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Authors: India Knight

Don't You Want Me?

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INDIA KNIGHT
Don’t You Want Me?

PENGUIN BOOKS

Contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Acknowledgements

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

India Knight is the author of three novels:
My Life on a Plate
,
Don’t You Want Me?
and
Comfort and Joy
. Her non-fiction books include
The Shops
, the bestselling diet book
Neris and India’s Idiot-Proof Diet
, the accompanying bestselling cookbook
Neris and India’s Idiot-Proof Diet Cookbook
and
The Thrift Book
. India is a columnist for the
Sunday Times
and lives in London with her three children.

PENGUIN BOOKS

DON’T YOU WANT ME?

Praise for India Knight:

‘Brilliantly funny and knowing … Clara Hutt could eat Bridget Jones for breakfast’
Evening Standard

‘With its intelligence, exuberance and its admirable charm,
My Life on a
Plate
is a welcome revival of a tradition of
mondaine
comedy which seemed to have become extinct with the death of Nancy Mitford’

Sunday Telegraph

‘Almost unbearably funny’
New Statesman

‘Knight is brilliant on comic details … and spot-on about relationships’

The Times

‘Tender, tough, schmaltzy, witty and heart-warming all at once. Knight has a great comic touch’
Metro

‘Fabulous. Laugh-out-loud funny’
Cosmopolitan

‘Knight has a keen eye for delicious detail’
Herald Scotland

In memory of my father,
Michel Aertsens,
1927–2001

Where is the life that late I led?

Where is it now? Totally dead.

Where is the fun I used to find?

Where has it gone? Gone with the wind.

A married life may all be well,

But raising an heir

Could never compare

With raising a bit of hell

So I repeat what first I said:

Where is the life that late I led?

– Cole Porter

1

I am lying in my bed, listening to Frank having sex again. ‘Gur-runt, gur-runt, gur-runt, gur-runt, gur-runt’ is what it sounds like: coitus as iambic pentameter, which you must admit is unusual. His is the only voice I can hear: is he having the sex with himself, I wonder? Because he’s being unnecessarily vocal for a solo performance: if you have a quick Barclays, you hardly need to provide your own running commentary. What can he possibly be saying to himself? ‘You’re hot, Frank, mate. You make me hard, know what I mean? Does this feel good, Frankie, baby?’ God, how creepy. How deeply, deeply creepy. The
freak
!

I do not deserve my life, I really don’t. I’ve never deliberately hurt anybody, I pay my taxes, I love my child, and what do I get? An absolute pervo smut-freak of a house-mate: a man who lies there dirty-talking himself. Oh, yuck. Oh, blee. I might have to switch the light on and pace up and down for a bit.

Still, makes a change, the solo business. It’s usually a duet.

But I spoke too soon, for lo, here’s tonight’s ladyfriend, who’s been silent as the tomb until now: ‘Eee,’ she’s saying – perhaps she’s from Yorkshire. Very high-pitched, at any rate. ‘Eee.’ Oh, I see: ‘Frank-eeee.’

I suppose that makes it marginally better. But still … I am really, really happy for Frank that he’s having so much sex – someone in this house has to, and it sure as pants
isn’t me. But I’d rather not be listening. Not that that’s what I’m doing – listening. I am
overhearing
by accident. You couldn’t not. Oh, I wish I was earless and had lots of elegant turbans, like my great-aunt, who of course
had
ears, but you get the gist.

On and inexorably on it goes: ‘Gur-runt, gur-runt …’ (Frankie’s sexual technique is quite impressive: it’s been at least twenty-five minutes. Dominic took about half this time, including foreplay. Still, he was English, so what can you expect? I’m lucky I got away with my bottom intact.)

I know what you’re thinking: that it’s all very well for me to sit, or rather lie, here complaining, and that if I don’t like it then I should stop listening like some depraved voyeur, or rather
écouteur
, and maybe put some music on, or get into the shower, or just
go somewhere else
. But I can’t. It’s two a.m.: the creak of floorboards, let alone a sudden blast of either water or Puccini, would simply make it perfectly clear to Romeo and Juliet that I can hear everything. Besides, I’m cosy in my bed: I don’t want to go out anywhere. And it’s raining. It always rains here.

Christ, I wish he’d hurry up. Why are the walls so bloody thin, anyway? There’s a whole bathroom between us: I really shouldn’t be able to hear a thing. This is a big fat square Victorian house: you’d think the walls were as thick as tree trunks. They probably made them thin on purpose, so that Mr Unwholesome Victorian could hear the maids being shagged. Bloody pervy, weird English (I must stop saying that, actually, or even thinking it: I’m half English myself).

Thank God Honey is tucked up two floors away. Brahms’s Lullaby this ain’t,
comme on dit à New York
.

‘Woah, God,’ Frank suddenly shouts, sounding agonized. ‘Woah, God.’

‘Eee,’ she says. ‘Aaaa. Aaaa.’ And then, sounding oddly tribal, ‘Oa. Oa. Oa. Oa.’ Exactly like that: four times. She likes the simple vowel sounds, clearly.

And then she screams.

Clear as a bell, she screams, ‘In my face. Yurgh. Yurgh. Hoooooooo yes. Hoooooo yes. RAAAAH.’

And then, finally, there is quiet.

So obviously it’s a teeny bit awkward at breakfast the next morning. I wasn’t going to say anything – I tend not to – but I wake up both knackered and in a furious bad mood. I didn’t get to sleep until after three, and Honey woke up at six, as toddlers will. Mary, her baby-sitter-cum-occasional child-minder, has finally arrived to look after her for a few hours, and the two of them have gone off into the living room armed with puzzles, board books and a vast collection of dollies.

Honey looks as fresh as a daisy. I look like a gnarled old oak, especially under the eyes. It’s just before nine, and here we are in the kitchen. Frank’s wearing his favourite battered tartan dressing gown and is squeezing oranges. The oranges match his hair (body, head and, presumably, pubis). So if you think this is one of those ‘And there the love of my life was all along,
right under my nose
’ stories, you are very much mistaken.

Frank has a lot going for him: he’s charming, he’s clever, he’s funny, he’s kind, and he is extraordinarily professionally successful – my ex-husband Dominic now sells his paintings for tens of thousands of dollars. His face is nice too: stern jaw, flinty grey eyes and a mouth that looks potentially
cruel (very sexy, I always think) until he smiles his lovely, faintly goofy disarming smile. Great body, too: lanky yet broad but not overdeveloped, and marvellous sinewy arms from all that painting.

So on paper, yes, foxy in the extreme. On paper, I’d read about him and shout, ‘Go on, my son,’ to myself. On paper, I’d be the one having sex with him, and teaching him the beauty of consonants. But this isn’t paper, and while all of the above are true, there is one insurmountable problem.

If I got desperate enough, I could just about go with light strawberry blond. Or pale Titian, maybe, or whatever lying excuses for ‘ginger’ people come up with. But Frank isn’t merely ginger. He is, as I said, as orange as the fruits he is squeezing: not merely ginger, but practically fluorescent. He makes the average carrot look pretty peaky.

The problem isn’t just his head hair. The problem, for me, with gingers – and yes, I happily admit I have a problem, so you don’t need to bore me with ‘What would it sound like if you substituted “black people” for “gingers”?’ because I
know
, I know how bad it sounds – lies in the secondary hair. (Black people, cleverly, never have ginger hair.)

If it was just the head, I could make my ginger lover wear a hat at all times, or I could just shave it off. There would still be a faint marmalade shadow, but if I kept my contact lenses out, I probably would barely notice. No, it’s the other hairs. It’s the ginger chest hair, and the ginger arm and leg hair and – here’s the crux of it – the
ginger armpit hair
, all damp and curlicued after lovemaking … and the pubic hair. The orang-utan-orange pubic hair of someone
like Frank. I simply can’t countenance it: for some people it’s hairy backs that make them dry-heave, or men with pronounced female buttocks (never, I’ll grant you, a good look), or the old weeny peeny problem. Or – God – man-boobs. For me, it’s orange pubes:
no pasarán
.

That’s not all, unfortunately. And I can’t dismiss the other stuff as easily – as facetiously – as the orange body-wool, either. The fact is that Frank is casually promiscuous in a way that stuns and fascinates me in equal measure: joyfully, guiltlessly, permanently up for it. Which is fine, of course, but one wouldn’t necessarily want to go there: every woman Frank sleeps with becomes a notch – an instantly forgettable, inconsequential little notch – on his bedpost.

He’s forgetful in other respects too. I happen to know that Frank has a child up in Newcastle, where he comes from (Frank never wears coats). A child – a daughter – whom he never sees and never mentions. And the child presumably has a mother, of whom Frank has never spoken. And I have a problem with that, I really do: such a problem, in fact, that I can’t even bring the subject up with him. I am silenced by my own disgust. So let’s just say Frank is not my dream date, and leave it at that.

But I digress.

‘Morning, Stella,’ Frank beams, handing me a glass of orange – natch – juice. ‘Sleep well?’

I raise one eyebrow and give him a slow, deliberate look. He understands it, and a hot blush starts creeping up his Celtically pale face.

‘Maybe you could very sweetly buy me a present,’ I tell him sternly.

‘What, like a bunch of flowers? It’d feel a bit like apologizing to the landlady,’ he smiles.

‘I was thinking more of earplugs.’

‘Oh, God,’ says Frank, covering his face with his hands in the usual way. ‘Oh, God. I’m really, really sorry.’

‘It’s OK,’ I tell him. ‘But honestly, Frank, you do this all the time, and if you’re going to be quite so, um, vocal, then earplugs really might be an idea.’

‘Yeah,’ says Frank, staring at his bare toes, which are scrunched with horror. ‘Honestly, Stella – I didn’t even know it was going to happen, otherwise, you know …’

‘What? Otherwise what?’

‘Well, we could have gone to hers, or whatever.’

BOOK: Don't You Want Me?
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