Today we hosted a Wake at the hotel. A
week previous to this the daughter of the deceased woman had come to
discuss the menu. She is a Countess. For starters she requested the
Salmon Terrine. And for main course the Guinea Fowl.
“And what would you like for the
vegetarians madam?”
An icily raised eyebrow and a
meaningful pause later;
“The Guinea fowl.”
I was keen to get a glimpse of her.
The room had been prepared beautifully
except for one curious anomaly. Amongst the linen and the silver and
the tasteful but eye wateringly expensive flowers were a profusion
of cushions. Silk with prints upon them of the deceased mothers face
throughout the years. Myself and Casper, the Polish waiter looked on
curiously.
'People will be sitting on her face,'
he said.
'Perhaps its what she would have
wanted,' I responded.
During breakfast I watched as funeral
attendees arrived. The Wake was set for 45 people. By 10am it had
risen to 57 and the chef was none too quietly having an aneurism in
the kitchen.
'How many fucking people am I feeding?'
By 11am the figure was possibly 60, but
maybe only 35. We tiptoed around the service area with fear in our
hearts as the chef paced and swore and played Candy crush on his
iphone.
When the Countess arrived it was
impossible to ignore her. She wore black fur from her neck to the
ground, huge Chanel sunglasses and a net and feather headdress. She
looked like a star of the silver screen and when she removed her
shades to dab at the tears she revealed a face that was ethereally
beautiful. Icy, but divine.
'She looks like a young Meryl Streep,'
I muttered to Casper whilst clearing away another round of dirty
breakfast plates.
'She looks cold, like her tears might
freeze on her face,' he whispered.
He had a point.
They headed off to the church and I
carried a tray of champagne flutes to the lounge area to prepare for
their return. I found the manager fiddling with a projector. As I
lined up the glasses a 35mm film burst in to life and the image of a
middle aged and terribly elegant woman appeared on my shirt. She was
driving an open top sporty car through the countryside. A moment
later the sound of a husky but oddly girlish laugh filled the room. I
shuddered.
'Am I listening to the laugh of a dead
woman?'
The manager nodded. 'I can't watch it
the whole way through. I'm an emotional young man.'
'Less of the “young”,' I said and
smirked as he automatically reached nervously to pat his bald spot.
At noon the bereaved began to file back
in to the hotel. They were ushered to the lounge and served champagne
and the tiniest, most delicate canapes created by the now apoplectic
chef.
'What do you mean there are 50 of them
but you have no idea how many are staying?! I'm up to my tits in
Guinea Fowl here! Are you having a fucking giraffe?'
I wanted to top up the champagne
glasses or hand out the canapes so I could watch the film and their
reactions but because of my tattoos I was relegated to the kitchen
polishing cutlery.
Within twenty minutes the chef was
creaming 'Service!' and the starters were rushed out in the hands of
three elegant waiters and one disgruntled French sommelier.
Within moments ten of the starters were
returned to the kitchen by three somewhat less elegant and slightly
more frazzled waiters and one stony faced sommelier.
'What?' The chef asked in a quiet
threatening voice.
'Some are outside smoking. Some are
just gone. We have no idea how many people we are serving. And they
keep changing seats.'
'Fuck it,' the chef muttered and
stalked outside for a fag.
As the main course was carried out,
Casper, through a mouthful of Salmon Terrine, observed that the
Countess was drunk and hugging everyone.
The manager ran in to the kitchen
calling my name.
'Can you take some more champagne
through? Everyone is busy. Make sure your sleeves are rolled down to
cover your tattoos. You don't have your nose ring in do you?'
'No,' I smiled. Fuck you, I thought.
As I circled the room I observed the
guests. The Countess was indeed somewhat drunk and hugging everyone
she spoke to. Occasionally she'd point to one of the hideous silk
cushions;
'Its my art,' she slurred.
'Lovely,' a bemused elderly gentleman
murmured, painfully aware that he was sat on the deceased's face.
In the distance a wrinkled and liver
spotted arm held an empty champagne flute aloft. I weaved my way over
and recoiled. The face attached to the arm made no sense whatsoever.
The woman had endured so much plastic surgery that she looked like a
startled cat. Her eyes mere slits in her overly stretched face. Her
lips pouting sexually in a profoundly disturbing way for the aged.
I think she was crying. It was
impossible to be sure.
Amongst the well heeled and, I don't
say this lightly, inbred guests, I noticed three people who stood out
dramatically. A Thai woman about my age and her two teenage
daughters. Whilst everyone else wore expensive suits or silk and
little fur wraps, these three wore inexpensive coats which they had
yet to remove. They looked painfully uncomfortable and smiled shyly
as I offered to top up their glasses. At the next table I heard a
distinguished man in his 70's say to his neighbour;
'Oh yes, she was her housekeeper. More
her carer towards the end. Very good, very hard working girl. I
believe she's left her something in the will.'
I watched as various people wandered
over to the thai women and engaged in short and awkward conversation
before drifting off again.
The Countess was now hugging a woman
who bore a slight resemblance to her but none of her glamour. She
seemed uncomfortable in her skirt, her hair frizzy and unmanageable.
Her tears fell warm and unrestrained.
'My poor sister,' the countess slurred,
stroking her hair. 'Mummy loved you very much didn't she.' An edge
there.
As the coffees were served the countess
had run out of guests to embrace and had moved on to the waiting
staff.
'You're doing such a marvellous job.
Really. Just marvellous. I love you all.'
She grabs me by the arm.
'Be a darling and get me a green tea
would you? I'm awfully pissed and I don't need caffeine on top of
it.'
When I returned with the tea she was
sat again, this time with two horsey looking women and one elderly
retainer who clearly came from old money and had a sharp bright look
about her.
The countess was mid flow.
'He had such long and elegant limbs.
Tall, terribly handsome and so very charming. There was no question
of his breeding. None at all.'
The elderly retainer turned to her.
'Whom are you talking about Alex?' She
asked lightly.
'Mummy's friend. Henry, you remember
him don't you?'
'Your father is sat at the next table
child and you are drunk. Hush your mouth.'
'But -' The countess protested.
'Enough.' The woman snapped.
Silence descended.
Mid afternoon the guests began to file
out, some held aloft by the less inebriated.
As I cleared away the dirty cups and
their chanel stained rims the Countess raised her voice.
'Oh for christ's sake Lizzie, if you
want the flowers take the bloody flowers!'
'I just want one bouquet to dry,' the
sister whispered, embarrassed by the sudden attention. 'Something to
remember the -'
'Yes, yes, just take them! Stop being
such a pill. Anyone would think you were the only one who'd lost a
mother.'
The sister ran from the room and in to
the garden followed closely by her father, the distinguished looking
gent I'd seen earlier.
The Countess continued to address no
one in particular.
'Honestly, did you see the scene she
made? Take the damn flowers! I paid for them but by all means help
yourself. Did you see the scene? Did you?'
It only took an hour or so to clear
away the remnants of the Wake. Apparently the deceased mother had
worn vintage Chanel her whole life. Nothing else. Only Chanel.
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