After the Storm (All I've Ever Needed) (6 page)

BOOK: After the Storm (All I've Ever Needed)
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“You don’t have a man.
 
You don’t go anywhere.
 
All you do is work and read those silly romance novels,” her mother chastised.
 
“How are you going to find yourself a man if you don’t go out?
 
And you can’t even find a man at work because they’re all white.”

“Actually, Mummy…”
 
Natalie hadn’t come over with that intention of talking about Stephano, but as her mother had raised the subject, she decided to seek some advice.
 
Her mother had lived on the island for the first twenty years of her life and though the population was predominantly African and Indian, the island was an eclectic mixture of races.
 
“Did you ever date a man of another race when you lived in Trinidad?”
 

“No.”
 
Her mother’s answer was immediate and not very encouraging.
 
She turned to Natalie with a suspicious glint in her eye.
 
“Are you trying to tell me something?”

Natalie could have evaded the question.
 
What she and Stephano shared could still be chalked up to an indiscretion and brushed under the carpet.

“There is a guy at the office—”

“You said that you’re the only black person working there…so he’s white?”

“Yes, he’s white.
 
His name’s Stephano.
 
His parents are Italian, but he was born here.”

Her mother was silent for a moment.

“How old is he?”

“He’s twenty-eight.”

“At least he’s not a dirty old man.”

“Mum!”

“Look at Sybil’s daughter—living with a man old enough to be her grandfather!”

“Mum, David’s not old enough to be Sybil’s…”
 
Her mother was right, but just barely as his eldest child was almost seventeen years older than his new lover.
 
“Okay, he’s old enough to be her grandfather, but he’s not!
 
And he loves her.”

“Of course, he loves her.
 
What’s not for him to love?
 
She’s young and beautiful.
 
Why didn’t he marry her before asking her to shack up with him?”

“Maybe
she
doesn’t want to marry him!”
 
Natalie retorted.
 
Knowing Karen as she did, she was sure that the young woman Karen planned on being a pampered mistress for a while before moving on.

“You think she prefers to live in sin with him?”
 
Her mother made a dismissive sound.
 
“He doesn’t want to have to give her half of his money if they get divorced.
 
And why would he buy the whole cow when he could drink all the milk he wants?”

“Mum, that’s so cynical.”

“I’m just being realistic,” her mother insisted.

Karen was a year older than Natalie.
 
Their mothers had been friends as long as she
 
could remember, but she and Karen had never had much in common.
 
They’d chatted and played when their parents had thrown them together, but they had never made any attempt to deepened or further the friendship.
 
Most people accused David of taking advantage of Karen because he was so much older, but all it took was one look to see that he was totally whipped by his younger lover.
 
Karen had always been street smart and savvy;
she
had probably decided that she wanted a life of luxury and found a man to provide it.
 
Natalie would be willing to bet that Karen was the one not wanting to get married and not the other way around—she had probably decided,
why buy the whole bull when all she wanted was some meat?

“Was Michael white too?” her mother asked.

“Why do you ask that?”
 
The question was so unexpected Natalie felt sick for a moment, thinking that Nathan had betrayed her although she had sworn him to secrecy.

“You mentioned him all time and I got the impression that he was more than just a classmate.
 
When you didn’t bring him home, I did wonder.”

“No, Mum.
 
Michael’s black.
 
His stepfather’s from Trinidad and his mother’s from Jamaica.”

“What’s his father’s name?
 
I might know him!”

“He never told me.”
 
Natalie had asked him, wondering if the man was a friend of her father’s, but Michael had refused give her any details except to say that he was a ‘Trini bastard’.
 
“His real father was Jamaica, but he and Michael’s mum split up when Michael was a baby.”

Her mother was silent for another minute.

“I expected Nathan to date a white girl with every Black British footballer, politician or celebrity marrying one, but somehow I never thought that
you
would date a white boy.”

Nathan was popular and outgoing, like their mother.
 
Growing up he’d had friends from all walks of life.
 
His previous girlfriends had both been St Lucian, the last one two years older than he was.
 
He’d met his fiancée Folasade at university.
 
He’d admitted that he’d admired her willowy beauty from afar, but she had blown him away when she’d sung a cappella at a fund-raising event the university’s African-Caribbean Society had organized for victims of the Haitian earthquake in 2010.

“I never thought I would date a white man either,” Natalie admitted.

“Times are changing,” her mother mused.
 
“Everywhere you go in London you see mixed couples now.
 
White men dating black women has suddenly become quite trendy.”

“I’m not doing it to be part of a trend, Mum!”

“I never said you were, honey.”
 
Her mother’s face suddenly became serious.
 
“You know that your father isn’t going to take this very well?”

Natalie knew he wouldn’t.
 
She was a daddy’s girl and to him it would be like she was dating the enemy.
 
Her mother was confident and outgoing and had friends of all races.
 
Her father, though born in London, had only a handful of friends, all West Indian, but mostly Trinidadian, with whom he exchanged visits from time to time.
 
He
 
was most content to be home with his family when he wasn’t working as a building surveyor.
 
Five years ago he had sued his employer for racial discrimination and won.
 
He had been unsuccessfully in applying for a managerial role and had accepted their decision even though he had then been told that he had to train the appointee.
 
When he’d discovered that the younger man was only partially qualified, although the job specification had clearly stated full qualification and professional membership of the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors as requirements.
 
He’d won the case and been paid substantial damages.
 
He now worked freelance and admitted that he enjoyed the variety and the less-rigid work schedule, but the case hadn’t endeared him to white men.
 
Surprisingly he had no problems with white women—her mother had often said it’s a man thing and borne of their competitiveness.

“I know he won’t.”

“He will be upset, but you have to live your life to please yourself, honey.”
 
Her mother squeezed her hand as if willing her to be strong.
 
“If your Stephano is a good man and he treats you well, your father will come around.
 
Just give him time.”

“I hope so.”
 
Natalie wasn’t so sure that time would make a difference.

“Honey, your dad is old fashioned in many ways, but he’s not going to disown you if you don’t date a black man.”
 
Her mother turned so that she was facing Natalie fully.
 
“Just don’t accept anything less from a white man than you’d expect from a black man.”

“Mum, I would never do that!”
 
Natalie protested instinctively.

“I’m glad to hear it.
 
I would be disappointed otherwise.”

***

As she drove back to her flat in Fulham that evening, Natalie thought about her mother’s parting words.
 
Would she be accepting less from Stephano than she would from a black man?
 
Not compared to her relationship with Michael.
 
She hadn’t known about his girlfriend Melissa and even when he told Natalie that she wasn’t good enough to be his main girlfriend, Michael hadn’t given her a choice to end their relationship.
 
With Stephano
she
would choose to be the other woman, or not.

As usual, the thought of Michael make Natalie grit her teeth unconsciously.
 
It had been a dark period in her life.
 
He had sensed her little insecurities—her shyness, her height, her dark skin and short hair—and fed them until they’d become phobias.

The only person she’d never been shy with was Nathan.
 
She was seventeen months old when he was born and she’d loved him from the time she’d laid eyes on him, looking like one of her dolls come to live.
 
They had shared a bedroom and did everything together until their parents moved to a larger house when she was nine.
 
It was a safer neighborhood and Nathan started to spend more time outdoors playing with friends.
 
At first, missing Nathan, she had spent time cuddled into her father’s side whenever he was home, having him read to her or reading one of her books as he watched the news or sport on TV.
 
He was an innately shy man and though he masked it effectively, she’d recognized the shared trait.
 
But gradually she began spending more and more time in her bedroom which had been painted the soft pink of her choice.
 
She discovered teen romances two summers before she was officially old enough to read them and spent every spare minute in her bedroom reading one after the other.
 
On returning to school the next term, she’d found it difficult to connect with her friends. And as the years went by it became increasingly difficult after each school holiday.
 
By the time she’d left to go to university she’d had no close friends at school.

Her mother was a beautiful, confident woman who couldn’t understand her child’s reticence.
 
She delighted in telling her children how she had ‘hooked’ their father when he had come to Trinidad for carnival one year.
 
She had seen him at a party and decided that she wanted him, so she put some extra movement in her waist as she danced and he had come over and asked her for a dance.
 
Less than a year later he had returned to the island to marry her and bring her back to the UK.

Her father, convinced that Natalie would master her shyness, had constantly told his wife to stop worrying.
 
Her mother had thought differently and though Natalie hadn’t applied for any out-of-London universities, intending to live at home and travel to lectures daily, her mother had insisted that she spend the first year at least living in student halls of residence.

Intellectually Natalie had understood her mother’s actions were motivated only by her concern—she’d thought forcing her daughter to fend for herself in the outside would prepare her for live as an adult—but it had been hard not to feel resentful.
 
She had been unable to sleep at first in a room that was so small it felt as though the walls were closing in on her.
 
When she finally dropped off to sleep she was often rudely awoken by loud noises or laughter coming from adjoining students’ rooms.
 
She’d been too proud to plead with her parents to go back home and after the initial shock of having to fend for herself, she began to really enjoy the freedom of having her own place.

Michael Evans hadn’t been the image of the man she’d imagined would be her first boyfriend, except for the fact that he was unfairly good looking in a way that most vertically-challenged men seemed to be.
 
She had certainly never been attracted to guys who pumped their bodies up, expanding it sideways in an effort to make up for what they thought it lacked lengthways.

BOOK: After the Storm (All I've Ever Needed)
5.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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