I’d fallen for him big time. Five years later it seems as if I’m still rescuing him from himself.

  It was me that did all the initial running in this relationship. And me that’s still doing it. Leo is physically incapable of planning ahead. That includes grocery shopping as much as relationships. The less interested Leo was in being pinned down, the more I pursued him. It’s probably down to the fact that I’m the youngest and most spoiled daughter and am, therefore, used to getting everything that I want. All I’ve ever desired has been handed to me on a plate by my doting parents. A lovely position to be in – but not one that accustoms you to someone saying no. Even the men I’ve dated pre-Leo have doted on me and, subsequently, have bored me to tears. And how many modern women want a doormat as a boyfriend? With Leo it has been an entirely different matter from day one. He hasn’t doted on me. He certainly hasn’t bored me to tears. He was, from the start, elusive and frustrating. I saw Leo as a challenge. For the first three months of our relationship, he never once returned one of my telephone calls. He just knew that I’d continue to phone him and I often wonder what would have happened if I’d simply stopped calling.

  Leo is not a natural hunter gatherer. The caveman gene has passed him by completely. There isn’t a bone in his body that compels him to barbecue raw meat. He’s never going to grab me by the hair and drag me into a cave, much as I may secretly have a fantasy that he might. It’s an attitude that serves him in all other areas of his life. My dearly-beloved is reasonably successful in his chosen career but it couldn’t be said that he pursues promotion with a vengeance. Casual, is the best way to describe Leo’s approach to work – and to life and to love. Casual. Very casual. I can’t help believing that Leo would be absolutely wonderful if only he’d apply himself to the real world.