Read Little Bits of Baby Online
Authors: Patrick Gale
âWhat was she like then?'
âThe same, physically. Ash-blonde hair, perfect skin, long, intelligent face, sexy voice. Candida was born twenty-seven, born to have a public.'
âYou know she's been top of one of those lists for the last three years?'
âWoman men would most like to marry?'
âNo. The woman most desirable as a mistress. Did everyone think she was your girlfriend?'
â
I
thought she was my girlfriend. We did everything together.'
âEverything?'
âNearly. We kissed a lot and went to lots of French films over in Notting Hill. We spent hours together. Then she told me that I didn't find women attractive, not sufficiently. I asked her what she meant and she dragged me off to Soho to other cinemas to prove her point.'
âAnd did she?'
âNo. Porn always made me laugh so we had to leave. I didn't believe her, not really. I just took it as her typically devious way of saying that she wanted us to be just friends. She didn't run off with anyone else, and neither did I. They were a fairly grim bunch at school so we used each other as camouflage and let people think what they liked. Then we went to university, of course â¦'
âOf course.'
âAre you laughing at me?'
âNo.'
âWe went to university and met Jake. Or rather, he met us. He trailed after us everywhere. Lectures, library, mealtimes â we couldn't shake him off. We were rather silly and exclusive, you see. Eventually he was terribly brave and actually asked us round to his room for lunch. It was awfully touching. He'd blown most of his grant cheque. There was champagne, caviare, smoked salmon and strawberries. Everything. And we'd never really spoken. He'd just sat near us and listened in and occasionally volunteered a comment or two. Of course he didn't have a sense of humour and he was totally obsessed about having gone to a grammar school and having a father who'd made his money in showroom dummies â both of which we told him couldn't matter less â but he was horribly attractive.'
âWas he?'
âOh, not physically. I mean, he was good-looking but not half as stunning as some people. No, the main thing was â this is fairly horrible â the main thing was his devotion and complete lack of self-esteem. We were vain and exclusive and he was devoted and rich (rich by our standards, anyway, probably not by his now) so we let him into our little club of two.'
Robin broke off to kiss Faber. Faber kissed him back then sensed that he was trying to slip past the subject and firmly pushed him away.
âWhat happened next?' he asked.
âI want something to eat.' Robin bit softly at Faber's shoulder.
âTell me,' Faber insisted.
âCandida found herself a boyfriend. Not just anyone, of course, but the current college sex symbol. You won't have heard of him. William Warner. He was one of the ones that burned out â like me. He was a rowing hero who somehow happened not to be hearty but a sensitive, intelligent soul who was heavily involved in some campaign for the release of literary dissidents in Central America. Suddenly Candida was spending days on end in his rooms, professing a new interest in radical politics but getting so much sex she could hardly write a cheque, much less hold an intelligent conversation. Naturally that left Jake and I alone together.'
âAnd?'
âAnd I brought him home to stay and he took me to stay with his parents and we took rucksacks and a tent and spent a summer touring Greece.'
âAnd?'
âAnd nothing. You don't seem to understand, we were very naive. In fact I â¦'
âWhat?' Faber felt himself smile.
âI've only lost my virginity this evening.'
Faber wondered how he should react.
âNo wonder you're ravenous,' he said. âMy God! What'll it be? Beans on toast? A bacon sandwich? There's really nothing very edible in the house.'
âA bacon sandwich would be lovely.' Robin made as if to get up.
âYou stay right there,' said Faber, pressing him back against the pillows. âI'll bring it up.' He headed down to the kitchen, jokily muttering, âPoor ravished thing,' caught his own eye in a mirror and beamed.
Twenty
âOK, Joy. Tell him to come on up,' said Jake.
He set down the telephone and lost two minutes to blind panic. He had been meaning to ask Robin out for lunch ever since the christening, he honestly had, and Candida kept nagging him about when they should invite him over for dinner to meet some old friends, but Jake had been frantically busy. And too plain cowardly. Now Robin had turned up out of the blue, claiming that they had an appointment and, to save face, Jake told his assistant that this was true but that he had forgotten to enter it into his desk diary.
âIn you go!' Joy chirped and ushered Robin into Jake's office.
âVery smart,' said Robin, looking around him. âVery smart indeed. This all yours? Like the picture, what's it meant to be?'
âThe blue blob's Candida and the pink blob's meant to be Jasper.'
â
Candida Albicans
.'
âWhat?'
âYou remember. It's the proper medical name for thrush. It used to make us laugh.'
âOh yes.' Jake chuckled obediently.
âIt is good to see you on your own,' said Robin, grasping Jake's hand and shaking it vigorously between both of his. âHope you don't mind my barging in but I thought that perhaps you were feeling nervous about it all and I should just force your hand. Were you?'
âFeeling nervous? No.'
âGood. Can you make lunch?'
âOf course.'
âSure?'
âDon't be stupid. Of course I can.'
âThat girl thrust this glass into my hand.'
âIt's a new mineral water we're launching. It's quite good. Not too bubbly.'
âGot anything stronger?'
âNot really. Let's go out.' Jake held open the door, waiting for Robin to stop admiring the view. âCome on,' he said. âJoy, I'm just going for a bite of lunch with Robin here. If Saskia needs me, tell her I'll be back by three.'
âOK, Boss,' said Joy.
âNo. Make that two-thirty.'
âDoes he pay you well?' Robin asked her, leaning on her desk.
âCan't complain,' she told him and laughed, throwing her hair out of her eyes.
âI haven't had lunch with him in over eight years,' Robin told her confidentially.
âWhat a lot he'll have to tell you,' she said.
âCome along,' said Jake, holding open the lift door.
Robin admired the interior of the lift in much the same, slyly ironical way he'd admired the view.
âI like your lift, Jake. Is this malachite real?'
âYup.'
âGood lord.' They stopped at the next floor to let in some typists, giggly from too much coffee and too little sleep. One of them stared at Robin with frank admiration but he didn't notice, being too busy smiling at Jake. âThat's a strange name for her to have â Joy,' he said suddenly. âNot very Chinese.'
âShe's Vietnamese. Her sister's called Pamela, which is stranger still.' The lift stopped again and they walked out into the atrium. âWhere shall we eat?' Jake said.
âYou choose. London's moved on and left me behind.'
They went to a French-Vietnamese restaurant in Joy's honour and, Jake realised, because none of his professional contacts ate there anymore.
âHow's Candida?' Robin asked as they sat down.
âFine. Tired but fine.'
âAnd my bouncing god-daughter?'
âRosy-cheeked and filthy-tempered.'
âGood. Cheers, Jake.'
âCheers.'
Candida had talked about Robin in her sleep for seven nights running. She would mutter his name then prattle on incomprehensibly, stopping from time to time to let out little moans of need. She would wake in a bad mood, taking care to wake Jake too, although he had two hours' sleep to go, and would blame her crossness on Perdita. This morning she had claimed that the baby woke her three times between midnight and dawn. Jake had appeared to accept this lie although he had lain awake all that while and had given Perdita her bottle each time she asked for it, without Candida waking once from her troubled dreams.
âSo tell me about this wonderful job of yours,' Robin asked, having gleefully ordered the most rarefied items on the menu because Jake was paying. âHow long have you been there?'
âSix years. Nearly seven. Do you remember, I'd already made contact with them through that time I spent there during our last Christmas vac.'
âThat's right. You were researching a thesis.'
âEssay.'
âIt was longer than an essay. I remember. It said very clever things on marketing the Conservatives; rather frightening.'
âAnyway, I sent them a copy of it when I applied â they hadn't advertised, you see â and the pushiness seemed to appeal to them. They took me on unconditionally.'
âWhat as?'
âNothing much, but they let me sit in a corner having ideas which they then made lots of money out of. Did you see that toothpaste advert that ran all year a while back? The one with the little girl in a space station?'
âWe don't have telly on Whelm.'
âOh no. Of course not. Anyway, that was one of mine. Then I realised that they needed me so I threw my weight around and made them give me a decent salary and a desk of my own and so on â I was in a sort of corridor to start with.'
âPoor thing.'
âAnd now I'm called Creative Director and I don't do very much at all. I suppose I've sold out really.'
âOh, I wouldn't say that.'
âYes, I have. I mean, when I went there as a student it was very much a case of spying on the enemy camp. And then they started paying me â well, you know how I never had a bean to spare â so that rather numbed me. Also I felt I was at least being creative. I'd think how you used to go into raptures about ads for carpet cleaner and public service announcements to stop children getting run over and that would make me feel less grotty. Everyone else was being properly creative, you see.'
âNot making any money out of it, you mean?'
âNot exactly. I mean, Diana and Toby were acting, Roger buried himself in Cornwall and wrote things, Clem left banking and took herself off to art school â¦'
âBut advertising's very creative â¦'
âIn a way. But it's still dubious. I mean, my team were so creative with the Tories that we got them back in. Twice. And then the Tories went and cut back all the government grants to the properly creative people.'
âThere's no point being moral about it. Creativity's got nothing to do with morality. And besides, you must be fearfully rich now.' Robin chuckled and began to lay waste the first of his valuable
hors d'oeuvres
. âYou can't deny it,' he said with his mouth full. âNot now that I've seen the house. And dear Candy must be worth a bomb, by now. I thought she was just a continuity girl, I hadn't realised she was a star!
âDon't buck the system,' he went on. âIt works so beautifully. Now that you're stinking rich and feeling guilty about it, you can both start paying your poor contemporaries to be creative for you, like paying an architect to build a chantry round your grave then paying in perpetuity for nuns to save your soul in it.'
âYou're playing devil's advocate, naturally.'
âNo, I'm not.' Robin sipped his wine then laughed at Jake outright. âWell, there's no need to look so upset.'
âBut you're the one with ideals. You're the one who's turned his back on all this. You should be coming amongst us snorting disapproval.'
âWhy on earth? I can appreciate comfort and achievement like the next man.'
âYou've just spent eight years in a monastery! Now you
are
playing devil's advocate.'
âJust a little.'
Jake relaxed.
âHow's your sea bass?' he asked.
âDelicious. Piquant and perfect. You're hardly eating a thing. Here. Try some of this.' Robin slipped him a piece of fish wrapped in crisped seaweed. âOf course it isn't really seaweed â they just call it that â it's actually sea spinach or something. They dry it and shove it through a shredder. What's wrong? Aren't you hungry?'
âNot very. We had people round again last night â third time this week.'
âLord. Oh well. Cheers.' Jake's guest drank to him then munched on unabashed. Jake toyed with a piece of duck. âOf course,' Robin declared, âwhen you expect me to come along and disapprove of how you've sold out, what you're actually saying is that you want me to attack you for having run off and married Candida when you were meant to settle down with me.'
Jake felt his face burn,
âThat's hardly fair,' he said.
âOr proper,' said Robin, apparently still intent on his food. âSorry. Tell me about Jasper. Does he give his parents hell?'
As the conversation was swung away from this emotional precipice as violently as it had been launched towards it, Jake felt relief, also a lingering disappointment. Since first taking the initiative so dramatically eight years ago he had been assiduously learning to do so with more aplomb. In his first year of marriage he had enrolled himself on an expensive course in Gloucestershire to learn assertion techniques and, in equal secrecy, had returned for remedial weekends every year since. Now that he was back in Robin's company Jake's training evaporated and he doubted that he could possibly have withstood a thorough raking-over of the past. Once again Robin was taking the lead acting as though he were always right, and once again, damn him, he was. Maddening though this might be, Jake had quite forgotten how pleasurable his old passivity was. He sat back, drank more than his regulation two glasses, regained his appetite and let himself be entertained.