Husbands. Part 13

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'So it hasn't turned out too badly, has it?' I say stupidly.

Stevie shakes his head in disgust, I think.

'How old is Philip?'

'Thirty-nine.'

Stevie splutters into his drink.



'Don't be so infantile,' I groan. 'When we were sixteen, thirty-nine might have seemed old, but-'

'When we were sixteen, twenty-three seemed old.'

'Exactly,' I say, thinking he had proven my point for me. But he's grinning as though he's proven his own.

'He's clearly wealthy.'

'We're comfortable, thank you.' Not that it's any of his business.

'You're not working?'

'Not at the moment, but I didn't marry him for his money if that's what you are thinking.'

'No, no, of course not,' Stevie is smirking. I can't be bothered to explain. I owe Stevie a number of explanations but not that one.

'Do you think we can have our marriage annulled?' I ask, trying to get back on track.

'On what grounds? We'd hardly be able to claim non-consummation, would we?'

We fall silent. I wonder if startlingly vivid images of my naked flesh are accosting his mind, the way images of him are demanding my immediate attention.

Oh G.o.d, he'd been lovely. Toned and tanned. Fit and lean. Fun and loving. He hasn't changed much.

I lost my virginity to Stevie. Not that it was a loss of any sort, that's a terrible expression. Rather, I chucked my virginity and caution to the wind and I was happy to do so. The funny thing about s.e.x for the first time is that it's such an enormous deal. Stevie, being male, pretty much pushed for s.e.x from the moment he dropped his yellow checker into the blue Connect 4 frame. The onus to resist, to be cautious and careful, fell entirely on to my shoulders because I was the girl. But I wanted him just as much as he wanted me. I wanted him so much it hurt. Still, the initial opportunity took some negotiating.

Armed with a three-pack of condoms (purchased from the male loos at the local pub) we set about finding somewhere suitable for the big event. We didn't have a car so we couldn't join most of our cla.s.smates who stumbled through their first time parked up at the beach. I didn't want my first time to be up against the bike sheds or in the woods lying on his parka (although subsequently I found these to be more than adequate as venues for love). Stevie's mother never went out so we couldn't do it at his place and while all my brothers and my father went out loads, they didn't coordinate their movements so rather frustratingly someone was always at home. Besides, I didn't really fancy s.h.a.gging in my room. I hadn't changed a thing in there since my mum had died. It was (and as far as I know still is) a tatty and trippy mess of clas.h.i.+ng flowery prints. There were flowers on the bedspread, different flowers on the wallpaper and another set on the carpet. There were posters of boy bands on the walls declaring that I was a teenager and dolls on the shelves arguing that I was still a wee girl. I simply would not have been able to concentrate on Stevie with Tiny Tears and Take That smiling down at me.

In the end we caught a train to neighbouring town Newburgh and booked into a bed and breakfast. It was a dingy place with the type of landlady who didn't ask questions providing you paid cash up front. Perfect. Stevie finally relieved me of my virginity on a narrow single bed. The mattress squeaked and the nylon bedspread scratched. Yet, I thought I was in heaven.

Stevie had an enormous p.e.n.i.s. Of course, back then I had nothing to compare it with except a picture of Michelangelo's David, so I guess an average-size p.e.n.i.s would have seemed gigantic. But I've since done more groundwork and I can confirm I was not wrong. The first time was actually quite uncomfortable and all over in seconds. His size, my nerves and our combined inexperience united to make the entire exercise daunting. So why is it one of my sweetest memories? I still clearly remember the look in his eyes as he rolled off me. Despite the brevity of the act we were both so proud and happy. Stevie almost shouted with excitement that we were lovers. We were grown-up. We were no longer kids whose only entertainment was hanging around the corner shop and the grey granite memorial for the drowned, swigging cider and kicking cans we were lovers. Stevie promised me that the s.e.x would get better with practice, so we made love twice more that night. Not only did we get our money's worth out of the B&B but he also proved his point; the s.e.x did get better and better with practice.

The issue of where we had s.e.x never appeared again. After the first time we seemed to reach a silent and mutual agreement to make love wherever and whenever we could. I didn't care a jot about sand in my knickers or mud on his parka. Urgently we'd bang out our youthful desire, only pausing momentarily, to wedge a washbasket or other piece of furniture in front of the door. University halls of residence brought a certain level of comfort. At least in those narrow beds we did not have to keep one eye on the door handle. Our lovemaking was pa.s.sionate, exciting, charged, novel and tender. It was rarely comfortable.

Maybe I should have known that there was bound to come a point when I didn't want carpet burns from thin nylon carpets which smelt of cat pee and had never seen underlay. Every girl dreams that one day she'll slide out of silk underwear and then make love on goose-down duvets, surrounded by satin cus.h.i.+ons just the way I do with Philip.

'Have you ever told anyone about us?' I ask, forcing myself back to the issue I have to deal with.

'No.' Relief squelches through my body. He tilts back his head, blowing out smoke, 'Er, thinking about it, yes, one person.'

I'm immediately erect with tension. 'Who, for G.o.d's sake who?'

'I can't remember her name now. Helen or Ellen or Ella. Something like that.' He shrugs, casually dismissing the woman who holds my most important secret. 'We met in Thailand, on a beach. We'd smoked some weed. She asked me to marry her, as a laugh, cos she was mellow and I said no. She took it badly.'

'Of course she did, after such a meaningful relations.h.i.+p,' I snap. b.u.g.g.e.r me, I'm jealous that he smoked weed with an anonymous girl on a beach.

'I didn't want to hurt her feelings so I told her that I was already married.'

'You told some bimbo on a beach that we were married! What if I ever meet her? What if Philip does?' I yell angrily.

'She had braids and wore tie-dye. I can't see her turning up at one of your dinner parties.'

'How could you be so-' I am about to call Stevie stupid. I can see from his face that he already expects this, so I resist.

'Don't get arsy with me, Belinda. I'm not the one who remarried.' He has a point so I have no alternative but to breathe deeply. 'Chill. She didn't believe me anyway. Not even when I showed her your picture.'

'You carry a picture of me?'

'Always.' Stevie coughs and turns away so I can't see his eyes. 'It's just habit,' he a.s.sures me.

I don't believe him and, worse, I don't want to believe him.

'It came in useful when I was looking for you.'

I put my head in my hands and allow the full implication of the situation to engulf me. Over the last few weeks I've been so absorbed in my mess and how I can get out of it without affecting my relations.h.i.+p with Philip, only now am I beginning to understand the further consequences of what I did to this man whom I loved and who had loved me. Whose only mistake had been to marry me when we were too young.

'Tell me about loving Philip,' says Stevie, looking into his beer gla.s.s.

'You don't want to hear that.'

'I do. I want to understand it. I want to understand you.'

Stevie and I were once so close that we thought our souls had been cut from the same part of the sky. I remember him saying that to me. Now I can't think we have anything in common. I expect he feels the same and wants to reacquaint himself. I'm uneasy but don't see that I am in a position to negotiate.

'We've been married for-'

'You're not married,' says Stevie grimly.

'Well, for the sake of argument.' Stevie shrugs and lets me go ahead. 'We've been married six months.'

'That's no time at all.'

I can hear the jeer in his voice. Stevie doesn't see my marriage to Philip as a real marriage. But he's wrong. My marriage to him was the farce.

'I want to get to our ruby wedding anniversary,' I hiss. I'm irritated. I know I'm on thin ice. Six months is no time at all. It's short enough for Philip to write it off as a ghastly mistake, which I'm sure he would, if he found out about my bigamy.

'We'd dated for nearly two years before we got married. All our friends think we're perfect for each other. When we announced our engagement, they asked what had taken us so long.'

'You could have explained, Belinda. You could have said you weren't in a position to commit,' says Stevie sarcastically.

I s.h.i.+ft uncomfortably on my chair. 'It was generally expected that when confronted with Philip-the-obvious-catch, I would snap him up after the first post-coital snooze. I live in London, where suitable bachelors are thin on the ground. At twenty-eight, I felt like a baby but was already being referred to as "Madame" by strangers. Philip was heading for The Times rich list and he's kind.'

'So you didn't fancy him?'

'I did. I do,' I stumble. 'Very much. I'm not blind. I could see that Phil was eminently eligible. He has sense, looks and money enough but I really wasn't planning on marrying. I was trying not to fall in love with him.'

I look at Stevie, hoping for a reaction. He sneers, which is not the reaction I was looking for. f.u.c.k me, what did I expect? He can't possibly be understanding.

I hadn't been waiting for a proposal. I was very aware that I was in no position to accept one. And I was planning to tell Philip about Stevie. Or, at the very least, to track down Stevie and sort out a divorce before I moved things on with Philip. I once went as far as to visit Friends Reunited but Stevie wasn't registered. I wouldn't have accepted Phil's proposal if he hadn't asked the night Ben was killed. I'm not saying that I didn't want to marry Phil. I did want to marry Phil. One day.

I can't articulate any of this accurately so I mutter, 'There's no crime in marrying someone who wors.h.i.+ps you.'

'There is, if you're already married,' points out Stevie.

'Well, yes,' I admit with a reluctant grin. I'm surprised that I feel like grinning at all. 'But if I hadn't been married then it would have been OK.' I touch my temples, I'm exhausted. 'Look, I bath in a loved-up glow and I won't apologize for that. I didn't marry Philip for his money, you know, Stevie. I married his gravitas,' I confess.

I wonder if Stevie will understand this. I wanted to feel safe. Stevie must realize this as he knows me better than anyone else, or at least, used to. He knows where I come from but sadly did not know where I wanted to go.

'Philip is big and strong and-'

'Grey?' says Stevie, rupturing the romantic bubble where he still understands me. I dream of being known and understood, something I've made impossible. Is he jealous of Philip?

'Yes, he is greying but I like that.'

'Older men tend to be richer.'

'Maybe, and they tend to be more mature,' I snap. Stevie looks offended and I'm glad. 'I don't need to explain my love for Philip. I don't need to explain why I married him. He's a good husband. An excellent one.' I catch sight of Stevie's face. He looks hurt again. I reach out and squeeze his arm, 'I know you loved me too, but we were-' I want to say we were too young but Stevie interrupts.

'We were a mistake. I know, you told me.'

We stay silent for some time as anything I say seems to make matters worse. We drain our drinks and Stevie stubs out his f.a.g. Only as we walk to the pub door dare I ask.

'Will you help me, Stevie?' I put my hand on his arm. His skin feels soft, warm, and pleasant. Stevie pauses and then after the longest time he nods.

'Yes, I will help you, Belinda, because some things never change.'

The relief is enormous, it washes over me although I know I can never be clean again.

'Stevie, one more thing.'

'What?'

'My picture, in your wallet. You have to dump it.'

Stevie nods. 'It's lousy anyway. You're wearing electric-blue mascara.'

24. That's All Right, Mama.

Laura.

There's a loud knock at our door.

'Stevie, Stevie, Stevie, Stevie,' says Eddie, jumping up from in front of the TV, hopeful and delighted.

I open the door and grin, 'Hi, we weren't expecting to see you tonight.'

'I can leave if you want,' he says, turning away.

'No way, babe you're here now.' I pull him into the flat and pretend not to have noticed his tetchiness.

'Have you brought your guitar? Are you going to sing?' demands Eddie.

Stevie drops to his knees so that he is at eye level with him, 'Sorry, mate. I did promise to bring it next time I came round, didn't I? I wasn't planning on coming by. It slipped my mind.' Stevie looks gutted at having let Eddie down. Eddie, on the other hand, isn't bothered in the slightest and has already moved on to the next thing.

'Do you like Lego?'

Stevie and Eddie settle down to making Thunderbirds out of Lego and I go back to the ironing. We'd agreed not to meet tonight because following three sleep-deprived nights on the trot, I decided my house needed attention and I needed rest. This was a rational decision made over the phone at lunchtime. However, Stevie's irrational appearance is welcome, despite the fact that he's found me in all my barefaced glory. Then again, he's seen me in all my bare-a.r.s.ed glory. It isn't logical to worry about lack of make-up.

'Everything OK?' I ask. Clearly it's not. This isn't one of those visits where your new boyfriend tears round to your flat because he can't wait to rip off your clothes and give you a d.a.m.n good ravis.h.i.+ng. He looks tired and stressed. He's come to my flat as a sanctuary. I'm stoked. I mean, obviously, I'm sorry that he's tired and stressed but I can't help being chuffed that he's come to me for a bit of TLC.

'Have those kids been picking on you again?' I ask, with a smile.

Stevie gets up from the floor where he's been playing with Eddie, and throws himself on to the settee. It shakes ever so slightly under his weight. Oscar was much shorter and Stevie looks as though he's going to burst through the ceiling at any moment. All my furniture seems girly and effeminate when he lounges.

He pats the settee. 'Come and give me a hug, Laura.'

I willingly leave my ironing and oblige. 'Tough day?'

'Yes.'

'Kids? Parents? Paperwork? That old guy who eats all the chocolate biscuits in the staff room?'

'Nothing like that,' says Stevie. He's quiet for a long time and just when I'm giving up hope that he's going to tell me what's bugging him, he mutters, 'Neither John nor Dave can make it to Las Vegas.'

'You're kidding?'

'Nope. John can't get time off and Dave has a family party or something that weekend.'

'Can't he get out of it?'

'Sister's wedding, so no, not easily.'

'Oh, babe, that's a shame, I know you wanted them to be there.'

'Yes, it's a shame.'

Husbands. Part 13

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Husbands. Part 13 summary

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