name of her new hometown made her feel sad. Without pausing to think, she did the thing that she had vowed not to do after he had failed to call the previous evening: she picked up her mobile and keyed in Gavin's office number.
'Edward Collins and Co,' said a woman's voice, after the third ring. They answered your calls immediately out in the private sector, when money might depend on it.
'Could I speak to Gavin Hughes, please?' said Kay, staring down at Terri's file.
'Who's speaking, please?'
'Kay Bawden,' said Kay.
She did not look up; she did not want to catch either Alex's or Una's eyes. The pause seemed interminable.
(They had met in London at Gavin's brother's birthday party. Kay had not known anyone there, except for the friend who had dragged her along for support. Gavin had just split up with Lisa; he had been a little drunk, but had seemed decent, reliable and conventional, not at all the kind of man that Kay usually went for. He had poured out the story of his broken relationship, and then gone home with her to the flat in Hackney. He had been keen while the affair remained long-distance, visiting at weekends and telephoning her regularly; but when, by a miracle, she had got the job in Yarvil, for less money, and put her flat in Hackney on the market, he had seemed to take fright ... )
'His line's still busy, would you like to hold?'
'Yes, please,' said Kay miserably.
(If she and Gavin did not work out ... but they had to work out. She had moved for him, changed jobs for him, uprooted her daughter for him. He would never have let that happen, surely, unless his intentions were serious? He must have thought through the consequences if they split up: how awful and awkward it would be, running across each other constantly in a tiny town like Pagford?)
'Putting you through,' said the secretary, and Kay's hopes soared.
'Hi,' said Gavin. 'How are you?'
'Fine,' lied Kay, because Alex and Una were listening. 'Are you having a good day?'
'Busy,' said Gavin. 'You?'
'Yes.'
She waited, the phoned pressed tightly against her ear, pretending that he was speaking to her, listening to the silence.
'I wondered whether you wanted to meet up tonight,' she asked finally, feeling sick.
'Er ... I don't think I can,' he said.
How can you not know? What have you got on?
'I might have to do something ... it's Mary. Barry's wife. She wants me to be a pall-bearer. So I might have to ... I think I've got to find out what that involves and everything.'
Sometimes, if she simply remained quiet, and let the inadequacy of his excuses reverberate on the air, he became ashamed and backtracked.
'I don't suppose that'll take all evening, though,' he said. 'We could meet up later, if you wanted.'
'All right, then. Do you want to come over to mine, as it's a school night?'
'Er ... yeah, OK.'
'What time?' she asked, wanting him to make one decision.
'I dunno ... nine-ish?'
After he had rung off, Kay kept the phone pressed tightly to her ear for a few moments, then said, for the benefit of Alex and Una, 'I do, too. See you later, babe.'
V
As guidance teacher, Tessa's hours varied more than her husband's. She usually waited until the end of the school day to take their son home in her Nissan, leaving Colin (whom Tessa - although she knew what the rest of the world called him, including nearly all the parents who had caught the habit from their children - never addressed as Cubby) to follow them, an hour or two later, in his Toyota. Today, though, Colin met Tessa in the car park at twenty-past four, while the schoolchildren were still swarming out of the front gates into parental cars, or onto their free buses.
The sky was a cold iron-grey, like the underside of a shield. A sharp breeze lifted the hems of skirts and rattled the leaves on the immature trees; a spiteful, chill wind that sought out your weakest places, the nape of your neck and your knees, and which denied you the comfort of dreaming, of retreating a little from reality. Even after she had closed the car door on it, Tessa felt ruffled and put out, as she would have been by somebody crashing into her without apology.
Beside her in the passenger seat, his knees absurdly high in the cramped confines of her car, Colin told Tessa what the computing teacher