After the Party

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Authors: Lisa Jewell

BOOK: After the Party
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For Jascha, Amelie and Evie

Acknowledgments

T
his time round thanks are due almost entirely to Kate Elton, my UK editor. Thank you for taking huge chunks out of your precious maternity leave to read and reread and reread again, to thrash it into shape, and thank you, even, for the eighteen pages of painstaking (10-point font, single-spaced) edited notes which I would quite happily have doused in petrol and set fire to the first time I saw them. I appreciate every single moment of your time and effort. It's the hardest I've ever worked on a book postdelivery and I'm so glad you made me do it.

Thank you to everyone who said: “Ooh, a
Ralph's Party
sequel. I can't wait!” during the writing of it. It simultaneously spurred me on and terrified me, but ultimately I'm just delighted that people still remember and still care. I really hope I haven't let you down.

Thank you to Jascha for being completely unfazed by my writing a book about a Completely Fictional Relationship That Bears No Resemblance Whatsoever to Anything That Has Happened to Us—for the SECOND time. Since you haven't read any of my books since
Vince & Joy
, I feel fairly confident that you'll never get round to this one.

Thanks to the usual behind-the-scenes people: to Sarah Branham and the amazing team at Atria. Thanks to Jonny Geller and to everyone at Curtis Brown. And huge thanks to the incomparable Deborah Schneider for finding me such a wonderful home in the United States. Thanks to booksellers and readers and library workers the length and breadth of the land without whom it would all be a little bit pointless. And thanks, as ever, to my dear friends on the Board, for being there inside my computer whenever I need you.

A successful marriage requires falling in love many times, always with the same person.

—Mignon McLaughlin

Prologue

T
he twelfth anniversary of Ralph and Jem's first kiss falls upon a cool, paper-dry Wednesday at the beginning of March. The wisteria outside Jem's office window has yet to yield its cascades of perfumed lilac blooms and the hydrangea by the front door is stubby and only just turning green—spring feels a long way off although it is just round the corner.

At about three fifteen, Jem leaves her office, heading for an appointment in Battersea. She takes with her a small manila folder, her mobile phone, her handbag and a loaf of brown bread. Before she leaves she turns to her assistant, Mariel, who is making tea in the kitchenette, and says, “Off to see the recluse.”

“Oh,” says Mariel, “God. Good luck.”

“Thanks,” says Jem. “I'll need it. I'll be back in an hour.”

Mariel smiles sympathetically, and Jem closes the door behind her. The sad irony of a trip to Almanac Road on such an auspicious date is not wasted on her. She is painfully aware of it as she walks the fifteen minutes from the office on Wandsworth Bridge Road. When she gets there, she glances down, as she always does, into the basement pit of the house at number thirty-one.

Terra-cotta tiles gleam, newly laid and freshly mopped. Three small trees carved into pom-pom balls of varying sizes sit in shiny cobalt-blue pots. The front door is thickly painted
in a matte shade of mushroom and dressed with nickel-plated knobs and knockers. Through the window she can see more mushroom paint on walls hung with black-and-white photography. Suddenly, two small hands and a baby's head appear over the top of the sofa. Jem smiles. The baby smiles, then disappears again.

Someone else lives here now. A young family, a house-proud family with enough money to renovate the run-down flat they'd bought a year ago, and enough foresight to have done it when the lady of the house was four months pregnant with their first child, unlike Jem, who had spent the last night of her first pregnancy on a mattress in the dining room of her sister's flat, her possessions piled around her in gigantic cardboard boxes, like a township, waiting for a woman in Camberwell to sell her flat to a man in Dulwich so that the owner of their new house in Herne Hill could sign the completion forms and hand them their front door keys.

Before the very neat and well-organized family lived here, a scruffy woman with a deadbeat teenage son and three obese cats had lived here. And before the scruffy woman with the fat cats, a young couple with matching bikes and raincoats had lived here. And before the smug, outdoorsy couple with the bikes, a man called Smith had lived here, alone, having an existential crisis that led, eventually, to his retraining as a Reiki teacher and relocating to San Francisco. And even longer ago than that, years before the man called Smith had lived here alone having an existential crisis, Smith's best friend, Ralph, had lived here with him. And so, for a very short while, over twelve years ago, back in 1996 when Oasis was the most famous band in the country and football was, supposedly, coming home, when she was a child of only twenty-seven, had Jem.

Jem can feel it, even now, as she stands on the pavement, peering through the window at strangers' mushroom walls—she can still feel the electric jolt of sudden promise, the thrill of new beginnings. She feels it for just a moment, and then it passes, because for some strange reason things have not worked out how she thought they might during those long-ago days and now it's just a dull echo of a moment in her life when fate, chance and destiny all came together and took her somewhere quite remarkable.

She sighs sadly and pushes her hair behind her ears. Then she looks up, her attention taken by the clatter of a sash window being pushed open and then a loud male voice:

“Intercom's broken!”

A small shiny object leaves his hand and hurtles toward her, catching the light as it falls, landing on the pavement within an inch of her toes.

“Let yourself in!” The large hands slide the noisy window back into place. Jem tuts and picks up the keys. She climbs the front steps and prepares herself, mentally, for the next half hour of her life. She picks her way through the debris of Karl's life: forgotten T-shirts, a broken guitar, a shopping bag full of recycling, and, oh, God, a pair of underpants. She finds him on the sofa, eating a ham sandwich and watching an old episode of
Murder She Wrote
.

“I thought you said you needed bread?” she says, waving the loaf of Warbutons Malted she took for him from her own kitchen cupboard that very morning.

“I do,” he says, “that's the end of it. Had to scrape some spores off it, make it, you know, edible.” He takes the fresh loaf from her and smiles, gratefully. “Thanks, Miss Duck.”

“You're welcome,” says Jem, lowering herself onto the very
farthest edge of a grubby yellow armchair. “What happened to the cleaner?” she asks, looking around the room.

Karl smiles, his catch-all “forgive-me-for-I-know-not-what-I-do-but-oh-I-am-lovely-aren't-I?” smile. It is a good smile, a smile that has seen him through a ten-year career in B-list television presenting, but not quite a good enough smile to stop his killing that career stone dead after a terrible episode in the Australian jungle last autumn, in front of six million viewers. “I kept forgetting to pay her,” he replies in his smooth Irish croon. He shrugs. “Who can blame her?”

“How've you been?” Jem squints slightly as she asks the question, almost not wanting him to answer it.

Karl rearranges his large form on the sofa, so that he's facing her. “Oh, you know, the parties, the premieres, the hot dates, it never ends.” He looks old. Not a line on his face, not for a man of forty-seven, but his face looks dead, as if someone has taken a sheet of sandpaper to him and scoured away all the gloss, all the glitter.

“It doesn't have to be like this, you know,” she says, opening up the manila folder. “Everyone's ready to forget.”

“What you got in there?” he asks, eyeing the folder skeptically.

“Well, it's not money, that's for sure.”

He winks. “Maybe I need a new agent,” he jokes.

Jem sighs. Jem is Karl's agent, and Karl's joke (this is not the first time he has made it) is not funny anymore. She takes out a letter that arrived this morning, printed on sky-blue paper. It is confirmation of a phone call that she had last week with a production company that is filming a series of interviews with “controversial” celebrities.

Karl takes it from her and scans it, rapidly, with a furrowed
brow. “Jeez,” he says, “what is this—the Last Chance Saloon for Battered B-listers? Christ. You're going to make me do it, aren't you?”

Jem shrugs. “I can't make you do anything, Karl. But it's money in the bank—”

“How much?” he interrupts.

“Five thousand. And if you handle it well, if you paint yourself in a good light, it'll open all those doors again.”

Karl puts the paper down on the sofa and picks up his sandwich. He stares at it disconsolately for a second. “If that's what I want,” he says, so quietly that Jem only just hears him.

“Yes,” she replies, “if that's what you want. But here's the thing, Karl.” She pauses. She didn't come here to give Karl a piece of paper. She could have put it in the post. And she certainly didn't come here to replenish his bread bin. “Here's the bottom line: if you don't do the interview, I'm letting you go.”

The words are gone now, the words that Jem has been carrying round in her head for days, for weeks. She's imagined this conversation a thousand times and every time her heart has raced, her skin has flushed.
Letting a client go
. And not just any client, but her first client, the one who started it all, twelve years ago. And not just a client, but a friend. It's harsh, but it's for his own good, she reminds herself—without the threat he wouldn't do the TV interview, and without the TV interview there is no career for her to manage.

“Jesus fucking Christ,” he drawls. “That's bribery!”

“Well, yes, though more gentle bullying, I would have said.” Jem pauses and stares at the sleeves of Karl's pullover, which are encrusted with some kind of beige paste. “I only want what's best for you, and I think this,” she points at the sky-blue paper, “is what's best for you.”

“I know,” says Karl, “I'm not stupid. It's fine. I hear you loud and clear. And yeah, okay, I'll do the show. But if it backfires in my face, I reserve the right to sack
you
.” He winks at her, smiles, and then sighs. “I'm sure life used to be simple,” he says. “I'm sure there was a time.”

Jem smiles, thinking of a night, exactly twelve years ago, when for a while life had felt far from simple. Exciting, romantic, crazy—yes, but not simple. She thinks again about the way she'd felt when Ralph had proclaimed his love for her, when she realized that she loved him too, when the gates to the Rest of Her Life had swung open and she'd taken her first tentative steps onto the open road. And now she is here: separated, a single parent, inhabiting a desperate, heartbreaking place where she never expected to be. She swallows a swell of tearfulness and smiles. “No,” she says, “it's never been simple. Did you know, for example, that it is precisely twelve years to the day since you beat up Siobhan's boyfriend outside an art gallery?”

Karl smiles. “What, really?”

“Yeah. Really and truly.”

“You have a very good memory,” says Karl.

“Well, it is also twelve years to the day since Ralph and I first . . .”

“What, shagged?”

“Yeah,” she laughs, although she doesn't really feel like laughing. “It's our sexiversary! Well, it
was
,” she adds sadly.

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