Read Young Wives' Tales Online
Authors: Adele Parks
‘I don’t know.’I wish he’d shut up. Why isn’t he
suggesting she’s my One? He’s normally so keen on the sentiment. Why is he insistent that any feelings I have for Connie have to be shallow and have a deviant motive?
‘Is she interested in you?’
‘Of course –’I falter. Craig hears the catch in my voice.
‘What if she isn’t interested in you?’asks Craig, in his quiet, steady voice.
I’m a bit irritated with him for even suggesting this. Normally, he has one hundred per cent certainty in my pulling power.
‘She is or, at least, she will be,’I assure him.
‘She’s married,’he repeats.
‘I’m aware of that,’I say dryly. I don’t want to have to tell Craig that Connie was married the first time we met and that proved to be nothing more than an initial stumbling-block. I think the revelation would damage his view of the world.
‘And they seem a really happy couple. Quite especially so,’he adds. ‘Has she given you any encouragement?’
‘Sort of,’I say carefully. In fact our conversations have been littered with polite but consistent rebuffs but still, I’m confident. I’m sure she’s just playing with me. ‘She will see things from my point of view, sooner or later,’I assert.
‘I just mention it because you’re my pal and if she doesn’t want you and you’re knocked back – well, I just don’t want to see you hurt.’
I’m shocked. I don’t like Craig’s insight, or sympathy
or warnings. When I think I’ve heard as much as I can bear from Craig, he adds something yet more traumatizing than his compassion or counsel. ‘I don’t want to see you hurt,
again
.’
‘Put your finger right there, Auriol.’Obediently Auriol pushes her tiny forefinger on to the ribbon and I’m able to tighten the bow around the parcel. I step back and view my work with triumph. ‘What do you think?’
‘They look excellent!’says Auriol brightly as she surveys the two huge boxes wrapped in blue metallic paper, presents for Sebastian and Henry.
Inside one is an Xbox 360 and inside the second there are six games for them to play. I had considered buying them a console each but Peter said that would be too much and that it would be good for the boys to practise sharing. I doubted their ability to do this but understood the principle. In addition I’ve bought them each a new bike. They have bikes at their mother’s but I thought the ones I’d purchased for their birthday (with fifteen gears) could stay at our home for them to use when they are here. Despite mildly chastising me that I was spoiling the boys, I knew Peter was thrilled with my efforts. I hadn’t realized that gift-buying for kids is an aphrodisiac. But, at the moment, pretty much
everything I do seems to have Peter simmering. I hadn’t realized that he thought the Mary Poppins type was so hot. I notice that I am singing under my breath. I stop, stare at Auriol and throw her a return wide smile.
Without any warning the smile Auriol was wearing collapses, her brightness and breeziness vanishes and suddenly she is sobbing.
‘I want an Xbox.’
I take a deep breath and summon my now oft-drawn-upon supplies of patience. No one ever said this was going to be easy. But no one ever said it would be this hard either. I reach for a tissue and wipe her eyes and nose (it always seems to be in need of a tissue even when she doesn’t have a cold – is that something I just have to get used to?).
‘But it’s not your birthday, sweetie,’I say reasonably.
‘I want, want, want one,’she says as she slams her foot on the kitchen tiles. The vulnerable sobbing has disappeared as quickly as it arrived and in its place a tempest is stirring.
Sometimes, I still find it very hard to like her; loving her is a given but liking is occasionally still a test. Until very recently, whenever Auriol threw a tantrum I employed the policy of giving in to her immediately. Whatever it was she demanded I’d find a way to provide it. It was not because I was besotted and wanted to fulfil her every whim – the truth is, I don’t like scenes. If I said yes she could have another ice cream/Barbie doll/TV in her room/friend to play then I avoided a scene. As I averaged seven hours a week contact with
her, it didn’t really matter to me if she was spoilt to the point of being delinquent. Now, however, I try to get home most nights for bathtime or at least in time to read her a story. I don’t go to the gym on Saturdays and I now have my manicure on Sunday morning, when she’s at horse riding. Previously I had always timed my beautician appointments to coincide with Auriol being at home. With the increase in contact I realize that I cannot allow her tantrums to continue because I have to live with the consequences. Occasionally, of late, I’ve discovered that I have to bite the bullet and say no.
‘When it’s your birthday Mummy and Daddy will buy you whatever you want and wrap it in a big box just like this one,’I tell her.
‘No!’
For a moment I’m puzzled.’Except with pink paper,’I assure her.
‘And?’
I try to think. ‘A purple ribbon?’
‘No. No. I want a bigger box.’Auriol flounces out of the room and I follow her progress through the house, tracking her by which doors she’s banging closed. As she exits dramatically, Peter comes into the kitchen. He is much more serene.
‘Hello, darling, what are you up to?’
I stand away from the beautifully wrapped gifts so that Peter can get the full benefit of my efforts with the bows.
‘Just finishing wrapping up the boys’gifts,’I say with a beam. ‘Are you going to take them round now?’
‘Yes, I thought so. Would you like to come?’
A month ago I could have answered that question in a heartbeat. No, I would not like to visit Rose’s home and I do not want to have to endure watching her brats greedily open their gifts. I would have told him that I had no interest in whether they delighted in the presents or hated them, the result was normally the same – the twins would dismiss the gifts in moments and move on to the next parcel. It always sickened me. Besides, not a birthday had gone by without Rose alluding to the fact that she gave birth with nothing more than gas and air and that both the twins weighed over 8lb. I hate the way she tries to collude with Peter and constantly prompts him with ‘do you remember’stories. However, now, I take a deep breath and I wonder what to say for the best. The best for everyone.
‘Would you like me to come?’I ask.
‘Yes,’says Peter firmly.
My heart sinks. ‘I think Rose prefers it if I don’t,’I comment. I’m pretty sure that if I attend the twins’party she’ll surmise I’m there just to spite her. She’ll end up annoyed, I’ll end up frustrated. A lose/lose situation. All my good work of the last few weeks could be blasted apart in one hasty sentence.
‘Auriol would love it if we went as a family,’says Peter.
It’s a low trick. In the past I’ve followed a strict policy of limiting the time Auriol spends with Rose and the boys. I maintained that the only things Auriol could learn from Rose were pastry-making and cross-stitch,
not skills I felt Auriol necessarily needed. Once, when Peter was in an especially grumpy mood, he’d pointed out that maybe she’d learn respect and the ability to be pleasant from Rose. The insult was implicit but marked and I was furious. Now, I concede it might not be a bad thing for Rose to have some influence on Auriol. I’d never admit it aloud, but Sebastian and Henry aren’t absolute little snots the
entire
time. They can be quite decent company when she’s not inciting them to rebel against me.
‘OK, I’ll come.’
Peter looks thrilled. He cups my face in his hands and kisses me. ‘You really are wonderful.’
‘I know.’
For reasons which are beyond me, it takes us about another forty minutes to get ready to leave the house. I have noticed that it’s impossible to go anywhere on the spur of the moment with a child or even to leave one destination smartly in order to arrive at another promptly. I’m slowly accepting this to be a life truism, but I am still uncomfortable with it. Lateness is laziness. While Peter and Auriol run around the house collecting car keys and essential favourite dolls, I utilize the few spare moments by attending to some of the e-mail which is backing up in my inbox. Shortening the hours in my day has led to a backlog of e-mails so I systematically work through them at home, adding another three or four hours on to my day after Auriol is asleep. On Thursday the unthinkable happened, I couldn’t be bothered. I spent the evening shopping online for toys
for Auriol instead and then on Friday Peter and I went to Nobu. It was an overdue trip. I am aware that I probably have over two hundred e-mails waiting for my attention and I can’t put off attending to them beyond this weekend.
I see his notes immediately. His name jumps out like a vivid scab.
Joe Whitehead.
I’m tempted to press delete without even reading them, but there is always the slim chance that he’s contacting me about a work issue. I’m being disparaged and overlooked at work enough at the moment as it is, so it would be professional suicide to ignore e-mails.
The first one is a round robin to the entire floor. It’s a grumble that people congregating at the water-cooler chat too loudly and apparently he finds this distracting. Moron. I never go near the water-cooler as it is right next to his desk. I press delete, with a sense of relief.
The second note is one of those ridiculous chain letters. This one is about confidence and individuality. The instruction at the end of the note is to pass it on to ten people you admire for having those two qualities. I see from the address list that Joe has only sent the note to six people, two of whom must be relatives as they share his surname. He doesn’t have ten friends, let alone ten confident and individual friends. I’m so not surprised. Maybe a nicer person would pity him. I’m just ashamed that my name has found its way into his e-mail address book. I press delete.
The third note is more worrying. I’m the only addressee.
Beautiful Lucy, you look hot in your blue suit. Is it new? Are you trying to impress me?
Yours, duly impressed, Joe
xxx
I press delete.
The fourth note is similar.
Hey Stunner, have you been working out? Your legs are looking fab. I’d like to get hot and sweaty with you again some time soon.
Yours, panting, Joe
xxx
I press delete. Notes five and six are on a similar line. The subject matter being my hair and my mouth. We have firewalls at GWH, so Joe cannot use any expletives, but the notes feel dangerous and threatening. The volume screams desperation. The fact that he has sent me so many e-mails without receiving any encouragement through a reply makes me as fearful as if the man had laid a shotgun on my desk. I delete six more notes without reading them. I doubt they are work related. As I press refresh, two more notes come into my inbox and then messenger pings on to my screen.
Hey, Sweetheart, you are on line, me too, want to chat or more?!
xxxx
I slam down the screen of my laptop. For Joe to have a messenger link he must have tampered with my
computer. The thought is horrifying. I look around, as I half expect him to be standing in the kitchen with me. I’ve noticed that he’s always encroaching on my space at work. I’m reluctant to call him a stalker because I want to believe he is too ridiculous to warrant such a threatening label. But the fact is if I venture to the bathroom or the photocopier he always seems to pop up from nowhere, right by my side. More than once I’ve spotted him in the queue at the deli when I’ve been buying my sandwiches. He seems to be in an increasing number of the same think-tank groups as I am. I try to tell myself it is just coincidence and I find ways to avoid him – I hold my pee and send Julia out to buy my lunch. After receiving an insufferable number of text messages and phone calls I reported my mobile lost and changed my telephone number. This has been hugely inconvenient but has meant that Joe can’t call me. I’ve avoided his gaze, I’ve rebuffed his conversation and I’ve never found his jokes funny so it’s been easy to refuse to laugh at his gags. I thought he’d get the message. He’s had his moment. There is not going to be a repeat performance.
Why doesn’t he go away?
‘Everything all right, darling?’
I look up and Peter and Auriol are standing in the doorway. They have their coats on and look ready to leave. They both look beautiful and the kitchen appears to glimmer in their presence. Joe’s messages seem so dark by contrast. Shame scratches at my throat.
‘Yes, fine,’I say hastily. And I force a smile.
‘Problem at work?’
‘No. Why would you think that?’
‘Because you look worried.’
I kiss Peter and hurry them both out of the door.
‘Nothing I can’t handle,’I assure him.
I have no idea why Peter insists on torturing me on an ongoing basis. I wonder at the depth of his cruelty when I open the door and see that he has brought Lucy to the twins’birthday party. I accept that Auriol must be a guest but why is he so insistent on ruining everything?
Of course Lucy looks absolutely wonderful. She is wearing white trousers and a white shirt, for a children’s party! It’s madness. Or at least it would be for mere mortals; she’ll probably leave the party looking immaculate. I am wearing my cerise cardigan from Monsoon and had been rather pleased with the effect until I opened the door and was faced with the combined effects of years and years of self-absorption, iron willpower (when it comes to carbs or saturated-fat intake), a platinum American Express and several hours’grooming in front of a mirror. I study Lucy very closely and note that she’s wearing her latest adultery rather well. But then, it always was a look that suited her. She looks unchanged from last time I saw her and yet
my
whole world has altered.
Lucy presents the boys with two enormous boxes. She tells them that these presents are just the little gifts and that their real presents are waiting for them at home and they can open them next time they visit. I balk at her use of the word ‘home’but as the boys’real home is full of their guests I resist pulling her up.