One-hit Wonder
'A compelling story packed with intriguing characters' THE TIMES
By: Lisa Jewell
Paperback | 1 June 2006 | Edition Number 1
At a Glance
464 Pages
3.1 x 13.1 x 19.9
Paperback
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Ana Wills has day-dreamed for years about the exotic half-sister she hasn't seen since she was thirteen. When she comes to London to clear out her flat she is surprised to discover that Bee's life was far from glamorous. And there are some things that need explaining - a missing cat, mysterious weekends away and a secret cottage in the country.
Instead of going home, Ana tracks down Bee's two closest friends, Mad Lol and strong, silent Flint, and together they set out to discover whatever happened to Bee Bearhorn.
About the Author
Lisa Jewell was born and raised in north London, where she lives with her husband and two daughters. Her first novel, Ralph's Party, was the bestselling debut of 1999. She is also the author of Thirtynothing, One-Hit Wonder, Vince & Joy, A Friend of the Family and 31 Dream Street, all of which have been Sunday Times bestsellers.
Industry Reviews
Prologue
Jan-00
Bee hissed under her breath at the sack-of-potatoes cab driver sitting there in all his Rothman-breathed, greasy-haired splendour while she hoisted boxes and boxes of stuff from the back of his estate car. Then she turned to hit Mr Arif, the corpulent and slimy property agent who was grinning at her from the front step, with one of her sweetest smiles. When what she actually wanted to do was put his repellent testicles into a Corby Trouser Press and squeeze them till they popped.
It was one of those days. Wild and woolly. The sky was an intense blue and full of overfed clouds being dragged across the sun by an insistent wind, and it was bitterly, almost sadistically cold.
Mr Arif sucked in his gut to let her squeeze past in the doorway and smiled at her, lasciviously. Bee nearly gagged on the smell of his liberally applied after-shave. ‘Maybe, Mr Arif,’ she began sweetly, ‘it would be easier if you waited for me in the flat.’
‘Oh yes, Miss Bearhorn, of course. I will await you. Upstairs.’ He backed away grinning at her as if she was the answer to all his prayers. And in a way, she was. She’d phoned him that morning, asked to see a selection of flats, looked at this one in Baker Street just an hour after their phone conversation, told him she’d take it, gone back to his office, filled in some paperwork, given him cash for three months rent in advance and was now moving in a mere four hours after first contacting him. He’d probably never had to do so little for his commission.
It really was a bloody miserable flat, and extortionately expensive, but with the meter running up on her minicab and John threatening to do something unmentionable in his cat box at any minute, time to find the perfect flat hadn’t been a luxury available to her. And besides, she quite liked the anonymity of the area around Baker Street. The blandness of it. There was no ‘scene’ in Baker Street, no vibe, just streets of blank-faced mansion blocks full of foreigners and retired people. In her current state of mind, Bee wasn’t ready to fall in love with a neighbourhood again. And anyway, this was only going to be temporary, just six months to get her life back together, make some money and then she might even buy a place somewhere.
An elderly lady with intricately curled silver hair and a tartan-jacketed dachshund was waiting outside the lift as Bee made her way up with John in his carrier. She smiled at Bee as she pulled open the metal grille and then down again at John.
‘Well, well, well,’ she said, addressing the cat, ‘you’re a very handsome young man, aren’t you?’
Bee smiled at her warmly. Any friend of John’s was a friend of hers.
‘What a beautiful creature,’ she said, ‘what d’you call him?’
‘John.’
‘John? Goodness. That’s an unusual name for a cat. What type is he?’
Bee stuck a finger between the bars of John’s carrier and played with the fluff on his chest. ‘He’s an English Blue. And he’s the best boy in the world. Aren’t you, my little angel?’ John rubbed himself against her finger, purring loudly.
‘And who’s this?’ Bee asked, addressing the small, bizarrely-shaped dog sitting at the old lady’s feet. She didn’t really want to know but thought it only polite having discussed her own pet in such detail.
‘This is dearest Freddie – named after Freddie Mercury, you know?’
‘Really!’ exclaimed Bee, ‘and, why er – Freddie Mercury?’
‘He loves Queen, would you believe – he can howl his way through the whole of Bohemian Rhapsody.’ She chuckled and eyed her pet affectionately.
Well, thought Bee, you never could tell about people, you really couldn’t.
‘So, dear. Are you moving in today?’
Bee nodded and smiled. ‘Number twenty-seven.’
‘Oh good,’ said the old lady, ‘then we shall be neighbours. I’m at twenty-nine. And it’s about time we had a new young person about the place. There’s too many old people in this block. It’s depressing.’
Bee laughed. ‘I wouldn’t call myself young.’
‘Well, dear – when you get to my age, just about everybody seems young. Alone, are we?’
‘I beg your pardon.’
‘Are you moving in alone?’
‘Fraid so.’
‘Oh well. A beautiful young thing like you, I shouldn’t imagine you’ll be alone for long.’
She squeezed Bee’s arm with one tiny, crepey hand and shuffled into the lift.
‘Anyway. I’d better get on. It was charming to meet you. My name is Amy, by the way. Amy Tilly-Loubelle.’
‘Bee,’ said Bee, feeling for once, like her name wasn’t quite so whimsical, ‘Bee Bearhorn.’
‘Well – nice to have met you, Bee – and John. See you around.’
Bee smiled to herself at the old lady’s closing blast of modern lingo and then the lift creaked and clanked and began its snail’s-pace journey back down to the lobby. She walked down the corridor towards number 27 – her new flat.
Mr Arif was sitting on the sofa, going through some paperwork, but stood up abruptly and let his papers fall to the floor when he saw here walk in.
‘Oh no no no no, madam. No no no.’ He was crossing his hands in front of his chest and shaking his head quite violently. ‘This is simply not allowed. This animal. It must go. Now.’ He pointed at John as if he were a sewer rat.
‘But – he’s my cat.’
‘Madam. I do not care if he is the cat of the Queen. No animals, of any description, allowed in any of my properties. It must go – now.’
‘But he’s an indoors car. He’s never been outdoors. He’s full house-trained, he’s quiet and he doesn’t even moult and …’
‘Madam. I have no interest in the personal characteristics of your animal. All I know is this – it must leave. Now.’
Bee wanted to cry. She wanted to hit Mr Arif. Really hard. In fact, the way she was feeling right now, after the events of last night, she’d really quite like to kill him. With her bare hands. Put her hands around his big squishy neck and squeeze and squeeze and squeeze until he went purple and his eyes started bulging and then … ‘Miss Bearhorn. Please. Remove this animal. I cannot give you the keys until this animal is gone.’
He’s not an animal, she wanted to scream, he’s a human being. Bee could feel her temper building, a pounding in her temples, a painful lump in the back of her throat. She took a deep breath.
‘Please Mr Arif.’ She perched herself on the edge of the sofa. ‘I need time to think. I need …’
‘Madam. There is no time to think. These keys remain in my pocked until I can no longer see your animal.’
Bee lost her battle to control her anger. ‘Okay. Okay fine!’ She leaped to her feet and grabbed John’s carrier by its handle. ‘Fine. Forget it then. Forget this flat. I don’t like it anyway. I want my money back. Take me to your office and give me my money back.’
Mr Arif smiled at her indulgently. ‘May I draw some points to your attention at this moment, most charming Miss Bearhorn. First of all, the contract is signed and your money is on its way to the bank. It is too late for any form of cancellation. And second of all, are you really wanting to take away all of your possessions when you have just this minute carried them up here? Possibly it would be easier to leave your animal with a friend or family?’
Bee looked around her at the piles of boxes and decided that although she’d be more than happy to sacrifice every penny of the cash she’d given Mr Arif in exchange for a place where John would be welcome, she really couldn’t stomach the thought of lugging this stuff all the way back downstairs, with Mr Arif watching her with his smug little raisin-eyes and then having to find another letting agency and look at another flat an go through this rigmarole all over again. So she took a deep breath and decided to lie.
‘OK,’ she said, ‘no problem Mr Arif. None at all. You’re absolutely right. I’ll just make a call and find an alternative home for my, er, animal.’
She pulled her mobile phone from her bag and dialled in a made-up number.
‘Hi!’ she said breezily, to an unavailable tone, ‘it’s Bee. Are you around? Cool. I need you to do me a favour. Can I leave John with you? I don’t know. For a while. Three months at least. Really? You don’t mind? God – thank you. That’s brilliant. You’re a star. I’ll be round in about ten minutes. OK. See you then.’
‘All is sorted out?’
‘Yes,’ she beamed, tucking her mobile phone back into her handbag, ‘all is sorted out.’
Outside the block, she agreed to meet Mr Arif later at his office to pick up the keys and then watched his huge arse swinging its way back down the street towards his offices in Chiltern Street. She stuck one finger up at his receding back and stuck out her tongue. ‘Fucking tossy wankhead arseknob shitbag cunt,’ she murmured under her breath, before leaning into the cab.
‘Hi!’ she beamed, switching on the charm, ‘there’s been a slight change of plan. I need you to drive around the block a bit with my cat.’
‘You what?’ The fat cab driver looked at her in horror.
‘You heard me,’ she hissed, ‘just take the cat and drive around a bit. I’ll meet you back here in half an hour.’
The driver’s expression softened when Bee forced three tenners into his sweaty hand. ‘There’ll be more where that came from when you bring him back. OK?’
‘Whatever,’ he shrugged, folding up his copy of the Racing Post. ‘Whatever.’
She slipped John’s box on to the passenger seat and tickled him under the chin again. ‘You be a good boy,’ she whispered into his ear, ‘I’ll see you in the half an hour. Be good.’ And then she closed the door and felt tears tickling the back of her throat as she watched the car pull away and her beloved cat disappearing into the early evening London traffic.
She sighed and made her way to a Starbucks where she sat for few moments sipping an Earl Grey tea and taking stock of what had happened in the last twenty-four hours. Her life, as she knew it, was over. And all she had to show for it was as much as she could fit into the back of an Astra estate. She had no idea why she’d left her flat, no idea what she was doing moving into this one. It was really just a gut reaction to what happened last night. And in a strange way if felt sort of … pre-ordained.
After ten minutes she picked up her bag and headed for Mr Arif’s office. He looked thrilled to see her sans cat, and handed over the keys with what seemed to be unbridled joy.
‘And may I wish you many, many, many, years of contentment in your beautiful new home, most charming Miss Bearhorn. I am sure you will be most happy there.’
Bee took the keys and headed wearily for Bickenhall Mansions, thinking that that was very unlikely indeed.
ISBN: 9780140295962
ISBN-10: 0140295968
Published: 1st June 2006
Format: Paperback
Language: English
Number of Pages: 464
Audience: General Adult
Publisher: Penguin UK
Country of Publication: GB
Edition Number: 1
Dimensions (cm): 3.1 x 13.1 x 19.9
Weight (kg): 0.32
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