She woke early, used to going to the gym. With the new job, the commute had become longer. When she came into consciousness, it was as though at the tail end of a dream: no, she was thinking, no, no. She became aware of the duvet, the blinds, the room, its walls, where she was. She rejected all of these, but especially the other body in the bed. She would lie there in semi-conscious fury, thinking, this can’t go on, I must do something; then she would get up and begin to make her peace with the day in small repeated actions: going to the bathroom, brushing her teeth, washing and examining her face, or going to the kitchen to make coffee; opening the living-room curtains. Summer was ending, with faded, charming days of residual warmth.
At Finchley Road she crossed the platform and waited till a Metropolitan line train rumbled up. A few people got out, and she found a seat. She carried her heavy new bag, with the laptop from work.
The train drew past neat brick houses and the backs of gardens which she liked to look into; past tower blocks, roads, bridges, and later, humdrum fields, in some of which a few horses stood chewing. She had marvelled when she’d gone for the interview: the ProPage office, which described its location as west London, seemed to be in another world. These were the suburbs, a mid-sized town not much larger and uglier than the one she’d grown up in, but as a satellite of London, people here had a confidence Leela and her contemporaries would have envied.
She’d arrived at work, or nearly, and that brought its own reluctance. She walked slowly along the platform. The tarmac had deep depressions which filled with water. Leaves, curled, forked at the ends, yellow, brown, and parchment, sometimes magenta, fell into these miniature reservoirs and were displayed.
To get to the office she walked through the shopping centre, where assistants in black clothing were brusquely rearranging racks of dresses, jumpers, and jeans.
The office was in a high-rise shared with other professional service companies – an accountancy firm, a lawyer’s. In the lobby, she waited for the lift, and stared at the points of her new shoes. When the door opened on her floor, she knew, she would walk out quite fast, as though impatient for the day to begin.
‘Hey there!’ She looked up at the sound of comic reproach and after a pause recognised Judy, who worked in the same part of the firm.
‘Oh, sorry. World of my own,’ said Leela. She smiled for Judy and regretted for herself that it wasn’t possible actually to live in a world of her own. What if she had indeed devised this world? Could I have done this, she wondered of the lift, the tan stockings of the girl on her left, the horrible carpet?
‘And this is it?’ the other girl enquired, her Scottish voice full of sarcasm but also a cheer that came from her youth. Or perhaps from the fact that she was crazy. Leela grinned at her, taking in the messily scraped-back hair, the drop of eye make-up on her cheek, and the tiny rip in her black jeans, worn under a jacket.
‘God, I’m so hungover,’ Judy complained. The lift door opened. They shambled out together onto the fifth floor.
‘Could you put this on my desk? Why don’t you come and lurk near the art guys?’ Judy put her bag into Leela’s hand and wandered away. ‘Do you want a coffee?’ floated back at her.
‘No thanks,’ Leela said quickly. Almost no one made it strong enough. She plugged in her laptop, put Judy’s bag on her desk, and logged onto the system. She must check her horoscope.
Judy came back with coffee and put it down. It spilled slightly. ‘Shit …’ She began to use a tissue to mop it up. Mere coffee, Leela thought, could look so offputting. Her wave of revulsion reminded her of the time just before adolescence when she’d hardly been able to eat, suddenly hyper-aware of the chomping, swallowing, digesting sounds of her family around her at the table: her mother, picking up a piece of chapati and scraping after a last lick of gravy; her sister eating in enormous, swift mouthfuls; her father’s small teeth quietly grinding at a piece of meat. She remembered a poem for children about a boy who becomes translucent, so that everyone can see his food as it is masticated, passes through the first part of the gut, then turns into chyme – a word that by itself could make her feel sick. And what happened at the end of the poem? Did the entire family kill themselves because life had become too disgusting? She didn’t remember.
‘So why haven’t I seen you for a few days? You went somewhere, didn’t you – no, wait,’ Judy was saying. She flicked the tissue into the bin. ‘I remember. You went to a wedding.’
‘Yeah, one of Richard’s friends from school.’
‘Where was it again?’
‘Nowhere. Devon. Beautiful place, estuary, cottages, that sort of thing. Country church. We stayed in a really nice hotel.’
‘Uh huh?’ Judy was picking black nail varnish from one fingernail.
‘Mm, that’s very lady-like of you.’
The other girl grinned. ‘It is, isn’t it? So, did you have fun at the wedding?’
I hate weddings, Leela contemplated explaining, and I hate enforced fun. Richard’s friends make me nervous in large groups and, sometimes, bored in small ones, and I spent the entire time before and most of the time during it waiting for him to embarrass me by flirting with someone or just make me feel crap by staring at someone. She thought tangentially of the man she’d seen at the wedding. She’d been introduced to him, but forgotten his name. He’d come on his own, seemed to know few people, and had kept to himself, inappropriately dressed in chinos and a torn jumper, looking cheerful. She’d envied him because he was alone.
But she hadn’t been at ProPage long enough to start being honest. ‘Yeah, it was great,’ she said.
Judy gave her a bored look. ‘Right,’ she said. Her computer whirred into life. ‘Now,’ she said, ‘which piss-boring page of the leading business-to-business monthly for reinsurers should I lay out first?’
‘Yeah, let’s go out for a quick drink.’ They were at Amy’s flat. ‘I’m not really up for anything big though.’
‘I’m so not up for anything big. Jeez.’ Amy shut the door behind her with a bang. They ran down the narrow stairs and were in the street, then the main road.
‘How about here? It’s pretty average, but doesn’t look horribly loud,’ Amy said. And, at the bar, ‘I think I’d like white wine. What about you? Shall we just get a bottle? It’s less than two glasses each would be.’
Leela carried the bottle, Amy the glasses. They sat at a wooden table on an elevated platform with a railing round it: an imitation, several times removed, of something in a nineteenth-century painting.
‘Cheers. So, how’s it going with Andrew?’
‘Oh, it’s been a hideous week or two. First, I saw him three times the week before last.’
‘Wasn’t that nice?’
‘It was lovely. It was lovely. But then I didn’t hear from him for a week. He was in Brussels, he was doing some stuff. Then he and Laura went away for a few days. It feels so shit not to hear from him after spending so much time together.’
‘It must do.’ Leela tried to look sympathetic. They’d had a conversation in which Amy had berated her for not being supportive enough about Andrew. And Leela’s interest in talking about him had increased since she’d met him.
Amy’s voice had risen, and a couple of men at another table looked at them curiously. Leela was aware of their slight movements, and their voices lowering, then she stopped looking. Something caught the corner of her eye: one of them was waving at her and Amy. Leela, startled, peered at him, but didn’t recognise him.
‘I know, I know, it’s my own fucking fault,’ Amy was saying savagely.
‘It’s not easy though,’ Leela said. ‘I mean, what are you supposed to do? At least he’s interesting and nice and intelligent. He’s not threatened by you.’
‘Obviously,’ Amy snorted.
‘I don’t really get the whole thing. I don’t get what’s supposed to be the thing to do.’
‘I should have met the man I was going to marry at university,’ Amy said with irritation.
Leela grinned. ‘Too late now.’
‘I’m sure that’s what was supposed to happen.’
The wine tasted sweet, but only faintly. Leela was hungry and drank more, till the sugar and alcohol hit her. Amy tipped the last drops into her glass.
‘Another bottle?’
‘Uh, well –’
When she returned to the table, Leela was declining an offer of a drink from the man who’d waved at them.
‘Why won’t you let us buy you ladies a drink?’
‘Because,’ Amy interjected, ‘we already have a drink. See? Have wine. No want to talk to you.’
Fuelled by their indignation, they drank faster.
‘So, what’s happening? I need to know everything,’ Amy said.
‘I’ve got to go to this hideous dinner thing tomorrow. I suppose it might be all right. One of Richard’s friends. He lives with his parents, in Richmond or something.’
‘Why will it be hideous?’
‘Because they’re cripplingly posh. What am I supposed to do with my knives and forks? I mean, no, don’t tell me, I know what to do with them. But what the fuck? There always ends up being some small random other knife sitting about that you didn’t reckon on, and you end up buttering your bread with the proper knife, then have to eat your dinner with the little one and look like a cretin.’
‘Supper. I’ve started calling it supper.’
‘What?’
‘I think it’s more posh,’ Amy articulated clearly, ‘so I’ve started saying supper.’
‘For fuck’s sake.’
It turned out the second bottle was also over. Both of them were drunk, but it was only nine. Amy had a brainwave. ‘I can’t get another hangover. Let’s go back to my flat and do an aerobics DVD.’
‘What are you talking about?’
‘It’ll make us metabolise the alcohol faster. We’ve just poisoned ourselves. Our livers are dying.’
‘Cheery.’
They went to her house, and Leela lay on the sofa, the room doing aerobics around her head, while Amy watched an apparently interminable film on television, saying that staying up would allow the alcohol to be processed. Leela fell asleep. The next day she had to rush, shower, borrow clothes, and scramble to get to work.
‘Thank you,’ Leela heard herself say for the fifth time in about three minutes. She couldn’t remember the rules. In her family people said it all the time, even when being served in restaurants; later, she’d come to suspect the habit betrayed how middle class she was. She was irritated with herself for even thinking about it; she was what she was – wasn’t she? ‘Supper’ popped into her mind. They had popped round for supper. She tensed and waited to hear someone say it.
‘The paella is delicious,’ Richard said. He smiled at Seb’s mother, who smiled back at him. Leela echoed the praise.
‘It’s a family recipe,’ Seb’s mother said. ‘We get the rice from a place on the King’s Road, it makes all the difference. And Seb went to get the mussels this morning because the fish man didn’t come this week.’
‘The mussels are yummy,’ Leela said.
The large room had a rustic, somewhat Spanish feeling, perplexing given that the house was in Richmond. In other circumstances, Leela might have warmed to Seb’s mother. She was very English, and rather upper class – his father, who spent part of the year in Spain, was a painter. Leela hadn’t heard of him. There was a studio in the house, and various canvases, some unframed, hung or were propped here and there. She liked them: they were warm abstracts that looked like aerial views of seascapes, different rich blues, greys and greens that made her think of reefs, or masses of seaweed.
Seb’s mother, who had been a star showjumper, was a pro-hunting campaigner. Leela had always been against the idea of hunting, mainly on the grounds of the loathsomeness of those who seemed to do it. Was it so much worse, she now wondered, to chase and murder fox babies than to coop up chickens so they couldn’t move, then eat their eggs? She winced at the thought of cows being milked by machines, compassion she couldn’t justify for suffering she was unable to measure.
She caught Seb’s mother giving her an odd look and realised she had stopped eating. Seb smiled and poured her more wine.
‘So, Leela, have you been to Avondale yet?’ This was their school, Richard’s and Seb’s.
‘Not yet. But then Richard hasn’t been to visit my comprehensive yet,’ she pointed out with a grin. Richard smiled; Esme, Seb’s mother, looked unamused. Everyone had a showpiece conversation about capital punishment, in which Leela took the opposite line to the one she thought she believed. These sorts of discussion were not foreign; she was comfortably back in the world she’d grown up in, where children were expected to have interesting things to say. But, when she made a distinction between the persistence of life and its quality, and which might be considered more important, she found Seb looking apologetic and his mother appalled. ‘As a Christian, I’m afraid the sanctity of life is something I take very seriously,’ Esme said curtly.
Leela nodded and was silent. Later, as she was eating a syllabub, she thought, but what about the mussels and prawns in the paella? She felt that it hadn’t been what she’d said, but the person she was, in an undefined way: her foreignness, but disappointing lack of corresponding aristocratic or artistic background – her mother was a lawyer, her father a language teacher, not that Esme had asked – or even her gender, that meant that Esme would have preferred, somehow, that Leela be a little bit prettier, or somewhat more silent.
But all of this might have been untrue.
Seb’s younger sister, whom Leela had an idea Richard had always thought pretty, wasn’t there; she was at university in Bristol. Her name was India.
Richard’s dad came for a visit. Richard, flushed and pleased, said they’d gone to lunch in an Indian restaurant in Mayfair. ‘You’d have liked it, the food was delicious. We’ll have to go some time.’
Leela didn’t argue with him. She went out with Judy after work.
‘Do you want to go somewhere round here, then go back into town?’
‘Are you crazy?’ Judy said. ‘Have you seen the places round here?’
She lived south of the river, Leela north, so they went for a drink at Baker Street, then to a restaurant that served crêpes and galettes.
Judy listened, her head on one hand, as Leela explained the situation with Richard, his father, and the unusual living arrangement. ‘So you don’t really see him when his dad’s here?’
‘I do, but not that much. He calls if he’s free.’
Judy’s eyes narrowed. Then she smiled, and reached for the carafe. ‘Let’s have another drink,’ she said.
Leela went home, which was now a flat share in Marylebone, in the apartment owned by a woman named Dee Dee, who had a seven-year-old daughter, Alisha. Dee Dee wore acrylic nails, and kept her Mars bars and cans of Coca-Cola in the fridge, so that vegetables had to be eased in between them. She was in theory an accommodating but in practice exasperated flatmate. She was pathologically clean, and had given Leela basic instructions when she moved in. The sink had to be washed every time dishes were washed in it; it must then be wiped with a paper towel to prevent water marks.
Dee Dee went to sleep early most days, and Leela was able to steal into the flat, walk to the kitchen and sink, get a glass of water, wipe the sink (Dee Dee would notice if she hadn’t) and go to her room. She kept the door locked; Dee Dee had said she might.
When she was in bed, her phone beeped. It was a text from Richard: Goodnight sweetie xx. She replied: he called, upbeat after a nice evening with his father. He left it slightly too long to ask about her evening, and in the small lag her rage mounted. She gave herself permission to be angry.
‘Why are you gloating about your evening? What’s wrong with you?’
‘What do you mean gloating?’
‘You’re always going on about things you do with your dad, but you won’t let me meet him. It’s deliberately cruel.’
‘No it’s not. I’ve explained –’
‘I don’t give a fuck about your explanation.’
It went on, increasingly vicious in words and forms, but a part of her was nonetheless aware of the moonlight, cold and quiet, moving across the room through not-quite-closed curtains.