In the Kitchen (16 page)

Read In the Kitchen Online

Authors: Monica Ali

Left alone once more, Gabe insinuated himself deeper into the room, gathering fragments of conversation, bright useless things, which were all that he needed right now. When he saw Rolly and Fairweather for a moment he wished he could disappear, but Fairweather smiled at him with such boundless enthusiasm that Gabriel said good to see you and found that he meant it; they were partners and surely friends.

'My wife collects this stuff,' said Fairweather, pushing his fringe out of his eyes. 'We're not checking up on you.'

'I am,' said Rolly, 'speak for yourself. There's a function room at the Pimlico site, we need to make it pay.' He was wearing a suit tonight, of a rather violent blue. His tie, which bore a daisy motif, had been loosened, the knot pulled down to the point on his chest from which his belly swelled.

'Fabulous,' said Fairweather, making an inclusive gesture. 'Wonderful. And the wives are over there, getting to know each other. They'll get along famously.

Lucinda gets along with anyone, all part of the job, like being a vicar's wife.'

'Tell you what Geraldine's good at – spending,' said Rolly. 'Used to be amateur, when I met her, now she's turned into a pro. I have to have it. What does that mean? I say to her, Geraldine, if you can't buy it are you going to go up in a puff of smoke?'

'Women.' Fairweather ruffled the top of his head, petting himself to mark his own incorrigibility which nobody, least of all Fairweather, could resist.

'I sent the revised business plan,' said Gabriel. 'Think it's looking good.'

Rolly blinked rapidly. 'It's getting serious. Getting down to the serious stuff.'

'What pretty girls,' said Fairweather, accepting a crystallized fruit from a golden Sirovsky specimen. 'Where in the world do you get them from?'

'Keep them in my desk drawer,' said Gabriel, 'one or two in my locker as spares.'

'What do you say?' began Fairweather. 'Let's take a little boys' trip, just a couple of days. We could go to France, look at some hand-built ovens I've been told about, do a bit of the old male bonding as well.'

'Hand-built ovens?' said Rolly.

'Weren't you just saying, Gabriel, that you could do with a bit of a rest, a bit of a boost?'

Gabriel found himself nodding, though he was sure he hadn't said anything of the kind. But it was true enough, he supposed, and sensitive of Fairweather to pick it up.

'Mancini's called in the receivers,' said Rolly. 'The fish place in Tooley Street is about to close. Chez Nous won't be far behind from what I hear.'

'Dreadful,' said Fairweather, 'the poor things.'

'Right. It breaks my heart. But restaurants are a cruel, hard world. And when I've finished crying for them I'll be over there, to see what bargains I can pick up.'

'Oh, he's the greatest, isn't he,' said Fairweather, 'he's the best. Dinga-ding. Round two.'

'Anyway,' said Rolly. He wiped a little sweat from his brow with his t
ie.
He looked, Gabriel thought, like a children's entertainer, down on his luck after a false accusation. Was he trying to be flamboyant? Was it Geraldine who dressed him like that? 'Anyway, you know something, if Gabriel's depressed then it's a cross he has to bear. It's the 5-HTT gene, read it in the papers today.'

'I'm not depressed,' said Gabe.

'Aha,' said Fairweather, 'we always have this conversation. We could say it's a predisposition, rather than, you know, written in the stars, as it were.'

'It's not in his horoscope,' said Rolly. 'I don't believe in that.'

'Of course not. I think you're absolutely right.' Fairweather beamed. He had a remarkable ability to agree and disagree at the same time. 'And we all take responsibility, don't we, for looking after ourselves. Quick tune-up needed sometimes. Nothing wrong with that.'

'What you want is the short gene, the short version, transports serotonin.

Hang on, no, that's what you don't want. You want the long 5-HTT.'

'I'm actually not depressed.'

'Well, I need my beauty sleep. Giving a speech in the House tomorrow.

Shall we rendezvous next week?'

A woman touched Fairweather's forearm. 'Excuse me – hope you don't mind me asking, but – are you somebody?' she said.

Gabriel thought about it as he stepped on to a Juliet balcony to get a breath of air. The guests were dispersing now, collecting goodie bags and brushing cheeks to signify a kiss. Are you somebody? Fairweather had managed to blush and bumble about being a mere junior minister of state. He was delighted, of course. He was somebody. What was the alternative? A nobody. If you were more than your own self you were somebody, and if you weren't 'somebody' perhaps being yourself amounted to nothing at all.

'Hello, Romeo, isn't this where I'm supposed to be?' She was a little older than he'd realized, a few grey hairs in that slick French pleat. Good-looking, though, handsome, with a broad, compelling mouth.

'Why's that?'

'Oh, you know, the girl stands on the balcony and looks down ...'

'And I clamber up with a rose between my teeth.'

She laughed. 'Listen, shall we cut to the chase?'

'Do you want me to chase you?'

'You are funny. That's exactly what you don't have to do.'

'If I were a free man,' said Gabe.

She shivered. She waited a moment, considering perhaps her exit or giving him time to change his mind. 'Well, Romeo, we're only as free as we want to be.

It's your funeral. You enjoy it,' she said. 'Goodnight.'

Gabe looked down at the street and then looked up at the sky. It was his funeral, was it? Charming. If a man said that! He shook his head and laughed.

He was hardly burying himself with Charl
ie.
They'd had that trip to Marrakech, a present that he'd organized, a little surprise. Maybe they needed something else like that, something spontaneous. He'd have to plan it in.

It was well past midnight and Gabe was at his desk. When he went home Lena would be there. Or maybe she had gone. It didn't matter either way. But she'd be there, of course she would, waiting for the money that he didn't find. Then what? He'd had it all worked out. It wasn't complicated, it was simple, he would just ...

Damn it, he wasn't wasting any more time on this.

Benny was the last in the kitchen. Gabe went out to see what he was doing.

'One gallon of court bouillon,' said Benny, lifting a lid. 'Two litres of demi-glace, nearly done.'

'Good man,' said Gabe. He watched as Benny skimmed the demi-glace. 'We've got to get twenty-four-hour room service started,' he said. 'It's to do with star ratings, now they've finished the refurb. We need to cover between midnight and six.'

'Yes, Chef,' said Benny. 'It's a long time to go without food.'

Benny stirred the bouillon. The scar across his cheek was faintly silvery. It was a big ugly scar but it didn't make him look ugly. In an odd way it suited him, if it was possible to suit such a wound.

'Problem is, it's the thought of having it rather than actually having it and that's why the numbers don't add up. It's why I haven't sorted it out before now. Mr Maddox wants every new initiative to show a profit. Insists on it, in fact.' Gabriel hitched himself up to sit on the worktop. 'But with the extra staff costs, waiters as well, remember, we're not coming out ahead.'

'So, Chef, what will you do?'

'You a bit of a night owl, Benny? Fancy the graveyard shift? It'll be soups and salads, fries and burgers, no real chance to cook, but I need a reliable man.'

'What about the profits? What will Mr Maddox say?'

Gabe shrugged. 'I'll punch in some different numbers. It'll look OK.'

'Yes, Chef.'

'Look,' said Gabe. 'This is the way it'll work. I put in some numbers to give the right projection, so Maddox can sign it off. His nose is clean. Then the orders don't come in at the projected rate, it's nobody's fault, we've got the extra star which is what we want. We fold the night-service profit and loss in with the rest of room service, which is what is going to happen anyway. We've made the problem disappear.'

Benny was quiet. He seemed to be loaded with questions, which he would now refuse to ask.

'What?' said Gabriel. 'What?'

'Nothing, Chef. I was just wondering, would it be easier to tell the truth?'

Remember, Gabriel, a lie is as worthless as the feller what's told it.

It was all very well. But at work, these days, truth and lies didn't come into it. What you had to think about was what 'they' did or didn't need to hear and how to make yourself heard.

'Truth is, Benny, it's going to work fine. All I'm doing is de-risking it for Mr Maddox so the worry is mine alone.'

Benny smiled again, showing his salt-white teeth. 'Let me work some doubles, Chef. I can sleep until the afternoon, come in and work until six.'

Gabe nodded. 'I'll pour this bouillon for you. Let's stick it straight in the fridge. There's one that's empty. No, I'm OK, you strain the demi-glace. Then we can both get home.'

They worked and cleared in silence. The night porter came in and made a start on the grease traps. They exchanged nods, one apiece.

'Right,' said Gabe. 'We're done.' He wiped his hands with an unnecessary flourish and smacked them together a few times. 'Home,' he said, and then, more weakly, 'home.'

'I have to go down and get my things from the locker,' said Benny.

'Right. Of course. Right.' Gabriel folded his towel. He picked it up again and scrunched it, then lobbed it at the laundry bin. 'OK.'

Benny started to move.

'Wait,' called Gabriel. 'Wait. Do you want to go for a drink? Do you need to get home? I'm not in a hurry myself, I mean, it's not that late really and –

come on, let's do it – I know a nice little bar.'

Dusty's was a cook-infested basement dive in Heddon Street. The eponymous Dusty was a Geordie with a legendary CV including working the rigs in Saudi, bootlegging whisky, also in Saudi, gunrunning in unspecified southern African states, managing a fairground attraction in Mexico City as a front for some hinted-at nefarious activity, and 'bodyguarding', as he put it, for celebrities. 'Yeah, they were cunts,' he liked to say, 'but no more than the other cunts. No more than you cunts in here. Come down to it, I've travelled the world and it's the same all over, it's what you get everywhere, and everyone, basically – I'm talking brass tacks, behind the scenes, boil it down – is more or less of a cunt.'

The cooks didn't give him any grief. They took their fights outside. The bar was like a warm, dark mouth which held them while they wet their troubles or joys, or rinsed off the boredom with Jack Daniel's and Bruce Springsteen.

Tonight there was no sign of Dusty. A girl in a ripped black T-shirt, sporting a ring through her lip and a cold sore besides, guarded the bar with a belligerence that must have taken months of training to perfect. She raised her chin a millimetre, an economical way of saying, yes, what can I get for you?

'Kronenbourg,' said Gabriel. 'Benny, what do you want?'

'Good evening,' said Benny to the girl, who had merely to slacken her jaw muscles to tell him what she thought of that. 'Do you have Blue Curaçao?'

The girl touched the tip of her tongue to her lip ring but disappeared down behind the bar and then rose again as if from the grave holding a bottle of the glowing blue spirit.

Gabe and Benny took their drinks and sat close to Spunker's Corner where Dave Hill, at that time Garde Manger at the Connaught, was said to have come in his pants while recounting the contents of a pornographic film. If you drank at Dusty's for long enough you learned a legend about everyone in the game.

'Where the fuck have you been?' Nathan Tyler came out of the gents, zipping, and spoke as if Gabriel had stood him up. In a sense, Gabriel supposed, he had. Since he'd got together with Charlie, he either went to the Penguin or went home.

'I've got to split, mate,' said Nathan, in a tone that suggested Gabe had begged him to stay. 'Listen, give us a call, yeah, you little fucker, give us a call.'

'We were at the Dorchester together,' Gabe told Benny. He smiled to himself.

Ten hours a day 'turning' potatoes, carving them into a roundness that nature did not see fit to provide. Doing that shit forged a bond between you, somehow, like living in a trench. Yeah, he'd give Nathan a call.

'Cheers,' said Benny. He lifted his glass. The contents looked radioactive.

Benny cocked his little finger daintily as he drank.

'It's good to ... you know, wind down after work,' said Gabe. 'Have a couple of drinks.'

'Yes, Chef,' said Benny. He had changed into stone-washed jeans with neatly pressed creases, a black leather jacket with a tiger embroidered on the back, and traded his work clogs for a pair of grey slip-ons so shiny they could easily be employed to look up a skirt.

'So,' said Gabe, glancing around. 'I used to come here sometimes.'

'Yes, Chef.'

Neither one of them, it seemed, was winding down. 'You don't have to call me Chef now. Gabe will be fine.'

'OK, Gabe.'

'Did you come that night we went to the Penguin? Place with the jazz singer, my girlfriend? Night Damian got legless and puked down his shirt.' The detail was extraneous; there hadn't been any other nights.

'No, Chef. I was not in that day.'

Soon after he'd started at the Imperial, Gabriel had taken the crew out, his first and so far only initiative in the building of team spirit.

'We'll do it again some time soon,' said Gabe, without meaning it. He wanted to ask Benny where he was from. Benny's English was excellent but deeply accented, each syllable a heavy mouthful, formed – so it seemed – with a degree of physical effort at the back of the throat, and released with an audible exhale. Gabe had been working with Benny for nearly six months now. It seemed a little awkward to be asking him where he was from. He decided to come at it from the side. 'Salim,' he said, naming one of the night porters. 'He's Somali, isn't he? Do you know much about it? Somalia, I mean?'

'I know a little,' said Benny with an enigmatic smile. He lifted his drink.

'You know this is made with oranges. How does it end up blue?'

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