About the Book
About the Author
Also by Anna Maxted
Title Page
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Copyright
Anna Maxted lives in London with her husband Phil and their three sons Oscar, Conrad and Casper. Anna read English at Cambridge and works as a freelance journalist. She is also the author of the international bestsellers, Getting Over It, Behaving Like Adults, Being Committed and A Tale of Two Sisters.
Getting Over It
Behaving Like Adults
Being Commited
A Tale of Two Sisters
For Phil Robinson, my hero.
Last time I was quite mean with my thank-yous so, be warned, I intend to compensate. I couldn’t have written Running in Heels without the help of a lot of very kind, patient, generous people. So, huge thanks to: Phil, for your love, support, jokes and genius (sorry, but Cheryl and I are allowed to say that); Cheryl herself, for all matters relating to food; Mary, for withstanding yet another fictional nightmare mother; my best sister, Leonie, for dutifully reporting every ‘He wears slippers, yes, but he’s not from London’ anecdote; Jonny Geller, occasional luncher and best agent in the world; Lynne Drew, for her brilliant editing and her willingness to attend pantomimes; Andy McKillop for his kindness and support; Mark McCallum for the lunches; the very clever Grainne Ashton; Ron Beard, who never gives up; Karen Gibbings, my aeroplane partner; Kate Parkin for general loveliness; Glenn O’Neill for the gorgeous cover; and all the talented people at Random House, without whose help this book would still be a vague notion in my head.
I had great fun (some might say, too much fun) researching Running in Heels, and I am enormously grateful to all the following people for their time and expertise: gorgeous Jim (I adore you); Anne Sacks, a wonderful loyal friend; Jo, the Queen of Hearts (you’re so glamorous); Elizabeth Ferguson and Jane Devine, you were great; Jane Paris, so were you; John ‘is this restaurant swanky?’ Perry, to think that once I didn’t like you; Paul Byrne, forgive the dyslexia; Steve from Contempo; Judith, Ray, Wendi, Sophie, Martin, Pier, John Nathan (I made it all up, honest); Caz Mercer (for knowing everything); Jason Rackham (Tony couldn’t have done it without you); Gina Short, in the nicest possible way Frannie owes you; Harry Selby, the fixer; Emma Beattie, for being inspirational – and letting me ride in the fire engine; the men on her watch (frankly, you’d set your own house on fire); Steve Vassell, you hero; Maurizio of Amici Deli, any mistakes are mine; Uncle Ken: Phil and I think you’re great; Eleanor Bailey, my fellow mother at toddler group; Trevor Blount, Pilates guru; Anna Cheevley, you’re mad; Sam Neville, for talking and talking; Frank Tallis, you clever man; Lucy, for knowing Italian; Tiffany Smith, for the Australian information; Deanne Jade, for her expertise; Elizabeth Davies of the National Osteoporosis Society, thank you.
Lastly, this is a book about friendship and – except for the slaps – a tribute to Leah Hardy, Alicia Drake-Reece, Jo Kessel, Sarah Maltese, Wendy Bristow, Sasha Slater, Laura Dubiner, Emma Dally, Anna Moore, and Caren Gestetner, all of whom helped me with Getting Over It, and much, much more.
THE BRIDE IS climbing a tree.
‘Babs, that branch looks unsafe. Are you sure—?’
Crash. Splash.
‘Oh well,’ she says, squelching from the pond, a happy green and brown mud monster. ‘At least I got the ball down.’
A tut! of wonder drags me from my thoughts and I realise that the bride is no longer twelve years old and soggy. She is all grown up and gorgeous, a Botticelli come to life. There is a swish of silk and a rustle of taffeta as my best friend halts and turns to face her groom. Her gaze is so intimate that I look away. A goose honks, or, possibly, my mother blows her nose. The vicar smiles crossly until there is quiet, then compares marriage to building a house.
I’m craning over the rows of prettily feathered hats, when my brother digs a sharp elbow into my ribs and says, ‘There’s nothing like a big bride. Always reminds me to lay off the cake.’
I blush. ‘Please, Tony!’ I whisper, ‘Babs is Amazonian.’
My brother needs attention like other people need to breathe, but despite his ungracious presence this day is a perfect day for Babs. It is her own personal fairytale made real in a haze of confetti and lace. She looks radiant. And I know as I sit here, sighing and cooing with the rest of the crowd, that I’ll never forget her wedding as long as I live. It is the beginning, and the end. The start of a marriage and the end of a beautiful relationship. Ours.
To say that Babs is my closest friend is like saying that Einstein was good at sums. Babs and I know each other like we know ourselves. We were blood sisters from the age of twelve (before my mother prised the razor out of Babs’s hand). And if you’ve ever had a best friend, you’ll know what I mean. If you’ve ever had a best friend, I don’t need to tell you about making blackberry wine in the garden and being rushed to hospital, puking majestic purple all the way. Or about our secret language (which is lucky, because I’d have to kill you). Or when we touched tongues to freak ourselves out. Or about our Spanish holiday aged sixteen. Or when Babs dated the coolest, tallest, blondest guy in school and set me up with his wetter, shorter, prematurely balding friend. (He wasn’t keen on me either.) Or when Babs thought she was pregnant and we bunked biology to beg the morning-after pill from her GP.
I don’t need to tell you of the endless talk about details – the use of toothpaste to zap spots, the way some dads suddenly bolt to LA with their secretaries (adultery is rarely original), being fitted for a first bra in a shop where rude old ladies roar out your chest size, the odds on marrying Matt Dillon, wearing an orthodontic brace that Hannibal Lecter would reject as unflattering, mothers who collect you from parties with their nightie showing under their coat – so much talk, we talked ourselves into our twenties.
Even when our ambitions defined us, we couldn’t bear to be apart. I chose a London college to be near Babs. We shared a flat, we shared lives. No man could hurt us like we could hurt each other. Blokes came and went – and feel free to take that literally. There were a few serious boyfriends, and a lot of jokers. We weren’t too bothered. There was always next Saturday night and anyhow, we were in love with our careers. Babs and I had such a beautiful relationship, no man could better it.
And then she met Simon.
I watch him slip the ring on her finger and see his hand tremble. What do I know? Is this love, or a hangover? Dubious thoughts to be having in church, so I file them under ‘envy’, kiss and hug the happy couple, and when Tony mutters, ‘I’ve counted seventeen strings of pearls,’ I ignore him.
I squeeze through the perfumed crush of guests, to where the table plan is mounted on a large easel. I’m hoping to be sat next to at least one of Babs’s Italian male relatives (her mother Jackie is from Palladio, a small town near Vicenza, and its entire population – seemingly composed of film stars – appears to be present). I scan the Ms until I see Miss Miller, Natalie. Table 3. There is a disappointing dearth of Cirellis and Barbieris on this table, but it’s a nice distance from Mrs Miller, Sheila (Table 14).
That’s the trouble with close friendships formed in early adolescence. Your families see it as their divine right to muscle in and before you can say ‘inter-parental surveillance,’ the lot of them are as enmeshed as the jaws of a zip. Having been shadowed by my mother throughout the service, I’m pleased that we’re dining apart. She’d have tried to cut up my poached salmon for me.
I jump as someone smacks me on the bottom.
‘Fluff,’ trills my mother. She gazes at me, licks her finger and rubs it around my cheek.
‘Mum!’ I feel like an extra in Gorillas in the Mist. ‘What are you doing?’
‘You’ve got red lipstick all over your face, dear,’ she explains.
‘Oh. Thanks.’ (It would be cheeky to suggest that lipstick is preferable to spit.)
‘So who’ve you been put with?’ she demands, peering at the board.
‘Tony—’
‘Ah! He wears a tux beautifully!’
‘Frannie—’
‘Frances Crump! A dot of blusher would make all the difference. She looks like a gypsy in that purple skirt. I don’t know what Babs sees in her, yes, who else?’
‘Er, some guy called Chris Pomeroy—’
‘Sounds like a poodle, who else?’
‘Andy—’
‘The brother of the bride? The brother of the bride! What an honour! I must go and say hello, haven’t seen him for years what with all that fiancée business, terrible shame, and leaving his job like that. Apparently he only got back last week, darling, you must remember to thank Jackie, a note and a telephone call I think would be appropriate, not tomorrow though, she’ll be inundated, leave it till Monday, would Monday be best? Yes, I’m sure Monday would be best, the day after your daughter’s wedding is always fraught, although saying that, what would I know—’
If you haven’t already guessed, my mother has a habit of thinking aloud. Incessantly. I suspect it comes from living alone, but it’s a quirk easier to understand than to tolerate. When the Master of Ceremonies orders the ladies en gentlemen, boys en girls to take their seats, I’m the first to obey.
The chairs are adorned with winter roses. White roses in January. I find mine before anyone else has even approached the table. I check the namecards on either side. Tony is on my left and poodle man is on my right. Frannie – in an error comparable to handing a pyromaniac a blow torch – has been placed next to Tony. I am studying the menu (which I already know by heart as Babs devoted as much time to it as a scribe on the Magna Carta), when the chair beside mine is yanked out and a man wearing a white jacket and a crumpled black shirt sags into it. I look up, smile doubtfully, and he nods, once.
Under cover of the menu, I watch Andy. He is leaning across the table listening to Frannie.
Tony’s eyes gleam. ‘All right, Anders!’ he roars, slicing through Frannie’s chat like a knife through lard. ‘How you doing? Bit swish, this!’
Andy – who is irritatingly tanned – raises a hand and grins. ‘Good to see you again, Tone,’ he says. ‘We’ll catch up!’ He winks at me, mouths ‘Hello, Natalie,’ then turns back to Frannie.
His memory may be selective, mine isn’t. Twelve years ago, when Babs and I were fourteen, our older brothers were great friends. They had masses in common, for instance a pathological desire to make their sisters’ lives wretched. Where do I start? When Babs and I took Silky Drawers, her family retriever, for a walk and Tony screeched in front of the neighbourhood, ‘Anders, look! There’s three dogs!’ When my mother gave Andy a lift home and I sang in the car and Tony said afterwards, ‘Anders found your singing very amusing.’ When Andy released my budgie from its cage because it ‘looked depressed’ and it flew to the top of the curtains and Tony tried to coax it down with a broom and crushed its head.
And there was other stuff.
I smooth my napkin on to my lap. Tony has been distracted by the little disposable camera, placed in remarkably good faith on the table for guests to record their own celebrations. He unwraps it, and slides low in his seat until his hand brushes the floor like an orangutan’s. Then he casually tilts the lens so that it points up Frannie’s skirt.
‘Tony, no!’ I whisper, trying not to giggle. ‘Don’t, please, you know what she’s like, she’ll prosecute!’
Tony’s blue eyes crinkle and he cracks up laughing. He wriggles upright and punches me gently on the arm.
‘I’m playing with you, floozie,’ he grins. ‘Your face though. Priceless.’
Tony (thirty this year) is like a hyperactive child – sugar and encouragement are bad for him. I bite my lip and squint at poodle man’s namecard. Then I tap him lightly on the arm and say, ‘Excuse me, Chris, could you possibly pass me the water?’
Chris, who is picking a cigarette to bits on the cream tablecloth, slowly turns and looks at me and my heart does a double take. I wish I was either wittier or invisible. The man has a face like a fallen angel. Dark shaggy hair, designer stubble, sulky brown eyes, and a wide pouty mouth. My mother would describe him as in need of a Dettox bath. As for me, I’d join him in it. He looks down a fraction, at my chest then up again, glances lazily at my namecard, and drawls, ‘Yes, possibly I could pass you the water.’
He retrieves the Perrier and pours.
‘Thank you,’ I mutter, cursing my mother for teaching me manners. Chris leans back in his chair and doesn’t smile. I snatch up my glass but – I am still being ogled like a lab rat – feel unable to drink from it. I am about to take a sip when he leans towards me and says, ‘You have a blow-job mouth.’
I nearly bite through the crystal. My brain paddles in thin air for a second, then from nowhere, I produce a reply. ‘But what a shame you’ll never know for sure.’
I scurry upstairs for a cigarette and try to compose myself. My hand shakes as I flick the lighter. You can’t just say what you think. And what is a liability like Chris doing at Babs’s wedding? You don’t meet dark smouldering sex beasts at weddings (I knew I’d be cordoned off from the Italians). You meet balding Keiths who wear Next ties, work in marketing and laugh at their own jokes.
I suppose I have the groom to thank for my good fortune. Babs has a protective nature and if she’d devised the table plan I’d have been sat next to the vicar. I grin and lean over the balcony. Andy is still listening to Frannie. He raises a finger and gets up. I wonder where he’s going. I glance at the top table and I see the bride bend towards the groom. His head is tipped back like a fire eater and he is gulping champagne from a large flute. She whispers in his ear. Instantly, Simon places his glass on the table and gives it a small push away from him. Wow. It must be love.
I close my eyes. Babs would still be single if it weren’t for me. It was her idea to go clubbing (‘Come on, Nat. It’s a seventies night. I’m sick of the modern day, I need to dress up!’). But I approached Simon. Normally I don’t approach men. I’d prefer to approach a grizzly bear: you have less chance of being rejected.
But this was different. I was trying to locate the beat in Ain’t No Stoppin’ Us Now and wishing I hadn’t worn a poncho, when a lanky guy in brown flares and stacked heels clumped up. ‘Where’s Scooby?’ I thought. But Shaggy looked through me as if I was wearing glasses (pink heart-shaped glasses, to be precise), placed a hand on Babs’s lower back, and shouted something profound in her ear. I believe it was, ‘Are you a model?’
Babs, who weighs eleven stone in her socks, tossed her hair and tee-heed daintily until her cartoon suitor relaxed. Then she stopped laughing – in that abrupt way that gang bosses do in films shortly before they execute a minion – and shrieked, ‘Are you a moron?’ A smarter man would have run for it. But Shaggy chuckled senselessly and roared, ‘No, but seriously, what do you do?’
Babs bellowed, ‘I eat men like you for breakfast.’
Shaggy smirked and yelled, ‘I look forward to it.’
By now, I was feeling about as edgy as a goat in a voodoo doctor’s waiting room. I slunk off, lit a cigarette to give my presence meaning, and watched Babs dance. Two smokes later, she staggered over.
‘He’s called Will,’ she boomed. ‘He’s not such a dollop as he looks. Come and chat to his mates.’
Conscious that I was dressed in the theme of ‘the decade that style forgot’ while all the other women were glam-rock to the tips of their fake eyelashes, I declined.
‘I’m wearing a red fright-wig,’ I said. ‘I look like Ronald McDonald. I might go home.’
Babs pouted. ‘You’re all right if I stay?’ she asked.
I hesitated then nodded. ‘Oh! yes. Yes.’
Babs beamed and said ‘Brilliant.’ Then she added humbly, ‘I don’t know why he picked me with you about – he must be blind. Blind drunk, maybe.’
All very consoling. But as the girly rule ‘I’m So Rubbish You’re So Great’ was, in fact, written by me, I didn’t fall for it.
‘Go and play,’ I mumbled. ‘I’ll see you tomorrow.’
I shuffled off to the Ladies and, as I emerged, passed Babs on the way in. ‘Will’s at the bar getting me a vodka Redbull,’ she said gleefully. ‘Check out his beautiful arse!’
I dutifully scanned the bar for nice bottoms, but saw none. But I did see a huddle of guys, all crumpled with laughter, except one, who was shaking his head.
‘You bastard, Will,’ drawled the head-shaker, a tall bloke in a safari shirt and dark trousers. ‘You’re such a heel.’
Apart from the fact I’d never heard the term ‘heel’ applied to anything but a foot, I was intrigued. I crept closer.
‘She’ll find out, Will. She always does.’
‘She won’t. She’s not back till tomorrow night. Look, I’ve bought some bird a drink, I’ve not shagged her!’
Got it. And, while I am the girl that geese say ‘boo’ to, I won’t have Babs made a fool of. I poked Will in the back and said, ‘I’d drink that drink myself if I were you.’
Will burst out laughing. ‘Yeah? And why’s that?’
‘Because when I tell Babs what a sleaze you are she’s going to pour it on your head.’
Will laughed again but head-shaker looked embarrassed. ‘Who – er, who are you?’
I was wondering whether to repeat the Ronald McDonald line when a small worried voice said, ‘Nat, what’s going on? Where’s Will?’
Head-shaker and I swung round to see Babs standing forlornly in front of us, and a large empty space where Will and his henchmen had been.
Head-shaker gazed at my friend. ‘Barbara, isn’t it?’ he said softly. ‘I’m terribly sorry, but Will had to go. I – er, well, to be honest he’s a twit. His loss. Your friend and I were arguing about it. But I’m Simon, and if you don’t mind, I’d love to buy you a drink.’
I grimaced but Simon looked through me as if I was wearing orange tie-dye trousers. Within seconds I was feeling like a goat again. This time I went home immediately.
That was five months ago, and now this! I look down on Babs in her frothy white dress and can barely believe it. I should have realised there was mischief afoot when she went missing for three days.
‘Don’t worry, though,’ she purred when she finally bothered to call. ‘I’ll do your share of the washing-up rota next week!’
To which I retorted, ‘Thank you, Barbara, and now if you’ll excuse me I have to call the police to inform them the search for your body is now off.’
I wanted contrition but got instead, ‘Good idea, because Si’s been conducting his own investigation! Pah ha ha! It’s been very in-depth!’
‘It’s very English, isn’t it?’ says a voice, making me jump.
Andy leans his arms on the balcony railing, and turns to me, smiling.
‘It’s lovely,’ I reply, torn between loyalty to Babs and wanting to snub Andy.
‘Mum didn’t want to have hymns – Italian weddings don’t have hymns – but Simon’s parents wouldn’t budge.’
‘Your parents are very easy going,’ I say. I hope this doesn’t sound friendly.
‘Unlike Simon’s. I think Mum and Dad feel like Germany at the Treaty of Versailles.’
‘That’s a shame,’ I reply. I have no idea what he’s talking about.
‘So, Nat,’ he says. ‘How about a dance later? To Rule Britannia, probably.’
‘Well, I—’
‘We should, we’re practically brother and sister!’
‘Thank you, but I already have one brother,’ I say. ‘And believe me, he’s more than enough.’ I return to our table.
Tony is chatting to a Keith over Frannie’s abandoned chair. My brother and Frances Crump do not get on. She calls him an ‘unreconstructed Neanderthal’ while he refers to her as ‘Forkhead’ (meaning he’d like to stick a fork in her head). I glance at the top table and see Frannie crouching before Babs like a eunuch in front of Cleopatra. I swallow hard. I don’t get on with Frannie either. Frannie is The Third Friend. She follows Babs around like a pimple on a bottom.
I smile helplessly at Chris who grins in a way that squeezes the air from my lungs.
‘I can’t be doing with weddings,’ he drawls. His voice is soft and scratchy, honey on gravel. Its faint northern twang goes straight to my knees. He holds my gaze and adds, ‘Normally.’
I smile and say, ‘Me neither.’
Chris tips back in his chair. He seems to have ants in his pants. Meanwhile, Babs and Simon are smooching up for the first dance.
Chris murmurs, ‘I’d ditch all this and go to Vegas.’
I giggle and say, ‘Me too.’
Then we fall silent as Kenny And The Drum Kit Krew start up a terrible racket which is faintly recognisable as You’re Nobody Till Somebody Loves You. This is a hardline wedding, I think, as everyone claps. My mother, I notice, applauds so furiously she looks like a Venus flycatcher on speed.
‘I’d go to Vegas,’ says Chris again. He and I sit out Lady In Red, and Come On Eileen. I ask Chris why he’s not wearing a tux like all the other men. His answer is to sniff twice, and cast a withering look at all the other men. Andy, I note, is dancing with Frannie.
‘Vegas,’ mutters Chris.
‘As you said,’ I say politely. He grinds his teeth and I’m not sure if he has Alzheimer’s. He then asks why I’m wearing a brown hat. My answer is that my mother over there making a spectacle of herself to Agadoo said I should, except I don’t get that far because Chris grabs the hat from my head, drops it on to the violently-patterned carpet and – as I sit there frozen and speechless – unpins my butterfly clasp and rakes his hands through my hair, shaking it out so that it tumbles over my shoulders.
Then he leans closer and closer until we are nearly touching and I can almost taste his bittersweet breath.
‘Natalie,’ he murmurs, twirling a yellow curl around his finger. ‘You should let your hair down more often.’
I am dazed and drooling at the delicious raw nerve of the man when a white moon face appears between us, forcing us apart, and Frannie sings, ‘Nataleeee! Where’s your boyfriend? Saul Bowcock!’
I’VE KNOWN BABS for a long time. I know what makes Babs laugh – place names like Piddlehinton and Brown Willy. I know what makes her cry – anything, from news reports on starving children to the end of Turner & Hooch when Hooch dies but leaves behind a legacy of puppies. (She bawled, ‘It’s not the same!’) I know she hates small teeth, and the texture of apricots. I know she gets a rash from underwired bras. I know she can beat Tony in an arm-wrestle. I know she has a tiny black spot above her left knee, from a childhood accident with a sharp pencil. I know her favourite words are ‘hullaballoo’ and ‘pumpkin’. I know what Babs sounds like when she’s having sex.
So you can imagine my pique when Babs re-introduced me to Simon a week after the seventies night fiasco and he said, ‘So, ah, how do you know Barbara?’ I could barely believe he’d made such a blunder. Like asking God, ‘So, ah, how do you know Adam?’
‘How do I know her!’ I squeaked before lowering my pitch as bats were falling out of trees clutching their ears. ‘I’ve known her for ages,’ I choked eventually. ‘We’re very close friends.’
I was too stricken to say more but the question stormed round my head like a bully in a playground. How obsessed must Babs and Simon be that in seven solid days of crash-course intimacy, she hadn’t mentioned me? I soon found out. Their enthralment was mutual and total. There was endless fondling in front of me. I wanted to roar, ‘Stop it at once!’ But they literally had eyes and ears for no one else. When I spoke, or smiled, they barely saw or heard. I was excluded. It was offensive. It was like a thief shutting you out of your own home. I couldn’t believe it. My boyfriend could have written a thesis on Babs within a fortnight of knowing me. But then maybe Saul Bowcock is less in love than Simon.
Maybe Saul is too sensible to be in love. We are driving – at a sensible speed – to my mother’s solitary white house in Hendon to attend a celebratory dinner for Tony’s latest promotion. (From Executive Marketing Manager to Vice-President of Marketing at Black Moon Records. Although, as my boss Matt observed, ‘I’ll bet there’s a Vice-President of Teabags at Black Moon Records.’)
Saul likes seeing my mother, as she clucks and fusses after him in the vain hope that he’ll propose to me. ‘Should we stop off and get Sheila some flowers?’ he says, slowing as the traffic lights turn amber instead of speeding up like a normal person.
‘Good idea,’ I nod.
That’s the trouble with Saul. He’s considerate but he’s also so screamingly proper. He is allergic to straying from his schedule. He thinks an impulse is a deodorant. I glance sideways at his face, and try to think kind thoughts. Saul is a nice man. Honest. Predictable. Safe. Affectionate. The only man I know who taps his girlfriend on the back and says, ‘I need a cuddle.’ ‘A willy cuddle?’ said Babs suspiciously, when I told her. No! A fully-clothed frisk-free cuddle. Saul isn’t like other men. We met nine months ago at the chiropodist’s and his chat-up line, I’m sorry to say, was ‘You have such an intelligent face. What do you do for a living?’
As he was never going to get anywhere with any woman ever with hopeless patter like that – surely even the Pope has a sharper spiel – I didn’t have the heart to snub him.
‘I’m senior press officer for the Greater London Ballet Company,’ I replied kindly. ‘And you?’
‘I’m an accountant,’ he told me solemnly. ‘But I do have a nice car.’
I wait in the green Lotus Elise while Saul hurries into Texaco to purchase a bunch of fiercely coloured blooms, and bite my nails. Or rather, bite the skin on my fingertips as I finished my nails last week. I am looking forward to dinner as I look forward to a cervical smear test. It’s nearly a fortnight since Babs’s wedding and I know my mother will want to dissect it and I don’t have the energy to fight her off.
‘I wonder what Sheila’s cooking for supper,’ says Saul as he bounces into the driver’s seat. ‘I’m famished!’
Barry Manilow singing Copacabana is audible from the driveway. In a powerful puff of Dune and fried onions, my mother appears, straightens my jumper, and crushes the air out of Saul in a pincer hug.
‘Don’t you look well! A crying shame you missed the wedding!’ she exclaims, shaking her head so fiercely I’m surprised it doesn’t come loose. ‘But you managed to get all your work done?’
Saul gratefully breathes in upon his release, and says, ‘Yes, thank you, Sheila.’ My mother scuttles off to fetch him a glass of milk. Yes, a glass of milk. Saul is a strapping twenty-nine-year old but he drinks more milk than a parched baby elephant. Call me lactose intolerant but it’s a trait I can’t get along with. It’s almost as odd as his habit of sleeping with a black jumper sleeve over his eyes. Which is like The Mask of Zorro without Antonio.
I follow my mother into the steamy kitchen while Saul collapses on the sofa and starts shelling pistachios. I can hear the crack-crack-cracking sound. I chew my fingers and look around. The shelf above the hob is jammed with books. On the left is The F Plan Diet, The Hollywood Pineapple Diet, Beverly Hills Diet, Complete Scarsdale Medical Diet, Dr Tooshis High Fiber Diet, The Grapefruit Diet, Dr Atkin’s New Diet Revolution, Reader’s Digest Mind and Mood Foods, Rosemary Conley’s Complete Hip and Thigh Diet, Carbohydrate Addicts Diet: The Lifelong Solution to Yo-Yo Dieting, The Food Combining Diet, Dieting with the Duchess, A Flat Stomach in 15 Days and (the altogether less efficient) 32 Days To a 32-Inch Waist.
On the right is The House & Garden Cookbook, Step-by-Step Cooking with Chocolate, Delia Smith’s Winter Collection, Leith’s Book of Desserts, Good Housekeeping Cookery Club, Evelyn Rose – Complete International Jewish Cookery, At Home with The Roux Brothers, The Dairy Book of Family Cooking, Mary Berry’s Ultimate Cake Book, The Crank’s Recipe Book, A Wok for All Seasons, A Table in Tuscany, A Little Book of Viennese Pastries, Amish Cooking, 365 Great Chocolate Desserts, The Naked Chef and The Artful Chicken.
‘What can I get you? When did you last comb your hair?’ demands my mother as she tips a brick of Lurpak into a casserole dish. ‘Orange juice? You look like something out of Black Sabbath.’
I reply, ‘Water’s fine. I’ll brush it in a sec.’ I watch as she pours a slick of sunflower oil on to the spitting butter. She’s an expert on heavy metal but thinks cholesterol is a vitamin.
‘Are you sure you need all that, Mum?’
My mother wipes her hands on her apron, ‘And what do you know about cooking herby orange poussin?’
Fair point. ‘Well, would you like me to make a salad?’
My mother hands me a glass of water, flaps at me with a Beefeater dishcloth and says, ‘You’d only chop your finger off. You be a good girl and go and chat to Saul.’
As I trudge towards the lounge, the cloying stench of alpine breeze air freshener intensifies with every step (it’s never occurred to my mother to open a window). Then someone presses his entire bodyweight on the poor little doorbell and keeps pressing. Drrrrrrrrrrrgggggggg!
Tony. My mother zooms past me in a blur and wrenches open the front door. ‘Hello, my love,’ she says in a sympathetic tone, in honour of the exhausting trek he’s made from Camden Town in his black BMW 5 series 2.0 520i four-door saloon. ‘How are you? Here, let me take your coat. Hard day? What can I get you? Something to drink? I’ve got that champagne you like in the fridge and I’m doing your favourite desserts, lemon syllabub and chocolate cheesecake. I know it’s naughty but we deserve a treat. I went to Weight Watchers yesterday so tonight I’m free!’
Tony kisses Mum and grins. ‘Mother,’ he sighs, ‘you’re a saint. I can hardly believe we’re related.’
I smile with my mouth shut. Since the divorce Tony and I are hostage to my mother’s needs. Except Tony plays the game better than I do. (In fact, he plays it so well you might suspect him of cheating.) Mum dyes her hair black, tends to wear yellow, and carries a handbag tucked under her arm like a machine gun. You don’t want to upset her in the way that you don’t want to upset a wasp. She lost her capacity for fun fourteen years ago when my father scribbled her a letter on his surgery notepaper that began, ‘Dear Sheila, Sorry about this but I’d like to jump ship on our marriage . . .’
You’d think that such an event would dissuade her from chasing her offspring up the aisle. No, indeed. She read Bridget Jones’s Diary and cried. I kiss Tony hello, and brace myself. Our bottoms brush our chairs and she’s off, like a greyhound after a rabbit.
‘So Barbara got her happy ending. I spoke to Jackie last week, and this morning, and yesterday – oof. Such a plush do. Altogether she felt it went very well. The groom, Simon, nice looking boy. You’d never think it, what with his mother’s jaw and teeth. What a fright. And her dress. Cream. And with a figure like that. You just can’t. It did nothing for her, nothing. I said to Jackie, you looked at least twenty years younger than her, at least. You were the belle of the ball, apart from Barbara, of course. She looked a picture, she really—’
‘Mum,’ says Tony, with a sly glance at me, ‘She looked like what she is. A fireman in a skirt.’ Saul coughs into his watercress soup. I place my spoon at the side of my plate. Tony has not forgiven Babs for making him the victim of her party trick (in front of an audience, she flipped him over her shoulder and ran down the road with him, as if he were as light and inconsequential as a blow-up doll).
I say, ‘Babs is a fire fighter, Tony. That’s the correct term. And she did look nice. Tanned, tall—’
‘Why aren’t you eating?’ interrupts my mother. (She’s justly proud of her cooking and takes offence if you slow down during a meal to, for instance, breathe.)
‘I am eating,’ I cry, hoping to ward off an explosion. ‘It’s delicious.’
I wave my spoon in the air as evidence, as my mother says, ‘I go to all this trouble and you sit there huffing at your soup like it’s bilge water! I don’t—’
‘Sheila, you must be very proud of Tony,’ suggests Saul. ‘I forget. How many times have you been promoted in the last year, Tony?’
My brother shrugs and replies, ‘Three.’ Saul and my mother and I wobble our heads in unison.
‘Amazing,’ murmurs Saul. He coughs, curling his fingers into a tube to, I presume, catch the cough. ‘You must be marvellous at what you do.’
My mother exclaims, eyes glazed, ‘Oh, he is, Saul, he’s such a credit to me, he’s so talented!’
Saul smiles at her and says, ‘And so are you, Sheila, this watercress soup is sensational. I don’t suppose there’s any m—’
‘Of course there is!’ booms my mother. ‘My pleasure.’
‘Are you sure?’ replies Saul, ever the gentleman. ‘I mean, Sheila, have you had en—’
‘Me?’ she exclaims, ‘Don’t be ridiculous! I’ll heat it up for you.’ She speeds to the kitchen at the pace of a cheetah in a rush and I slump in relief.
‘Nice one, Saul mate,’ murmurs Tony. ‘Don’t know when to stop, do I?’
Saul beams with pleasure and gratitude. I suspect it’s the first time in his life he’s been called ‘mate’. Then again, there’s something about my brother that bewitches people. He is without doubt an Alpha male. You want to please him. A smile from him is like a kiss bestowed by a film star.
I look at Saul, who grins back. ‘I didn’t realise you were so fond of watercress soup,’ he says. ‘I can make it for you if you like.’ I suppress a whimper. Saul is to cooking what whirlwinds are to Kansas.
‘That’s sweet of you,’ I reply, ‘but I thought you were going on a health kick.’ Saul’s face drops.
‘You what!’ hoots Tony. ‘You’re not dieting are you? You big girl! You want to play a bit of sport, mate. FIFA 2000, something like that!’
Saul blushes. ‘I’m, er, actually I’m not all that good on the football field—’
‘It’s a video game, Saulie,’ I murmur, as my mother bustles in. She deposits a bowl of soup in front of my boyfriend with the reverence of a courtier presenting the crown jewels to the king, and instructs him: ‘Eat!’ We sit in brief silence while Saul eats.
‘Didn’t think much of the food at the wedding,’ exclaims my mother, who has been itching to reintroduce her specialist subject for the last three minutes. ‘Now if I were organising a wedding, not that I ever’ – here, in deference to Saul, she catches herself – ‘Well, if I were to organise a wedding I’d spend a lot less on the drink, it’s not necessary for people to get so away with themselves, and a great deal more on ensuring the food was restaurant quality because – and naturally I didn’t say anything to Jackie – but the asparagus were’ – here, my mother’s voice drops to a low hiss – ‘tinned!’ We digest the import of this grave news in silence. ‘And the shame of it is,’ continues my mother, ‘that Jackie wanted to have food from the deli. But Simon’s parents were paying and they insisted on using their caterers,’ she adds, in the tone of one personally affronted by this slight.
I catch the scent of an approaching tailspin.
‘But you liked the dancing, didn’t you, Mum?’ I say, in an encouraging tone. ‘You’re a bit of a Ginger Rogers when you get going.’
‘Well, I hope not! She’s so old she’s dead!’ retorts my mother.
‘I reckon Mum had been at the Special Brew – you’re a bit partial to a can of Special, aren’t you, mother?’ grins Tony.
‘Anthony, stop it!’ My mother’s mouth is a stern line, but she is trying not to laugh. ‘That was once, and a long time ago, and you gave it to me in a wine glass and said it was Chateau de Sleepeengruff. I wasn’t to realise it was so potent! Anyway, as if they’d serve lager at a smart wedding like Jackie’s. I mean, Barbara’s!’
My mother adores being teased by her son, so all hail to my brother, the evening is resuscitated. That said, when Saul drops me in slow motion at my flat later on, I am too tired to invite him in for coffee (by which I mean a cup of Nescafé). Which is fortunate, since when I press the play button on my large grey dinosaur of an answer machine it whirrs and clicks and grumbles before drawling – in a dry breathy voice that makes my skin tingle – ‘Hi, Natalie. I’ve been thinking about you . . . letting your hair down.’
I’VE BEEN SUSPICIOUS of letting my hair down since Rapunzel let down hers and found a ruddy great bloke on a horse hanging off it. Let your hair down and before you know it you’re wearing elastic waistbands, eating pizza in bed, and justifying the purchase of an £800 coat from Harvey Nicks on the thin premise that you haven’t had children, a facelift, or a month’s holiday on a large yacht in Monte Carlo, and have therefore saved yourself a vast sum and are technically economising.
Even so, I think of Chris and drool. After Frannie shattered the mood with all the grace of a demolition van, reality hit and I blushed. ‘I’m sorry,’ I blustered to Chris, ‘I am seeing someone. I – er, you are lovely but I shouldn’t be doing this. It’s bad of me.’
But Chris seemed unruffled by Frannie’s interruption. He stared at her and said, ‘Why are you so white?’ When she withdrew, speechless and bristling, Chris tutted. ‘If there’s one thing I can’t stand,’ he said, ‘it’s rudeness!’ I hurriedly lit a cigarette and breathed in the nicotine like – well, like a drug. Chris added, ‘It’s bad of you? You don’t know the meaning of bad.’
Aware that I was coming across like Mary Magdalene at a mixed sauna, I replied squeakily, ‘Yes I do.’
‘I’d like to show you,’ said Chris.
‘Actually, I –’ I began.
‘So do you have a number or is it classified?’ he said.
‘I didn’t bring anything to write with,’ I croaked.
‘Well, princess, how about you scrawl it on my chest in lipstick,’ he replied. I smiled as he removed a slender pen from his jacket and handed it to me. Then he pulled a Rizla from its packet and gave me that too. Obediently, I scribbled down my home number. I’m sorry, but he was so pushy and, for the first five minutes of a relationship, I like that in a man.
‘Don’t use it,’ I said, to salve my conscience.
I listen to his message again. My heart jumps like a cricket in a box. The man should come with a health warning and a free chastity belt. I won’t call him though, it’s not fair on Saul. Saul is so trusting. If only he was suspicious I’d feel justified. No. I can’t call Chris. I mean, I really can’t – I don’t have his number. Then I press 1471 and I do.
I stare at the pale blue walls of my hallway until they blur. I wonder. I still can’t call him. I won’t. I’m with Saul Bowcock. We’re in a sensible relationship (as Romeo said to Juliet). I can’t cheat on him. It’s not fair. I can’t end it. I don’t end relationships – it’s too upsetting. I’m fond of Saul. Really. He’s a sweetie. If only Babs were here I could bore her about it. She’d know what, or who, to do. I double-lock the front door and plod along the corridor to bed. Surely she’s got to be back from Mauritius soon; it seems like she’s been on honeymoon for the last decade.
The first thing I used to hear on walking into the office was, ‘Your mission is to retake the building with minimal loss of life,’ but not any more. Matt – my immediate boss – has been promoted to Head of Press and Marketing and now shuns computer games as ‘underplaying the pressures of the real world’. This morning he is hunched in front of his screen and acknowledges my entrance with a silent wave. His basset hound, Paws (full name, Pas de Quatre), is slumped at his feet chewing at a pinkish rag.
‘Dinner OK?’ says Matt, still tapping.
‘Not too terrible.’ I’m touched that he’s remembered. ‘How’s Stephen? Is he still in hospital?’
Matt swings round. ‘No. He was discharged – mm, nice word – on Saturday.’
‘How is he?’
‘Crotchety, demanding, no change there. But the main thing is, I’ve escaped to the orifice, and you survived dinner. Were there lots of wedding questions?’
I nod. Matt rolls his eyes. ‘The bride, wasn’t she beautiful? That dress, wasn’t it faaabulous? The groom, wasn’t he a dish? Oh, I love a wedding, Natalie dear – Saul, such a pity you missed it! Am I warm?’
I giggle. ‘You must have had me bugged.’
‘Your life fascinates me. And I’m gagging to meet that wicked boy Simon.’
‘I’ll bet you are,’ I say. A small sigh escapes me.
‘Hey. Don’t be miz. She’ll come back. They didn’t live together, did they? Oh lord. Six months of pooey pants on the floor and bristles in the bath and noisy wees and car rows and crusty socks stuffed down the side of the sofa and you’ll see more of Babs than you did when she was single. And I should know.’
‘Aw Matt, I am happy for her, bu—’ I’m interrupted by a loud canine cough. Sounds like a basset hound choking on a dirty pink shredded rag – oh my God, it’s a pointe shoe! ‘Where did Paws get the shoe from?’ I ask, glancing in horror at what Matt and I call the tat cupboard. I’d like to blame Belinda, our assistant (a woman whose mouth never quite shuts, even when she’s not talking). Pity she’s on holiday in Crete for two weeks.
‘What shoe?’ says Matt. I lurch to the cupboard and start raking through the rubble on the second shelf.
‘It’s the one signed by Julietta,’ I groan. ‘He’s only gone and pinched the one signed by Julietta!’ Julietta is our Principal Dancer. The Greater London Ballet Company has six, but Julietta is a principal principal. She has hair the shade of buttermilk (mine is tart-blonde compared to hers), moves like a wisp of heaven, and – as one critic put it – is ‘womanly, without it spoiling her line’. She is intelligent, intense, and has a thing about people thinking ballet dancers are stupid. She terrifies me. The media love her, and once in a grovelling while we’ll persuade her to sign a worn pink satin shoe which then serves as a competition prize – supposedly for some ten year old girl, but probably for a middle-aged male.
‘The shoes are on the second shelf,’ I say. ‘Paws is the height of a toadstool. What did he do – stand on a chair?’ By now, Matt is crouching beside Paws. He has thick black hair (Matt, I mean – Paws is brown and white) and five o’clock shadow at 11 a.m. When he smiles his face creases with laughter lines. He isn’t smiling.
‘You’s a bad dog,’ he says lovingly. ‘Naughty naughty boy!’ To me, he says, ‘Did you lock the cupboard door on Friday before rushing off to the gym?’
I stop myself from pulling at my hair. ‘I was sure I did. But anyway, how could he reach?’
Matt sighs. ‘Paws has diddy little legs, Natalie, but he makes up for them with his impressively long torso.’ A pause. ‘What’s got into you lately? Nat, for someone in a senior position you’re doing a good impression of an airhead. You used to be so efficient. And now is not the time to be seen as dead wood. Lock the damn door in future.’
I flinch. Matt is more like a friend than a boss. It’s horrible when he asserts his authority and dispels the illusion. You used to be so efficient. I flashback to Matt buying me an orchid after I got a willowy senior soloist a picture spread in Hello. And to Matt kowtowing and crying; ‘We are not worthy!’ after I cajoled the Daily Mail into doing an interview with our Artistic Director and – the surprise bonus – printing it. Suddenly, I’m furious at my mistake. Especially as Matt is correct: now is not the time to be seen to be slacking. The company has exceeded its budget (they went all out on Giselle, hiring a white horse and a pack of beagles to make the hunting party’s arrival in the village more dramatic. Unfortunately, the horse trod on a beagle and killed it, resulting in a lawsuit). The rumour is, a ‘restructure’ is imminent.
I blurt, ‘I can’t believe I was so stupid. What a thick, stupid, brainless prat.’
Matt holds up a hand and says, ‘Easy on the sackcloth, dear. What’s done is done. Wheedle Julietta into signing another shoe. Although it’s not my idea of fun, other people’s verrucas.’ I think Matt takes pity on me because after a pause, he says cheerily, ‘He’s my dog. I’ll ask her. Later. When I’m begging about the other stuff.’
‘What other stuff?’
He drops a copy of Hiya! magazine on my desk. There, on its shiny toilet-paperish cover, nestling naked in a snowy heap of feathers, is Tatiana Popova, star of the Southern Royal Ballet – our main competitors who for their winter season are staging Swan Lake. Normally, the Southerners are so stuck up, you’d think their every swan had laid an egg. But here is Tatiana, getting into bed with a downmarket rag. That’s our turf!
‘The Southern have gone tabloid!’ I gasp. ‘How dare they! No wonder Hiya! didn’t return our calls!’
‘I’m seeing the boss in three minutes,’ says Matt. ‘To explain our counter-strategy.’
‘What counter-strategy?’
‘Exactly,’ says Matt, drawing a finger across his neck. ‘I bequeath you Paws,’ he adds, marching to the door. ‘One thing, though,’ he calls from the corridor. ‘The Telegraph is getting back to us re a possible shoot with Julietta. See what you think. The minute they call, see about getting it pencilled into the Ballet Schedule. I’ll speak to the dancers, and then we’ll go to work on the details. Guard the phones with your life!’
I salute in the direction of his voice, and when the phone rings I leap on it. From now on my standard of work will be so high, I’ll make God look like a slacker. Resting on the seventh day indeed!
‘Hello greater london ballet company press office how may i help you?’ I say breathlessly.
‘Natalie? Germaine Greer is chairing a debate on Thursday at the Barbican,’ declares Frannie through her permanently blocked nose. ‘I have a spare ticket and I thought you might benefit.’
‘Oh! Hello, Frannie. That’s very kind of you. What a surprise!’ I wince. That came out wrong. Or maybe not.
‘Not at all. As I say, I thought you might benefit.’
I bite my lip. The problem I have with Frannie is that she refuses to be nice, even when she’s being nice. ‘What’s it about? It’s lovely of you to think of me.’
‘Is gender a continuing identity or a feature of personality?’
‘I don’t know.’
‘Oh Natalie, really. I’m not asking you, that’s the title of the debate!’
‘Right. Well. The thing is, Frannie, work is very busy this week and –’
‘If you don’t want to come, Natalie, that’s your right and you can say so.’
‘No, no, no, it’s not that, I –’
‘You don’t want to come. Not a problem! By the way, I spoke to Babs last night.’
‘What!’ I gasp. Eventually I say, ‘What, you called her at the Paradise Cove Hotel?’
‘That would hardly have been appropriate. She and Simon flew home yesterday morning. Babs called me.’
‘But, but –’ I blurt. Then I stop. Cool as a cucumber, cool as a cucumber, I tell myself.
‘But why hasn’t she called me?’ I bleat, cool as a boiled cucumber.
Frannie sighs happily. ‘She can’t call everyone,’ she replies.
Having dealt her knockout blow, Frannie trips breezily on to other topics. But I am deaf with confusion and mute with pique. My nose is so out of joint I consider going straight to casualty. Call Frannie! Call Frannie and not me? Babs always calls me! Even when we lived together we rang each other three times a day.
I wait until Frannie has said her piece (and it’s a bloody big piece). Then I call Babs.
‘Yeah?’ says a sleepy voice.
‘Babs!’ I exclaim. ‘It’s me! Why haven’t you rung? How was it? Did you have an amazing time? Was it hot? Are you outrageously brown?’
There is a brief silence then Babs says stickily, ‘Oh hi, Nat, hello love. What time is it?’
I glance at the clock. ‘It’s, er, it’s quarter to ten.’
Babs groans. ‘I’ll kill you! It’s the middle of the night!’
I feel like I did aged six when I blundered in on my father naked. ‘Oh no!’ I squeak. ‘Did I wake you up?’
‘Forget it,’ she yawns. ‘My fault. I should have taken the phone off the hook.’