Louisa Young - Desiring Cairo

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The sparky, funny sequel to Louisa Young’s acclaimed first novel of belly-dancing, motorbikes and single-parenthood.Angeline Gower, ex-bellydancer, ex-biker, single mother of a little girl who is not actually her child, is mired in problems again in this wonderful sequel.Her relationship with Harry, the lover turned cop, remains fraught, the lure of the glamorous but no good Eddie hasn’t gone away. And there is yet another element complicating things know – the seductive and mysterious Sa’id. With Angeline older and a little wiser, Louisa Young weaves a tale that is richer, sexier and more moving than ‘Baby Love’, while remaining just as exciting. Shifting between Shepherd’s Bush and Cairo, full of the contrasts between the West and the Middle East, ‘Desiring Cairo’ thrills and enthralls while at the same time making us think and feel deeply about the love between mother and child, man and woman, friend and friend.Louisa Young has skilfully written this so that it is equally enjoyable read on its own, or as part of the trilogy that starts with ‘Baby Love’ and ends with ‘Tree of Pearls’.

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*

I rang him back. He wanted to meet. It seemed to me like a tiny nasty echo of when Jim had reappeared, wanting to meet, wanting to see Lily, wanting to take her from me. How soon before the lawyers’ letters start up again? At the same time I recognised the absurdity: this was Harry, who had been my Harry, Harry who wasn’t a bad bloke, Harry who now wore a white hat, Harry who wasn’t even definitely her father. And I knew I couldn’t avoid it forever, because he was right, you cannot avoid what exists. This question existed, no doubt about it. I knew that all I’d said to him that night on the balcony was untenable. A father is a father – if he is then he is. I’d even agreed that about Jim.

So I agreed to meet him the next day. He wanted to make it the evening, I said no, lunch is easier, Lily will be at school. How much they have to learn.

FOUR Chapter Four: Hakim’s Business, Harry’s News Chapter Five: Next Chapter Six: Tell Mama Chapter Seven: Brighton Chapter Eight: Harry Cooks Dinner Chapter Nine: Sunday Night Chapter Ten: Sa’id Chapter Eleven: The Funeral Chapter Twelve: Dinner with Sa’id Chapter Thirteen: Tell Your Own Mama Chapter Fourteen: Chrissie, Get Out of My Bath Chapter Fifteen: Sunday Night Coming Down Again Chapter Sixteen: ‘You are dearer than my days, you are more beautiful than my dreams’ Chapter Seventeen: I Wish I Was in Egypt Chapter Eighteen: What Harry Knows Chapter Nineteen: The Madness Sets In Chapter Twenty: Cairo Chapter Twenty-One: Family Life Chapter Twenty-Two: Let’s Go to the Bank Chapter Twenty-Three: Give Me Your Hands Chapter Twenty-Four: Semiramis Chapter Twenty-Five: God, when he created the world, put a great sea between the Muslims and the Christians, ‘for a reason’ Chapter Twenty-Six: The End, and the Beginning Acknowledgements About the Author Also by Louisa Young About the Publisher

Hakim’s Business, Harry’s News Chapter Four: Hakim’s Business, Harry’s News Chapter Five: Next Chapter Six: Tell Mama Chapter Seven: Brighton Chapter Eight: Harry Cooks Dinner Chapter Nine: Sunday Night Chapter Ten: Sa’id Chapter Eleven: The Funeral Chapter Twelve: Dinner with Sa’id Chapter Thirteen: Tell Your Own Mama Chapter Fourteen: Chrissie, Get Out of My Bath Chapter Fifteen: Sunday Night Coming Down Again Chapter Sixteen: ‘You are dearer than my days, you are more beautiful than my dreams’ Chapter Seventeen: I Wish I Was in Egypt Chapter Eighteen: What Harry Knows Chapter Nineteen: The Madness Sets In Chapter Twenty: Cairo Chapter Twenty-One: Family Life Chapter Twenty-Two: Let’s Go to the Bank Chapter Twenty-Three: Give Me Your Hands Chapter Twenty-Four: Semiramis Chapter Twenty-Five: God, when he created the world, put a great sea between the Muslims and the Christians, ‘for a reason’ Chapter Twenty-Six: The End, and the Beginning Acknowledgements About the Author Also by Louisa Young About the Publisher

After the first day, spent drinking coffee and reading Arabic newspapers, Hakim had expanded his repertoire to drinking coffee, reading Arabic newspapers and making and receiving telephone calls. He had a mobile phone, of which he was proud. By day three he wanted an A to Z. However he doesn’t read English too well. This was obviously going to make life a bit of a problem for him, and for me by default. He decided that the simplest thing would be for me to teach him. I thought it would be far easier if I just showed him where Somerset House was on the map, and wrote out CHARING CROSS in big letters so he could tell when he’d reached the right station. I instructed him in English, he wrote it down in Arabic. I didn’t want to think about it actually. ‘You killed my love’ was on my mind. I didn’t want it to be. I know the form. You ignore anonymous letters, you put odd phone calls down to the vagaries of the system. You have better things to worry about. And I do. I have Harry.

But it was on my mind. Latching on to that which is always on my mind. Because I did … kill. Janie. And however much you may know, reasonably, and accept everybody else’s convictions, there is always … It’s always there. However much an accident is an accident. The sense of responsibility. Guilt at surviving when she didn’t. Helplessness at not having preserved your parents from it. Whatever she may have done makes little difference to that, and the punishment that I had, in losing my fitness to dance, makes little difference either. It matters, but it makes little difference.

I couldn’t think what the letter was to do with. But it had touched a nerve. A ganglion actually. So it wasn’t till Hakim had left that I wondered what he was going to do at Somerset House.

When he got back, five hours later, I made him a cup of coffee and asked him.

‘Nothing,’ he said. He looked angry, almost tearful. ‘Nothing. What can I do? I don’t know your writing. I was lost. It’s OK, I ask in shops and everybody speaks Arabic. I get home. But I found nothing. Somerset House is just the wrong place.’

Of course it was. Somerset House is always the wrong place. You think it’s the right place because it was in Sherlock Holmes or something, but the right place is now in Preston, or care of a privatised company in New Maiden. Poor lost foreigner. I remembered my first days in Cairo, days of lonely chaos before I discovered the bar on the roof of the Odeon, and the flat in the block on Champoleon Street – Château Champoleon, as Orlando the Colombian political correspondent next door called it in his camp Latino/Tennessee accent. Orlando it was who taught me never to say America when I meant the United States. There is a brilliant blind chaotic excitement to a new city, an alien city. But God there is some loneliness too. When there’s too much going on out there, too much cardamom and donkey shit and Arabic, too many Mercedes and veils and babies, and you can’t face it, so you stay in your cheap cockroachy room saying it’s only wise to in the heat of the day, or the danger of the evening, pretending that you’re taking the opportunity to catch up on Proust, but really you’re just building up loneliness and boredom to the point when you have to explode. It’s like the internal combustion engine. Suck squeeze bang blow: Suck in loneliness, squeeze it with boredom until BANG! you are blown out on to the streets of the alien city, and thank God for it. Whereupon you suck in strangeness, squeeze it with fascination till BANG! the top of your head blows off with the excitement of it all and blows you into the next strange and fascinating experience. (I was very much a biker in those days, hence the imagery. Orlando liked the image, said it was just like Hegel, thesis, antithesis and synthesis, only in fourtime instead of a waltz, ‘But it’s all dancing,’ he said. Orlando was a gas.)

I don’t know what London is like to a stranger. I should imagine horrible. Cold, unfriendly, cliquey, snitty, incomprehensible. And grey, and strange, and wet, and cold. Light when it should be dark; dark when it should be light. And expensive. And big. But people come here, people stay here, whole peoples come and live and settle. No thanks to the welcome we give them, that’s for sure. Poor Hakim.

‘I’m sorry,’ I said. ‘I should have helped you. I’ll come down with you tomorrow morning.’

‘Thank you,’ says Hakim.

‘Shukran afwan,’ said Lily, grinning, waiting for approbation.

‘Bravo,’ said Hakim. She went pink with pleasure, and he smiled and pinched her cheek, and she smiled and pinched his and said, ‘Chubby chops’, and he said, ‘What is chubby chops?’, and generally they were carrying on like love’s young dream.

‘So what is it you’re trying to find out about?’ I asked.

Hakim went very quiet.

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