Read Christmas at Tiffany's Online
Authors: Karen Swan
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Contemporary Women, #Holidays, #General
‘Ah-ha!’ Cassie said, pulling out her welly-green muck boots from the hall cupboard and staring down at them wistfully. How ironic, she thought – that they’d remained unworn since her first day here, only to be worn again on her last.
They travelled down in the lift together, waving cheerily to Bill, who was about to clock off.
Brett looked dashing in his penguin suit and Cassie felt a well of resentment rise up in her as she waved them off. She knew that right now, this very instant, across the pond, the Hogmanay reel that she and Gil had held every year would be in full flight. The bells would have sounded an hour ago, the first-footers would have turned up with their lumps of coal, and kilts would be flying, sashes slipping, men whirling and women twirling as they danced in the new year.
She wanted to be doing something that could compete on that scale too – laughter and noise, music and drinks, finery and flirting. She didn’t want to spend it sitting in an empty loft with fairy lights in an artful heap on the floor and Blondie on the iPod. This New Year’s Eve had to be memorable, iconic. It had to show Gil she was okay without him – even if he’d never know it.
She set off and trudged through the snow alone. It was still pristine, and as clean and fluffy as freshly washed feathers, but she knew that by daybreak it would be tainted, melting into a grey slush as revellers and gritting trucks and multitudes of cabs did their worst. She was almost pleased that she wouldn’t be here to watch the city sink back into its greyness.
Almost.
She walked along, past partygoers and couples all en route to somewhere vibrant and alive. She felt their energy and good cheer as they smiled and wished her a good new year as they passed. If they only knew what this one had been like, she thought, smiling back.
She tried to buck up, to be flattered that Luke wanted her all to himself. Kelly had been right. Who would have thought it? In spite of his reputation and her determination not to get attached, things had turned serious between them. He wasn’t making it easy for her to leave, and she already knew they weren’t going to sleep at all tonight.
She turned into his street, past the red-brick buildings that characterized this part of the city. All around, the sounds of parties in high-up apartments bounced off the walls, echoing and mixing until the city seemed almost to vibrate with celebration.
She pressed the entry buzzer and waited for the street door to click open.
‘Hi, babe,’ his voice said through the intercom.
She climbed the stairs and rapped on the door.
‘Hey,’ he said, opening it and sweeping her into his arms there and then in the lobby.
‘You’re . . . you’re in black tie!’ she said, wriggling back to get a better look at him.
He shrugged and smiled at her. ‘What can I tell you? I wanted to make tonight special for you.’
‘But you said you hate wearing penguin suits,’ she said, the irritation spilling out in her voice as she looked down at her padded coat, skinny jeans and muck boots. ‘Look at me! You could have warned me,’ she moaned, shrugging off her coat and stamping her feet on the floor to dislodge the snow. Swinging the door open, she walked into the loft. ‘If I’d known, I’d have—’
‘
SURPRISE!!
’ came a cheer from the far side of the room. In front of her, Kelly and Brett and Bas, Stefano and his fiancée Ilya, Raoul, Bonnie, Molly and a scattering of Luke’s friends cheered loudly. They were all wearing sparkly cone hats on their heads and holding glasses of champagne in their hands. Balloons bounced across the floor, hoovering up dust, and streamers hung dreamily from the black-and-white galleries. Someone started up the music.
‘I can’t believe it,’ she said in utter amazement, turning back to him, her hands up at her mouth. ‘You threw me a leaving party?’
‘Not exactly,’ he smiled, fishing in his jacket pocket and bringing out a key.
He was biting his lip, but his eyes betrayed his excitement. He took a deep breath. ‘I want you to have this. I want you to move in with me, Cassie.’ He linked his arms around her waist, pulling her in to him. ‘I want you to . . .’
But she’d already caught sight of a huge banner hanging above the door. It said just one thing.
‘Stay!’
The driver let her out on the corner, clearly without giving any indication to the cars behind, whose drivers honked their horns and shook furious fists at her – as if it was her fault – as they swerved on the cobbles, their tyres squealing, whilst the driver unloaded her bags from the boot. She had arrived here with vastly more luggage than what she’d arrived in New York with. Had she been stopped at Customs on the way through, they’d have assumed she worked in the undertaking trade, such was the quantity of black clothing inside the suitcases.
Anouk was sitting watching from a table next to the window, her signature tortoiseshell shades on, even though it was New Year’s Day and the sky was boasting all the brightness of a duvet. A tiny espresso was sitting in front of her, and she was holding a cigarette between her fingers.
Cassie clattered over, having to make several trips to get her bags through the narrow gaps between the tables.
‘
Chérie
,’ Anouk beamed, getting up at last to proffer three kisses. ‘
Bienvenue à Paris!
’
She put a gentle hand on Cassie’s shoulder, tipping her head slightly to the side as if in sympathy. ‘I must be honest, I did not think you would come. Even yesterday, all day, I was waiting for the call when you would say you were staying after all.’
‘He threw a Stay party.’
‘A
what
?’
Cassie bit her lip hard and nodded. ‘Talked Kelly and Bas into it too. Told them I’d be
bound
to stay if he asked me to live with him.’
‘I see,’ Anouk said quietly, taking in Cassie’s grey pallor and swollen eyes. ‘Come. Sit,’ she said, turning and catching the waiter’s eye – which was easy enough since he hadn’t stopped staring at her since she’d arrived – for more coffees.
Cassie crumpled into the chair, vaguely tuning into the different frequency in the café. In New York, when she and Kelly had hung out at Sant Ambroeus, it was to a backdrop of steamed milk, soprano laughter and Marc Jacobs’ ‘Daisy’. Here, the coffee was as dark as treacle, Shalimar hung in the air like chandeliers, and the conversational pitch was at tenor level.
She resisted the urge to rest her head in her hands, even though, being the first of January, she could probably pass herself off as weary reveller rather than lovelorn émigrée.
‘Tell me what happened.’
Cassie sighed, wishing she didn’t have to. All she had done all night was talk. Talk, talk, discuss, extrapolate and argue. And all to no avail.
‘He just doesn’t understand,’ she shrugged. ‘He thinks this . . . “plan”, coming to stay with you all . . . is nonsense. “It’s not how the real world works,” he said.’
Anouk considered for a moment. ‘I suppose that’s understandable. He’s underestimated what you’ve been through. I don’t mean just in the past four months, but in the past ten years.’ She lit a cigarette and inhaled deeply. ‘He doesn’t understand that when you married Gil, you were barely an adult. You’d seen nothing of the world. He, meanwhile, crosses it three times a month for work.’
The waiter arrived with their coffees, but Anouk ignored him.
‘You were living in a big house, on your own most of the time, in the middle of nowhere. And then you found yourself thrown back out into the world, with no warning, no planning. You didn’t see it coming. You were on a plane to New York within hours of finding out. You mustn’t blame him for not being able to imagine all that. I can scarcely believe it myself – and I was there.’
‘Me neither,’ Cassie mumbled, managing a wry smile.
‘As far as he’s concerned, he just fell in love with a beautiful new divorcee.’
Cassie blanched at the word. And anyway, it wasn’t true; they weren’t divorced yet. Not even close, in fact. Even though she had done the ‘right thing’ in honouring the pre-nup, they were clashing over the cause being cited in the papers. She wanted it to go through on his ‘unreasonable behaviour’ but Gil wanted ‘irreconcilable differences’, and they were both digging their heels in over it. Owning up to what he’d done to their marriage was the very least he owed her.
‘You were new to the city, new to the fashion industry, new to being single . . . Everything about you was fresh, unpretentious, innocent. That must have been exciting to him – you must have been totally unlike the other girls there. But you
have
had your heart broken,’ she reminded her. ‘Badly. And while on paper you’re free to fall in love again, in the real world, it’s going to take a lot longer than a season in New York to put you back together.’
Cassie nodded gratefully. Her earlier concerns about staying with Anouk had been overtaken in recent weeks by concerns about their vastly different attitude towards men. Anouk was secretive to the point of paranoia about her boyfriends. No one ever met them. She just had her fun, then moved on, it seemed, so Cassie had been more than a little worried that Anouk would brush Luke off as of no consequence, just a rebound relationship, a plaything to have kept her amused in the evenings and at weekends, when in reality he had been so much more than that – she wasn’t capable of using someone in such a cavalier way.
‘I tried explaining all that to him – that I’m still trying to find out who I am. Do you know what he said?’
Anouk waited.
‘He said I sounded like I’d been living in Los Angeles. Me!’ She shook her head. ‘I mean, when has my life ever been about navel-gazing? I’m the least self-informed person I know.’ She looked straight at Anouk, whose luxuriant hair tumbled casually about her shoulders. She was wearing a navy trench belted at the waist and a dusty-pink dotted Hermès scarf at her neck. ‘You’ve never doubted who you are, have you?’
Anouk twitched her mouth side to side, not even able to pretend for camaraderie’s sake. ‘
Non.
Never.’
Cassie sighed. ‘I wanted him to come out here and visit. I’d bought him a ticket.’
‘Did he take it?’
‘He wouldn’t. I ended up giving it to Bas. You know, I told him that these other trips – here, London – weren’t for ever. Just a few more months, and then if we were still . . . strong, happy, whatever, then I’d go back to New York at the end of the summer. Like you said, there were lots of reasons for me to stay there. Not just him.’ She shook her head, lacing her fingers together. ‘But he doesn’t believe in longdistance relationships.’
Anouk gave a little sigh. ‘Well, I don’t think I do either,
chérie
, if I’m honest.’
‘No?’
‘
Non.
Always been a disaster.’
Cassie looked up at her. ‘Do you think I did the right thing, coming here?’
‘Yes.’ Anouk placed a warm hand on her wrist.
‘So does Bas, even though he didn’t want me to go either. He really didn’t. But Luke . . . he’s so angry with me. He’s taken my coming here as a rejection of
him
. All I know is that . . . I have this feeling that I’m not quite there yet, wherever “there” is. I’ve got this instinct that I must keep going.’
‘Well you were right to follow it, and I for one am glad you’re here. If you are supposed to be with him, it will happen,’ Anouk smiled. ‘Love always finds a way.’
‘Don’t tell me you believe in destiny too?’
‘Of course. Doesn’t everybody?’
Cassie sighed and picked up the tiny cup, its handle so small she had to pinch it. ‘It rather seems they do. Yet again I think I might be the odd one out.’
The apartment was half a block away. They wheeled two bags each along the pavement, coming to a stop after a minute outside a pair of solid black arched double-height gates. Anouk unlocked them with a huge old key and they stepped into a courtyard. It was paved with grey cobbles worn to a rounded shine, and a fountain encircled by a dwarf wall sat in the middle. The apartments facing this side of the courtyard were flat-faced, boasting tall, narrow windows with silk curtains lavishly draped behind the glass, and topiaried trees were spaced equally, Versailles-style, along the wrought-iron balconies that were as finely rendered as filigree.
They walked into the building facing them at the back. It felt chilly and austere in the hallway, with no pictures or warm panelling on the walls, just a huge gilt mirror above a marble-topped console and a salmon-pink damask Louis Quinze chaise longue.
Anouk started climbing the sweeping stone staircase. ‘No lifts here, I’m afraid,’ she said. ‘Although it doesn’t matter so much when there are only three
étages
. How many were there in Kelly’s building?’
‘Well, she was on the twelfth floor, but there were sixteen in total. And her building’s considered pretty low.’
‘
Mon Dieu
. Lifts must be a basic human right there.’
‘They are,’ Cassie smiled. ‘Although Kelly’s a committed tower-runner.’
‘What’s that?’ Anouk asked breathlessly, clearly unused to carrying anything bigger than a Birkin up the steps.
‘Nutters running up the stairs of skyscrapers and tower blocks.’