Fallen Women. Sue Welfare
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It wasn’t the question Kate particularly wanted to answer.
‘I don’t know, I haven’t even thought about it. I wish you could’ve seen him. He’s got a tan and works out. You don’t get a six pack by accident, and he’s in bed with my mother, a woman whose idea of exercise and a good time used to be throwing a stick for the family Labrador.’
Kate took a long pull on her tea.
‘My mother is sleeping with a man whose body is in better shape than any man I’ve ever been out with. A Chippendale is screwing my mother. My mother is having sex, for God’s sake.’
Wisely, Chrissie said nothing, so Kate continued in a hoarse whisper, ‘He calls her “Mags-baby”. There is just no way I can stay here with the pair of them, Chrissie. It’s sickening. He was dotting about making tea in his knickers. I’m going to tell them that I’ve spoken to you and that you need me to get back for the boys, and besides that I’ve got work to do – clients that I can’t possibly let down.’
‘Right.’ Chrissie didn’t sound convinced.
‘Chrissie, I’ve just driven up here, worried sick about what I’m going to find, all set to play Florence Nightingale, only to discover that when I wasn’t looking my mother transmogrified into Mrs Robinson. And I can’t believe that this guy Guy has moved in here with her without her saying so much as a word to either me or Liz.’
‘I read somewhere that the original Mrs Robinson was only about thirty-seven or thirty-eight.’
‘I’m thirty-eight,’ Kate hissed, ‘and I’ll tell you now I am certainly not Mrs Robinson material. My mother is fifty-eight. She should be making jam and doing yoga, going to evening classes to expand her mind not be, not be –’
‘In bed with some good-looking guy and his suntanned six pack?’ said Chrissie.
‘Exactly,’ hissed Kate.
Chrissie sighed. ‘Look. If it wasn’t your mother and I wasn’t meant to say how disgusted and horrified I am, which I obviously I am, I’d cheer and so would you. If you could just see beyond this whole mother daughter thing, you’d go out and buy a roll of bunting and a couple of bottles of fizzy pink plonk, celebrating the breaking down of sexual mores and God knows how many years of indoctrination and sexual repression.’
There was a long pause and then Kate said, ‘You’ve been reading Cosmo again, haven’t you?’
‘What are you going to do?’ asked Chrissie.
‘Do? What do you mean, do?’
‘While Guy is away in Germany?’
‘He’s already said he’s going to cancel his trip.’
‘And you think she’ll let him?’
‘All right, all right – but I do have work to sort out and I can hardly leave the boys there with you all week, it’s not fair.’
‘Don’t worry, Joe and I will manage between us and Bill offered to lend a hand if the going gets tough. We’ll be fine. Honest. I’d stay where you are, at least over the weekend until you see how they manage. Oh and Kate –’
‘Yes?’
‘Enjoy the view.’
Kate snorted and as she said her goodbyes made up her mind to go home the next morning, whatever Chrissie said and come back again on Monday, if and when Guy flew off to wherever it was he was going.
While it was true nobody was going to die if Kate took the week off, all the projects she was working on did have a deadline. Kate was justifiably proud of her reputation for delivering on time, even – in the long distant past – if it meant composing copy while breast-feeding. Her job had paid the lion’s share of bills for years. If she really was going to be away for a few days, Kate ought to sort work out. All of which could have been done at her mum’s if she’d had the nous to pack the laptop. Once she had sorted out the justification for going home Kate began to relax.
As she switched off the bedroom light and settled down, she heard the bed squeaking across the hallway, which very briefly conjured up an image which was just too horrible to contemplate.
‘Are you certain that you have to go home? It seems such a pity.’ Maggie was sitting up in bed, flanked by a set of crutches, drinking tea. In the daylight her bruises looked more painful, bright navy in contrast to her pallor and so violent that Kate couldn’t look at them directly without wincing. It was around ten the next morning, not that it really mattered what time Kate left for home; the boys were staying with Chrissie, and Joe would be off schmoozing some Yank but it felt like the right time to leave.
‘I’ll try and get back next week. I need to sort my client list out and make arrangements for the kids.’
Maggie painted on what passed for a brave smile. ‘Okay, if you’re sure. Thanks for coming to the rescue, darling. It was so nice to see you. Ring me when you get back.’
Kate kissed her goodbye and then jogged down the stairs, fighting with her guilt, not protesting when Guy offered to carry her bag out to the car.
At the car, to her surprise, he gave her a hug. ‘It’s been great to meet you at last, Kate, I’ve heard a lot about you. It’s a real shame you couldn’t stay longer, but don’t worry I’ll take good care of your mum.’ He kissed her on the cheek. ‘Safe journey home.’
Kate nodded. It was sickening, Guy was so genuinely nice and pleasant that Kate was ashamed of herself for feeling so – so what? So jealous? So put out, so aggrieved? Angry? Disgusted, excluded? What on earth was it that was churning away in the bottom of her belly? Some odd out-of-the-cradle, pseudo-sibling rivalry? Was she jealous of Maggie or jealous of Guy? It was all far too Freudian to contemplate; she would glad to be safe in the car and on her way home.
Breakfast had been almost more than Kate could bear. Guy loping round in the kitchen wrapped up in a white towelling robe, all buffed and puffed and pink from the shower, making up a tray for Maggie, with a bunch of daisies on it. He was way too gentle and funny. Tender, warm. There had to be a catch, surely to God no one could be that good? What must it be like to be loved by someone who did all that sort of thing and really meant it?
‘Don’t beat yourself up if you can’t make it next week,’ he was saying, as she buckled up her seat belt. ‘It’ll be okay, we’ll manage, don’t worry.’ He was standing alongside the car. ‘Viv next door has already said she’ll keep on eye on Maggie and help her out if I can’t reschedule the Germany trip. I should know later today –’
Kate reversed out onto the road, managing to give Guy a smile and a perfunctory wave, wondering how her conscience would feel if she decided not to come back at all, ever. Her mind shuffled and reshuffled the possible permutations. Maybe Guy would be able to reorganise the trip. Maybe