The Cherry View Wellness Centre was located in a converted luxury house on an avenue of converted luxury houses which now acted as premises for lawyers' offices, accountancy firms and marketing bureaus, plus the occasional family home for rich people. The property was owned by the widow of a wealthy banker who discovered spirituality in her late middle age, and who was also not blind to the tax benefits of funding a charitable foundation. The house itself was white with huge bay windows on the ground floor, narrow windows on the upper floor and small, square windows peeking out from the gables set into the charcoal-black slate roof. Like all the houses in that road, the building was free-standing with enough space to park cars on both sides. There was plenty of greenery around the black tarmac, with a lawn at the front, boxwood and azalea shrubs along the perimeter walls and one old cherry tree which stood like a sentinel by the smooth tarmac driveway.
Ursula Graham arrived at ten-to-nine and parked her green Clio in the spaces reserved for staff on the left side of the building. She was a life coach and counsellor, one of twenty freelance wellness practitioners—almost all female—who paid Cherry View a hefty percentage of their earnings in exchange for use of the facilities and inclusion on the website. Her background was in corporate law and she still did occasional work for her former boss to supplement her income, but after fifteen years in that world, she looked forward to the day when she could say 'no' to him for good.
Cherry View employed three receptionists and this morning it was Beryl at the desk in the foyer next to the staircase. Beryl was a sturdy woman with white hair who ran the desk with the efficiency of a sergeant major. Ursula offered her a cheery hello, but Beryl seemed occupied going through files and didn't respond. Ursula coughed and repeated her greeting. Beryl stopped, looked at her and stared.
'Ursula, darling, are you remembering to eat?' she said.
Ursula felt her neck flush red.
'I eat fine, thank you,' she said. 'I'm just naturally thin.'
'Well ... lucky you,' said Beryl and she went back to her files.
Ursula clenched her teeth and went up the staircase. She reminded herself that spiritual wellness meant accepting people as they were and not allowing oneself to be triggered by one's own emotional reactions. Yes, she had been skinny as a child and was still thin in her thirties. It was why she tended to wear long skirts, heeled boots and well-cut jackets over a flowing blouse or thick polo-neck. She also wore her hair long, clipped back in a way to look soft and full, although it didn't hide her sharp cheekbones nor the thin point of her nose. But as she climbed the stairs, Ursula told herself she could still look attractive and that her thinness was not the reason she had been alone for over two years.
Ursula reached her usual consulting room and entered. It was her favourite room on that floor, beautiful and light in the summer with a great view of the trees in the back garden. Even now in autumn, it still had a relaxing energy. Ursula hung her coat on an old-fashioned hatstand in the corner and prepared the room for her first appointment. This consisted of moving an extra chair into place. Then she took off her boots and socks and sat cross-legged on the floor for her fifteen-minute morning meditation.
Ursula's first client was Sally Price, thirty-two, married with two children and part-time account manager at a marketing firm. She had come to Ursula suffering from stress and, after three sessions, its cause seemed pretty clear: Sally's husband wasn't pulling his weight at home. It was a situation so common, Ursula could have told Sally's story for her: The woman puts her career on hold while she has children and takes care of them through their first two years. The man promises that when she goes back to work, he will step up and take equal responsibility for the housework and parenting, but when the woman actually
does
go back to work—surprise, surprise—the man reneges on his promise. Sally was now heading for a burn-out because she was essentially working two jobs while her husband just did the one.
Ursula had listened to this story with indignation and finally asked Sally if her husband would be open to joining them for a session. Sally was delighted with the idea, saying he deserved a good telling off. Ursula reminded her client that, as a counsellor, she was not allowed to take sides. 'But I know all the excuses,' she said. 'And if your husband can be made to see the impact of his behaviour, I'm sure we can reach a suitable compromise.'
The intercom buzzed and Beryl's voice announced the presence of clients at the reception desk. Ursula glanced at the clock. Sally had been late for every one of her appointments, but now she was five minutes early. That was encouraging.
'Shall I send them up?' came Beryl's tinny voice through the speaker.
'No, I'll come down,' said Ursula.
She put on her socks and boots, gave her appearance a quick check, then headed out to the staircase. As she went down the stairs and turned the corner of the landing, she made a mental note to pay attention to her clients' body language when she saw them. The couple were at the reception desk, exchanging a few words with Beryl.
Sally Price was an attractive woman with shoulder-length blond hair and a taste for stylish outfits to show off her admittedly wonderful figure. She was the kind of women who could have her pick of the men and—much as Ursula hated seeing things in those terms—there were moments when she wondered why Sally's husband wasn't bending over backwards to please her.
But that was before she saw him.
Ursula looked at the man by the reception desk and her stomach lurched, as though she'd dropped through a trapdoor. 'Oh, my God! He's
gorgeous!'
screamed an internal voice. The man was tall, broad-shouldered and casually well-dressed, leaning on the desk like it belonged to him. Ursula remembered Sally mentioning an Italian mother and she saw it now, in his dark eyes and lashes, his black wavy hair and strong jawline. A group of women were coming in for a yoga lesson and they were all doing double-takes, as though struggling to believe that such miracles of manhood actually walked the earth.
Ursula mentally shook herself, irritated. She reminded herself that women married to good-looking men were often afraid of asserting their rights, just in case he left them for more amenable women. As she walked across the floor to them, Sally smiled in relief and patted her husband's arm to get his attention. The man turned, his gaze rested on Ursula and her heartrate accelerated. She forced herself to maintain eye contact, gave him a formal smile and held out her hand.
'Good morning,' she said, relieved to hear clipped professionalism in her tone. 'I'm Ursula, Sally's coach.'
'Jeff Price,' said the man, shaking her hand.
'Price?' said Ursula. 'So you took your wife's name?'
Jeff was taken aback. Sally laughed.
'No,' he said, recovering. 'Sally took mine. But, for the record, I would have been fine if—'
'I was joking,' said Ursula.
'Oh.'
'Shall we go upstairs?'
Sally said: 'Sure!'
Ursula led them up the staircase to her consulting room, trying to make relaxed small talk. Inside, she was furious with herself. First, with framing as a joke an issue she actually felt strongly about. But, more importantly, she was letting Sally down. The whole point of this meeting was to get Jeff to see that he was not honouring his responsibilities and putting him on the defensive was a bad first move. Jesus, why did women
always
have to dance around the sensitive egos of men?
Ursula showed the couple into the consulting room and they took their seats while Ursula fetched a flask of water and three glasses, along with her notebook and pen. She poured water for her guests, then sat back in a chair strategically placed to face the two of them from equal distances. Ursula began by thanking Jeff for his presence at the session, which she said demonstrated that he was taking Sally's concerns seriously. However, she emphasized that her role was to act as an impartial facilitator; she would not be taking sides.
Jeff sat easily in his chair, one leg crossed over the other, and listened to Ursula with an expression of polite scepticism. His gaze never left her and Ursula found herself referring to the blank notebook on her lap, because she knew if she held eye contact for too long, her face would go red. It was a relief when she could finally turn to her client.
'Sally, maybe we can start with you?' she said. 'In your own words, why don't you tell Jeff the cause of your stress?'
Sally launched into a speech: Jeff had promised to share the responsibility for chores and parenting, and he had ended up leaving everything to her. She wanted to go from part-time to full-time work, but she couldn't because she was unable to trust him to do his share. Jeff listened patiently, with the expression of a man who had heard this a hundred times before. When Sally finished, Ursula turned to him.
'So, Jeff,' said Ursula. 'How would you like to respond?'
'Well, the first thing I would say,' said Jeff, 'is that I didn't make a promise in the way that Sally described.'
'That's not true!' said Sally.
'Um, Sally...?' said Ursula.
Sally pressed her lips together and looked down. Ursula's gaze went back to Jeff.
'You were saying that you
didn't
make any promises to Sally?'
'No...' said Jeff. 'I'm saying that it wasn't a case of
me
making a promise to
her.
The way I see it, we
both
made promises to