Other Names for Love by Taymour Soomro
Author:Taymour Soomro
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
* * *
THE BOY WAS FOUND, of course. Those who made it their business to know knew all along where he was. He sent word that heâd meet his father, why should he have anything against it, but he wouldnât come to the embassy, or to the Dorchester, or to the flat. They could have dinner somewhere. Heâd bring a friend.
He chose a restaurant in Mayfair. âThese boys,â Rafik said to the driver, as they made their way there, âwhat can one do? Rascals.â
It was a famous place, the driver said, made to look like a ship inside, that famous ship that had sunk all those years ago. There was a film about it too.
It was on a street corner, with a doorman in a top hat to guide Rafik in, a pretty girl to take his jacket. He was the last to arrive, she said, guiding him down a wide curving staircase, into a bustling room with mirrored walls that made it appear like an endless warren, glittering and humming with figures.
âPretty girl,â he said to her. âGood work.â
She led him to a table. âOh, no,â he said, ânot this one.â He gave the boyâs name again. He scanned the room but now the people at the table were standing, one pushing past a chair to greet himâgarishly dressed, a gaudy silk shirt, rings in the ears and chains round the neck, hair like Liberace.
He waved his hand in Rafikâs face, flapped it at Rafik. âYouâre looking everywhere,â he said, âbut here.â
âIs it?â Rafik said, the figure in front of him resolving into a face that he recognised, that sharp nose, that petulant chin, the fragments reassembling intoâit wasâinto the boy. âLooking like somebody else. Completely different. All this. What is this?â Rafik laughed. âDressing up. Like a gigolo. But you should do what you want.â
The boy introduced his friend, a much older man, who was so heavy he struggled to stand and was breathless with the effort.
âAaah,â Rafik said, resting his hand on the back of the chair that had been pulled out for him, studying the boy still, the boyâs face shining so that it looked almost white, tight as a bladder. âIâm only showing you,â Rafik said, gesturing at his own face so the boy should know what he meant, âhow a man should be. He should not appear vain.â But the boy would only look at his friend, dabbing at the corners of his lips with his napkin though there was no food on the table.
The friend invited him to sit, as though Rafik were attending at his invitation.
Rafik glanced around, glancing at the staircase that had brought him there. âYour friend must take care of himself,â he said to the boy, sitting finally. âNot good to have all this excess weight at his age.â
Menus were brought. He ordered Scotch, imagining Mousey in the empty seat across from him. âYour uncle would have liked the place,â Rafik said.
The boy thrummed his fingers against the table, staring at his friend.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Action & Adventure | Classics |
Coming of Age | Family Life |
Historical | Horror |
Humorous | Literary |
The Thirst by Nesbo Jo(6458)
120 Days of Sodom by Marquis de Sade(2947)
Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer(2514)
Angels in America by Tony Kushner(2399)
A Ladder to the Sky by John Boyne(2318)
The Femme Playlist & I Cannot Lie to the Stars That Made Me by Catherine Hernandez(2173)
The Patrick Melrose Novels: Never Mind, Bad News, Some Hope, and Mother's Milk by Edward St. Aubyn(2136)
The Goodmans by Clare Ashton(2124)
Alpha Awakened (Waking the Dragons Book 1) by Susi Hawke & Piper Scott(2066)
Shawn by Catherine Lievens(2035)
A Chance in Time by Naomi Lance(1970)
Iggy by Catherine Lievens(1935)
I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith(1914)
Well Traveled by Mills Margaret & Ward Tedy(1912)
Rabbit by Catherine Lievens(1887)
Neriah by Catherine Lievens(1843)
His Fragile Heart by Jamie Lynn Miller(1789)
The history of Tom Jones, a foundling by Henry Fielding(1752)
Unlawfully Claimed by Kian Rhodes(1731)
