Authors: Freya North
They broke for a cup of tea and a softening digestive biscuit from a long since opened packet.
âTime's passing, Pollygirl.'
âIsn't it just,' Polly agreed.
âWhen's the big day, then?' Dominic asked with a little nudge.
âDay after the day after tomorrow,' Polly told him with a fleeting but telling sparkle.
Dominic fell silent and regarded her reproachfully. âI meant,' he said, âwhen are you going to marry my brother, not leave him?'
âI'm not leaving him!' Polly rushed, reddening. There was a perceptiveness to Dominic's tone for which she would never have credited him previously, and it unnerved her.
âSo, then, when?'
âWe haven't picked a date precisely,' she told him truthfully, and as breezily as she could.
âOh.'
âOnce I'm home for good,' Polly continued carefully, taking another digestive, bending it without eating it, smiling very widely for Dominic.
âSo, you're leaving on Friday,' he responded through a slight shower of crumbs.
âSuppose,' she said, looking away quickly but not before a mixture of grief and excitement scumbled across her face and settled as sludge in her eyes. She could not prevent it, she could not hide it; the blatancy was there for Dominic to witness. Consciously, Dominic let an edgy silence hang a moment longer. Polly wiped her hands on her skirt methodically and raised her eyebrows. âBack to work?'
âMy muse!' he proclaimed, letting her off the hook and banishing the unsettling image. âBetter take advantage of you while I can, eh?' He had no idea what to do with the inkling that something might be amiss.
Come on, take stock. I mean, this is Pollygirl Fenton we're talking.
âNow I'm going to zoom in on your eyes,' he told her, âand then, later, transpose famous clock faces over your irises.'
Pity it won't be in colour â just get a load of that khaki hue.
Suddenly, the clock tower at Hubbardtons, between the main hall and the dining-room, flitted across Polly's mind and at once transported her back to Vermont. She could even smell morning grass. She shut her eyes and felt the fresh air against her skin.
Behind closed eyelids, Polly shifted her focus just slightly, over to the right, a little more â there! Petersfield House; colonial, wooden and pretty, her new home for her new responsibility as Dorm Mother to twelve girls. Sweep round 45 degrees, beyond the bike porch, to the hockey field. Beyond it, the sports hall, the gym, the Athletic Trainer's surgery. Behind it all, lofty Hubbardtons wearing the velvet mauve of its early winter plumage while awaiting its annual cloak of snow to swathe away its contours until spring.
Faintly, now louder: voices.
âHey there, Polly, welcome back, honey.'
âHi Polly, hold up!'
âYo, Miss Fenton, good to see you.'
âHey Fen'un, looking good. How's it going?'
Hullo Kate, hey Lorna, morning AJ, hullo Chip. It's nice to be back. It's good to see you too. It's going fine. It's going to be fine.
âOy!'
Who?
Polly opens her eyes.
Dominic.
Hampstead.
âI can't superimpose Big Ben or the Selfridges clock over closed eyelids!'
âI was miles away,' Polly apologized, still miles away and finding it difficult to get back.
A photographer's skill is his heightened sense of looking. Just then, Polly's vivid reel of Hubbardtons continued to run across her opened eyes. In an instant, Dominic saw.
She's gone already.
It explained so much.
Her distance. The change in her.
He walked towards her, the intensity of his gaze rendering her powerless to close her eyes again though she was desperate to, just to look away, even to blink.
She's hardly here at all. She wants to leave. She'd rather be over there. Something's happening to her. Something's happened. No. How can it? She's only Polly.
âWhat is it, Polly?' he asked, uncomfortably close to her face, his tone accusatory and unsettling. âWhat's going on? Something's wrong, isn't it?'
âWhat?' she said with an edged laugh, Dominic's eyes still locked on to hers though she flitted her gaze desperately. âNothing's wrong.'
It won't be wrong. It's going to make things right.
âIt bloody is,' Dominic countered. âYou've been,' he stumbled, âyou've been â you just haven't been you.'
âDominic!' Polly protested, shivering as if she was as naked as she felt. âWhat on earth are you going on about?'
âI don't know, Polly,' Dominic replied measuredly, backing away from her and regarding her through slanted eyes, âyou tell me. I just don't know. You've been distant and moody and that's not like you. In fact,
furtive
is the best word. Not pleasant, at any rate.'
âI'm just tired,' she pleaded in weak defence.
âWell,' said Dominic, dismantling his equipment, âI don't want to photograph your eyes.'
âDom!'
âNo, Polly,' he said sternly, hands on hips, âyou won't do. I don't like what I see.'
âHullo?'
âMegan?'
âYes?'
âDominic here. Fyfield. As in Maxanpolly.'
âHullo there!'
There is only one Dominic. He needs neither introduction nor genealogical clarification. And he's on the end of my phone.
âHi.'
âHi.'
âI was wondering if you'd, er, if I could, um. I mean, it's Polly's last night, as you know, and she and Max are going to do something suitably romantic and private â you know, lots of candles, syrupy music and soft focus. So I was wondering if you'd like to go out for dinner. Or something.'
Sweet baby Jesus and his lovely mother Mary! Is Dominic Fyfield asking me out on a date?
âUm,' hesitated Megan for good effect and with a monstrous smile she was relieved Dominic could not see, âwell, actually, yes I would. That sounds lovely. Thanks. Great. See you later then.'
âSuitably romantic and private', hey Mr Fyfield? Better not be outdone by baby brother! Must phone Polly.
âPolly?'
âMeg!'
âYou OK? Still on for tea and cake at three?'
âYes. And yes. You?'
âOh yes. But maybe not a whole pastry. Maybe we should
share
.'
âOh?'
âOh yes, I wouldn't want to spoil my
dinner
now, would I?'
âNo?'
âHo! Dinner
date
. I have one too!'
âYes?'
âIndeed I do. The Fyfield Boy's just phoned.'
âMax? You joining us?'
âDominic, you idiot woman.'
âYo!'
âPardon?'
âI'm sealing my approval with an expression of excitement!'
âAh ha. See you at three then?'
âLater, dude.'
âEnough, Fenton. I know you're trying gently to ease yourself back into the swing of all things American, but just let me hear you say “Jolly good, tea at three”.'
âJolly good, tea at three.'
The girls shared a mountainous portion of pavlova. As it happened, Polly couldn't have managed a portion to herself anyway. The glut of emotions weighed heavy on her stomach. Dominic's intuition had surprised and unnerved her. She felt unsettled. She felt disorientated. She couldn't possibly leave England. She wasn't ready. Her trip home had passed so quickly. She didn't want to go back to America. She wasn't ready. What could she have been thinking? She wished she'd never gone out there in the first place. She regretted coming home to England for Christmas.
âYou ready to go back?' Megan asked gently, right on cue. âPacked?'
âNo,' Polly replied, âand no.' How she wanted to open up, to let Megan in; confide, seek advice, approval, disapproval â whatever â just so she did not feel so alone and so solely responsible for any action she might take. Instead, she bit her cheek and held back, though she lacked the courage and the voice to speak anyway.
âWhat's in store for you, next term?' Megan asked, using her index finger as a spatula against the plate.
Don't ask.
âPardon?'
âWell,' said Polly quickly, âI'm moving from Kate's to Petersfield House to be a Dorm Momâ'
âDoes that have capitals? Is it on your job description?' interrupted Megan.
âYes and yes,' Polly smiled and nodded, âand in class, we're going for manners and wit with a dose of Austen and Wilde.'
âThey'll love that,' said Megan, etching dreamy expressions across the imagined faces of Polly's anglophile students.
âHow about you?' asked Polly; desperate to be distracted, needing an anchor with England, keen to divert the focus away from herself.
âMocks,' groaned Megan to Polly's say-no-more expression.
âAnd
you
,' Polly stressed, âyourself?'
Megan's eyes glinted as she spun a lock of her hair through her fingers, a sly smile broadening across her lips. She arranged sugar cubes into the letter âD' and then took one out, sucking on it luxuriously.
âI'm going to have a Dalliance with Dominic.'
âJust a dalliance,' Polly responded. It was not a question.
Now that Dominic had Megan all to himself and out of context, he was delighted to discover anew just how gorgeous she was. Previously, that she was Polly's close friend had somehow diminished her stand-alone merits. He had often flirted with her but elaborately and artificially because the very presence of Max and Polly had encouraged it. Tonight, there was no connection other than Max and Polly being absent and thus enabling this situation to have arisen. Dominic, aware and repentant that he had invariably acted up when in the presence of his brother, his brother's girlfriend and her soul-mate, now made a conscious effort to be himself. Megan, who had already pinched herself a number of times to verify the actuality of the evening, relaxed. To her delight, she discovered that Dominic was not merely a gorgeous playboy to whom she would have surrendered herself willingly anyway; he was also attentive, intelligent and witty. And all the more attractive because of it.
âAre you busy Saturday?' Dominic asked as coffee came and went and came again at his instigation.
âSaturday, Saturday,' Megan mulled, though a clear picture of her even clearer diary came into view, âyes, I think I am. I'll have to double-check, though.'
âWell, if you are free,' said Dominic, hoping sincerely that she would be, âwe could go to the flicks.'
âHave you seen the new Bruce Willis?' Megan asked, her eyes sparkling.
âNo,' said Dominic, with his devastating grin, âMax won't come and see it with me. Might you, then?'
âWill I!' Megan enthused, âI love Brucie-boy. If I'm free.'
âOf course,' said Dominic, asking for the bill and winking, very quickly, but straight at Megan.
M
ax thought Polly looked quite the most beautiful he had ever seen her, standing there in her stockinged feet, her hand held by frail Miss Klee while they weathered a diatribe from an incensed Mrs Dale. Polly was wearing a softly tailored shift dress the colour of blackberry and her hair, recently trimmed to just below her jawline, her fringe skimming her neat eyebrows, gleamed like mahogany, framing her face and accentuating the shine of her eyes. A lick of mascara emphasized her eyes, a swipe of lipstick made her already kissable lips even more so. Slender, milky arms, gorgeous knees, shapely calves and dainty ankles; what a package! Max congratulated himself and thrust his hands deep into the pockets of his chinos to conceal his burgeoning erection.
âGood evening, Miss Klee,' he said, tipping his head in her direction, but with his eyes locked on to Polly.
âGood evening,' Miss Klee said to him with absolutely no recognition, âis it evening?'
âIt is,' said Max kindly, taking her hand from Polly's and leading her up the stairs to her flat, âhalf past seven, already.'
âMrs Dale,' he replied calmly over his shoulder, to a torrent of abuse, on his way back down, âthere is neither point nor merit in speaking like that. You will cause yourself an injury with all that rage. I shall turn the communal light off just as soon as we're safely inside Miss Fenton's flat.'
He performed this simple action as promised and closed Polly's door behind him, heaving out a theatrical sigh, âWomen!'
âDarling Max,' marvelled Polly, trailing her fingertips over his cheek and down the side of his neck, âsuch a gentleman.' Max responded to the compliment with a flourish of a bow. Polly nestled against him, lost in her confusion but comforted by the sanctuary of his heartbeat.
âDo you love me?' he muffled into the top of her head. âWill you miss me?'
âYes,' said Polly, âand yes.'
âYou hungry?' he murmured. âShall we go?'
âYes,' said Polly, âand yes.'
Hampstead Heath was inky dark as they walked to their favourite restaurant in South End Green. It was like stepping into somewhere Mediterranean: pastel-washed walls, sunny waiters, fresh, colourful food, animated chatter; a perfect antidote to the damp chill of January in north London. The staff, uniformly camp and lavish with compliments, sashayed around the tables seeing to the diners' every need and pampering them for the duration of their visit. The quality of the dishes and the showmanship of the staff kept Max and Polly entertained. Their waiter hyperbolized on Polly's eyes and paid such attention to the details of Max's outfit that Max wondered whether he should just take the shirt from his back and leave it as part of the tip. When each dish was brought to the table, their waiter placed it down with such care and attention that Max and Polly felt almost guilty for disturbing the platter's design and eating the contents.