Antidote to Infidelity (49 page)

BOOK: Antidote to Infidelity
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Me:
(taking off my eye
mask, blinking at the fuzz)

Er, letting? Snaps?
Sorry, I was asleep. You

ve lost me.

Jubilant Jill:

The interior shots, you know,
of the house? We

ve got the full
frontal, thanks, but we need the internals before we can get your three hundred
and sixty degree tour on the web . . .

Me:
(groaning, lying
back down between the stirring twins)

Aaah. Sorry, I think
you’ve got the wrong number. This is Mrs Moss,

. . . (then, feeling like my snooty mother) . . .

Sally.

Jubilant Jill:
(pausing, rustling
papers)

Mmm. Three-bed semi,
Oakham Close. Double garage, private garden, two bathrooms; one en-suite,
conservatory, full central heating throughout . . . oooh hang on a sec, just
gonna put you on hold.

(A short blast of
Abba

s Dancing Queen,
followed by)
Jubilant Jill:

Mrs Moss? Hiya,
silly me I
am a
fruit
,
I’m
getting my wires crossed. My mistake, have a nice day!

Click. That was it.
Conversation over. I wouldn

t have given it a
second thought had she not reeled off our address
and
described our
house in detail. I’m certain that, when I call back later, she’ll explain that
she meant
nine
Oakham and - hooray! - the curtain-twitchers next door
are on the move.

***

The second strange
call came on Wednesday morning just after I

d
put the phone down to Mike. Unlike my so-called
friends,
who are too
busy swinging, decorating palaces, procreating with pro-hockey players and
shagging traffic light engineers to care about
my
problems, the doc has
been checking in twice daily.

In fact, he’s been a
rock. Whilst the girls - quite unanimously – think Will deserves ‘a break’ and
‘a second chance’, Mike thinks it’s high time I showed him the road.

As usual after his
calls, I was lost in a parallel universe of my own, folding Will

s underpants, when the landline
rang -
caller withheld
. I assumed it would be my long lost husband
calling to say,

make me a sandwich,
I

ve come to my senses

.

I was wrong.

Me:
(Calvins in hand,
phone wedged between cheek and shoulder)

Hello? Will?

Deep, posh male
voice:

Ah, good day. May I
please speak with Mr Moss?

Me:
(thinking,

Huh!
You

d
be lucky, mate!

)

I

m
sorry, no.

(Adopting my finest
secretarial tone)

He

s unavailable at the moment, I

m afraid. May I take a message?
Or get him to call you at his first available opportunity, perhaps?

Deep, posh male
voice:
(clearly
impressed)

Certainly, with whom
am I speaking?

Me:
(thinking,

Ooo-err, my mother wouldn

t half love you

)

This is Sally, his wife.

Deep, posh male
voice:
(rattled)

Ah, in that case, I
think it might be better if I call back and speak to Mr Moss . . .
directly
.

Me:
(dropping the act)

Why
? Why can

t you talk to
me
? Will
and I don

t have any secrets.
Tell me who you are and I

ll get him to call
you tonight. Promise.

Deep, posh male
voice:
(sighing)

Very well. This is
Doctor Tinkle, I

m calling to enquire
as to whether Mr Moss will be requiring his appointment next week, being as he
missed yesterday

s and failed to
cancel.

Me:
(thinking,

Oooh! Like the Carry on Films,
then panicking)

Appointment? What
appointment? Is Will sick?

Doctor Tinkle:
(quickly)

I . . . well, no. Not as
such
.
I really can

t elaborate, I

m afraid. If you

d be so kind as to get him to
call me . . .

Me:
(nervously)

Whoa, hang on. You can

t just call and say Will

s not sick

as such

without giving me
some
kind of explanation. He

s either sick, or he

s not.
Is he okay?” (Then, shrilly) “
Is this about the
drugs?

Doctor Tinkle:
(strangled)

Drugs?
What
drugs?

Me:
(concerned)

Oh, you
know
. That
powder he

s been guzzling at
the gym to turn himself into the Michelin Man. What

s it called? Oh yeah,
Volterine. I
told
him he was an
idiot
and it would make him ill.
Has it made him ill? It

s made him ill, hasn

t it?

Doctor Tinkle:
(mildly agitated)

No! No, no. It

s nothing to do with
that
I
can assure you. Although I must confess, I wouldn

t
advise the use of Volterine given the delicate nature of your husband

s . . . condition.

Me:
(worried witless)

What
condition? So he
is
sick then? Oh God, oh no . . .

Doctor Tinkle
: (exasperated)

Your husband is
angry
,
Mrs Moss. Very
an-gry
. That’s all. Sometimes it can be construed as a
sickness.

Me:
(calming down)

Angry? That’s it. Just
angry
?
Phew, tell me something I don’t know. Come to think of it, how do
you
know?

Doctor Tinkle
(almost smugly)

I
my dear am Mr Moss

s anger management therapist.

(Then, huffily)
“But
this
really
is
a
confidential matter . . .

Me:
(startled)

Anger management? Oh, blimey.
What

s upsetting him? How
long have you been treating him?
Do you know where he is? . . .”

Doctor Tinkle:
(flustered)

Mrs Moss, like I said, it
really
is . . .

Me:
(miserably)
“Okay, okay, I get it. It’s
just that I’m worried sick. I’ve got all these questions and no answers ’cos he
keeps hanging up on me.
How
long
, doctor? Please?

Doctor Tinkle:
(cracking)

Humph! This is
highly
irregular, but very well. Seven months.

Me:
(examining the
plaster board where the phone used to be)

Seven
months
?
Are you kidding me?
Are you
a
real
doctor, doctor?

Doctor Tinkle:
(incredulously)

I

ll
have you know,
madam
, that Spring Meadows is
my
practice. . .

Me:
(cutting him off)

Spring Meadows? Is that the
private one on Pelham Road? How was he when you saw him last? You
can
fix him, can’t you?”

Doctor Tinkle:
(defensively)

I can
assure
you, Mrs
Moss, that I’m doing my very best.

Me:
(defiantly)

And I can assure
you,
Doctor Tinkle, that you need to try
harder
.”

Doctor Tinkle:
(toe in a mouse
trap)
“Whaaaaaat?”

Me:
(indignantly)
“Well, I don’t mean to be
rude
but you’ve had him on your couch for
half
a year
yet my house looks like the back end of Beirut and my husband’s
still mad as a hatter!”

Dr Tinkle:
(angrily)

Well, in my humble opinion,
madam
,
there

s little wonder.
Please have him call me. Good day!

***

Okay, okay, I

ll admit it, I handled it
poorly and probably came across as bit of a ball-breaker, but hey - he caught
me at a bad time, alright? I don’t know why I keep morphing into the wife from
hell on the telephone, it’s something I’ll have to work on. Of
course
I

m concerned that my runaway
husband is battling his inner demons, but how am I supposed to help him if he
doesn

t tell me he
needs
help? I just thought he was grumpy.

I’m
relieved
he’s in therapy, he clearly needs it, but as for anger being ‘a sickness’ in
Will’s case I disagree. I’m
certain
it’s a side effect. A direct
consequence. He’s been gym-mad with Rob for about eight months, having anger
management for seven. It’s too much of a coincidence. I’m sure that if he just
stops taking Volterine (and I stop winding him up) everything’s reversible.

The trouble is, it’s
like living with Paul Daniels - I never know when he’s going to disappear. The
last time he vanished, he bedded a hot young nurse. He’s been gone long enough
this
time to have shagged his way through the whole sorority. I honestly
think he’s trying to finish me off.

***

The third phone call
came late yesterday evening whilst the twins and I were playing tiddlywinks in
the lounge, watching The Sound of Music. Although short - and scarily sweet -
it was so
obscenely
out of character it knocked me sideways.

It was a call . . .
from my mother.

Mobile
(with apt new
ringtone
)

I will survive, I
will survive, hey hey. Dooo, do do do do dooodleooo do do da da da da da da . .
.

Me:
(singing along
merrily before seeing

Monster

on the display, groaning and
reluctantly answering)

Hello mother. How

s things?

Mother:
(bright and breezy)
Oh, hello sweetheart. Champion, thank you for asking. Your father

s just grappling with the
conifers and I

m busy making a
steak and ale pie for tomorrow

s supper. I was just
wondering if you

d like one dropping
off?

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