One Small Mistake(16)
Chapter Five
25 Days Before
Elodie Fray
Champagne hangovers are the worst. I wake up on Tuesday morning with a pneumatic drill in my head and sawdust in my mouth. Sunlight streams through the window in a blinding assault. Seefer leaps onto my bed, making me jump. I don’t remember letting her in last night. My landlord is dead set against pets but, last year, as I teetered to my front door, juggling shopping bags full of Christmas gifts, a little tortoiseshell cat started figure-of-eighting around my feet. She was so tiny, and it was raining so hard, I brought her inside and fed her ham from a packet in the fridge. Pretty sure she was a stray, I gave her a name and started adding a few cans of cat food to my weekly shop. I worry my landlord might make a surprise visit and kick me out for breach of contract but still, I can’t not let her in when she comes to my door.
Eyes closed, I curl into a ball on my side; everything aches, like I fell down a flight of stairs. Maybe I did. I reach for the memory of arriving home but there’s nothing except a black hole.
Seefer bumps my hand so I stroke her, running my palm over the little rust-coloured heart shape on her flank which I love, and her purring quiets my mind. She meows, wanting food. I sit up. And frown. The dress I wore last night is neatly folded on my stool, and my heels are carefully lined up by the door. Drunk me would never have achieved that. Drunk me staggers into her room, kicks off her heels and passes out face down on the bed. It’s only when I see the water and pills on the side with little Post-it notes reading ‘Drink Me’ and ‘Swallow Me’ that I realise who’s behind this. Just on cue, I hear a key in my front door.
A few seconds later, Jack strides into the bedroom carrying a brown paper bag and says, ‘Welcome back to the living.’
‘If this is what living feels like, I’d rather be dead.’ I flop back down onto my pillow. ‘Why do the most terrible hangovers happen on the sunniest days?’
‘How’re you feeling?’
‘Peachy.’
Jack raises one disbelieving brow. ‘Really?’
‘Well … I feel like a peach. You know, one that’s been flung off the top of a fifty-storey building and splattered on the hot tarmac in a mess of insides and fluids.’
He nods solemnly and the bed dips as he sits down on the end of it. ‘And that peach – are most of its fluids gin?’
‘Nope. Tequila and champagne.’
He winces. ‘That’ll do it.’ He reaches into the paper bag. ‘Here,’ he says, handing me a croissant wrapped in a napkin.
Even though I’m starving, the thought of eating sends another violent surf of nausea through me. I put it down beside me on the bed. ‘Later. Thanks though – you didn’t have to get breakfast.’
‘What happened last night? You weren’t making a lick of sense.’ There’s the slightest American twang when he speaks, left over from the years he spent in New York as a child. I love the American accent, it makes me feel as though everything is going to turn out happy, like in the movies; the guy gets the girl, the villain is defeated, and she was always a hooker with a heart of gold. ‘When I picked you up from the station, you were rambling about Margot’s book?’
Oh god.
Last night ricochets back and I taste the lie on my tongue. Why did I have to let Margot think I have an offer too? The throbbing in my skull intensifies. ‘Yeah,’ I say without looking at him. ‘Yeah, Margot has a book deal.’
‘I thought she was a wedding planner …’
‘She is … but you know, her mum’s a famous model – retired now – and, well, Harriers has commissioned Reyna to write about her life. Margot’s contributing, writing her own chapters.’ I’m surprised by how level-headed and calm I sound, like I’m simply recounting how many drinks we ordered at the bar.
‘How did your meeting go?’ he asks. ‘Did Harriers make an offer?’
The grief is instant.
‘No,’ I say – I can’t lie to Jack too. ‘No. They didn’t.’
He is silent. I wait, but he doesn’t speak, so I glance up and see the anger in the tenseness of his jaw, the flash of his eyes. ‘They’re idiots.’
‘Except they’re not. They’re professionals. They know the difference between good books and bad ones.’
‘It is good. Why don’t they want it?’
‘Romances aren’t selling right now. Stories based on real life events are. They want something grittier.’
‘Okay,’ he says slowly. ‘Write that.’
‘Sure, I can write about how I dropped a career in marketing to pursue something I’m clearly not cut out for.’ My laughter is mirthless. ‘Everyone likes a tragedy, right?’
He gives me a look. ‘This one-woman woe-is-me gig is going to get old. Fast. You’re better than this, Fray. You’re talented and ambitious and—’
‘Full of woe.’ I hold his stare. ‘I’m twenty-eight, I turn twenty-nine in less than two months, I don’t have a house or a husband or a career—’
‘That’s your mother talking.’
‘Well, maybe she’s right. Maybe I have made a huge mistake.’ Jack wants me to be happy, but I’m hungover, and I don’t have the energy to fake it. ‘The longer I go without a book deal, the harder it is to justify putting my career on hold. What will Mum say when she finds out the dream I’ve been chasing has been handed to Margot like it’s a bag of pick ’n’ mix?’ My parents want me to strive for more. Like Ada and all she has. Like Ruby. Like all their friends’ children. I’m in a race I didn’t want to enter. Along the track, others are snatching things up from the side: careers, marriage, children, houses, book deals. But anything I manage to grasp slips from my fingers a few strides later. Now, I’m so far behind everyone else, I’m terrified I’ll never catch up. ‘Maybe I should just go back to marketing.’