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Chapter 2.
There was so much to take in, Jo didn't know where to look first. The Highgate house had seemed small from the outside, smaller even than her parents'. It was a nondescript end-of-terrace Victorian house with no front garden. It had only one window facing the ugly north London road that looked nothing like a village, with or without a high gate. And the road was so jammed with enormous four-by-fours Jo wondered if they were occasionally used as extra rooms.
She rang the doorbell and waited. Eventually a ha.s.sled Francesca, soon-to-be-ex nanny, opened the front door, and Jo stared at the Tardis in front of her.
The entrance hall was practically a room in itself, with bright Victorian floor tiles and ceiling cornicing framing a filigree radiator cover. A chaise longue stretched across the opposite wall, with a mock Victorian-style telephone on the minute table next to it. The walls were painted a sumptuous red. Wordlessly, Francesca motioned Jo to wait in the living room and shut the door behind her. There Jo stood, executing a slow-motion 360-degree turn, trying to take in as much as possible in as little time as possible. The lounge and dining room had been made one room, so what looked from the outside like a tiny front room was in fact a very comfortable sitting room and adjoining dining room with extremely high ceilings.
The living room was furnished with large, deep, white sofas on the varnished real oak floor. The walls were a different shade of deep, rich red, and a stunning Victorian fireplace stood in the center of the wall, framed by minutely detailed, s.h.i.+ning Victorian tiles. Above it was a painting in vivid primary colors that Jo imagined must have been done by one of the children.
In the dining room stood a splendid, vast wooden table with matching vast wooden chairs. On the walls, wrought-iron sconces held fat, misshapen candles, as did the central chandelier-style fitting. The only electric light was in the far corner, over the polished upright piano, on top of which sat two descant recorders. Next to them languished a slow-blinking cream cat, staring at her. Jo started at its first blink, feeling she'd been caught red-handed, spying. She smiled shamefacedly at it before tutting at herself and looking away.
Every window was a sympathetically updated sash, and the curtains were a sumptuous, even darker, richer red than the walls, tied back by dramatic wrought-iron fittings.
Jo heard the sound of a man and a young woman saying their good-byes in the hall, the woman very obliging, the man monosyllabic. Then the front door shut and after a moment of silence she heard the man say loudly, "Sweet mother of Jesus."
Jo sat down quickly as the living room door opened and the man appeared. She stood up again.
"Jo Green?"
"Yes." Jo walked toward him, and the man nodded briefly, before saying, "Follow me."
Jo had already put her hand out to be shaken, and the man seemed somewhat taken aback.
"Oh," he said, coming forward into the room and shaking her hand. "d.i.c.k Fitzgerald."
"Pleased to meet you, Mr. Fitzgerald," said Jo.
"Oh, d.i.c.k, please. Pleased to meet you too. Um, do follow me."
d.i.c.k led Jo down a narrow corridor to the back of the house, where he opened the door for her and followed her into the kitchen.
"My wife will be along in a minute," he told Jo's back.
Jo hardly heard. She was standing in the biggest, brightest kitchen she'd ever seen-the size of her parents' entire downstairs floor. Ceiling spotlights shone in the distance onto a gla.s.s table in a separate dining area from which enormous, elaborate French doors led onto a perfectly proportioned, perfectly manicured, long, narrow garden. Upon the table languished another cream cat, staring at her like a frosty queen, and Jo wondered uneasily whether this was a twin of the cat on the piano or the piano cat's idea of a joke. Unnerved, she edged farther into the room. The kitchen was painted a color she didn't even know the name of. Was it purple? Lavender? Blue? Lilac?
She kept on walking, and round the corner in an extended conservatory to the side was a matching (purple? lavender? blue? lilac?) two-seater sofa. Opposite it was the biggest television she had ever seen in her life. She tried not to gasp. The television was so large it was practically another presence in the room. Her dad would be in paradise in this kitchen. All he'd need was a toilet attached and he'd never want for anything. Sod it, he'd make do with a potty. She noticed that the two-seater opposite the television had a throw folded over one arm-the room's one concession for life with children. This must be the nanny's habitat. She found herself grinning. She could be very happy here.
d.i.c.k offered her a seat and she sat down at the gla.s.s table. She tried not to look at her legs and feet through the gla.s.s, but it was a most odd sensation. She followed d.i.c.k with her eyes as he tidied some mugs away into the dishwasher. This kitchen had curved doors and curved doors handles. It also had every possible modern convenience, including coffeemaker, pasta maker, and bread maker. It was like being in a state-of-the-art witch's grotto. Every convenience, including the s.p.a.ce-age kettle and vast toaster, were made of s.h.i.+ning chrome. Not a flower in sight. Her mother would suffer withdrawal symptoms here. And as she looked at the objects all lined up on the wide window ledge of glazed Mediterranean tiles, Jo felt tempted to agree with her mother. She felt like she was in the middle of a chrome battlefield.
Meanwhile, necessities like the fridge were disguised behind matching (purple? lavender? blue? lilac?) doors. Only the fridge was conspicuous thanks to its icemaker, and near it, the large, kidney-shaped sink was completely empty and clean, thanks to the expertly disguised dishwasher. Jo tried to remember if she'd ever seen her mother's sink empty. Instead of two taps, the sink had one burnished bra.s.s tap that looked like an old-fas.h.i.+oned pump. Surrounding the sink, and stretching out luxuriously over all the cupboards, a s.h.i.+ning, curvy pine work top glistened luxuriously.
Jo took it all in then glanced back at d.i.c.k, nodding pleasantly. She might never see this place again-she had to take in as much as possible. d.i.c.k moved to another door behind him, and what Jo had a.s.sumed was a cupboard was in fact a good-sized utility room, with another, larger though less beautiful, sink. There the dryer, was.h.i.+ng machine, ironing board, and iron were kept. The room was as big as her mother's kitchen. Jo was beginning to wish she'd brought a camera.
d.i.c.k let her stare. G.o.d, he loved this bit. It was well worth taking a Sat.u.r.day off work to enjoy all this young, provincial adoration. And he loved it when they tried to pretend they weren't bowled over by the house, as if he couldn't read it all over their faces. This was where they usually became deferential and tongue-tied.
"Your home is absolutely beautiful," said Jo warmly. "I feel like I've stepped into a glossy magazine."
d.i.c.k laughed with some surprise.
"Oh! Well! Thank you," he said. "You're very kind. My wife should really take all the credit-"
A woman appeared at the kitchen door. "Are you talking about your ability to dress yourself again, darling?" she interrupted d.i.c.k as she approached Jo. "Vanessa Fitzgerald."
"Jo Green."
"Thank you so much for coming down to see us."
"Not at all. Once you're on the train it isn't-"
"Where are you from again?" Vanessa wandered toward the kitchen table and thrones.
"Niblet-upon-Avon, a tiny little village just near Stratford."
They shook hands firmly.
"How lovely."
"Oh, have you been to Warwicks.h.i.+re?"
"No. But I hear it's on a par with Tuscany."
"Um. Well, it's very beautiful."
"Right," said Vanessa, shooing the cat away. "Let's start." The cat resettled itself farther down the table, ready for the show.
The two women sat down. Vanessa gave Jo a tight grin.
"I'll just file the previous applicants." She scrunched up five CVs and threw them in the bin. "We're hiring a nanny," she smiled, "not doing 'Care in the Community.'"
"G.o.d, darling," said d.i.c.k from the kitchen. "I love it when you're inhuman."
Unable to watch Vanessa read her CV, Jo studied d.i.c.k as he busied himself in the kitchen. He was what Jo could only describe as a handsome older man. If he had been twenty years younger she would be feeling significantly rosy-cheeked. But age had certainly softened his edges. He was in his late forties possibly early fifties and was wearing a navy crew-neck sweater with the latest fas.h.i.+on jeans. Somehow they didn't look too youthful on him. She glanced back at Vanessa, who, though tired, was really rather beautiful. Soft brown eyes, vanilla skin, and thick dark hair that made Jo think of ice cream. Probably late thirties. She was wearing a fas.h.i.+onable knee-skimming skirt and a short, close-cut top, which showed off her curves.
Jo began to feel the first signs of hope that she'd felt for a good while. Here were two attractive people who had waited until they'd found the right partner before starting a family, rather than doing it just because everyone else had started around them. Together they had everything-looks, money, large family, and a television the size of a small cinema. Look and learn, she thought to herself. Look and learn.
"Tea? Coffee?" asked d.i.c.k from the kitchen.
"Oh tea would be lovely." Jo smiled.
"Earl Grey, English Breakfast, herbal, or lapsang souchong?"
Jo stared at him. Had the interview started?
"Stop showing off, darling. Make us a pot of tea and shut up."
Jo stared back at Vanessa. Never in a million years had she ever heard a woman tell a man to make the tea and shut up.
While d.i.c.k made the tea, humming as he did so, Vanessa caught Jo eyeing the enormous television behind her.
"It may be big," said Vanessa dryly, "but it still shows the same c.r.a.p as any other television."
"Surround sou-ound," sang d.i.c.k, busily placing cups and a teapot on a tray.
"Surround sound, my a-a.r.s.e," sang Vanessa back, still smiling at Jo. She leaned in toward her, and said conspiratorially, "Men think the bigger and faster anything is, the better it is. Except for their women, of course, whom they want small and slow. It's precious, isn't it?"
Jo stared at her. Had the interview started now?
d.i.c.k approached with the tray, stepping carefully, over cat number one, who had come in from the living room and positioned itself, sphinx-like, in the middle of the floor. He placed the tray on the table and sat down next to Vanessa, facing Jo.
Jo had never seen so many different brightly colored cups and saucers. d.i.c.k carefully arranged them so that not one of the cups and saucers matched. The turquoise cup sat on the fuchsia saucer, the emerald cup on the aquamarine saucer, and the aquamarine cup on the turquoise saucer. Her mother would be out in hives if she could see them.
Vanessa and d.i.c.k both smiled at her politely, indicating that the interview was about to commence. She managed to return the favor, feeling increasingly uncertain.
"I have a previous marriage," d.i.c.k started as he poured milk (from the lilac milk jug) "so it's not just the three children who are living here at the moment. There's Toby, who's thirteen, who my ex-wife, Jane-"
"Whom," corrected Vanessa.
"-will bring round here every Friday evening, six sharp. Toby stays until Sunday afternoon." He paused before saying, "I think you'll find it was 'who,' darling."
Vanessa smiled sweetly at Jo over her cup of tea (turquoise), as if d.i.c.k hadn't spoken.
"Have you ever looked after a child that old?"
"Nearly," said Jo emphatically, trying to ignore the novelty of watching a couple point-score over grammar. "My previous but one family ranged from five to eleven. Actually I've missed the conversation of the older children. It was one of the reasons I answered your advertis.e.m.e.nt."
Vanessa stared at her. "And, perhaps more importantly," she continued, "have you ever looked after a child of Satan?"
"Darling," reprimanded d.i.c.k.
"Well, you've said it yourself," Vanessa reminded her husband. "Jane the Drain is the devil woman."
Jo interrupted before the argument took hold.
"I've always thought that all children-like all adults-have the potential to be nice and nasty," she said. "If you get on with people, you can get on with children."
d.i.c.k joined his wife in staring at her.
"Then there's d.i.c.k's other son," continued Vanessa after a pause, "who's twenty-five."
Jo raised her eyebrows in surprise. It was the right thing to have done.
"I know." d.i.c.k grinned, genuinely trying to look humble but genuinely unable to pull it off. "Child groom. Unfortunately, I married a child bride. We didn't stand a chance."
Vanessa added, "Now you're just a child father-of-five, and she's a bitter b.i.t.c.h from h.e.l.l."
"Thank you, darling, very helpful." d.i.c.k turned back to Jo, not remotely put off by his wife. "Josh is a chip off the old block. Good-looking, eye for the ladies, always got a few on the string at the same time if you know what I mean, been living with his mates in Crouch End-very trendy area just near here-for a couple of years, very successful accountant, on his way to becoming a partner in a large city firm."
He paused dramatically, to let it all sink in. Jo raised her eyebrows and nodded, to register immense respect for all this information.
Vanessa turned to her husband and smiled tightly at him. "And what block is that exactly?"
In the silence that followed, the cat on the table suddenly yawned, displaying its incisors to all with complacent pride.
d.i.c.k turned slowly to his wife and locked eyes with her. They were sitting a fraction apart. He looked down at her lips. Jo couldn't work out if they'd forgotten she was there or were performing to her.
"Oh come now, sweetheart," d.i.c.k murmured. "You remember my block. It hasn't been that long, surely?"
Vanessa seemed to consider this before giving him a conciliatory smile and turning back to Jo's CV.
"Anyway," said d.i.c.k, turning to Jo suddenly, "Josh pops in from time to time-"
"-when he's visiting us," interrupted Vanessa, "from Planet Josh."
Jo had absolutely no idea how to react, so she did the first thing that came into her head.
"Ooh, how lovely!" she enthused. "He sounds...perfect. I mean, I can't wait. I mean..." she trailed off.
They both eyed her suspiciously.
"What I mean is," she said, considerably slower, "that sounds nice."
Their eyes shrank, as if to focus past Jo's face, on her mind.
"For you," said Jo quickly. "And of course for the children."
"Not really," said Vanessa. "He's been known to get them so excited they vomit."
Jo nodded seriously. She felt her control of the interview slipping out of her hands. Something had to be done.
"I have a boyfriend," she told them. "We've been together for six years."
Vanessa's and d.i.c.k's eyes widened again.
"So I take it it's serious?" asked Vanessa.
Jo thought. "Yes," she said at last. "But it used to be fun."
d.i.c.k laughed loud and strong, until Vanessa said dryly, "I know the feeling," and then he stopped.
"I like your goldfish," said Jo desperately, nodding at the vast rectangular goldfish bowl high up on a wide shelf above the kitchen counter. "Isn't he big!" The shelf must have been built specially because it was exactly the shape of the bowl, allowing nowhere for the cats to climb or perch. In the bowl darted a single large goldfish, eyeing the cats.
"Thank you!" said Vanessa. "He's the children's. He's called Homer."