Authors: Jane Lovering
had a bruised feeling at the top of my hip. Aha! I
remembered that. I'd crashed into a table, Piers had given me
some wine and I'd—
Oh God
,
please, no
. The summerhouse. Dope, wine, Piers's
arm around me. I'd told him about Florrie. About—
him
. Flick.
The elven-faced, blond-haired artist who'd drawn me into his
life and misled me, and ultimately who'd betrayed me in
favour of his art.
Agonies flooded me, scrying and scribbling through my
intestines like haruspices trying to divine the future. So now
someone knew. Seventeen years of containment, of a
memory dam which had resisted all other forces, gone in one
night. Now, it wasn't so much a question of facing the music,
more of facing a full symphonic orchestra with a nuclear
string section.
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I staggered out of bed, wincing as my feet touched the
floor and my legs straightened. There was a cracking sound
from my spine as I reached full height and dragged myself
over to the small low window by judicious use of pieces of
furniture. I had to lean quite heavily on the sill and close my
eyes until the outside world stopped spinning, and I could get
a proper look at it.
Oh
shit
. I mean, really, really
shitty
shit. With a big side
order of
fuuuuuuuckkkk
.
The view wasn't familiar. Not exactly. But I did know
where I was. Oh God, someone was going to
die
for this. It
might be me.
"Oh, you're up and about. I brought you some orange
juice. Reckoned it might be the best thing right now. Thirsty?"
"Piers, you absolute, total and complete
bastard
." I spun
away from the window, hissing like a boiling snake. "What the
fuck possessed you to bring me
here
?"
Piers put down the pitcher and tray slowly and carefully,
then, with great deliberation, began pouring a glass of juice.
"What else could I do? You'd passed out, you were throwing
up, like, every two minutes. I couldn't
leave
you. You might
have choked."
"I don't remember." It was a half-lie. "I don't remember
anything."
Piers drank the orange juice, looking at me over the glass.
He had no
right
to look so bloody good. "Okay." He replaced
the glass on the tray and sat down on the window ledge. "You
were out of it, completely gone. I thought about getting you
to hospital, but I figured you'd thrown up most of the alcohol
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anyway. I was going to take you to your place, but—" He
looked down at his hands. "Don't forget, I was outta things
too last night. Not thinking straight, know what I mean? And
then." He looked at me and there was a whole book written in
his eyes. "I didn't like to leave you," he repeated. "So I got a
taxi, brought you back here. You'd stopped throwing up, but I
couldn't be sure."
"This is your flat, yes? And you have been subtle about it?
I mean, I'm not going to walk out through that door and find
Alasdair and Tamar waiting to hear how I came to be brought
home by her son, blind drunk and only half-dressed?"
"This is my place, yeah. Want to look round?"
I took a deep breath. "Piers, I'm only nominally sober, I'm
still only half-dressed, and I feel like—you don't want to
know. If I smile I'm convinced my face is going to fall off, put
it that way."
"You look okay to me."
"I might
look
okay but I
feel
like a chemical toilet. Why
didn't you book me into a hotel? And what about Grainger? I
should have rung the vet!"
"The way you were last night? I had to pay the taxi driver
double, he thought you were going to die on him. The only
hotels that would have taken you were
not
places you'd want
to be waking up in this morning. And, like I said, I didn't want
to leave you. Don't worry about getting back home. I'll need
to get to York, pick up my car. I'll drop you off on the way.
Grainger will still be at the surgery whatever's happened."
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There was a silence. I took the glass of juice he poured
me, proper stuff, freshly squeezed. "Piers, what I said last
night—"
"You said nothing last night. You want toast? I got a real
class act, kick-ass toaster, does bagels too." He got up and
headed out of the room, but I followed. This was too
important to leave.
"No, I mean—"
He stopped, so suddenly that I collided with his back.
"Alys. Listen up. You said
nothing
last night, right?" He turned
around to face me, put his hands on my shoulders. "Nothing."
His face bent towards me until I felt the soft drift of his hair
on my cheek, close enough to tell that his breath smelled of
coffee. "It's okay." And he was gone, whirling away across
bare-boarded floors to an island unit which stood in the
middle of the best fitted kitchen I'd seen outside a
Homes and
Garden
's magazine. "You should really be worrying about
what you
did
! Jeez, you were crazy, woman. Thought you
were going to jump in the river one time, up on the bridge
dancing. What was it?
Rio
, something."
"Duran Duran? I was dancing to Duran Duran? On a
bridge?" Trying to follow his mood, copy it, kid both him and
me that I believed he'd really never mention last night again.
"Not just dancing. You were
singing
it! Fucking crazy. And
that's when you threw your boots in the river too, case you
were wondering. Can't dance in boots, apparently. You want
eggs? No? And then you locked yourself in the john, did three
lines of coke and insisted we went on to a club."
"I didn't!" This was truly horrific.
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"Nah. Just kidding, you passed out. Had to carry you to the
taxi." Piers juggled three eggs in the air, cracking each one
against the side of a bowl as it came down. "Sure you don't
want? I'm scrambling?"
"You're posing."
"Yeah." He struck a muscle-man attitude, then one-handed
slooshed the eggs into a pan of foaming butter. "And I cook.
Twenty-first-century man, right in front of your very eyes."
I shook my head and went and sat down in a cuboid chair
until he'd finished. The smell of the eggs cooking made me
nauseous, and the relentless resilience of youth made me feel
crippled and weak.
I had to admit though that his flat was beautiful. Pale
boarded floors from end to end, the kitchen with its lean-over
worktop leading to the dining area, possibly the biggest TV I'd
ever seen, and the clean-sheeted bedroom. I presumed there
was also a bathroom to match. Anyone with a set-up like this
was highly unlikely to be pissing in a bucket. I leaned my
head back and closed my eyes. This much conspicuous
consumerism in one place was narcotic and I must have
drifted off again, because the next thing I knew was Piers
gently shaking my shoulder.
"Alys. The taxi's here."
"Wha'? Oh. Need to get dressed." I shuffled into the
bedroom and emerged wearing the pink skirt, but still in the
T-shirt and with bare feet. I'd found the halterback top, but at
some point during the night I'd obviously been sick on it. "I'll
get the T back to you later."
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"Keep it." Piers handed me a pair of flip-flop sandals.
"Wear these for now. They'll stop you looking quite so—" He
stopped and his cheeks flushed under his dark stubble.
"Quite so what?" He shook his head, but I insisted. "Quite
so
what
, Piers?"
"Quite so slept over," he muttered.
"But I did sleep over, where's the problem?"
"I am so
not
going to spell it out for you, Alys. Let's go,
taxi's waiting."
I frowned, and then his meaning rammed into my skull.
"Oh!" and a second later, "Oh, God. You don't think anyone
would think—would they?"
"My reputation's been shit for years, how's yours?" Piers
flashed me a mischievous grin.
"Going downhill, I suspect," I said, as disapprovingly as I
could.
"Yeah." Piers led the way to his front door. A short way
farther down a gravelled drive lay the five-bedroomed, five-
bathroomed home of Alasdair and Tamar. I felt a brief stab of
pity for the two of them; this would have been the perfect
setting for a clutch of kids. What the hell, they could always
adopt. Tamar would no doubt insist on a matching pair of
Romanian orphans and Piers would be kicked out to make
way for a Norlands nanny.
"Darling." The voice cut the tranquillity I'd been feeling
with the finesse of a chainsaw. "Did you want to come over
for lunch?" Tamar's accent was still, after seven years in
Yorkshire, entirely New England. I'd never put my finger on
exactly how it was that she managed to make me feel
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superior and yet patronised all at once, but I suspected the
accent played a large part.
"Uh, no thanks, Ma. Gotta get back into town." Under his
breath he added, "Please go now." But instead Tamar
advanced from around the side of the house until I couldn't
help but come into view.
"Alys?" Tamar was clearly torn excruciatingly between the
politeness she normally extended towards me whenever we
met, and the thousand-and-one questions which had
obviously sprung up, seeing me in the company of her son,
wearing his T-shirt, a micro-mini skirt and suspect sandals.
Particularly when she was as ever immaculate, with her
feathery blonde hair, her oversized shirt emphasising her
narrow shoulders and her sugar-pink pedal pushers with
matching ballet pumps. She looked like Sunday Morning
Barbie.
"Alys got mugged last night in York. She knew I was up in
town at a party so she called me." Piers's eyes gleamed at
me.
"And I didn't want to be alone, with Florrie away. I was a
bit shaken to tell the truth so—"
"So I brought her back to mine for the night. We're off now
to...er..."
"Report it to the police. I was too shaken last night, and
they'll never catch him anyway. Them," I upgraded, knowing
Tamar thought I was more butch than Russell Crowe simply
on the evidence that I lived without a man and could wire a
plug.
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"Oh, Alys, that's terrible." Tamar looked me up and down.
"They stole your clothes?"
"No, I—"
"Ma, we have to go, I don't want the car towed." Piers
flung the taxi door open and waved me inside, rather wildly I
thought.
"Sure. Okay. Have you heard from Florence lately, Alys?"
Tamar continued, obviously trying to make conversation. You
had to admire her really. After all, when it came to awkward
social situations this must rank pretty highly.
"A couple of postcards, some rather brief phone calls. Have
you?" I wanted the answer to be "no".
"Oh yeah. She sounds real happy, doesn't she? City life
suits her."
The taxi started moving before I could reveal that Florrie
had left herself limited time during her snatched phone calls
in which to sound happy or otherwise, she mainly rang to
shriek things like "I'm in the Tower of London!" Anyway,
Tamar seemed to have satisfied herself that sufficient
pleasantries had been exchanged. She was already heading
back to her Aga-lined kitchen with resident cook. She
probably had a little woman to do her sit-ups and pelvic-floor
exercises too. I gave her a smile as we passed. She waved,
but there was a thoughtful look in her eyes. Was it the sight
of her son in my company or was she starting to make
connections?
I was getting paranoid. I silently cursed Piers for telling me
about Alasdair's fertility problems. But there was no reason
for anyone to put things together. Alasdair's early influence
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on Florrie had made sure that she had a lot of his
mannerisms, even his own parents had remarked on how like
him she was. People seeing what they wanted to, I supposed.
"You okay?" Piers's voice shook me out of my delusions of
discovery. "That was one wild party last night. Not surprised
you're still hungover."
"I'm just tired."
"Yeah right. I know hungover when I see it." Piers smiled
lazily and hauled his hair back off his face. "Can't take the
pace."
He was trying to distract me, to stop me thinking about
last night's revelations, to make everything all right again. A
sudden wave of affection for him welled up inside me. "Know
something, Piers? You are a very lovely guy."