Read With or Without You Online
Authors: Helen Warner
And Charlie was right, she often went away for a few nights when she was on an assignment, so they wouldn’t think it weird. She could call them and tell them there had been a sudden change
of plan.
Martha had always been such a good girl. She had worked hard as a journalist and a mother, had always put her family first and she had never cheated on any of her lovers, least of all Jamie.
Maybe now was the time to put herself first. Maybe now was the time to jump.
As the thoughts tumbled through her head and her heart started to race, she looked up and met Charlie’s eye. ‘OK,’ she said. ‘I’ll come.’
Jamie jumped as his mobile rang, cutting through the silence of the house. He had been sitting at the table with his head in his hands, praying that Martha would come home.
That she would give him a chance to explain. Not that he could explain it, even to himself. He just wanted to talk to her.
‘Hello?’ he said, his heart pounding. The number was withheld.
‘It’s me, Martha.’ Jamie shivered at the icy tone to her voice.
‘Martha! Where are you? I’ve been worried sick—’ he began.
‘I’m phoning to tell you that I’m going away for a few days,’ she cut in.
Jamie’s stomach dropped. ‘Oh God! No . . . please, Martha, don’t go. We need to talk.’
‘
You
might need to talk, but I don’t want to hear any more of your bullshit.’
Jamie felt the tears flash into his eyes. He hardly recognised Martha’s voice. She sounded so different. So distant and angry. Obviously his email had had no effect whatsoever. ‘What
about the kids?’ he managed to croak.
Martha let out a small sob. ‘I’m not sure I’ll be able to keep it together in front of them. I think it might be better if I get away for a couple of days until I
can.’
Jamie put his hand over his eyes, as if doing so would block out the horror of what was happening. ‘Martha . . . please,’ he began.
‘I’ll call them later,’ she interrupted, sounding slightly more conciliatory. ‘I’ll explain that I’ve got a last-minute assignment.’
There was a pause. ‘Where will you be?’ Jamie said at last.
‘It’s none of your business, but I’ll be in LA.’
‘LA?’
‘Yes.’
‘Who with?’
‘Again, it’s really none of your business,’ she said, her tone even colder than before, ‘but I’m going with Charlie Simmons. I’ll call the children
later,’ she finished, hanging up abruptly.
Jamie stared at the handset in shock. This was bad, really bad. Martha would never leave the children if she didn’t have to, and how the hell had she come to be going to LA with Charlie
Simmons so suddenly? But the biggest and most pressing question, he thought, standing up and staring out over the back garden as Martha had done only that very morning, was how on earth was he
going to hold it together himself in front of the children?
It was 3.15 p.m. by the time Mimi rang the doorbell. She had her own key but never used it, saying she preferred to see her dad or, on occasion, her mum, as soon as she possibly could.
Jamie opened the door and stood back as Mimi stepped through.
‘Hey Dad,’ she smiled brightly, immediately causing tears to well up again in Jamie’s eyes. ‘What’s the matter?’ she said, looking at him closely.
‘What’s happened to your face?’
‘Um, nothing . . .’ Jamie wiped his eyes and rubbed the scratches on his cheek. ‘Cut myself shaving,’ he mumbled unconvincingly. He grabbed Mimi and hugged her tightly to
him. ‘I really love you, you know that, don’t you?’
He felt Mimi nod into his chest. They stood together for a few moments as he rubbed her back, more to soothe himself than her, until finally they broke apart. Mimi walked slowly into the hallway
and dropped her bag on the floor, just as she always did. ‘Something’s not right,’ she said, looking around her slowly.
Jamie swallowed.
‘The house is the tidiest it’s
ever
been. What the heck is going on?’
Jamie followed her gaze. He had almost forgotten that he had spent hours cleaning. It seemed like a lifetime ago. It was as if the whole day had been suspended in time. ‘I, er, I decided
it was time I cleaned up my act.’
Mimi frowned, her large blue eyes narrowing as she did so. ‘Well, about time too,’ she said, in that voice that was so like Martha’s, as she walked slowly into the kitchen,
looking around her in wonderment as if seeing the house for the first time. ‘Where’s Mum?’ she said suddenly, spinning around to look at him.
Jamie looked away, unable to meet her eye. ‘She’s not here,’ was the best he could manage.
‘I can see that. Where is she?’ Mimi wasn’t going to be fobbed off.
Jamie rubbed his face, playing for time. ‘She’s . . .’ he began, just as the doorbell rang again. ‘That’ll be Tom,’ he said, heading for the door, relieved to
have been saved from an explanation, for the moment at least.
Tom was pressing his smiling face to one of the small glass squares in the front door, his white blond hair visible in the square above. Jamie tried to smile back as he opened the door. Tom
trudged past and dumped his bags beside Mimi’s on the hall floor.
‘Don’t I get a hug?’ Jamie said, his heart aching at the sight of Tom’s trusting, open face, so secure in his happy little life. The happy little life that was about to
be blown apart.
Tom gave Jamie a perfunctory hug before following Mimi into the kitchen. ‘Wow, everything looks different,’ he said, looking around. ‘Tidy,’ he added, as he helped
himself to a chocolate Hobnob from the biscuit tin and got himself a drink of orange squash.
Jamie leaned against the doorframe, watching his children as they settled at the table, ready to talk about their day, just as they always did before they would go off to do homework, play on
their computers or listen to music.
He hesitated, then poured himself a coffee and joined them. Mimi looked up at him expectantly. ‘So, what’s going on?’ she said, as direct and no-nonsense as her mother.
Tom looked at Mimi in surprise, before turning to Jamie. Jamie felt his face burn under the scrutiny of the two pairs of eyes boring into him. ‘Well . . .’ he began, before shrugging
helplessly, at a loss to know what to say.
Tom frowned. ‘Where’s Mum?’
Jamie took a deep breath. ‘She’s . . . well, she’s gone away for a few days.’
‘But she wasn’t well this morning,’ Mimi said quickly, and Jamie could almost see the cogs of her brain whirring as she spoke. ‘And she didn’t mention any
assignments.’
‘No,’ Tom agreed solemnly. ‘She was throwing up this morning. So how could she go anywhere? I always have to stay in bed with a bowl beside me when I throw—’
‘Yes, we know!’ Mimi snapped. ‘So, what’s going on, Dad? Something’s not right.’
‘Oh God,’ Jamie mumbled to himself, rubbing his face again. ‘Look, your mum has had to go away for a few days unexpectedly . . .’
Mimi frowned. ‘Where’s she gone?’
‘LA. She had to do an interview for the book she’s doing . . . um, with that guy,’ he continued, deciding that keeping his explanation as honest as possible was the best idea.
‘You know, Charlie Simmons, the actor? He’s gone to LA and Mum has to follow him to see how he gets on.’
Mimi’s face crumpled slightly. ‘He’s the one she was photographed with in the paper . . .’
Jamie clasped Mimi’s hand. ‘How do you know about that?’
‘Some of the girls at school had seen it. They said Mum spent the night at his hotel with him . . .’ A fat tear slid down her smooth, pale cheek.
‘Oh darling,’ Jamie reached over to hug her awkwardly across the table. ‘That’s not true at all. I burnt a hole in her dress, so he lent her some of his clothes to wear.
It was completely innocent!’
Mimi looked at him suspiciously. ‘You’re just saying that to protect her,’ she began, shaking her head. ‘Otherwise, why has she gone off to LA with him?’ She burst
into noisy sobs as she finished speaking, and Tom, who never cried, followed suit.
Jamie watched both his children helplessly, unable to reassure them. The only way he could convince them that Martha was innocent was by confessing to what he had done himself and he
wasn’t ready to do that just yet. He couldn’t even begin to find the words.
‘Come here,’ he said in a choked voice, standing up so that he could hug them both. ‘I promise you, your mum has done nothing wrong. She has just had to go on assignment for a
couple of days. I spoke to her earlier and she is going to call you later to explain. So, dry your eyes and let’s do something fun.’
After a few moments, both children had calmed down. Mimi got up and took a tissue from the box on the window sill, with which she dabbed at her eyes. Tom wiped his eyes and nose on the back of
his sleeve.
‘OK,’ Mimi fixed Jamie with her wide blue stare. ‘Do you promise, I mean absolutely promise, that nothing is going on between Mum and that guy?’
Jamie blinked as he thought quickly. It was strange that Martha had gone off to LA with Charlie Simmons, but it was only because of what he had done. She couldn’t be blamed in any way.
‘I promise you, your mum has done nothing wrong,’ he said, wishing so badly that he could say the same for himself.
Martha gazed unseeingly out of the window of the limousine that was taking her and Charlie to the airport. It was early evening and the pubs and cafés of London were
alive with throngs of after-work drinkers, laughing and chatting in the late sunshine. She felt strangely numb. Only this morning she had woken up feeling so happy and content with her life.
Nothing could have prepared her for the way she was feeling now, just fifteen hours later, as if she had had a terrible crash and was in some sort of suspended coma.
The day had passed by in a fog. Charlie had listened patiently while she tried to make sense of what had happened. From the moment she arrived at the hotel, she had forgotten that he was a
celebrity and had seen him as just another human being who had been through the same sort of trauma as her, albeit in a much more public and humiliating way. He had an amazing way of looking at her
that made her feel as if he was embracing her, while giving her enough space to think and breathe.
Although he didn’t offer any opinions about what Jamie had actually done, he did attempt to give a male perspective on what the reasons behind it could be; that maybe Jamie had felt
emasculated being a house-husband and having to rely on Martha for money.
Martha had shaken her head. ‘No, he did feel like that when he was first at home. But we found a way round it and he loved being at home. He loved being with the children.’
‘But I remember being at home with Felix, when he was small . . .’ Charlie tailed off as he wrestled with the memory, before continuing. ‘I loved it, but I think it’s
human nature for men to feel as if they aren’t quite fulfilling their genetic potential if they have to rely on a woman for money.’
‘But you didn’t repay Liv by going out and sleeping with someone else, did you?’ Martha spat, desperately trying not to sound too bitter.
‘I didn’t,’ Charlie said quietly. ‘But she did, unfortunately.’
‘Would you . . .’ Martha began, before hesitating, not sure if she should risk intruding too much so soon after meeting him. But then, he already knew far more intimate details about
her than he could ever reveal about himself. ‘Would you have forgiven Liv?’
Charlie held her gaze for a while before replying. ‘Yes, I would have forgiven her. I think I did forgive her . . . but would I have taken her back? I don’t know. I think
that’s another issue.’
‘So would you?’ Martha’s breath caught in her chest as she waited for his answer.
‘Yes. Probably. But our relationship would have been so damaged . . . who knows whether it would have worked.’
Martha chewed the inside of her lip. There was no doubt that whatever happened, her relationship with Jamie would be badly damaged by what he had done. Could there ever be a way back for
them?
‘How are you holding up, Martha?’ Charlie asked now, interrupting her gloomy thoughts.
‘I’m not sure I should be doing this.’ She turned to look at him. ‘I should really be at home with the kids.’
‘Why don’t you give them a call? Make the decision once you’ve spoken to them. It’s not too late to go home if that’s what you want.’
Martha smiled at Charlie gratefully. She couldn’t believe how understanding, kind and patient he had been. She reached into her bag and pulled out her phone. She hadn’t looked at it
since she had left home that morning and had used the hotel phone to call Jamie. There were several missed calls and emails, which made her heart quicken in alarm.
She scanned through the missed call list first. There were several blocked calls, which would probably have been from Louisa, Charlie’s PR, plus two calls from Lindsay. She thought back to
the morning, when she had last spoken to Lindsay, just before making her horrific discovery. It was as if her life was suddenly divided into two parts: before the affair and after. Then she had
felt so bad for Jamie, seeing her picture in the paper with another man. ‘Pah!’ she snorted aloud, drawing a quizzical look from Charlie.
‘Nothing,’ she said, shaking her head. She clicked onto her inbox to find that, among several others, there was an email from Jamie. The bile rose in her throat as she tried to pluck
up the nerve to open it. She had a pretty good idea what it would say, but she didn’t know if she could stand to read his hollow words. Taking a deep breath, she clicked on it.
My beautiful, darling Martha,
she read, and the tears flashed into her eyes before she could stop them.
I love you so much and I am so, so sorry about what I did. I hate myself for causing you such pain and I would do anything to take it back.
There are no excuses for what I did. It was madness. I never considered it an affair because I felt nothing for her, but I can see now that it was. Please believe me,
though, Martha, that it is the only affair I have ever had, I promise you. And I am going to spend the rest of my life proving to you that I regret it more than anything.
I can’t believe I have been such a fool to risk the relationship I have with you for something so sordid and horrible. You are my life. I can’t live without
you. Please give me a chance to make it right again.
I love you with all my heart.
Jamie
xxx