job?â
âI still havenât heard anything.â Kim bit her lip. âIâm trying not to think about it. But it was perfect. A national charity campaigning against homelessness.â
âWhich, given your personal circumstances,â said Izzie, âsounds ideal.â
â¢Â  â¢Â  â¢
Whenever she and Harry were alone together without Eva, Kim felt embarrassed. They were like two politicians meeting in a corridor in Brussels, desperately in need of a translator.
On this particular Sunday afternoon, Eva was upstairs asleep when Kim got back from the supermarket. Eva often disappeared to her room these days. âItâs all these baby cells multiplying and growing,â sheâd say. âItâs exhausting.â Kim wandered into the kitchen, carrying her plastic carrier bags, to find Harry sitting at the table. It shouldnât have surprised her. He still treated the Nunhead house as his second home. But her heart banged unpleasantly at the sight of him. One moment she was thinking about nothing very muchâthe crunch of Coxâs apples, how Condoleezza Rice found time to play the piano. The next she was on red alert, marshalling her thoughts into a defensive position, turning herself into a fiercely guarded fortress with archers on the turrets and boiling oil at the ready.
Harry had the local paper open on the table in front of him. âSo where should it be?â
âWhat?â
âEvaâs new flat.â
Kim put the shopping on the working surface by the kettle. âAsk Eva.â
âI have asked Eva. She said to ask you.â
Kim frowned. âWhy?â
âBecause she wants to be near you. Obviously.â
Kim turned her back and took out an economy jar of store-brand instant coffee. âIzzie and I are looking round New Cross.â
âVery edgy.â
âEdgy?â
âOn trend.â
âYou have no idea,â said Kim, swinging round to face him, âwhat youâre talking about.â
Harry laughed.
âWeâre looking round New Cross because thatâs all we can afford.â
âI could help.â
âNo.â
âJust no?â
Kim narrowed her eyes. âI donât want your help.â
Harry sat back in his chair. âLook at it this way. I work in the City and make an obscene amount of money. Youâve just got a short-term charity job that will pay you almost nothing. If I make a small contribution towards your rent, itâs a redistribution of wealth. Social justice in action. The triumph of New Labour.â
âItâs not funny.â
âIâm not joking.â
Kim glared at him. âYouâre Evaâs friend. If you want to pay for her flat, thatâs fine.â Itâs your bloody baby. âBut youâre not my friend. I donât want any money from you.â
Harry put his hand on his heart as if sheâd wounded him. âNot your friend?â
âNo.â
Harry looked down at the table. After a while, he said, âEvaâs the only family Iâve got.â
For a moment, fleetingly, Kim wondered what he meant.
âShe looked after me when I needed her. So I want to look after her.â
Oh, thought Kim. A new little game. Harryâs soft and caring side. Showing just enough emotion to bring me to heel. But I wonât play. I can tell, just from looking at your face, that youâre hiding what you really think. âIâm not stopping you looking after her.â
Harry waited.
âBut I donât want you to look after me.â
There was something in his eyes she couldnât read. It was like standing in a lit doorway trying to make out the shadows in a darkened room.
Harry gave an exaggerated sigh. âSo weâre back to where we started. Iâm going to rent a flat for Eva. Where should it be?â
âSomewhere surrounded by trees.â
âWhy?â
Kim shrugged as if
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