Authors: Adale Geras
Around the table, everyone hovered, uncertain what to do next. Charlotte could see that if she didn't say something, if she didn't restore order, everything she'd wanted this day to be was in danger of disintegrating. She said, with a great deal more confidence than she felt, âPlease sit down, Dr Ashton. And everyone ⦠I'm sure we'll be back to normal in a minute. Let me get the coffee. Bob will take care of Joss. Don't worry.'
No one spoke. Maureen whispered to her husband, who had moved stiffly to sit beside her, looking trapped and uncomfortable. Zannah and Em, you could see, were longing to go and find out what was wrong with their mother. Isis said, âIs Grandma ill?' and Charlotte, glad of the distraction, had answered, âI'm not sure, dear. Just sit still and finish your tart.'
Then Joss came into the dining room again. Bob stood
next to her, with one hand on her elbow. She said, âI'm terribly sorry, everyone. I have to go home. I ⦠have a migraine. I must go. Charlotte, thank you so much for everything ⦠I ⦠'
âAre you sure you don't want to go upstairs and lie down, Joss?' Charlotte said.
âOr I could take you home to the flat,' said Zannah. âYou could rest there.'
âNo, really, I can't. I couldn't. Thank you, but I have to leave now. I can't ⦠I want to go home. Now, please. At once. I can't tell you how sorry ⦠how sad ⦠'
Her eyes filled with tears and she seemed to be having some difficulty breathing. She was still white, but now two red patches had appeared on her cheeks. Bob put an arm around her and led her out of the room. Charlotte followed them to the front door, and watched as they stumbled down the drive. As soon as the car door slammed behind her, Joss collapsed against the seat and threw her arm over her face, as though she wanted to hide, or not to see, or both. Charlotte waited till the car turned out of the gate and then she made her way slowly inside again. Joss had hardly ever had even a mild headache as far as she knew. The migraine was a lie. Why, Charlotte wondered, did she feel she had to run away? Because that was what she'd done. What could possibly have happened to make her flee her own daughter's engagement party? It wasn't a
what
, she realized, but a
who
. Joss had been fine till Graham Ashton appeared. She'd been better than fine. Her distress must have something to do with him. I'll ask her, Charlotte decided, when she's feeling better. I'm sure there's a perfectly rational explanation. She went back to the dining room, ready to make light of the whole thing: ready to corroborate the migraine story Joss had produced. She had never suffered from migraines as a child, but must have had a good reason for lying. Charlotte wondered what that could possibly be.
*
Joss was aware of Bob being aware of her, even though he was supposed to be concentrating on the road. She hadn't opened her eyes since she got into the car and was determined not to speak or move till they reached home. I don't care if he's worried, she thought. I'll pretend to be sleeping. She heard his words as though he were speaking from a very long way away, instead of from right beside her, as though her ears were full of a thick mist.
âJossie, darling.' Years and years since he'd called her that. It made her feel queasy. âDon't worry about anything. You're tired. We'll talk later. You sleep.'
He was so kind, so loving, that she felt as though something inside her was being wrenched apart. Now, now would be such a good time to stop everything: to say,
There's nothing wrong with me. I'm fine. I don't know what happened back there
and end all the speculation that must, she knew, be preoccupying Zannah, Emily and Charlotte, and probably Maureen and Adrian too.
Whatever was the matter with that woman?
she imagined Maureen asking her husband and could visualize her expression as she spoke: a combination of curiosity, distaste and an undercurrent of glee at the sight of someone else making a
faux pas
, putting a social foot spectacularly wrong. Maureen's husband. Gray.
My Gray
. More than any other feeling â more than embarrassment, or shame, or sorrow at wrecking her own daughter's engagement party â was the anguish she felt at his betrayal. He'd lied to her.
Almost as soon as they met, the strange rules that were to govern their dealings with one another had been set out. Other people embarking on a relationship of any kind wouldn't have hedged it about with such conditions, Joss knew that. And yet for her it was part of the magic, part of the
separateness
of her feelings for Gray from anything else in her life. She remembered the
night she had met him, at Fairford Hall. She'd decided, even before she went on her first course there, that day-to-day Joss would be left behind and Lydia Quentin the poet would expand and grow for once. She'd decided that, apart from the very basic information, married, with children, etc., she wouldn't tell anyone the details of her life. As it turned out, Gray was the first person to take an interest, to ask her about herself.
After dinner on the first night, a group of them had sat round the fire. Outside, November frost had iced the grass. They'd drunk a couple of bottles of wine between them, laughed and exchanged gossip and opinions. Then, one by one, the others had gone to bed. A single lamp shed a yellowish light and filled every corner with black shadows. The flames had died into a cluster of embers, which glowed faintly pink. She was on the sofa, and Gray was sitting across from her on a low armchair. When they found themselves alone, he came and sat beside her, closing the distance between them, and Joss could still remember the tremor that ran through her as she looked at him. His thin face was half in darkness. She noticed his long eyelashes, how white and slender his hands were, and that the hair falling on to his forehead was glossy and dark and scarcely touched with grey.
âTell me something about yourself,' he said.
âI don't do that,' she'd answered. âI'm anonymous, when I'm here. I like being ⦠well, not myself in some way. Lydia Quentin isn't my name.'
âBut I like it. I'm afraid Graham Ashton
is
my name.'
What had made her say what she'd said next? Sitting so close to him on the sofa? The knowledge that he liked her? Admired her? The daring conferred by not being Joss Gratrix but someone freer, braver, more forward in every way? Anyway, she'd said it: âI'm going to call you Gray. That suits you much better than Graham.'
It was hard to see in the dim light but Joss thought he blushed when she told him that. He said, âRight. No one's called me that before. And it's a good word, isn't it?
Gray
. All sorts of associations and a colour I like as well. It can be yours alone.' He bent his head, and Joss could see that he, too, was embarrassed. He went on, âWhat I mean is: I won't let anyone else call me that.'
A silence fell then. He broke it. âAre you married?'
âYes, I am. I'm fifty years old. I've got two daughters. I'm a librarian. I live up north.'
âTell me their names. I want to know about you.'
Joss could still remember how vehemently she'd shaken her head. âNo, I'm sorry, Gray. I'm not going to say anything. I can't. This ⦠' she gestured to include the whole room, indicating Fairford Hall, everything it stood for, âthis place is far away from my daily life and I want to keep it separate. I'm so sorry.'
He said, âNo need to apologize, as long as ⦠'
âAs long as what?'
âAs long as the important things about you aren't part of what you call your daily life.'
âOh, they aren't,' Joss said. The wine had made her feel light-headed, reckless. âThey really aren't. This, the way I am here, that's the real me, I promise. My thoughts, my dreams, my ambitions, my opinions, the whole of my childhood, my memories, my work ⦠everything. I'm happy to ⦠' Her courage failed her then. She had to pause to get her breath back before going on. âHappy to share all those,' she said finally, almost whispering out of embarrassment at what she'd just done. What had possessed her? Why did she think this handsome man might be interested in â had she truly said it? How toe-curlingly
awful!
 â her childhood memories?
She began to stand up, confused and wanting suddenly to go, to be in her room and away from his disturbing presence. He took her left hand and held it between both of his. Joss found herself sitting down again, every
nerve-end charged with a kind of electricity, wondering what would happen next. The silence was unbearable. She turned to Gray and asked: âWhat about you? Are you married?'
âNo, I'm not,' he said. âI'm going to do what you're doing and keep my real life out of this as well. I'm fifty-one. I live in the south. I work in a hospital. That's it. We're going to be friends, aren't we? Tell one another everything?'
âExcept the facts of our lives,' Joss answered.
âFacts! Who needs them?' Gray said, and smiled at her so fondly, so lovingly that she felt an odd, liquefying sensation in her stomach. She stood up then, needing to be alone.
âI don't,' she said. Then, sounding much too brisk and schoolmarmish to herself, she added, âI'm off to bed. See you tomorrow.'
âGood night,' he said, and she felt his eyes on her back as she left the room.
The sound of the car's engine brought her back to the present. She half opened her eyes, glanced at Bob's profile without moving her head and decided to keep on pretending to sleep. She couldn't think of anything except Gray.
He'd lied to her. He'd deceived her from the start, from that first night. All through the time they'd known one another, he'd never said a single word about a wife or a son. He was single. He'd said as much. Perhaps she should have been more sceptical, asked more questions. Perhaps she ought to have wondered how a man as attractive as Gray had escaped marriage. I didn't want to look into it too closely, she told herself. His being single was the one thing that kept me going. She realized it now: she'd relied on the knowledge that should she ever dare to go to him, or need to run away and find him, he'd be there for her. He would be waiting and wanting nothing but her. How many times had he said so?
Words he had written over and over again came back to her.
You're the only one. There's no one else. My only only love. For ever
. God, how stupid she'd been. Now, her heart was breaking. She fancied she could feel it literally splintering into fragments, just there, under her ribcage, but for the moment everything else was obliterated by the force of a rage of such intensity that she was breathless. She could deal with the pain later on, and there'd be plenty of time to do that, because she had no reason to suppose it would ever stop. Her life, all the various strands of it that she'd managed to keep nicely separated, had come to resemble a mass of knotted threads, like the contents of an old tapestry bag that hadn't been touched for years. I wish I could cry, she thought, as she listened to the deafening shriek of her husband, her poor Bob, not speaking to her. Not asking her for an explanation. What was she going to tell him? She couldn't maintain silence for ever.
*
âYou heard what Charlotte said. How she used to have migraines when she was a kid.' Zannah was lying on the sofa, still wearing what she'd worn at lunch.
âThen why,' said Emily, who'd changed into jeans and a sweatshirt the second they'd got home, âhaven't we ever seen her having one? Don't migraines keep happening over and over?'
âWell, what else could it have been? Ma'd rather die than make a fuss. It must be true.'
âIt'd help if she answered her mobile. They must be home by now, surely. Even stopping off on the way up there.' Emily stood by the window, looking out at the London roofscape. Zannah knew her sister didn't think much of the view, even though if you leaned out far enough you got a glimpse of Highgate Wood. Emily didn't think things were beautiful unless they were deserts or mountains or countryside. And she'd picked up a love of anything ancient from Pa.
They were very lucky to be living in this flat. It belonged to one of their father's colleagues, Dr Farraday, who'd bought it more than thirty years ago. He'd arranged to let Zannah rent it after her divorce for a nominal sum while he lived in a whitewashed cottage on a Greek island, enjoying his early retirement. It was much larger than the usual London cubbyhole: an enormous four-bedroomed apartment on two levels in a converted Victorian townhouse. When Emily arrived in London, shortly after Zannah's divorce, she had moved in to keep her sister company, and each was glad the other was there, even though they occasionally disagreed about how the place was run.
âSlut and control freak living together,' Emily used to say. âBound to be a problem.'
Zannah knew that Em was far from a slut and she certainly didn't think of herself as a control freak but basically that was the way it was: Em was messy and she was tidy and between them they were just right.
But she doesn't realize, Zannah thought, that I mean it when I say I like what I see out of that window, especially at night. Twilight had washed the sky in mauve and apricot and the edges of the buildings across the road were sharp and black against the pale background. It looked like the paper cutouts she'd helped Year Six to make before half-term: silhouettes of houses and people and animals that she'd spent ages sticking on to a background of orange paper to make a mural for the classroom.
Isis was kneeling beside the coffee table in her pyjamas, drawing on bits of rough paper with her felt tips, and keeping very quiet so as not to draw attention to her presence in case she was told she had to go to bed. She wasn't interested in what was outside the window, but had covered her paper with more and more elaborate dresses of the bridal variety. Let her stay there, Zannah
thought. I'm too worried about Ma to think about bedtime. And it's Sunday tomorrow. No school and none the next day either or for a whole week. Lovely, lovely half-term.