“And then when I became a model in high school, I heard they put my picture up on the wall as ‘thinspiration’ or whatever for the kids. You know, to encourage them to eat healthy. But I’m like, babes, it’s not that complicated. You just stop eating and start doing a bunch of blow.”
Quentin laughed, and Cleo forced herself to join. She could see the couple nervously trying to digest this new information. Cleo was so tired of being the kind of person who made other people uncomfortable. She could see it when she was with Frank, strangers trying to work out their relationship to one another. Too young to be her father, too old to be her partner. And Quentin specialized in making people feel uncomfortable. She used to get a thrill from it—it felt like a repudiation of her stiff British upbringing—but now it only exhausted her.
Paddy moved to unplug the vacuum. “Well, we’re about to have our dinner. So if everything with the Dyson looks good …”
“We eat so early now,” Anna said apologetically and rubbed her protruding belly. “I can barely stay awake past nine.”
“When are you due?” asked Cleo.
“You guys should go to the Duplex one night,” said Quentin. “It’s right around the corner from here. I sing there sometimes. If you can stay awake, I mean.” Quentin looked meaningfully at Paddy.
“We should let you eat,” said Cleo.
“Well, I hope you enjoy it,” Paddy said, motioning toward the vacuum perched between them like a watchful animal.
“I always do,” said Quentin with just the slightest wink.
“Why do you do that?” asked Cleo. They were back outside on the street corner, Cleo hopping from foot to foot to stay warm. An ambulance drove past, sirenless, illuminating their faces.
“Do what?”
Quentin lit a cigarette and handed the pack to her.
“Lie to strangers. About us.”
“Why not?” shrugged Quentin. “It’s not like we’re ever going to see them again. Although I wouldn’t mind seeing more of old Paddycakes.” He wiggled his eyebrows over his glasses.
“I think he was aware,” said Cleo.
“Good,” said Quentin. “Always good to give a man options.”
“And what about Alex?”
“What about him? He’s not my boyfriend.”
Cleo exhaled. Had Quentin always been this prickly and defensive? It felt impossible to talk to him—just when she needed to talk to someone most.
“Their life seemed so … simple,” said Cleo.
“If you’re using simple as a euphemism for boring, then yes, it was very simple,” said Quentin, pulling out his phone. “There’s a party with an open bar tonight, if we get there before ten.”
“No, I meant it seemed nice,” she said. “Happy.”
“Oh god, Cleo, you’re not going to let Frank knock you up, are you?”
“We’d have to be having sex for that happen.” Cleo blushed. She hadn’t told anyone that.
“Good,” said Quentin without looking up from his phone. “You’re not cut out for that.” Quentin affected his elderly queen voice. “‘We are not those kind of people, honey.’”
Cleo immediately regretted saying anything. Why should he care about her failing marriage anyway? Why should she expect anyone to care? Quentin tried to insist she come get a drink with him, but she pretended she was having dinner with Frank.
“Tell Frank about the party tonight,” said Quentin as he crawled into the back seat of a cab with the vacuum. “You know he likes an open bar.”
Cleo’s smile collapsed as soon as the taxi pulled away. Her face was a white tent with the ropes coming loose, everything falling at once. The evening had brought a freezing wind and people were huddled together, hurrying into the warmth of restaurants and homes. She walked south toward her apartment, shivering. She was trying to think of a single person she admired who lived a happy life. Quentin was certainly no example. He wore himself like an elaborate, glittering costume full of pins.
It occurred to her that Anders seemed content, in his own selfish way. The thought was unbearable. She’d called him the day after Frank returned. No answer. It had taken weeks of silence for her to finally understand that she would not hear from him again. The phrase she kept thinking was that Anders had washed his hands of her. She was the smut, and he wanted to be clean. When Frank told her Anders had accepted a job in LA, she knew he had rinsed her off him for good. Frank had been looking to her for comfort, but she’d only stared at him mutely. On the night of Anders’s going-away party, she’d feigned sickness and lay, unsleeping, in bed for the whole evening and night. Just his name sent a hot wave of humiliation through her. Of course she couldn’t have been happy with Anders. She couldn’t imagine herself being happy with anyone. Quentin was right. She was not those kind of people.
Cleo had reached the gardening store near her and Frank’s apartment. She had always loved glimpsing the courtyard filled with palm trees as she walked past, an unlikely slice of the tropical between the blandly gray. Without thinking, she walked through the entrance. Plant life was all around her instantly. It was like being in a Henri Rousseau painting. Cleo closed her eyes. The air smelled green.
“Need help?”
A young man wearing overalls was looking at her.
“How did you know?” asked Cleo. She began to laugh. Why was she here? She was there to buy a new blue orchid, that must be it. She had broken the blue orchid. “Do you have orchids?”
“Most of them are in the hothouse. You want me to help you pick one out?”
Cleo shook her head and walked in the direction he pointed. The warmth of the hothouse enveloped her immediately. A sweet, pungent odor enfolded her. Cleo could feel the pores of her skin pop open like hundreds of curious eyes. Everything was so close, flooding back inside her. The orchids were arranged in rows; creamy white, hot fuchsia, buttery yellow, vulva pink … but no blue. There was only one indigo-blue orchid, and she had destroyed it.
She looked at the rows of pert little flower faces staring up at her. They were so fleshly, so human. Cleo stroked a crimson petal with the tip of her finger. She had expected it to feel supple, velvety, but it was waxen and stiff. So they were not faces at all, but cadavers. These flowers were all dead and pretending to be alive. They were rotting behind their waxen masks. The fragrance of flowers plugged her nostrils and filled her throat. She was choking on the sweet, putrid scent. She grasped for the door and escaped back into the cold evening.