Authors: Jane Lovering
"No, it's fine. All over now."
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Slightly Foxed
by Jane Lovering
As soon as Simon was safely away in the cubbyhole, Jace
marched me into the cover of Biography. "Well? Is he coming
passionately at you?"
I wrinkled my nose. "He wasn't coming in any sense
whatever." I gave her the details of the attempted telephone
calls.
"Hmm." Jace looked critically into my face. "He is sounding
like an unreliable man. Does he have nobody to be petting his
horses if he is not there?"
"He did try. Anyway, it doesn't matter, I'm going down
tomorrow for the weekend."
"I am thinking that it matters very much, if he cannot
leave his horses to come and see his woman." Jace turned
away. "I hopes you are taking some care, Alys. Hearts should
be given to those who earn them." I would have credited this
with more philosophical depth if I hadn't noticed the Mills and
Boon she'd shoved under the counter, bookmarked halfway
through. She and Mrs. Searle were obviously kindred spirits.
I began dusting Queen Victoria since no one seemed to
have taken any interest in her for quite some time. This
meant lying along the floor to blow dust off the angled edge
of the bookcase. I was thusly prone when a shadow fell over
me and a voice said, "It's okay, Alys, you can worship me
later."
"Piers!" I tried to jack-knife to my feet but ended up on all
fours performing a sort of press-up manoeuvre with my
duster in my hand. "How are you?"
"I'm cool. Listen, when is Florence due back?"
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I hauled myself to my feet with judicious use of the
shelving. "Not for another week, did she not tell you? She's
having far too good a time, if you ask me." Out of the corner
of my eye, I saw Jace lurking in Poetry, wiggling her
eyebrows, and I made shooing motions. She just winked
broadly and lasciviously, and pretended to be rearranging
books in order to earwig our conversation.
"She may have said, can't remember. I wanted her to—
hey, perhaps you can help instead."
"As long as you didn't require her to do anything gyratory
in very small trousers, I shall do my best to replace her," I
said solemnly. Piers did the thing where he combed his hair
back off his face. It drew his tight T-shirt close around his
body and Jacinta nearly poked her eye out with Ted Hughes.
"I've found this flat, need a female perspective kinda thing.
It's very central, very open. But I dunno if it's really, like,
me
,
you know?"
"I'm not sure I'd be any use, Piers. I know nothing about
property buying and anyway, you've
seen
my place. Would
you trust the opinion of anyone who lives in a shoebox?"
"Yeah. I would." Piers noticed Jacinta. It wasn't difficult
since she was hanging from the far edge of Biography like a
cross-dressing mountaineer. "You reckon I can trust Alys's
sense?"
Jace realised he was talking to her and quit her pretence of
tidying, dropping neatly to the floor alongside us. "I think she
has much sense. In some things." She threw me a glance
which was probably meant to be meaningful. "Anyway, if she
cannot help you,
I
am very good indoors."
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I gave in and introduced them, and to Jace's great
gratification, Piers did the slow look up and down that men
reserve for women whose charms have not totally passed
them by. But then, Jace's charms took quite a long time to
travel past anyone. "Hi, Jacinta. I've heard a lot about you."
You liar, I thought, but it was nice of him to make the
effort.
Jace almost broke into a purr. "But you. Alys is not telling
us of
you
."
"Yeah, well, Alys likes to keep me under wraps, you
know?" Piers dropped his voice to a loud whisper. "I don't
think she wants people to know that she's got this crazy
young guy who can do real
amazing
things to women with a
tub of ice cream and a feather."
Jacinta's eyes went very round and she stared at both of
us for a second, until I gave her a poke on the arm. "Jace,
he's winding you up. He has a very peculiar sense of
humour." In explanation, "He's American, he can't help it."
"So, meet you back here at, what, five o'clock? You
finished by five, Alys?" Piers consulted his watch which
caused the T-shirt-stretching thing to happen again, pulling
the fabric close to his rib cage until even
I
could see that Piers
had the makings of a very nice six-pack. Jace could probably
have described his underwear.
"Yes, of course, but—Piers, don't you have any girlfriends
you could take to look at this place? Or your mother? I mean
Florrie would be next door to useless unless you wanted an
opinion on the coolness of the location."
"It'll be good that you're coming instead then, won't it?"
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"Does no one do any work around here except me?"
Simon's slightly cantankerous tones broke in. "There's a lady
here who would like to buy a book and I can't get the till open
because
someone
has got the key."
I went to his rescue, leaving Piers to wink goodbye to Jace,
who had to sit down rather heavily on the library steps as
soon as he'd gone.
"Why can I not find a man like that?" She fanned herself
with Mary Astor, her chest heaving with the exertion.
"You could always make a play for him," I said. "I don't
think Piers would be averse to an experienced woman."
She seemed for a second to consider it, the fanning
stopped anyway. "No, I think he is interested elsewhere. But I
would like to be seen with such a man. It will make other men
curious to be knowing what I can be doing so good."
I went back to sorting shelves. About half an hour later, I
was summoned to the cubbyhole by Simon who stood holding
a bouquet of deep red carnations like a man holding an
unaccustomed small child. "These just arrived for you. I'm
beginning to feel more like a dating agency than a bookshop."
I flipped the card open.
Incredibly sorry about yesterday
, it
read.
Can't believe how much I was looking forward to it. Can
we try again on Friday? Leo
and three
x
's. By now Simon was
tutting so hard he sounded like an unexploded bomb. "Sorry,
Simon. These are a one-off. And it was only Piers again."
"Still wanting your help with a 'family matter'?" Simon
sounded sarcastic, which was not like him at all. I spent the
rest of the day incarcerated in the back room, which was
Simon's equivalent of the Punishment Cell, sorting a heap of
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dusty old volumes that he'd bought in from another sale. At
five o'clock, Jace had to beat me clean with a damp rag
before I could meet up with Piers, who'd been hovering
outside in the Porsche since four thirty.
The flat turned out to be the whole top floor of a Bonded
Warehouse right on the river. Huge metal pillars supported
the roof, but apart from that it was one long, empty space
with the bathroom a very visible corner behind stylish glass
bricks.
"Well?" Piers stood in the middle of the room, hands in
pockets. "What do you think?"
"I think it would make a great rollerblading rink. But a flat?
I don't know. It is very
you
though, Piers."
"How, me?" He rocked back on his heels watching me
intently. I wasn't quite sure why.
"Very cool, very trendy. Very exhibitionist. I mean, if there
was anyone here with you, you wouldn't even be able to
scratch yourself without them seeing."
"So, you reckon I'm a cool, trendy exhibitionist?" His eyes
were glittering.
"No, you're—" But I stopped myself.
"What
do
you think of me, Alys?" He came a little closer. "I
mean, am I a nice guy or a psycho, or what? Y'see, you never
say what you think, you keep it all locked away, up here—"
He reached out to touch my forehead but, disturbed for no
reason I could think of, I shied away and waved a hand to
indicate the bare brick walls.
"Can you imagine curling up in here with a video and a
pizza and listening to the rain outside?"
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"Er...Alys..." Piers held his hands out in front of him.
"Twenty-one. Male. Too fucking cool to live. I do
not
sit in
with pizza."
I had a sudden flashback to last night, my birthday night,
sitting in front of the TV, cheese stringily dripping onto my lap
whilst Mr. Depp strutted his sizeable funky thing for my
delectation. My sole conversation had been with Mrs.
Treadgold who'd rung to make sure I'd enjoyed the cake. "If
all you want is a sexy address, this will do you fine. But if you
want a
home—
this will never be a home, Piers."
"That was straight from the heart anyway." Piers looked
the place over, with a sigh. "But I guess you're right. It's a
little municipal."
I instantly felt contrite. "But the view, the view is lovely."
Bobbing away down the Ouse were the houseboats and the
tourist craft. On the far bank were the riverside pubs and
clubs. "Very urban."
"Noisy, at night."
"Yes, but lively. And handy for the station and the shops."
Piers just looked at me, steadily. "You hate it."
"Well, yes, but it's not
for
me, is it? Do you like it, that's
the question. What about your girlfriend, does she like it?"
Piers turned away abruptly and leaned on one of the
windowsills, gazing out across the rooftops of York. "I'm—
kinda between women at the moment." There was a peculiar
tone in his voice and I wondered if I'd put my foot in a
monumental great hole.
"Are you gay?" The question came out rather faster, and
more breathlessly, than I'd meant. I'd heard all about his
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penchant for young girl model-types who left not one inch of
him uncovered with lipstick praise, mostly in scathing terms
from Florence. But maybe they'd been symptomatic of a
struggle with sexuality.
Piers seemed unoffended. I suppose, looking the way he
did, all hair and rings and androgynously sexy, it must be
something he got asked a lot. "No. I'm not. There
is
someone, but it's all kinda difficult at the moment, you
know?"
I stood beside him and together we looked out of the
window. "Life, eh?" But I had to admit that he made me feel a
tiny bit better; he might be beautiful and well connected, but
he still wasn't happy.
I
could manage to be miserable without
any of those advantages. "Better get home. Grainger's been a
bit off-colour lately and he's not too hot with the litter tray, so
I don't like to be late."
"You won't come for a drink, then? Maybe some food, say
thanks for coming to look at this place?"
"Wellll, all right, Grainger can cross his little furry legs for
a bit longer. But you are absolutely not to order any wine,
okay?"
"Yes,
ma'am
." Piers executed a very smart salute. His
mood seemed to have switched from forlorn to cheerful in
nanoseconds.
"And we can only go somewhere that won't mind my
jeans, I haven't got anything to change into. Oh, and Piers,
have you got anything to put on over that T-shirt?"
"Yes, ma'am, sure thing, ma'am. Why?"
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"Oh, nothing, it's just that every time you move it's
distracting."
"Yeah?" Slowly and deliberately Piers stretched his arms
upwards, straightening out his spine and rolling his shoulders
backwards, until his T-shirt moved up his torso, over the
waistband of his jeans revealing, inch by inch, bare flesh
studded with dark hair.
"Piers, you are
such
a poser." I turned away quickly so he
wouldn't see that I was enjoying the show. "Come on, stop
flaunting yourself and let's go."
"Sure thing." Bouncing on the balls of his feet, Piers led
the way out of the flat. We ate in an Italian restaurant and
chatted until they closed the place around us. I was surprised
by just how much I enjoyed myself.
Next morning I woke up with the feeling that I'd done
something I ought to regret. I padded out of the bedroom
with my towel, heading for the bathroom. At least it was early
enough that I could have a shower before work.
As I passed Florrie's bedroom door, I heard Grainger give
one of his plaintive
murp
's on the far side of it. Somehow,
and I could be almost
positive
I'd left the door open, Grainger
had become shut in.
I flicked the door and Grainger ran through my legs. To