'Are the Bosnian Serbs the same lot who were attacking Sarajevo?' I asked.
Silence.
'Whose territory is Srebrenica in, then?'
'Srebrenica is a safe area,' said Daniel in deeply patronizing tones.
'So how come the people from the safe area were attacking before?'
'Shut up.'
'Just tell me if the Bosnians in Srebrenica are the same lot as the ones in Sarajevo.'
'Muslims,' said Daniel triumphantly.
'Serbian or Bosnian?'
'Look, will you shut up?'
'You don't know what's going on in Bosnia either.'
'I do.'
'You don't.'
'I do.'
'You don' t.'
At this point the commissionaire, who was dressed in knickerbockers, white socks, patent leather buckled shoes, a frock coat and a powdered wig, leaned over and said, 'I think you'll find the former inhabitants of Srebrenica and of Sarajevo are Bosnian Muslims, sir.' Adding pointedly, 'Will you be requiring a newspaper in the morning at all, sir?'
I thought Daniel was going to hit him. I found myself stroking his arm murmuring, 'OK now, easy, easy,' as if he were a racehorse that had been frightened by a van.
5.30 p.m. Brrr. Instead of lying side by side with Daniel in hot sun at the side of the lake wearing a long floaty dress, I ended up blue with cold in a rowing boat with one of the hotel bath towels wrapped round me. Eventually we gave up to retire to our room for a hot bath and Codis, discovering en route that another couple were to be sharing the non-wedding party dining room with us that evening, the female half of which was a girl called Eileen whom Daniel had slept with twice, inadvertently bitten dangerously hard on the breast and never spoken to since.
As I emerged from my bath Daniel was lying on the bed giggling. 'I've got a new diet for you,' he said.
'So you do think I'm fat.'
'OK, this is it. It's v
ery simple. All you do is not eat any food which you have to pay for. So at the start of the diet you're a bit porky and no one asks you out to dinner. Then you lose weight and get a bit leggy and shag-me hippy and people start taking you out for meals. So then you put a few pounds on, the invitations tail off and you start losing weight again.'
'Daniel!' I exploded. 'That's the most appalling sexist, fattist, cynical thing I've ever heard.'
'Oh, don't be like that, Bridge,' he said. 'It's the logical extension of what you really think. I keep telling you nobody wants legs like a stick insect. They want a bottom they can park a bike in and balance a pint of beer on.'
I was torn between a gross image of myself with a bicycle parked in my bottom and a pint of beer balanced on it, fury at Daniel for his blatantly provocative sexism and suddenly wondering if he might be right about my concept of my body in relation– to men, and, in which case, whether I should have something delicious to eat straight away and what that might be.
'I'll just pop the telly on,' said Daniel, taking advantage of my temporary speechlessness to press the remote-control button, and moving towards the curtains, which were those thick hotel ones with blackout lining. Seconds later the room was in complete darkness apart from the flickering light of the cricket. Daniel had lit a fag and was calling down to room service for six cans of Fosters.
'Do you want anything, Bridge?' he said, smirking. 'Cream tea, maybe? I'll pay.'
JULY. Huh
Sunday 2 July
8st 10 (continuing good work), alcohol units 0, cigarettes 0, calories 995, Instants 0: perfect.