“Champagne!” Mrs. West sounds on the edge. She eyes Cassidy as though suspecting she’s being mocked. “Champagne? Why would we expect champagne?”
“Maybe not,” Cassidy backtracks hurriedly. “Only there was a bottle addressed to ‘the couple on the beach,’ and—”
“The couple on the beach?” Mrs. West cuts her off. “You want to know the truth? We don’t know if we’re still a couple.”
Yowser. My eyes flit to Mr. West, who is standing motionless, his face granite, as though his worst nightmare is being played out. Which maybe it is.
“Maybe we’ll find out the answer on this holiday,” adds Mrs. West, wrapping her thin arms miserably around her torso. “Or maybe not.”
She’s wearing her wedding ring, I notice. But she’s also clenching her hands pretty tightly.
“Of course,” says Cassidy, looking flummoxed. “Well, it takes all sorts, doesn’t it? Here’s hoping that …” She stops, as though not sure how to proceed. “Although, may I say, if you did want to move into … perhaps adjoining single rooms, I’m sure we could waive the surcharge—”
“I don’t believe this!” Mr. West rounds on his wife. “What have you been saying about our sex life?”
“I didn’t need to say anything, it’s obvious to everybody!” she snaps back, her voice high with distress. “Everybody!”
I glance at Finn, who pulls an awkward face back.
Actually, it wasn’t obvious to everybody. Or indeed anybody. But I’m not sure this is the moment to tell Mrs. West that. There’s an embarrassed prickly silence, broken only by Herbert snoring gently.
“So!” Cassidy clears her throat. “Well. That’s … I hope you enjoy your stay, apart from the … Obviously …” She clears her throat. “Did you still want dinner at eight?”
“Eight will be fine,” says Mrs. West, over-politely. “Thank you.”
We all watch, silent and riveted, as they walk up the stairs, and it’s only when they disappear from view that I exhale. I hadn’t realized I was holding my breath.
“Lovely couple,” says Cassidy, then she seems to reconsider. “Or … whatever. I probably shouldn’t have mentioned their sleeping arrangements.” She makes a regretful face. “Only, you want people to be as comfortable as possible, you know?”
“I think that guy would be most comfortable in a different hotel from his wife,” says Finn. “Or maybe a different country.”
“Poor loves. Shame our reflexologist isn’t here,” adds Cassidy pensively. “She does couples therapy as well. Got the Walkers back together again after he slept with that Jet Ski girl. But as I say, she’s working at Burger King at present.… Anyway.” Her face brightens. “While I’ve got you both, can I mention a couple of upcoming events in our entertainments calendar? You’ll already have seen the invitation to our lobby concert. On the app!” she adds, noting my blank look. “I’ve just sent it out. Check your phone!”
Finn and I exchange shifty glances.
“I’m trying not to use my phone,” I say. “Digital detox. Maye you could just … tell me?”
“Of course,” says Cassidy unsuspectingly. “Here you are.” She hands me a printed sheet inviting me to a Special Lobby Concert, featuring Herbert Wainwright on French Horn and Other Acts.
“Great!” I try to sound enthusiastic. “I’ll do my best to make it.”
“Marvelous! And now, the caves. You’re all booked for this afternoon, two P.M. Both of you,” she adds to Finn. “Enjoy!”
“Both of us?” I echo, taken aback.
“Yes, you both expressed interest, and that’s the only available slot. In fact, you’re the only takers.” Cassidy lowers her voice. “They’re opening up just for you.”
I glance awkwardly at Finn.
“Is that a problem?” he says at once. “Because I’m happy to bow out if you’d rather tour the caves alone.”
“No, no,” I say a bit stiffly. “You go and enjoy the caves. I’ll bow out.”
“Aren’t you polite?” cries Cassidy in admiration. “Why don’t you both go? They’re big caves, you know. You can easily avoid each other. I know that’s your thing,” she adds knowledgeably. “Avoiding each other. I’ve marked it on your notes.”
“Yes, I guess that is our thing,” says Finn, his mouth twitching as he meets my eye.
“We try our best.” I nod.
“That’s settled, then,” says Cassidy. “And I’ll order you a taxi there, if you like. If you don’t mind sharing?” she adds warily. “Because if you do, I could always order two taxis.”
Oh my God. What would we look like, arriving there in convoy?
“No, it’s fine,” I say, glancing at Finn for confirmation. “We can share a taxi, I’m sure?”
“We’ll stare out of opposite windows,” agrees Finn, deadpan. “I won’t speak or move a muscle, and maybe you could do the same.”
He’s quite funny, I’m realizing. Underneath his frowny, bad-tempered demeanor.
“Well, if that’s all, I must just pop to the kitchen,” says Cassidy, coming out from behind the desk. “Nice to see you both. You know, you do look like a couple,” she adds musingly. “Funny that you’re not, isn’t it?”
“Well,” I say, feeling my face heat up. “It’s …”
I’m not sure how to finish that sentence.
“Hilarious,” says Finn.
As Cassidy starts walking across the lobby, I call out quickly, “Wait, before you go, what about the champagne on the beach? You’re sure it’s nothing to do with the hotel? Because it’s glass. We shouldn’t leave it there. What do you think we should do?”
Cassidy turns back and looks at me, apparently nonplussed, then shrugs. “Drink it?”
Eleven
True to his promise, Finn sits in total silence all the way to the caves, and if he’s breathing, I can’t hear it. I sit facing the other way, equally silent and rigid, determined to match his implacability. But as we get near, my calmness starts to slip. These are roads I haven’t seen for years, and they remind me so strongly of Dad that I feel a physical ache.
The caves were his thing. Whenever we visited them, Mum would stay behind and have a little nap, whereas Dad would leap at the chance to clamber about the caverns and give us talks on rock formation. “Look,” he’d say every year, his glasses gleaming with enthusiasm in the dim subterranean light. “This rock is a thousand years old. Nearly as old as me!”
Every year we took the same cheesy picture of ourselves grinning self-consciously in the Rainbow Cave, our favorite of the caverns. I searched out those photos last night and scrolled through, watching the gradual unfolding of time. Dad looks the same enthusiastic, slightly goofy dad every year, barely aging beyond a thinning of the hair. But Kirsten and I transform, year by year. In the first photo, I’m a toddler; I only reach Dad’s knees. By the age of twelve I’m up to his shoulder.