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Authors: Helen Warner

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‘No, he’s staying here. Oh, it’s such a long story that I haven’t got the time or the energy to go into it right now. I’ll call you later, OK?’ Liv said,
before hanging up, feeling shaky and a bit sick. It had been a draining and upsetting conversation, breaking it to Mariella that Danny had ended their relationship.

Her mother would never have admitted it, but Liv knew that she was ridiculously impressed by Danny’s connections, even though her own family were already famous themselves. She had
secretly been over the moon when Liv had dumped Charlie, who Mariella thought would never make it big, in favour of a Hollywood A-lister, as it had automatically propelled her up the fame ladder by
association.

No, Liv thought, as she made her way through to see Charlie, Mariella had never tried hard to disguise the fact that she was as shallow as a paddling pool; her disappointment at Liv’s
wrecked relationship was definitely more for herself than for her heartbroken daughter. As the thought entered Liv’s head, it was immediately followed by the realisation that maybe she
herself wasn’t as heartbroken as she had always imagined she would be. In some ways, now that the worst had happened, it felt like a relief. She had spent so long twisting herself in knots,
worrying that Danny might be cheating on her, or would grow bored with her, that she couldn’t have carried on for much longer as she was.

‘Hi. I was just on the phone to my mother,’ she explained, as she came into the day room to meet Charlie.

Charlie rolled his eyes. ‘And how is the lovely Mariella?’

‘Exactly the same as she ever was,’ Liv replied, thinking how strange it was to have her ex-husband, who knew so much about her and her family, sharing her house again, and for them
to be getting on so well after so many years of clipped conversations and recriminations. ‘I told her about . . . me and Danny,’ she said quietly. She glanced towards the kitchen. She
needed a drink but suspected that Charlie might disapprove.

Charlie nodded. ‘And let me guess. I bet she wasn’t happy? Or at least not as happy as she was when you left me?’

Liv sighed. ‘No,’ she admitted. ‘I hate that she didn’t treat you as well as you deserved, Charlie. None of us did.’

‘Forget about it,’ Charlie said. ‘I managed just fine without Mariella’s dubious support, thanks very much,’ he added, dropping down onto one of the over-sized
white sofas that were dotted around the giant space and smiling up at Liv, taking the sting out of his words.

‘Anyway, forget about my mother.’ Liv waved her hand dismissively. God, she really did need a drink. ‘How did you get on?’

‘Fine,’ Charlie nodded. ‘I’ve left them to it. Dropped them at the Four Seasons . . . We were booked in there anyway.’

Liv sat down on the floor, her legs crossed and her back against one of the easy chairs. ‘That was very nice of you, Charlie, especially considering . . .’ she tailed off.
‘Well, you know.’

‘Yes,’ Charlie stretched his long legs out in front of him and crossed them at the ankles. He frowned slightly. ‘I must have “mug” tattooed on my
forehead.’

‘No!’ Liv protested. ‘You’re not a mug at all. You’ve done really well for yourself. You’re flavour of the month at the moment – everyone’s
tripping over themselves to offer you stuff.’ She hoped she didn’t sound as bitter as she felt. What would her career hold now she’d been relegated to ‘Danny’s
ex’?

‘Yes, I guess so. I’ve got a couple of meetings tomorrow, actually. I’d almost forgotten about them,’ he replied, looking down and meeting Liv’s eye.

‘I remember that feeling of being fêted by every director and having to turn stuff down . . .’ Liv pushed out her bottom lip glumly.

‘Any new roles lined up?’

‘A couple,’ Liv lied, before admitting, ‘Actually, Charlie, the truth is, things haven’t been so good lately. I’ve missed out on a couple of parts that I really
wanted and I don’t know why. Everything seems to be going wrong at the moment,’ she said, her eyes filling with tears and her head swimming.

Charlie looked at her appraisingly. ‘Everyone goes through lean patches, Liv,’ he said. ‘It’ll come good, you’ll see. You’ll get a call tomorrow from your
agent with something amazing and wonder what you were worried about.’

Liv smiled gratefully, remembering how good Charlie had been for her confidence. He had always believed in her. Believed that she would make it all the way to the top.
And he had been right. For a very brief period, after she and Danny got together, she had been the toast of Hollywood, turning down endless parts because she didn’t have the time to fit them
all in. But then, as Danny moved on to new projects with new leading ladies and she starred in a couple of movies that were universally panned, she noticed that she was starting to lose out to
other actresses for parts that she would have thought were a dead cert.

‘It’s amazing that you can be so generous, after what happened between us,’ Liv chewed her lip nervously. She and Charlie had never actually discussed what had happened, after
the initial phone calls in which he had begged her to reconsider and she had coldly told him that she had made up her mind and that she wouldn’t be getting back with him.

Charlie looked up as he considered what she had said. ‘I don’t
feel
generous,’ he said. ‘But I do feel as if something has changed in me recently. Maybe
I’m hardening,’ he added, with a glint in his eye.

‘I’m the opposite,’ Liv could feel the cloud that had been hovering ominously over her shoulder start to descend just a little bit further. ‘I feel a bit . . .
overwhelmed by everything. As if I can’t cope.’

Charlie thought for a moment before he spoke. ‘I felt like that for a long while after you left me,’ he said, his tone matter-of-fact rather than accusatory.

Liv closed her eyes and shrank back against the chair she was leaning on, her stomach churning. It might be easier if he was a bit more aggressive and nasty, but his kindness only made her guilt
a million times worse. ‘I’m sorry . . .’ she muttered.

‘I wasn’t expecting you to apologise,’ Charlie said quickly. ‘I just meant that it’s not surprising you feel like this so soon after your relationship breaking up.
But it passes.’

Something inside Liv seemed to crack as he spoke and she started to shake violently, then her chest tightened and she started to struggle for breath.

Charlie jumped up in alarm. ‘Liv! Are you ok?’ he cried, kneeling in front of her and lifting her chin. ‘Take a deep, slow breath. Come on, breathe with me, Liv! Jesus,
you’ve gone grey. Where’s your phone?’

Liv tried to focus on what he was saying but it was as if all the muscles in her neck had disappeared and she couldn’t hold her head up, let alone breathe.

Charlie cast around wildly, looking for the phone as Liv slid down onto the floor so that she was lying on her back. Suddenly, it was as if she was floating above herself, watching as her body
continued to shake violently and her eyes began to bulge as she clutched her chest.

Charlie finally located a phone and dialled 911. ‘Ambulance, emergency,’ he said, before giving the address. ‘It’s Liv Mason. She seems to be having some sort of
attack.’

Chapter 27

Martha leaned against the balcony rail and looked out at the view over the pool. It reminded her of an all-inclusive holiday they’d once taken with the children, the way
the sunbeds were all lined up in neat rows.

Unlike the all-inclusive, however, where there was an unseemly scramble for the sunbeds each morning, many of the beds were available. Those that weren’t were mainly occupied by extremely
attractive young women, clearly hoping to be ‘discovered’ either by a passing movie director or, failing that, a very rich man who would provide a passport into a life of Hollywood
luxury.

Every fifteen minutes or so, a handsome young man in an emerald green polo shirt and stone-coloured shorts would approach the sunbathers and top up their water jugs or refill their glasses.

At any other time, Martha would have lapped up this whole experience. She was in one of the best hotels in Beverly Hills, surrounded by beautiful people, celebrities and God knows how many
potential stories, but she just couldn’t get excited about it.

She and Jamie had talked for hours, with Jamie desperately trying to get her to focus on the good times they had had together. They had reminisced about the early days of their relationship and
all the things they had achieved together; they remembered the days their babies were born and how scared they had felt bringing them home for the first time. But underlying everything was both of
them trying to make sense of what had happened and why he had done it. Eventually, Jamie had succumbed to exhaustion and jet-lag, and was still fast asleep.

Martha stepped back into the room – she hadn’t used the other room they had booked yet – and pulled the doors closed behind her, blocking out the sunshine and the smoggy heat
of the city. She sat down on the sofa and watched Jamie as he slept, thinking how troubled he looked, with the deep frown lines across his tanned forehead that moved up and down as if they were
having a conversation all of their own, his square jaw clenching every now and again as he ground his teeth together. There were still traces of the three scratches she had left on his cheek when
she had clawed at him that first morning, which gave Martha a strange sense of satisfaction. She decided that it was because she had inflicted pain on him the way he had inflicted it on her. Was it
really less than a week since all that had happened?

Jamie jolted violently in the bed and groaned. Clearly his dreams were as bad as hers. She had loved this man so, so much and yet, watching him, she realised how close love was to hate, because
hate was definitely her over-riding emotion now. How could he have done it to her? But worse, how could he have done it to their children?

She wondered what Charlie was doing right now and why she was missing him. Probably because he had been so kind to her, she told herself. She could picture his long-lashed, dark eyes, watching
her with sympathy and understanding as she talked. It was the sympathy of someone who knew exactly how she felt.

Martha shook her head, trying to clear all thoughts of Charlie from her mind, but it was hopeless. She needed to see him. Casting another glance at Jamie, she picked up her phone and left the
room. She made her way along the plushly carpeted corridor to the lift and pressed the button for the pool area.

As she walked out into the sunshine, she was immediately hit by a gush of dry heat and she instinctively dropped her sunglasses against the glare. Her eyes felt sore enough without exposing them
to the sun’s rays. Now she understood why so many Hollywood stars were never seen without their shades. It would have been impossible to function without them here.

She headed for one of the sunbeds and was just about to lay down when one of the attendants darted in front of her and placed a thick cream towel on the sumptuous padding and another one rolled
up for her head. Martha smiled her thanks and sank down onto it, suddenly grateful that she was wearing a sundress rather than a bikini, judging by the model-like beauties draped over some of the
other beds.

She dialled Charlie’s number and felt a stab of disappointment when he didn’t pick up. She knew that he had her number in his phone; was he deliberately screening her calls because
he was pissed off that she had agreed to meet Jamie? Surely not. Jamie was her husband and the father of her children. She couldn’t let him come all the way to LA and ignore him.

As instructed by an automated voice, she left a message. ‘Hi Charlie, it’s me. Martha, that is,’ she added, laughing nervously. ‘I just wanted to . . . um, speak to you,
I suppose.’ She was trying not to sound too desperate. ‘Anyway, please give me a call if you get this message. Uh, thanks. Bye.’

She hung up and laid her head back on the rolled-up towel at the top of the sunbed, feeling strangely upset. ‘Hi there!’ said a ridiculously good-looking blond-haired man in his
twenties, looming over her and making her jump. ‘Can I get you a drink from the bar?’

‘Oh!’ Martha stuttered, sitting up quickly and automatically pulling down the hem of her dress. ‘No, er, I’m fine, thank you. I’m with someone . . . he’s just
upstairs!’ she trilled over-brightly. She knew she had started to blush. It was a long time since a man had hit on her and she didn’t know how to deal with it.

The man managed to smile and frown at the same time. ‘No problem, just give me a shout when you’re ready to order!’

‘Will do,’ Martha muttered, feeling idiotic and lying back down as flat as she could, in the hope that she could disappear altogether. Of course he hadn’t been hitting on her.
He
worked
here.

After a few moments Martha must have dozed off because she was awoken by a voice accompanied by a hand on her arm. ‘No!’ She opened her eyes in alarm. ‘I’m still fine for
a drink, thank you!’

‘Martha, it’s me, Charlie,’ said the voice, as Charlie stepped slightly to one side so that the sun wasn’t behind him and she could make out his face.

‘Oh, hi!’ she said, aware that she was grinning now. ‘I just called you.’

‘Actually, you called me a while ago but I was at the hospital.’

‘Hospital?’ Martha echoed, sitting up in alarm. ‘Why? What’s happened?’

Charlie sighed as he sat down on the sunbed nearest to her, upon which the ever-present attendant had already placed two towels.

Around the pool, Martha could see a couple of people glancing surreptitiously over the top of their sunglasses at him, and she realised with a start that it was because he was easily the most
famous person here. Already it seemed as if Martha had forgotten that Charlie was a VIP – she just thought of him as the same as everyone else.

‘It was Liv. She had some sort of funny turn—’

‘Like the other day?’ Martha cut in, turning sideways so that she was facing him, planting her bare feet on the ground.

‘I guess so. Looked like she was having a heart attack but I doubt it’s that – she’s too young and fit.’

Martha shook her head as she absorbed the news. ‘I did notice that she seems to be drinking a lot. Do you think it might have something to do with that?’

BOOK: With or Without You
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