just go home. Christ Almighty.’
He was obviously genuinely upset; Zoe hesitated. She
was fond of him and she hated being thought tight; it was
one of the reasons she was always in debt. And she had been
looking forward to the evening so much …
‘Wait,’ she said, putting her hand on his arm. ‘I’m sorry. I
have got some money. I - I got it out to pay Rom back.
Money she’d lent me. But I can get some more. Come on,
I’ll pay.’
She could get some more; do some babysitting or
something. Ian looked at her. ‘Okay, fine,’ was all he said.
It cost a tenner each to get into the Ministry; then she
bought him a couple of vodka and Red Bulls, which was
what he always drank there, and the same for herself; forty
quid gone already. Oh, well, she could still put half the
money back.
She didn’t care any more anyway; she felt wonderful.
The music was fantastic; they danced for a long time. It got
very hot, they consumed endless ice lollies from the buckets
that were brought round. ‘I’ll get these,’ said Ian, grinning
at her. ‘My treat. You’re worth it.’
He had left his jacket in the car; he was wearing just black jeans and a black sleevless T-shirt. His brown arms
were very muscly; he really did have a superb body. Zoe
thought of the pleasures that lay just ahead of her and felt
quite faint.
Marianne lay in the extremely large bed in the suite at the
Swan; she was in a state of acute sexual excitement. In the
end, there had been no conflict, she had simply agreed to
stay there with Nico, as she had known, of course, that she
would. She wanted him, he wanted her, there seemed
absolutely nothing else to consider.
She moved her hands now to her own breasts, as she did
when she was excited, contemplating the acute pleasure of
other hands on them, moved one down to her flat stomach,
smoothing it, lay looking at Nico. He was sitting on the
bed, wearing a bathrobe, ordering breakfast and the papers,
impressing that there should be no phone calls put through;
he smiled at her, put the phone down, stood up, took off
the robe. He was very slim, clearly very fit; unbidden she
thought of Felix’s large body, with its powerful sexuality
and its capacity for giving her pleasure, recognised her own
disloyalty and was shocked at it, and at the same time found
it strangely and appallingly exciting.
‘Dear God,’ said Nico, pulling back the sheet, studying
her, ‘dear God, you are beautiful.’ And then bent his head
to kiss her breasts, moving his hand slowly down her, where
her own had been, stroking, smoothing at her stomach.
‘I haven’t said this for a very long time,’ he said finally,
taking her in his arms, and she surged, felt herself move
towards him, wanting him, longing for him, ‘but I know
that I am very much in love with you.’ And then his body
began to move slowly and with surprising care and
tenderness on her and into her; and pleasure of such power
and intensity took possession of her that she was surprised
even at herself.
‘Oh, my God!’ Someone was shouting: a girl, it was her,
Zoe thought confusedly, it must be, there was no one else there, shouting through the explosion of violence and release that was her orgasm. ‘My God, my God, oh, my
God.’
‘Shut up,’ said Ian, putting his hand over her mouth,
laughing quietly, ‘you’ll have the neighbours in. Shush,
Zoe, for God’s sake.’
‘Sorry. Sorry. Just - a bit much. That’s all.’
‘Good. Very good. Glad to hear it.’
He rolled off her, studied her thoughtfully. She looked
back at him, smiling rather shakily, pushing her hair out of
her eyes. It was wet with sweat. She was wet all over.
‘You’re quite a girl,’ he said. ‘You know that?’
‘Yeah. ‘Course.’
‘Want some grass?’
‘Not yet. No. Let’s just - lie here.’
‘Nah. I get bored. Come on, I’ll go and get it.’
He eased himself up. They had been lying on the carpet,
beneath them just a rug they had found; she looked at his
back view, his lean muscly back, his taut buttocks, his
confident, slightly swaggering walk and felt mildly irritated.
He always got straight up afterwards, wanted to be doing
something: let’s get in the shower, have a smoke, a drink,
never wanted to lie and talk and kiss and be close. She
sighed; he heard her and turned.
‘What’s the matter?’
‘Oh, nothing.’
‘Yes, there is, come on. Out with it.’
‘It’s just that I - well, I like to be - close afterwards. You
always seem to want to get up and—’
‘Well, it’s over, isn’t it? What’s the point of staying
there?’
‘The point,’ she said more irritated still, ‘is that I would
like it.’
‘What, the old postcoital rubbish? You’ve made me feel
so good, all that?’
‘Well - yes.’
‘Zoe, what is this? You’re not going all serious on me,
are you? Because—’
‘No, of course not,’ she said, sitting up, pulling her knees to her chin, wrapping her arms round them so she was less
naked, less at a disadvantage. ‘But it’s still nice to feel — well,
close. Cared about.’
‘Jesus,’ he said. ‘Zoe, I’ve been caring about you. I’ve
given you a really good fuck. Two actually. I’m not up to
all that lovey-dovey stuff. Sorry. You’ll have to get one of
your public school hoorays for that.’
‘Don’t be ridiculous,’ she said. She tried to smile, to clear
his mood.
‘I’m not. I mean it. That’s what they’re good at, I
believe. Not so good with their cocks, by all accounts,
quick poke and they’re wilting again, but—’
‘Ian, how could you possibly know that?’
‘Oh, I know,’ he said. ‘You’re not the first upmarket bird
I’ve screwed, you know. Don’t flatter yourself.’
‘I didn’t think I was,’ she said. But somehow she had; and she felt absurdly upset, almost tearful.
He disappeared, went downstairs, reappeared with some
Rizlas and a bag of grass, sat on the bed rolling the joints.
He passed her one; she shook her head vigorously.
‘No thanks.’
‘Go on. It’s very good.’
‘Ian, I don’t want one.’
She felt cold suddenly, reached for her dress. As she met
his eyes, she saw he was watching her, his expression very
hard. He said nothing.
‘What’s wrong?’ she said, trying to sound lighthearted
again.
‘Let’s just say I don’t like this,’ he said.
‘Don’t like what?’
‘This — mood.’
‘Ian, I’m not in a mood.’
‘Yes, you are.’
‘I’m not. I just don’t want to smoke, okay?’
‘Yeah, okay. Fine. Well, best get going, then.’
‘What? What are you talking about?’
‘I’m talking about I don’t want to sit here, you looking
all tight arsed. Come on, get dressed.’
Zoe lost her temper. ‘I am not looking tight arsed.
You’re being ridiculous.’
‘I’ll decide what I’m being. Get your clothes on, Zoe, I
want to go.’
‘Well, just fucking go, then,’ said Zoe.
It was a stupid thing to say; she knew it at once. He stood
up, pulled on his clothes and walked out of the room
without even glancing at her; she heard the front door slam
and the truck start.
Zoe looked at her watch; it was not quite four. She felt
very frightened and very alone in the house; she pulled on
her clothes, rang for a taxi on her mobile, and went outside
and pulled the door shut after her, shivering. As she waited
on the corner, she realised that the taxi would cost her the
best part of the forty pounds she had left.
‘And how would you describe the way you’re feeling now?
Take your time, there’s no hurry.’
Louise looked at him, and thought if she hadn’t been
feeling so physically exhausted, she would undoubtedly
have hit him. How could you describe the effect on you of
wanting to die, trying to die, thinking indeed you were
safely dead, and then being sucked literally back to life by
the horror of a tube pushed down your throat and into your
stomach, the contents of your stomach emptying slowly and
disgustingly into a bucket on the floor at your side. That
was what she had awoken to; that, and then later the pain,
the dreadful raw pain, starting slowly, increasing in vehemence
and then through the haze of misery and nausea,
feeling the bleeding begin, being told she was miscarrying,
told she couldn’t have anything for the pain just now, her
body couldn’t tolerate it, that it would soon be over. But it
wasn’t soon over at all, it went on right through the night,
and then when it really was over, when there was no hope
for this baby either, when she was weeping, mourning for
it, being told briskly that she was being taken down to
theatre, to have a D&C just to make sure you aren’t
hanging on to any bits’.
And then coming round, confused and sore, and lying all
day in the ward, thinking that they couldn’t tell her about the baby’s sex because they would have just thrown it away, put it down the sluice. That was when the anger began.
And then, having endured all this, being asked how she
was feeling.
She didn’t answer because it was safer; just sat there,
staring at him.
He waited patiently for a while, just looking at her, then,
‘You’re not ready for me yet, are you?’ he said, smiling at
her, a dreadful patronising smile. ‘Never mind. We’ll just
let you rest for a day or two, and then we can really talk. All
right?’
‘No,’ said Louise, ‘not all right at all.’
Because it wasn’t. It was horribly and hideously all
wrong. And the only good thing she felt, strong and almost
comforting, helping her to go forward somehow, was the
anger. The anger was becoming her friend.
‘I think I’d like to take the line of least resistance,’ said
Tom. ‘If you don’t mind, that is.’
‘Not at all, old chap,’ said Aubrey. ‘I’d come to much the
same conclusion myself.’
They smiled at one another; two stiff-upper-lipped
Englishmen sitting on leather chairs in a book-lined room,
looking more as if they were agreeing to cancel a game of
golf, rather than the demise of something unique and
successful, created through their own particular blend of
talent and courage and commitment, something that had
absorbed all their energy, ingenuity, and most of their
waking hours over the past five years. No one would have thought at that moment that Tom Fleming was feeling a passion of rage so violent against the factors that had robbed
him of it, including his own folly, that he was having
trouble restraining himself from hurling his cup of coffee on
to the pristine white wall, or that Aubrey Cotterill was
looking round the room with a depth of sadness only
matched on the day when the wife he had thought had
married him for love had informed him she found him so
unattractive she was moving out of his bedroom permanently.
‘I
did talk to DTN,’ he said now. ‘We’d be lackeys,
office boys, forced to sit in meetings with our own clients
while the decisions we knew were right for them were
reversed.’
‘Aubrey,’ said Tom, ‘I did hate that idea. And I tried the
bank: no joy. Not a penny piece. But I did pop into a few
galleries over the weekend. I can cover the salaries if I
empty my walls into Cork Street.’
‘I can’t match that, I’m afraid. But I can probably keep
the wolves from our personal doors for a week or two, if I
visit an old friend in Hatton Garden with Bernadette’s ring.’
‘Well, what do we do first? Talk to the staff, inform the
clients?’
‘Go down to the courts, I should think, get the form. I
shall find it easier telling everyone if it’s actually a fait
accompli. Three hundred and fifty quid, you said?’
‘Yup. I wonder if the bank will lend it to us,’ said Tom,
and actually managed to smile.
‘Oh, my God,’ said Octavia. ‘Oh, my God.’
‘No,’ said Gabriel Bingham modestly, ‘no. Just me. Mr
Bingham. I’m surprised you’ve forgotten me already.’
He smiled at her; she smiled back.
‘It’s so nice to see you,’ she said and meant it.
‘Well, I thought I’d come and see your modest little
workplace. Don’t worry, I’m not staying.’
‘Absolutely you are not,’ said Melanie Faulks walking in.
‘She’s very busy.’ She settled herself on the edge of
Octavia’s desk, held out her hand. ‘Hi. You must be the
Angel Gabriel. I’m Melanie. Loved the roses you sent on
Friday. Nice touch. She cried, you know.’
‘She cried?’ He was clearly astonished. ‘Why did she cry,
for God’s sake?’
‘Oh, she’s like that,’ said Melanie. “Very emotionally
labile. I have a lot of trouble with her.’
Octavia felt a stab of irritation. She could see it was all good fun, that they were enjoying it, but in her fragile — or indeed labile — emotional state, it was hard to keep smiling.
The faint euphoria of Friday had been brief lived. She had
had a difficult and lonely weekend with the children and
had actually longed by Saturday evening for adult company,