I nod and try to say thank you, but nothing comes out.
‘Madam?’ The first porter again. ‘Do we need to call someone? The police?’
‘No. Not the police.’ I dab my cheek, and this small, cold contact is enough to tell me that it has already started to swell. I’m going to have a spectacular bruise in a few hours’ time.
‘Madam.’ The porter coughs delicately. ‘Several of the guests reported screams. Something has obviously happened here.’
‘It’s not what you think. It really isn’t.’ Neither of them says anything, but another glance is exchanged. I try to keep my voice calm and clear. ‘There was this guy. Things got out of hand . . .’ I can’t find the words to explain any further. The first porter nods tactfully. ‘I don’t need the police,’ I repeat. ‘Nothing happened. Nothing serious. I just need to sleep.’
The second porter shakes his head, the movement barely discernible. ‘I don’t think we can leave you alone. Not like this.’
‘I’m okay. I’m not hurt.’
I press the flannel harder against my cheek; then, before I can stop myself, I’m crying again. They’re right, of course. I can’t just go to sleep and hope everything will be normal again in the morning. And it’s not sleep that I want; it’s oblivion. I want to close my eyes and for everything to stop.
I get up and retrieve the spare towel that’s folded at the bottom of the wardrobe. Neither of the porters says anything as I produce my mobile from the middle of this bundle. What could they possibly say? I see you’ve wrapped your phone in a towel.
‘I’m going to call a friend now,’ I tell them. ‘I’m going to ask her to pick me up. If you don’t mind, I’d like to be alone. You can call my room when she arrives.’
The first porter throws a questioning look at the second, who, after a moment, nods. ‘We’ll notify you as soon as she gets here. Is there anything else you need in the meantime? Anything at all?’
‘No. Thank you. You’ve been very kind. Please, could you close the door on your way out?’
There are eighteen missed calls on my phone, and God knows how many texts and voicemails, but I have to ignore them for now. I can’t think about those messages yet, not if I want to function. I hit the cancel button, then check the time. It’s one twenty. I call Dr Barbara.
The phone only rings a couple of times before she picks up, and when she speaks she sounds completely alert, though I assume I must have woken her. ‘Abby, where are you?’
‘I’m at the Dorchester.’
She registers no surprise at this fact. ‘I’m coming to get you. I’ll be there within half an hour. Do not go anywhere. I want you to promise me.’
‘I won’t go anywhere,’ I tell her.
‘You promise?’
‘I promise.’
‘Is anyone with you?’
‘No. I’m alone. I have a room.’
There’s a brief pause as she digests this information. ‘Abby, listen to me. I want you to stay in your room. Do not leave. If you have any thoughts of hurting yourself, you are to phone me immediately. Immediately. I’ll be with you very soon. Stay put.’
‘Okay.’
‘Okay.’
She hangs up and I place my phone beside me on the bed. I try to picture her on her way, shoes clicking purposefully, headlights flaring to life, but the images quickly spin out of my control. I see her car crumpled at a junction, blood pouring from her mouth and nose and eyes. That would be my fault too. Half an hour seems an impossible amount of time to wait.
I get up and go to the bathroom. In a mirror that covers most of a wall, I see a girl who might have been painted by Picasso. My left eye has narrowed above a hillock of swollen skin, and my hair is in disarray from having lain foetal for so long. My cheek is the red of severe sunburn, and already taking on a darker, purplish hue. And somehow it’s all made worse by the flawless luxury of the surroundings: the snow-white towels, the dazzling light, the endless, astonishing marble. Against this backdrop, I look so messed up it’s mesmerizing, and for several minutes all I can do is stare, held captive by the grotesque jigsaw where my face used to be.
I no longer feel drunk. I no longer feel much of anything. It’s as if the alcohol and the mania and the tears and the kisses and the slap have all cancelled each other out, leaving a void as blank and formless as fog. But I know that this is only half of the story. Somewhere, buried deep, there is still the urge to run – the black inversion of my earlier elation. My instinct is to get out, to leave the hotel this very minute and let the night swallow me. The only thing standing between me and the door is the promise I made to Dr Barbara.
The light is too bright in the bathroom, so I return to the bed, get in, and pull the covers over my face. The problem, of course, is that this is not enough; I can’t switch off all the lights in my head. I need a distraction, so I get up again and ransack the room for something to read. There’s nothing very inspiring: just the hotel directory and the Gideon Bible. I try both, but the directory doesn’t last long, and the Bible is too brutal. Eve eats some fruit; God says he’s going to punish her by making childbirth excruciating. I get back under the duvet and pray for the phone to ring.
Lacking any alternative – other than the bathrobe – I put my dress back on and head down to the lobby, my steps slow and mechanical. Dr Barbara intercepts me before I’m halfway to the reception desk and enfolds me in a tight hug. My own arms hang lifeless at my sides, as limp as overcooked noodles.
‘You’re hurt,’ she says as she pulls away. ‘Someone hit you.’
I open my mouth, close it again, then just shrug and nod.
‘It’s okay. You don’t have to tell me now. Tell me in the car. We need to get you home.’
‘I don’t think I can go home.’ My voice is still a cold monotone. ‘Not yet.’
‘My home, Abby. I’m taking you back to mine. For now.’
‘Thank you.’ My eyes prickle. ‘I need to return my key.’
‘Give it to me.’
I do as instructed, and Dr Barbara strides over to the desk and hands the key to the receptionist, touching him briefly on the arm. In anyone else, it would seem overfriendly, a breach of etiquette; but Dr Barbara does it with such a calm and kind authority that it looks the most natural thing in the world.
‘My bill,’ I say when she comes back. ‘I think I need to check about my bill.’
‘Don’t worry.’ She’s already ushering me out. The doorman nods politely as we pass. ‘It’s taken care of.’
‘Thank you. That’s . . . I’ll pay you back, I promise. As soon as I can.’
‘Abby, you’re not to worry. There isn’t going to be a bill. I explained the situation. The staff were very understanding.’
‘Oh.’ I don’t know what else to say.
Dr Barbara gives me a tight-lipped smile and guides me to where her car is parked, in the drop-off zone. It’s a Prius, charcoal grey and shiny as a bullet. She gestures to the passenger door and I get in. The interior is spotless, as if it’s just been valeted.
She doesn’t start the engine immediately. She flips on the interior light and looks at me again, her eyes lingering on my left cheek. ‘Abby, I’d like to call Beck if that’s all right? Just to let him know you’re okay.’
My stomach drops a little. I close my eyes and nod. It’s a phone call that has to be made, but there’s no way I could make it – not right now. Dr Barbara, it seems, has understood this without having to ask.
The call lasts only a couple of minutes, but even this is close to unbearable. All I can think about is burying something sharp or hot in my flesh.
When it’s finally over, Dr Barbara slips her phone into the side compartment and turns back to me. ‘Abby, I want you to tell me exactly what has happened today. Bits of it I know already; Beck phoned me soon after you left. He was . . . worried, understandably. But I’d like to hear it in your own words. Can you manage that?’