Another Country

Read Another Country for Free Online Page B

Book: Read Another Country for Free Online
Authors: Anjali Joseph
she said.
    He grinned, she thought, in the dark, and turned to put in the digicode. The lock clicked, and he pushed one of the great doors. Leela stepped over the threshold.
    The stone stairway was cold and damp; the flat was on the second floor, with a burgundy door. Simon used his key, and Leela went in. A dark crowded hallway – a small wooden table, boots near a closet with a half-open door, and, ‘Here,’ said Simon, ‘come into the main room.’
    It was very large, with two big sofas, and a white wall of shelving, in which were neatly arranged paperbacks, and various other objects: cigarettes, a road map of the Île-de-France, a glass ashtray, a box of mints, black and grey plastic film canisters, keys, coins, and a scuffed copy of In Cold Blood , splayed open on its front. The room reminded Leela of a larger, airier version of an Oxbridge fellow’s study, and she felt impersonally indulged, welcomed in the way students always were in those rooms – seated on a sofa and given coffee or a drink to sip.
    â€˜Beautiful room,’ she said. She looked up at the high ceiling.
    â€˜Isn’t it great?’ Simon’s hand rested briefly on her shoulder. He walked past, to the coffee table, and removed a mug, piled up a few large books, flicked at a cushion. ‘This room is really why I took the flat. Well, that and the upstairs. Come with me, I’m going to the kitchen to get us a drink.’
    He walked out, and Leela followed him, into the hallway and then a small, plant-filled kitchen. ‘The lady whose house it is asked if I’d be willing to look after the plants,’ he said, smiling at Leela. She brushed gingerly past a large spider plant, whose leggy babies, each on a long stalk, were reaching for the floor tiles.
    Simon was opening a cupboard. ‘Would you like a drink-drink? A gin and tonic, or a vodka?’
    Leela hesitated. He grinned, his hand on the cupboard door. ‘You can have anything you like. Even if it’s non-alcoholic.’
    â€˜Do you – can I have some tea?’
    â€˜Tea?’ His grin was wide, but not without warmth. ‘Sure you can. With milk and sugar? Real tea?’
    She nodded. He smiled to himself as he filled up the kettle. ‘A cup of tea.’ While it was boiling, he got out tea bags – Assam, she noted sadly – a jar of sugar, and a tall glass. She watched him move around the kitchen, and, looking at the red melamine counter, scored in places, she felt a fleeting affection for the family life that might have gone on here earlier.
    Simon worked methodically, unhurried: he took tonic out of the fridge, and a lime, sliced it, got the ice cubes and so on as he made his drink. Leela watched. She was aware that he didn’t really care whether or not she had been there, and this made her relax and warm to him in a way she would have found difficult to explain.
    He took out the tea bag, smiled at her, put in milk, and – which also made her warm to him – two and a half spoons of sugar without comment, stirred it, gave her the mug. He picked up his own glass.
    â€˜Let’s go through to the other room.’
    Leela followed him, and he put on a floor lamp near the back sofa and sat down. The room was dim, hospitable. The enormous windows gave onto a damp, dark blue night.
    Leela sat on the same sofa, and sipped her tea. It was too hot. She put it down.
    â€˜Just a second.’ Simon got up and went towards the kitchen. He was gone for a little while, and she reached for the heavy art book in front of her, a collection of photographs entitled Doorways . She leafed through it randomly: entrances in what looked like Mexico, some that seemed to be here in Paris, London, she thought …
    Simon returned, smoking, carrying another ashtray. He stood looking down at her. ‘Like the book?’
    She smiled at him. ‘It’s interesting. Lots of, well, doorways.’
    He laughed, and

Similar Books

Crashland

Sean Williams

Daughters

Elizabeth Buchan

Neptune's Ring

Ali Spooner

A Minute on the Lips

Cheryl Harper