“Too far from the bright lights, big city,” said Murray even slower than before.
Keiko wondered if he was speaking pidgin English, if he was mocking her. Do not imagine trouble Keko-chan, her mother would say. Can’t see it? Call it a flower. She turned very deliberately to Craig.
“What is it you study?” she said.
“Business and economics,” said Craig
“So then today, in the shop? You were practising?”
Murray snorted. “Tax dodge, isn’t it?” he said.
Craig put his fingertips into his beer and pretended to flick it at Murray, who frowned and flinched away. Keiko though she understood then; this mocking was friendliness. She had heard it called banter although she had never fully grasped it.
“And you are a butcher?” she said, turning to Murray.
“So what’s your PhD all about?” Craig said. “I must have read the sponsorship form when Uncle Jimmy had them, but… which one was yours again?”
Keiko looked from one to the other. Murray was smoothing stripes into the condensation on his water glass with one careful finger. Craig was looking intently at her, forward in his seat as though desperate to hear her answer. No banter now.
She tried to remember the beginning of the speech she had practised for all those hours on the plane. It seemed like weeks ago.
“Actually,” she said, “I’ve changed my proposal a little from the version I sent initially. I hope,” she lowered her voice, “I hope Mr. McKendrick won’t mind.”
“Couldn’t tell the difference if one was green and one was his granny,” said Craig.
Keiko let out a sigh. “Well,” she said, “I’m still interested in nutritionism as new folklore. Feeding Belief was the title I sent.” Both boys looked back at her blankly. “But I’m less interested in the content than the movement of the knowledge itself now. In dense networks.” More blank looks. “My new title is Hot Gossip: the mechanics of construing common knowledge in social groups.”
“Jesus Christ,” said Murray. “You’re kidding.”
Craig swung back on his chair and let out a hoot of high-pitched laughter that made his uncle look over and subject them all to a stare. “You’ve come to the right place then,” he said.
“I don’t understand,” said Keiko.
“I hope you two are being good hosts to our new arrival,” said Mr. McKendrick, appearing suddenly at Keiko’s shoulder and making her jump.
“She’s told us about the new research topic,” said Craig. “Hot gossip.”
“Food,” corrected Mr. McKendrick.
“Oh yes, health scares and food fads-excellent material,” Keiko said.
“Scares and fads?” said Mr. McKendrick. “That’s not what I understood. We take our heritage very seriously here in Painchton. And we’re not the gossiping sort at all. A secret is safe in this town, that I assure you.”
The waitress came to clear her plate and give her a new one, so Keiko had time to calm herself before she spoke again.
“Let me assure you,” she said, “I’m an experimental psychologist. I work in lab conditions with controlled stimuli and cohorts of subjects all very carefully chosen. I’m not an anthropologist. I’m not interested in grubbing around in anyone’s-” Except she had a flash of herself on her knees, in front of the radiator, trying to catch hold of the envelope with the tips of her fingers.
“I’m glad to hear it,” Mr. McKendrick said and went back to his seat where his own new plate was waiting.
“Is that right then?” said Murray when he was gone. It seemed that he was looking at her properly for the first time. “I thought psychology was all about…”
“Lying on a couch crying about your mum,” said Craig.
“No,” said Keiko. Then she smiled. “Not absolutely all of it. My interest is in the hardwiring and the circuits. It’s mostly quite dull.”
Craig began to nod until he stopped himself, but Murray was gazing at her.
“It sounds pretty cool, if you ask me,” he said. He bent his head close to hers, so close that she could smell the fruity shampoo he must have just used. “I’d still keep it quiet though. Not the food stuff-no worries there-but about the gossip anyway. ” He winked at her and sat up again.
Keiko ate steadily but without making much of a dent in her plate of dinner.
“What is Yorkshire pudding?” she asked after a while, starting to lift a corner of it out of the gravy to examine it more closely. But Mrs. McLuskie was watching her, so instead she folded another pad of it onto her fork and ate it, smiling.
The waitress, when she returned, looked down at Keiko’s plate in sorrow.
“You should have called me over, honey,” she said, shaking her head and stroking Keiko’s shoulder. “I could have got you an omelette.”
“No, it was delicious,” said Keiko, “but just so much.” She looked up and down the table for corroboration, but saw an empty plate with a neatly meshed knife and fork at each place.
“It’s a skill,” said Craig. “Like sword swallowing. Takes years of practice.”
“I’ll make a doggy bag,” said the waitress.
“Lovely,” said Keiko, not sure what she was agreeing to. She lay back in her chair and sipped water but noticed the others beginning to stir.
“Ladies and Gentlemen, we will now adjourn to the Bridge for the remaining courses,” said Mr. McKendrick. He wiped his mouth firmly with his napkin, folded it by his plate, then drew out a handkerchief and wiped the rest of his face and neck. Mrs. McLuskie picked up her chain from the back of her chair where she had laid it while she ate and draped it back over her shoulders.
Keiko lost Craig and Murray in the crowd and was swept up into a group of women, little Mrs. Watson among them, on the way down the stairs. She hesitated at the bottom, but the others carried on right out into the street.
“Well, I think it’s a good idea,” said an old lady to nobody in particular. “A breath of fresh air and a chance to stretch your legs. Well done, James.”
“Fart break, in other words,” said Mrs. Watson under her breath, making Keiko giggle.
“A piece of nonsense, if you ask me,” said someone else. “It’s not a competition.”
They crossed the road in a straggling crocodile towards the Bridge. There were fairy lights in the flower baskets now, winking off and on. Mr. McKendrick sprang ahead and swept the door open.
“Where are we, James?” asked Mrs. McLuskie.
“In the Keeper’s, Etta. Just go straight through.”
Along a narrow corridor with double doors at the end, held open by two waiters in burgundy jackets, Keiko could see another room laid for dinner, another U-shaped table covered in glasses and candles, flowers and silver. She turned to Mrs. Watson in a panic.
“Dinner again?”
“Pudding, my darling,” said Mrs. Watson.
Mr. McKendrick’s seating plan didn’t survive the change of scene. Although she could see his arm above the heads of the crowd and the flicking gesture as he tried to direct people to one place or another, everyone seemed ready just to drop down into the nearest space, Keiko still with her group of old ladies and Murray and Craig nowhere to be seen, until she caught sight of the side of Murray’s head at the far end of the table, when he tilted back on his chair and tossed his hair out of his eyes.
So… more Yorkshire pudding, more plates of roasted meat. Some ancient barbaric feasting ritual, obviously. But how many times would they do it in one night? And what was the etiquette? Was it better to turn down their generosity or to crawl under the table to vomit? Keiko swallowed hard as the waiter approached, carrying a dish piled high with some kind of soft, pale substance dotted with dark buttons. Mashed potato? Olives? She looked closer: ice-cream and berries of some kind, pastry underneath.