In at the Deep End

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In at the Deep End Page 1

by Kate Davies




  Copyright

  The Borough Press

  An imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd

  1 London Bridge Street

  London SE1 9GF

  www.harpercollins.co.uk

  First published in Great Britain by HarperCollinsPublishers 2019

  Copyright © Kate Davies 2019

  Cover design by Micaela Alcaino © HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd 2019

  Cover photograph © Ros Roberts/Getty images

  Kate Davies asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.

  A catalogue copy of this book is available from the British Library.

  This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to events or actual persons, living or dead is entirely coincidental.

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins.

  Source ISBN: 9780008311346

  Ebook Edition © February 2019 ISBN: 9780008311360

  Version: 2018-12-13

  Dedication

  To my one true Spud

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  1. SEX NOISES

  2. NO-MAN’S-LAND

  3. THOSE AREN’T MY TITS

  4. UNSEXY SEX

  5. NEVER SAY NEVER

  6. A SEXY, WORDLESS TONGUE CONVERSATION

  7. LICKING THE SNAIL

  8. WELCOME TO THE FAMILY

  9. SCARY LESBIAN EYES

  10. A SEX-CUPBOARD STAPLE

  11. WHIPS ARE VERY TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY

  12. A SALTY RIM

  13. AUBERGINE EMOJI

  14. TEFLON-COATED BY HAPPINESS

  15. EMERGENCY DOUGHNUTS

  16. NO ONE STARTS WITH JUST ONE JUGGLING BALL

  17. I CAN REALLY SEE THAT YOU ARE A MAMMAL

  18. AN UNUSUAL LESBIAN SAINT

  19. ALL YOUR EGGS IN ONE BASKET

  20. MR LOVER LOVER

  21. THE WEAPON OF MASS DESTRUCTION

  22. GIMP MASKS AND WAGON WHEELS

  23. NOT THAT KIND OF MARRIED PERSON

  24. I HOPE YOU’VE BROUGHT YOUR PYJAMAS

  25. ALL OF THE BAD WORDS

  26. SAM LOVES JULIA

  27. THIS IS WHERE THE MAGIC HAPPENS

  28. A VERY ATTRACTIVE CAR CRASH

  29. BAISE-MOI!

  30. CONDOMS ON THE PILLOWS

  31. MÉNAGE À TROIS

  32. POLYAMORY FOR BEGINNERS

  33. SAVING CONTENTMENT FOR MY RETIREMENT

  34. ELIMINATION DAY

  35. VINDICTIVELY CALM

  36. VERY SCOTTISH TINNITUS

  37. SHUT IT, YA BAWBAG!

  38. SHRIVELLED PEA

  39. A TERRIBLE HUMBLEBRAG

  40. LEMON DRIZZLE v BLUEBERRY TART

  41. EL JEFE

  42. NO WEDDINGS AND A FUNERAL

  43. A COUPLE OF PIROUETTES

  44. LOVE, ACTUALLY?

  45. SHAG PILE VIRGIN

  46. A DYKEY FRENCH LIEUTENANT’S WOMAN

  47. BACK

  48. RESIDUE

  49. WOW

  50. CHRISTMAS SPECTACULAR

  51. IT’LL PASS

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  About the Publisher

  1. SEX NOISES

  One Saturday morning last January, Alice pointed out that I hadn’t had sex in three years. I knew I’d been going through a dry patch – I’d been getting through vibrator batteries incredibly fast, and a few days previously I’d Googled penis just to remind myself what one looked like – but the full force of how much time I’d wasted not having sex hadn’t hit me till then.

  The last time I’d had sex was nothing to write home about either, let me tell you. He was a twenty-one-year-old editorial assistant from Alice’s office with an unusually large forehead, and it happened after a terrible house party that left our flat stinking of pastis. I tried to take him to my room, but a couple were already in there, dry-humping on top of the duvet, so we did it on the fake leather sofa in the living room. I kept getting stuck to the sofa, sweat pooling in the gap beneath my lower back. I don’t think he’d ever fucked anyone before, so it was a bit awkward and thrusty, and he cried and hugged me for too long afterwards. It comes back to me in flashes all the time – I could be boarding a bus, washing my hair, or sitting on a particularly squeaky sofa when suddenly I see his clenched red face or his sweaty pubic hair and flinch involuntarily. Enough to put anyone off sex for, say, three years.

  To be honest, I’d always preferred the idea of sex to sex itself. In my imagination, I was experimental, confident, uninhibited, a biter of shoulders, a user of words like ‘pussy’. I could think about sex in the filthiest terms and speak frankly about it to friends – but when it came to actually doing it, or talking to someone I might do it with, I clammed up. I struggled to think of myself as sexy when I was with another person. I struggled to say sexy things with a straight face. It all felt performative to me, ridiculous, too far removed from the way I behaved in a non-sexy context, like I was playing a part in a porn film, and playing it badly. I couldn’t even flirt convincingly, certainly not when I was sober. Which might go some way towards explaining why it had been so long since I’d fucked anyone.

  Alice and Dave, on the other hand, did have sex. A surprising amount of it, actually, considering they’d been going out for five years. The Friday night before that Saturday morning, I was alone in the living room, trying to ignore the sex noises coming from their bedroom. Our flat had incredibly thin walls, so it was almost as if I were there with them. How can something that is so much fun when you’re doing it (though not always – see previous note about sweaty sofa sex) be so repulsive when overheard? I didn’t mind living with a couple; having three people in the flat brought the rent down. Also, Dave had several Ottolenghi cookbooks and some very tasteful mid-century furniture, so we were better fed and more stylish than we would have been without him. But sex-noise-wise, I’d had enough.

  The next morning, I heard Alice walk Dave to the door. They whispered to each other revoltingly and kissed wetly. I sat on my bed, picking the dry skin on my fingers, practising my speech in my head.

  Alice walked into my room without knocking; people tend to do that when there’s no risk you’ll be shagging. She sat on my bed, her hair rumpled, a post-coital smile on her face. ‘Do you fancy brunch?’ she said. ‘I’m starving.’

  ‘I’m not surprised,’ I said, which wasn’t how I’d intended to broach the subject.

  ‘What?’

  ‘Nothing.’

  ‘Why aren’t you surprised? What do you mean?’

  ‘Well – you and Dave sounded like you had fun last night.’

  ‘You listened to us having sex?’

  ‘I didn’t listen. I heard. It wasn’t an active choice.’

  ‘We weren’t that loud,’ said Alice, as though asking for reassurance.

  ‘You asked him to—’

  ‘To what?’

  I looked away. ‘You know what you asked him to do.’

  ‘How do I know if you won’t say?’

  ‘Fine. You asked him to stick a finger up your arse.’

&n
bsp; ‘Julia!’

  ‘You’re the one that said it!’

  ‘That’s private!’

  ‘So keep your voices down!’

  Alice’s cheeks were pink.

  There was an unpleasant silence.

  ‘Did you really hear us?’

  ‘Yes! I always hear you!’

  ‘You can’t always hear us. We don’t even have sex that often any more—’

  ‘Three times a week isn’t often?’

  ‘Not for us.’

  ‘Well. I’m very happy for you.’

  Another silence.

  ‘You wouldn’t care so much if you had a boyfriend too.’

  ‘I don’t want a boyfriend, thank you.’

  ‘Sex, then.’

  ‘I have sex.’

  ‘No, you don’t,’ she said. And that’s when she pointed it out, about the three years.

  I went back to bed after that, and stayed there for most of the day, eating cheese and trying to remember what sex was like. I’d never had really, really good sex, the kind that resulted in the sort of noises I heard Alice and Dave making. Oral always felt a bit like someone was wiping a wet flannel over my nether regions, and having a man on top of me made me feel quite claustrophobic.

  The thing is, sex had never been particularly high on my list of priorities. In my teens, I was too obsessed with becoming a dancer to worry about having a relationship. I did manage to lose my virginity after my first year at ballet school, though; my friend Cat took me to Jamaica to stay with her grandparents, and I did it on the beach with a boy named Derrick, who had terrible acne and a bottle of cheap rum, which is what led to the sex. We didn’t use a condom; the sheer terror I’d felt afterwards at the prospect of being pregnant and the mechanics of trying to procure a morning after pill without Cat’s grandparents finding out had put me off sex for years after that. I still can’t drink daiquiris. But I was pleased to have got it over with – I felt more sophisticated than the other girls in my year, enjoyed muttering wisely, ‘Don’t do what I did. Wait until you’re ready,’ whenever we talked about sex at sleepovers.

  Then there was Leon. I met him during a Freshers’ Week toga party at Warwick. He’d looked very fetching in his white sheet, and it was only later that I realized he wore corduroy trousers every day. Nevertheless, we stayed together, right up until he dumped me just after graduation because he wanted to ‘travel the world’ and be ‘free of ties’. He moved to Peckham three months later and started a graduate training scheme in management consultancy.

  Leon and I had quite fun sex in the early days – we tried out the reverse cowgirl, did it standing up in the shower, things like that – but by the end of the relationship he could only get in the mood by listening to the ‘Late Night Love’ playlist on Spotify, and I knew exactly where his hands would be at which point in each track, so it was a bit like an obscene, horizontal line dance. The boring sex was bad for both of us, self-esteem-wise, I think. After we broke up I decided to have a bit of a sex break, and the longer I left it, the scarier sex seemed, like crossing a big, naked Rubicon. I had a couple of drunken one-night stands – including the sofa sex – but most of the time going home alone seemed like a much more sensible, less humiliating option, and far less likely to lead to stubble rash.

  I masturbated, though – I had a couple of reliable vibrators, a Rampant Rabbit and a small bullet-shaped one that I took on holiday with me. The only thing I didn’t have was someone to grab my breasts. I tried to do it to myself sometimes, but it wasn’t the same.

  Dave made us roast beef that Wednesday night. As he was cooking, I sat on the sofa imagining myself fucking him – something I swear I’d never done before – and I found my heart speeding up a bit. Dave is objectively a very good-looking man, despite his massive beard. I found myself staring at the beard, wondering whether it got in the way during oral sex, and looking at his knuckles, imagining what they’d feel like inside me. I couldn’t look him in the eye for a little while after that. I didn’t really want Dave’s fingers inside me, honestly. But I did want something inside me. Something live and warm and moving and not made of pink latex.

  I was more awkward than usual during dinner that night, which isn’t that surprising, really. Dave did most of the heavy lifting, conversation-wise, asking me lots of questions about work in his lovely northern accent and pretending to be interested in my answers, even though I was a civil servant at the Department of Health and Social Care, answering letters from members of the public about foster care and NHS waiting times and other things I’d rather not think about, and he was a graphic designer, which is both cooler and less depressing.

  He passed me the horseradish and asked, ‘Get any good letters this week?’

  People don’t usually send letters to the government unless they are very angry and very old. But there are exceptions.

  ‘Got another one from Eric,’ I said.

  ‘The Bomber Command vet?’

  I nodded. ‘He’s upset about the cuts to social care.’

  ‘Didn’t he write to you about that last month?’ Alice asked, through a mouthful of beef.

  ‘Last month it was the standard of hospital meals.’

  ‘Getting old’s a bastard, isn’t it?’ Dave said, but his eyes were fixed on Alice, and I could tell he was playing footsie with her under the table. I stared down and concentrated on the steam curling up from my potatoes, but the footsie continued.

  There was a pause in the foot fondling while Alice cleared the table and served our dessert (Ben & Jerry’s), but then it started up again, and it put me off my ice cream – no easy feat. So I ate it as quickly as I could, then pushed my chair back.

  ‘Thanks for cooking, Dave,’ I said.

  ‘No worries,’ he said, smiling at Alice.

  Alice looked up at me. ‘Stay and hang out with us,’ she said. ‘There’s that Benedict Cumberbatch thing on tonight.’

  ‘I’m not really into Cumberbatch,’ I said. ‘And I’ve got a bit of a headache.’

  I went to my room and switched on my TV. I tried to watch a cooking show, but Alice and Dave were soon snogging so loudly that I could hear them above the shouty presenter. So I opened my laptop and put my headphones on, and then I switched on private browsing and searched for real couples on Pornhub.

  There’s something comforting about watching ordinary people having sex; I always think I’d probably do it better than them. Maybe that’s not the point of porn, but I don’t care – their incompetence turns me on. I clicked on a video and watched a thin, pale man adjust his shaky video camera and walk over to the bed where an overweight woman was waiting for him. I pulled my trousers down to my ankles and started to wank as the pale man slapped himself arrhythmically into his partner. That’ll show the patriarchy, I thought. I’m going to give myself an amazing orgasm in about two minutes, because I know how to push my own buttons – I don’t need a man to do it for me.

  But then it was over, and I felt hollow and desperate to come again. The video ended, and an ad for Hot local sluts popped up. I flinched and clicked on it to make it go away, but I accidentally clicked on the ad instead, and a woman with huge, spherical breasts filled my screen, panting and rubbing her nipples. I tried to shut it down, but hundreds of windows had popped up, each one filled with hot blondes, or dirty Russians, or naughty teens, like endless mirrors reflected in mirrors. Looking at them turned me on, and that made me feel sordid again, so I slapped down the lid of my laptop and hugged my pillow. It didn’t hug me back.

  I told Nicky about my unsatisfying wank. Bringing it up was a bit awkward; it was only my third session and I wasn’t that comfortable with her yet. I wasn’t that comfortable with the idea of being in therapy at all; I never thought I’d have a shrink at 26, even a semi-amateur one. A therapist feels like the sort of thing only glamorous New Yorkers should have, the kind who can afford to buy olives from Dean & DeLuca and who say things like ‘My ob-gyn told me to eat less wheat.’ This is how it happened:
I’d been suffering from constant, low-level anxiety, the sort of feeling you get when you realize you’ve forgotten to turn the hob off, but all the time. Then one day I had a panic attack in the middle of a team meeting about letterheads at work, probably triggered by the fact that I have a job which involves team meetings about letterheads. Nobody noticed – it was a subtle panic attack – but that evening I burst into tears in the middle of the Sainsbury’s frozen-food aisle, holding a packet of fishcakes. So I went to the GP.

  ‘Would you say that you’ve been excessively worried, more days than not, for over six months?’ the GP asked, looking down at a checklist.

  ‘I don’t know if I’d say excessively worried.’

  ‘What sort of things are you worried about?’

  ‘Just – everything, really.’

  ‘Probably excessive then.’ She smiled at me. ‘Do you think the world is an innately good or evil place?’

  ‘Definitely good,’ I said, pleased, because I knew that was the correct answer.

  ‘And you haven’t thought about hurting yourself? You don’t have suicidal thoughts?’

  ‘Never.’

  ‘Do you feel like you can’t cope with everyday things?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘Do you have trouble making decisions?’

  ‘Not really.’

  ‘And do you often find yourself crying for no reason?’

  ‘No. I mean – I cry quite a lot, but I usually have a reason.’

 

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