Guilt thuds. This is all my fault. “I didn't mean for you to break up with Daniel,” I protest quickly. “I mean, not that you were ever togetherâ” I try to backtrack, but she cuts me off.
“I didn't finish it. Daniel did. He doesn't think we should see each other anymore.”
I stare at her incredulously. “But I thought . . .” I hesitate, my mind whirring. “I thought you two were having lots of fun together. The African drumming band, the vegan restaurant, last night . . .” I trail off, thinking about them together on the sofa. Trust me, Daniel did not look like a man who wanted to finish things.
“We were.” She nods. “We did.” She gives a little sniff and her large green eyes start to glisten. She blinks rapidly. “But he said now that I've found Harold, he didn't want to stop me from being with him. From being with my soul mate.”
I pause, allowing that to register. “Can you just rewind that bit?” I fix her with a hard look. “How does he know you've . . . I mean,
I've
found Harold?”
“I told him.”
“
You told him?
”
“Of course.” She nods. “I told him about Harold from the very beginning, how I'm searching for him, how he's my soul mate.”
“You haven't even met him yet! He might be the completely
wrong
Harold!” I exclaim, waving the espresso pot around. “I mean, there must be more than one unlucky sod in the world with the name Harold.”
Robyn stiffens slightly.
“And even if by some miracle he is the right one, you might hate him.”
“I don't hate anyone,” she reprimands hotly. “Hate is wasted emotion. It will only bring bitterness into your heart.”
“That's not what you said about the man who left his dog in the car.”
Last week Robyn saw an article on the news about a man who'd nearly killed his Dalmatian from heat exhaustion by leaving it locked in his jeep in the midday sun. Thankfully it was found in the nick of time by a passerby.
“I don't hate him. I want to lock him in his car in hundred-degree heat without any water or air and let him suffer in agony for a very, very long time and beg for help and come this close to dying.” She pinches her finger and thumb together and scrunches up her face so that she looks pretty scary. “There's a difference.”
“So what are you going to do?” I quickly change the subject. “About Daniel, I mean, not the man with the Dalmatian,” I say hurriedly, before she reams off a list of torture devices. For a woman who's all about healing, she knows an awful lot of ways to inflict pain.
“Nothing.” She shrugs and stares dolefully down at the teapot. “I would have had to finish it anyway. It was inevitable. It's meant to be.”
“Why? Because of what some stupid psychic said?” I feel a stab of frustration.
Robyn purses her lips tightly and lifts her chin. “Wakanda is a Native American healer who can communicate with spirit guides. She has an amazing gift. Her Sioux name actually means âpossesses magical power.'”
I open my mouth to argue, then, realizing it's futile, let out a groan. “Oh God, why didn't I keep my mouth shut? I should never have told you about meeting the artist. It was supposed to be a secret.”
“But you did,” she says, reaching out and squeezing my arm in a don't-blame-yourself kind of way. “You did tell me, and you did meet him. It's serendipity.”
“I thought that was a movie, not real life,” I quip.
She smiles, and turning back to her teapot, gives it one last stir and pours herself a cup.
“So what are you going to do now?”
She pauses, and for a moment a look of sadness flashes briefly across her face, then it's gone and is replaced with one of determination. “Do what I always do,” she says firmly, and tucking her hair behind her ears, she gives me one of her megawatt smiles. “Leave things up to fate.”
Chapter Thirty-three
I
've got a bone to pick with fate.
Fate likes to portray itself as a genial character, a helpful soul, a guardian angel who will be there for you to lean on when the going gets tough. Don't know what to do? Leave it up to fate to decide. Life in a mess? Let fate sort it outâhe knows best. Single and heartbroken? Fate's got something wonderful in store for you.
No wonder everyone is keen to put their feet up and let fate look after them. It's rather like your granddad. Or a very hands-on organized person, sort of your own personal PA.
Only in my experience fate is no such thing, and the same goes for his little brother, destiny. Quite frankly they've made a real mess of things where I'm concerned. So from now on they can bugger off and stop meddling. I'm taking charge of my own life, and when it comes to love, fate can mind its own bloody business. Besides, like I said, I'm not wasting any more time thinking about that love stuff. That was then and this is now.
So as Monday morning rolls around, it's a whole new me who wakes up before her alarm, puts on clothes that are hanging up, and sets off for work in plenty of time. “That was then and this is now,” I repeat to myself under my breath as I stride along the street. “That was then and this is now.” Robyn says I have to keep repeating it to myself as an affirmation.
Robyn's big on affirmations. When I first moved in, I would find them stuck on bits of paper all over the apartment and hear her wandering around the house saying them. I have to admit I thought she was a bit batty. “It's about replacing a negative thought with a positive one,” she explained. “So, for example, if you're worried about something and want to improve it, you say an affirmation.”
“I'm worried about my credit card bills,” I replied, waving a red overdue statement at her. “Got an affirmation for that?”
Closing her eyes, she pinched her nose as if in deep concentration for a few moments, then, opening her eyes, intoned solemnly, “âI pay my bills with love as I know abundance flows freely through me.'”
Suffice it to say, I got charged a late fee and a ton of interest.
But that was then and this is now, and although I still have my reservations, and I still think Robyn's a bit batty, the way I see it a few affirmations can't hurt. It's all part of my determination to turn over a new leaf, a blank page, plus anything else that I can get my hands on, and focus on what's important.
Like Kate and Jeff. His operation is scheduled for this afternoon and so I've arranged to work a half day and meet Kate at the hospital. “No, I'm fine, honestly,” she protested. “You don't need to come.”
For the first time in my life I stood up to my sister. “ToughâI'm coming.”
First, though, I need to deal with the fallout from my meeting with Artsy, I muse, reaching the gallery and pushing open the glass doors. I'm bracing myself for Magda's inquisition. Apart from the quick telephone call afterward, we haven't spoken, and if I know her, she'll want all the details. And who can blame her? If he agrees to exhibit, the gallery is saved. And if he doesn't?
Nerves twist in the pit of my stomach. I don't even want to think about it. Not yet, anyway.
Stepping inside the gallery, I wait for the usual cry of “Loozy!” and for Magda to appear. Only she doesn't. I glance around the gallery. It's empty. Valentino scampers out from the back, snuffling and yapping, and jumps up at my legs.
“Hey, boy,” I say, picking him up. Magda's obviously here, but where? “Magda?” I call out, walking past the reception desk and toward the office, at the back of the gallery. My footsteps echo on the concrete floor. “Are you here?”
I'm about to enter the office when abruptly the door is flung open and out jumps Magda. Wearing a white trouser suit and sporting a bright orange tan, she looks startling, like an Oompa Loompa.
“Oh my God.” I jump back, spilling my coffee and dropping Valentino, who gives a high-pitched yelp. “You frightened the life out of me!”
“I'm sorry. I was . . . um . . . a little tied up.” She stands in the doorway looking all twitchy. “I didn't hear you come in.”
“Oh well, never mind,” I say, smiling. “Let me just hang my cardigan up.”
I go to enter the office, but she bars my way with her arm as if doing a stretch against the doorframe, which is very odd. Magda doesn't stretch. Not even at her health club, apparently: “I go there to use the wonderful hot tub and watch the even hotter trainers,” she once told me unapologetically.
“Sorry, I just need to get through,” I say, making a gesture with my cardigan.
“Let me do it.” Flashing me a smile, she takes my cardigan from me. “I'll hang it up for you.”
Now I'm really confused. Magda doesn't hang up other people's coats. She doesn't even hang up her own coat, for fear of ruining her manicure.
“Are you feeling OK?” I peer at her uncertainly.
“Who? Me?” She clutches her chest in exaggerated surprise. Trust me, her acting is worse than mine. “I'm just a little preoccupied,” she explains, hopping from one white patent stiletto to the other. “I have things on my mind.”
“Oh, of course.” I nod, suddenly understanding. She's probably spent a sleepless weekend fretting about the gallery, worrying if my trip to the Vineyard was a success. “You mean Artsy.”
Her reaction is not what I'm expecting. Instead of nodding compliantly, she looks shocked. “What about him?” she demands defensively.
“Well, I imagine you want to know all about what happened at our meeting. In the Vineyard,” I prompt. Gosh, she is acting really weird. Even weirder than normal.
“Ah, yes, yes, of course.” She nods vigorously. “Your trip to the Vineyard.” The way she says it, it's almost as if she'd totally forgotten about it and was thinking about something else entirely. “I'm all ears.” Putting her arm round my waist, she leads me across the gallery and over to the reception deskâbasically moving me as far away from the office as she can get me, I can't help noticing. I glance at her sharply. What on earth's going on? Why is she acting so bizarrely?
“Go ahead. Tell me everything,” she says in a stagey voice, plonking me onto a stool.
“Well, he was really nice, not what I was expecting,” I begin, my mind spooling backward, “but then I'm not sure
what
I was expecting.”
“Mmm.”
“You know, when I first arrived, he had me digging his vegetable patch.” I smile at the memory. It seems so surreal now I'm back here in New York. “Then he showed me his recent artwork, which really was quite . . .” I look at Magda. She's not even listening. Instead she's fiddling with her hair and looking around shiftily.
“Mrs. Zuckerman?” I say in a firm voice.
It grabs her attention. “Uh, yes, Loozy?” She attempts an innocent expression, which quite frankly couldn't look more guilty.
“You seem preoccupied,” I say questioningly.
“I do?” Her eyes are rabbit-in-the-headlights wide and she hesitates before saying, “One moment. I forgot something,” and scuttling back across the gallery and disappearing into the office.
I stare after her, perplexed. And more than a little bit peeved. Sod it, she's not even interested. I flew all the way to Martha's Vineyard to meet Artsy; I even shared a bed with Nate because of himâwell, sort ofâand all because Magda made out it was this huge deal, that it was the only way we could save the gallery. Now I'm back here and she can't even be bothered toâ
“Surprise!”
I snap back to see Magda reemerging from the office doorway, then stepping to one side to reveal a tall figure wearing lederhosen, a white frilly shirt, and a large-brimmed hat. His face is partly in shadow, but there's only one person I know who'd wear clothes like that.
“Artsy?” I gasp, taken aback. “What are you doing here?”
“Exhibiting!” whoops Magda, before he can open his mouth to answer. “Isn't that right?”
It's a statement, not a question, and I gape at Artsy. A bolt of relief, delight, and God knows what else zips right through and threatens to erupt like a great big firework. Is it true? My eyes search his out under the brim of his hat.
Is it?
“I do believe that's correct,” he replies with mock formality, then, glancing at me, he winks.
The firework erupts silently inside me, fizzing and showering me with a million pieces of glitter. I did it. He said yes. We're saved.
I want to punch the air, high-five Artsy, pick up Magda and swing her round, tickle Valentino's tummy, but instead I force myself into professional mode. “That's great news,” I reply evenly, trying to silence my inner voice, which is shrieking excitedly. “The gallery will be very honored, and I'm sure you'll find a very happy home here at Number Thirty-Eight.”
Magda shoots me a look of grateful appreciation. Something tells me she's been whooping, “Wonderful, wonderful,” ever since he broke the news to her.
“I'm sure I will.” He nods lazily, chewing gum. “Especially now I've met Mrs. Zuckerman personally.”
“Please, call me Magda.” She blushes and giggles coyly like a schoolgirl.
A schoolgirl with a crush, I realize, glancing across at her.
“I'm sorry, it was all my idea.” Artsy turns to me.
“Sorry?” I look at him in confusion.
“The surprise,” he explains. “I thought it might be kinda fun. I'm afraid I can be a bit of a practical joker.”
“But you're not joking now,” I say, checking hastily.
He grins and strokes his beard, which he's shaved into a point and plaited with tiny beads. “No, this part's for real.”