Tasmina Perry 3-Book Collection: Daddy’s Girls, Gold Diggers, Original Sin. Tasmina Perry

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got about half an hour. The Moonstone Club are coming round at three.’

      ‘The Moonstone Club?’

      ‘Elmore’s found this incredible psychic who’s got a PhD and everything. She chairs these meetings where we all talk about spirituality and stuff. There’s about ten of us and it’s just amazing. It’s like the, the new … book club.’

      Cate couldn’t believe Serena had ever attended a book group.

      She took a moment to look around Serena’s new flat, which she had just moved into after a two-month stay at Claridge’s. It had not been carefully interior-designed, just like Serena and Tom’s Cheyne Walk house, but there was a pretty insouciance about it, a blank white canvas with polished walnut floors, full of beautiful, glamorous things for a beautiful, glamorous person. Overlooking St Mary’s Church, it must have been costing her a fortune.

      ‘How did you find this place?’ asked Cate curiously.

      ‘Remember Sheikh Kolum, who I used to see all the time when I used to go down to L’Equipe Anglais?’

      Before Tom, Serena had gone through a phase when she was never out of London’s Eurotrash nightclubs. ‘Vaguely,’ she lied.

      ‘Well, it’s his London pad. He’s hardly ever here; always in Paris these days, so he says I can have it until at least New Year. Anyway, can I get you anything?’ she yawned, waving her hand in front of her casually as if she had no intention whatsoever of going to get anything for her. Cate knew she could spend half an hour making small talk until the Moonstone Club arrived, or get straight to the point, her curiosity about David still gnawing away at her.

      ‘How was the wedding?’

      ‘OK, nothing special,’ replied Serena casually.

      There. Cate could see it. She knew her sister so well that she could distinguish her arrogant indifference from evading an issue.

      ‘I want to know what happened,’ said Cate quickly. ‘And you might as well tell me everything because Nick’s already told me.’

      Serena seemed to twitch awake as if she’d been given an adrenalin shot. ‘Oh, and what’s Nick told you?’ she said haughtily.

      ‘He told me about David.’

      ‘Oh, what does Nick Douglas know about anything?’ said Serena, tying her cotton gown around her more protectively. Serena was an actress. She was a good liar: convincing, manipulative, natural. But Cate could see a look of pure guilt painted on her face. Not obvious, more soft and subtle like a watercolour, but it was there nonetheless.

      ‘David went to see Nick yesterday after the wedding. He told him,’ said Cate with false knowingness in her voice.

      Serena gazed down at her fingers stretched out in front of her. For a few moments the room fell totally silent.

      ‘He came on to me, you know,’ she said, looking up suddenly, her eyes blazing defiantly.

      The enormity of what had just been said spun around the room. Cate’s breath quickened. Five simple words: ‘He came on to me.’ Me. Serena. Her sister. She felt as if she had been kicked in the chest.

      ‘It was you?’ she whispered.

      Serena’s face was pallid with guilt. ‘Cate, seriously. Nothing happened,’ she said quickly, trying to sound casual.

      ‘I don’t believe it!’ said Cate, the words starting like a whisper, building in ferocity until she was screaming. ‘You slept with him, didn’t you?’ she spat, jumping up off the sofa.

      Serena took a step backwards, beginning to edge out of the room. ‘Cate, I didn’t. I promise,’ she stammered.

      ‘At least have the guts not to lie to me,’ Cate yelled, struggling to catch her breath. She looked at Serena’s pale face and wanted to summon up a barrage of hate in her voice, but it wouldn’t come. Instead she turned her back away from her sister and started pacing the room, blinking tears back furiously. She felt every muscle in her body crumple.

      ‘Catey, I’m sorry. I really am.’ She moved forward to touch Cate who recoiled back so quickly she almost stumbled.

      ‘Get away from me,’ she started sobbing. ‘Get away.’

      She sank back into the sofa, her body like a rag doll.

      ‘Why? Serena, why did you do it?’

      ‘Cate. I feel so terrible. I was drunk. You know I haven’t been drinking. I didn’t think –’

      ‘I don’t care if you were drunk,’ she said ferociously. ‘I don’t care if you were so drunk you screwed every man in the room. What I care about …’ Cate could feel her voice crack. ‘Is why him …? When you could have had anybody, why did you have to pick him?’

      Serena sat on the edge of a chair, her hands falling in her lap. ‘Because he wanted me,’ she said softly. Her voice was low, calm and controlled. Cate couldn’t tell whether it was with guilt or arrogance.

      ‘You bitch,’ whispered Cate, feeling her fingernails dig into her palms. ‘You selfish, spoilt, self-obsessed little bitch.’

      ‘It didn’t mean anything,’ faltered Serena.

      ‘It didn’t mean anything?’ Cate replied incredulously. She swiped her hand in frustration through the air. ‘Well, it means something to me,’ she croaked. She put her head down and, biting her lip to keep controlled, picked her bag up and headed for the door.

      ‘Cate, don’t go. Please, let’s talk about it …’

      Cate looked back, her eyes simply sad. ‘There’s nothing to talk about,’ she said, opening the door.

      ‘Cate, wait. No …’

      But Cate had gone, running down the stairs and onto the street, feeling as if her whole world had exploded and was raining down around her in a cloud of thick, dark, choking ash.

       36

      Sitting in the high-back leather chair in the offices of Mayfair’s most prestigious accountants, Oswald’s blood began to boil. He was beginning to harbour grave reservations about whether the young man in front of him could manage to find his backside with both hands, let alone manage his business affairs.

      Six months ago, Lionel Davenport, Oswald’s accountant since the sixties and senior partner in the firm of Davenport Davis, had retired and handed over the reins of the company to Peter Cable, whom Davenport had pitched to Oswald as ‘the firm’s dynamic future’. Since then, Oswald had heard nothing but doom and gloom about his financial situation, and today, it seemed, was no exception.

      ‘So what can we do then?’ challenged Oswald, his irritation mounting. ‘Lionel said you were creative, so come on. I need to raise about two and a half million by the end of the year. A forty-five per cent share in my daughter’s business is up for sale. Her husband died in that terrible

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