Tiffy: It wasn’t like a memory, it’s not like something came into my mind’s eye . . .
Me: More like muscle memory?
She looks up.
Tiffy: Yeah. Exactly.
Pour the teas. Open fridge for milk and pause. It’s filled with trays of little pink cupcakes iced with ‘F and J’.
Tiffy pads over to join me, sliding an arm around my waist.
Tiffy: Ooh. These must be for the wedding happening after we leave.
Me: How closely do you think they paid attention to the quantity?
Tiffy laughs. Not quite a full laugh, and a little wet with tears, but still good.
Tiffy: Probably very. Although there are so many.
Me: Too many. I’d estimate . . . three hundred.
Tiffy: Nobody invites three hundred people to their wedding. Unless they’re really famous, or Indian.
Me: Is it a famous Indian person’s wedding?
Tiffy: Lordy Lord Illustrator didn’t explicitly say so.
Pinch two cupcakes and give one to Tiffy. Her eyes are still a little pink from crying, but she’s smiling now, and eats the cupcake in almost one bite. Suspect she needs sugar.
We eat in silence for a while, moving to lean against Aga side by side.
Tiffy: So . . . in your professional opinion . . .
Me: As a palliative care nurse?
Tiffy: As a vaguely medical person . . .
Oh, no. These conversations never go well. People always assume they teach us all the medicine in the world at nursing school, and that we remember it five years later.
Tiffy: Am I going to freak out like this every time we’re about to have sex? Because that is literally the most depressing thought ever.
Me, carefully: I suspect not. May just take some time to work out triggers and how to avoid them until you feel safer.
She looks at me sharply.
Tiffy: I’m not . . . I don’t want you to think . . . he never, you know. Hurt me.
Would like to dispute that. Seems he has hurt her rather a lot. But it’s definitely not my place, so I just go and fetch her another cupcake and hold it up for her to bite.
Me: I’m not presuming anything. Just want you to feel better.
Tiffy stares at me, then, from nowhere, pokes me in the cheek.
Me, with a yelp: Hey!
Cheek-poke is a lot more startling than I’d realised when I did it to her earlier.
Tiffy: You’re not real, are you? You’re implausibly nice.
Me: Am not. I’m a grumpy old man who dislikes most people.
Tiffy: Most?
Me: There are a small number of exceptions.
Tiffy: How do you choose them? The exceptions?
Shrug, uncomfortable.
Tiffy: Really. Seriously. Why me?
Me: Umm. Well. I suppose . . . There are some people I just feel comfortable with. Not many. But you were one before I even met you.
Tiffy looks at me, head tilted, eyes holding my gaze for so long I twist on the spot, itching to drop the subject. Eventually she leans forward and kisses me slowly, tasting of icing.
Tiffy: I’ll be worth the wait. You’ll see.
As if I’d ever doubted it.
55
Tiffy
I lean back in my desk chair, taking my eyes off the screen. I’ve been staring at it for way too long – the castle knitwear photos have been picked up on Daily Mail’s Femail, and it’s weird. Katherin is officially a celebrity. I can’t believe how quickly this has happened, and also can’t stop reading comments from other women about how hot Leon is in those photos. I obviously already know he’s hot, but still, it’s simultaneously horrible and kind of good to get external validation.
I wonder how he’s feeling about it. I’m hoping he’s too technologically incapable to scroll to the comments section on the Daily Mail, because some of the comments are really quite X-rated. There’s obviously a few racist ones in there as well, this being a comments section on the Internet, and everything briefly descends into an argument about global warming being a liberalist conspiracy, and before I know it I have circled my way into the plughole of the Internet and wasted half an hour following people’s outlandish opinions on whether Trump is a neo-Nazi and whether Leon’s ears are too big.
I go to counselling after work. As per usual Lucie sits in borderline uncomfortable silence for a while, and then, seemingly spontaneously, I start telling her awful, painful stuff I mostly can’t even bear to think about. How cleverly Justin made me believe I had a bad memory, so he could always say I’d misremembered things. How brazenly he convinced me I’d thrown a bunch of clothes out when