For a moment I thought Frances was going to hug me, but she contented herself with a hand on my shoulder and a warm, relieved smile.
‘Hello,’ I said. ‘Sorry about yesterday.’
‘I’m just pleased you’re here now. Come downstairs. Johnny’s made us a pot of coffee.’
‘Johnny?’
‘Yes. Listen, I need you to do me a favour. Anyway, it’ll be more interesting for you than just trawling through the papers.’
‘What is it?’ I asked. Trawling through the papers was exactly what I wanted to do: I hadn’t finished with Milena Livingstone yet. Her chart was incomplete. My need to know about her had not been extinguished by that single coarse message scrawled so carelessly on the back of one of her menus. Now I wanted to know why – why had Greg fallen for her? What did she have that I didn’t?
‘I’ve got to dash out.’ She waved her hand vaguely in the air. ‘Crisis. But I’d promised Johnny I’d go to sample some of his suggested dishes, make the final choices. You can go instead of me.’
‘Wouldn’t it be better if Beth did it?’
Frances frowned. ‘Beth isn’t here yet. Besides, she doesn’t deserve it.’
‘I don’t know anything about food.’
‘You eat, don’t you?’
‘Kind of.’
‘Then it’ll be a treat for you. Are you hungry?’
I tried to remember when I’d last eaten a proper meal.
‘Good. That’s settled, then,’ said Frances, as if she had read my mind.
Johnny arrived with the coffee. He kissed me on one cheek, then the other, and said I was looking lovely. I stammered something and caught Frances’s amusement and something else. Tenderness?
Johnny’s restaurant was in Soho, down a little side alley. I knew it must be exclusive because it was almost impossible to spot from the street. The dining room was small, maybe ten tables, only one of which was unoccupied as we came in. With its low ceilings and deep-red wallpaper, it had the air of being someone’s private house rather than a public place. There was the hum of conversation, the chink of cutlery on china; waiters padded through, hovering deferentially over diners, pouring the last of the wine from bottles into glasses.
‘Nice,’ I commented.
‘They’re all here on expense accounts,’ Johnny said dismissively. ‘They don’t even taste what they’re eating. Why do we bother?’
‘Shall I sit here?’ I gestured to the single empty table.
He shook his head and whisked me through the door at the back and suddenly I was in an entirely different world, a brightly lit space of gleaming stainless-steel surfaces and scrubbed hobs. It was like a laboratory where men and women in white aprons bent over their work, occasionally calling instructions or pulling open vast drawers to reveal ingredients. I stared around me in fascination. Johnny pulled out a stool and sat me down at the end of a counter. ‘I’ll give you some things to try.’
‘Am I meant to choose the menu for Frances?’
‘No, I’ve already decided it.’
‘Then what am I doing here?’
‘I thought you were sad. I’m going to look after you. Wait.’ He disappeared through a small swing door and returned holding a large glass with a tiny amount of gold liquid in the bottom. ‘Drink this first.’
I took an obedient sip. It was sweet, pungent, like apricots.
‘Now, some soup. Radek, soup for the lady here!’
It didn’t come in a bowl, but a tiny teacup, and was frothy like cappuccino. I drank it slowly, finishing it with a teaspoon. ‘What is it?’
‘Do you like it?’
‘It’s delicious.’
‘Artichoke.’
Lunch came in miniature portions: a sliver of sea bass with wild mushrooms, a single raviolo sitting in a puddle of green sauce in the middle of a huge bowl, a square inch of lamb on a spoonful of crisped potato, a thimbleful of rice pudding with cardamom. I ate very slowly, in a dream, while around me the bustle gradually died down as the restaurant emptied and the kitchen filled with racks of washed plates and glasses. Johnny fussed over me, wanting my approval. The mess of my life receded; in this warm space I felt I need never venture to be Ellie again.
‘I’ve never eaten like this in my entire life,’ I said, over strong black coffee and a bitter chocolate truffle.
‘Is that in a good way?’
‘I feel looked after,’ I said.
‘That’s what I wanted.’ He put a hand on my shoulder. ‘What is it, Gwen?’
Our eyes met. For a moment, I so badly wanted to tell him the truth that I could feel the words in my mouth, waiting to be spoken. Then I shook my head, smiling at him. ‘Everyone has their sad days,’ I said. ‘You’ve cheered mine up.’
‘That was what I wanted.’ His hand was still on my shoulder. ‘Tell me something, please.’
‘What?’
‘Is there anyone?’
‘There was,’ I said. ‘For a long time there was. But not any more. That’s all over now.’
I felt so sad as I said the words. Cocooned in sadness, tiredness, food, warmth and the admiration of this nice stranger.
I let him take me home. Not to my home, of course, but his: a flat near the restaurant, up two flights of stairs and looking out on to a street market that was just packing up. It wasn’t out of desire but need, and the sheer, raw, monumental loneliness that had engulfed me: to be held as the day faded, to be told I was lovely. I shut my eyes and tried not to think of Greg’s face, tried not to remember and compare.
Afterwards, when he tried to hold me, stroke my hair, my body wouldn’t let me stay still. I got out of bed and dressed with my back to him, so I couldn’t watch him watching me. An hour later, as I opened my front door, I felt a sudden unease, as if the house itself would be angry with me for what I’d done.
Chapter Eighteen
‘What was it like with Johnny?’ asked Frances.
I looked up from some files and wondered if she could see my cheeks going red. Had he blabbed? ‘What do you mean?’
‘The food,’ she said. ‘What did you think?’
‘It was fine,’ I said.
‘Just fine? Is that all?’
‘It was good,’ I said. ‘It was really nice.’
‘Details, details,’ said Frances. ‘I need to know everything.’
Frances poured a cup of coffee for me and one for her, and I went through every dish Johnny had served me, describing its appearance, its texture. Under Frances’s intense questioning I was forced to recall the ingredients, the garnishes, the presentation. And as I talked, she leaned forward, her lips parted, as if she was tasting the food in her imagination. I suddenly saw her as a hungry woman – not just for the meals I was describing, but for intimacy, affection.
‘Mmm,’ she said, when I’d finished. ‘Lucky you. Do you think it’s stuff we can use?’
‘It might be a bit ornate,’ I said.
‘Ornate is good,’ she said.
‘Johnny never showed me a menu, but I guess it’s expensive.’
‘That’s the whole point,’ said Frances, briskly. ‘You’ve been looking through the bills, haven’t you? In the bonus season, the problem for most of our clients is finding things that are expensive enough. And that look expensive as well, without being vulgar. But you know that. What I really wanted to talk to you about was Johnny. Did you see him at work in the kitchen?’
‘That was where I ate.’
‘On a first date?’ said Frances.
‘It wasn’t exactly a date.’
‘Whatever,’ said Frances. ‘But wasn’t it wonderful, watching him cook? I remember the first time he made supper for David and me – it was a revelation. It was like knowing someone and thinking they’re fairly normal, then discovering they can juggle or do magic tricks. He was so at home. Just the way he chopped vegetables or handled a piece of meat. I couldn’t see how he did it all so quickly and casually. Except it wasn’t casual. When I saw him cook, I thought he loved food more than he loved people.’