“Hello, Jenna,” said Marcus
King, when Jenna opened the door to him at twenty past seven on Friday
evening. “You look absolutely gorgeous.”
Considering the lengths that she
had gone to in order to ensure that her appearance that evening would send out
the right signals – casual but not scruffy, attractive but not sexy, looking as
though she’d made some effort but not over the top – Jenna thought that ‘gorgeous’
was not the word she’d wanted to hear.
Nor was the look on his face one that she’d hoped to see. She would have to be very, very careful, and
she was out of practice. The last person
she’d gone on a first date with had been Rick, nearly twenty-five years ago,
and she’d known him, and his family, for a while before taking the plunge. Marcus King was a totally unknown quantity,
and she suddenly felt very nervous.
“Thank you,” she said, hoping
she sounded suitably flattered. “Oh, are
those for me? You really shouldn’t
have.”
Marcus had produced a cheerful
bunch of daffodils and narcissi from behind his back. “I should put them in water straight away,”
he said.
Taking the hint, Jenna ushered
him into her tiny hall, and through the living room, where the kittens were
playing paws-under-the-door, to the kitchen.
She got a blue and white jug out of the cupboard below the sink, filled
it with water and put the flowers in.
When she turned round, Marcus was looking at Artemis and Apollo with
interest. “Are those the sandwich
thieves?”
“Yes. Apollo is the blue one, and Artemis is his
sister. They’re great fun to have around,
when they’re not nicking my lunch.” She
gave him a bright smile. “Shall we
go? I’m starving.”
It was a very cold night, with a
sprinkling of snow like ice dust in the air, but the pub was warm and cosy,
with a blazing fire. They sat at one of
the tables in the bar, and ordered fish and chips, which Jenna knew from past
experience would be delicious. Her plate
would probably represent her recommended calorie allowance for the entire week,
but she’d always been slim, much to Saskia’s envy. She had a half of beer, and he had a
pint. They made small talk for a while –
she told him about working for Andrew, and they discussed the difficulties of
making a shop profitable all the year round in a seaside town. She’d already decided not to ask him about
his time in Afghanistan, thinking it was far too serious a topic for what was
supposed to be a casual and light-hearted evening, and he didn’t bring it up,
which was something of a relief. He
asked her about the twins’ trip to Australia, and she was happy to expand on
what they’d done, referring him to their blog.
Their food arrived, and Jenna cast dietary caution to the winds, telling
herself that she’d had a very light lunch knowing that she’d eat well in the
evening. Gradually, her nervousness
diminished and she began to relax.
Marcus was a nice man and a pleasant companion. He was a bit too serious for the evening to
be totally enjoyable – she had always taken life quite lightly until it decided
otherwise – but at least she’d dipped her toe into the dating waters and hadn’t
drowned. Yet.
“So,” he said, finishing the
last scrap of batter and picking up a stranded chip, “tell me about your
husband.”
This hadn’t been in the
script. Startled, Jenna put her knife
and fork together and stared at him.
“Rick? He’s my ex-husband.” The divorce was well under way, so although
this wasn’t yet strictly true, she could say it with confidence.
“Ex-husband, then. Do you mind talking about him?” He had very blue eyes, quite striking in his
tanned face, and they were fixed on her with interest.
Jenna swallowed. “No,” she said cautiously, thinking that this
was a rather strange thing to ask a woman on a first date, if date it was. If Marcus had been female, of course, this
would have been an open invitation to dish the dirt on Rick, in the interests
of feminine solidarity, and the evening would have continued with the ‘all men
are bastards’ theme so beloved of Saskia when her love-life wasn’t going to
plan. But she didn’t want to play the
part of the stereotypical wronged and bitter divorcée. “There isn’t much to tell,” she said
reluctantly. “We were married for
twenty-three years, three kids, we grew apart and he met someone else. End of story, really.” And the essential truth of that struck her
with sudden force. They had grown apart,
they no longer wanted the same things, and their split was not the result of
Rick’s sudden, seismic affair, but a subtle, almost organic process that had
been undermining their marriage for years, a crack that, eventually, she had
been unable to ignore, or to paper over.
“You must have been very young
when you married.”
Well aware that she was probably
older than he was, Jenna said, “I was twenty four. Not that young. And Rick was thirty.” She gave him what she hoped was a
light-hearted smile. “The older
man. I knew his sister at uni, Jules was
one of my housemates in Norwich.”
“Ah, so you were at UAE?”
“Yes, the place with the
ziggurats – you know, those stepped halls of residence,” she added, seeing him
look slightly bewildered. “Rosie – my
daughter, you met her at the party – Rosie’s there now, she’s in her first
year. And two of my other housemates
were at the party too, Jon and Fran.”
She decided to do some questioning herself. “Where did you go to uni?”
“Cambridge,” he said. “I did biology, then decided to try medicine,
so I went on a graduate course. I’d been
in the cadets at school, then at university, and it just seemed like a natural
progression to join the army once I’d qualified as a doctor.”
“So how long were you in the
army for?”
“Ten years. Then I decided I wanted a change, broaden my
experience. My parents live near
Sudbury, and they’re not getting any younger, so I looked for a GP post not too
far away, and found one in Woodbridge.
I’ve been there nearly five years now.”
“Isn’t it a bit, er, quiet after
being in the army so long?”
He smiled. “You could say that. But it has its compensations. After shredded limbs, the prospect of a
morning full of coughs and bunions seems positively restful. And Woodbridge is a much more attractive
place than Camp Bastion.”
“I bet.” The waiter, a boy about the same age as Rosie
with spots and a floppy haircut, had appeared to take their plates. “So,” Jenna added, as he offered her the
pudding menu, “you commute from Orford?”
“Yes, it only takes about twenty
minutes – longer, of course, if I happen to get stuck behind a tractor. Not an uncommon occurrence.” Marcus took the other menu and perused it,
while the boy hovered, pen poised. “I’ll
have the sticky toffee pudding.”
Jenna was feeling uncomfortably
full after fish and chips and beer, and settled for a couple of scoops of ice
cream. When the waiter had gone, she
said, “So how do you know Ruth and Gary?”
“Oh, I met Gary on the
Ness. I was interested in the Cold War
relics, but he persuaded me to join one of his birdwatching courses. I’d only just moved here, so I think he and
Ruth decided to take me under their wing.
Now I can tell you more about avocets than you ever wanted to know.”
“I can believe that,” Jenna
said, grinning. She had hoped that by
now she would have begun to relax and enjoy herself, but she was still uneasily
aware, every time he looked at her, that he might be making assumptions about
the evening that she didn’t share. “Come
the spring, I expect I’ll be persuaded to join one of his courses too. What with that and Jim’s promise of a sailing
trip down to Shingle Street, my diary’s filling up very nicely.”
“So what made you move
here? Ruth said you used to live near
London.”
Once more, Jenna found herself
explaining, in carefully neutral tones, the reasons for her radical change of
scenery. Fortunately, Marcus knew St.
Albans well, as one of his school friends had lived there, and he’d spent some
of the holidays with him. From this, she
deduced that he had been to boarding school: it fitted with his clothes, his
voice and his career.
“But I haven’t been back there
for years,” Marcus said, as their desserts arrived, hers looking rather small
and apologetic beside the lavish, steaming heap of his sticky toffee pudding,
accompanied by a lake of syrupy sauce and a dome of vanilla ice cream. “What’s it like now? Full of yuppies and hipsters, I suppose.”
“Some parts of it are,
yes.” Jenna dug into her own ice cream,
which was salted caramel, and absolutely delicious. “It’s the sort of place where you can buy a
Gucci handbag or a matching set of Cath Kidston tea-towels, but not a cotton
reel or a screwdriver – unless you shop on the market, of course.”
“Ah, yes, I remember the market,
it was amazing. I suppose Marlborough’s
a bit like that too – that’s where I went to school.”
Bingo, Jenna thought, and resolved not to hold it against him. “What was it like? School, I mean.”
He grinned. “Enormous fun. I enjoyed every minute of it. I’d recommend boarding to anyone. You have to work, of course, and bloody hard
it was, but I did all right. And the
army’s not so different, to be honest.
What school did you go to?”
“You won’t have heard of it,”
Jenna said. “Just a bog standard
comprehensive.” She nearly added the
words “I’m afraid,” and then thought defiantly, why should I apologise for being one of the 93% who haven’t had an
allegedly privileged education?
Marcus laughed. “Nothing wrong with that,” he said, and she
hoped she hadn’t detected a slightly patronising note in his voice. “I seem to remember John Holland said
something at the party, about you being an expert in mediaeval history?”
“Good grief, no, I just did my
degree in it. Then I taught primary kids
until I had kids myself. Mind you, I
knew all the things to point out when we did a castle visit. Garderobes were particularly popular.” She caught his rather bemused expression and
grinned. “Mediaeval toilets. Guaranteed to appeal to eight-year-olds. My classes would have loved the castle here –
we had to make do with Berkhamsted, which is far less spectacular. Have you been up to the top? You get a fabulous view over the marshes.”
He shook his head. “No, to my shame, I haven’t. Perhaps you could show me round sometime when
the weather’s better, give me the guided tour?”
That seemed pretty harmless, so
she smiled and nodded. “Yes, I’d love
to, though I warn you, you may end up knowing far more about twelfth century
castles than you ever wanted to know.”
“Well, after the avocets I’m
game for most things. Thanks, Jenna,
I’ll look forward to it.”
They finished their desserts,
and when the infant waiter asked them if they wanted coffee, Jenna said yes,
hoping that it would resolve her dilemma about whether to ask Marcus in. By now, the pub was filling up with evening
drinkers, busy and noisy, and the cosy, intimate atmosphere was fast
disappearing. A track came on the sound
system, barely audible above the chatter, and she recognised it as the one Fran
had written for the boy band, Love You
All My Life. She’d always liked it –
one of the ‘guilty pleasures’ on her YouTube playlist – and now, knowing who
had written it, she couldn’t help feeling a frisson of delight.
The coffee came, just the right
thing to round off the meal, and they chatted about food, and the range of good
restaurants in the area. Marcus
confessed to being , in his words, a ‘rubbish cook’, a devotee of what he
called the ‘hurl-it-and-stir-it method’.
“Which is why I didn’t invite you over for dinner,” he added, with a
disarming smile.
“I’m sure you’re much better
than you give yourself credit for,” Jenna said, sipping her coffee. “So, what do you like to cook?”
“Stews, casseroles, oven chips. I’m not brave enough to go in for baking,
much though I’d love to.”
“Do you watch Bake-Off? It’s either inspiring or terrifying, I’m not
sure which.”
“I’ve seen some of the last
series – it got quite addictive. But
living on my own, I don’t feel justified in making a cake or a loaf of bread
just for me.”
“You could take something to
your parents,” Jenna pointed out.
“Oh, my mother would keel over
with shock. All the food gifts go the
other way. Every time I visit, she
presses something on me, ‘just a little something to keep the wolf from the
door.’ As if I’m in danger of
starvation, or haven’t got anything in the fridge bar cans of beer.”
“And have you?”
“Milk, yoghurt, cheese, eggs,
ham, orange juice, lots of veg, salad, and half a quiche,” said Marcus, with
evident and endearing pride.
“I’m impressed,” said
Jenna. “Especially as you can’t have had
much opportunity to cook, being in the army.”
“Oh, Suzanne did all the
cooking.” He saw her look of surprise,
and added, “My wife – or should I say, my ex-wife. Unfortunately, she decided that army life was
not for her.”
Jenna suspected that this very
brief explanation was as severely expurgated as her own description of her
divorce had been, and let it pass. She
was curious enough to add, though, “Have you got any kids?”
“No. In fact that was one of the bones of
contention – she wanted them, I didn’t.
Just not the paternal sort, I suppose.
She met someone else a while later, and she’s got three sons now, so it
worked out OK for her, which is good.”
That’s just as well, Jenna couldn’t help thinking, because I strongly suspect my
child-producing days are numbered.
She decided to steer onto safer ground.
“Have you got any brothers or sisters?”
“A younger brother and an older
sister. Both of them have offspring, so
at least my parents are happy about that.
How about you?”
“Oh, I’m the only one. I’ve often wondered what it would be like to
have siblings.” She sipped her coffee
thoughtfully. “Most of the people I know
well seem to have lots. Rick was one of
four, my friend Saskia has two, and I’ve got three kids myself. It’s nice to think they’ll always have each
other, whatever happens.”
“As long as they get on. My siblings aren’t on very good terms with
each other, unfortunately. Long and
boring story to do with a legacy from our grandparents. I suppose your twins are close?”
“Very, though they’re like chalk
and cheese.”
“Not identical, then?”
“No, they don’t even look
particularly alike. It’s amazing how two
simultaneous dips into the same gene pool came up with people so different. But they’ve always been mates, ever since
babyhood, and they’re very protective of their sister, though she really
doesn’t need it, and tells them so at every opportunity.”
“Oh, my sister always made it
very clear that she was the boss – but then she is six years older than me, and
ten years older than my brother. We’re a
very spread out family. My father was
away a lot, he was in the army as well.
What did yours do?”
“He was a teacher, but he died
in a car crash when I was twelve.”
“That’s terrible,” said Marcus,
with evident sincerity. “What an awful
thing to have to deal with at such a young age.
What happened?”
“I don’t really know,” Jenna
said, realising how lame it sounded.
“Mum had been in the car with him, she was hurt, though not very badly, but
she had some sort of breakdown – I was sent to live with my grandmother for a
year, and when I got back home I was told not to ask any questions as it’d
upset my mother too much. So I just sort
of accepted that it was off limits.”
“Didn’t your grandmother tell
you anything?”
Jenna thought back to those
confused, frightening days when she was still trying to accept that she would
never see her father again, and unable to understand why her mother wasn’t
coming home, even though her physical injuries had not been serious. The gaps in her knowledge had been filled by
lurid imaginings that refused to let her sleep, and even Nana May’s
reassurances had failed at first to soothe her.
It had been more than six miserable weeks before she had begun to relax,
to realise that life with her grandmother might be an improvement on the past,
and to discover that it was possible, even in these circumstances, to have a
little fun. Patricia, obsessed with outward
appearances and ‘what people might think’, had not been a parent who thought
highly of fun.
“Not much, but remember that I
was only a child and I suppose they wanted to protect me. And of course I had all sorts of questions –
was it quick, did he suffer, that sort of thing – and I felt I couldn’t ask
them, because they’d just have fobbed me off with platitudes. Even my grandmother, who was usually very
blunt and to the point.” She smiled at
him, seeing his evident concern. “But
kids are pretty resilient, and even at twelve, you’re incredibly selfish and
live in the moment. And it didn’t take
me very long to discover that I much preferred living with Nana May to living
with my mother. I was devastated when I
had to go back. And it’s awful to say
it, but I really didn’t think much about my poor mother at all, and how she
must have felt, losing her husband in such traumatic circumstances.”
“Well, like you say, you were
just a kid. Do you remember much about
your dad?”
Jenna shook her head. “To be honest, no. He was a very busy man, he was head of a big
primary school in north London, and he worked long hours and had a lot of
stress to put up with.” And my mother, she added mentally,
thinking sadly that some of the clearest memories she had of Keith Talbot
involved the furious rows he’d had with his wife. She’d had no idea of what they were about,
she just remembered hiding under the bedclothes while the angry voices went on
and on downstairs, and putting her hands over her ears to try and shut them
out.
“Though I do remember the last
holiday we had together,” she added, caught by a sudden vision of her father on
the beach at Perranporth, flying a kite, with his trousers rolled up and the
sun glinting on his fair hair. “It was
in Cornwall, and I spent quite a lot of time with him, because Mum wasn’t well
and stayed in bed.” She grinned. “We both loved strawberry ice-cream, and
swimming in the sea. It was a really
happy time. And then a couple of weeks
later, he was dead.”
There was an awkward pause. Her right hand lay on the table next to her
coffee cup, and suddenly Marcus put his own over it. “I’m so sorry,” he said. “It must have been terrible.”
“Yes, it was at the time,” Jenna
agreed, thinking that he was making a bit too much of this. “But it was over thirty years ago, after all,
and I’ve moved on, to coin a cliché.”
Patricia hadn’t moved on, of course, but it must have been far worse for
her. She resolved, guiltily, to be a
bit more accepting of her mother’s neediness, when she returned from her
cruise.
Marcus removed his hand, and
smiled at her. “Of course, that’s
understandable. As you say, children can
be very resilient.”
Jenna finished her coffee,
unsure as to how she ought to respond.
At last she said, “I don’t want to sound callous, but now it really
doesn’t seem that big a deal. To be
honest, I think me splitting up with Rick has had a far bigger effect on my
children than Dad’s death had on me.
After all, my father had no choice.
Rick, emphatically, did.”
“Well, he was an idiot,” Marcus
said warmly.
She was saved from having to
reply by the approach of a tall woman of about her own age, greeting him with a
cry of delight. “Marcus, my dear, how
are you? I haven’t seen you in such an
age. Are you well? You look well.” He rose, and she kissed him extravagantly on
both cheeks, before turning to Jenna, who had also got to her feet. “A new friend? Do introduce me!”
Her voice had a touch of
shrillness, and though she was smiling, her eyes, assessing every detail of Jenna’s
appearance, were sharp, almost hostile.
Marcus didn’t seem to have noticed anything: he said, “Camilla, this is
Jenna Johnson. She’s just moved here. Jenna, this is Camilla Clifford, she lives in
Snape.”
“At the Maltings,” said Camilla. She was beautifully dressed, in a slinky dark
blue dress that clung to her rather sparse figure, and her blonde hair was
artfully styled and highlighted. Beside
her, Jenna couldn’t help feeling dowdy, dull and unattractive. “Wonderfully convenient for concerts, of
course, though it does get a little busy during the season. Marcus, you haven’t seen Anthony, have
you? We were supposed to be meeting for
a drink, but he seems to have vanished off the face of the earth.”
“No, I’m afraid I haven’t. Would you like to sit down? Can I get you anything?”
“Oh, how kind of you! A dry white wine, please.” As Marcus threaded his way over to the bar,
Camilla pulled up an adjacent chair and settled herself elegantly upon it,
slinging an expensive-looking black coat over the back and placing her handbag,
which bore the tell-tale Mulberry bronze oval and had probably cost well into
four figures, on the table next to Marcus’s empty coffee cup. “So,” she said, turning her beady gaze back
to Jenna, “what do you do?”
“Not a lot, at the moment,”
Jenna said, her hackles beginning to rise.
“I haven’t been here very long. I
used to be a teacher.”
“Oh, really?” said Camilla, with
eyebrows disdainfully raised: as if, Jenna thought with annoyance, she’d just
admitted to a career as a drugs mule.
“And will you go back to it?
Those long holidays and short hours must be very tempting.”
“I’m afraid the job’s not like
that these days,” Jenna said. “It’s very
hard work, but of course it can be very rewarding.”
“And of course there are all
those feral children running riot.”
Camilla smoothed the already immaculate line of her dress. “So, what does your husband do?”
“I’m in the middle of divorcing
him for adultery,” Jenna said, not without some mischief – she wanted to see
the other woman’s reaction.
“Really?”
There was no mistaking the look
of hostility now. Jenna decided to go on
the attack. “And what about your
husband?”
“Oh, Anthony’s in finance,” said
Camilla. “He spends the week in London or Frankfurt,
and the weekends down here. Orford’s
such a lovely place, isn’t it?
Especially if you sail. Do you
sail?”
“I’m afraid not.”
“Oh, don’t you? What a pity.
We love it. Anthony’s just bought
a new boat, we’re planning to go over to Holland in the summer. Marcus sails, don’t you, darling?”
Marcus had reappeared with a
glass of wine, which he handed to Camilla with a smile. “Sometimes.
I’d like to do more, but I really haven’t got the time at the moment.”
“I was telling Jennifer about
Anthony’s new boat. She has six berths,
so we’ll have plenty of room for passengers, if you’d like to come along with
us.” This invitation was directed
entirely at Marcus. “Do you know what
he’s called her? So sweet - Camilla Jane. Oh, look, there he is. Anthony! Anthony!
Over here! Look who I’ve found!
A large man with florid cheeks
and thinning dark hair was making his way over to them. Once more, introductions were performed,
hands shaken, and Jenna, feeling increasingly uncomfortable, smiled politely
and wondered how soon she could make her escape. She didn’t care for Camilla, who despite the
presence of her husband seemed to regard Marcus as her personal property, and
Anthony had all the charm and charisma of a blowfish. She glanced at her watch and said brightly,
“Lovely to meet you both, but it’s getting late and I think I’ll be off home
now. I’ll settle up at the bar, Marcus.”
“I wouldn’t dream of it,” he
said at once. “My treat. And you must let me walk you home.”
“It’s only fifty yards.” Jenna shrugged herself into her jacket and
picked up her handbag. “No, honestly, no
need to bother.”
“Rubbish, I insist.”
“You must come back and join us
later,” Camilla drawled. “So nice to
meet you, Jennifer, I’m sure we’ll see a lot of each other.”
God, I do hope not, Jenna thought, as the other woman air kissed
her in a waft of Chanel. After a mild
dispute at the bar, which was resolved by her insistence on paying half the
bill, Marcus escorted her outside. It
was freezing after the warmth of the pub, and snowing again. She took two steps, discovered the pavement
was more slippery than she’d realised, and would have fallen if he hadn’t grabbed
her in time. “Thanks,” she said
breathlessly, her heart pounding. “I
nearly went over then, and I’ve only had half a pint of beer.”
“Just as well I was here,”
Marcus said. He still had hold of her
arm, and it didn’t seem as if he was going to let go. “Slowly and carefully does it. Ruth would have something to say to me if you
broke your leg on our first date.”
Together, slowly and carefully,
they made their way up Quay Street.
Occasionally a car would come cautiously along, its headlights
illuminating the glittering dust of the snow, and its wheels leaving tracks
down the road. “It doesn’t look as if
the gritter’s been out,” Jenna said, as they paused opposite Wisteria Cottage,
waiting for an enormous Land Rover to pass.
“Well, Orford’s not on the way
to anywhere, so it tends to get left till last.
OK, I think it’s safe.”
It should have been pleasant to be
looked after like this, but something inside Jenna was protesting that she was
a strong and independent woman, thank you very much, and not some fragile
porcelain doll. And she really must put
him right about the ‘first date’. They
crossed the road and made their way up the path to her front door, obliterating
their ghostly footprints from earlier in the evening. She fished her key out of her bag and turned
to find him bending towards her.
His arms were pulling her close, and then, before she could react, he
was kissing her.
Given that she’d been expecting,
and dreading, this all evening, Jenna was quite pleased, afterwards, that she
didn’t flinch away from him. With what
she considered to be commendable self control, she gently but firmly disengaged
herself. “I’m really sorry, Marcus,”
she said. “But I’m just not ready for this, not yet. It’s much too
soon – Rick and I only split up a few months ago.”
In the light from the light
above the door, she could see acute disappointment on his face, but what had
preceded it, gone so quickly she couldn’t be sure whether she’d imagined
it? Had it been a flash of anger? She added, “But thank you for a lovely
evening. It was nice to get out.”
“Good,” Marcus said stiffly. “And I quite understand. I’m sorry if – if I presumed too much.” He
paused, and then added, “I hope that we can still be friends.”
“Of course we can,” Jenna said,
relieved: she must have imagined it. “I
wouldn’t want anything else.”
“I’m glad you enjoyed this evening. Perhaps we can do it again some time.”
“Yes, I’d like that.” She smiled at him. “Thanks for walking me home. You saved me from an embarrassing tumble.”
“No problem.”
“Well ... good night, Marcus.”
“Good night.”
She put the key in the door and
opened it cautiously, hoping that the kittens weren’t on the other side,
preparing to make a dash for freedom.
The hall was empty though, and with a last wave for Marcus, she quickly
shut the door behind her and breathed a sigh of relief. Her instincts hadn’t been wrong, but she
hoped she’d let him down gently.
In the sitting room, the kittens
were curled up together in front of the woodburner, which was still
glowing. Jenna went through to the
kitchen and made herself a mug of the expensive hot chocolate she kept for
occasions like this. There was something
very heartening about the rich taste and the way it slid, smooth as warm silk,
down her throat. She curled up on the
sofa and sipped, thinking about the evening.
It was no more or less than the truth – she really wasn’t ready for
another relationship, not when Rick’s betrayal was still raw and fresh in her
mind. It had been less than four months
ago, after all, that dreadful moment when he had dumped her by phone, after
twenty three years of marriage. She
needed time to recover, to make a new life here and discover her real identity,
before trusting herself to someone else.
And would that someone be Marcus
King?
Something touched her leg. Jenna looked down and saw Artemis, gently
patting her with a reassuring paw. “Come
on, then,” she said, and the kitten made a valiant leap and arrived beside her
on the sofa. She gave the mug of
chocolate a curious sniff, and then climbed up her front to settle down,
purring ridiculously loudly, on her shoulder.
It was not long before Apollo noticed that his sister had disappeared,
and followed her. Having one on each
side, whiskers tickling her neck and rumbling in stereo, was enormously
comforting. “Well?” Jenna said
aloud. “What do you two think? Is Marcus a possibility for the future?”
Artemis sneezed, and began to
wash herself, tickling even more. Jenna
laughed. “I’ll take that as a no,
then. What about you, Polly?”
If the other kitten felt himself
slighted by the indignity of this nickname, he gave no sign: indeed, if
anything, he purred louder. “And you say
yes. OK, I’ll think about it.” But somehow, no matter how hard she tried,
she couldn’t imagine herself and Marcus as an item. He seemed to take himself too seriously, and
although his interest in her was flattering, it couldn’t be based on anything
other than physical attraction: he knew too little about her for it to be
anything else. And during that brief
kiss, she had felt not the slightest spark that might prompt her to forsake her
current state of celibacy and hook up with him.
Her phone announced that she had
a text message, making her jump. It was
lying on the coffee table in front of her, which meant that she had to lean
forward carefully, without dislodging the kittens, to pick it up. As she’d suspected, it was from Saskia. “How’d it go?”
Jenna finished the rest of the
chocolate and put the mug down beside her on the sofa. She hadn’t meant to tell her friend about her
date with Marcus, but in their last phone conversation she’d made the mistake
of saying that she was going out this evening, prompting Saskia to demand who
with, and she hadn’t wanted to lie, even for the sake of peace.
“OK, but told him I wasn’t
ready,” she texted back. “Not sure if
he’s for me anyway.”
“U turned him DOWN???”
“Yes.”
“Ijit. Pass him on to me.”
“Thought u scared him?”
“Moi?”
“Yes, u. Off to bed now, speak in the morning.”
“Will do. Nightie night, darling.”
“Night.” She gently removed the kittens from her
shoulders, switched the phone off and put it back on the table. “Time for bed, you two. And thanks for your advice.”
They gazed up at her with wide,
innocent eyes that were beginning to change to their adult golden colour. Jenna laughed, picked up her mug and went
into the kitchen. One of the advantages
of living on her own was that there was no-one to complain (as Rick had been in
the habit of complaining) about washing up left in the sink, or assorted belongings
strewn untidily in the living room. She peered
through the window. It was still snowing,
and the garden glimmered with a faint, ethereal radiance. Hopefully it would still be there in the morning.
Jenna loved snow, and the way it transformed
even the most ugly or mundane surroundings into a magical landscape of mystery and
enchantment. And, better still, she didn’t
have to go anywhere: her job at Andrew’s shop started next week, and she hadn’t
heard back from Fran yet, about when he wanted her to come over to tutor Flora.
If she was snowed in, it didn’t matter, she
could just enjoy it – perhaps she could wrap up warm and take Sammy for a walk over
the marshes, or even regress to childhood completely and build a snowman in the
back garden. She could do exactly as she
pleased, and the thought was at once alarming, and invigorating.
Smiling to herself, she went upstairs
to bed.
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