Coming Home: An uplifting feel good novel with family secrets at its heart. Fern Britton
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‘The one and only. Not the type to take home to your mother.’ Rachel sighed. ‘I know from personal experience.’ She retied the scarf in her hair. ‘Moving on, what’s next for you two? You need a job. Somewhere to live.’
Rosemary, who was feeling rather homesick and would have done anything to catch the next ferry home, looked pleadingly at Sennnen – who ignored her.
‘We were thinking of bar work or chambermaiding, perhaps,’ Sennen shrugged. ‘Anything.’
Rachel got to her feet and put her mug in the sink. ‘You can stay here for a week or two. After that you’re on your own. I’ve got to go to work in an hour, so get dressed and I’ll take you into town with me. We’ll ask around.’
Rachel’s apartment was underneath an old and ugly residential building which had many windows broken. As the three girls climbed the dark and smelly concrete stairs to ground level, Rachel explained that the building was due to be demolished. ‘I’ve been here for three months now. One of the better squats I’ve known.’ She pushed a heavy door and they found themselves on the street.
Sennen and Rosemary squinted at the sudden sharp light. Rachel found some sunglasses and perched them on her nose, sniffing. ‘Gonna be hot today.’
As they walked, they passed small parks with ladies walking dogs and men sitting in the shade watching the ladies walking the dogs.
Café tables and umbrellas spilt out on to the pavement, the smell of the lunchtime tapas reminding Sennen that she could do with some breakfast.
They walked for about fifteen minutes, turned a corner, and saw the sea sparkling ahead of them with a long stretch of beach running to their left and right.
Sennen caught her breath. ‘Wow.’ She put her arm around Rosemary’s shoulder. ‘Fancy a swim?’
Rachel pulled them along. ‘You can have a swim once we’ve found you a job.’
They walked for another mile or so, the heat building all the time. Sennen was hot and uncomfortable, Rosemary was thirsty and tired. ‘Where are we going?’ she bleated.
‘Right here,’ said Rachel.
They had stopped outside a busy café bar sitting in the shade of several trees opposite the beach.
‘Come and meet my boss.’ She shouted to a small man with a big belly who was working at a coffee machine. ‘Ola, Tomas!’
He looked over at her and lifted his chin in greeting. He glanced at Sennen and Rosemary.
‘Not more of your street urchins, Rachel?.’
‘Tomas, these are friends of mine, just arrived from England. I was at school with them.’
Tomas turned away from her and shot a jet of hot steam through a pipe. ‘You think I was born yesterday. You have been at school with all the girls in the UK?’
‘I am very popular.’ Rachel laughed, then putting her head on one side and blinking coquettishly said, ‘Please, Tomas? Sennen and Rosemary just need a little tiny job.’
He gave a guttural throaty snort. ‘Experience?’
Rachel nudged Sennen.
‘Oh yes,’ Sennen answered convincingly, ‘I’ve worked in lots of cafés and pubs at home. I love it. Meeting so many interesting people.’
‘Don’t overdo it,’ Tomas replied, smiling, ‘I can tell bullshit when I hear it.’
‘And I’m very good at that too,’ said Sennen.
Tomas laughed. A deep laugh that wobbled his belly. ‘Okay. I give you girls aprons and Rachel will show you what to do. By tonight I will see if you are good.’
It was a long day. The café was popular with tourists and locals and whatever language barrier there may have been the girls got over with sign language and a smatter of O-level Spanish.
Tomas watched them all day, shouting disapproval and orders or nodding silently.
It was gone midnight before the last customer left.
‘Clear the tables and I will tell you my decision,’ he told them.
At last the place was tidy, bar and glasses cleaned, chairs upturned on all the tables except one, where Tomas sat reading a newspaper.
He gestured for them to join him.
Rosemary sat down yawning. ‘Tired, eh?’ Tomas asked.
‘Yes.’
‘You work hard today. You were good with the customers.’ He looked at Sennen. ‘You are cheeky. Too much chat, but I think they liked you.’
Rachel clapped her hands. ‘Told you they were good.’
He slid a sideways look at her. ‘I tell you before, I was not born yesterday. These two have no experience. All bullshit.’
He put his newspaper on the table. ‘No more lies. I will give you the job but bring me no trouble. No boyfriends, no police. Understood?’
Rosemary nodded. ‘Thank you.’ She looked at Sennen who was looking at Tomas’s newspaper. ‘Sennen,’ she said. ‘What do you say?’
Sennen tore her eyes from the paper. ‘What?’
‘We’ve got a job. Tomas has given us the job.’
‘Oh … right. That’s great.’ She turned to Tomas. ‘May I have your paper?’
In bed that night, Sennen looked at the newspaper again, at the photo of a young man in a sequined black biker jacket, swirling a magician’s wand and a wolfish smile. He was here. He had told her he would be. He had laughed when she said she would follow him. She couldn’t wait to surprise him. She read the article. Amongst the Spanish words she managed to translate were ‘Senor A’Mayze seria en el Teatro Arriaga hasta el 30 do Septiembre.’ So now she knew he was at Arriaga Theatre until 30th September. She had six days in which to surprise him.
The work at Tomas’s Café was hard but as the days passed her feet got less sore and the heat more bearable. They were earning good tips and Tomas was pleased with them. On the night of 29 September, Sennen asked Tomas if she could have the next night off.
‘Por qué?’ he asked suspiciously.
‘I have to go to the dentist.’
He laughed. ‘No, you don’t. You are meeting someone? A boy, perhaps? Not the dentist, anyway.’
She decided to tell – almost – the truth. ‘Tomas, I want to see the magic show at the theatre in town. I have always loved magic and one of my favourite magicians from England is in the show and … Don’t tell Rachel or Rosemary. They will laugh at me.’
Tomas looked right into her eyes.