On her birthday, Laurel receives a large bouquet of purple hyacinths and laurel from Floyd. Paul always used to put laurel in her bouquets. But this doesnโt take away from the pleasure of it, the startle of his thoughtfulness. And a comparison to her ex-husband is no bad thing, no bad thing at all.
Later on he takes her to a bar in Covent Garden called Champagne & Fromage, which delivers what its name promises. Throughout the evening Laurel keeps her eyes on her surroundings, hoping for a glimpse of Hanna, who said she was โgoing somewhere in town with matesโ when Laurel had inquired about her birthday plans. But she doesnโt see Hanna anywhere and so the mystery of the man called โTโ stretches on.
โWhenโs your birthday?โ she asks Floyd, her knife breaking into a tartine. โThe thirty-first of July,โ he replies. โRoughly.โ
โRoughly?โ
He shrugs and smiles. โThings were a bit chaotic when I was born.โ โReally?โ
โYeah. It was a steep trajectory for my parents. From the gutter to the stars.โ โAnd the gutter was . . . ?โ
He narrows his eyes and she hears a small intake of breath. โMy mum was fourteen when I was born. My dad was sixteen. No one wanted to know. They were homeless for a time. I was born in a public toilet, I believe. In a park. They took me to a hospital . . . and left me there.โ
Laurelโs breath catches.
โI was dressed in a blue suit and a fresh nappy, wrapped in a blanket. I had on a soft hat and mittens. I was in a box lined with a cushion. Theyโd written my name on a piece of paper. โThis is Floyd, please look after him.โ My parents came back for me three days later. By that time Iโd been taken into emergency foster care. There was no way they were giving an abandoned baby back to a pair of
scrawny teens with no means of support. It took them nearly a year to get me back. I think it was the fight to do so that fueled my parentsโ ambition.โ
โAnd how did you find out about it? Did they tell you?โ
โYes, they told me. My God, they told me. All the time. Whenever I was misbehaving theyโd march it out: โWe should have left you there in the hospital. Weโll take you back there, shall we?โ โ A muscle twitches in Floydโs cheek.
โBut do you remember anything about it?โ she asks. โAnything about those days?โ
โNothing at all,โ he replies. โMy very first memory is my dad bringing home a plastic car. It had a little ignitionโโhe mimes turning a key in a lockโโand it made a noise when you turned it, an engine starting. And I remember sitting in that car for an hour, maybe more, just turning that ignition, over and over. I was about four then and we were living in an apartment in Boston with a balcony, views across town, all the bright lights and the ocean. So, no, I donโt remember the bad days. I donโt remember them at all.โ
โYou know,โ she says, โyouโre the first person I ever met in my whole life who didnโt know their birthday.โ
He smiles. โYup. Me, too.โ
Laurel glances about herself. For so long she has been the story: the woman whose daughter disappeared, the woman at the press conference, the woman in the papers, the woman who had to bury her daughter in tiny fragments. But now here is another human with a terrible story. What other stories surround her? she wonders. And how many stories has she missed all these years while sheโs been so wrapped up in her own?
โYour parents sound amazing,โ she says.
Floyd blinks and smiles sadly. โIn many ways I suppose they are,โ he says. But thereโs a chip of ice in his delivery, something sad and dark that he canโt tell her about. And thatโs fine. Sheโll leave it there. She understands that not everything is conversational fodder, not everything is for sharing.
They go back to Floydโs house after dinner. Sara-Jade is curled up in the big armchair again, a laptop resting on her thighs, headphones on. She jumps slightly as Laurel and Floyd walk into the room.
โHappy birthday,โ she says in her whispery voice. โDid you have fun?โ Laurel is taken aback by the unexpected overture.
โYes,โ she says, โyes, thank you. We did.โ
Floyd squeezes Laurelโs shoulder and says, โIโm just popping to the loo, be back in a minute,โ and Laurel knows his withdrawal is deliberate, that heโs hoping she and SJ might finally have a chance to bond.
โIโm a bit tipsy,โ she says to SJ. โWe went to a champagne and cheese place.
Had more champagne than cheese.โ
SJ smiles uncertainly. โHow old are you?โ she says. โIf you donโt mind me asking?โ
โNo, of course I donโt mind. Iโve never understood people being ashamed of their age. As if itโs a failure of some kind. Iโm fifty-five,โ she says. โAnd a few hours.โ
SJ nods.
โAre you staying over?โ Laurel asks.
โNo,โ says SJ. โNo. I think Iโll go home and sleep in my own bed. Iโve got work tomorrow.โ
โOh,โ says Laurel. โWhat sort of work do you do?โ
โBits and bobs. Babysitting. Dog walking.โ She lowers the lid of the laptop and uncurls her legs. โModeling tomorrow. For a life-drawing class.โ
โWow. Is that clothed, or . . . ?โ
โNaked,โ SJ says. โJust as you say that thereโs no shame in getting older, I think thereโs no shame in being naked. And donโt you think,โ she continues, โthat if people say you shouldnโt be allowed to ban burkinis on the beach then, really, the natural extrapolation of that is that full nudity shouldnโt be banned either. Like, who decides which bit of a body should or shouldnโt be seen in public? If youโre saying that one woman legally has to cover her breasts and her minge, then how can you tell another woman that sheโs not allowed to cover her legs or her arms? I mean, how does that even make sense?โ
Laurel nods and laughs. โGood point,โ she says. โI hadnโt thought about it like that.โ
โNo,โ she says. โNo one thinks about anything properly these days. Everyone just believes what people on Twitter tell them to believe. Itโs all propaganda, however much itโs dressed up as liberal right thinking. Weโre a nation of sheep.โ
Laurel feels suddenly very drunk and has to resist the temptation to sayย baaaaa. Instead she nods solemnly. She has barely absorbed another personโs opinion for over a decade. She is no sheep.
โYour daughter was Ellie Mack,โ says SJ, as if reading the changing direction of Laurelโs thoughts.
โYes,โ Laurel replies, surprised. โDid your dad tell you?โ
โNo,โ she says. โI googled you. Iโve been reading everything on the Internet about it. Itโs really, really sad.โ
โYes,โ Laurel agrees. โItโs very sad.โ โShe was really pretty.โ
โThank you. Yes, she was.โ
โShe looked really like Poppy, donโt you think?โ
Laurelโs head clears, suddenly and sharply, and she finds herself saying, almost defensively, โNo, not really. I mean, maybe a little, around the mouth. But lots of people look like people, donโt they?โ
โYes,โ SJ replies, โthey do.โ