Read When I Was Invisible Online
Authors: Dorothy Koomson
Reese and I were bad for each other because he could do terrible things, he could screw me over, verbally abuse me, and I would still love him, would still look out for him, would still be his port of call when he needed someone to pretend his life was normal. Reese sometimes needed tough love. We both knew every time he went down into the hole of heroin that he hadn't fallen in, he had crawled in. He made the choice to do it. Yes, it was a choice made from the physical and psychological craving so strong he often couldn't stand the pain that came from living without it flowing through his veins, but it was still a choice. My choice wasn't so much physical, it was psychological, emotional, instinctive â I
had
to be there for him. I
had
to show him I believed him because no one else had. We both knew Reese needed tough love sometimes, Reese knew I needed tough love sometimes, but we neither of us were quite brave enough to bring it about.
Marshall has all of this to come: the relapses, the promises, the money, the emotional ringer he will be dragged through while Eliza pretends to him and herself that she wants to get clean. And, addict that I am, I want to be there for him. To help him while he helps her. To feed my habit with his need to help his friend.
I park my trolley outside 415. There is no âdo not disturb' sign hanging outside so I raise my hand.
Knock, knock!
Wait ten seconds.
Knock, knock!
âHousekeeping!' I call. Wait another ten seconds.
Nothing, no response. That doesn't always mean the person is out, though â they could be in a deep sleep, they could be in the shower, they could have headphones on and can't hear me ⦠on average I scare the living daylights out of five different people a day.
I swipe the card attached to the loop on my maid's uniform, slowly open the door. When the door is open, I enter the room but stay by the door, then knock again, call âHousekeeping!' again. No response. The room is darkened because the curtains are drawn, but it doesn't feel empty. The bathroom light is out, there are no shapes in the bed, but I am not alone in here.
Urgh
. On average,
this
happens at least twice a week â someone will âaccidentally' treat me to a full-frontal nudie show. I've seen far too many naked people â male and female â since I started working here, and none of them has the body that can make it worth my while.
Do I go or do I stay?
I'm really not up for being flashed today. My eyes dart around the dimly lit room, taking in the mess, assessing how much time I'll need when I come back later. A man's suit jacket has been slung over the back of the chair by the window; on the low padded bench by the door a suitcase stands yawning open, but its contents don't contain clothes other than underwear, from what I can make out, so I'm guessing the person has hung them up. On the floor by the bed is a pair of trousers, one leg inside the other; a pair of men's tight underpants is on top of the trousers, and beside them is a white T-shirt. On the bedside table there is an expensive watch, a fancy silver lighter, loose change and keys â car and house. Not too messy â the bathroom may not need too much clearing up, either.
Do I go or do I stay?
The room is unnaturally silent even though I am not alone.
Do I stay or do I go?
The bathroom light flicks on suddenly, and out of nowhere a form appears from the bathroom and pauses, leaning against the frame so their whole body takes up the entire doorway. The person is male, his doughy midsection topped by a toned, muscular chest. He's naked, of course, brandishing his body like it is necessary viewing for every person who walks the face of the Earth.
Immediately I avert my eyes, but I know he's probably switching his gaze between checking how embarrassed I am, and admiring himself in the full-length mirror I am standing beside.
âOh, I'm sorry,' I say, averting my eyes. âI thought you were out. Housekeeping. I'll come back later.'
I step back, ready to shut the door behind me. âNo, no, don't run away. You can still clean up around me. I
really
won't mind.'
His voice
. His voice crawls into my ear, then spreads out through my memory, stroking every one of my nightmares awake, causing them to flash through my mind in an uncontrollable torrent.
âI-I'll come back,' I manage. I keep my head lowered, push my glasses back into place. âSorry.'
I step out of the room, swing the door shut. I can't luxuriate in a moment to steady myself, I have to move on, get into the next room, hide out and hope he didn't recognise me, hope he doesn't open his door, stick his head out and sayâ
âNikky? Is that you?'
I keep walking, keep moving, because I am not Nikky. Nikky is a woman he made in his image.
âAll right then,
Nika
. Nika Harper, you stop right there and talk to me.'
I don't even know why, but maybe I am, deep down, that twenty-one-year-old who did whatever he told me to do. Maybe I knew I'd always have to have this conversation, this confrontation, and there's no point trying to avoid it, and that is why I stop my trolley with its sometimes squeaky left wheel and I stop walking.
I can't keep running away from bits of my past. Some day, somehow, I'm going to have to deal with it.
I turn around to face him. It looks like the part I have to deal with now is the part involving Todd.
âI almost didn't recognise you with the hair and the glasses,' he says. âYou look really different.'
âSo do you,' I reply. He's a little grey around the temples, the sun from his expensive holidays has weathered his skin and he's older, of course, but essentially he
looks
the same. But that's not what I mean when I say that. I used to be scared of him â more so after I left him. He was terrifying in my mind, scarier than the thought of sleeping rough. Maybe it was the thought of what he could make me do, how he got me to collude with him to treat me badly, that had sent me out there in the first place and had scared me most. Yet, standing in front of him, the flashbacks that moments ago came rampaging through my mind, trampling over all the good things in my memory when I realised who he was, don't seem to have been of him, the man leaning out of a doorway so he's not flashing the corridor. Those nightmares were of someone far more menacing. Someone charming and good-looking; cruel and cunning. That doesn't seem to be him.
He
looks completely different.
âWhy don't you come back into my room so we can talk?' he says pleasantly.
I shake my head. âNo, I'd prefer to stay out here.'
âI haven't seen you in ten years and you want to talk out here?' He waves his hand around the corridor, which, as corridors go, is very pleasant. The lighting is low but not grungy, the carpets are clean, the wallpaper is fancy.
âWhy not?' I ask. âIt's as good a place as any.'
âCome on, Nikky, just step inside for a moment.' He sounds jovial, like a man humouring his ex, like a controlling man who will turn on the thinnest of edges when the ex doesn't do what she's told.
âNo, thank you,' I state. âI can't talk for long, either, I have to get back to work.'
âYeah, work,' he scoffs. At one point in my life, that scoff would have hurt. I would be hanging on, waiting for the other words that would cover the cut of those words and make me feel all right again. Right now, the smirk bounces off without even touching me. âHang on,' he says when I don't reply. He's gone a few moments, then re-emerges wrapped up in the white dressing gown from his room. âI can't believe how low you've sunk, Nikky,' he says. âThere was a time when we used to laugh at people like maids in hotels, having to get down on their hands and knees for hours to make enough money for a packet of fags, remember?'
I shake my head. âNo, I don't remember because I've never laughed at anyone who has to work for a living, Todd. I don't think of people like that. Never have, never will.'
âOh, come on, you know what I mean.'
âI don't, I genuinely don't, because I've always had respect for people, no matter what they do. It's not hard, you know, not thinking you're better than someone because they can't afford your lifestyle.'
âYou've really changed,' he says sadly.
âHave I?' I reply. âYou haven't.'
âLook, this is silly, we can't talk properly like this. Let me take you to dinner tonight, we can talk and get to know each other again. Wouldn't you like that?'
I'm so appalled at that suggestion I have to stop myself screwing my face up like he has let off a very bad smell. I'm even more appalled when I realise he means it. âI don't think so. Thank you, but no.'
âHow can you say no to me?' he says. âYou owe me at least a little bit of your time, don't you? You walked out one day after a silly little spat. I had to deal with the aftermath of cancelling the wedding. Do you know what that was like for me? It was so humiliating. Some of my sponsors were down to come to the wedding, they were planning special celebration products, and you messed that all up for me. I've had to rebuild my life since then. Plus I've been going to see your family. Bet you didn't know about that, huh? Because you're
selfish
. Your parents said you left them in exactly the same way as you left me and that you'd always been a thoughtless child. I stuck up for you. I told them that the stories in the papers about you using drugs weren't true and that I had been taking care of you. I did all that even though you'd left me in the lurch.
âYou owe me, Nikky, you owe me. Now, I'm willing to listen to what you have to say for yourself about why you did that to me, but not like this. We have to sit down properly, talk it all through. You need to understand that we can't pretend none of this has happened, but I'm willing to try.'
Todd has clearly had this moment, this conversation, mapped out in his head for years. He knows what I was meant to have said and when, what he was meant to have said and when, and how the whole thing would resolve itself. Todd speaks like that conversation has happened exactly how it was meant to in his mind, even though I have not said a word.
âDid Frank get his job back?' I ask.
âFrank? Who the hell is Frank?'
Frank is the man I still fretted over, who I felt so guilty about I often thought of breaking my exile to go and beg his employers to think again, who I almost returned to Todd for so he would tell them to re-employ him. âFrank is the driver who you had sacked because he was nice to me.' This is clearly not part of the script he has in his head.
Almost visibly, a thousand thoughts run through his mind as he squints his way through his history. He's obviously done it since then, he's obviously had men removed from their positions for being too nice to one of his wives or fiancées. I'd wager he's had it done so many times he's genuinely forgotten who Frank is.
âGoodbye, Todd,' I say.
âDon't walk away from me, Nikky. You don't get to walk away again.'
Room 417 has a DND sign, so I push on, ignoring the braying man behind me, and stop outside room 419.
âNikky, you come back here. Now. You come back here. I'm not finished talking to you.'
Knock, knock!
Wait ten seconds.
âDo you hear me, Nikky? Nikky!
Nikky!
'
Knock, knock!
âHousekeeping.'
âNIKKY!'
I swipe my card, open the door and drag my trolley in with me when I'm sure the room is empty. I don't usually do that, but I need to shut him out. I need him to stop shouting. This is a nice hotel: the last thing they need is for some man to be stood in the corridor, screaming the name of a woman who does not exist.
âI thought you might like a hot chocolate?' I said to the girl.
I'd noticed her arrive a few days ago, walking into town from the direction of the coach station, and she was set apart from the other people who had arrived because she was shrouded in a new-girl fear that was like a thick, visible blanket. I'd noticed her walking and walking that night when I went to meet Reese. Now, she was sitting on the raised platform outside a closed shoe shop with her bag beside her and an air of hopelessness that had replaced the blanket of fear. That must have been what I'd looked like when I'd first arrived; it was certainly what I remembered feeling like.
I held out the styrofoam cup filled with a frothy hot chocolate to her. She seemed too young for coffee, would probably turn her nose up at tea, and I had no idea where to start with herbal stuff. Hot chocolate seemed a good compromise.
âIf you're a social worker you can do one,' she practically spat at me with a slightly curled lip, and narrowed eyes.
âI'm not a social worker,' I said.
âCop, whatever â I'm not interested.'
âI'm not a police officer, either. I'm a â¦' What was I? âI'm like you. I'm homeless, too.'
âYeah, right, you look it.'
I sat down beside her, without cleaning off a spot first, and she did a double-take because few ânormal' people did that. âI don't sleep on the streets any more, no, but I live in a homeless bedsit-type thing.'
She turned her body, which seemed so fragile, like a bird with delicate wings, towards me, her face curious. âYou really slept on the streets?'
âYeah, and if you're going to do it, I'll tell you what a good friend told me: you need to hide, sleep somewhere hidden so you'll feel a bit safer. But, if you sleep out a few nights in the open, there are people who will help you. Get you a place in a shelter, get you the help you're entitled to.'
âThey'd just make me go home. I can't go home.'
âThey won't, you know. Maybe justâ'
â
I can't go home!
' she screeched. I wasn't listening to her, and I should be. I had started this conversation â why bother talking to her if I wasn't going to listen? She wasn't ready to get help from someone who might want to talk her into going home.