Secret Smile
By Nicci French
Warner Books
Copyright © 2006
Nicci French
All right reserved.
ISBN: 9780446617109
Chapter One
I've had a dream recently, the same dream, over and over again, and
each time I think it's real. I'm back at the ice rink on the
afternoon I first met Brendan. The cold stings my face, I can hear
the scrape of the blades on the ice and then I see him. He's
glancing over at me with that funny look of his, as if he's noticed
me and he's got something else on his mind. I see all over again
that he's good looking in a way that not everybody would notice. His
hair is glossy black like a raven's wing. His face is oval and his
cheekbones and chin are prominent. He has an amused expression on
his face as if he has seen the joke before anybody else and I like
that about him. He looks at me and then gives me a second look and
he's coming over to say hello. And in my dream I think: Good. I've
been given another chance. It doesn't have to happen. This time I
can stop it now, here, before it's even begun.
But I don't. I smile at what he says to me and I say things back to
him. I can't hear the words and I don't know what they are, but they
must be funny because Brendan laughs and says something and then I
laugh, and so it goes, back and forth. We're like actors in a
long-running show. We can say our lines without thinking and I know
what's going to happen to this boy and this girl. They have never
met before but he is a friend of a friend of hers and so they are
surprised that this is the first time they have come across each
other. I'm trying to stop myself, in this dream that I both know and
don't know is a dream. An ice rink is a good place for a boy and a
girl to meet, especially when neither of them can skate. Because
they have to lean against each other for support and it's almost
compulsory for the boy to put his steadying arm around the girl and
they help each other up and laugh at their joint predicament. Her
laces are frozen together and he helps her to untie them, her foot
in his lap for convenience. When the group starts to break up, it's
only natural that the boy asks the girl for her phone number.
The girl is surprised by a moment of reluctance. It's been fun but
does she need something like this at the moment? She looks at the
boy. His eyes are shining from the cold. He is smiling at her
expectantly. It seems easier just to give him the number and so she
does, even though I am shouting for her not to. But the shouting is
silent and in any case she is me and she doesn't know what is going
to happen but I do.
I'm wondering: How is it that I know what is going to happen? I know
they are going to meet twice-a drink, a movie-and then, on her sofa,
she'll think,
Well, why not? And so I'm thinking if I know what's
going to happen, it must mean that I can't change it. Not a single
detail. I know they'll sleep together twice more, or is it three
times? Always in the girl's flat. After the second time she sees a
strange toothbrush in the mug next to hers. A moment of confusion.
She will have to think about that. She will barely have time.
Because the next afternoon, her mind will be made up for her. It's
at about that moment-the girl coming home from work, opening the
door of her flat-that I wake up.
AFTER WEEKS OF GRAYNESS and drizzle, it was a beautiful autumn
afternoon. A blue sky just beginning to lose its electric glare, a
sharp wind that was shaking bright leaves from the trees. It had
been a long day, and I'd spent most of it up a ladder painting a
ceiling, so my neck and right arm ached and my whole body felt grimy
and sore, and there were splashes of white emulsion over my knuckles
and in my hair. I was thinking about an evening alone: a hot bath,
supper in front of the TV in my dressing gown. Cheese on toast, I
thought. Cold beer.
So I opened the door to my flat and walked in, letting my bag drop
to the floor. And then I saw him. Brendan was sitting on the sofa,
or rather, lying back with his feet up. There was a cup of tea on
the floor beside him and he was reading something that he closed as
I came in.
"Miranda." He swung his legs off the cushion and stood up. "I
thought you'd be back later than this." And he took me by the
shoulders and kissed me on the lips. "Shall I pour you some tea?
There's some in the pot. You look all in."
I could hardly think which question to ask first. He hardly knew
what job I did. What was he doing, thinking about when I finished
work? But most of all, what was he doing in my flat? He looked as if
he had moved in.
"What do you think you're doing?"
"I let myself in," he said. "I used the keys under the flowerpot.
That's all right, isn't it? You've got paint in your hair, you
know."
I bent down and picked up the book from the sofa. A worn hard-backed
exercise book, faded red, the spine split. I stared at it. It was
one of my old diaries.
"That's private," I said. "Private!"
"I couldn't resist," he said with his roguish smile. He saw my
expression and held up his hands. "Point taken, I'm sorry, it was
wrong. But I want to know all about you. I just wanted to see what
you were like before I met you." He reached a hand out and gently
touched my hair where the paint was, as if to scratch it away. I
pulled away.
"You shouldn't have."
Another smile.
"I won't do it again then," he said in a playfully apologetic tone.
"All right?"
I took a deep breath. No. I didn't think it was all right.
"It's from when you were seventeen," he said. "I like to think of
you at seventeen."
I looked at Brendan and already he seemed to be receding into the
distance. He was on the platform and I was on the train that was
pulling away and leaving him behind forever. I was thinking how to
say it, as cleanly and finally as possible. You can say,
I don't
think this is working anymore, as if the relationship was a machine
that has stopped functioning, some vital bit having gone missing.
Or,
I don't think we should continue, as if you were both on a road
together and you've looked ahead and seen that the road forks, or
peters out in rocks and brambles. You can say,
I don't want to keep
on seeing you. Only of course you don't mean
see, but touch, hold,
feel, want. And if they ask why-
why is it over? what have I done
wrong?-then you don't tell them:
You get on my nerves, your laugh
suddenly irritates me, I fancy someone else. No, of course you say,
You haven't done anything. It's not you, it's me. These are the
things we all learn.
Almost before I knew what I was about to do, I said the words. "I
don't think we should go on with this."
For a moment, his expression didn't alter. Then he stepped forward
and laid his hand on my shoulder. "Miranda," he said.
"I'm sorry, Brendan." I thought of saying something else, but I
stopped myself.
His hand was still on my shoulder. "You're probably exhausted," he
said. "Why don't you have a bath and put on some clean clothes."
I stepped away from his hand. "I mean it."
"I don't think so."
"What?"
"Are you about to get your period?"
"Brendan ..."
"You're due about now, aren't you?"
"I'm not playing games."
"Miranda." He had a coaxing tone to his voice, as if I were a
frightened horse and he was approaching me with sugar on his
outstretched palm. "We've been too happy for you to just end it like
this. All those wonderful days and nights."
"Eight," I said.
"What?"
"Times we met. Is it even that many?"
"Each time special."
I didn't say,
Not for me, although it was the truth. You can't say,
It really didn't mean much after all. It was just one of those
things that happened. I shrugged. I didn't want to make a point. I
didn't want to discuss things. I wanted him to leave.
"I've arranged for us to meet some mates of mine for a drink this
evening. I told them you were coming."
"What?" I said.
"In half an hour."
I stared at him.
"Just a quick drink."
"You really want us to go out and pretend we're still together?"
"We need to give this time," he said.
It sounded so ridiculous, so like a marriage guidance counselor
giving glib advice to a couple who had been together for years and
years and had children and a mortgage that I couldn't help myself. I
started to laugh and then stopped and felt cruel. He managed a smile
that wasn't really a smile at all, but lips stretched tight over
teeth, a grimace or a snarl.
"You can laugh," he said at last. "You can do this and still laugh."
"Sorry," I said. My voice was still shaky. "It's a nervous kind of
laugh."
"Is that how you behaved with your sister?"
"My sister?" The air seemed to cool around me.
"Yes. Kerry." He said the name softly, musing over it. "I read about
it in your diary. I know. Mmm?"
I walked over to the door and yanked it open. The sky was still blue
and the breeze cooled my burning face.
"Get out," I said.
"Miranda."
"Just go."
So he left. I pushed the door shut gently, so he wouldn't think I
was slamming it behind him, and then I suddenly felt nauseous. I
didn't have the meal in front of the TV I'd been looking forward to
so much. I just had a glass of water and went to bed and didn't
sleep.
My relationship with Brendan had been so brief that my closest
friend, Laura, had been on holiday while it was going on and missed
it completely. And it was so entirely over and in the past that when
she got back and rang me and told me about what a great time she and
Tony had-well, after all that, I didn't bother to tell her about
Brendan. I just listened as she talked about the holiday and the
weather and the food. Then she asked me if I was seeing someone and
I said no. She said that was funny because she'd heard something and
I said, well, nothing much and anyway it was over. And she giggled
and said she wanted to hear all about it and I said there was
nothing to tell. Nothing at all.
Continues...
Excerpted from Secret Smile
by Nicci French
Copyright © 2006 by Nicci French.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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