A Spot Of Bother - Part 21
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Part 21

Girl radar? It sounded wrong as soon as it came out of her mouth. But Mum was relaxing visibly. It sounded wrong as soon as it came out of her mouth. But Mum was relaxing visibly.

"It's OK, Mum," said Katie, "I'm not going to give you a hard time."

Was it OK? Katie wasn't sure. It looked a bit different now it was out in the open. So long as Mum didn't want s.e.x tips.

"Except it's not OK," said Mum, plowing doggedly on.

For a short, fuddled moment Katie wondered if Mum was pregnant. "Why not?"

She examined the varnish on her nails. "David has asked me to leave your father."

"Ah." Katie stared into the wobbly orange light coming from the fake coal fire and remembered Jamie, years ago, taking it apart to examine the little metal propellers turned by the hot air coming off the bulbs.

"Actually," said Mum, "that's unfair to David. He said he wants me to come and live with him. But he understands that I might not want to. That it might not be possible."

Now Katie was on the back foot.

"He doesn't want to rush me. And he's happy for things to stay as they are. He just wants...He wants to spend more time with me. And I want to spend more time with him. But it's very, very difficult. As you can imagine."

G.o.d, he smoked those weird ladies' cigars, didn't he. "What about Dad?"

"Well, yes, there is that, too," said Mum.

"He's in the middle of having a nervous breakdown."

"He's certainly not very well."

"He can't leave the bedroom."

"Actually, he does come down occasionally," said Mum. "To make tea and go to the video shop."

Katie said, quietly but firmly, "You can't leave Dad. Not at the moment. Not while he's like this."

Katie had never stood up for Dad before. She felt oddly n.o.ble and grown up, putting her prejudices to one side.

"I'm not planning to leave your father," said Mum. "I just wanted...I just wanted to tell you." She leaned over and took Katie's hand for a few moments. "Thank you. I feel better for having got it off my chest."

They sat in silence. The orange light flickered under the plastic coals and Katie heard a distant burst of Hollywood gunfire from upstairs.

Mum eased herself off the sofa. "I'd better go and see if he needs anything."

Katie sat for several minutes, staring at the foxhunting print on the far wall. The storm over the hill. The lopsided farm dog. The fallen rider who, she could see now, was about to be crushed by the hooves of the horses jumping the hedge behind him.

She'd seen it every day for eighteen years and never really looked at it.

She poured herself another gla.s.s of wine.

The frightening thing was how alike they were. She and Mum. Putting the thing with David to one side for the moment. Putting the thing with Ray to one side for the moment.

Mum was in love.

She replayed the words in her head and knew that she should feel moved. But what did she feel? Only sadness for that fallen rider whose approaching death she'd never seen before.

She was crying.

G.o.d, she missed Ray.

53.

The following weekend Jamie went to Bristol to stay with Geoff and Andrew. Something else he was able to do now he was single again. He and Geoff had seen each other pretty much every month since college. Then Jamie made the mistake of bringing Tony along. Jamie went to Bristol to stay with Geoff and Andrew. Something else he was able to do now he was single again. He and Geoff had seen each other pretty much every month since college. Then Jamie made the mistake of bringing Tony along.

G.o.d, the last visit would be burnt into his memory forever. Andrew talking about imaginary numbers and Tony a.s.suming it was some kind of intellectual one-upmanship. Despite Andrew being an actual maths lecturer. Tony getting his own back with the KY toothpaste story and some rather theatrical belching. So that Jamie had to send flowers and a long letter when they got back to London.

Geoff had put on a bit of weight since their last meeting, and he'd gone back to wearing gla.s.ses. He looked like the wise owl in a children's story. He had a new job, too, doing the finances for a software firm that did something utterly incomprehensible. He and Andrew had moved into a rather grand house in Clifton and adopted a Highland terrier called Jock who clambered into Jamie's lap as they sat in the garden drinking tea and smoking cigarettes.

Then Andrew arrived, and Jamie was shocked. The age difference had never seemed relevant. Andrew had always been the leaner, fitter man. But he looked old now. It wasn't just the stick. You could break an ankle at eighteen. It was the way he moved. As if he expected to fall.

He shook Jamie's hand. "Sorry I'm late. Got held up in some stupid committee. You're looking well."

"Thank you," said Jamie, wanting to return the compliment but not being able to.

Jamie and Geoff cycled to a postcard pub in the country while Andrew and Jock took the car.

It seemed sad, at first, the way Geoff's life was being narrowed by Andrew's illness. But Geoff seemed as devoted as he'd ever been, and eager to do anything to help Andrew. And this made Jamie sad in a different way.

He simply didn't understand. Because he could suddenly see Tony's point. Andrew was a generous man. But he didn't do small talk and he didn't ask questions. When the conversation moved out of his sphere he switched off and waited for it to move back.

Andrew retired to bed early and Jamie and Geoff sat in the garden finishing off a bottle of wine.

Jamie talked about Katie and Ray and tried to explain why the relationship made him uneasy. The way Ray cramped her style. The gulf between them. And only when he was doing this did he realize how much of what he was saying applied to Geoff and Andrew. He tried to change the subject.

Geoff could read him like a book. Perhaps every conversation came round to this subject eventually. "Andrew and I have a very nice life together. We love one another. We look after one another. We don't have as much s.e.x as we once did. To be honest, we don't really have s.e.x at all. But, without putting too fine a point on it, there are ways of dealing with that."

"Does Andrew know?"

Geoff didn't answer the question. "I'll be there for him. Always. Until the end. That's the thing he knows."

An hour later Jamie lay on the pull-out bed, looking at the roll of carpet and the defunct skiing machine and the cello case and felt that rootless ache he always felt in business hotels and spare rooms, the smallness of your life when you took the props away.

It disturbed him, Geoff and Andrew. And he wasn't sure why. Was it Geoff having s.e.x with other men and Andrew knowing and not knowing? Was it the thought of Geoff watching his lover growing old? Was it because Jamie wanted the unconditional love they had? Or because that unconditional love seemed so unattractive?

The following week he spent three days running the interviews for the new secretary and sorting out all the attendant paperwork. He went to Johnny's leaving do. He saw A Beautiful Mind A Beautiful Mind with Charlie. He went swimming for the first time in two months. He ate a takeaway Chinese in the bath with with Charlie. He went swimming for the first time in two months. He ate a takeaway Chinese in the bath with The Dark Side of the Moon The Dark Side of the Moon cranked up to nine downstairs. He read cranked up to nine downstairs. He read The Farewell Symphony The Farewell Symphony and the fact that he finished it in three days almost made up for how fantastically depressing it was. and the fact that he finished it in three days almost made up for how fantastically depressing it was.

He needed someone.

Not for s.e.x. Not yet. That came a couple of weeks later, in his experience. You started finding ugly guys attractive. Then you started finding straight guys attractive. Then you had to do something about it pretty quickly because by the time you started thinking you'd settle for s.e.x with one of your female friends you were heading for a whole barrel-load of trouble.

He needed...The word companion companion always made him think of elderly playwrights in silk smoking jackets holed up in Italian coastal towns with their handsome secretaries. Like Geoff, but with more glamour. always made him think of elderly playwrights in silk smoking jackets holed up in Italian coastal towns with their handsome secretaries. Like Geoff, but with more glamour.

He wanted...There was that feeling when you held someone, or when someone held you. The way your body relaxed. Like having a dog on your lap.

He needed to be close to someone. Wasn't that what everyone wanted?

He was getting a bit old for the outdoor stuff and clubs always seemed to him like stag nights, with the hormones flowing in the opposite direction. Men doing what they'd done since they came down from the trees, gathering in herds to get drunk and talk b.o.l.l.o.c.ks, anything to avoid the nightmares of being serious or having nothing to do.

Besides, Jamie's track record was not good. Simon the Catholic priest. Garry and his n.a.z.i memorabilia. Christ, you'd think people would either confess these things up front or avoid mentioning them at all, instead of announcing them over breakfast.

Halfway round Tesco he put a tin of sweetened condensed milk into his basket but came to his senses at the checkout and quietly slid it to the side of the conveyor belt when no one was watching.

Back at home he was lying on the sofa toggling idly between Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow and something about the Great Wall of China when he realized that he could ring Ryan. and something about the Great Wall of China when he realized that he could ring Ryan.

He went to get his address book.

54.

At four o'clock the following day Katie made the mistake of saying to Jacob, "Well, buddy, half an hour and we'll head back to London." the following day Katie made the mistake of saying to Jacob, "Well, buddy, half an hour and we'll head back to London."

Cue tears and high-volume wailing.

"I hate you."

"Jacob..."

She tried talking him down but he was winding up for a big one. So she put him in the living room and closed the door and said he could come out when he'd calmed down.

Mum caved almost immediately and went in, saying, "Don't be mean to him." Two minutes later he was eating Maltesers in the kitchen.

What was it with grandparents? Thirty years ago it was smacking and bed with no tea. Now it was second helpings of pudding and toys on the dining table.

She packed the car and said goodbye to Dad. When she told him Mum was going to the doctor he looked petrified but she'd run out of sympathy several hours back. She kissed him on the forehead and closed the bedroom door quietly behind her.

She manhandled a thrashing Jacob into the car and Hey presto, Hey presto, as soon as he knew resistance was futile he slumped backward, silent and exhausted. as soon as he knew resistance was futile he slumped backward, silent and exhausted.

Two and a half hours later they pulled up outside the house. The hall light was on and the curtains were closed. Ray was there. Or had been.

Jacob was in a coma, so she lifted him out of his seat and carried him to the front door. The hallway was silent. She hefted him upstairs and laid him down on his bed. Maybe he'd sleep through. If Ray was lurking she didn't want an argument while ministering to a waking child. She slipped his shoes and trousers off and put the duvet over him.

She heard a noise and went back downstairs.

Ray appeared in the hallway carrying the blue holdall and Jacob's Spider-Man rucksack from the car. He paused, briefly, looked up, said, "Sorry," then took everything through to the kitchen.

He meant it. She could see. There was something broken about him. She realized how rarely she ever heard someone say sorry and mean it.

She followed him and sat down on the opposite side of the table.

"I shouldn't have done that." He was nudging a ballpoint pen round in little circles with his finger. "Running off. It was stupid. You should be able to go out for coffee with who you like. It's none of my business."

"It is your business," said Katie. "And I would have told you-"

"But I would have been jealous. I know. Look...I'm not blaming you for anything..."

Her anger had vanished. She realized that he was more honest and more self-aware than any member of her own family. How had she not seen this before?

She touched his hand. He didn't respond.

"You said you couldn't marry someone who treated you like that."

"I was angry," said Katie.

"Yeh, but you were right," said Ray. "You can't marry someone who treats you like that."

"Ray-"

"Listen. I've been doing a lot of thinking over the last few days." He paused, briefly. "You shouldn't be marrying me."

She tried to interrupt but he held up his hand.

"I'm not the right person for you. Your parents don't like me. Your brother doesn't like me-"

"They don't know you." Those three days alone in the house she'd been glad of the s.p.a.ce and the quiet. Now she could see him walking out for a second time and it terrified her. "Anyway, it's got nothing to do with them."

He narrowed his eyes a little while she was talking, letting it wash over him like the pain from a headache. "I'm not as clever as you. I'm not good with people. We don't like the same music. We don't like the same books. We don't like the same films."

It was true. But it was all wrong.

"You get angry and I don't know what to say. And, sure, we get along OK. And I like looking after Jacob. But...I don't know...In a year's time, in two years' time, in three years' time-"

"Ray, this is ridiculous."

"Is it?"

"Yes," she said.

He looked directly at her. "You don't really love me, do you?"

Katie said nothing.