A Spy by Nature - Charles Cumming [40]
My room is in absolute darkness as these thoughts peck away at my heart. The shock of them has quickened my breathing to something approaching the panic of an asthma attack, and I have to sit up in bed and then walk slowly around the room, gathering myself together.
I open the curtains and look outside. The colour of the sky is caught between the city’s reflected glow and the first light of dawn. She is out there with him somewhere, lying against pale sheets.
I take out Kate’s T-shirt from the bottom of my chest of drawers and bury my face in its soft cotton folds. Her perfume has disappeared from it entirely. From a bottle of scent that I keep in the bathroom, I replenish the smell, tipping droplets of Chanel No. 19 on to the material before scrunching it up in a tight ball. It is the fourth time that I have had to do this since we separated. Time is passing by.
I cannot get back to sleep, so I sit in the kitchen drinking coffee, my mind shuttling between memories of Kate and apprehension over the results of Sisby.
Whatever happens now, win or lose, I can’t go back to CEBDO. Not after all this. I couldn’t shrink myself. So tomorrow, first thing, there’s something I must do.
‘Look, Nik, here’s the thing. I want to move on.’
This has been coming for months. It feels good to be telling him.
‘You want to move on.’
This isn’t said as a question. More as a statement. Nik swallowing the news whole.
‘I feel I’ve achieved everything that I can working for you. And things have got very bad between me and Anna. We can’t work together any more and it’s better that one of us should go.’
I have brought him to a small greasy spoon on the Edgware Road. Ten a.m. Traffic and people clapping by outside. There’s a red plastic bottle containing ketchup - probably not Heinz - sitting on the table between us. Nik stares at it.
‘OK,’ he says.
I had expected more of a reaction, a trace of hurt.
‘I’ve been offered a chance to do something… larger. Something more meaningful. You know?’
Nik shakes his head, still looking at the ketchup.
‘No, I don’t know. You tell me what that is, Alec. I’m not a mind reader.’
‘I’m sorry. I’ve hurt your feelings. You’ve invested a lot of time in me and I’ve let you down.’
Now he lifts his head and looks me straight in the eye. There may be pity in his leering, condescending grin.
‘Oh, Alec. That’s what I always hated about you. You always think you’re the most important person in the room. Let me tell you something. The world is bigger than you. You understand? You don’t hurt my feelings. You think something like you handing in your notice could hurt my feelings? You think I can’t go out on to that street right now and find someone to replace you? You think I can’t do that?’
This is more like it. This is what I was expecting.
‘I’m sure you can, Nik. I’m sure you can. You’re amazing like that.’
‘Don’t make fun of me, all right. I gave you a job of work. You come in to my offices and all you’re interested in doing is fucking my staff, fucking Anna. And now you say you cannot speak with her. This is your problem. I gave you a job of work. That is a precious thing…’
‘Oh, please.’
I really draw out the ‘please’ here, and it deflects him. I often wonder when he is angry like this how much gets lost in translation, how much of what he wants to say is denied to him by his mediocre English.
‘This operation I have,’ he says, gesturing freely with his right hand. He’s about to