Marrying the Mistress (29 page)

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Authors: Joanna Trollope

BOOK: Marrying the Mistress
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‘Glad she’s got the garden,’ Guy’s mother had said, and then after a pause, almost reflectively, ‘Bloodless girl, your Laura.’

If only, Guy thought, opening cupboards in search of a tea bag, his mother could see Laura now. Or Merrion,
for that matter. What on earth would she make of it all? Whatever would she think of a son who had found love – true love – in his fifties when already a grandfather? What would she think of Laura’s reaction and her insistence upon Simon’s succour? She had been a teacher, Guy’s mother, a biologist, but for her the heart had been chiefly a vital and ingenious organ and not the seat of all joy and all anguish. Guy and his brothers had assumed, without ever looking at it too closely, that their parents’ marriage had not only been one of the meeting of two extremely competent professional minds, but also one of mutual devotion. But then, of course, they never really knew, did they? It was the custom of their parents’ generation neither to explain nor to complain and if the steady beat of that marriage had faltered – which it surely must have done, sometimes, mustn’t it? – nobody would ever know. Poor old Mum, Guy thought, pouring boiling water on to the tea bag in one of Merrion’s white mugs, but then lucky old Mum, too. Rules made a cage but they also made a structure.

Guy turned off the lamp and slid the door to the sitting room back again. It was a clear night and the glow from the sky and the street filled the room with itself, and with big, soft shadows. Guy sat down on the sofa – the cushions were still crushed from where they’d both been earlier, half sitting, half lying – and put his mug down on the table. He leaned back and looked at the ceiling, at the narrow track of minute, brilliant spotlights that ran across it and which, when switched on, created such extraordinary effects. It was,
he thought, like being with Merrion or being without her, like bumbling along in the half-light or suddenly seeing things with freshness and novelty. If only – he shut his eyes and grimaced to himself in the dimness – if only it were possible to keep that novelty from turning itself into strangeness, to prevent it from colliding with other things, refusing to co-exist.

‘I could not bear,’ he’d said at dinner, ‘to feel I was in any way limiting you.’

She was eating a complicated salad with a fork. She didn’t look up at him, instead endeavouring to fold a long leaf of rocket in two.

‘We’ve had this conversation.’

‘That doesn’t deal with it,’ Guy said. ‘Looking at Jack the other night brought home to me how young you are. You’re far closer in age to him than to me. Far.’

She put the rocket into her mouth, pushing the stalk in after the leaf, with her fork.

‘Are we talking about babies again?’

‘I suppose it’s part of it — ‘

‘Maybe I don’t want a baby.’

Guy said gently, ‘Don’t be childish.’

‘I’m so tired,’ Merrion said, ‘of you bringing up difficulties. You never used to.’

‘And you always said they’d be there.’

‘They
are
. But they don’t need talking up a storm all the time.’

‘Or ignoring.’

She speared a piece of red pepper, inspected it, and put it on the side of her plate.

‘I’m not ignoring anything,’ she said. ‘I’m just finding it very difficult to cope with your preoccupations. It’s very hard, Guy, to see you mentally miles away from me. I know you’re having a hard time, I know Laura is being impossible and the flat is horrible and dealing with your children is at best difficult but it seems to me – I have to say this – that you are
drawn
towards all that, almost that you’re returning to something you knew long before me, that you’ve gone somewhere I can’t follow you.’

He turned his wineglass round and round, twisting it by the stem.

‘I have never loved anyone as I love you.’

‘I know,’ she said. She put her fork down. ‘But that isn’t really the point, is it?’

He stared at his plate.

‘You’ve found something,’ Merrion said, ‘haven’t you? You’ve found your family again.’

Guy said, ‘But I want you to be part of that family—’

She said sharply, more sharply than she meant to, ‘And is that a good thing?’

He raised his head.

‘A good thing?’

‘For me,’ Merrion said. ‘Is it a good thing for me to be sort of
subsumed
into your family? Is that what you and I are about? Is that what we’ve been aiming at, all these years?’

He shook his head. He said, almost inaudibly, ‘No.’

And then he said, ‘We didn’t know, did we, we didn’t know what was coming—’

‘No,’ she said. She pushed her plate away. ‘I don’t want to talk any more. I don’t want to have to say things. I’m not ready for saying things yet. Not some things, anyhow.’

He opened his eyes now and reached for his tea. It didn’t taste of anything much: he hadn’t let the tea bag soak long enough. What he had wanted to say at dinner and been unable to bring himself to say had been that he couldn’t, for reasons he couldn’t explain, visualize how their life together was going to be in the future. In the past, he’d always seen it: it hung in his mind, a clear picture in equally clear contrast to the half-life he lived with Laura. He’d seen an urban flat, a big flat, full of his books and her objects. He’d seen a house somewhere, maybe even a townhouse, with doors opening to a small summer garden and music playing. Sometimes, they’d even talked about these pictures, playing the luxurious game of how things could be if they were free to make them so. And now that freedom was, round extraordinary obstacles, slowly coming, and as it advanced towards him, it seemed to be blurring his vision of the future. What was even more disconcerting was that he suspected it was blurring Merrion’s vision, too, that vision that had always been so unclouded, that had always sustained him, reassured him.

He looked round the sitting room. They couldn’t stay there, that was for certain. It was too small, too feminine, too emphatically the flat of a single life. He tried, as he had tried so often recently, to visualize somewhere else that would be right for them; to conjure up that fantasy flat, that fantasy house where they could
amplify that sense of complete belonging that they felt together. He could think of nothing. When he tried to imagine, all he saw was what he already knew: this flat, Hill Cottage, the dreary rooms at Pinns Green.

He stood up. The light was getting stronger, dawn triumphing over street lamps. He went quietly across the sitting room and opened the door to the bedroom.

‘You’ve been ages,’ Merrion said.

‘Have I? I thought you were asleep.’

She turned towards him. He could see the dark mass of her hair on the pillow.

‘At least an hour. Are you all right?’

He sat on the edge of the bed, his back to her. She put a hand out and laid it flat on his back, on his spine below the shoulder blades.

‘I don’t know,’ he said.

‘Get in,’ she said.

He swung round and pushed his legs back in under the bedclothes.

‘Guy,’ she said. ‘What is it?’

He looked at the ceiling. He said, ‘I can’t seem to see the way ahead. I always could, but at the moment, I can’t.’

She felt for his hand, under the covers, and held it in both of hers.

‘Keep saying at the moment,’ she said. ‘Just keep saying that.’

Her voice was apprehensive, almost frightened. He put his second hand over hers and they held on to each other, under the covers, hard.

‘Just keep on,’ Merrion said.

The pub Alan had chosen had tables on the pavement. When Guy approached, Alan was already there with all the accessories on the table before him that Guy had come to recognize as urban essentials – a mobile telephone, a newspaper and a drink. Alan was wearing sunglasses and a blue linen shirt. He got up as Guy came towards him and held his arms out.

‘Hi, Dad.’

Guy held him.

‘That’s nice—’

‘You OK?’ Alan said. He shifted his arms in order to put his hands on his father’s shoulders.

‘A bit tired—’

‘I’m not surprised,’ Alan said.

Guy smiled. He looked at Alan’s glass.

‘What are you drinking?’

‘Campari.’

Guy made a face.

‘I think I’ll get myself a beer.’

Alan pushed down lightly on Guy’s shoulders.

‘You sit down. I’ll get it.’

Guy sat down on a white plastic chair with his back to the wall of the pub. He felt tired indeed, tired in body and spirit.

‘Do I look my age?’ he’d said to Merrion that morning.

She’d been in the shower and was making coffee, wrapped in a bath towel.

‘I’ve no idea,’ she said, and kissed him.

Alan came back with a tall glass of lager.

‘This sort of beer?’

‘Excellent,’ Guy said.

‘Dad—’

‘Yes?’

‘I’ve got something to tell you.’

Guy looked at him. He was back in his chair and resting his elbows on the table.

‘I’ve moved in with someone,’ Alan said.

‘Someone—’

‘He’s called Charlie Driver. He’s a doctor.’

Guy raised his beer glass.

‘Good.’

‘That sounded a bit hearty—’

‘It wasn’t meant to.’

‘It’s such a relief,’ Alan said. ‘Being in love again.’

Guy smiled at him.

‘Of course.’

‘I want to tell the world—’

Guy looked down at his beer.

‘I remember.’

‘Dad. I’m not telling Mum.’

‘No—’

‘In fact, I’m not sure I’m even speaking to Mum for the moment.’

Guy said unhappily, ‘Nobody seems to be able to—’

‘That was the other thing I wanted to see you about.’

‘Besides Charlie.’

‘Yes.’

Guy put a hand out and held Alan’s nearest wrist.

‘I am really pleased about Charlie. As long as he’s good to you.’

‘None better,’ Alan said. He took a swallow of Campari. ‘But Mum—’

‘Yes.’

‘She’s now refusing to take Simon’s advice.’

‘I know.’

‘I think,’ Alan said, ‘that I have to have another go at Simon.’

Guy said with sudden vehemence, ‘Alan, I’ve suddenly got no skins left about it any more. I can hardly think about it, let alone do anything about it. I just seem to dread it all, dread the difficulties and refusals and complications. Dread the decisions. It was such a relief to see Jack the other night. Someone else’s problems, someone else’s life—’ He stopped.

Alan waited.

‘Sorry,’ Guy said.

‘Why sorry?’

‘I’ve created these complications,’ Guy said, staring past Alan along the pavement, ‘and I feel the least I can do is shoulder the consequences, and not complain.’

‘But you didn’t know what the consequences would be—’

‘I thought I did. I thought I could guess. And that I could deal with them.’

‘But you can’t—’

‘No,’ Guy said. He pushed his glass away. ‘Once, I seemed to know what I was doing so clearly that I didn’t even have a choice to make. And now it’s all choices.’

‘Is it?’ Alan said. He picked up his cigarettes.

‘No,’ Guy said. He glanced at Alan. ‘No, it isn’t choice now. It’s dilemma.’

It was almost nine-thirty before Rachel heard Carrie go downstairs. On Sunday mornings, it used to be Simon who went down first, and he’d put a tracksuit on and go out for the newspapers and then he’d bring them upstairs, with a cup of tea, for Carrie. When they were all little, Rachel remembered, Simon would get cross with them if they tried to get into bed with Carrie on a Sunday. Saturday was OK, but Sunday was forbidden. But the last few months, Sundays had been the other way about. It was Carrie who went downstairs first, and made tea. She didn’t go and get the newspapers until she was properly dressed, and she made the tea wearing the old kimono with blue cranes and flowers printed on it which Rachel could remember all her life. Simon had once bought Carrie a new dressing gown, a white one made of thick waffle woven cotton, but Rachel knew it was still in its plastic bag on top of Carrie’s cupboard, and Carrie was still wearing her kimono.

Rachel got slowly out of bed. Simon’s grey sweater was on the floor where she had dropped it the previous night, and she picked it up and pulled it over the outsize T-shirt she’d slept in. Then she pulled her hair back, unbrushed, and pushed it through an elasticated towelling band.

It was silent on the landing. Emma’s door was shut and so was Simon and Carrie’s and there was no sound
from the little staircase up to Jack’s room. Rachel padded downstairs. Carrie was standing in the kitchen, dressed in jeans and a checked shirt and a fleece jacket, with her hand on the kettle as if that would help it to boil faster.

‘Hi,’ Rachel said.

Carrie turned round.

‘Morning, darling.’

Rachel went to lean against the counter near the kettle.

‘You going to get the papers?’

‘Yes,’ Carrie said. ‘Why d’you ask?’

‘No reason.’

Rachel yawned. She put a hand up and scratched her collar bone through her T-shirt. She said, ‘Is that for Dad’s tea?’

‘Yes,’ Carrie said.

‘I’ll do it.’

‘Will you?’

‘Yes.’

‘He’s still asleep—’

Rachel looked at the clock.

‘It’s twenty to ten.’

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