Authors: Lynne Shelby
âMum. Hi.' Nick pulled up his boxers and sat on the side of the bed. âI'm very well, thank you. How are you?'
That woman's timing is impeccable, I thought. How does she do it? With a sigh, I covered myself with the duvet, and reached for the paperback on my bedside table. I knew from experience that any call from Nick's mother was likely to last long enough for me to read several chapters. To be fair, it wasn't entirely unknown for me to have hour-long conversations on the phone with my mother or my sister, Vicky, but not at a time that would irritate Nick.
Nick said, âNo ⦠Well, yes ⦠I'd like that too, but ⦠Oh, well, if they're going to be there ⦠No. No, that's not too soon ⦠Yes, we'll see you then.' He ended the call.
âNick,' I said, âWhat have you just agreed to do for your mother?'
And why didn't you check with me first?
âMatt and Georgina and the boys are going to Mum and Dad's for Sunday lunch. I've said we'll join them, that's all.'
âSo what happened to us spending the day together, just the two of us? One phone call from your mother and we're rushing off to eat lunch with your entire family.'
âAw, don't be like that, Anna. I've not seen the boys in weeks. I don't want them to forget they have an uncle. It's a good opportunity for us all to be together.'
I felt bad when Nick said that, because I knew he was very fond of his elder brother's five-year-old twins (who were, I had to admit, adorable).
âYou're right,' I said. âI'm being selfish. It's important that you spend time with your nephews.' Even if it meant that I had to spend time with his mother â who had known me for over a year, and still expected me to call her Mrs Cooper. I pushed back the duvet. âSo when is your mum expecting us?'
âI said we'd be there in an hour.' Nick's gaze strayed to my breasts. âThere's time for us to have sex. If you still want to.'
So much for passion. Maybe I should start throwing the odd bit of china. Starting with Mrs Cooper's dinner service.
âOh, why not?' I said.
Five
Mrs Cooper said, âYou'll never guess who I ran into yesterday, Nicholas.'
âYou'd better tell me, then,' Nick said.
âMelissa.'
âReally?' Nick said. âI haven't seen her in years. I thought she relocated to New York.'
âShe did,' Mrs Cooper said. âBut she's back in England now.'
âWho's Melissa?' Matt said.
âSurely you remember Melissa,' Mrs Cooper said. âMelissa Harrington.'
âOh, you mean Nick's ex,' Matt said.
âSuch a delightful girl,' Mrs Cooper said. She looked directly at me. âThere was a time when I hoped that Nicholas and Melissa would marry. Sadly, it wasn't meant to be.' She sighed. âI was very fond of Melissa.'
Unbelievable.I glanced round the dining table. Nick and Matt were systematically working their way through the port and the stilton. Matt's wife, Georgina, was languidly sipping her coffee. Mr Cooper was leaning back in his chair, arms folded across his ample stomach, an expression of benign contentment on his face. I wondered if I was the only one who thought what Nick's mother had just said was plain bad manners.
Mrs Cooper continued. âIt's so hard to keep in touch with people who live in another country.'
âNot always,' I said. âAlexandre, my French penfriend, has recently come to London and is staying with me for a few weeks. Alex and I have been writing to each other since we were eleven years old.'
âHow charming,' Mrs Cooper said. âThough it must be frightfully difficult having another person living in your tiny little flat. What with your having only one bathroom.'
I thought of how hard I'd worked so I could afford to buy my little flat, and how much I loved it. In my lap, under the cover of the snowy white tablecloth, my hands clenched so hard that my nails dug into my palms.
Don't say anything to her. Just don't say anything.
From outside the house came the shouts and laughter of the twins, who'd been released from the torments of Mrs Cooper's lunch table before the rest of us, and were playing in the garden.
Mrs Cooper said, âHave you put Charlie and Joshua's names down for Gade Court yet, Matthew?'
âNo, not yet,' Matt said.
âWell you should do it as soon as possible. There's no guarantee that they'll get places just because you and Nicholas are former pupils.'
âWe may not be sending them to Gade Court,' Georgina put in.
âWhy ever not?' Mrs Cooper asked. âIt's an excellent school.'
âI'm sure it is.' Georgina' said, âbut it may not be right for Josh and Charlie.'
Mrs Cooper pursed her mouth. âWell, you must do what you think best â¦'
âNothing's been decided,' Matt said.
Georgina drained her coffee cup. âTalking of my sons, they've suddenly gone very quiet, which usually means they're up to something. I should go and check on them. Come with me, Anna? I want to hear all about this penfriend of yours.' She pushed back her chair and stood up.
âSure.' The afternoon was too grey and overcast to make the Coopers' back garden an enticing prospect, but I wasn't going to turn down a chance to get away from Nick's mother.
âI'll come out and give the boys a game of football once I've finished my port,' Nick said.
I hurried after Georgina, who was already striding from the room. Snatching my coat off the peg in the hall, I followed her through the house and out onto the patio. Josh and Charlie were chasing other around the apple trees at the far end of the garden. They waved to Georgina and me, and we waved back.
âThey don't seem to be doing anything too terrible,' I said.
âI didn't think they were,' Georgina said. âBut I needed a break from Mrs C and I thought you could probably do with one too.'
I gaped at her.
âIf I have to listen to any more of her snide remarks about the way I'm bringing up my own children, I swear I won't be responsible for my actions. I put up with her for Matt's sake, but â Why are you staring at me?'
I said, âI'd no idea that you felt that way about Mrs Cooper.'
âI can't stand the woman.'
Before I could stop myself, I blurted, âNeither can I. She doesn't seem to like me much either. I don't know why.'
âIt isn't
you.
No girl will ever be good enough for her sons.'
âExcept for Melissa Harrington.'
âApparently. Although, strangely, I don't recall Mrs C being particularly eager for her company when Nick was dating her.'
I smiled at that, and Georgina smiled back.
âThat's quite enough talk about my dear mother-in-law,' she said. âDo tell me about this penfriend of yours. Have you really been writing to each other since you were children? I didn't think anyone actually wrote
letters
any more â¦'
I was telling Georgina about Alex's first trip to London when, much to Charlie and Josh's delight, Nick appeared in the garden carrying a football. The three of them spent an energetic half-hour kicking it round the lawn, while Georgina and I cheered them on from the patio, before the light began to fade and we were forced to retreat inside. Matt and his family left almost immediately (Georgina told Mrs Cooper that she'd have loved to have stayed longer, but she really couldn't keep the boys out late on a school night), and not long after, Nick decided that we too should be getting off home. Mr Cooper roused himself out of his post-prandial stupor to tell me that he hoped he'd see me again very soon. Mrs Cooper said goodbye, without expressing any particular hope that I would be present in her near future.
Outside, it was now fully dark, and the streetlamps made halos of yellow light between the skeletal branches of the trees lining the road. Shivering in the night air, I took Nick's hand and we walked quickly along the pavement to where he'd parked. He handed me his keys, and we got in.
âThanks for saying you'd drive,' Nick said. âI'd have hated to miss that rather good bottle of Cabernet Sauvignon that my father produced to go with the beef.'
âOh, I don't mind being the designated driver when we visit your parents. I can't tell the difference between the expensive stuff they like to drink and the wine boxes I buy in the supermarket.'
Nick laughed.
âWhere do you want to spend the night?' I said. âMine or yours?'
âMine, I think. I'm worried that I might not be able to get a decent drink at your place.'
I pulled away from the kerb.
âYou had a long chat with Georgina this afternoon,' Nick said.
âYes. I've never really had the chance to talk to her before. We've more in common than I realised.'
âWe really should try to see my family more often.'
I see quite enough of your mother, thank you very much, I thought.
âMum is always so pleased when we visit,' Nick said.
Choosing my words carefully, I said, âNick ⦠sometimes ⦠I'm not sure that your mother ⦠approves of me.'
âWhy ever would you think that?'
I took a deep breath. âJust ⦠a couple of things she's said. Like today, when she was talking about meeting your ex-girlfriend, I got the impression that she'd rather you were still with Melissa, and not with me.'
âAre you jealous of Melissa Harrington?'
âWhat? No, I'm not jealous of Melissa Harrington.'
âYou
are
jealous.' Nick sounded incredulous. âYou're upset because my mother mentioned one of my exes? That's crazy.'
âYou're totally missing the point â' I broke off. If Nick had no idea what I was getting at, if he hadn't see anything objectionable in his mother's comments, then there was not much use in my picking a fight about it.
âI haven't seen Melissa for at least five years,' Nick said. âI don't even have her number in my phone.'
My hands gripped the steering wheel more tightly.
âI'm thirty-two years old,' Nick said. âIt would be odd if I didn't have a couple of long-term relationships behind me, don't you think?'
I gave up. âYou're right. I'm being unreasonable.'
âWe've both dated other people, but we're together now, and that's what matters.'
âI know that â in my less crazy moments.'
Mollified, Nick switched on the radio and was soon humming along to a piece of classical music.
I drove on through the empty night-time streets. Not for the first time after I'd spent a Sunday afternoon in Mrs Cooper's company, I wondered how my boyfriend could have such a total blind spot when it came to his mother.
Six
Monday morning began in its usual chaotic way, with my arriving home from Nick's with just enough time to shower and change before I had to dash off again to get to work. I was already half way out the front door, when Alex, wearing just a pair of jeans, emerged from his bedroom.
Step away from the candy, I thought.
Averting my gaze from Alex's muscles, I wished him good luck for his first day in his new job, and hurried on my way.
At Nova Graphics, I'd barely sat down and switched on my computer before Izzy came bounding up, and perched on the front of my desk.
âAlexandre Tourville is such a lovely guy,' she said.
âYes,' I said. âHe is.'
âI can't believe that you've been writing to him all these years and you'd no idea that he was so utterly lush.'
The image of a shirtless Alex floated into my mind.
âWell, it's true.' I said. âActually, the first time I wrote to him, there was some confusion over his name, and I thought he was a girl. I was horrified when I found out that my penfriend Alexand
ra
was a boy named Alexand
re
.'
âBut why?'
âI was eleven. To me, at that age, boys were just annoying, noisy creatures who talked about football all the time.' We both glanced towards our male colleagues who were grouped around the water cooler, animatedly discussing the weekend's sporting highlights.
âPoint taken,' Izzy said. We exchanged smiles.
âI found it really hard to write to Alex at first,' I said. âWhat with him being a boy. And because I had to write in French, which I wasn't very good at. It was only after his school came on a visit to England that he and I became friends. We started writing to each other so often that my French improved dramatically.'
âThat's what Alex told me at the party. He said that you were both thirteen the last time he came to London. I'm guessing your opinion of boys had changed by then?'
âWell, yes ⦠Did Alex tell you what happened on that school visit?'
âOnly that he stayed with you and your family.'
âI wasn't very nice to him. He was very shy, and I thought he was a geek.'
âThis is the same Alexandre Tourville you're talking about? The guy you introduced met to on Saturday?
âYes. He's changed â'
âI'll say he has.' Izzy smiled dreamily.
I said, âDay one of the French children's visit, we were all taken on a coach outing to Madame Tussauds. Afterwards, we had a picnic in Regent's Park, and then we were given some free time. We were supposed to stay in the park, but a group of us sneaked off and took the tube to Trafalgar Square. I was too busy flirting with a French boy called Gérard to notice that Alex had got separated from the rest of us â¦'
We're standing on the platform at Marylebone Station. Gérard is telling me his family owns a
gîte
in the Dordogne. I've no idea what a
gîte
is (or where the Dordogne is either â presumably somewhere in France?), and I can only understand about half the words he says, but I smile up at him (he is
so
tall!) and wonder if he'll kiss me before he goes back to Paris. I've never kissed a boy. The thought of kissing Gérard is thrilling â and just a bit scary.