Authors: Adele Parks
âI said I would.' I lean in and give him a double kiss. The left side doesn't touch him at all; as I move towards his right, he seems to remember what he is supposed to do and his lips briefly land on my cheek. Dry. I wait for the spark. The jolt. The justification and authentication. Nothing.
âYou're looking well,' I comment.
âThank you. You too.'
I beam back at him, and sway from side to side, girlishly holding my dress. It must be nerves that force me into performing this ridiculous parody of flirtation, and I hate myself for it. It's some relief to clock that Martin isn't actually looking at me; he's staring at something over my shoulder (a flower arrangement, I think) and hasn't noticed me making a fool of myself.
âThose flowers are quite something, aren't they?' He slaps his hands together excitedly and then rubs them as though he is warming them up. It is a gesture I remember. He occasionally uses it when he is ridiculously excited about something; when his team won the championship, for example, and when he got promoted at work.
This is harder than I imagined. Now I'm stood in front of Martin my plan starts to seem hazy, like a mirage. Unreal. I need a way into what I've come to say. This is undoubtedly going to be the most difficult conversation I've ever had to have, probably even harder than calling off our wedding; I am here to ask him to call off someone else's.
âDo you have time for a drink?'
âWell, I don't know.' Martin glances at his watch. âGloria asked me not to drink before the ceremony. Her parents have pledged, and whilst Gee and I obviously still enjoy a glass â¦'
âObviously.'
â⦠we don't want to appear disrespectful to her parents.'
It is suddenly very important to me that I get him to have a drink. If I can make him go back on his word to Gee about something small, I reason that I have a chance of getting him to go back on his word about, well, the whole day.
Lifetime.
It doesn't sound very honourable put like that, but time is of the essence.
âJust a small one. It's traditional, isn't it? The groom and his best man have a quick one before the ceremony?'
âBut you're not my best man.'
âNo, but we could still have a quick one before the ceremony.'
Martin looks at me oddly, and I can feel a blush spreading up my neck. The double entendre was not intentional.
âWhere is Harry, anyhow?' I ask to change the subject. Harry has been Martin's best friend since secondary school. He was going to be our best man; I doubt a slight detail like a different bride will have had any effect on that fact.
âHarry isn't my best man. Gee's brother is.' Ah ha! Am I about to sniff out a bossy bride with overpowering demands who has vetoed her groom's choices? âHarry emigrated to Australia two years ago. We hoped he'd get over for the wedding but then last week he broke his leg and he can't fly.'
âOh. I see.' No demanding bride, then.
âGee's brother was one of my ushers, but he stepped up. I'm so grateful.'
âI bet Gee was pleased that her brother got a promotion in the wedding party.'
âActually she was gutted. She's been looking forward to meeting Harry for ages.'
âOh.'
âYou know what, she even offered to postpone the wedding until he was fit to travel.'
Cold feet? I wonder. I mean, what bride would offer to postpone her wedding if she was crazy in love with her groom? âReally?' I murmur.
âWasn't that considerate? But in the end we decided it would simply inconvenience too many people. Besides, after last time, I didn't want anyone â¦' He trails off, looks around him, a bit embarrassed, then somehow he finds his feet again. âI didn't want anyone thinking my bride had cold feet. Not a second bride.'
âI'm sure no one would have thought that,' I mutter guiltily. I hate myself. I hate myself for putting him through such hell the first time and imagining (however fleetingly) that it might happen a second time. I don't want Gloria to ditch Martin. I want to tell him I've made a mistake. That he was right after all, that we were meant for one another. I hunt around for a starting place. The words stubbornly elude me.
Martin looks uncomfortable; obviously thinking back to our non-wedding is difficult for him. âMaybe a drink would be a good idea,' he admits.
The two of us settle at the hotel bar. We order sherries, laughingly agreeing that neither of us are really sherry drinkers but it just seems like the sort of drink a couple of Brits ought to drink before a wedding. Martin says, âBottoms up' and then necks his drink. Is he avoiding the potential difficulty of discussing what we should toast? Fair enough. I am not about to suggest we toast the bride and groom's health and happiness, but anything else seems rude, because that's what is expected today. That and nothing else. I'm not used to being rude. I normally strive to be as considerate as possible; a model of good manners and thoughtfulness. Thinking about just how discourteous and impolite hijacking a wedding is causes a wave of nausea to flood through my body. I down the strange thimbleful of liquid, but before it even hits my stomach I know it won't be enough. Martin must have the same thought, because he signals to the bartender that we need two more. This time we both sip the liquor more cautiously.
There isn't a hope in hell that we can hide in small talk. It would waste time, and besides that, it's demeaning to both of us. Martin must know that I'm not here to ask about his health or chat about the weather.
I pick up a peanut from the small silver bowl on the bar, and then remember some terrible statistic about how many germs those shared nut bowls harbour so drop it again.
âSo you're really happy?' It seems an obvious place to start. If he chooses to, Martin can pretend I've just made a simple observation appropriate to his wedding day; instead he dignifies our shared history and accepts I am asking a question. Still, I don't get much from his reply.
âExtremely.'
âNever happier?' This is perhaps unfair of me. I am basically asking him to compare how he feels now with how he used to feel about me. Clumsy, but isn't that why I'm here? It has to get bloody before things can get better. He used to say I made him happy, that he'd never been happier than when he was with me, and more than that, he used to say he couldn't imagine being happier. I have to find out if he was right about himself. He stares at me across his sherry glass.
âIt's a different happy, Jo.'
What does that mean? I'd have been on surer ground if he'd simply given me a âYes, never happier' in response, although gutted, obviously, but he didn't say that. Nor did he say he is unhappy. He's chosen to be more considered than that, more truthful. I stare at him as I ponder my next words. He's changed. Besides the smart suit and decent haircut, he is different on a deeper and more profound level. He's grown up. It is attractive, deeply so, but also alienating. I am suddenly unsure that I really know this Martin. Martin the man. I was engaged to Martin the boy.
Gently, carefully, I pull out the old tricks. I look at him from underneath my eyelashes and ask, âMartin, don't you ever wonder, what if?'
He has the good grace not to pretend he doesn't understand me. I knew he wouldn't. He's never been the sort to play games. Isn't that why I am here? I'm sick of the game-playing. I'm looking for someone trustworthy. I'm looking for a keeper. It's just a terrible inconvenience that I didn't recognise him as such before.
âWell, no, not any more,' he says flatly.
âBut you did?' I probe.
âOf course, for a while.' He dips into the nut bowl and scoops up a huge handful. He tips them down his throat; clearly he doesn't have any qualms about germs. It's such a small gesture, but it strikes me as bold. I'm encouraged by his boldness. If I'm honest with myself, it's not an attribute I'd have traditionally bestowed on him; I've always thought of him as kind, honourable and straightforward, but not bold. âYou broke my heart, Jo. Of course I gave our doomed, non-existent future more than a cursory passing thought. I spent quite a bit of time thinking about what might have been.'
âYou did?' I can't keep the pleasure out of my voice.
âYes, but not as much time as I spent on thinking what the hell happened.'
âOh.'
âLargely I was dealing with the sudden finality of our arrangement. The shock of how it ended.' So he's bold now and he's never played games, and this is the result. Straight talking. Of course, what did I expect? I shift uncomfortably on my bar stool. It's hard thinking about him upset, confused and anguished. This isn't the particular route down memory lane that I wanted to take. I'd do much better if I reminded him of the good times, but before I can, Martin says, âHey, why are we talking about this? Where's this going? This isn't appropriate for my wedding day.' He points this out with a reasonableness that causes my throat to tighten and the skin under my hair to prickle. It feels a lot like shame.
âWell, I think we have to talk about it today. It's now or never,' I mutter.
âNever works fine for me. Jo, it's been five years. We could have had this conversation any time. Why now?'
I'm not ready to answer that question yet, so I throw out one of my own that I hope will edge the conversation in the direction I need it to go. âWhy did you invite me to your wedding?'
âGee thought it was a good idea.'
âSorry?' This is not what I was expecting. âWhy would Gee want me here?'
Martin sighs. âShe thought it would stop people talking, you know, about the wedding that never was. Sometimes her friends, or my friends, tease me about it.'
âThey do? Even now?'
âEven now.' All the skin on my body is crawling. Of course people tease him. If I'd ever thought about it, I'd have guessed he'd be the butt of jokes. âYes, Jo, they do. Not often. Sometimes. Gloria is sensitive to it. Mostly on my behalf. She wanted to see the girl who let me go. In her words, to be exact, “the lunatic that allowed you to slip through her fingers”. I guess she's curious. Human. She wanted to send you an invite, so I thought I'd let her. I don't like to deny her anything.'
âI see.'
âTruthfully, I didn't think you'd come.'
âBut I have.'
âWell yes. And now you are here, I really hope you have a nice day, but there's a favour I need to ask you.' I suppose he's entitled to ask me a favour. I owe him big time, and besides, it's his wedding day, the one day when people are meant to get their own way, unequivocally. I don't suppose he thinks I'll deny him anything. He's right, I won't. There's something about the combination of his new-found confidence and his more recognisable straightforward way of dealing with me that means I want to oblige him. âJo, we can't make today about us. We can't let it be about us in any way. Today is Gee's day. Mine and Gee's.'
The words pitter-patter around me. They land softly, causing me less distress or offence than I might have anticipated they would. Had I been expecting this, on some level? Is that what I thought he'd say? A declaration of undying love is what I was hoping to elicit, but have I ever really expected it? Have I ever thought that I, Joanna Russell, would finally find a happily-ever-after? That I'd find it here at another bride's wedding? No, probably not. I take a deep breath and say, âI know what you are asking, but the thing is, Martin, there's something I have to say. There's something I just have to tell youâ'
âShe's brought a date.'
âWhat?'
âA date, brilliant,' says Martin as he turns in the direction of the interruption. I do too. Dean is standing right next to us, glorious, gorgeous in a dark navy suit, clean-shaven and spruced up.
âYes, she's brought a date; me, in fact,' he says pleasantly. He holds out his hand to Martin, who accepts it. They shake heartily, and then Dean swoops down and kisses me on the cheek. He slaps the kiss down. His manner is not particularly sexy, the kiss is not loaded or meaningful; it is all about play-acting. From the hearty handshake, the broad beam, the chaste but deeply affectionate kiss, I understand which particular scenario he's picked. He's decided we're a happy, confident, probably quite steady couple who are past the first stabs of lust, and yet ⦠the kiss sears. I touch my skin and it's tingling.
âA date. Wow. Well, that's really good news.' Martin looks delighted. Delighted and (I have to admit this to myself) relieved. âDo you know, this is going to sound crazy,' he continues.
âWhat is?' Dean asks. I think he knows that his interruption has left me stunned and I'm struggling to scavenge around for words, so he blithely fills in.
âOh, it's nothing,' says Martin, shaking his head and chuckling.
âWhat? No, go on,' urges Dean.
âFor a moment there I thought she was here to ⦠No, I can't say it.'
Dean interrupts again. âDid you think it was going to be a “Don't marry her, marry me” moment?' he asks, guffawing loudly.
Martin laughs too but doesn't deny it. âMental, huh?'
Dean puts his arm around my shoulder and kisses the top of my head. âAbsolutely mental. No worries on that front, this baby is mine.'
I pull away from him, which is harder than it should be. The second kiss, the one he planted on my scalp, felt comforting and pleasant. It acts like a balm to my crawling skin, and for a moment I feel soothed. But that feeling is shoved aside by my confusion. He isn't supposed to be here! I know I asked him, but he said no! Besides, he was supposed to be moral support, not a fake date. He isn't helping. I am in the middle of something. He's not the one who is supposed to be pulling the surprises today.
Both men turn and stare at me. Martin is full of bonhomie and radiates pure happiness. Now he's sure I'm not here to wreck his wedding, he can relax. He's probably already thinking of a way to work me into his wedding speech. People love to brag that their guests have travelled miles and miles to be at the occasion; it's a way of showing how popular and valued they are. Dean looks significantly more apprehensive. His eyes are full of warning and caution. I scowl at him. What the hell is he doing here? Everything was going to plan â well, almost. No, not at all.