When we pull up outside our hotel, even Dad looks speechless. The grey stone front seems to stretch up for miles. Two huge Christmas trees twinkling with red and gold lights are standing on either side of the large revolving door, like guards on duty. As I step out of the taxi, I feel something cold on the end of my nose. I look up and see that it’s starting to snow. Not heavily, just a few tiny flakes drifting down, as if they’ve sneaked out of a cloud to see what’s going on.
“Good afternoon, ma’am!”
I look over and see a doorman dressed in the smartest uniform ever, smiling at me.
I smile back shyly. “Afternoon.”
“Welcome to the Waldorf,” he says, coming over to help us with our cases.
I look at the Christmas trees and the twinkling lights and the snowflakes shimmering in the air like powdered silver, and I don’t feel like I’m in a movie anymore; I feel like I’m in a fairy tale. As we all follow the doorman into the hotel, I cross my fingers and hope it has a really happy ending.
Chapter Fourteen
Imagine the most incredible, beautiful, luxurious fairy-tale palace your brain is capable of conjuring. Then add more marble, more gold, more chandeliers, and more general shininess and sparkliness and then, maybe, you’ll have something close to the Waldorf Astoria.
“Wow!” Elliot exclaims, as he gazes around the lobby.
“Beats the Hastings Travelodge, eh, kids?” Dad says with a wink.
I’m too stunned to even giggle.
Mum looks slightly terrified. “This is huge,” she whispers to Dad. And I’m not sure if she’s talking about the lobby, the hotel, or the wedding she’s got to organize.
By the time we’ve been shown to our rooms, Elliot and I are doing a great impression of a pair of goldfishes—opening and closing our mouths but with no words coming out other than “Oh my God.”
We’ve been put in two adjoining rooms right next door to Mum and Dad’s.
“We need one of these back at home,” Elliot calls over to me from the adjoining door. “How cool would that be, if I could just pop over to see you without ever having to go outside?”
“It would be very cool,” I say, perching on the edge of my bed. My room is like something out of a stately home. The furniture is all made from gleaming mahogany, the chairs and the desk and the bed all with ornately carved legs. The color scheme is burgundy and gold, which isn’t something I would ever choose for my bedroom at home, but here it’s perfect. I look over to the window. The velvet curtains go all the way from the ceiling to the floor and are tied back with wide sashes. “Oh my God, is that . . . ?” I jump off the bed and race over to the window.
Elliot follows me. “The Empire State Building,” he gasps as we gaze out at the New York skyline.
We turn and look at each other for a second, then we both start jumping about like kids on Christmas morning.
For the rest of the afternoon, Mum and Dad are busy in meetings with Cindy, Jim, and the catering manager. Elliot and I are supposed to be napping off our jet lag before we go out for the evening but we’re far too excited to sleep. Instead, we’ve built a nest of cushions and pillows on my bed and we’re channel surfing our way through American TV.
Elliot is also looking up interesting facts about the Waldorf Astoria on his laptop. My laptop is still tucked away inside my suitcase. I’ve decided to leave it there for the rest of the trip. I’ve also turned off the Internet on my phone. I want it to truly feel as if there’s an ocean between me and everyone from school and my Unicorn Knickers Shame.
“Oh my God, Pen, listen to this!” Elliot starts reading from his screen. “The Waldorf Astoria was created by two feuding cousins called Waldorf and Astor who each built rival hotels next to each other.” He turns to me, laughing. “Then, when they made up, they built a corridor between them.”
“Seriously?”
“Yep.” Elliot continues reading. “Oh, but it’s not this building. This one was built in 1931. The original hotel was knocked down to make space for the Empire State Building.”
We both glance to the window and once again I get that pinch-me-I’m-dreaming feeling.
“You’re not going to believe this,” Elliot exclaims with a gasp. “This was the hotel where room service was first invented!”
“You’re kidding?”
“Nope. And—and”—Elliot can barely contain his excitement—“there was a secret underground train platform.”
“What?”
“It was for VIPs who wanted to arrive here in secret, like the president.” Elliot looks at me, his eyes wide as saucers. “Oh, Pen, I love this place.”
In the end we order some room service because, as Elliot said, “It would be rude not to, given that they invented it.” We order a Waldorf salad because it was also invented here and a huge margherita pizza. I’m just starting to feel really sleepy when Mum and Dad get back. Dad is looking his usual laid-back self but Mum is looking super-stressy.
“There’s so much to do!” she wails, plonking herself down on my bed. “I knew we should have come sooner.”
“It’ll be fine,” Dad says, giving her a reassuring smile. “We’ve got all day tomorrow to sort everything out. And Sadie Lee is a star.”
Mum nods. “Yes, she’s amazing. Her bread pudding tastes divine.” Mum turns to me. “Cindy and Jim were wondering if you could take some behind-the-scenes photos for them. They’ve got a professional photographer booked for the wedding day, but they were saying how nice it would be if they could have some pictures of us setting things up and putting the Downton Abbey touches to everything. And they’ve asked if you’d take some fun shots on the day too—the little things the professional photographer won’t see.”