Read The Flavours of Love Online
Authors: Dorothy Koomson
‘Not about that any more. But it’d be naive to think they won’t when they find out about this. People always find out.’
‘This is what I hate about all of this. Like last time, we can’t hide away, we can’t pretend it didn’t happen because everyone knows. I don’t know if emotionally she can stand it.’ I
know
emotionally I can’t stand it. ‘And there’s Zane. It’s another thing in his life he has to deal with that he shouldn’t. Sometimes I wonder who exactly “out there” has it in for me.’
‘It does feel like that sometimes.’
‘Wasn’t your wife’s death hard on you?’
‘I don’t understand what you mean.’
‘You were very careful to point out how hard it was on Curtis, and it sounded like you weren’t bothered either way.’
He blinks at me and without his glasses the up and down fluttering of his eyelashes is quite pronounced. ‘Of course I was bothered.’
‘But?’
Our gazes meet, stay locked together. He is gauging how much he can tell me. I am wondering why I’ve asked him that when I wouldn’t even entertain anyone asking me the same thing. Had the roles been reversed, I would have walked out by now.
‘So, what about our babies making babies?’ he says in the same fake bright tone I used earlier. His gaze goes to the bar, mine to the snug area through the archway at the back of the pub.
A pair of eyes are avidly watching me. I’m too far away to see the colour of them, but I know what colour they are. I’ve looked into
them enough times over the years, I’ve stood beside the man whose eyes they are so many times over the years I could easily describe his face without looking.
Fynn. He is staring at me. Of course he’s seen me in a bar with a good-looking man. Of course he’s seen said good-looking man cover my hand with his. Of course he thinks I am on a date.
I want to smile at him, to maybe wave him over, but I do neither of these, I simply stare until he redirects his gaze to the person opposite him and I know from the way he holds himself, the way his face is rigidly directed towards his companion, that he will not look at me again for as long as I am sitting there.
‘I’m sorry, I can’t be here,’ I say to Mr Bromsgrove and gather into my arms my bag from beside us on the table and my jacket from over the back of the chair. ‘I can’t be here.’
Alarmed, his eyes wide in confusion, he says, ‘But we haven’t—’
‘I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I just can’t be here.’
My body can’t move fast enough. I can’t escape fast enough. I can feel the lingering trace of Fynn’s gaze burning into me – accusing me of cheating on Joel; denouncing me as a false widow; condemning me for being out in a pub instead of at home grieving.
The worst part of that, of course, as I run-walk my way towards home, is that I know it’s not true. Fynn wouldn’t think that. He was probably surprised to see me out with someone when I hadn’t asked him to babysit; probably confused why I didn’t smile and call him over.
The sickness that is twisting up my stomach as it churns itself round and round is from
me
thinking that. Because, above the sickness, blossoming in my chest like a maturing flower, is the sure and certain knowledge that I’m attracted to Mr Bromsgrove.
XV
11 years before
That Day
(March, 2000)
‘Do you promise you won’t laugh at me?’ he said.
‘Of course I won’t. When, apart from about your Klingon DNA showing in your forehead, have I ever laughed at you?’
As usual, he laughed and pressed his fingers against his forehead. ‘I do not have a big forehead,’ he proclaimed when he had confirmed his forehead was normal sized.
‘I know you don’t. I’m sorry, go on, what was it you wanted to tell me?’
‘For years and years I’ve wanted to write a cookbook.’
‘I can so see you doing that. You should absolutely do it.’
‘For honestly, real?’
‘Yes. What sort of cookbook?’
‘Well, this is the bit you might laugh at because it may sound a bit stupid and airy-fairy, but I want to make it about the foods that I love. Each recipe will have at least one ingredient that I absolutely love or means something to me. What do you think?’
‘I think that’s brilliant. I’d love to make stuff from a book that is all about food someone loves and means something to them. All the flavours they love.’
‘And it wouldn’t upset you?’
‘No, why would it?’
My husband took my hand and tugged me onto his lap from my place beside him on the sofa. I was the mother of a four-year-old and just pregnant again, which meant I had a lot of emotional reordering and thinking to do in coming to terms with how my body would
change, how my life would change again. If I thought about it full on, though, panic billowed up inside and my heart became a speeding train, while my lungs would not expand fully. Joel understood this, sometimes better than I did. ‘You know why.’
‘No, it won’t upset me. It’s something you love so it won’t upset me. I like to cook. And I’m fine most of the time. It’s just sometimes things are difficult. But mostly I’m fine.’ I slung my arms around him, pulled back a little to examine his face properly. ‘And this idea of yours is brilliant.’ I kissed him. ‘Because you’re brilliant.’ Kiss. ‘And everything you do is brilliant.’ Kiss. Kiss. Kiss.
‘I ain’t paying you to help me,’ he said.
I took my arms away. ‘Fine, well you’re on your own then, ain’t ya?’ I said and put on a toddler-like grump that caused his syrupy laugh to erupt and fill the room. I closed my eyes and the sound of happiness, of my life working out, soothed some of the panic inside.
XVI
Ding-dong!
echoes through our otherwise empty house. As usual, I toy for a second with leaving it unanswered, with not inviting whatever is on the other side of the door inside. I often wonder what would have happened
that day
if I hadn’t answered the door – if they hadn’t been able to tell me their news. Would it still have been true? Would I still have him? Or would they have hunted me down all over Brighton – the world – to tell me, to change my life?
The man at the door could not be more unwelcome if he tried. After last night, as punishment for what I admitted to myself, I read the rest of the letter. It spiralled me back to that time like the other night, but I was prepared for it and I braced myself as much as I could. When it wasn’t as sudden, brutal and unexpected as the other night, it didn’t precipitate as much mental, emotional and physical trauma as before. It still upended me in many ways. And the letter that was sitting on the mat when I came back last night is unread. It is tucked away with the first one because even I don’t need that much punishment.
The words of the original letter, although not as potent as when I first read them, are wrapped around my memories of that time like a red bow, the showy outer binding of something I’d rather keep shoved away in an unexplored corner of my mind and never brought out into the light. That is why I do not want this man here, he has made me confront something I do not want to acknowledge.
‘Hello,’ he says.
‘Hello,’ I reply. I want to be cold and glacial, but it seems out of reach, like something on a high shelf I’ve shoved that little bit too far back so I can’t get at it any more, not even on tiptoes.
‘My name is Lewis Bromsgrove and I am your daughter’s form tutor at St Allison. I am also the parent of the boy who got your daughter pregnant. I would like to talk to you, if that’s possible?’
‘Yes, it is possible.’ Lewis. His first name is Lewis. I don’t think I knew that. Or maybe I did, maybe I overheard it in the playground and didn’t register it in any meaningful way at the time because he was nothing to me. Or maybe he told me it during the last year or so and I’ve missed it like I’ve missed so much else.
‘I’m not quite sure what happened in the pub,’ Lewis says gently when we enter the kitchen. ‘But I thought it best that I came over so we could have a sensible conversation about the situation.’ I notice he has gone to the furthest part of the kitchen away from me, while I stand near the door, beside the cupboard where I keep my notebook of recipes, fussing. I pick up my notebook, I put it down. I force it open flat against the white marble, flick through the pages without seeing a single word that is written down. I pick up the notebook, hold it closer to my face, maybe I can read if I hold it nearer.
Eventually I toss the hardcover book, covered in pictures of crystal butterflies, bought for me by Phoebe and Zane for last year’s Mother’s Day, onto the side and stare into space for a moment.
I think I’ll make stuffed cherry bomb peppers for dinner
, I decide.
I have feta, I have cherry bomb peppers, I have basil, I have chilli flakes. I will make them for dinner. Maybe with grilled sardines. No, Zane will hate that. Maybe with home-made pizza and salad. Yes, that’ll work. Stuffed cherry bomb peppers, pizza, salad
.
‘Are you listening to me, Saffron?’ Lewis asks, barging his way into my thoughts. ‘If I may call you Saffron.’
My heart is fluttery, unsettled and agitated. It doesn’t feel like it is beating properly in my chest. And my breathing is far too shallow, probably because of the odd, staccato, stop-start of my heart.
‘You may,’ I say. I’m trying to concentrate on something else but he’s still getting through. If I focus on something other than him, I may not throw him out and the sickness may not come spilling out of me.
‘Did you hear what else I said?’
‘Yes,’ I say.
He fills the gap between us with a deep inhalation of breath. Frustration. ‘Have I done something wrong?’ he eventually asks.
Yes. Of course you have. How can you not know that?
‘No.’
‘If you’re sure … Anyway, I talked to Curtis, he said first of all that he didn’t say that to her. When I asked if he was calling Phoebe a liar on top of everything else, he admitted it. I can’t believe he’s been that stupid.’
‘Stupid,’ I echo.
‘If it’s OK with you,’ Lewis says, ‘I’d like Curtis to come to Phoebe’s next doctor’s appointment.’
‘Why?’
‘He needs to go through it as much as he can. He can’t carry the baby or give birth, but I want him to know what it’s like to have to arrange his life around appointments and scans and so on, like her.’
My fussing stops and I focus on the man in front of me properly for the first time. It happens again: the sudden, almost wholly unwelcome, awareness that he is male. Maybe it’s the set of his lip, possibly it’s the way he stands tall in his frame, or the way his dark, almost black eyes, highlighted now he is without his glasses, are concentrated on me. He is male, he is here, he is causing all sorts of pleasurably unsettling feelings to spiral outwards through me from the centre of my chest.
‘What if she doesn’t want to go through with the pregnancy?’
‘I’m guessing she’ll have at least one appointment for that, too, so I’d like him to go to that. And go with her on the day. As much as is possible, I don’t want him to be protected from any of what Phoebe’s got to go through. He needs to know what it’s like, especially if he’s not going to go off and do the same thing all over again.’
‘You’re serious, aren’t you?’
‘Yes. I’ve seen this many times before and I’ve always thought that boys get off too lightly in these sorts of situations. It becomes the girl’s “problem” and the boys are often protected from the reality of it. That’s why I tried to drum it into him to always take precautions
… Clearly my lectures fell on deaf ears. Maybe going through this process won’t.’
‘Yeah, maybe.’
‘Where is Phoebe? And your other child, Zane?’
‘They’ve taken their great aunt out to the shops. That was a while ago, and if you met her, you’d understand why I’m very nervous at the moment. No doubt there’ll be somebody on my doorstep complaining about her –
them
– at some point soon.’
I’ve told him we’re alone in the house. My body floods with heat, embarrassment and unexpected, irrational desire. In desperation for something else to do, to look at, I glance down at my hands, something that will sober me up from the intoxicating feelings caused by being around Lewis. Looking at my hands always grounds me: my nails are neat and short, barely crescents above the tops of my fingers; the skin is smooth over a network of pronounced veins because I regularly rub moisturiser into them; but my knuckles are rough and scarred from past times when I haven’t taken care of them properly, when I didn’t give a second thought to my hands and how they would show up my regular lack of care and attention for myself.
‘How is Phoebe holding up?’ Lewis asks in another attempt to end the silence, break through my barrier. ‘Is she any further along with the decision-making process?’
I flex my hands, promise myself to take care of them before I turn away from Lewis and refocus on the butterfly-covered notebook that holds the secrets to my cooking life. The secrets to my current life, really. Before Monday, before my trip to the school that changed everything, my life had become about cooking: making, baking, creating. I return to Lewis. ‘When I said last night that she doesn’t talk to me, did you think I was exaggerating or lying?’
The sideways glance and clearing of his throat is all the answer I need.
‘I wasn’t lying. She doesn’t talk to me. My daughter has been through a horrible ordeal in her recent past and that means I have to be careful with her in everything I do and say because I do not
want to further traumatise her. So, she doesn’t talk to me and I don’t push her.’
‘What about you? How are you bearing up after the trauma?’
‘I don’t know,’ I admit. ‘But in relation to this, at least I know who the father is.’ As it has done several times a day since Thursday, how Curtis touched Phoebe plays across my mind: he was cautious, almost reverential in the way he put his arm around her; like he wasn’t used to it, like he’d dreamed of it, but hadn’t done it very often. Something doesn’t ring true, here. It’s been niggling and nibbling at my mind since I saw them together. The words fit, but the way they were with each other makes me wonder if he’s really the one. Also, someone who convinces a girl she can’t get pregnant first time wouldn’t have the almost worshipful respect Curtis has for Phoebe, nor would he come forward and confess so easily – boys who lie and manipulate are the types of cowards who hide every which way they can. On so many levels I don’t believe Curtis is the father, but why would they both lie?