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Authors: Carrie Adams

The Godmother (45 page)

BOOK: The Godmother
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“Well, isn't that what it's all about? We're just kids in a passageway. You think kids in a passageway have what it takes to survive the odds?”

“Yes.”

“What happens when you realize I'm not perfect?”

“That won't happen.”

“Of course it will. God, Ben, let's not piss about here. Marriage is tough for anyone. If it weren't, we wouldn't be sitting here now.”

“You're just getting cold feet, as usual. You never see anything through—”

“I thought you said I was perfect.”

“You are, please don't do this.”

“You're just being belligerent now. You don't want to listen to me because you know what I'm saying is right.”

Ben was shaking his head. “I don't believe this is happening.”

“My dad says you should always go with your gut reaction. When I told you, you said ‘Oh.' Then you went home and thought about all the little things that annoyed you about Sasha, which I'm sure are plentiful, and many of which she deserves, and I bet there are just as many things that you do that piss her off. Then you thought about all the things that don't piss you off about me, and you thought, I must love her too. Nice, easy solution. You said it: I make you feel great. I worship the ground you walk on, naturally I make you feel great.”

“Sasha doesn't make me feel great.”

“Because she asks more of you. You're the man you are because of her. You feel great about yourself. Sasha did that.”

I could feel Ben's resistance to the idea that we'd got it wrong start to slip away. But he was still fighting.

“Our marriage won't survive,” he said.

“Maybe not, but you should take Nick's advice and give it a bit of attention before you make that decision. I was speaking to a divorce lawyer the other day; he said that divorce rates are much higher among second marriages. Why? Because the couples find themselves back in the same place, with the same problems. Many even go back to their first partners. It would be really sad if you and Sasha didn't make it, but either way, it can have nothing to do with me. I won't be waiting for you, Ben. This isn't a trick, some strange test I've set you, I'm done. It's over. I'm sorry.”

Ben looked at me. He hadn't changed since we were kids. It was true, I did worship the ground he walked on, but, like him with me, I never got to see the shoddy bits. When he sulked. Went out and got so pissed with his mates that he couldn't get himself home. Since I was getting pissed with him, I thought it was funny. I wouldn't think it was so funny if I was the one waiting at home. Leaving the lights on all the time. Never emptying the rubbish. All the stupid little things that annoy one person about another, they'd all pile up, eventually And that was before something really challenging happened, like infertility, illness, truancy, infidelity, death…the list was endless.

“You promised no cold feet. You started all of this,” he said.

“I'm sorry,” I said again. “But Ben, we've both been pedaling the myth, leaning on each other, using the other like polyfiller. The only person who
doesn't think Sasha is fun, is you. You've got to appreciate what you've got. We both must.” If I didn't learn to love what I had, how could I move on? Nick had been right on so many levels. I wanted to have a family, and while that might never change, what had changed was that I no longer wanted it at any cost. And this; this was far, far too high a price to pay. I stood up. “It's time to go home, Ben.”

“I'm going to sit here for a bit.”

“OK. But Ben, when you go home, please be nice to Sasha. Whatever is going on between you two is one thing, but this bit, us, isn't her fault. Let her be the amazing woman she is.”

He nodded.

“It's not my place to tell you what to do, but I strongly advise you to never tell her any of this. Ever.”

He sighed deeply. “What about us?”

I shrugged. I hoped that we could go on being friends but in a different way from before. Better. Because we'd no longer be one another's safety net. The walk would be much more terrifying without him, but at least I'd be doing it on my own. The rewards would be mine to keep.

“Can I kiss you goodnight?” asked Ben.

It took a long time for me to reply. Finally I came up with the only answer there was. “Kiss your wife instead,” I said, squeezed his shoulder and walked back into the house.

I only took Cora to Regent's Park because of the elephant. I was afraid of ruining Cora's day when we were told that the elephant had been sent elsewhere, but Cora was pleased. She didn't think London was big enough for an elephant to live in. Instead, we walked up the hill to the playground. It was too cold to sit on the bench with the other parents, so I climbed the rope wall, walked the rickety bridge, squeezed my adult bottom down the child-sized slide and generally made an ass of myself. Cora tried to escape me by making some friends, as she tended to do wherever she went, but I followed them inside the Wendy house. There we spent a happy half-hour sitting on cold, damp sand making endless birthday cakes.

“That's probably how the elephant felt,” said Cora.

“I sincerely hope I'm not the elephant in this little scenario.”

Cora and the two girls she'd befriended giggled.

“Cheeky monkey. Right,” I said, trying to stand, “this elephant needs a coffee. My bottom has gone all itchy from the wet sand.”

The girls giggled again. It was easy to make children laugh. You just had to say bottom a lot. Grown-ups aren't supposed to do that. I started to wrench myself out of the corner of the Wendy house, but it seemed to have shrunk since I'd squeezed myself in.

“Pineapple-juice man,” said Cora, glancing out of the window.

“What?”

“It's the pineapple-juice man.”

I glanced too. Oh my God. James Kent was walking towards the sandpit. I ducked, lost my balance and fell into a heap.

“Hide me, hide me,” I whispered desperately. “Get down.”

The girls immediately looked out of the window.

“Everyone, shh!” I whispered.

“Daddy!” yelled one of the girls.

Oh no, this could not be happening. James Kent was going to stick his head through a Wendy house and think that mad-psycho bitch had abducted his children. There was nowhere to hide, but I still tried.

“Hey, girls.”

“Daddy, Daddy, Daddy!”

He was crouching outside the little house. I could see his feet, but he couldn't see in. I might just make it.

“We've made cakes. This is Cora, can she come to our house to play?”

“Cora?”

Then again, I might not.

“Hello, pineapple-juice man.”

“Hello, Cora.”

“How do you know my daddy?”

“We went to a party together,” said Cora. “You got me pineapple juice.”

“Yes, I did. How are you?”

“Deaf in one ear.”

“Oh, I'm sorry about that.”

“Actually, it's quite useful. We live on a noisy street and now I sleep on my left side and I don't hear the cars any more. But we're moving soon to a bigger house with a garden.”

I was pressed against the wall.

“Godmummy T thinks I only pretend to be deaf when it suits me and that I can hear perfectly well whenever she's whispering about grown-up things that I'm not allowed to hear.” There was an almighty pause. Cora looked at me, I pleaded with my eyes. “Don't you, Godmummy T?”

I closed my eyes in shame. James Kent got on to his hands and knees and peered in. He saw me cowering in the corner. I'd never been so embarrassed in all my life.

“Hi,” I said.

“Hello,” he said tersely, then stood up. I stared at his feet. “Come on, girls, we ought to go.”

“No, no, no,” cried the three girls.

“Please can we stay a bit longer? Please?”

“Ten minutes,” said one of his daughters.

“Five,” said James, and walked away.

I owed it to myself to clamber out of the Wendy house and explain my behavior to him, but I really didn't want to. However unfaithful he'd been, I didn't want anyone walking around with such a hideously low opinion of me. I crawled out of the house, stretched myself back into human form and walked towards the bench he was sitting on.

“I owe you some money,” I said.

“Yes, you do.”

His tone slightly changed my consolatory mood. “I should have explained in person that I didn't sleep with married men. I can write you a check. Joint account is it?”

“What?”

“Where is your wife?”

“My ex-wife is at home. Her home.”

“Ex?”

“You thought I was married?”

“You are.”

“I was. We separated four years ago.”

“Four years? Are you sure?”

That came out worse than intended. He stood up and thrust his hands deep in his pockets. “Don't worry about the money. Frankly, I've tried to forget the whole sorry thing. Have a nice day.”

He couldn't wait to get away from me. “Clearly I behaved badly. I'm sorry. I found out you were married and had two kids, I was…” Upset. Disappointed. Staggered because nothing in his behavior had hinted that he was that type and yet I didn't even bother to offer him the courtesy of an explanation. “Whatever, I shouldn't have behaved like that.”

“No, you shouldn't have.”

“Well, you should have told me about your daughters. A fairly big detail to leave out, don't you think?”

“You'd have run a mile. The mention of kids and you started to shudder.”

“That's not true.”

“‘Kids, who'd have them,' I think is what you said.”

“I wasn't being serious. You got that one wrong.”

“Well, I wasn't married, so I guess we're even.”

“Let me pay you back,” I pleaded.

“Don't worry about it,” said James, dismissively.

“Please?”

“No, it's fine. Honestly.” He moved back towards the Wendy house. “Five minutes are up. Come on, kids, let's go home.” They emerged, pink from the cold, and started to run rings around us.

“Lainy and Martha, right?” I said, trying desperately to end this on a happy note.

James nodded.

“Beautiful girls,” I said.

James wasn't taken in by my pathetic attempts to suck up to him. “It's all right, Tessa. I understand now. I'm glad I ran into you, the whole thing had slightly freaked me out, but now we can forget about it.”

“I thought you were married with kids. I'm sorry I didn't just stay around and ask you.”

“Me too,” he said.

I felt the atmosphere soften.

“Can we have our raisins now?” asked one of James's daughters. James brought the boxes out of his pocket.

“Can we share them with Cora?”

“Of course you can,” said James. He was too polite to say no.

“I saw you at the funeral,” I said.

“I was very sorry about your friend; you did her proud though, I thought.”

I brightened. Two months on and I still wasn't sure about my ad-libbing at the funeral.

“Thank you.”

“Where are the twins, by the way?”

“With Neil's parents this weekend.”

“How are you coping with them? Must be hard on your own.”

“Me? Oh no, they don't live with me. They're being adopted by Neil's brother. Lovely family. He's a builder, he's building an incredible extension
to their house, it's like kiddy heaven there. I go up quite a bit. They're crawling now.” I felt the familiar swell of pride when I thought about the twins, coupled with the familiar sting of tears when I thought about them without their mother—or rather, their mother without those little boys.

“I heard you were their guardian.”

I looked at James again. “You checking up on me?” I asked, an itsy-witsy, teeny-weeny bit flirtatiously.

“No,” he lied. He scuffed the ground with his shoe. “Though I did hear you'd got yourself a new job.”

I smiled. “So you have been checking up on me?”

Cora and James's daughters had wolfed down the raisins and it was obvious to both James and me, though not to them, that they were cold and hungry.

“Come on, Cora, we'd better go. You need refueling.”

“Us too,” said James.

“Can we play again?” asked Cora.

There was a slightly awkward pause.

“Well, we're here every other weekend,” said James.

Every other weekend. He really was divorced.

“Can we, Godmummy T? Can we come back?”

“Yeah,” chorused the girls. “Daddy never talks to anyone in the park normally, so we're never allowed to stay and play.”

He grabbed his daughters playfully around their middles and tickled them until they screamed. “Oh yeah, you two have a terrible life, no fun.” They giggled again. “No toys, no treats.” They laughed through their half-hearted protests. “No trips to the playground.” Finally he put them down and held them to him, then he looked at me. “What do you think?”

“I'm sure we can, I'll check with Billy.”

“Well, we'll be here anyway, so if you can make it then…” What? What was he going to say? I suppose I'll talk to you, if I have to…“Great,” he said.

“Great,” I repeated.

We all ambled towards the playground gate. I looked up at him once; he looked quickly away. We said goodbye.

“I am sorry,” I said again.

“Let's forget it.”

I thought about myself sitting in the park, near a playground like this one, wearing a stolen dressing gown and knocking back the wine.

“You must have thought I was an absolute nutter,” I said.

“Still do,” he said. But this time there was a faint smile on his lips.

We walked away in the opposite direction.

“He's nice,” said Cora.

“You think?”

“For an old man.”

I ruffled Cora's hair. She was getting to the age when that was beginning to really annoy her.

“Should we come back to play with them, then?” I asked her.

“Maybe,” said Cora. Maybe was right. Moments later my phone rang. I didn't recognize the number. I turned back to where James and his children had gone. Could it be…?

“Hello?”

“Is that Tessa King?”

Not James then. “Yes?”

“You probably don't remember me, my name's Sebastian.”

“Sebastian?”

“We met at Samira's curry night.”

You've got to be kidding. We did a little more than meet. “I remember.” I think I started blushing.

“I know it's been a while”—nearly six months and you didn't call me once—“but, well, here's the thing, I've been invited to this amazing party in a derelict castle in Wales.”

I watched James help his daughters on to their bikes then turned away. “That's nice for you,” I said coolly.

“It's organized by this mad friend of mine with unlimited funds who's decided no one throws proper parties any more.”

“I agree with him.”

“He's hired professional cocktail makers, tequila girls, there'll be fireworks and a great band. The setting is incredible.”

And Sebastian wanted to take me? I was mildly interested but not naive. “What's the catch?”

“Not a catch as such, but there is a criteria I was hoping you could help me with.”

“Go on…”

“I'm not on loud speaker or anything am I?”

I laughed, nervously. “No.”

“Well,” he hesitated.

I may as well admit it. I was curious.

“You have to bring along a one-night stand.”

Cora was busy picking a weed. “Kinky,” I said, quietly.

“Obviously there were many options…”

“Obviously…” I said, smiling despite myself.

“But it had to be a great shag and no nutters, which kind of narrowed down the list to, well,” he paused, “you. What do you think?”

I turned 180 degrees to look back down the hill. James Kent was looking our way. I took a few steps backwards, watching him watching me. What did I think? What do I think? I think that life has to be lived and while maybe meeting James Kent again in two weeks' time was an appealing thought, I wasn't going to idle in neutral waiting, dreaming up scenes that would never happen. I'd done too much of that. In the meantime, a night in a derelict castle in Wales sounded like an adventure. A little bit daring. Helen would have approved. All my friends would. Except maybe Ben. But I wasn't his unofficial mistress any more and how I lived my life no longer fell under his jurisdiction. I was as young today as I'd ever be, I was healthy as far as I knew and blissfully unattached. Those three things were worth celebrating.

“I think it sounds fun, morally dubious, but fun.”

“Is that a yes?”

I raised an arm and waved at James. He waved back. This time with a broader smile across his face.

“It's a maybe,” I said.

“Fair enough. The party is in three weeks. And Tessa, I'd rather not take anyone else.”

Three weeks. A lot could happen in three weeks. I might be longing for a wild night in Wales. I glanced at the swings. Then, again…

“Sebastian, can I let you know?”

“Sure, whenever you can.”

I replaced the phone in my bag and turned away, humming quietly to myself. There was nothing wrong with hedging my bets, was there? After all, anything is possible. That's the beauty of life. Cora returned to my side.

“Godmummy T?”

“Yes, sweetheart?”

“What does kinky mean?”

Ah…For a moment I panicked. I didn't know the answer. But then it came to me. “I don't know, darling,” I said, taking Cora's hand. “Let's ask your mummy when we get home.”

BOOK: The Godmother
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