Authors: Jane Lovering
man who'd enquired, screaming to be heard over the wailing
which permeated the air.
"That's Alicey then, isn'it? So,
Alicey
, what're you doing
here? You're not"—the hand which had been hovering on my
leg retracted—"you're not Si's mum, are you?"
"No." I edged towards the kitchen, which had been my
destination when I'd been accosted by this pink-haired punk-
approximate. "Look, excuse me, I want to get another drink."
"Yeah, great idea! Let's go get another drink. C'mon guys,
fuck off out of it, Alicey wants another drink." A crude method
maybe, but the crowd blocking our way parted, and I reeled
through the doorway only to crash my hip against a table
which had been formed by standing a board between two
beer crates.
At least it was quieter in here. Very, very smoky, but
quieter. In fact—I coughed for a second until my lungs caught
up—it was so smoky you could probably get high simply by
standing in the same post-code. "So, what'ya drinking,
Alicey? Look, have some of this. Tastes like piss but—
wheeeeewww!"
Oh God, and for this I'd worn suede. "No, thank you. I'll
just have some wine."
"Nah." My pink-haired attendant grabbed a bottle of
something suspiciously cloudy and upended it over a glass.
"You want some of this. Loosen you up, know what I mean?"
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He peered into my eyes, which were still red from crying over
Grainger.
A hand extended over my shoulder and passed me a glass
of white wine. I recognised the scary pattern of the sleeve.
"Thanks," I said, with relief.
"Maaaaaaan!" My new friend slammed Piers on the back,
missing a couple of times. "Where you been? This"—he
gestured more or less in my direction—"is Alicey." He lowered
his voice to a subtle shout. "I'm gonna get her upstairs after
another couple."
"Oh, sorry, was that your foot? These heels are really quite
sharp, aren't they? Whoops, there goes my wine, clumsy me."
"I'd better get you out of here before you kill him," Piers
muttered, tugging me by the wrist through the kitchen and
out of the back door. I took deep breaths of the clean air,
spoilt only by the smoke from the joint which Piers was
carrying. "How're you doing?"
"What, apart from being chatted up by men with all the
romantic subtlety of Australopithecus? Fine, thanks."
Piers shrugged, tugged at the cuffs of his jacket and took a
mighty drag. "Yeah, sorry. I didn't think this place would be
quite so uncool. You want we go on somewhere else?
Somewhere quieter?"
I sat down on a low wall overlooking a lawn which sloped
down to a summerhouse. "No, it's fine. Just what I need
really, to stop me sitting at home moping, a spot of culture
shock. Another drink and I'll be dancing on the table with my
top off like the other girls."
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He grinned. "Now, that I'd pay to see." He held the joint
out. "You want?"
Motherhood, legality and upbringing came swarming to the
surface. "No thanks." I crossed my legs and folded my arms
in an attitude of total denial, until I realised that this revealed
my knickers and pushed my boobs beyond the help of my
strapless bra.
"Hey." Piers leaned down until his face was level with
mine. "Live a little, yeah?"
Oh, what the hell, I thought.
We sat on the wall and smoked in a pleasant kind of
silence. When we finished, Piers dodged into the house again
and emerged carrying two glasses, an untouched bottle of
wine and another joint.
"Piers, can I ask you something?"
"Absolutely anything, Alys." He handed me a glass. "So
long as it's not the square root of anything. Crap at math,
always was."
"Where do you get these
terrible
clothes?" I pulled at his
jacket lapel to draw attention to its awfulness. "I mean, how
many sofas had to die to make this thing?"
"That bad, eh?"
"Worse. You look"—I indicated the floppy bell-ended
sleeves—"like the bastard offspring of Lawrence Llewellyn-
Bowen and an Axminster carpet."
"A mating that I would also pay to see." Piers poured
himself another glass of wine. It occurred to me at this point
that he wasn't going to be fit to drive home, but I'd reached
the stage where this was simply a thought, not a practical
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eventuality. "I dunno. I kinda buy stuff that I like. I prefer to
be an individual, you know? I don't follow the crowd."
"I don't think they'd
let
you," I muttered.
"Okay. My turn."
"Turn for what?"
"To ask you something." He lit the second joint but passed
it directly to me. "Play fair, now." He wasn't looking at me, I
noticed, keeping his eyes on the ground, hair hiding most of
his expression. "Who's Florrie's real father?"
I felt the blood rise to my face. "What?" I took a huge pull
on the joint, followed by an enormous gulp of wine. Buying
time, covering my confusion.
"Does she know it's not Alasdair?" Piers was looking at me
now, properly, his features barely illuminated in the weak
light that reached us via the kitchen. His eyes, huge, dark,
lost in the shadow. Unreadable.
"That's two questions."
"Yeah."
What did he want? My heart was hammering in my throat,
my skin reacting with goose pimples on my arms and legs.
"What makes you think...?"
"Alys, I
know
. Ma and Alasdair have been trying for a baby
since they got hitched. Six, maybe eight months ago they
went for tests. Guess they both kinda thought it was her. I
mean, she's what, forty-two?"
Oh God.
"Turns out he's got, now what was it? Oh yeah, low-
motility sperm. Little bastards just don't wanna swim. And,
you know what? The ones that
do
go round and round in
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circles. About as much chance of getting to an egg as I have
of getting to the North Pole."
I only realised I was shivering when Piers draped his jacket
around me.
"Shit. I didn't want to do this, Alys, believe me. I just
thought you ought to be warned. I didn't do it to hurt you, or
Florrie, or even Chrissake fucking
Alasdair
. I—Alys?"
"Flick," I said, distantly. The wine, the fragrant smoke, his
eyes, they'd all reached me at last.
"Excuse me?"
"His name. Was Flick. Or, well, it wasn't, but I couldn't
pronounce his real name. He was Polish. Flick was the nearest
I could get."
"No shit." Piers took the joint off me. It was almost gone,
but he sucked at it until the end glowed fierce in the
darkness.
"I've never"—I drained my glass and shuddered as the
bitterness cascaded down my throat—"
never
told anyone
about this."
"You're drunk. And stoned. Maybe this isn't the time."
"Yes. Yes, I am. And I'm cold, I'm sad, I'm lonely, and my
love-life has gone tits-up yet
again
, and I'm really tired and
you're here. I can't think of any better time to tell someone."
Piers let out a breath. "Okay then. But look, you're fucking
freezing. Give me a second." He vanished indoors again.
I waited, my heartbeat still filling my ears. What was I
doing? This was
Piers
. But he was here and he listened and
he was so
nice
and
pretty
, and bloody hell I was drunk. I
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could do with some peanuts.
I hope he's gone for some food.
Oh shit, fairly sure the garden wasn't meant to tilt that way.
"Come on."
"What? Where?" This time he'd got two bottles of wine.
"You'll see."
I clutched at the lapels of the jacket again, this time to
hold it close around me as we set off down the garden. Piers
loped through the long grass with me bobbling and weaving
alongside.
"In here." Piers pulled a key from his pocket and unlocked
the door to the summerhouse. "I think there should be—yeah,
over here, there's some cushions." I sank down onto a pile of
damp canvas and leaned back against the wall. Piers pressed
a bottle into my hand and came to sit beside me. "I got
crisps. Figured the munchies'd be striking about now. Guess I
was right."
We sat and ate crisps for a while, listening to the sounds of
the river and the very distant noises of the party, which
occasionally crept closer in the form of vomiting in the
shrubbery and what sounded like some vigorous copulation
off to our left.
Piers eventually broke the crunch-filled silence. "I've been
trying to say something to you since I found out. Didn't know
how."
"That night in the wine bar?
This
was what you were trying
to tell me? The family matter?" I started to drink wine out of
the bottle; I was fairly certain that tomorrow wasn't going to
be pretty. I failed to see how a killer hangover was going to
make things any worse.
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"Uh huh."
"I suspected. We tried for a baby when Florence was about
three. Nothing happened and we both shrugged it off, decided
that she was more than enough to be dealing with." I lapsed
into silence for a bit, apart from the plopping sound my
tongue made in the neck of the bottle as I prevented the wine
from drowning me.
"You okay?" Piers asked eventually.
"I loved him," I said simply.
"Yeah, well I'm sure he loved you too. He often talks
about—"
"Flick."
"Oh. Yeah. Okay."
"He was an art student. Lived in this incredible van on a
patch of waste-ground outside the city. The coolest thing, all
great slabs of artwork and chrome. I was only nineteen and
he was the most beautiful man I'd ever seen."
"Did he know? About Florence?"
"I was young and stupid, thought he'd be
pleased
. There
was an argument. Flick—he wasn't—he decided he wasn't dad
material. And then I met Alasdair and he wanted to marry
me, and he had a car and his dad's a laird and everything
and..."
"He didn't know you were pregnant?"
"No," I said in a tiny voice. "I had to choose. Flick wanted
me to get rid of it. Alasdair was absolutely ecstatic when I
told him I was having a baby. He just assumed—"
"Oh shit. Alys. Jesus."
"Piers?"
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"Hey." His arm came round me in the darkness and I was
glad of his closeness. "I'm not judging you. I've not been
there, so I don't know how it goes, but shit, yeah, I can
imagine. Christ. No wonder you don't take money off him."
"I said that I didn't need his money, but Alasdair said that
if Florrie needed anything or wanted anything she only had to
ask, so she did. I couldn't stop her," I added sadly.
"So you live like you do, because..."
"Because that's what I deserve for what I did." I was
slurring my speech quite badly now. "I used Alasdair because
he was there. Because he said he loved me."
"And you didn't? Love him, I mean?"
"I was fond of him, yes. But. It was my fault. My fault he
met your mother and left me. I couldn't—the marriage
wasn't—it wasn't what he'd hoped for."
Piers's arm tightened around me. "Have you ever had it?
That moment when you think, 'Yeah, I'd do anything for you.
Die for you. Give you everything'? Ever had that, Ally?"
My head dropped briefly onto Piers's shoulder, my eyelids
drooped. I could feel his heartbeat through the thin cotton of
his shirt. Fast and deep. "No." The image of Leo swam into
my head. "I want to."
Piers cleared his throat. "Florrie not being Alasdair's. I
mean, I got there. I put things together. I'm clever, Alys, I'm
sharp, but I'm not the only one. How long have you got
before someone else does?"
"I don't know." I put the mouth of the bottle between my
teeth, braced myself and poured. What was left in the bottle
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slid down my throat and I gulped at it, eagerly courting
oblivion.
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I lay very, very still. With the return of consciousness
came a montage sequence of events which I had to suppose
represented the previous night—and then, nothing.
It was very quiet. This was bad. Meant I probably hadn't
made it home last night.
Oh shit. I scrabbled about in my memory, trying to
uncover some tiny glimpse into last night's events which
would reveal just how deeply in the crap I currently was.
Cautious fingers, still numbed with alcohol, let me know that I
was wearing knickers and a T-shirt. My feet were bare and I