โHi. Floyd. Itโs Laurel. Laurel Mack.โ โMrs. Mack.โ
That soft transatlantic drawl, so lazy and dry. โOr are you aย ms.?โ
โIโm aย ms.,โ she replies.
โMs. Mack, then. How good to hear from you. I could not be more delighted.โ
Laurel smiles. โGood.โ
โAre we making a dinner plan?โ โWell, yes. I suppose. Unless . . .โ
โThereโs noย unless. Unless you have a specificย unlessย in mind?โ She laughs. โNo, I have noย unlessย in mind.โ
โGood then,โ he says. โHow about Friday night?โ
โGood,โ she says, knowing without checking that she will be free. โLovely.โ โShall we go into town? See some bright lights? Or somewhere near me?
Somewhere near you?โ
โBright lights sound good,โ she says, her voice emerging breathlessly, almost girlishly.
โI was hoping youโd say that. You like Thai?โ โI love Thai.โ
โLeave it with me then,โ he says. โIโll make us a booking somewhere. Iโll text you later with the details.โ
โWow, yes. You are . . .โ โEfficient?โ
โEfficient. Yes. And . . .โ โExciting?โ
She laughs again. โThatโs not what I was going to say.โ
โNo. But itโs true. I am a thrilling guy. Nonstop fun and adventures. Thatโs how I roll.โ
โYouโre funny.โ โThank you.โ
โIโll see you on Friday.โ
โYou will,โ he says, โunless . . .โ
Laurel has always taken care of her appearance. Even in the terrible early days of Ellieโs disappearance she would shower, choose clothes carefully, blot out the shadows under her eyes with pricey concealers, comb her hair until it shone. She had never let herself go. Herself was all she had left in those days.
Sheโs always made herself look nice but not worried about looking pretty for a long time. In fact, she stopped attempting to look pretty in approximately 1985 when she and Paul moved in together. So this, right now, her stupid face in the mirror, the open bags of cosmetics, the flow of nervous energy running through her that has her putting mascara on her eyelids instead of eyeliner, the terrible scrutiny and crossness at herself for allowing her face to get old, for not being pretty, for not being born with the genes of Christy Turlington, this is all new.
She grimaces and wipes the mascara away with a cleansing wipe. โBollocks,โ she mutters under her breath. โShit.โ
Behind her on her bed are the contents of her wardrobe. Itโs strange weather tonight. Muggy, for the time of year, but showers forecast, and a strong wind. And although her figure is fineโsheโs a standard size tenโall her going-out clothes are ones sheโs had since she was in her forties. Too high up the leg, too flowery, too much arm, too much chest. Nothing works, none of it. She surrenders, in the end, to a gray long-sleeve top and flared black trousers. Dull. But appropriate.
The time is seven oh five. She needs to leave the house in ten minutes to be on time for her date with Floyd. She quickly finishes her makeup. She has no idea if sheโs made herself look better or worse but sheโs run out of time to care.
At the front door of her apartment she stops for a moment. She keeps photos of her three children on a small console here. She likes the feeling of being greeted and bade farewell by them. She picks up the photo of Ellie. Fifteen years
old, the October half-term before she went missing; they were in Wales; her face was flushed with sea air and ball games on the beach with her brother and sister. Her mouth was fully open; you could see virtually to the back of her throat. She wore a tan woolly hat with a giant pompom on the top. Her hands were buried inside the sleeves of an oversized hoodie.
โIโm going on a date, Ellie,โ she says to her girl. โWith a nice man. Heโs called Floyd. I think youโd like him.โ
She passes her thumb over her girlโs smiling face, over the giant pompom.
Thatโs awesome, Mum, she hears her say,ย Iโm so happy for you. Have fun!
โIโll try,โ she replies to the emptiness. โIโll try.โ
The light is kind in the restaurant that Floydโs chosen for their date. The walls are lacquered black and gold, the furniture is dark, the lampshades are made of amethyst beads strung together over halogen bulbs. Heโs already there when she arrives, two minutes late. She thinks, He looks younger in this light, therefore I must look younger, too. This bolsters her as she approaches him and lets him stand and kiss her on both cheeks.
โYou look very elegant,โ he says. โThank you,โ she says. โSo do you.โ
Heโs wearing a black and gray houndstooth-checked shirt and a black corduroy jacket. His hair looks to have had a trim since their first meeting and he smells of cedar and lime.
โDo you like the restaurant?โ he asks, faking uncertainty and fooling nobody. โOf course I like the restaurant,โ she says. โItโs gorgeous.โ
โPhew,โ he says and she smiles at him. โHave you been here before?โ she asks.
โI have. But only for lunch. I always wanted to come back in the evening when it was all gloomy and murky and full of louche people.โ
Laurel looks around her at the clientele, most of whom look like they just came straight from the office or are on dates. โNot so louche,โ she says.
โYeah. I noticed. I amย veryย disappointed.โ She smiles and he passes her a menu. โAre you hungry?โ
โIโm ravenous,โ she says. And itโs true. Sheโs been too nervous to eat all day. And now that sheโs seen him and remembered why she agreed to share his cake with him, why she called him, why she arranged to meet him, her appetite has come back.
โYou like spicy food?โ โI love spicy food.โ
He beams at her. โThank God for that. I only really like people who like spicy food. That would have been a bad start.โ
It takes them a while even to look at the menu. Floyd is full of questions: Do you have a job? Brothers? Sisters? What sort of flat do you live in? Any hobbies? Any pets? And then, before their drinks have even arrived, โHow old are your kids?โ
โOh.โ She bunches her napkin up on her lap. โTheyโre twenty-seven and twenty-nine.โ
โWow!โ He looks at her askance. โYou do not look old enough to have kids that age. I thought teens, at a push.โ
She knows this is utter nonsense; losing a child ages you faster than a life spent chain-smoking on a beach. โIโm nearly fifty-five,โ she says. โAnd I look it.โ
โWell, no you donโt,โ he counters. โI had you at forty-something. You look great.โ
She shrugs off the compliment; itโs just silly.
Floyd smiles, pulls a pair of reading glasses from the inside pocket of his nice jacket and slips them on. โShall we get ordering?โ
They overorder horribly. Dishes keep arriving, bigger than either of them had anticipated, and they spend large portions of the evening rearranging glasses and water bottles and mobile phones to free up space for them. โIs that it?โ they ask each other every time a new dish is delivered. โPlease say that thatโs it.โ
They drink beer at first and then move on to white wine.
Floyd tells Laurel about his divorce from the mother of his elder daughter.
The girl is called Sara-Jade.
โI wanted to call her Sara-Jane, my ex wanted to call her Jade. It was a pretty simple compromise. I call her Sara. My ex calls her Jade. She calls herself SJ.โ He shrugs. โYou can give your kids any name you like and theyโll just go ahead and do their own thing with it ultimately.โ
โWhatโs she like?โ
โSara? Sheโs . . .โ For the first time Laurel sees a light veil fall across Floydโs natural effervescence. โSheโs unusual. Sheโs, er . . .โ He appears to run out of words. โWell,โ he says eventually. โI guess youโd just have to meet her.โ
โHow often do you see her?โ
โOh, quite a lot, quite a lot. She still lives at home, with my ex; they donโt get on all that well so she uses me as an escape hatch. So, most weekends, in fact. Which is a mixed blessing.โ He smiles wryly.
โAnd your other daughter? Whatโs her name?โ โPoppy.โ His face lights up at the mention of her.
โAnd whatโs she like? Is she very different to Sara-Jade?โ
โOh God yes.โ He nods slowly and theatrically. โYes indeed. Poppy is amazing, you know, sheโs insanely brilliant at maths, has the driest, wickedest sense of humor, takes no shit from anyone. She really keeps me on my toes, reminds me that I am not the be-all and end-all. She wipes the floor with me, in all respects.โ
โWow. She sounds great!โ she says, thinking that he could have been describing her own lost girl.
โShe is,โ he says. โI am blessed.โ โSo how come she lives with you?โ
โYes, well, thatโs the complicated part. Poppy and Sara-Jade do not have the same mother. Poppyโs mum was . . . I donโt know, a casual relationship that rather overran its limitations. If you see what I mean. Poppy wasnโt planned. Far from it. And we did try for a while to be a normal couple, but we never quite managed to pull it off. And then, when Poppy was four years old, she vanished.โ โVanished?โ Laurelโs heart races at the word, a word so imbued with meaning
to her.
โYeah. Dumped Poppy on my doorstep. Cleared out her bank account. Abandoned her house, her job. Never to be seen again.โ He picks up his wineglass and takes a considered sip, as if waiting for Laurel to pick up the commentary.
She has her hand to her throat. She feels suddenly as though this was all fated, that her meeting with this strangely attractive man was not as random as sheโd thought, that theyโd somehow recognized the strange holes in each other,
the places for special people who had been dramatically and mysteriously plucked from the ether.
โWow,โ she says. โPoor Poppy.โ
Floyd turns his gaze to the tablecloth, rolls a grain of rice around under his fingertip. โIndeed,โ he says. โIndeed.โ
โWhat do you think happened to her?โ
โTo Poppyโs mother?โ he asks. โChrist, I have no idea. She was a strange woman. She could have ended up anywhere,โ he says. โLiterally anywhere.โ
Laurel looks at him, judging the appropriateness of her next question. โDo you ever think maybe sheโs dead?โ
He looks up at her darkly and she knows that she has gone too far. โWho knows?โ he says. โWho knows.โ And then the smile reappears, the conversation moves along, an extra glass of wine each is ordered, the fun recommences, the date continues.