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Many thanks for their help and inspiration to Jenny Main, Maggie Nutt, and the Skills for Life students at Mid Essex Adult Community College. Also, thank you to Kate Elton, Georgina Hawtrey-Woore, Lizzy Kremer, and Philippa Hayward.
Contents
1.Woman Walks into a Bar
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
Twelve
Thirteen
2.Excerpt from The Runaway Wife
Prologue
One
3.Excerpt from Mommy by Mistake
Conception
One
One
“You are joking,” I said, straight-faced. “You had better be bloody joking.”
Joy and Marie exchanged looks over the smokers table, located outside next to the dumpsters.
“Why would we be joking?” Joy said, leaning back in her chair and patting the pocket of her jacket in search of her fags. She winked at Marie. “Do I look like I’m joking?”
“No!” Marie replied, even though she was laughing. “We’re not joking, Sam—we really have set you up on a blind date! In the White Horse—tonight at seven. Are you excited or what?” She sort of squealed and bounced up and down in her chair as she spoke. Marie is the kind of person who gets very excited over nothing much at all. I put it down to her not having any kids. If she had kids she’d be too knackered to get excited about anything. I was pissed off.
“You have not set me up on a blind date,” I said firmly, looking at Joy. I was trying to show her how angry I was. But in all the years I’ve known her, I’ve never seen Joy afraid, least of all of me. She tipped her chin back as far as it would go and blew smoke into the air above the table because she knew that too much smoke in the air would make me need my blue inhaler. She seemed to have forgotten that stress makes me need it too.
“It’ll be great,” she said, as she leant forward over the table and stubbed the butt of her fag out in a tinfoil ashtray. “When have I ever let you down?”
I had to admit she was right. Joy had always been there for me from the first day we’d met at school until now. She was my best friend through thick and thin. Mostly thick, as it turned out. Which is why she should know not to set me up on a blind date. She should know how much I’ll hate it.
Joy looked at her watch. “Come on, break’s nearly up and I’ve got to get back. Sulky Sandra wants me to restock feminine hygiene before dinner. Lucky me. A whole morning of stacking tampons.” She and Marie started to get up but I didn’t. I just sat there and stared at her. She sat down again.
“Look,” she said, starting to latch on to the idea that I was not very happy. “It’ll be a laugh! You turn up looking sexy. He’ll buy you all the drinks you want, and if you don’t like him you can leave. OK?”
“But it’s Friday night,” I said. “It’s our night out. Our girls’ night.” I thought of our usual routine at the end of the week. Me, Joy, and Marie down the White Horse every Friday night at seven. A few cut-price cocktails to warm us up before the disco started, and then we’d dance the rest of the night away. It was a stupid disco, really cheesy. But we always had a good laugh, just the three of us. It was a girls’ night out. Just girls. Marie didn’t bring her husband and Joy refrained from flirting. And we always, always dressed to the nines like we were going to some West End hot spot, not the local pub. Marie, tall and skinny, with her blond curls piled high on her head so she’d tower over any man that dared to chat her up. Joy, in her latest slinky dress with all the right curves in all the right places. And me with a lot of the wrong curves in a lot of the wrong places, and hair that’s just brown and eyes that are just gray, but who still—even if I say it myself—scrubs up pretty well compared to some. But now Joy had put a man right in the middle of it. It made me feel hurt, like she was trying to get rid of me. It was a stupid thought, but I get stupid thoughts like that. I have done since I was a kid. And I haven’t always been wrong.
“We’ll be there too,” Marie said. “To keep an eye on you.”
“Piss yourselves laughing at me you mean,” I said, starting to feel anxious. I put my hand in my jeans pocket to check that my inhaler was there if I needed it. I didn’t find my inhaler, just a small square of folded-up paper. I wrapped my fingers round it and held it. “Anyway, Joy, I know all the blokes you know. You wouldn’t go out with any of them—what makes you think I would?”
Joy leant over the table and put her hand on mine. They were cold. Joy always had cold hands. “Cold hands, warm heart,” she always said. And most of the time it was true.
“We’ll be there to keep an eye on you, idiot,” she said, smiling at me. “We don’t want you to get in any more trouble, do we? Think of Marie and me as your bodyguards. Hanging about in the background. You won’t know we’re there unless you need us. And then we’ll be like pow! pow!” Joy chopped her hand through the air as she spoke but I shook my head.
“No,” I said. “Look, you’ll have to phone this bloke up and tell him no. All right? I’m not going on a blind date!” I leant back in the chair and crossed my arms. “Blind dates are for sad bastards who can’t meet people in a normal way.”
Joy and Marie laughed. I knew why they were laughing and I supposed it was pretty funny. I felt the corners of my mouth twitch, but I made them stay down. I didn’t want to stop being angry until this whole thing was cleared up.
“So Internet dating isn’t like a blind date, then?” Marie said, her mouth curled into a smile.
“No,” I said, rolling my eyes like my daughter Beth would have. “You know a lot about the person before you meet them and they know a lot about you. And you’ve seen a photo.”
“Yeah, but whose photo!” Joy cried, slapping the palm of her hand down on the table as she spoke. She and Marie were laughing again.
“You know what?” I said, only half angry now. “Everyone thinks my love life is such a joke. And I reckon I must be the punch line because I tell you what, everyone else but me thinks it’s funny!”
“What was his name again, the one who sent someone else’s photo?” Joy asked me between laughs.
“Bill, and it wasn’t someone else’s photo—it was his photo,” I said, feeling the corners of my mouth start to twitch again. “Just one he’d had taken twenty years before, that’s all.”
And then we were all laughing.
The One Who Was All Right Really but Not for Me
I walked into the bar.
It wasn’t the usual sort of place I’d go to. It was a wine bar in the town center. Beth said I needed to wear a skirt and put my hair up, but my hair is quite fine so it had taken half a can of hairspray to get it to stay put. It felt like I had a Brillo pad on my head. It made me walk like I had a stiff neck.
I had his photo in my bag. Beth had printed it out for me. Underneath it she had written one of the jokes from The 1001 Worst Jokes Ever book my mum had given her for Christmas. She pretended she was too old to find the jokes funny anymore, but she’d read them out to me so we could laugh at how
unfunny they were. She’d started writing jokes out on slips of paper and leaving them in surprise places for me to find, like in my purse or knicker drawer.
A horse walked into a bar, and the barman said, “Why the long face?”
I smiled at the joke, not because it was funny but because it made me happy to know that Beth wanted me to do this. It gave me courage.
We thought Bill’s face looked nice. The right one for my first date in nearly eight years. Twinkly eyes, friendly smile, and dark, wavy hair. But it took me a while to recognize him because most of the wavy hair had gone. And the nice eyes had gone from twinkly to wrinkly. And the friendly smile was perched on top of at least three more chins than were in his photo.
“Samantha!” he said, walking toward me, stretching out his hand. He shook it hard so that the fat on the top of my arm wobbled. “You look just like your photo. Pretty as a picture.” I smiled at him, but I didn’t know what to say. He reminded me of my dad.
I thought as I was in a wine bar I’d better have wine, but I didn’t drink much of it. It tasted sour and seemed to make my mouth feel drier with every sip. We sat on two barstools at a high, round table. He kept slipping off his.
He talked, I listened. At first I had thought he was pretty funny and sad. A funny, sad man trying to fool women into going out with him with his old photo. But then I started to listen to what he said, and I realized there was nothing really wrong with him. He was a nice man, a nice, lonely man. I liked him. I had even decided it would be too cruel to say no to a second date. That I’d agree now and then to just ring him later with a really good excuse. Like I’d died or something.
A few times he reached out and covered my hand with the hot and heavy weight of his, so that I’d be forced to pick up my wineglass and take another sip of it so I could free my fingers from his damp grasp. But it wasn’t like he was trying to touch me. He just wanted someone to hold on to. I knew how that felt.
“You’re a good listener, Samantha,” he said, suddenly getting teary. “I really like you. You’re a fine-looking woman. But I’m sorry, I shouldn’t be leading you on like this. I shouldn’t be here at all!”
“Funny,” I said lightly. “That’s just what I was thinking!”
“I can’t love you, Sam,” he said, without hearing me.
“Not to worry,” I said.
“No, no—don’t try and talk me round. It wouldn’t be love between us, you see. It would just be sex and you deserve more. Much more than just animal lust.” His chins wobbled when he got worked up.
“Thanks,” I said. I took a big gulp of the wine and didn’t care what it tasted like.
“It’s not you,” he said. “It’s me. I still love her, you see? I still love her, and I can’t get her out of my head. I’ve tried! Oh God, I’ve tried! But the first cut is the deepest, isn’t it?”
I nodded.
“You’re a lovely girl, Samantha,” he said. “And that’s why I must be honest. It’s not going to work out between us. I’m sorry.”
* * *
And that was how I got dumped less than one hour into my first ever Internet date by a man twice my age with practically no hair.
It might have put some people off for good. But “some people” didn’t have my daughter to contend with.
Two
It had been Beth’s idea to join me up on an Internet dating agency about six months ago. I would never have thought about joining any kind of dating agency, let alone one on the Internet, but to Beth it seemed as normal as breathing.
“I’m twelve, Mum,” she said. “I’ll be grown up soon. It’s about time you got a boyfriend while you’re still quite thin.” I’d started to say no way, but when I thought about it I realized that she was right, in a way. It seemed like only yesterday that she was a baby crawling around on the kitchen tiles and now here she was in her first bra, nicking my eyeliner.
For a long time, years after I broke up with my ex, Adam, I didn’t think about having a boyfriend at all. I couldn’t face the thought of it. But then a while back I started remembering what it feels like. To have a man’s warmth lying in bed next to me, or to have someone hold my hand and kiss me. Not just hugs and kisses like I used to get from Beth all the time until she started feeling so grown up, but kisses that mean something. Touches that made me feel something inside. That made me feel like I was more than just awake. That made me feel like I was alive too.
For a long time just thinking about any of those things had made me feel angry and frightened, but lately I’d been thinking how nice it would be to go to sleep with someone’s arms around me apart from my own.
Beth made me sit on her bed while she filled in my details on the computer my brother had got her last Christmas, even though she didn’t ask me once what to write. She just talked aloud as she typed stuff in.
“Five foot six, slim build, blue eyes, blond hair, likes”—she’d turned and looked me up and down—“music, theater, films, eating out, and good times. I’ll send this picture Uncle Eddie took of you at New Year. The one before you were drunk and still had lipstick on.”
I had thought about pointing out that I wasn’t quite that tall, that I didn’t think a size fourteen counted as slim, that my eyes were gray, my hair was more of a light brown, and that really my idea of a good time was a night in with the telly and a bar of Dairy Milk. But while I was thinking about it she had clicked around with that mouse thing and all the stuff she had typed was sent. Sent where and how, I had no idea. But someplace where other people could look at it.
“I’m not sure,” I’d said, feeling my chest tighten as Beth logged off the Internet and started fishing about in her schoolbag for her homework. I’d fished in my pocket for my blue inhaler. “I mean, can you get it back? I’ve changed my mind.”
Beth had rolled her eyes at me. She does that a lot these days.
“Mum,” she’d said. “You’re twenty-eight. You’re the same age as Lady Gaga, even if you don’t look it. You need a boyfriend. This will be great, trust me. Everyone does it these days. Miss Porter did and now she’s getting married!” I’d sat there for a moment longer watching her using the computer like she’d been born to use it, until she’d rolled her eyes again and said, “Mu-um! Go and watch EastEnders or something, please!”
I had had three responses from the agency so far. I had been on three dates. And they were blind dates, I suppose, because, honestly, there was no way I saw any of that lot coming.
Three
Just before getting back to work, I unfolded the square of paper in my jeans pocket and read the joke that Beth had left for me.
How do you know when you’ve got an elephant in your fridge?
There are footprints in the butter!
I groaned but couldn’t help laughing. That one was pretty funny, if you had the mentality of a four-year-old. Joy found it hilarious.
“Get a move on, girls!” Sandra bellowed across at us. “Break was over five minutes ago!”
The three of us stood up and started to make our way back to the shop floor. Marie first, then me, followed by Joy trailing behind. Joy was complaining because she was on tampons.
“I wish I was on tampons,” I said to her over my shoulder. “I’m on fresh fish. I hate fresh fish, it makes me want to gag.”
“Marie,” Joy called out as we filed out of the canteen. “You’ve got to get her off fresh fish. We don’t want her stinking of fish guts tonight, do we?”
Marie was the shift checkout captain. Or Captain Checkout as Joy called her. Marie loved herself in her special orange blazer, tottering up and down the tills with her clipboard.
“I’ll have a word with Sandra,” she said, slightly on the snooty side. Marie took her job very seriously. Checkout captain wasn’t enough for her. She had her eye on section manager tomorrow and assistant manager the day after that. And the day after that, Joy often tea
sed her, the world.
Joy, on the other hand, treated her job at the supermarket exactly the same way she had treated school. She looked upon it as a way to have as much of a laugh as you could without getting put into detention. That was why she was never checkout captain.
I was never checkout captain because I couldn’t work a till without killing it. Even though you just have to put the bar code under a red light and the till reads it for you. It’s not because I don’t know how they work, I do. But I always seem to make electric things go wrong. I only have to look at them.
Whenever I’m on a till, it always gets jammed or broken within about ten minutes. It’s always on a Saturday morning. There’s always a huge queue and it’s always some obnoxious woman I’m holding up, tapping her credit card like fury on the counter because she’ll be a few minutes late picking her kid up from ballet in her car, which is the size of a bus. And when people start to look at me like I’m stupid, I start feeling stupid and all of the things I know I should do to put the till right go out of my head. I look at it but it’s like I’m looking at something I have never seen before in my life. It makes no sense to me. So then I have to flash my light until the checkout captain comes over and presses two buttons to make it work again. And then I get sent on a break, and when I come back I’m back on fresh fish.
So I only ever get out on the till when there’s been flu going around or on Valentine’s Day when no one else wants to work in the evening.
Joy treats her job like a laugh, Marie treats it like a career path, and I treat it exactly like what it is. A way to support myself and Beth. A way to get her the latest pair of trainers or games for the Xbox my brother bought her, without having to answer to anyone but myself.
I’m luckier than some. Mum and Dad do pretty well—Dad’s garage makes good money. I know he’d help us more with money if I let him. He tells me so every time we go round there for fish and chips on a Wednesday night. And I know Beth thinks I should let him, that a bit more cash would be a quicker route to whatever skirt, top, or DVD she wants—but I won’t let him.
Woman Walks into a Bar Page 1