So, in case you hadn’t guessed, yesterday’s brief was to write truly the worst story ever – I’m hoping that people who saw my effort didn’t think that really was my best work!
Today’s offering follows:
The Importance of Being Honest
“Would you
ever lie to me?” I ask.
I’ve always
thought that honesty is the most important thing in a relationship – partly
because my ex didn’t see things that way at all and seemed to believe it was
okay for him to cheat on me as long as I didn’t know about it.
I still
remember the gut-wrenching agony I felt when I stumbled across the email he’d
left open on his laptop: a lovey-dovey message from a woman named Kath who’d
sent him a thousand kisses – yes, I counted every one of them to make sure –
and claimed she couldn’t stand being apart from him.
I challenged
him, of course: I waited until we were having dinner, just the two of us, and
then dropped her name into the conversation ever so casually. He didn’t bat an
eyelid: just laughed and made some comment about her being infatuated with him;
alleged it was all one-sided. But I knew.
And, once I
knew, it was all over. I think she possibly thought I knew more than I did
because – when I engineered bumping into her at the gym at just the right time
to get chatting – I told her I knew what was going on, even lied and said that
Dave had told me it was an affair. By the time she’d incriminated herself – and
him – it was too late. I made her give me her phone so I could forward myself
all the raunchy text messages he’d sent her. I needed evidence, you see –
didn’t want Dave to try to wriggle out of this one.
It was several
years later when I met Mark, my current husband. He’d been burned too, just
like me; and because we both knew what it was like to be cheated on, we
promised each other that we’d always be honest with each other, no matter what.
And, so far, that’s worked – until now, that is.
I ask the
question again, turning around in front of Mark so he can give me an honest
answer. “Do these jeans make me look fat?” I repeat, expecting honesty but
wanting something kinder.
Mark doesn’t
let me down. “Not fat – they show off your arse, if that’s what you mean.”
It would be
far too tacky to ask him whether or not my bum looks big in these jeans;
besides, I know what he’s saying is that he loves the sight of my backside and
that its size is immaterial.
Mark will
always fancy me: I know that as surely as I know that the earth is round or
that Teresa May buggered up Brexit; but the reason I’m asking is because I need
to know whether or not I’ll pass muster at my upcoming school reunion. Back in
the 1990s, I was an awkward, gawky teenager, too self-conscious and shy to
attract any attention from boys. Now, just past the big Four-O, I’m far more
comfortable in my own skin, actually like the way I look most days. I know I
look pretty good compared to most of the people I was at school with too:
thanks to Facebook, I know exactly who’s aged well and who hasn’t. The boys, on
the whole, are a sorry looking crowd: mostly bald, or overweight, or both; but
the girls seem to have invested more time and effort into their appearance,
sporting a range of almost natural looking hair colours and make up that just
escapes being tarty. I’ve chatted to a few of them on Messenger, ever since
Paula set up this reunion page, and realised that we’ve all mellowed and
matured with the passing of years so that I now find the ‘them’ and ‘us’
mentality of ‘cool kids’ and ‘geeks’ no longer exists. Instead, we are bound
together by age and era, products of a pre-internet time when children ‘played
out’ and a phone was something fixed to the wall in your parents’ house.
*
Twenty-four
hours later and the reunion is in full swing. I’ve travelled almost a hundred
miles to be here and initially it’s terrifying as I nervously make my way into
the cricket club to face crowds of strangers I haven’t seen for twenty-six
years.
Luckily,
Julie’s by the bar, sipping away at a bottle of cider. We’ve chatted a lot on
Facebook recently, both of us commiserating with each other over dead-loss exes
and the highs and lows of parenthood. She was always a hefty girl at school and
she’s still plump now, but she gives me a massive grin when she sees me and
hugs me as if I’m some long-lost relative and not someone who just happened to
sit on the same table as her for art lessons all those years ago.
Behind her,
Alison and Rosie are catching up on current jobs and partners; and, over in the
corner, a group of middle-aged men – who used to be the boys in my year group –
are discussing football. (What else?)
I’m just about
to order an orange juice when a voice at my shoulder makes me spin round. “Good
to see you, Deb. Can I get you a drink?”
Paul Johnson
was my first crush, way, way back in Year Seven. My longing for him was
hopelessly unrequited: he was already going out with Joanne Stansfield and she
had long dark hair and curves whilst I was just a little girl with short hair
and skinny legs. After Joanne, he upgraded to Louise Benson and they were
pretty much inseparable for the rest of our time at school. I used to think
about him from time to time and wonder if the two of them had got married;
there’s a ring on his finger now, but I don’t want to look too nosy, so I
decide not to ask.
Paul repeats
his question. “Can I get you a drink?”
“Just an
orange juice, thanks,” I reply absently, cognisant of the fact that I’ll be
staying with my teetotal mother tonight and she won’t appreciate it if I roll
up drunk or even the least little bit tiddly.
Paul hands me
a glass a moment later and I take a deep draught before I realise there’s
something else in there besides orange juice. “Is that vodka?” I ask, wondering
what he’s playing at.
He gives me an
unapologetic grin. “I thought it might bring back a few memories of all those
parties in Year Eleven.”
Perhaps he
remembers those parties, but I certainly don’t: I was never cool enough to be
invited to one of them.
Slightly
flustered, I sip my drink, realising that, unlike most of his friends, Paul’s
not fallen prey to the same ravages of time. He still has hair, for one thing;
and although there’s a slight suggestion of the onset of a middle-aged paunch,
he’s aged well for a man in his early forties.
“You’re
looking good for your age,” I say lightly.
He regards me
hungrily. “So are you.”
Our eyes meet
and something imperceptible passes between us. That’s when I know: Paul
Johnson, the object of my schoolgirl infatuation, likes what he sees. And I’m
damned if I’m going to pass up the opportunity.
*
We spend most
of the evening glued to each other’s sides. Paul buys me drink after drink – by
now, I’ve stopped telling myself that I’m not going to drink any alcohol and
I’m ordering white wine spritzers as if there’s no tomorrow. I’m not going to
do anything stupid, I reason with myself: I’m just going to rewrite history a
little, give my ego a bit of a boost by flirting with a guy who used to be one
of the most popular boys in the school.
It’s ten
o’clock and the room we’d booked at the Cricket Club is now officially closed.
Paul looks at me. “We’re going to see if any of the old nightclubs are open,”
he says. “Are you up for it?”
I can’t
believe that I’m actually getting to hang out with the cool kids. It’s not just
Paul, but Simon Jones, Martin Foster, Laura Smith and Helen Anderson, all six
of us piling illegally into a single taxi that will carry us into the town
centre in search of our lost adolescence. When the taxi driver grumbles that
the car isn’t big enough to take us all, Paul pulls me onto his knee. His hand
on my waist feels strangely exciting, although I can’t decide whether that’s
the alcohol or something else making me feel that way.
We reach the
centre and tumble out of the cab, laughing and joking as we push our way inside
a cramped, dark venue. “I thought this was the Post Office!” I remark with
surprise.
Laura lets out
a laugh. “Twenty years ago, maybe! They’ve been doing Old School Disco Nights
here for ages.”
As we dance to
the almost-forgotten tunes of Pulp, Britney Spears and The Spice Girls, the
tension that’s been hanging in the air between Paul and me seems to thicken,
wrapping itself around us as if urging us together. A half-formed thought at
the back of my mind reminds me of Mark, my gentle, patient husband, and of
Lisa, Paul’s equally unwitting wife. It’s not that I want to be unfaithful, you
understand; it’s just that the combination of wine and nostalgia are taking
their effect on all of us. Even as I gaze about me, while Paul holds me close
in the swaying rhythm of the music, I can see Simon and Laura enveloped around
each other, and Martin and Helen kissing like a couple of teenagers.
But we’re not
teenagers any more: we’re past forty and we can’t party all night the way the
others used to. Paul looks at me and sighs. “I suppose we’d better make a
move.”
We extricate
ourselves from the dance floor, leaving the club without any remorse. Martin
and Helen disappear into a taxi together and I feel a sudden pang of regret: I
know she’s single, but Martin spent quite a bit of time telling me about his
wife and his teenage sons. I only hope they know what they’re doing.
I check my
purse and I’ve no change left for a taxi of my own. Mum’s house is only half a
mile away though, so I reckon I’ll be okay walking – even if it is way past
midnight.
“I’ll see you
around, then,” I tell Paul as I prepare to wend my way home.
“You’re not
walking, are you?” He looks shocked.
“Don’t worry –
I promise not to mug anyone,” I giggle; but he frowns and insists on walking
with me.
For a while,
we walk in silence, unspoken desire hovering around us like moths. I know
nothing can happen, and I’m okay with that: I’m going back to my mum’s house;
he’s going back to his parents’ – it’s as if we’re still teenagers and he’s
walking me home at the end of a date.
We reach the
end of my road and I turn to face him. “Thanks for tonight,” I say sincerely.
“I had a really good time.”
He bends and
kisses me: a friendly kiss goodbye that rapidly deepens into something much
more meaningful. My heart flutters; my legs feel weak. This is everything I ever
wanted when I was fourteen, fifteen; and now I’m a grown-up, it’s no longer
enough.
When he
finally releases me, I feel emotionally bruised. I’ve just kissed a man who
isn’t my husband – and I enjoyed it; far too much.
“We should
have done this years ago,” Paul says, looking as sad as I feel.
And I know
that somehow he’ll convince himself that he always had a thing for me in high
school, that this one kiss was something he’d always dreamed of, just like I
dreamed of kissing him. He’ll tell himself that because it’s easier than the
truth: that we betrayed our partners because of wine and whimsy.
I creep back
into Mum’s house, feeling slightly ashamed. It’s almost 2am but she doesn’t
stir. Silently, I undress in the bedroom that used to be my own, crawl into bed
and then lie awake for hours, wondering what I’ll tell Mark.
*
It’s almost
nine by the time I wake up. Automatically, I reach for my phone and click on
the Facebook app. There are plenty of photos of the reunion, including some
from the nightclub as well. I gaze at a photo of Paul holding me close and
think, for just a brief moment, of what might have been. Then I add a comment
to the group photo of the Class of ’93: “Did anyone else feel like a teenager
all over again, sneaking into their parents’ house at 2am and trying not to
sound drunk?”
There’s a
message from Paul flashing up on my screen. “Finally up, are you?” Followed by,
“I stopped off for a kebab on the way home after leaving you. Big mistake.”
Does he mean
the kebab or the kiss?
*
It’s midday
before I feel able to get behind the wheel for the two hours’ drive back to
Surrey. On the journey, I’m quiet and subdued. I can’t tell Mark about the
kiss: he’d feel betrayed. That’s when I realise that honesty isn’t the most
important thing in a relationship: it’s trust.
Myriad clichés
assault my mind as I drive: ‘What the eye doesn’t see, the heart doesn’t grieve
over’; ‘Ignorance is bliss’; and, finally, ‘Sorry seems to be the hardest word’.
I know I’m making excuses, trying to fool myself that it’s better to hide the
truth; but if I confess, will it really do any good? Isn’t it far more likely
that Mark will think something far worse happened and that I’m lying if I claim
it was ‘just’ a kiss?
*
By the time I
reach home, I have a killer headache. (Or is it a hangover?) Mark greets me at
the door, wearing a pink crown and with sparkly glitter on his cheeks. It looks
like he’s been keeping our six-year-old entertained whilst I’ve been off having
extra-marital clinches with former high school hunks. Guilt compounds my
migraine, making me wish I could crawl into bed and stay there for a week, but
instead I have laundry to do and a kitchen to clean – anything that will take
my mind off Paul and the way I’ve messed up my marriage.
By five
thirty, I’m dead on my feet. Mark touches me on the shoulder. “Why don’t you go
and have a soak in the bath?” he suggests. “I’ll sort out food; you just relax.”
*
Lying in warm
soapy suds for the best part of an hour makes me feel much better. When you
think about it, I haven’t really done anything wrong. It’s not as if I slept
with the guy, for heaven’s sake! It was just one little kiss.
But then I
think how I’d feel if Mark was the one who’d been kissing someone else behind my back. Should I tell? Would I be happier
not knowing myself?
Wrapped in a towel,
I make my way into the bedroom. There on the bedside table is my phone – I put
it there to charge before I stepped into the bath. I thought I’d left it on
screensaver, but instead it’s showing Paul’s most recent message: “Last night
was pretty special.” Winky face.
Mark’s sitting
on the bed, staring at the walls, deliberately not looking at me. Without him
saying anything, I know he’s seen the message.
“Mark,” I
begin, slowly, hesitantly, but he cuts me short.
“Would you
ever lie to me, Deb?”
And that’s when I finally tell him the truth.