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Authors: Matt Whyman

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BOOK: The Savages
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6

Angelica Savage wasn't just a unique cook. Nor was she simply an accomplished homemaker. One look at her credit card statements revealed that she was also a formidable shopper. She kept them in a shoebox at the back of her walk-in wardrobe, which also contained the reason why she had racked up so much debt.

When it came to fashion, Angelica was bleeding edge. Her style was simple and elegant, but it came at a sky-high price. She would shop in boutiques where the staff dropped everything knowing what she could spend. Sometimes she went directly to the internationally admired dress designer, Gerado Figari. It was an association that would later come close to ruining the man's reputation, of course. Back then, whenever his mobile rang and her name appeared on the screen, he would always be quick to pick up. His dresses from across the seasons hung from every rail in Angelica's wardrobe, alongside more casual clothes for the home that still cost a small fortune. It would be easy to look back and link her need for shopping to the family's hidden secret. Certainly many criminal psychologists have stepped forward to say that her consumer habit on the high street served as some kind of escape for the woman. A chance to momentarily forget about the horror that took place inside the house. This, they argued, explained how she managed to spend way beyond her means, and took to hiding the true nature of her debt from the rest of the family.

‘Is this the bathroom?'

The voice took Angelica by surprise. With a gasp, she hurried to replace the lid on the shoebox. Then she twisted around to see Grandpa standing behind her. He was wearing a vest and drawstring trousers. For one horrible moment, it looked as if he was about to unbutton himself.

‘No it isn't,' she said, rising to her feet. She sounded cornered, perplexed and a little cross. ‘It's my wardrobe, Oleg. The bathroom is across the hall. You know that, don't you?'

Grandpa looked even more bemused than Angelica. He took a moment to consider what she'd said, before his eyebrows lifted in surprise.

‘Oh, of course! So it is. I'm sorry.'

As he spoke, Angelica's expression shifted from surprise to concern. For decades, Oleg had shown no sign that age was getting the better of him. His wrinkles may have deepened, but this was the first occasion that his mind had let him down. Seeing him like this, as she recovered her composure, just served to make her aware that he wasn't going to live forever. It didn't matter how often Titus joked that Oleg's diet made him immortal, one day nature would take her course. However you conducted yourself through life, whatever path you chose, everyone died in time.

‘You've had a senior moment,' she told him gently, before encouraging him to turn and leave the bedroom.

‘Have I?' Oleg looked like he had completely forgotten what just happened. Angelica placed a reassuring hand on his shoulder. She could feel his bones and joints at work, as fragile as if fashioned from balsa wood. At the same time, she hoped he wouldn't go wandering downstairs on Saturday in a similar state of undress.

‘We have another shoot at the weekend,' she told him. ‘It's important that we stay out of sight and let them do their job.'

‘So the kids told me,' he said. ‘But I would've figured it out for myself on account of all the cleaning you've been doing.'

Angelica smiled to herself. It was good to know that Oleg was a long way from living in a complete fog of bemusement. The fact was she had spent much of the day making sure the house was prepared. She had scrubbed and disinfected, dusted and polished and vacuumed every last inch.

‘It has to be done,' she said, as he followed her out onto the landing. ‘Titus insists.'

‘You should just let him pay off your credit card,' said Oleg.

And reveal just how much debt I'm in?
Angelica thought to herself.
He'd slay me
.

‘Titus has his own concerns,' she said instead, and directed OIeg to the bathroom in case he had forgotten.

‘Titus should relax about Sasha,' he said. ‘At the moment he's just driving her into the arms of this boy.'

Oleg stopped and looked around at his daughter-in-law. Angelica had been referring to the fact that Titus was preoccupied with work. Even so, Oleg had a point. The last time Titus tried to address the situation with his eldest daughter, Sasha had left the table early.

‘Did she tell you that he's invited her over for supper?' she said. ‘A
vegetarian
meal.'

‘So, it'll give her wind all evening. Is that the worst thing that can happen? Let the girl learn from the experience.'

Grandpa shuffled into the bathroom. As he turned to close the door, he found Angelica looking at him thoughtfully.

‘Titus is just scared that his little girl is growing up.' She gestured at the window overlooking the park and the city beyond. ‘It's a big bad world out there.'

‘Sometimes it feels as if I can't breathe at home,' complained Sasha later that day. She looked at the ground, which was some way down, and shook her head. ‘My dad is such an asshole. Who put him in charge of all the oxygen, eh?'

Sasha Savage was sitting alongside her two closest friends on the back of a ramp at the skate park. Sasha, Maisy and Faria came out here at lunch breaks just to get away from it all. The canteen was always packed with Years 7 and 8. Even if the girls were starving hungry, the shrieking and the smell of egg, farts and crisps was enough to persuade them to find some space. It meant Faria could light up while Sasha could air her problems.

‘What's he done now?' asked Maisy, a pretty, cheery girl whose manner served her well in her Saturday job as a waitress.

Sasha looked across at her. At that hour, the sun was at its brightest. She shielded her eyes with her hand before answering.

‘It's Jack,' she said. ‘Dad hates him.'

‘How can anyone hate Jack?' asked Maisy. ‘He drives his own car and everything.'

‘Anyway, why is your old man so upset?' This was Faria, whose gaze was locked on the school buildings as she pulled on the cigarette hidden in the palm of her hand.

‘It's his new default position.' Sasha checked her bag to see if she had packed her sunglasses. She sighed to herself, but not just because she had forgotten. ‘They haven't even met.'

‘Typical,' said Maisy. ‘Bloody dads!'

‘Jack's cooking for me this weekend. All properly romantic and everything. His parents are out, so it's a really good chance for us to get to know each other, only Dad has decided that I'd be placing my life in danger by dining alone with him.'

‘Oh, for God's sake,' said Faria. ‘It's not like Jack's going to feast on your liver and spleen.'

Sasha returned her attention to the ground, quietly wishing she had some shades to hide behind. Behind them, a couple of lads who'd left school the year before were slamming from one side of the ramp to the other on skateboards. One worked evenings at the Cheepie Chicken takeaway. The other had been rejected by the army. None of the girls paid them any attention whatsoever.

‘So, what are you going to do?' asked Maisy.

‘I wouldn't want to let Jack down this soon in your relationship,' warned Faria, before sucking on the cigarette like an asthmatic with an inhaler in the midst of an attack. ‘There are girls out there who would literally kill for a piece of him,' she finished, on exhaling. ‘Let's just say that if you fail to make it to his supper at the weekend I don't suppose he'll be dining alone.' Faria took another hit on her hidden cigarette, seemingly unaware that Sasha was looking at her incredulously.

‘Jack wouldn't cheat on me,' she said eventually. ‘He wouldn't
dare
.'

7

In her teens, Lulabelle Hart had crossed catwalks from London to Milan. Her height, frame and freckles were perfectly suited for modelling, as was her tumbling red hair that she had learned to flick over her shoulder just as the camera shutter opened. For several years, Lulabelle lived a lifestyle that many would envy. Then the next generation of girls began to attract the attention of designers and magazine editors, and slowly the work took a slide. Now in her mid-twenties, Lulabelle's last fashion shoot featured clothes most people had since passed on to the charity shop. Still, her agent continued to find her work, and though she no longer graced front covers you could still find her advertising sofas and conservatories in the back pages. Sadly, Lulabelle's A-list days were long gone. What remained was her attitude.

‘Explain this to me,' she said, having just swept into the Savage house on the morning of the shoot. She was standing in the front room, where a crew worked hard to set up lights and cameras. The shoot, an advert for a plug-in air freshener, required Lulabelle to play the role of a beautiful but harassed mother who finds escape in the synthetic aroma of a tropical seashore. Lately, Lulabelle had played a lot of beautiful but harassed mothers. Given her dislike of other people's children touching surfaces and door handles, she found it all too depressing for words. ‘What is that?'

‘What is what?' asked the production manager, a young woman with a clipboard and earpiece. She turned to see what Lulabelle was looking at. ‘It's a mirror,' she said, and stood beside the model to admire the framed vintage glass that hung above the fireplace. ‘Gorgeous, isn't it? A work of art.'

Lulabelle leaned forward, narrowing her eyes.

‘But it's mottled and blotchy.'

‘It's antique. That's what happens. The silver backing peels away from the glass over time.'

Puzzled by this, Lulabelle turned to address the production manager directly.

‘What's the point of a mirror when you can't see your own reflection?'

Ivan Savage peered through a crack in the door. He watched the model in conversation with the production manager, and wondered who would be first to see the dead vole he had planted in the grate of the fireplace. He had found the creature in the yard that morning, disembowelled and abandoned by next door's cat, and slipped it in just as his mother finished cleaning. Ivan held his breath, waiting for the first one to shriek, only to exhale in disappointment as several crew members placed a large flood lamp right in front of the fireplace. It was a shame because the cat had done a great job in teasing out the vital organs from the mouse, as well as removing its head.

‘Ivan! Come away from there.' From the top of the stairs, Angelica Savage was forced to hiss at her son one more time before he closed the door. ‘We're not here to disturb them!'

‘I'm bored already,' he complained, and made his way back to the landing. ‘There's nothing to do.'

‘You say that every time.' Angelica ruffled his hair as he passed. ‘It's only for the day.'

As Ivan sauntered by, Sasha emerged from her bedroom. She was wearing jeans and a capped T-shirt, with her hair scraped back in a band. It was clear that she'd made no big effort to dress. That, she hoped, would come later.

‘Where's Dad?' she asked, and looked nervously at her mother.

‘In his study. Working.'

‘But it's a Saturday,' said Sasha.

‘He has a lot on right now.'

‘I really need to speak to him about this evening.'

Angelica tipped her head, appraising her daughter.

‘This boy, Jack … is he important to you?'

Sasha looked a little unsure.

‘It's just he's my first,' she said, and looked to the floorboards for a moment. ‘I mean my first, you know … boyfriend. I just want to see how it goes for now.'

Angelica met her gaze once more with a smile. Sasha was certainly flowering, but even she could see that her daughter wasn't set to lose her head with this young man. If anything, she sounded as if she was discovering for herself that romance wasn't always a fairy tale.

‘Then talk to your father calmly, like a grown-up,' she told her. ‘I'm sure he can spare you a moment.'

Downstairs, Lulabelle Hart sat on a stool at the breakfast bar. She wasn't there to eat, despite the offer of a bacon sandwich from the catering manager brought in to feed the cast and crew. Lulabelle didn't really do food at this hour. Ever since she found herself in competition for modelling jobs, meals had become something she felt the need to control. Just then, the smell of eggs in the pan made her mouth moisten. Starting the day with a glass of warm water and a sprig of mint just didn't compare. Still, it meant come lunchtime she would earn the right to make the most of what was on offer. Until then, Lulabelle closed her eyes and tipped her head back so the make-up artist could work.

‘Are you sure I can't tempt you?' the catering manager asked one more time, as he loaded the plates on the breakfast bar.

‘I'm fine,' said Lulabelle, as a foundation brush whisked over her face. ‘Don't torment me.'

Her response was so abrupt it left an awkward silence in the kitchen. It meant when footsteps creaked overhead, everybody heard.

‘Someone's on the prowl,' said the make-up artist.

‘Who lives here?' asked Lulabelle. ‘That mirror is just wrong.'

‘Well, they like to cook,' observed the catering manager. ‘Kitchens don't come much classier than this.'

Lulabelle eyed the display of knives. They clung to a magnetic strip above a butcher's block, and ranged in shape and size.

‘It's just showing off,' she said, as if to correct him. ‘I mean, how many blades do you need?'

‘Judging by the grooves in the block,' said the catering manager, who had crossed the floor for a closer inspection. ‘I'd say they make full use of them all.'

This was a first for Titus Savage. Normally, the ground floor of the house would be hired out during the working week. It meant he could steer clear all day, forget about the intrusion, and then return from the office to find his wife happy and everything as it should be.

BOOK: The Savages
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