Sunshine After the Rain: a feel good, laugh-out-loud romance. Daisy James
preferred. Her ever-present craving for household orderliness was a seriously undervalued personality trait in her view.
Pippa took a seat next to her, her fingers laced around her coffee mug. The look of sympathy on her friend’s face almost tipped Evie over the edge. But she grabbed hold of her emotions and managed to rein them in as there was one question she was burning to ask.
‘What happened at the gallery after I left? Is Jaxx still furious about the canvas switch?’
‘Well, he’s not happy, to say the least. I think it might be a good idea to steer clear of the gallery for a week or so until the whole episode blows over and James sees what a mistake he’s made by letting you go. You are a fantastic manager, Evie, the best he’s going to get. It’s because of you that Jaxx chose to debut at Bradbury Art in the first place and he knows that.’
‘But the painting …’
‘Pierre and Antoine replaced the rogue canvas with “Muswell Musings”, which seemed to placate Jaxx and his agent. Most of the VIP guests were fans of Jaxx’s music so it wasn’t the most critical of audiences. Their extravagant compliments massaged his ego, and he sold every single one of his canvases. There was even an impromptu mini auction over the star of the show after it was unveiled – although, as you know, I have no idea what the bidders saw in it, or any of the others for that matter.’
‘I still don’t understand what happened. Was the switch some kind of cruel joke? If it was, it’s not very funny! I’ve lost my job! And who was the trick meant to be played on – Jaxx or the gallery? You know, instead of sitting here, I really should be out there scouring the city for the culprit and when I find out who did this, I’ll … I’ll … well, I haven’t decided what I’ll do yet but it won’t be very nice. Did you find out anything about who the original canvas belongs to?’
‘No, not yet, but James has promised a full investigation. The most likely explanation is that it’s one of Garth Maddox’s masterpieces, which arrived early for his exhibition next month – exceptionally bad timing!’ Pippa took a sip of her coffee, studying Evie over the rim of her mug.
Evie offered her friend a weak smile; bad timing was the understatement of the year. Her whole life had crumbled around her in the space of two hours through no fault of her own. She glanced out of the window of her attic home to the cheerless rooftops and the flat, pewter-grey sky beyond. The rain of the previous night had disappeared only to be replaced by a canopy of drab cloud cover. The meteorological palette reflected her emotions at the moment, but she knew there were worse things happening in the world.
Her earlier surge of anger faded; she couldn’t turn the clock back. So, the best thing to do in situations like this was to try to make the best of it.
‘Actually, I think I should use this opportunity to reassess my priorities. It’s not just Dylan who’s stopped chasing his dreams …’
‘Never a truer word!’ interrupted Pippa as she swept her mahogany eyes around the walls of the living room-cum-kitchen. ‘I don’t see any evidence whatsoever that the owner of this flat is an accomplished artist. Where are those fabulous watercolours of Cornwall you showed me last year?’
‘In a portfolio under my bed.’
‘So, this is the perfect time to start painting again.’
‘Perhaps.’
‘Then, why don’t you go down to Cornwall and stay with your parents? It’s a fabulous place to paint – lots of inspiration. Everyone says so.’
‘Oh, God, what are Mum and Dad going to say when I tell them I’ve resigned from Bradbury’s? They’ve been so supportive of my move to London, after what happened at the gallery in St Ives, even though they would have loved me to put on a brave face and stay in Cornwall. Now, with me and Dylan breaking up, they’re bound to want me to go back home so they can help me heal my “broken heart”.’
Evie ran her fingers through her bird’s nest hair and groaned. ‘Don’t get me wrong, I love my parents, but the thought of being treated like the prodigal daughter doesn’t appeal to me after the mess I’ve made of my life so far. I don’t want to lie to them, but at the same time, I know how upset they’ll be if I tell them the truth about last night. It’s just another catastrophe in the turbulent life of Evie Louise Johnson, but I wouldn’t put it past Dad to grab his pipe, don a deerstalker hat, and shoot up here to undertake the investigation into the Mysterious Case of the Canvas Switcher himself.’
‘So, don’t go home, stay here in London. It’s the perfect place for you to do something just for yourself. Now Dylan has vanished into the ether you’ll have all the peace and quiet you need to paint.’
‘Oh, Pip, I’ve tried, believe me I’ve tried. Over and over again when Dylan and I first arrived in London. But the St Ives gallery fiasco shattered my confidence more than I thought and one of us had to work to pay the rent. Dylan was adamant that a recording contract was just around the corner, so whilst he concentrated on his dream of becoming a famous musician, I worked hard in the gallery. Chasing my elusive painting passion just seemed to get subsumed in the treadmill of life.’
The look Pippa was giving her made her feel guilty for not tending her dreams more carefully. And whilst she adored her job in the gallery – until recent events, of course – she should still have made space for facing up to her demons, maybe even considering a course of therapy, and continuing with her ambition to become, one day, a commercially viable artist like those whose work she had showcased for the last two years. However, the longer she had put off getting her easel out, the less inclined she felt to paint, until a niggle of fear had entered her heart and paralysed her urge to hold a paintbrush. What if she had lost her creative flair altogether?
‘And anyway, have you seen the view from up here? It’s hardly Turneresque. Grey slate roofs under gloomy grey skies punctured by a jumble of chimney pots and TV aerials with only the occasional magpie or pigeon to add fluidity. Dark and brooding landscapes have never floated my artistic boat. I need sun, sea, sand, maybe a Tuscan cypress tree or two, a few terracotta turrets, quaint little fishing boats bobbing at a bleached wooden jetty on an azure ocean. If I stay here I know I won’t paint. I’ll just agonize over the unresolved situation at the gallery. Might even be tempted to join my father in his Sherlock Holmes fantasy to find out what went wrong. You know, Pip, the paperwork that came with the canvas definitely had James’s signature on it.’
‘I knew you’d say something like this. So, your personal Paul Daniels has conjured up a solution.’ Pippa cast a sidelong glance at Evie from beneath her eyelashes.
‘What do you mean?’
Evie snapped her attention from considering her fingernails to her friend’s beaming face. Pippa put her coffee mug down and scooted along the sofa to take Evie’s hands in hers.
‘Before you say anything just hear me out.’
‘What’s going on, Pippa?’
‘Promise to listen first and ask questions later?’
‘Pippa …’
‘Promise?’
‘Okay, okay,’ Evie sighed.
A wave of tiredness washed over her and her brain felt like it was crammed to bursting with marshmallow. The kitchen clock told her that it was eight o’clock on Saturday morning and, in another world, she would have been back at the gallery directing the tidy-up operation and mulling over the success of the debut show with Pippa, and maybe Sam who occasionally popped by on a Saturday morning laden with cappuccinos and cupcakes for everyone as there was no risk his father would be in attendance at a weekend.
Pippa was busy scrabbling in her handbag, and when she withdrew her hand, a set of keys dangled from her fingertip.
‘What are they?’
‘Keys to James’s villa in Corfu.’
‘And how come you have them in your handbag?’
‘James’s