Read Cloudy with a Chance of Love Online
Authors: Fiona Collins
Another text pinged onto my phone. It was Sam again.
Can't WAIT until tonight!
Me too
, I replied, but I wasn't feeling it. I didn't dare look up as I knew she'd be grinning over at me from her desk. I stayed with my head down, at my own desk, wallowing in my horrible history.
Jeff and I got married. At work I was still pretty brilliant, but at home I became everything I'd scoffed at. It was strange how it happened, really. Once we were married we suddenly weren't equal partners any more. He was husband; I was housewife. He gradually stopped helping me with chores; my job became less of a career and more of an inconvenience, to him. I began doing
everything
for Jeff. Far too much. I was also too adoring, too grateful â grateful little wifey. I'd thankfully take Jeff's odd, token attempts at romance â flowers, a bottle of perfume on my birthday, a new bra from Debenhams, which he thought the height of class even though he always bought the wrong size â as a sign of a happy bigger picture which turned out to be totally false. He wasn't happy at all. He wasn't happy until he'd dealt me the cruellest blow by going off with my best friend.
Cough. âCan you sign this card for Elaine and pass it on?' Bob was standing in front of my desk. He handed me a pink floral card, tucked inside a red envelope. It was Elaine who did everything for everyone else's birthdays; when it was her turn for happy returns, Bob always took charge and organised a card and a collection for a present, which was nice.
âOf course. Just leave it with me.'
âThanks, darling.'
As Bob wandered off, pulling a hanky from his pocket, I noticed his shoes were especially shiny today. They instantly made me think of my former best friend and husband-stealer, Gabby.
Great
. I was plonked back in the past againâ¦
Gabby. It kills me to even think of her name. I don't think I've said her name out loud, since it happened. If I'm referring to her, I call her
whatsherface
or
that cow
or, simply,
her
. She knew all about Bob and his shiny shoes; we'd once spent a whole Saturday afternoon hooting our heads off with laughter in her conservatory, with him as our specialist subject. We'd sat there for hours. I remember she'd kept refilling my glass of rosé, in between shooing children away. It had been so funny. The more Bob stories I'd relayed, the more we'd laughed. We'd laughed until we'd cried, until we'd got into that hysterical state where no sounds come out of your mouth, where you are collapsed and helpless on the floor, with tears running down your cheeks.
I missed that bitch.
Oh lord, I was at work, I shouldn't start thinking along Gabby. I'd just get depressed and angry. Or compose that same email I'd composed to her over and over again, but had never sent. The one where I tell her she's ruined my life, she's betrayed me in the worst possible way, that I hate her guts⦠and how I wish I could turn back the clock to when we sat on her bedroom windowsill, on summer evenings, and screeched along to George Michael's âFaith', then drove around Wimbledon Village in her dad's convertible, trying to pick up randoms. How I wished I'd never met her, but at the same time I just wanted to go back and meet her all over againâ¦
Enough! Stop it! Focus on the weather.
A thick band of clouds will move in across the region overnight and heavy rain will continue until the early hoursâ¦
Gabby Louise Trench. She was a laugh. Such a good laugh. I'd known her since school. She was in the year above. Gabby was quite glamorous at school. When I was still in Clarks buckle-up shoes and A-line skirts, she was rocking a mini kilt and pointy, tasselled loafers. Grey ones. I admired them long before I became friends with her, and that only happened because she once attempted to bully me. It was a failed attempt. I'd been loitering by the lockers, minding my own business, when she bustled up with Fat Felicia, a known corridor terrorist and possessor of the only lost virginity in the Fourth Year â apparently â and asked me to âMove along' as I was âmaking the place look untidy.' I remember looking at them both in astonishment. It was so uncalled for, so out-of-nowhere. I was not someone who drew attention. I was so far under the radar I was like Tom Cruise in Mission Impossible, commando-ing along the floor in a museum full of diamonds.
Before I'd had time to even think about it, I'd retorted with, âThe only thing that's making this place look untidy is Felicia's hair. There must be at least a couple of blackbirds nesting in there, making babies.'
I waited for anger to flash across faces, a possible fist to come flying my way â Fat Felicia was a notorious puncher â but, to my surprise, Gabby had burst out laughing.
âFunny,' she'd said. And she'd pushed a surprised-looking Fat Felicia along the corridor and they'd both disappeared in the direction of the Crush Hall.
A week later, they'd tried again. I was coming down the ramp of one of the Portakabins, after RE, when a grey tasselled foot shot out in a clear attempt to trip me up. I wasn't having it. I stopped dead in my tracks.
âYou are joking?' I said. Gabby and Fat Felicia were in shadow, the beige plastic side of the Portakabin casting weird stripes on their faces. âIf you're trying to make me fall over I suggest stretching skipping-elastic across the playground. I've seen more stealth on a nuclear weapon.' It was the era of the Cold War, Reagan and Gorbachev, âTwo Tribes' and the threat of nuclear war hanging over everyone. Kids enjoyed frightening themselves silly over it.
Fat Felicia looked confused. Gabby burst out laughing. Again. And again, Gabby trundled Felicia off â they headed towards the Fourth Form common room. I saw Gabby glance back in my direction a couple of times. She was still grinning.
That night, as I was waiting in the hall for my bus, she strode up to me. âAll right?' she said.
âYeah,' I replied.
âI like your style,' she said.
âThanks,' I replied. And she went off to her bus queue.
The following Friday there was a school disco. Gabby was there. She spent the whole night sharing her contraband Hock with me and regaling me with tales of her five current boyfriends. We became inseparable.
We were the best of best friends. She was always up for high jinks and I was her accomplice. Her jinks included: smoking where she shouldn't have been smoking; bunking off to go to the chippie; pulling the wrong sort of boy. I was the more sensible one, the one who was able to pull her back from the brink of complete rebellion and law breaking. She was the boss but I could be a persuasive employee. âPerhaps we shouldn't?' I used to offer, on a regular basis. âPerhaps we should go back in now? It's assembly in a minute.' âPerhaps you should pay for those.' Or I would make a joke and she would laugh and stop whatever near-criminal thing she was doing:
âI really don't want to have to visit you in Wormwood Scrubs, Gabby. I don't think they let you wear make-up.'
âThat's a men's prison â I'd be in Holloway â but, okay, Daryl. I won't do it then.'
I had to talk her out of serious trouble so many times. She would listen to me. It seemed I was only one she
would
listen to. She was blisteringly funny. We shared the same sense of humour and saw the funny side in everything. We laughed like drains at everything. We even had catchphrases. Lines from films like
Ferris Beuller
and
Back to the Future
and
Thelma and Louise.
âWhere we're going, we don't need roads.'
âYou've always been crazy, this is just the first chance you've had to express yourself.'
âParty on, dudes.'
I bloody well missed her.
Early morning the clouds will dissipate briefly, only to move back in mid-morning when we can expect more rainâ¦
She calmed down when she was older, she even became an accountant, mostly part-time, but she was still a brilliant laugh. And she was still pretty feisty when it came to men. She never got married; she just dated constantly, from seventeen. Only one, Martin, stuck around long enough to have a child with her. The rest were briefly brilliant love affairs and she always liked the same type: super rich but a bit flabby and a little bit dim, so she could feel superior (cherubs in chinos, she called them,
Brideshead Revisited
types with curly blonde hair). And, my, could she make me laugh when she told me all her stories about them. She was
funny
; it was why you could forgive her anything.
âOh my god,
that
total loser?' she'd laugh when I reminded her of one of her hapless suitors. âMr Bean in Burberry?'
âYou liked him, at first! You said you liked the way he drove!'
âDid I? Did I actually say that? I must have been deluded â he drove like Mr Magoo. And I liked all of them, at first.'
âEven Martin.'
âOh lord, Martin. That albatross. Still, at least he gave me Maisie⦠Come and sit next to me and I'll do your eye make-up for you.'
It was such a massive surprise when she stole my husband. He's thin and fiercely intelligent. He wears glasses and looks like Tim Robbins. He was not her usual bag. Her usual bag, which she swung casually from her shoulder, not caring if it got scratched or scraped in the dirt, was thrown in a skip and she came after mine. My bag. Which I had always clutched tightly to my chest.
âI could never fancy Jeff,' she'd once said to me, as she'd sat smoking on her back porch, doing my tax return for me â it was balanced on her lap, on top of a place mat. âHe's a bit too weedy for me.'
âWell, thank god for that,' I'd replied. âYou'd probably eat him alive.'
âThat I would,' she'd laughed, and I'd giggled. Jeff was safe from her. Serial dater and man-rejecter. Queen of the gilet and the put down. Glamorous heartbreaker. My funny and brilliant best friend. She would have been the first person I'd gone to, if Jeff had ever cheated on me. I'd even confided to her once, near the end, that he seemed distant and I wondered if anything was going on.
âJeff? No, don't be silly!' she'd protested. âHe wouldn't have it in him.'
He did, though. And so did she. She stole him. Right from under my nose, but she
was
round at ours a lot, at the time. She was single again. She'd pitch up with Maisie, on a Saturday night, a stack of duvets and pillows so high you couldn't see the top of her glossy head, and a bottle of vodka hanging off her wrist in a Tesco carrier bag, declaring, âStaying in is the new going out!'
âFor now,' I'd retort. âUntil the next Chinless Chino comes along.'
Gabby and Jeff were both smokers. They'd go out through our conservatory doors and puff away. Giggles from her, a low rumbling laugh from him, and the mingled smoke from their fags would spiral through the air and into our bay tree. They would then stamp on their fags in unison and come back in. I don't smoke. While they smoked I'd be washing up. Or picking up satisfying, molten pieces of wax from the tablecloth and flicking them into the bin. I never thought they were out there plotting to leave me.
She came over for dinner just a week before they went off together. I had no bloody clue. Not an inkling. I'd thought she only liked her
men
thick, but clearly she liked her friends that way too. Thick as
mince. I had no idea they'd been shagging for a year â a year! That means that the Christmas before last they were at it, too. I'd been given the equivalent of the Joni Mitchell album in
Love Actually
, while Gabby got the heart-shaped necklace, and I hadn't even known it.
I sighed and foraged for half a Twix from my desk drawer.
Temperatures tomorrow will be low for this time of year with them reaching the dizzy heights of only seven or eight
degrees
â¦
It'll end in tears, I thought, when I first found out. It won't last. But it
had
lasted â they were still together, living in Gabby's neat house in South Wimbledon â and tears had been shed, but they were all mine. So bloody many of them.
I'd popped over to see Gabby, after the school run that morning, a year ago. I knew she had a day off, and so did I, but I'd forgotten to tell her; I'd forgotten to tell Jeff, too. He wasn't interested in what was happening at my work. He wouldn't be interested in the fact that the studio had to be closed that day for an emergency fire and safety check (it was going to play piped-in pop classics, all day, from the sister station in Stevenage). I'd texted Gabby before I'd left but hadn't waited for a reply â friends like us never had to. I expected her to be surprised to see me, but I thought I'd get a warm hug and a load of gossip, not the weird, shocked face that actually came to the door and peered wanly through the glass. She acted weird the whole time I was there, too, so I didn't stay long.
âI'm not feeling very well,' she told me.
âOh? That's not like you,' I said. âYou're normally made of cast iron.'
âNot today,' she'd grimaced.
She'd disappeared off to the loo about three times while I was left sat staring at the telly. Eventually I left.
When I got home, I saw it. The letter. It was propped up on the sitting room mantelpiece. I only went in there to pick up a book I needed to return to the library. If Jeff wanted to guarantee I'd see it, he should have put it in the kitchen. By the kettle or on top of the fridge. But he must have thought the marble mantelpiece was the appropriate place to put it â solemn, formal, cold. He thought I'd read it when I got home from work tonight, but I was reading it now. It was cool to the touch as I picked it up and turned it over in my hand. My name written in Jeff's best black pen. And inside his words wrapped a cold, hideous claw around my heart and squeezed it so hard I could hardly breathe.
He was leaving me. He'd fallen in love with Gabby.