So bent on her task was Lottie that it took her some minutes to hear him.
“Lottie? Lottie, hey, slow down!”
She stopped and glanced backward, hoping that the wind whipping her hair would hide the flush that spread rapidly across her face.
He reached out an arm, as if to slow her. “Are we in a hurry?”
His voice had a slight accent, as if those loose-speaking, easy-limbed countries of his youth had rubbed the corners off him. He moved fluidly, as if there were enjoyment in the act of movement alone, as if there were no physical full stops to him.
Lottie searched for an answer. “No,” she said eventually. “Sorry.”
They walked on, more slowly this time, in silence. Lottie nodded a greeting at one of her neighbors, who raised his hat at them both, observing, “Blowy.”
“Who was that?”
“Just Mr. Hillguard.”
“He the one with the dog?”
“That’s Mr. Atkinson.” She paused, feeling her cheeks sting. “He’s got a mustache, too.”
A mustache. A mustache, she scolded herself. Who the hell notices a person’s mustache? She began to pick up her pace as they headed up the hill toward Arcadia. Please let this be over soon, she willed. Please let him remember some errand he has to do in town. Please just let me be.
“Lottie?”
She stopped, biting back tears. She was starting to feel slightly hysterical.
“Lottie, please wait.”
She turned. Looked on him fully for the second time. He stood before her, huge chestnut eyes set in a too-handsome face. Bewildered. Half smiling.
“Have I offended you?”
“What?”
He shook his head slightly. “I’m not entirely sure what I’ve done, but I’d like to know.”
How can you not know? she thought. How can you not see? Don’t you see in me what I see in you? She waited briefly to answer. Just in case he did.
Wanted to weep with exasperation when he didn’t.
“You haven’t done anything,” she said, and began walking again so that he couldn’t see how hard she was biting her cheeks.
“Hey.
Hey.
”
He had grabbed hold of her sleeve. She pulled her arm away as if he had burned her.
“You’ve been avoiding me since I got here. Is this some weird thing because of me and Celia? I know you’ve always been close.”
“Of course not,” she said crossly. “Now, please let’s go on. I’m very busy today.”
“I don’t see how,” came the voice behind her. “You seem to spend most of your time stuck in your room.”
A big lump of nothing had swollen in the back of Lottie’s throat. It was beginning to choke her. Her eyes were pricking with tears. Make him go away, God. Please. It’s not fair to do this to me.
But Guy pulled level with her again. “You know, you remind me of someone.” He didn’t actually look at her this time. Just kept walking alongside her. “I can’t work out who just yet. But I will. Is this the house?”
Out of the wind, the sun flooded her back with its warmth. Lottie walked slightly less briskly up the drive, the gravel crunching under her feet. She had got halfway to the house when she realized she could not hear his.
“Wow.”
He was standing back, one hand lifted to his brow, squinting into the sunlight. “Who lives here?”
“Adeline. And her husband, Julian. And some of their friends.”
“It’s not like an English house. It’s like the houses I grew up with. Oh, wow.”
He was grinning now, walking toward the house, peering sideways up at the cubic windows, at the bleached white of its façade.
“You know, I’m not so keen on British houses. The traditional Victorian types or all that mock-Tudor stuff. They feel kind of dark and poky to me. Even Celia’s folks’ house. This is much more my kind of thing.”
“I like it,” said Lottie.
“I didn’t think there were houses like this over here.”
“How long is it since you lived over here?”
He paused. Frowned. “About twenty years. I was around six when we first left England. Are we going in?”
Lottie looked at the envelope in her hand. “I’m not sure,” she said. “I suppose we could just pop it through the letterbox. . . .”
She looked longingly at the door. It had been almost two weeks since she’d visited. Celia hadn’t wanted to come with her. “Oh, that crowd,” she’d said dismissively. “Bunch of boring misfits. You want to come to London, Lots. Have some real fun. You might meet someone.”
“I’m not meant to like them,” she explained now to Guy. “The people who live here. But I do.”
Guy looked at her. “Then let’s go in.”
It was Frances who opened the door, not Marnie. “Marnie’s gone,” she explained, turning back down the corridor, wiping fish scales from her hands onto an ill-fitting white apron. “Left us. Rather a pain really. None of us are particularly good at domestic things. I’m meant to be preparing fish for supper. I’ve made the most awful mess of the kitchen.”
“This is Guy,” said Lottie. But Frances just waved a hand. There were too many visitors to Arcadia to make formal introductions really worthwhile.
“Adeline’s out on the terrace. She’s meant to be planning our mural.”
While Guy gazed around him at the house, Lottie stole furtive glances at his profile. Say something awful, she willed. Be dismissive about Frances. Make me go off you. Please.
“What’s the fish?” he said.
“Trout. Awful, slimy things. They’ve been flying all over the kitchen.”
“Want me to have a go? I’m pretty handy at gutting fish.”
Frances’s relief was palpable. “Oh, would you?” she said, and ushered him into the kitchen, where on a table two rainbow trout bled silkily onto the bleached wooden table.
“I don’t know why she left. But she was always cross with us about something. I was rather afraid of her by the end, moody old thing. She disapproved of us. Our household.”
Adeline had appeared in the doorway. She was wearing a long, finely pleated black skirt with a white blouse and black necktie. She smiled, her eyes on Guy. “I think she would have been more comfortable with something . . . a little more traditional. Have you brought us a new guest, Lottie?”
“This is Guy,” Lottie said. Then forced herself to add, “Celia’s fiancé.”
Adeline’s gaze flickered from Guy to Lottie and back again. She paused, as if considering something, then smiled and lifted a hand in greeting. “It is lovely to meet you, Guy. And I should offer my congratulations.”
There was a short silence.
“We never seem to keep housekeepers for very long. Will this knife do? It’s not terribly sharp.” Frances held up the bloodied knife.
Guy tested the blade on his thumb. “No wonder you’re having trouble. This is about as sharp as a butter knife. Got a steel? I’ll sharpen it for you.”
“I suppose we should get someone else in,” said Frances. “We never think of things like sharpening knives.” She rubbed distractedly at her cheek, unwittingly leaving a bloodied smear.
“Oh, it’s such a bore finding staff.” Adeline looked briefly ill-tempered. She raised a hand to her forehead theatrically. “I can never think of the right questions to ask. And I never check that they’re doing the right things. I don’t even know what it is they
should
be doing.”
“And they always end up getting cross with
us
,” said Frances.
“You need staff to manage your staff,” said Guy, who, with deft, sweeping motions was sharpening the blade along the upheld steel.
“You know, you’re quite right,” said Adeline. She must like him, Lottie observed; she reserved that smile only for people she felt relaxed with. Lottie had known her long enough now to recognize the other kind, where the corners of her mouth lifted but not her eyes.
Lottie, meanwhile, simply stared at Guy, hypnotized by the regular, metronomic swoosh of metal against metal, the repetitive flash of his tanned arm under his shirt. He was so beautiful; his skin looked almost polished, the way the light from the windows reflected off the planes of his cheekbones. His hair, unfashionably long, lay in dark gold layers, darkening toward his collar as if harboring rich secrets beneath. On his left eyebrow several hairs at the junction with his browbone were white, possibly the result of some accident in a past life. I bet Celia hasn’t noticed that, thought Lottie absently. I bet she doesn’t see half the things I can see.
Adeline saw.
Lottie, lost in her reverie, felt the increasing heat of her stare and, turning to meet her eye, found herself blushing as if caught in the middle of some transgression.
“And where is Celia today?”
“Having her hair done. Mrs. Holden asked Guy to come with me.” She hadn’t meant it to sound so defensive.
But Adeline just nodded.
“There!” Guy held up one of the trout; gutted and filleted, it hung balefully by its tail. “Want me to show you how to do the other one?”
“I’d rather you did it for me,” said Frances. “It takes you about a tenth of the time.”
“No problem,” said Guy.
As Lottie watched him carefully slit the shimmering belly from throat to tail, she found she had begun to weep. She wasn’t entirely sure why.
They had tea, which Lottie made, out on the terrace. Frances really was hopeless at domestic tasks. She had forgotten to strain the first pot she made, so that the milk was speckled with black tea leaves. The second time she forgot to add the tea altogether and had looked as if she were about to cry when this was gently pointed out. Adeline had thought it amusing and offered them wine instead. But Lottie, anxious that Guy not think ill of them, had declined and taken charge of the tea making. She was glad of the time to herself. She felt as if she had started to fizz with electricity, unable to control the direction of its current.
When she emerged carrying the tray and its odd assortment of crockery, Adeline was showing Guy the beginnings of their mural. In the time since Lottie had last visited, strange lines had begun to appear on the white surface, silhouettes nudging each other along the wall. Guy, his back to her, was tracing one of the lines with a square-tipped finger. His open collar had dropped back slightly from his neck, revealing a deeply tanned nape.
“You’re here, Lottie. Look, I put you far away from George, as I didn’t want you to be offended by him. He is a thoughtless man.” Adeline smiled at Guy. “His brain is full of the Russian economy and suchlike. It seems to leave little room for sensitivity.”
It had little blond hairs all over it, as fine as the down on a butterfly wing. Lottie could see every single one.
“I want to have you carrying something, Lottie. Maybe a basket. Because tipping you slightly will show that sinuous quality of yours. And I want to have your hair hanging loose, in a sheet.” Frances was staring at the sketchy image, as if it were nothing really to do with the real Lottie.
“And we will dress you in exotic colors. Something bright. Very un-English.”
“Something like a sari,” said Frances.
“The girls here dress in much more drab colors than those where I grew up,” said Guy, turning slightly to include her in conversation. “Here everyone seems to wear brown or black. When we lived in the Caribbean, everyone wore red or bright blue or yellow. Even me.” He grinned. “My favorite shirt had a bright yellow sun on the back. Huge, it was, with rays stretching right up to my shoulders.” He stretched his arms across his chest, as if pointing them out.
Lottie placed the tray carefully on the table, to try to stop the crockery from rattling.
“I think we should dress Lottie in red. Or perhaps emerald,” said Adeline. “She is so exquisite, our little Lottie, and always hiding herself. Always making herself invisible. I am on a mission,” she confided to Guy, breathing almost intimately into his ear, “to show this town that Lottie is one of its most precious jewels.”
Lottie found herself flushing furiously. She felt a searing anger at Adeline, the prickling suspicion that she was being mocked.
But nobody appeared to be laughing.
Guy didn’t even seem perturbed by Adeline’s behavior. He grinned back at Adeline and then slowly turned to look at Lottie. He really looked at her then, as if seeing her properly. The two faces, his and Adeline’s, staring intently at her, unbalanced Lottie to the point where she could no longer contain herself.
“No wonder you can’t get any staff. This place is a tip! You need to tidy it! No one will come if you don’t tidy it.” She leaped up and began moving empty wine bottles and newspapers across the terrace, gathering up long-empty wineglasses, refusing to meet anyone’s eyes.
“Lottie!” She heard Adeline’s soft exclamation.
“You don’t have to do that, Lottie,” said Frances. “Sit down, dearest. You’ve just made the tea.”
Lottie swept past her, pushing at her outstretched hand. “But it’s dirty. In some places it’s actually
dirty
. Look, you need some carbolic. Or something.” The words were tumbling over themselves. She moved inside, became manic, sweeping piles of papers off tables, pulling at drapes. “You won’t get a new housekeeper otherwise. No one will come. You can’t live like this. You can’t
live
like this!”
Her voice broke on the last words, and suddenly she found herself running down the corridor and out the front door into the bright afternoon sunlight, heedless of the bemused cries of the people behind her.
G
UY FOUND HER IN THE GARDEN
. S
HE WAS SITTING BY
the little pond, miserably throwing tiny pieces of bread into its murky waters, her back to the weathered brick of the house. On his approach she glanced around, groaned, and buried her face in her too-tanned arms.
But he didn’t say anything. Wordlessly, he sat down beside her, handed her a plate, and, as she sat looking furtively up at him from under her hair, pulled a large, blushing fruit from the crook of his arm. As she stared at its unfamiliar shape, her curiosity battening down her embarrassment, he pulled a penknife from his pocket and began to peel it, scoring its flesh lengthways. Absorbed in his task, he peeled away the four regular sections of skin, forcing the knife down carefully along the fruit’s innards, levering the flesh away from the stone.
“Mango,” he said, handing her a piece. “Came today. Try it.”