Read Nocturne Online

Authors: Graham Hurley

Nocturne (36 page)


That

s different. That

s just the once.


So what happens for the rest of the shoot ?


I

ll do it.


Including Brecon?


Of course.

She took off her glasses and gave them a polish. According to
Brendan, she

d never had a child of her own and I wondered just what
difference that made. Was she jealous? Or just pissed off that I was
wasting precious budget on something as flippant as a week

s leave?


Next week the kids are just bedding down,

I pointed out.

The
director I have in mind

s first class. Boys prefer men around. I

m
adding value here. Everyone wins.


That

s hardly the point, dear. The point is, you

re supposed to be
coping. You

re supposed to be in there, controlling the bloody thing.
That

s why we pay you. That

s what a producer
does
.

I stared at her. It was a clear threat, t
he shot across my bows I

d been
expecting for months. The phoney
war was over. My being pregnant
had opened hostilities.


OK,

I shrugged.

I

ll cancel the director and go back to plan A.


What do you mean?


I
mean I

ll direct it myself. Go up to Skye.

I gave her a smile.

Take
control.


You can

t,

she said sharply.

You

re exhausted.


I

m not.


Yes you are. You just told me.


I
was lying. I

m fine. It

s no problem. I can handle it.


And the baby?


We

ll handle it together.

The answer hurt her. I could see it. She almost winced. For a long
time, she stared at the Tango can. It was hot in the office and little
beads of condensation had formed around the outside.


I still love him, you know. And I miss him, too.

She glanced up.

Should I be telling you that?

I said I didn

t know. It sounded as pathetic as telling her I wa
s
knackered. I was looking for
an excuse to leave now, though in
retrospect I suspect I didn

t need one. What followed did neither of us
any favours.

She put the can to her lips, swallowing barely a mouthful.

He

s talented, isn

t he? Clever?


How do you mean?


How do you think I mean?

She stared at me, then motioned
crudely at her lap.

Good with it. Skilful. Too good really.

I gave her a weak smile, more to invite her to shut up than anything
else. Deliberately or otherwise, she ploughed on.


Does he spoil you?

she asked.

Have you done the honey yet? The
yoghurt? The bananas? All that?

As it happens, we had, though I wasn

t going to give her the
satisfaction of confirming it.


I
haven

t a clue what you

re talking about,

I said primly.


You

re lying,

she said hotly.

Jesus, look at you, sex on legs.

She
paused.

Ever wonder why he goes away so much? Why he

s forever
late back? Why it has to be Australia, or New York, or Los Angeles?
Ever think of all those hotel rooms? Those opportunities? Those big,
empty beds?

She tipped the can of Tango towards me in a mock-
toast.

The man

s insatiable,

she said softly.

Here

s to baby.

I

d had enough. I

d long ago abandoned the moral high ground
and I had precious little to lose except my job and whatever shreds of
a relationship I still shared with this twisted woman.

I stood up, looking her in the eye.


If you

re telling me he gets bored, I

m sure you

re right. The trick
is to keep him happy, keep him satisfied. Maybe you should have
tried a bit harder. Taramasalata

s good, by the way. Much better
than honey.

I reached forward, putting my unopened Tango can beside hers.
Then I left.

My friend Nikki returned from South Africa that same week. The
night after I

d broken the news about Pinot, I took her out for a
consolatory meal. We both got very drunk, ending up back at De
Beauvoir Square. I

d promised her a puppy. In fact I think I

d
promised her dozens.

She circled the flat, colliding with various bits of furniture. I

d been
describing my run-in with Sandra. The digs about Brendan had got
under my skin. Bitch.


You have to trust him,

Nikki kept saying.

You have no option.


I
do trust him. I trust him with my life. That

s the bloody
problem.


What?


My life.
He

s got it, all of it.
I gave it to him.


You did?


Yes.


Then y
ou

re stupid.


That

s what Sandra said. In so many words.


She

s his w
ife. She

s bound to say that.


I
know. But you said it too.


When?


Just now.

The conversation went round and round, dizzier and dizzier,
getting us nowhere. The fact that I

d got so hopelessly drunk made
me even more frustrated.


How can I know?

I wailed.

How can I know for sure? Shit, maybe
she

s right. She should know. Cow.


She

s inventing it. She

s winding you up.


You think so?


Definitely. Come here.

She gave me a big, wet kiss and we staggered off to bed. Next
morning, early for once, Brendan turned u
p from the airport. I was still
in the flat. Nikki had left in a taxi. My head hurt and I was feeling
extremely insecure.

I sat Brendan down and made him a bacon sandwich. Twelve hours
on the plane from LA had left him in an even worse state than me. I
hosed tomato ketchup all over the bacon, sealing the sandwich with a
kiss. The smell of it made me want to throw up.


Here,

I said, giving it to him.

Real food. Make you feel better.

Brendan nibbled at the edges of the sandwich before pushing it
away. Whenever I looked at him I couldn

t help thinking of all those
yawning hotel beds. King sized. Newly folded down.


Tired?


Not really.


Don

t fancy

?

I put my hand over his and felt him flinch. He

d never done that
before. I plugged the kettle in, meaning to make some fresh coffee.
When I turned round, he was examining the gas bill.
Gas
bill? Was I
that irresistible?

I circled him warily. Whatever happened next was completely out of
my hands. One way or another I had to get to him before the bitch-
queen did. Better me breaking the news than Sandra.


I

m pregnant,

I told him.

I

m going to have a baby.

Brendan was peering at the bottom of the bill.
If
you
use
more
than
ten
trillion
B
TUs
,
you
qualify
for
a
discount
.


You what?


I

m going to have a baby.

He looked up at last. Under the neon strip light, his skin was the
colour of putty. Too much indoors, I told myself. Too many hotel
bedrooms.


When?


December.


But when did it happen?


March.

I smiled wearily.

You probably remember.


But you told me


he fr
owned, still holding the bill.

I
was wrong.

I did my best to keep smiling.

But it

s great news,
isn

t it?

We had our crisis
meeting
two and a half weeks later. It happened to
be the
1
2th
August. I remember that because Nikki had a disgusting
boyfriend who went shooting in Scotland and he sent her a dead
pheasant care of Interbird or something and she phoned me up and
told me. I was about to go into Brendan

s office and she wished me
luck.

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