She duly arrives, and nobody knows who she really is. Hortense is reluctant to come to the party, but Cynthia persuades her. When he teils Monica, she is equally circumspect. When Cynthia now phones Maurice to ask is she can bring a friend from work to the barbecue, he agrees, albeit apprehensively. Maurice and Monica are also much affected by the surprise visit by the previous owner of their business, Stuart, who has returned from his failed emigration to Australia in a advanced state of alcoholic nervous breakdown. Whilst Roxanne shares with her quiet, scaffolder boyfriend Paul, how mystified she is by the sudden change in her mother, Maurice and Monica anguish over whether Cynthia has ever told Roxanne she has a half-sibling somewhere, and over the Bark secret of Monica's infertility. Only when Hortense has persuaded her to go to a cafe does a long-suppressed memory come flooding back to Cynthia, and she realises that Hortense is indeed her elder daughter The two women now start to meet and go out, and what begins in a fraught and suspicious way now develops into a warm, loving mother-daughter relationship. However, on seeing that Hortense is black, Cynthia insists that there has been a mis-take. On eventually realising who the caller is, Cynthia is deeply distressed but, alter some hesitation, she agrees to meet her a few days later in Central London. Meanwhile, having gone to some lengths to track Cynthia down, Hortense plucks up the courage to 'phone her. He announces that he and Monica intend to throw a small barbecue party for Roxanne's 21st birthday. MAURICE visits Cynthia, who becomes very emotional. No love is lost between Cynthia and Monica. They have not seen or spoken to each other for some time, and they miss each other Maurice feels guilty about his neglect, Cynthia resentful. Cynthia and Maurice's mother having died when they were children, Cynthia effectively brought Maurice up. His modern house boasts beautiful interior decoration, the work of his childless wife, Monica. Cynthia's surroundings contrast sharply with those of Maurice, her younger brother, a successful suburban portrait and wedding photographer. Her mother is Cynthia, a sad, unmarried woman who works in a factory, and lives in a shabby terrace house with her daughter Roxanne, a council road sweeper They do not get on. From this, Hortense discovers to her surprise and consternation that her birth mother was white. She receives instructions to visit a social worker, who, along with some general sympathetic advice, gives her her case file. They are her adoptive parents, and she now feels the need to try to find her birth mother. Hortense is a young black optometrist, living in London.
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