related to the boss who is an arse. Not my normal mode of dress. Anyway. Thank you. Wow …’ I put my hand to my head. ‘This is weird. You saved me.’
‘It’s good to see you. We don’t often get to see what happens afterwards.’
‘You did a great job. It was … Well, you were really kind. I remember that much.’
‘
De nada
.’
I stared at him.
‘
De nada
. Spanish. “It was nothing.” ’
‘Oh, okay, then. I take it all back. Thanks for nothing.’
He smiled and raised a paddle-sized hand.
Afterwards, I didn’t know what made me do it. ‘Hey.’
He looked back towards me. ‘It’s Sam, actually.’
‘Sam. I didn’t jump.’
‘Okay.’
‘No. Really. I mean, I know you’ve just seen me coming out of a grief-counselling group and everything but it’s – well, I just – I wouldn’t jump.’
He gave me a look that seemed to suggest he had seen and heard everything.
‘Good to know.’
We gazed at each other for a minute. Then he lifted his hand again. ‘Nice to see you, Louisa.’
He pulled on a helmet and Jake slid onto the bike behind him. I found myself watching as they pulled out of the car park. And because I was still watching I caught Jake’s exaggerated eye roll as he pulled on his own helmet. And then I remembered what he had said in the session.
The compulsive shagger.
‘Idiot,’ I told myself, and limped across the rest of the tarmac to where my car was boiling gently in the evening heat.
CHAPTER FIVE
I lived on the edge of the City. In case I was in any doubt, across the road stood a huge office-block-sized crater, surrounded by a developer’s hoarding, upon which was written: FARTHINGATE – WHERE THE CITY BEGINS . We existed at the exact point where the glossy glass temples to finance butted up against the grubby old brick and sash-windows of curry shops and twenty-four-hour grocers, of stripper pubs and minicab offices that resolutely refused to die. My block sat among those architectural refuseniks, a lead-stained, warehouse-style building staring at the steady onslaught of glass and steel and wondering how long it could survive, perhaps rescued by a hipster juice bar or pop-up retail experience. I knew nobody except Samir who ran the convenience store and the woman in the bagel bakery, who smiled at me in greeting but didn’t seem to speak any English.
Mostly this anonymity suited me. I had come here, after all, to escape my history, from feeling as if everyone knew every thing there was to know about me. And the City had begun to alter me. I had come to know my little corner of it, its rhythms and its danger points. I learned that if you gave money to the drunk at the bus station he would come and sit outside your flat for the next eight weeks; that if I had to walk through the estate at night it was wise to do it with my keys lodged between my fingers; that if I was walking out to get a late-night bottle of wine it was probably better not to glance at the group of young men huddled outside Kebab Korner.
I was no longer disturbed by the persistent
whump whump whump
of the police helicopter overhead.
I could survive. Besides, I knew, more than anyone, that worse things could happen.
‘Hey.’
‘Hey, Lou. Can’t sleep again?’
‘It’s just gone ten o’clock here.’
‘So, what’s up?’
Nathan, Will’s former physio, had spent the last nine months working in New York for a middle-aged CEO with a Wall Street reputation, a four-storey townhouse and a muscular condition. Calling him in my sleepless small hours had become something of a habit. It was good to know there was someone who understood, out there in the dark, even if sometimes his news felt tinged with a series of small blows –
everyone else has moved on
.
Everyone else has achieved something.
‘So how’s the Big Apple?’
‘Not bad?’ His Antipodean drawl made every answer a question.
I lay down on the sofa, pushing my feet up on the armrest. ‘Yeah. That doesn’t tell me a
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