Authors: Joan Smith
Loretta smiled. âNo, but it sounds terrible.'
âAlexander Korda, 1941, if memory serves. With Vivien Leigh and Olivier.' He grinned. âIt's supposed to have been Churchill's favourite movie.'
âI never saw no movie,' Katha interrupted. âI never even
heard
of her till my niece takes me to this musuem. Lady Hamilton, it says on the frame, and it don't mean nothing to me. Couple days later, I'm at my friend Eileen's house and her library books are on the table. First one I pick up, there she is again, same picture. And
then
â'She stopped.
Loretta said, trying not to sound as bored as she felt: âAnd then you read it?'
âI did
not
. I wait till my friend comes back with the coffee cups all laid out on a tray and I say to her â Eileen, did you read this? Sure, she says, and I say â you wanna ask me some questions? Go right ahead.'
The small group waited.
Katha said: âI got every one. Every single one. That's when I
knew.
That I was her, this Lady Hamilton, in another life.'
Loretta frowned. âWhat I don't understand is, in your book you say you've been able to recall what, five previous lives?'
âSix.'
âOK. Who else do you ... 'She hesitated, caught the eye of the man who seemed to know a lot about films, and thought she was going to laugh. âI mean, who else have you ... been?'
Katha Curran flicked her hennaed hair back from her sallow face, making her ear-rings tinkle. They were complicated designs in multi-coloured beads and silver, the kind of jewellery Loretta had seen in New Age shops in Cow Hollow. She suspected that if she asked, Katha would say they were traditional Native American designs, dream-catchers or some such thing.
âYou want them in order?' she heard Katha say. âLike -chronological?'
âAll right.'
âThis is not how I remembered them, right? I mean, when I began hypnosis, I had to really
trust
my therapist before I was able to go all the way back. Imhemet, the Egyptian slave, I only remembered her at the end. She was killed by a rival â â
Loretta said: âImhemet?'
ââ a rival because the king liked her singing better, he was so upset when she died he gave her a state funeral.' She held out her hands, half closing her eyes. âThey laid her body on a boat and took her down the Nile â'
The man next to Loretta said: âWas this before or after she'd been embalmed?'
âAfter. I can recall every detail of the process, if you're interested in making a study of it, it's all in my book. Next is Sarah, she was a girl from a rich Roman family, senators and stuff, who heard St Paul preaching and converted to Christianity.'
âWhat happened to her?' Katha's fan asked breathlessly.
âYou never heard what they did to Christians in those days? She was thrown to the lions â absolutely
torn apart.
In my book I
have the transcript of the hypnosis where I hear the lions roaring and I describe the place where she died in total detail,
total
detail.'
âThe Colosseum?' ventured Loretta, trying to remember whether gladiatorial combat had taken place there or in the Circus Maximus. âYou do know that Sarah isn't â it's not a Roman name.'
âI told you, she converted.'
The man said: âSeems like you've had bad luck, murdered twice and four more lives to go.'
âI've always wondered,' said Loretta, âwhy people who believe in reincarnation always have these glamorous other lives, Egyptian princesses and so on. I mean, in a hundred years' time I expect people will start claiming they were Mrs Thatcher.'
Katha said ominously: âI just
love
Margaret Thatcher. I don't understand why you Brits got rid of her.'
âFor much the same reason you got rid of George Bush. What I mean is, why does no one ever remember a previous life where nothing happened? Where they died in bed at the age of 82 surrounded by their grandchildren?'
âSo what do
you
think happens when we die?'
Loretta shrugged. âNothing.'
âNothing?
You mean all this' â Katha made a circling motion with her right hand, encompassing Kelly's living-room as though it was a microcosm of everything she valued â âall this is for nothing?'
Loretta glanced towards the sliding door on to a wide balcony where more of Kelly's clients had gathered, including a man she thought she recognised as a Syrian academic who had written a controversial book attacking America's role in the Gulf War. âIn the sense you mean, yes,' she said reluctantly.
Katha narrowed her eyes.
âMillions
of Americans disagree with you. Do you have any
idea
how many people already bought my book?'
Loretta realised that her part of the room had gone quiet.
Calmly she said: âSeveral hundred thousand, I should think. There's obviously a market for â for consolatory fictions.'
Katha stared at her, open-mouthed. Loretta was bracing herself for a full-scale row when Alan Larner, Kelly's husband, intervened.
âLoretta. Your glass is empty.' He signalled to a waiter in a white jacket who hurried over and filled it with Chardonnay. âKatha, I'm sorry to drag you away but there's someone I'd like you to meet. He's a
big
fan.'
Avoiding Loretta's eye, he slipped a hand under Katha's elbow and steered her away, past the big white sofas which faced each other in the middle of the room. On the far side, a man in a collarless shirt was talking earnestly to Kelly, and Loretta wondered whether he had written a book, and if so what it was about. Behind him, a lifesize portrait of Kelly gazed radiantly from the wall, posed on the balcony, her arms flung wide as she leaned back against the rail in a strapless white dress. She looked, Loretta thought for the first time, a little like Ivana Trump.
Loretta turned back and saw that the small group of people who had gathered around Katha had drifted away. Only the tall man was left and she immediately felt terrible, as though she had broken every unwritten rule about behaviour at parties. âOh dear,' she said, âI seem to have upset one of Kelly's most important authors.'
âBest selling,' he corrected.
Loretta conceded the point. âYou seem very knowledgeable about films. Is that what you write about?'
âPart of the time. It's my day job, if you like.' He held out his hand. âDale Martineau.'
âOh.'
She had been aware that he looked familiar without being able to place him. âLoretta Lawson. Your book's had terrific reviews.' She hesitated, then added: âSince I seem to be putting my foot in it tonight, I might as well admit I haven't read it.'
âIt didn't occur to me you had. There are around two hundred million people in the States and it's sold five thousand, six
hundred and forty copies. On the other hand, I don't have to pay a ghost writer.'
Loretta glanced across the room at Katha, who was now lecturing the man in the collarless shirt and a woman in green trousers.
âDid
she?'
âYou mean she struck you as literate?'
She heard the bitterness in his voice and said hastily, remembering what his novel was about: âI suppose you can only sell books about old age and dying if you can think of a positive angle. Like Betty Friedan. Or Katha. I don't suppose you remember any previous lives?'
âI have enough problems with this one.'
âMe too.' She was silent for a moment.
He said lightly: âThis is getting very serious.'
Loretta lifted her head and their eyes met, his so dark that it was almost impossible to make out the line between the iris and the pupil. A sudden, unexpected sensation of sexual arousal rippled through her and she felt her cheeks grow red.
He smiled. âYou were about to say?'
âNothing. Did you â are you working on another book?'
He started telling her about his new novel and she tried to visualise a profile of him she had read in the
San Francisco Chronicle
when the first one came out. It was mostly anodyne stuff about his job teaching film studies in New York, how he had started to write, what his students made of the book, but one startling detail came back to her: his father had been a policeman, one of the few high-ranking black cops in the NYPD in the 1950s, and he'd been shot dead in an undercover operation when Dale was only eight or nine.
He finished speaking, gave her an amused look and said: âWhat're you doing after this?'
Loretta felt a rush of disappointment. âOh God,' she said, not disguising it, âI'm having dinner with someone.'
âTomorrow night?'
âI'm going back to Oxford.'
Unspoken signals flew between them. Loretta undid the catch
of her bag and felt inside for her purse. I'il give you my card. In case you're ever in England.' She found a pen and scribbled her home telephone number next to her direct line at St Frideswide's.
He studied it. âI'm in London in September, when my novel comes out over there. That's not too far from Oxford?'
âAn hour by train. Will you ring me?'
âYou bet.'
âWho's your publisher?'
âBloomsbury.' He pronounced it in the American way, three discrete syllables: Bloomsbury.
âLoretta?' She felt Kelly's hand on her arm. âSorry Dale, but I can't let you monopolise her.'
She led Loretta across the room towards the balcony, saying in a low voice, âI hope you don't mind, I just noticed Cary Walker all on her own.' Loretta saw a small, lost-looking woman in a pink pantsuit staring out across the city and then Kelly was stepping through the open door, touching her on the arm: âCary, I'd like you to meet Loretta Lawson. Loretta's an academic, she's written a wonderful book on female characters in fiction but she knows all about journalism as well. Her husband's a reporter.'
âEx-husband,' Loretta said quickly but Kelly was already going back inside, arms spread wide to greet a latecomer.
âAre you an author?' she asked, turning back to Cary Walker and trying to look interested. She glanced covertly at her watch.
âI write true crime,' Cary Walker said in a gravelly voice. âLike, the real story behind the headlines? I used to be on the crime beat for the
New York Post
but since Kelly took me on I write full time.'
Loretta manoeuvred herself into a position which gave her a view of the room she'd just left and saw Dale watching her. He grinned and she pulled a face.
â.. . current project is writing the life of the Brooklyn Beast,' she heard Cary say. âYou hearda Ted Bundy?'
Loretta nodded.
âThis guy's not as big as Bundy, not yet, but the cops are going back through files this high.' She held her hand in the air,
indicating a point above Loretta's head. âThis guy
predates computers
.'
âDoesn't it upset you?' asked Loretta, who had avoided reading about the case as far as was practically possible with such a sensational story. The preliminary court hearings, and the prosecution's so-far-unsubstantiated hints about cannibalism, had pushed O J Simpson off the front pages of the tabloids for two or three days.
âUpset me?'
âI just meant,' said Loretta, âthat you're a woman and all his victims are women.'
Cary said abruptly, changing the subject: âYou read her book?'
âWho?' Loretta peered into the room to see who Cary was looking at. âKatha Curran? No.'
âIt's about how she's supposed to remember all these previous lives.'
âI know.'
âCrap. The Beast's my fifth book, you know what they call me?'
Loretta shook her head.
âThe True Queen of Crime. Neat, huh? Like Agatha Christie, except what I write about is all true.' She leaned towards Loretta and said confidentially: âYou know what never came out about him, the Beast?'
Loretta stepped sideways, grasping the rail of the balcony. The light had begun to fail and twelve floors below she could see the tail-lights of cars on a cross-street between Park and Madison, the roar of the traffic muted now; the sun had only just gone down, flushing the sky on the west side of the city a cloudy pink which reflected off the gilded pediment of a nearby skyscraper. Even the heat was bearable, had it not been for Cary Walker's voice describing in minute detail what the Beast had done to his victims in a residential area of Brooklyn.
âSorry,' exclaimed Loretta, interrupting Cary, âbut I have to meet someone. Good luck with the book.'
She hurried inside, looking for Kelly.
âThanks,' she said, kissing her on both cheeks. âIt's been -lovely.'
Kelly threw back her head, hardly disturbing her flossy blonde hair, and laughed. âShe has this theory, you know, Katha. She thinks anyone who isn't nice to her had a bad time in their last incarnation. I expect she has you down as a roach.' They walked towards the front door and she added: âI love your outline. There's someone I'd like to show it to next week, I know Branch Books did a nice job on
Milton's Cook
but I'm not sure this is for them. Is that OK with you?'
âWhatever you think,' Loretta said distractedly, aware that Dale Martineau was following them.
He caught up with them at the front door. âYou leaving, Loretta? I'll walk you down.'
They crossed the landing to the lift, which was waiting on Kelly's floor, and travelled down in tense silence. In the lobby, as the porter held the door open for them, Dale said: âSure you won't change your mind?'
Loretta pulled a face. âI can't.'
âOK. Where're you going?'
âTriBeCa.'
âIt'll be easier to pick up a cab on Park.' They walked the short distance and he waved one down, turning to Loretta with a regretful expression on his rather sensual face. Without thinking she stood on tiptoe and kissed him, not in the usual exploratory way of strangers but sliding her tongue into his mouth, startling him for a few seconds. Then he responded, pulling her close so their bodies pressed together, releasing her only when the taxi driver leaned across and asked bad-temperedly how much longer he was supposed to wait.