The Housekeeper
Page 1
Advance Praise for
The Housekeeper
“Mesmerizing suspense . . . Readers will relate to the very human Anne as she struggles to gain her emotional balance.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Suellen Dainty has created such a sense of place and lifestyle here . . . I was entranced. The fact that there was also a rip-roaring story of shocking betrayal and childhood trauma underpinning the whole thing was just the cherry on top. I loved, loved, loved this book and cannot recommend it highly enough.”
—Lisa Jewell, New York Times bestselling author of The Girls in the Garden
“Dainty writes with such nuance that I felt completely submerged in the Helmsleys’ world. I couldn’t help but fly through the pages. Gorgeous writing, wonderful characterization, immersive atmosphere, and a final twist that I did not see coming!”
—Kate Moretti, New York Times bestselling author of The Vanishing Year
“A compelling setup, intriguing characters, expertly handled plot, full of sharp details and insight. I couldn’t stop reading it!”
—Lottie Moggach, author of Kiss Me First
“The Housekeeper is a tense, compelling story of memory, madness, and family secrets. Dainty’s lush prose drew me into an orderly, domestic world where eerie images of the past lurk beneath charming, polished surfaces. You will fall under this novel’s urgent spell—page by page to its shattering betrayal—and will not be able to pull yourself away.”
—Karen Brown, author of The Longings of Wayward Girls
“Suspenseful and intriguing, wise, funny, and shocking. Beautifully written, this is a thriller for an age obsessed with celebrity—and all too ready to give its heart away to glamorous gurus.”
—Elisabeth Gifford, author of The Sea House
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For my family
1
What moved me, in the first instance, to attempt a work like this, was the discomfort and suffering which I had seen brought upon men and women by household mismanagement.
—Mrs. Beeton’s Book of Household Management, 1861
The bus was about to pull away as I turned into Park Lane, but the traffic lights suddenly changed. I raced across the road, dodging taxis and motorbikes, and jumped on just before the doors closed.
I stumbled down the aisle, past a sleeping woman and some boys jostling each other, and fell into a seat near the back. The couple in front of me were experimenting with ringtones. Joyful upbeat jingles alternated with thumping drums and pealing church bells. The man opposite sighed with irritation and drummed his fingers on his knee. I turned away and stared into the cold January night. The pavements were almost empty apart from a few people striding along with their faces muffled by scarves and the usual group of chauffeurs clustered around their limousines outside the Dorchester Hotel.
A couple walked towards one of the cars. The woman had her head on the man’s shoulder and he was caressing her hair, their faces bent towards each other. A chauffeur rushed to open the rear door. The interior lights snapped on, and I recognized them from the restaurant earlier in the evening. They’d sat at table 12, the best in the room. Pretty much everyone who came to the restaurant was good-looking, so I didn’t notice them because of that. I noticed them because they seemed to be so much in love with each other. They’d ordered lobster, one of the most expensive dishes on the menu. Anton and I had arranged it on their plates with a sprinkling of chervil and decorative pools of saffron sauce, everything in careful symmetry designed to please. It’s what Anton and I do: stand shoulder to shoulder every evening, preparing food to make people feel happier, sexier, bolder. We try to make everybody feel like somebody.
The bus moved along Bayswater Road, Hyde Park on one side and elegant white stucco buildings on the other, before slowing for late night roadworks. The man opposite sighed again. I didn’t mind the delay. After working in a basement kitchen for so many hours every day, I liked being aboveground, glimpsing other people’s sitting rooms and strangers sitting safely at home, even though the underground would have been much faster. The couple in front of me stood up, ready to get out at the next stop. There was that familiar smell of stale alcohol and scent that came from people at the end of their evening out. Anton always smelled like sun on sheets. I wondered what he was doing, if I should call him.
Someone had left a newspaper on the seat beside me and I picked it up, looking for distraction. In between pages of blingy advertisements for New Year bargains, grim-faced politicians warned about trade deficits. Another African country was about to be torn apart by civil war. I kept flicking until an article with the headline AN ISABELLA BEETON FOR THE 21ST CENTURY! caught my eye. Isabella Beeton was a heroine of mine. I admired her pronouncements on family life, cooking, and housekeeping. Order. Discipline. A place for everything and everything in its place.
The bus lurched to yet another halt and cold gritty air blew in through the doors. Normally that kind of thing annoyed me, but this time I hardly noticed. I read on. There was a photograph of a woman leaning against a marble fireplace. She had long blond hair and she was smiling at something or someone to her left. Her look was elegant and self-assured.
“It’s all about organization,” the woman told the interviewer. “Every working adult—men as well as women—needs to put aside time to plan their domestic life in the same way they plan their business life. Both are equally important and both feed into the success of each other.” Her name was Emma Helmsley. She’d been a psychologist but had left counseling because “I was much more interested in modern day household management and the way it could affect people’s lives and their happiness.”
I’d never heard of her, but apparently she was England’s answer to Martha Stewart and Oprah Winfrey. Her books sold millions, and her inspirational lectures (“oh please, more like informal chats”) were always sold out months in advance. She was in her middle forties and married to a psychologist called Rob (“twin souls, like swans, we’ve mated for life”) who wrote books as well and hosted a popular late night television program. They had a son aged fourteen and a daughter aged sixteen and lived just outside Richmond, in Petersham, near the river.
I dropped the newspaper on the seat, suddenly envious of this stranger’s perfect life, her handsome husband and her happy marriage. I wished I was back in Mayfair with Anton. Maybe I should call him, just to say good night. I fished my phone out of my bag and dialed his number. No answer.
My attempt at distraction hadn’t worked. If anything, I felt more ill at ease. Everything that had happened before I left the restaurant jumped into my mind like a flashback in a film. I saw myself climbing the stairs to Anton’s apartment above the restaurant, hanging on to the idea of some quiet time, just the two of us away from the crowded frenzy of the dinner service. I was longing to see him in his usual place on the sofa with his chef’s jacket flung on the floor, to feel his reassuring bulk as we embraced. All day as I’d chopped and diced and tasted, I’d reminded myself to keep my voice calm, my conversation light and cheerful, and to be the person he fell in love with.
But Anton wasn’t on the sofa where I wanted him to be. He was in the bathroom wiping steam from the mirror, a flush along his cheekbones from the shower. I stood behind him in misted focus, still in dirty work clothes, hair scraped into a tight ponytail. I should have changed and put on some lipstick and mascara after my shift. I should have taken the time to make m
yself look prettier, less like the dependable sous-chef.
“Why are you going out?” There it was, that tone in my voice again. I tried, but I couldn’t make it disappear, not entirely. “It’s so late.” It wasn’t late at all. It was only a bit after ten thirty.
“Investors. Money. The competition at my heels. I can’t afford to stand still.” After thirty years in London, a French accent still lingered around the edges of his sentences. He fiddled with his shirt buttons and smoothed his hair, the small preening gestures he always made before taking on the outside world.
He studied his reflection from different angles. Anton wasn’t conventionally handsome—his nose was too large and his face was too wide for that—but he had brown eyes that danced, a shock of gray curls, and a body that moved with surprising elegance. He was very fastidious about his clothes and grooming, as if he was on show in some way. I guess he always was on show. Anyhow, people tended to look twice.
He opened the wardrobe door and studied a line of black jackets. “All part of my job, my life,” he said. But I just want to be alone with you for a few hours, I thought. I want you to stop staring at that row of coat hangers. I want to go back to the beginning and start again.
He chose a jacket from the middle and shook it out with a whoosh of air. I went to help him put it on, but he had already fastened the buttons and was moving towards the door. “I might bring them back here afterwards.” He reached for his wallet. “Downstairs, to the restaurant and the kitchen. Maybe up here for a drink. Show and tell. You do understand, don’t you?”
I nodded and arranged my mouth into a smile. Of course. I understood. I shouldn’t have complained. I know the business. The fierce competition. The famous but fickle customers. Sometimes I thought they followed the paparazzi rather than the other way around. Lately, there’d been talk of opening another restaurant near London Bridge. Anton et Amis, however well established, had its limits. Restaurants always needed more money, even ones as well known as this, with its bronze front door often in the newspapers framing the entrances and exits of minor royalty, actors, and supermodels. There were still paparazzi outside the front door, but not as many as a year ago. A successful New York restaurateur had recently opened a chophouse in Marylebone, luring away many of our regular customers.
Anton picked up his keys. I leaned against him, feeling the curls of his chest hair under the thin cotton of his shirt. I started to put my arms around him, but he slipped away.
“See you tomorrow,” he said. “We can talk after the dinner service.” Then he was gone. I picked up his chef’s jacket, idly rubbing at the crusts of leftover food on its sleeves. A quick tidy up and then I’d go home. I didn’t like being alone in his flat. Anton never said anything, but I think he didn’t like me being alone there either. I didn’t mind him minding. Being there without him made me feel lonely, and there was always the thought of the other women who’d been there before me.
By Mayfair standards, his place was modest, but still much bigger than my own little box miles away in the non-gentrified part of Brentford. Anton never stayed there. He got fidgety if he moved more than a mile away from Hyde Park, and he always said his flat was far more convenient for our work and our life than mine.
I’d been with Anton for just over two years, and nothing in his relentless bachelor decor had changed in that time. Everything was brown and gray and hard-edged. I used to joke about bringing in some floral cushions to brighten things up, to leave some small trace of myself, but I never did. I tossed the dirty jacket in the laundry basket, keeping the lid open longer than necessary so I could inhale the scent of him: cooking, soap, and sweat, and under these, a vanilla odor with a bit of cinnamon somewhere. He must have been trying out a new recipe. I went downstairs again. Dinner service was almost finished. The porters were already sluicing down the floors and scrubbing the counters. In the locker room, I changed my clothes and left, buttoning my coat as the cold air bit my face after the warmth of the kitchen.
By now, the bus had juddered and swayed its way across London. Small workers’ cottages and late night kebab shops had replaced the large terraces of Bayswater. I was nearly home. The bus lurched to a halt and I stepped onto the pavement. A young boy was playing hopscotch, nimbly dodging late night commuters. A group of boys in padded jackets milled about the pizza café, passing around cigarettes and cans of beer. Smoke spiraled in the frosty air. A sprinkling of girls stood to one side, biting their lips and giggling. There was the faint tinny sound of rap. I caught my reflection in a shopwindow. The breeze from the bus had whipped my hair into a frizz. My face looked tired and pinched. I made myself smile, surprised by how easily it came, how natural it looked. I might have been a wife on her way home to meet her husband, an intimate evening ready to unfold. I walked past the pawnbroker and a row of empty shops, their windows covered by metal shutters emblazoned with graffiti, then turned into my street.
After I locked my front door behind me, I changed into pajama bottoms and a T-shirt, made a pot of chamomile tea, and lay on the sofa, trying not to think about Anton and what he might be doing. There was a time when I would have opened a bottle of wine at that point of the evening and finished most of it. Maybe all of it and then opened another. But alcohol brings out the worst in me. Bleak depression. Dreams of howling. Waking up with a jolt, not remembering where I am or what I’ve done. These days I stick to the one glass at a time rule, and only when I’m with other people.
I sipped my tea and contemplated the fat cream-colored moon that hovered at the top of the window. My flat was nothing like Mayfair. If I was lucky enough to remain solvent and employed, it would be mine in about twenty years, all 540 square feet of it. I’d never have been able to scrape up the deposit on my own, not in London, but Gran had left me enough for a down payment, carefully squirreled away to avoid it being used up by the nursing home bills, and I’d moved here just before I started working at Anton et Amis. I was on the third floor, with people above, below, and beside me. The sitting room had comfortable armchairs and a sofa covered in pale blue linen. A motley collection of framed prints from Tate Modern hung on the walls. Matisse, Klee, Mondrian, nothing unusual. The kitchen had a new oven and refrigerator. In the bathroom there was a full-size tub, again new. No moldy speckles in the grout.
Other people might have left the teapot and mug in the sitting room until morning. I wasn’t one of them. After I scrubbed everything clean and wiped it dry, I checked my emails—nothing of interest—and then, because I wasn’t quite ready for sleep, I did a quick search on Emma Helmsley. She had a lot going on. Numerous magazine and newspaper interviews, the usual Twitter and Instagram accounts as well as a website and a blog. There was even a tip of the day, called “Taking the Moment,” sent straight to your inbox. Why not? I thought. I entered my email address for her daily update. It wasn’t the kind of thing I normally did, but there was something about her that interested me. Maybe it was the way she revered order and organization, just like Isabella, just like me.
I picked up my battered copy of Mrs. Beeton’s Book of Household Management and went to bed. I’d found it in a charity shop on the main road, soon after I bought my flat, and thought it might be amusing to flick through recipes for boiled fowl or advice on plucking grouse. But it quickly became something of a bible to me. I had to explain to Anton who she was: that she was the eldest of twenty-one children, who had started writing about household management in her early twenties; that her book had sold two million copies when it was first published and was still in print today. Anton roared with laughter and asked what a Victorian housewife had to do with the way we lived now. As usual, he had a point, but that didn’t discourage me.
I turned to it most nights before sleep, opening a page at random and reading about the duties of butlers, housemaids, and laundresses. After the jangling of the kitchen all day, the comfort of their ordered life soothed me. Occasionally I imagined myself moving through halls with wooden floors waxed to the color of honey, a
djusting flowers in vases to the best effect and snipping off any tainted blooms.
More often, I imagined Anton and me in a house together. An unassuming, comfortable place in a street where you could go for a walk in the evening and peer through the windows to see families having supper together, or children doing their homework. We would stroll arm in arm before turning for home to enjoy a quiet drink in our garden, just the two of us. Sometimes, but only very rarely, I allowed myself the luxury of even more delicious imaginings: as we strolled arm in arm, I was wearing one of those papoose slings strapped around my waist, with a baby’s head, covered in dark wisps, bobbing happily against my heart.
I woke the next morning with a start, one arm searching for the outline of Anton’s warm bulk, as if my sleeping body had refused to accept his absence. The sheet was dotted with spots of blood. I must have scratched myself during the night again. My pillow was clammy with perspiration and my quilt was twisted around my legs like a straitjacket. A prick of nerves ran along my spine. I thought I’d gotten over all that.
After Gran died, it happened a lot. She had brought me up single-handedly after my mother died when I was five years old; I couldn’t even remember my life before her. It seemed that there had always been just the two of us, even after I’d left home for London. Without her I had the feeling of being a child left out in the rain and not able to find my way home. The word that came to mind was “abandoned.” If I’d tried to explain that to Anton, he’d have patted my arm and said I was exaggerating. I would have agreed with him. Gran was eighty-six years old and had been ill for some time, confined to her bed in a nursing home in Dorset, near where I grew up. No one ever left a place like that to start a new life somewhere else. But for all the advance notice, it still hurt, much more than I’d expected. Most people I knew had parents or grandparents who had passed away, and after a while they managed to function perfectly well without making themselves bleed in the night and wake up shivering.