pitilessly up into the shadows. He gave Leo a passing kiss on the cheek, and drew him into the kitchen, where the under-unit lighting stammered and blinked into life. 'Do you want a whisky?'
And for once Leo said, 'I don't mind if I do! Yeah, that would be nice. Thanks very much, Nick.' He strolled round the room as if not really noticing it, and stood scanning the wall of photographs.
He went up two at a time, in too much of a hurry, and when he looked back on the turn he saw Leo dawdling by the same factor that he was rushing; he went into the drawing room and pressed switches that brought on lamps on side tables and over pictures-so that when Leo sauntered in he saw the room as Nick had first seen it two years before, all shadows and reflections and the gleam of gilt. Nick stood in front of the fireplace, longing for it to be a triumph, but taking his cue from the suppressed curiosity in Leo's face.
'I'm not used to this,' Leo said.
'Oh…'
'I don't drink whisky.'
'Ah, no, well -'
'Who knows what it'll do to me? I might get dangerous.'
Nick grinned tightly and said, 'Is that a threat or a promise?' He reached out and touched Leo's hip-his hand lay there for a second or two. Normally, together, alone, they would have been snogging, holding each other very tightly; though sometimes, it was true, Leo laughed at Nick's urgency and said, 'Don't panic, babe! I'm not going anywhere! You've got me!' Leo rested his glass on the mantelpiece, and eyed Guardi's
'God, the snobs.'
Nick laughed. 'They're not really snobs,' he said. 'Well, he is perhaps a bit. They're…'It was hard to explain, hard to know, in the dense compact of the marriage, who sanctioned what. They were each other's alibi. And Nick saw that Leo was using the word in a looser way, to mean rich people, who lived in nice places, to mean nobs. It struck him that he might be about to take the whole treat of coming to Kensington Park Gardens and making love in a bed as an elaborate but crushing rebuff. He watched him sip some more, deliberately, and then wander towards the front windows. He tried to act on his advice of fifteen minutes earlier, tried to trust his Uncle Leo. The room was devised and laid out for entertaining, on a generous scale, and for a second, as if a thick door had opened, he heard the roar of accumulated talk and laughter, the consensual social roar, instead of the clock's ticking and the fizz of silence.
'That's a nice bit of oyster,' Leo said, pointing at a walnut commode. 'And that's Sevres, if I'm not wrong, with that blue.'
'Yes, I think it is,' Nick said, feeling that this nod at a common interest also brought old Pete rather critically into the room. Old Pete would have had some smart gay backchat to deal with an awkward moment like this.
'No, they've got some nice pieces,' Leo said, flatly, and a little ponderously, and so perhaps shyly. He turned round, nodding. 'You've done well.'
'Darling, none of it's mine…'
'I know, I know.' Leo sat down at the piano, and after a moment's thought stood his glass on a book on the lid. 'What's this, then… Mozart, all right, that's not too bad,' checking the cover of the music on the stand, but letting it fall back to the eternally open Andante. 'So what key's this in?'-as if the key required some special tactics, like a golf-shot. 'F major…'
'It's a funny old piano,' said Nick. He felt that if Leo played the piano, especially if he played it badly, it would waken the unconscious demons of the house and bring them in yawning and protesting.
'Ah, that's all right,' Leo murmured courteously; and he started to play, with a distracted frown at the page. It was the great second movement of K533, spare, probing, Bach-like, that Nick had discovered, and tried to play, on the night when he'd lost his chance of meeting Leo-till Catherine had complained, and he'd apologized and doodled off into Waldorf music. To apologize for what you most wanted to do, to concede that it was obnoxious, boring, 'vulgar and unsafe'-that was the worst thing. And the music seemed to know this, to know the irresistible curve of hope, and its hollow inversion. Leo played it pretty steadily, and Nick stood behind him, willing it along, nudging it through those quickly corrected wrong notes and tense hesitations that are a torture of sight-reading and yet heighten the rewards when everything runs clear and good. When Leo suddenly went steeply wrong he gave a disparaging shout, struck a few random chords, then reached for his glass. 'Must be too pissed to play,' he said, not necessarily joking.
Nick sniggered. 'You're good. I can't play that. I didn't know you could play.' He felt very touched, and chastened, as if by a glimpse of his own unquestioned assumptions. It opened a new perspective, the sight of Leo in his jeans and sweatshirt and baseball boots raising Mozart out of the sonorous old Bosendorfer. And it seemed to have loosened him up, he was like a shy guest who makes a brilliant joke, its lustre heightened by delay and distillation, and who suddenly finds he's enjoying himself. Nick grabbed him from behind and squashed a kiss onto his cheek.
Leo chuckled and said, 'All right, babe…'
Nick said, 'I love you,' shaking him in a tight hug, and grunting at the hard muscular heat of him. Leo reached up with his free right hand and gripped his arm. After a while he said,
'That's a terrible picture.'
It was Norman Kent's portrait of Toby, aged sixteen, and it was the image-beyond the intimidating bronze bust of Liszt-on which the eyes of the doodling pianist tended to dwell. While Leo had been playing, it had lent its sickly colour to Nick's thoughts.
'I know… Poor Toby.'
'Cos he's quite tasty, in my opinion.'
'Oh yes.'
'You never told me if you had him, when you were all up at Oxford University.'
Nick had still not quite let on to Leo that before their tangle in the bushes he had never exactly 'had' anyone. He said, 'No, no, he's completely straight.'
'Yeah?' said Leo, sceptically. 'You must have had a go.'
'Not really,' Nick said. He stood back, with his hands still on Leo's shoulders, and smiled wanly at the pink- faced blazered boy. The old regret could always come alive again, and for a moment even Leo, warm under his hands, seemed cheap and provisional compared to the unattainable bloom of Toby.
'I just thought the way he kissed you and looked at you was a bit poofy.'
'Don't!' Nick murmured, and then laughed, pulling Leo to get him up, and get the real kisses from him, the ones that Toby would never give him.
But Leo held out a moment longer. 'So they're easy about having a bender in the house, are they, their lordships?'
'Of course,' said Nick. 'They're absolutely fine with it.' And in his mind he heard Catherine saying, 'As long as it's never mentioned.' He went on, with a degree of exaggeration, 'They've got lots of gay friends. In fact they asked me to bring you here, darling.'
'Oh,' said Leo, with a subtlety of register worthy of Rachel herself.