Authors: Jane Lovering
"As far as I'm concerned, you are too. Oh, and
congratulations." I meant it.
"Thank you."
"How's Tamar?"
"Not too bad. Still a bit sickly. Otherwise she's blooming.
It's Piers we're most worried about. He's been a bit—"
"Hard." Whoops. "I mean, he must be taking it hard.
Moving out and all that." I think I got away with it, because
Alasdair never even flinched.
"Oh, he's decided to go back to the Argentine, work out
there for a bit. He's got dual nationality so there's nothing to
stop him. He's been so terribly restless these last few days.
Wondered if you might have a word with him. His mother will
miss him if he goes."
"Me?" I squeaked. "Why should he listen to
me
?"
"Oh, come on, Alys. You can't tell me you've never noticed
that Piers has the most almighty crush on you! If you told him
to go and live in the Sahara, he'd buy a camel tomorrow."
"Crush? Has he?" My voice had gone very small. How did I
feel about the prospect of him leaving the country?
"Good Lord, yes. Has done for years. No wonder he's
confused with the girls he goes out with. Maybe you could
have a quiet word with him about that too. You know, point
him in the right direction?"
"I'm not sure he needs any help with that," I muttered
weakly. "I'll go and find him, shall I?"
"Oh, no need, he'll have gone up to his flat. You know the
way, I believe? Oh, and Alys—"
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"Mmmmm?" I was thinking,
Please don't make me go into
his flat. Please. Things might happen. You know, things...
Things I had determined to myself would never happen again
.
Couldn't. Shouldn't. Ought not to—
"I admire you. Turning down the money that I offered. I
realise now that you were doing it from the most honourable
of reasons. I had thought that you were being typically
stubborn, all that 'I can do it alone' sort of thing, which is why
I used to overindulge Florrie a little. But now I see it was
because you
did
know and I think it was jolly decent of you.
Misguided, but decent."
"And you're not worried about her modelling?"
"Goodness, no. What is it Piers says? Ah yes, 'If you've got
it, flaunt it.' I am certainly prepared to give her the help she
needs to get her career underway, and if it fails...at least
she'll have stories to tell her grandchildren."
Well. Marriage to Tamar had certainly loosened Alasdair up
a bit. In fact, he was so loose he was nearly unravelled. I
made my way up the stairs which led to Piers's flat, thinking
that if Florence carried on modelling wearing the tiny little
clothes she had been, she'd probably have grandchildren
before she was thirty.
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On reaching his front door, I found myself physically
incapable of knocking. Only Alasdair standing behind me
stopped me from running. I couldn't do this. Piers deserved—
Piers
needed
someone, someone better than me, someone
who wanted him, loved him for himself. Not as a rebound.
When he opened the door at Alasdair's knock, I nearly
turned and flung myself down the stairs. "Go on, Alys. Piers
won't mind you going in," Alasdair encouraged.
I followed Piers inside, not knowing what to say. He draped
himself over a chair and waved an arm to indicate that I
should do the same, but I didn't have half his style and
settled for perching rather awkwardly, hands between knees,
searching for a conversational topic that wouldn't
and couldn't
be thought of as sexual. "I wonder where Jace is."
"Maybe it's something, y' know, private."
"If you mention the words 'women's trouble', I swear I'll
swing for you." God, I needed a drink. There were far too
many unspoken emotions around in this room.
"Hey, I'm a New Man, just had twenty minutes of Ma
telling me how her boobs are too big to let her get into a size
eight. You want vodka?" The grin he slid my way was as
warm and crisp as new toast. "Or are we still pretending that
yesterday didn't happen?"
"I don't want a drink. When I drink with you I end up with
a killer hangover."
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"Yeah. Ever wonder why that is?" Piers hauled himself up,
flipping to his feet with a twang of muscle tone. "D'you reckon
it's because the only time you can really relax, really let
yourself go, is with me?"
"I reckon," I called after him as he went into the see-
through kitchen and fetched drinks from the walk-in chiller
cabinet with the transparent door and mirrored back, "that
it's because you don't know when to stop and you drag me
down with you."
"That's not dragging, that's pulling." He came back
carrying a tray of assorted alcohol in bottles, little pearls of
condensation beading the sides like 1920's cocktail dresses.
My mouth watered as he handed me a frosted glass filled with
liquid and lemon slices. "Consider yourself pulled."
"Cheesy, Piers, very cheesy." But it tasted good and the
relaxation was welcome. "Do they teach you chat-up lines like
that at those expensive schools you went to?"
"All my own work, Ally, all my own work."
Dusk came slanting down across the gardens. The phone
rang and Piers answered it, while I suppressed a smile at the
thought of the damage a toddler would do to those beautifully
coiffed acres. Well, I wouldn't have been human if I couldn't
have indulged in a few moments of Schadenfreude on behalf
of Alasdair and Tamar. A perfect couple with a perfect lifestyle
which cried out for an injection of chaos. I stared at Piers
while he chatted, draping himself ornamentally against the
worktop. I didn't know what was going to happen. I didn't
even know what I wanted to happen.
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"Fuck." Piers hung up the phone. "Work. Sorry, Ally. Didn't
mean to ignore you."
"Don't worry about it." I helped myself to another tumbler
of the slightly yellow alcohol. Didn't know what it was, it
tasted of melons and grapes, passion fruit and papaya. Surely
anything with that much fruit in it
had
to be good for me?
"It's an on-site translation job, some contacts of Alasdair's,
wanting me up in Aberdeen for a coupla days. Got some guys
from Barcelona coming by." Piers rotated his shoulders
backwards, easing cramped muscles and causing more than a
little fluttering in my stomach, although I was carefully
keeping at least a hand-knotted Kilim rug's distance between
us. "Sorry. Won't bore you with it any more..."
"It's okay." My tongue seemed too big for my mouth.
"Nah. Rather talk to you, yeah?" And then, there he was,
standing beside me as the room grew darker, neither of us
making a move to switch on any lights as though anything
which happened in the shadows didn't really count. "Ally."
"Don't. Piers, it's not fair. You and me."
"What's this 'not fair'? Huh, Ally? We're made for each
other, babe."
"I can't do it. Don't you see, Piers, I'm just repeating what
happened before, with Flick and Alasdair—one guy out, one
guy in."
Piers looked at me long and steady. "You've given the guy
the push? Leo? Whoa, Ally, this is serious stuff. Why didn't
you tell me?"
"Because you're involved. Things were so much easier
when we were just friends. Then I could offload onto you, tell
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you my problems without worrying that you'd—" I stopped
myself.
"That I'd? Oh, I get it. You reckon I'd take advantage?
Hey, sweetie—" Piers came closer, brushed a fingertip over
the tears that fell. "Love doesn't take advantage."
"Piers—" I put one hand on his shoulder, pushed slightly so
that he stepped back. "I've lost Mrs. Treadgold. Now I've lost
you. I need a friend right now, that's all. I don't want to do it
again, jump from one guy to another, even when—"
He smiled. His eyes possessed my face, absorbed me.
"Even when you know you want to?" he asked, gently. "Even
when you want more?" His tongue moved on the side of my
neck, rippled its way down as his hands travelled up under
my shirt. "When this is the grand passion you've always
wanted, and you're going to turn it away because you reckon
you're on the rebound?" The silver on his fingers rolled
against my skin, cool on my nipples. "You are so fucking
screwed-up, Ally."
I gave a sigh, my body hanging in his hands. "Tonight,
because I want—I want to feel. And then—then it's over."
Piers bent over me. Dark hair tingled on my flesh, his
mouth dipping, licking. "You can say that now, Alys," he
whispered, accent much more pronounced when he spoke
softly. "But feeling isn't
here,
" and a light finger traced down
over my stomach, "it's in
here.
" The gentlest of touches on
my forehead. "It doesn't stop just because you think it
should."
Well, what can I say? It was a night of all the most
delicious things in life rolled into one glorious, duvet-twisting,
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sweat-sliding, panting, wanton lubriciousness. It was black
velvet, silk lace, cream, chocolate, strawberries, sunshine,
dead of night, summer rain and blasting thunderstorms. It
was—oh, add your own ideas of pure, ecstatic abandonment.
It was all that. And then he brought out the big guns, fired
the twin barrels of tenderness and concern to hit me direct in
the heart. Whispered beauty, romance and love to me in the
dark as we lay drying our heat in the cool night air, arms,
bodies, mouths entwined.
"Just tonight, Piers"—I found myself repeating like a
mantra which would save my soul—"just tonight."
"Don't cry, Ally."
"Just tonight."
"Yeah."
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I lay on my bed, alone in my flat. Alasdair had taken
Florrie shopping for the new wardrobe she'd need to rise like
a sun into her future while I lay with my head under a pillow
and a cat purring behind my knees, listening to the phone
ring.
Was this madness? I felt heavy, so terribly heavy. My
whole body wanted to sink right down through the mattress,
through the flat below and on down into the earth. The effort
of breathing, of raising and lowering my rib cage was so
taxing that I wanted it to stop.
The pain was sharp. Focussed under my chest but above
my stomach, like an ulcer, like some internal parasitic thing
gnawing away at me. A nasty alien feeling which stopped me
from thinking, simply absorbed me into the hugeness of itself.
The phone rang. Stopped. Rang again. I didn't care.
I must have slept. When I opened my eyes, the sun had
dropped away from my window, Caspar had moved from my
legs and was curled with his tail over his nose. Grainger was
crouching beside my head like a malignant Florence
Nightingale with a personal hygiene problem, staring at me as
though my face had become char-grilled tuna. "Wha'?" I
muttered, and the whole of last night crept up and hit me
round the head. "Oh. Shit."
Grainger continued the cat hypnotism. Caspar stretched
out his dark socks and arched his back but didn't wake.
Taking to my bed in the throes of misery was all very well,
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but it wasn't terribly practical. At least with sleep the sore
feeling around my heart had been anaesthetised to a dull
ache. I could almost forget about it. I tried to hasten the
healing by not letting myself even attempt to pick at the scab.
Instead I got on a bus and headed for work.
"Alys." Simon was outside, kicking next-door's pavement
sign unobtrusively until it was level with their window rather
than ours. "I wasn't expecting—"
"Ah, no one expects the Spanish Inquisition." I slid past
him and in through the door.
"I'm not saying any more about Jacinta." Simon followed
me, already on the defensive.
"It's a quote, Simon.
Monty Python
. Surreal humour. You
know what humour is, don't you?"
Simon eyed me askance. "Yes. It's the third section down
over there, under ghost stories."
"Hurrah. Another expensive education that wasn't wasted.
What
are
you doing?"
Simon was sidling along in front of me now, looking furtive
in a gangling, upper-class way. "Er. Nothing. No, nothing.
Umm. Alys, could you pop out and get me a sandwich
please?"
"Pop
out
? I've only just got here. And it's hardly 'popping'