Read Christmas at the Beach Cafe Online

Authors: Lucy Diamond

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Women's Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Domestic Life, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Contemporary Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Family Life, #Holidays

Christmas at the Beach Cafe (5 page)

‘And I’m really enjoying spending some proper time with him again, so – ’

‘I know!’ I said again. ‘So am I!’
No, I’m not. Not remotely. When is he leaving?

‘So let’s just – ’

‘Whoa, whoa!’ Oh, here he was, popping up right on cue. No doubt he’d been listening behind the door. ‘What’s this?’ he asked, all pretend concern.
‘Trouble in paradise?’

I was very close –
this
close – to blurting out ‘Up yours’ and storming past him, but decided that I shouldn’t give him the satisfaction. The last thing I
wanted was him reporting any of this back to his good friend Melissa. ‘No way,’ I laughed, fakely, instead. (All those years at Drama School had come in handy at last.) ‘Just
having a chat about . . . about what to bake next for our book. So many recipes to choose from!’

I met his gaze squarely and refused to look away, even though I could feel hot colour surging in my cheeks. The sooner he was out of here the better.

Chapter Five

We had a civilized, if not particularly chatty, lunch but my mind kept replaying the two awful conversations of the morning. Somehow or other I’d ended up feeling like
the villain here – the unwelcoming girlfriend trying to shove her boyfriend’s poor brother out into the cold. Okay, so right at that moment I
did
feel like shoving him out into
the cold, preferably off a cliff while I was at it, but I didn’t think I’d been
that
obvious about my feelings. And yet now Ed was being off with me, while Jake probably
thought he’d scored a hat trick. Think again, pal, I felt like saying, every time I felt his smirky gaze on me. You can just think again.

As we were finishing our lunch, the doorbell rang. Glad of a distraction, I went to open it . . . and forgot my foul temper in the very next instant. Of all the people that might have been standing there, it was the best one of the bunch: Amber. I
gave a cry of delight before realizing that she was tear-streaked and wild-eyed, and her bottom lip was decidedly trembly.

‘Oh Evie, I’m so glad to see you,’ she said and burst into floods of tears.

Amber was not the sort of person to cry unless something was seriously, humongously wrong. She also lived in London, over 250 miles away, and wasn’t in the habit of dropping round for a
surprise visit. I put my arms around her, shocked. ‘What’s happened? Come in! Oh love, what’s wrong?’

She sobbed into my shoulder for a minute and I managed to catch the words ‘lying bastard’, ‘tabloids’, ‘bollocking from my agent’ and ‘worst day
ever’.

‘Don’t you worry,’ I told her, steering her into the café so that I could shut the front door and keep out the freezing wintry air. ‘You’re here now,
I’ll look after you. Take your coat off and tell me all about it.’

If ever the Victoria Cross could be presented for good deeds in the name of friendship, Amber should have been awarded it for services above and beyond the cause of duty. She had been completely
amazing when I broke up with Matthew six months ago – providing sympathy, pep talks, chocolate and alcohol, and even trekking down to the Beach Café with me to help me get started
here. You can bet your life I was going to return the favour now, whatever had happened to her.

‘Sorry to turn up out of the blue like this,’ she said. ‘Oh God, and you’ve got company as well,’ she added, seeing Jake sitting there with Ed.

‘Don’t apologize! You’re welcome here any time, you know that.’ More welcome than Jake was, that was for sure. I took her hand and pulled her forward. ‘Amber, this
is Jake, Ed’s brother, just back in the UK from Thailand. Jake, this is my best friend, Amber.’

‘Hi Ed, hi Jake,’ she said, her voice trembling. ‘Sorry to interrupt your lunch, guys. Listen, if I’ve come at a bad time, then – ’

‘Of course you haven’t,’ I told her firmly.

‘Never,’ Ed said, standing up and giving her a hug. ‘Always good to see you, Amber.’

‘Hi,’ said Jake. He hadn’t taken his eyes off Amber since she’d walked in, and stared as she pulled off her enormous fake-fur hat and shook out her long red hair. Amber
was gorgeous, with her pale freckly skin, blue eyes and slender figure, dressed today in a simple black wool dress and a crimson scarf. ‘Nice to meet you,’ he remembered to add, after a
moment.
Hands off,
I wanted to growl at him.

‘Are you hungry? There’s plenty of lunch,’ I said, guiding her into a chair. ‘What can I get you?’

She took a deep breath and forced a smile. ‘If you don’t mind, I’d love a brandy,’ she said. ‘Better make it a large one.’

‘I’ll join you,’ Jake said, all too quickly. ‘Nobody wants to drink alone, do they? And it
is
Christmas.’

‘Absolutely,’ Ed agreed, but his eyes were concerned. ‘Sure I can’t get you something to eat as well, love? A nice juicy steak sandwich? Or there are plenty of pasties in
the freezer I could warm up . . .’

‘I’m not meant to be eating carbs,’ she sighed, then pulled a face. ‘Oh sod it. Who cares any more? Yes, please, Ed, to both. And some cake if you’ve got it.
I’ll have the lot.’

Amber and I had always had parallel lame careers, shambling along doing this and that, none of it particularly well. But this year had been a stellar one for us both in work
terms – me with the Beach Café, and her with a juicy new role in a prime-time TV series. The last time I’d spoken to her – a fortnight ago, by my reckoning –
she’d been enjoying all the freebies, fancy restaurants and five-star events that came with the job . . . and had fallen blissfully in love with her co-star David Maguire.

Ensconced in my cosy beachy bubble, I’d had no idea that things had gone so badly wrong for her recently: that Maguire had turned out to be a cheating love rat, and that she’d been
plastered all over the tabloids in various states of distress. After she had eaten a massive lunch and drunk a massive brandy, the two of us went out for a walk on the coastal path and she told me
the full sordid truth.

‘Oh God, what a wanker, I’m so sorry I haven’t been in touch,’ I told her, putting my arm through hers as we went along. ‘I hate thinking of you going through this
on your own. How have you left things with David? Might you get back together, do you think?’

‘No way,’ she said baldly. ‘Not now I know about his other girlfriend. His other pregnant girlfriend.’ She kicked at the grass looking thunderous. ‘The worst thing
is, having to face him at work, when everyone knows. When I hate him. When he keeps sliming around trying to make excuses for himself. We’re in loads of scenes together for the next few
episodes, and it’s just going to be awful.’

‘Ugh, that is grim,’ I said sympathetically. ‘The last thing you need.’

‘Why do I always pick them, Evie? Why do I always go for the complete arseholes? I’m thirty-three now. When am I going to start recognizing a dickhead when I meet one, instead of
falling in love with them every time?’

‘I’ll tell you what you need,’ I said. ‘A good old scream. Go for it. Nobody’s around. Just open your lungs and let rip.’

‘What, here?’

‘Absolutely here. Like this.’ I stopped walking, threw my head back and screamed out all the tension I’d felt ever since Jake had arrived. The wind snatched up my voice and
threw it out to sea. ‘Try it. You’ll feel so much better.’

She didn’t hesitate. With clenched fists and a screwed up face, she opened her mouth and let it all out. ‘AAAAAAAAARRGGHHHH!’

Then she grinned. ‘God, that felt good.’

‘I know, right? It’s the most brilliant stress reliever ever. AAAAAAAARRRGGHHHH!’

‘AAAAAARRRGGGGHHH!’

‘AAAAAAARRRRGGGHHHH!’

She started laughing then. ‘Jesus, we’re going to have the men in white coats here any second.’

‘No, we’re not,’ I said. ‘That’s the best bit. We’re completely alone. AAAAAARRRRRGGGHHH!’

I was getting a sore throat now but felt a lot better. The screaming helped, as did the fact that Amber was here so I’d have an ally in the flat.

‘What have you got to scream about anyway?’ she asked, watching my face. ‘I thought you were all lovey-dovey, happy-ever-after down here?’

‘We were,’ I said. We started walking again, seagulls screeching above our heads as they wheeled and dipped. ‘Until his ex-wife started sending friendly Christmas cards, that
is, and then Jake showed up, causing trouble.’

‘Hmmm,’ she said. ‘I don’t like the sound of that.’ Her phone gave a loud trill just then, making us both jump. She looked at the screen and rolled her eyes.
‘I don’t like the sound of that either,’ she said, switching it off and shoving it back in her coat pocket. ‘Bugger off, world. I’ve come here to get away from
you.’

‘Was it David?’

‘Yeah, desperate to explain his total shitness again, no doubt. Like that’s going to work. He’s been ringing round the clock, as have my agent and numerous skanky journalists
who’ve mysteriously got my phone number. It’s a bloody nightmare, I’m telling you, splitting up with someone famous. Everyone wants to talk to you about it, and all you feel like
doing is crawling back to bed for a year.’

I put my arm through hers again. ‘Well, you can hole up here and stay in bed for as long as you want,’ I told her. ‘Jake’ll be all right dossing on the sofa, you can have
the spare room.’

‘Are you sure? I don’t want to get in the way.’

I gave a snort. ‘With a bit of luck, it might make him leave a bit quicker. Fingers crossed . . .’

So that made four of us in the flat, with less than a week to go before Christmas. Not exactly the cosy romantic scenario I’d envisaged, but never mind. It would only be
for a few more days, wouldn’t it? Amber assured me that she would be spending Christmas with her parents in Lincolnshire and would be gone long before the big day, while Jake . . . Well, Jake
was still being annoyingly elusive about his plans and I daren’t ask about them a second time for fear of him twisting my words again and grassing me up to Ed. I daren’t ask Ed either,
who seemed very defensive of his younger brother.

Still, he’d better sort something out before the Advent candle burned much lower, that was all I was saying. Everyone knew that while two was company, three was definitely a crowd –
particularly when it came to Christmas. Plus, his bad habits were starting to seriously grate on me – and not just the sly digs and comments he was so fond of making. There was the leaving of
dirty pants and socks willy-nilly around the living room, where he was now sleeping. (It was not unusual to settle down on the sofa to watch
EastEnders
to find that you were leaning
against a used pair of boxers that had been abandoned there. Not nice.)

Then there was the never washing up problem. The using gallons of my Aveda shampoo in the shower (on his decidedly ordinary, not in need of pricey organic ingredients, hair). There was also the
‘expensive taste but no money’ issue. He hadn’t paid for a thing while he’d been staying, and while Ed didn’t seem to mind bailing him out time and again, it was
really getting on my nerves.

I was also increasingly paranoid about Melissa. I caught Ed and Jake deep in furtive conversation one evening and was sure I’d heard her name mentioned. Then there had been a couple of
strange calls – one where a woman asked for Ed and promptly put the phone down when I said he wasn’t in, another where the caller hung up as soon as I answered. And on more than one
occasion, I’d walked into a room to find Ed talking, low-voiced, into his mobile, only for him to freeze guiltily, then leave the room to continue the call elsewhere. It had to be her. I knew
it was. I also knew that asking him about it would only lead to another row.

I confided in Amber about my worries, but she didn’t seem to take them seriously. ‘Ed? He’s mad about you, don’t be daft,’ she said. ‘Not every bloke is as
evil as David.’ When I tried to moan to her about Jake, she couldn’t see the problem there either, as he’d always been nothing but charming to her, the creep. ‘Maybe you
misunderstood,’ she said doubtfully after my rant. ‘He seems perfectly sweet to me, I can’t imagine him being rude to anyone.’

Sweet? Ha. I knew what I’d heard, and I hadn’t misunderstood anything. He might have pulled the wool over Amber’s eyes but he certainly wasn’t fooling me.

Still, silver linings and all that: while Jake and Amber were here, I might as well make the most of them, I decided. The next morning, therefore, saw me suggesting quite forcefully that Ed and
Jake might like to go surfing. ‘You could make a day of it,’ I said. ‘Go to Trebarwith, take the wetsuits and a flask of soup . . .’

‘Sounds good,’ Amber said with a yawn. Her phone rang just then for the hundredth time and I snatched it up and switched it off.

‘Not you,’ I told her. ‘You’re staying here with me.’

As soon as I’d shooed the men out of the door, I told her my plan for Ed’s Christmas present. I might not be able to give him his favourite clifftop view wrapped up in red shiny
paper, but I could give him a beautiful photo of it. Twelve beautiful photos, in fact, of all the things he liked most in the world. ‘I’m going to turn them into a calendar for
him,’ I said. ‘ “A Year at the Beach Café.” What do you think?’

‘I think it’s a gorgeous idea,’ she replied. ‘Perfect!’

‘You don’t think giving him a home-made present is . . . lame?’ I asked, unable to rid my mind of Jake’s scornful face.

‘Of course not! It’s much nicer. More personal. More loving-girlfriend-ish.’

I still had my doubts. ‘I bet Melissa always gave him really flash presents,’ I said.

‘Yeah, right before she squirrelled away loads of their restaurant money to her secret lover and nearly got Ed sent to prison on a false assault charge,’ Amber reminded me tartly.
‘ Like he’s ever going to forgive her for
that.
Look, just forget Melissa, all right? She’s long gone.’

Jake obviously didn’t think so, I thought glumly, but decided not to harp on about it any more. Stuff Jake. Screw Melissa. We had a calendar to make, and it had to be
epic
.

Armed with seriously strong coffee, I opened the laptop, trying to banish my fears. ‘Right. Let’s do this.’

Amber and I sat on the sofa together and began sifting through photos in search of the best ones. The difficult part would be narrowing them down to just twelve, I soon realized. I’d been
snap-happy ever since I’d moved down here, and had masses of shots to choose from: Ed surfing, looking as wild and free and happy as it was possible to look; him laughing open-mouthed with
Florence as he flipped burgers at our end-of-summer beach barbecue; fireworks over the bay on Bonfire Night, bright sparkles against the black sky with the smudgy shape of the cliffs and the pale
beach just visible below; a richly coloured sunset, the sky streaked cerise and apricot; a snap I’d taken without Ed realizing, of him crouched down with an arm around Lola the dog, both
looking at one another as if in the middle of a very earnest discussion . . .

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