Authors: Anna Cheska
Michael just stared at her. âWhat are you saying?' he asked at last, his voice bleak.
Suzi let go of his hands and got the eggs from the side. Freshly laid, one of the many benefits of keeping hens in your back garden. She broke them and whisked, gently. What was she saying? âThat I don't want to be tied down,' she told him. âThat I'm not sure things have been going too well since you've moved in here. That it's all too much too soon.' She added the herbs â sprigs of thyme and rosemary from the kitchen garden. âI'm saying that I want to live my own life.'
âWithout me?' Michael looked desolate.
âNot necessarily.' Though she couldn't help wondering. It rather depended on how â or why â they had stopped being lovers. And how â or why â they'd become some parody of an old, established â sexless for God's sake â couple. And that wasn't all. She steadied her breathing.
âI don't want twenty questions, jealousy, all that sort of stuff.' She looked him full in the face. âI want my independence.' Perhaps it was some failing in her, that she couldn't live with a man, couldn't allow a man to take over any part of her life. That she fought back when she felt dictated to, that she felt easier and most at peace when she was alone in her cottage with her dogs and her cats. But whatever it was, Suzi reflected, it was better that Michael knew now rather than later.
Michael though, was still focused on the events of the day as he saw them. âJust tell me there's nothing going on with that guy.' He drained his wine glass.
Was that all he cared about, Suzi wondered. Was it OK for their relationship to have no prospects â just so long as she hadn't humiliated him by seeing someone else? She poured oil into the pan. âThere's nothing going on.'
âAnd in the future?'
âMichael, stop it!' She felt trapped. Didn't he realise? Perhaps she was being unfair to him. But he was pushing and pushing and she couldn't stand it any longer. Shaking, she poured the egg mix into the sizzling pan. The aroma of heating eggs, thyme and rosemary drifted up from the hob, almost making her giddy.
Michael was hunched at the kitchen table now, chin resting on folded arms, eyes accusing. âI'm surprised you bothered with those bloody concert tickets,' he said.
âWhat concert tickets?' She followed his gaze to the envelope on the shelf above the worktop. The orange tickets were just discernible, peeping out of the top. Anger at the fact that Michael had obviously been rooting around among her things, fought briefly with guilt. He thought the tickets were for him and Suzi, that much was clear. Well, he shouldn't have looked at them in the first place.
âThose are for Liam and Estelle,' she told him starkly. Perhaps she was wasting her time and money, but it was
her
time and money and why shouldn't she do something for her own brother and closest friend? âI was hoping to get the two of them together again. I thought, you knowâ¦' She caught a glimpse of his crestfallen features as she scooped the edge of the omelette up with her spatula and allowed more egg to run through underneath, oh hell, â⦠if music be the food of love and all that.' They belonged together, didn't he see?
Michael had stood up and was standing beside her at the hob. âYou don't love me, do you, Suzi?' he asked.
Suzi studied the pale blue eyes. Even now, she couldn't say the words, couldn't hurt him. âWhat's love got to do with it?' she floundered.
âEverything.' He took the spatula away from her.
Suzi buried her face into his chest. She could feel the bones of his sternum through the denim shirt he was wearing, sensed his hesitation as to whether or not he should hold her.
âYou're trying so bloody hard to get your brother back with Estelleâ¦' At last she felt his hand, stroking her hair, smoothing away the rough edges of her day, trying to make it better â⦠and in the meantimeâ¦'
âYes?' She looked up at him, the tears not far away.
âYou and I are falling apart,' he said.
Chapter 15
It had been a long and trying day, and Liam was attempting to wind up the rehearsal. He hadn't got round to doing his laundry, so no clean shirt this morning, and running out of fresh coffee hadn't improved his mood â the piss-poor instant available in the staff room was not something with which any poor sod should start the day. The kids had played him up during the mandatory RE, the head had bollocked him about the literacy testing results, and now Bradley Jacobs and Marcus Weatherby were taking advantage of the long-time war between the Capulets and Montagues by creating a pretty convincing war of their own.
âOuch! Jesus!' Marcus had let loose a punch in the direction of Bradley's ribcage.
âHey, Marcus. I thought I said no contact.' Liam jumped on to the stage and stepped between them.
âHe bloody elbowed me in the face,' complained Marcus. âSir.'
âDon't swear,' Liam snapped.
âYou said get in there and look like you want to kill him, Sir.' Bradley performed his customary flick back of the hair. âI was only acting.'
Titters from the wings and the flash of a mini skirt and long, bare legs, announced the side-line presence of Jade Johnson.
âJade,' Liam yelled. âThey're fighting because of you. You're supposed to be looking shocked and scared. You're Juliet, remember.'
Juliet smiled at Marcus (who was not her Romeo) in a manner that could only be called provocative, and stuck out one hip. Liam was aware of the buzz of teenage sub-text. Someone's mobile went off.
âI thought I said switch off all the bloody mobiles,' yelled Liam, leaping down from the stage again.
âOooh, does that include mine?'
Liam swung round to face Lorraine Johnson, who was sporting a batwing leather jacket teamed with what looked like black PVC trousers and high-heeled gold sandals. Ye Gods. âNo.' He smiled briefly.
âReady, babes?' she called.
No, she bloody well wasn't. And if she must pick her daughter up after rehearsals, why the hell couldn't she wait outside in her car like all the other parents, Liam wondered. âCan you give us a minute?' he said.
She consulted her brassy gold watch. âSure. No probs.'
Liam turned his attention back to the fight scene. It was supposed to evolve from a dance â with Juliet spun from one to the other of them, her smile for Romeo the spark that created the action. âFrom the top.' He looked around. âJade!'
Jade, who seemed to be involved in some sort of complex semaphore communication with someone on the other side of the stage, stopped abruptly and tottered in on her platforms.
Liam shook his head in despair. âYou can't dance in those,' he told her. âYou'll twist an ankle.'
âHe's right, babes,' put in Lorraine Johnson. âWear your Le Roc shoes.'
Jade scowled at her parent. âI didn't bring them.'
âBarefoot then,' Liam suggested, losing patience. âMusic, Crystal?'
Crystal pressed the play button, the song began, Jade pulled off her platforms, and was duly twirled by first Marcus, then Bradley, then back to Marcus again. At this point she put out just the tip of her tongue and ran it over her lips. In what was probably schoolboy instinct, Marcus grabbed her bottom, Jade giggled and thrust out her breasts, and Liam threw his hands in the air.
âHold it, hold it!'
âHe bloody well was,' muttered Bradley.
âMarcus is supposed to be your cousin,' Liam reminded Jade. âThatâ¦' He pointed at Bradley, âis Romeo. He's the one you're in love with, in case you've forgotten the story-line.'
âI'm not sure about this Juliet stuff, babes.' Lorraine Johnson flapped the arms of the batwing coat so violently that Liam half-expected her to take off. âI thought this Shakespeare was a highbrow sort of a bloke.'
Before Crystal Woods could leap into the breach with her once-weekly request to take over the part of Juliet, Liam took charge. âOn to the fight scene,' he said. âHold his lapels, soâ¦' He jumped back on to the stage and demonstrated. âMove with your fist, like so. Bradley, you move back. Push his shoulder, like this, then back. No contact, remember. But it's got to look convincing.'
The two boys glowered at one another.
âGood,' Liam said dubiously.
Ten minutes later he was as satisfied as he would ever be. âThat'll do.' He pushed his hair back from his face and wondered if they would ever get the play finished in time. What with this and his training programme for CG's, it was no wonder he couldn't find time to do the bloody laundry.
He started to clear up, moving chairs, getting the stage ready for tomorrow's morning assembly, as his cast began to drift away. The caretaker had complained that clearing up after drama was not in his contract, and Liam knew that any power struggle between caretaker and headmaster could only have one outcome. Sure enough, the head had spoken to Liam â and now Liam did the clearing up himself.
âBut
everyone's
going,' He heard Jade move into wingeing mode. âI
can't
be the only one not allowed. It's not
fair.
' Life isn't fair, Liam thought.
Behind her a group that included Marcus, Bradley and Crystal, were hovering, awaiting the parental decision. The hostility between the two boys appeared to have temporarily abated â for which Liam was grateful, he didn't want the production to turn into a blood-bath â but, being experienced in the handling of young teenagers, he couldn't help but be suspicious of Jade's role in all this.
He was dimly aware of Jade's mother's capitulation, Jade's assurance to her parent of lifelong love, and then the fact that ⦠hell, he was now alone in the school hall with Lorraine Johnson. He thought of what Amanda had said about recognising her as a man-hunter and tried not to panic. To avoid looking at Lorraine, he looked at the still lifes of various pieces of fruit that the year 6s had been drawing yesterday and which were now proudly displayed next to the shortlisted designs of the sports day programme. He felt a bit like a lemon himself. He was a grown man, for heaven's sake. How could he be frightened of a parent?
She lit a cigarette from a flashy gold lighter. Liam considered pointing out to her that it was not appropriate for a school hall to smell like an ashtray in morning assembly, but he daren't risk saying anything that might delay her departure.
He was just about finished moving chairs and had looked at as much fruit as he could take, when she made her move. âI wondered if we might have a little talk,' she said, taking a few steps closer.
Liam eyed the gold sandals. âA talk?' Since when had his voice risen by an octave?
She nodded, blew out smoke through red lips. âMan to woman, woman to man.'
âSure.' Liam grabbed a chair and placed it between them. Ridiculous, perhaps, but better to play safe since gender had been mentioned.
She smiled. âNot here, silly. In the pub. I'll even buy you a beer.'
Liam couldn't think how to say no. He tried, âI really don't think â' but got no further.
âPlease,' she said. And it wasn't a question. She waited for him by the swing door, a certain look in her eye.
âJust a quick one then,' he said. After all, she was clearly an important influence in Jade's life. And at all costs, as Amanda had said, the show must go on.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Estelle yawned loudly and put the reference book about antique jewellery that she'd been reading, down on the table by the worn red couch. A feeling of restlessness was ticking away at her. It was only six o'clock. She could eat her chicken-with-basil-and-sundried-tomatoes-for-one, and drink some of the Italian white chilling in the fridge, but it seemed too early to settle into another evening staying in alone.
Another day in the shop, another evening in the flat above ⦠Estelle frowned as she stared at the blue carpet. That was worn too, frayed round the edges. She mustn't let it become a routine, she decided, she must get out and do something, make some sort of contact with the outside world.
She could, she supposed, go down to her local. But the Bear and Bottle was an old-fashioned pub and therefore not terribly single-woman-friendly. And the alternative just along the road, The Seagull, would be crammed full with a younger generation she knew she wasn't part of any longer. Good grief, that was a depressing thought. When exactly had she switched generations â and how come she'd never noticed?
A walk, she decided, getting to her feet, trying to remember where she'd put her suede ankle boots. Not practical perhaps, but she loved them and wearing them always gave her a boost. A walk would provide the fresh air and exercise she probably needed, give her an appetite, maybe even the confidence to nip into the pub. She pulled on her jacket. She would walk down to the harbour, watch the boats for a while, and try not to think about Liam.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Liam was looking round the pub, feigning an interest in the dried flowers hanging from the oak beams, searching for an out-clause, increasingly desperate now. He had so much to do, for God's sake â a pile of English exercises to be marked by tomorrow, a lesson plan for science to be sorted. He had to eat, he had to find a clean shirt for tomorrow, and the flat was a mess. At this rate, he'd be up all night.
They'd sorted out Jade and Romeo and Juliet â this had involved him assuring Lorraine Johnson that there would be no âfunny business' going on, that he would look out for Jade's interests and ensure that her reputation and everything else remained intact.
It had also â unfortunately â entailed Lorraine placing a bony hand on his knee as they sat up at the bar and was now threatening to lead to the telling of her life story.
âI must be off,' Liam said firmly, trying to get up.
âDon't leave meâ¦' Her lipstick was smudged and her mascara had run. She ordered another drink and Liam realised belatedly that she must have had a few before she came to the rehearsal.