Read The Mirror World of Melody Black Online
Authors: Gavin Extence
âYes, well, that's rather subjective. I happen to like my job. It's challenging and stimulating, and there's a lot of room to developâ'
âChrist! You sound like you're citing the vacancies page.'
Francesca snarled. âYou don't even know what I do â not really.'
âThat's because I fall asleep whenever you try to explain it to me.'
âAbby, what's this all about? Are you still pissed off about last weekend?'
âNo, absolutely not. All forgotten.'
âReally? Because it seems like you've invited me to lunch with the sole intention of insulting me.'
âOf course I haven't. Don't be so sensitive.'
âSo why
are
we doing this?'
âDoes there have to be a reason? I was in the area and felt like having lunch with my sister. What's so odd about that?'
Francesca arched an eyebrow but remained silent.
âLook,' I continued, âlet's start again. We won't talk about work and I won't pressurize you to drink anything even remotely interesting. How does that sound?'
She looked at me for a very long time, as if she wanted to say something else but doubted the wisdom of it. Then she just exhaled and nodded. âFine. You can get me another Perrier. And let's order, for God's sake. I have to be back in an hour.'
Within ten minutes, I, too, was wondering why I'd thought this lunch would be such a good idea. I'd forgotten, once again, that Francesca and I could no longer sustain a friendly conversation, no matter what topic we settled on. The tragedy was that she used to be fun, once. The twenty-two-year-old Francesca would not have turned her nose up at absinthe and champagne, as if the very suggestion were some kind of hideous cultural faux pas. It was depressing to think that in the space of eight years she'd morphed into the neutrally clad, Perrier-drinking, humourless career girl who now sat opposite. Frankly, she was putting a real dampener on my day.
Nevertheless, I endeavoured to keep our dialogue â increasingly a monologue â light and breezy. I expounded on my trip to Oxford and my suspicion that I was a chronic sufferer of cognitive dissonance. But she didn't seem to get any of this. Several times she interrupted with the most irrelevant questions â why had I turned up at Professor Caborn's workplace uninvited? Why was I suddenly so interested in monkeys? â as if I hadn't explained all this already! She obviously hadn't been paying proper attention, so I decided I should just abandon this narrative and move on. I told her about the dinner with Daddy, and how I thought Marie would make a marvellous stepmother. She told me, with her eyes, that I was being extremely immature about this whole situation. I countered that she was being far too forgiving, as always, though I supposed this was understandable since her life had been far less affected by our father's multiple failings. We fell, eventually, into a barbed silence. For my part, I'd grown tired of carrying the conversation single-handed; and Francesca seemed determined to remain distant and judgemental â even more so than usual. She kept shooting me these wary, searching looks, casting her eyes in narrowed disapproval over my beautiful blue dress. I figured she was jealous; there must have been a part of her that wished she could wear something that astonishing to work.
I left the restaurant feeling a hot dart of irritation that my midday alcohol could not quite blunt. Still, I had no intention of letting Francesca spoil things. The afternoon was young; I didn't have to be home for the best part of three hours. I decided to get a tattoo.
My logic ran thus: I'd put around £900 on my credit card today; I might as well round up so that I could draw a neat line under my spending. And since I'd indulged myself â overindulged, my sister would say â I really ought to get something for Beck. Not only would it be a nice thing to do, but it would also pre-empt, and hopefully preclude, any complaints on his part.
I already had one tattoo, a small tribal dragon curled discreetly round my right ankle. But my new tattoo would be, in some sense, even more discreet. It would be on my breast â the right-hand side of my left breast, to be precise, since that was where my heart was. Already emblazoned on my mind's eye was the pin-sharp image of what I wanted: a butterfly, not much larger than a fifty-pence piece, its wings cherry red and half unfolded, as if it had just that moment landed, or was in the split-second process of taking flight. Delicate, feminine, romantic and sexy; replete with evocative classical symbolism. It was so perfect I wanted to cry. It would be like buying him a work of art, painted on the most intimate of canvases.
I found a nice tattooist called El on the edge of Covent Garden, showed her my dragon so she'd know I wasn't a novice, and not long after, she was busy sketching the butterfly to my exact specifications.
Being tattooed on the breast, it transpired, was not significantly more painful than being tattooed on the ankle â and anyway, it was the good sort of pain, the one that sends a hot electric thrill pulsing through your flesh. Too soon I was being cleaned, salved and dressed, with strict instructions not to touch it for the next two hours, by which time the small amount of bleeding and swelling should have subsided.
I lay on the sun-drenched grass of Victoria Embankment Gardens for the next hour and a bit, until it was time to go home; and when I got back to my feet, I felt completely intoxicated, as light and free as a feather caught on the gentlest of updraughts.
I sensed something was off-kilter the second I stepped through the door. Beck was home. He came to meet me in the hallway as I stood confused and motionless by the coat hooks.
âYou're back extremely early,' I noted.
âI took the afternoon off.' His expression was difficult to read.
âWho died?'
âNo one died, Abby. It's nothing like that. Fran called me at work. She was worried about you.
I'm
worried about you.'
I didn't say anything. It was like a conversation in a dream. It made no sense. âListen. Why don't you come and sit down for a second?'
âNo, I don't think I want to sit down. I think I'm perfectly happy here, thank you.'
âAbby, please.'
I shook my head petulantly.
âOkay, fine,' Beck said. âWe'll do this here.'
âDo what here? I haven't the foggiest idea what you're talking about.'
âAbby, you're manic. It's been building up for days, and now it's getting out of hand. I'm sorry: I should have said something earlier â much earlier â but I was hoping it was just a phase. I thought if I gave you some time, things might settle down of their own accord. They haven't. You need to see a doctor.'
âGod!
That's
what this is about? Listen, I don't know what Fran has been telling you, but you know what she's like. She thinks she knows it all when really she doesn't have the vaguest clue what'sâ'
âShe told me she could barely get a word in edgeways.'
I launched a laugh but he talked right over it.
âWhere are the curtains?'
âThe curtains?'
âThe curtains â where are they?' He gestured towards the bedroom as if presenting for the jury Exhibit A.
âBeck, the curtains are in the wheelie bin, which is precisely where they belong. New curtains will be arriving in due course.'
âWhen did we discuss getting new curtains?'
âOh, for heaven's sake! I didn't know we had to discuss it. It's not like it's a fucking . . . horse!'
By now, I was having to wipe the tears from my eyes. The whole situation was hysterically funny, if viewed from the proper angle.
âHow much have you spent today?' Beck asked.
I put my hand to my chest and took several deep breaths to steady myself. âNothing. Not a penny.'
âAbby, the dress.'
âNothing.'
âDid you pay for it or did you steal it?'
âNeither. It's all on credit. I shall pay for it next month, by which time Iâ'
He cut me off again. âAnd where are your other clothes? The ones I assume you were wearing when you left the flat?'
âFine! So I binned those too. They were old and tired, and I could hardly be carrying them around with me all day. You see, I've been doing this experiment.' I started to talk louder and faster to forestall his next interruption. âNo, Beck. Be quiet for a second. I have an excellent explanation for all this, which I'm sure Francesca neglected to tell you. The dress was effectively free. You see, there's a lot of money in fashion features right now, and you're forgiven for not knowing that, butâ'
âAbby, stop. Please stop. Just listen to yourself. You're going a mile a minute.'
âI've costed it all out in my head, but you're welcome to check my maths if you don't believe me. If I can write around fifteen hundred words at, let's say, three to four hundred pounds per five hundred words, then â fuck it! Forget the maths. I've got something wonderful to show you.' I patted my breasts, wincing slightly, at which point Beck reached out and took my hands in his, so gently it was as if he thought I was made of china. I snapped my wrists back and raised my voice even higher. âNo, stop it! This isn't fair! You're not listening to me!'
âAbby, it's okay. Everything is going to be okay. I'm going to ring Dr Barbara. I want you to speak with her.'
âLeave Dr Barbara out of this! She's not going to take your side!'
My shout had the desired effect. Beck took a step back and held up his palms. âOkay, okay. You don't have to do anything you're not ready for. But please come and sit down. I'll get you some water and we can talk some more. Calmly.'
I could see this was going nowhere â no choice left but to humour him. I threw my handbag to the floor and sat down right where I was in the middle of the hallway. âFine. Terrific. Get me a drink and I'll sit here and think of five reasons you and Francesca don't know what the hell you're talking about.'
âOkay. Good. Do that. Just sit here and I'll get you some water. I love you.'
I fixed my eyes on the carpet between my legs, a beige abomination. After a few moments, Beck nodded a couple of times, then slipped back through to the kitchen.
The instant he was out of sight, I rose silently to my feet. I picked up my handbag, stepped out of the door, and did not look back.
I take the stairs three at a time, dash through a screeching gap in the traffic, then cut a zigzagging path down a series of side streets, figuring this is a route unrepeatable in its tortuous complexity. My phone is already ringing in my bag, interminably, but I can't stop to silence it, not yet, not until I've put plenty of distance and corners between myself and the flat. I don't have a hope of blending into the crowd; my beautiful blue dress makes me far too visible. There are a dozen twists and turns before I come to a temporary, panting halt, plunge my hand into my bag, and find the off button without once glancing at the screen.
I light a cigarette and keep walking down the nondescript residential street in which I find myself. Weirdly, I have no real idea where I am, and it strikes me as a fact both startling and poignant. A few minutes of alternating turns and the city has already swallowed me. I'm no longer Abby; I'm Alice, tumbling down the rabbit hole, unable to tell up from down, left from right.
Slowly, though, I scrabble back to the surface. The nicotine clears my head and something like normality reasserts itself. It's a Friday afternoon of dazzling summer sunlight, not long past five o'clock. The sun is pretty much straight ahead, blazing in my eyes, so I guess I'm facing west, and if I take a left and keep walking, I'll get to the train track soon enough. But beyond that, no plan is forthcoming. The only solid notion is that I am not going home tonight. I feel too betrayed.
And at the same time, I feel exhilarated beyond words. Because it's not that Beck and Francesca are wrong â of course they're not wrong! They're bang on the money, but that no longer matters. When you're soaring this high, there are no thoughts of returning to earth. How could there be? Right now, my only concern is that I must be allowed to go on feeling as I'm feeling, consequences be damned.
Because there will be consequences. I know this too. This feeling can't last for ever, and that's part of its astonishing, shimmering beauty. The fallout will come, but it belongs to tomorrow, or the day after tomorrow. It has no bearing on the present, which I'll protect like a lioness guarding her cubs. The now is pure, ecstatic, simply sublime; and this is the real reason I cannot go home. I can't let anyone take this feeling away from me.
With these thoughts bursting like fireworks, I quickly comprehend the course the day must run. I can't go home, and neither can I contact any of my family or friends, who are not to be trusted. The only sensible option is to book into a hotel â somewhere nice. Anything less than five-star is unthinkable right now.
Eventually, I find myself at Turnham Green, where I board the eastbound District for central London. After switching to the Piccadilly at Earl's Court, I get off at Hyde Park Corner and walk up Park Lane until I reach the Dorchester. There's a man in a top hat and tails who opens the doors with a nod and a smile as I approach the main entrance, confirming what I already know: I look like I belong here. I return his smile but don't slow my stride as I walk through the doors and cross the mirror-polished marble floor to the reception desk, where another immaculately pressed gentleman in a dark green blazer and waistcoat is standing straight-backed and expectant, like a courteous meerkat.
âGood afternoon,' he says. âWelcome to the Dorchester.'
âGood afternoon.' I place my fingertips on the counter, which is as cool as ivory and edged with gold leaf. âI'd like a room. One night, just for me.'