The Plus One Pact

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by MacIntosh, Portia




  The Plus One Pact

  Portia MacIntosh

  For Joe

  The future Mr MacIntosh

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Acknowledgments

  More from Portia MacIntosh

  About the Author

  About Boldwood Books

  1

  You can’t put a price on finding love. If you could, it wouldn’t be £10.

  I’ve been playing the dating game for a while now but I just can’t seem to complete it – and I’m usually so good at games. No matter which level I try, there’s always a hole to fall down or a monster to eat me – metaphorically speaking, of course, although with dating apps you only ever feel a few bad decisions away from ending up in someone’s freezer.

  Recently I have been using an app called Matcher. You know the drill, swipe left or right on singles in your area, all the while hoping not to get connected with a murderer or, worse, someone who doesn’t know what punctuation is. All of my dates so far have ranged from pretty rubbish to monumentally awful. It’s safe to say that the date I’m on right now is one of the worst ones.

  I look down at the £10 note. Holding it out in front of me, gently waggling it to try and encourage me to take it, is Matt. After chatting with Matt on Matcher for over a week, tonight we had our first date. I’ve had some bad first dates recently but this is the first time there has been any discussion of money changing hands.

  Matt, a twenty-eight-year-old from Huddersfield (who I matched with while he was in Leeds for the day), caught my eye with his fun-loving profile. Well, he was someone a little different from the young professionals who take themselves too seriously and brag about their latest holidays – it gets a bit tiresome when there’s no chemistry to make it worth looking at that photo of them hugging a clearly sedated tiger in Thailand.

  I agreed to meet Matt on his turf, which was a little out of my comfort zone, but you’ve got to be willing to meet people in the middle (or Huddersfield) if you want to find love. Everything about dating involves stepping out of your comfort zone. But when I turned up at the address he gave me it wasn’t a bar or a restaurant, it was a house. His house, I assumed as I hovered outside on the pavement, so relieved I had decided to wear black jeans and a nice top, rather than a dress, because I would have been so annoyed if I’d shaved my legs for this. Naturally I wanted to scarper but the front door opened before I had a chance and a woman in her late fifties stepped out.

  ‘You must be Cara,' she said warmly, spotting me on the pavement, all smiles as she hurried down the short garden path to give me a big hug. I froze in her arms as my brain tried to fit the pieces of the puzzle together. She was much shorter than me so her face pressed awkwardly into my chest. She was all dressed up as if she was heading out on a date. Her perfume was overwhelmingly strong, and definitely the scent of a more mature lady. A heavy, floral scent that reminded me of my grandma’s usual go-to perfume.

  Then it hit me. This woman was dolled-up to go out, she said my name, she hugged me as if she knew me… had it finally happened? Had I finally been catfished? I’d been caught out by guys who were much shorter, heavier or older than their pictures or profiles let on before. As deceptive as it felt, I got it, we all want to show our good side, I’d put filters on my photos and never upload anything where I didn’t look my best, but there’s a difference between being a different height and being a different everything.

  ‘Matt?’ I said slowly as the horror set in.

  ‘Yes, let me show you inside,’ she replied, ushering me up the steps. ‘I’m Lizzie, his mum.’

  I let out a sigh of relief so strong I swear I almost caused the front door to slam closed.

  As soon as I realised that Lizzie wasn’t Matt, I softened, ticking myself off for thinking the worst.

  I felt so daft for jumping to such a wild conclusion, which is probably why I was so quick to put aside any concerns one might usually have when they turn up to a first date and it’s the guy’s mum who greets them.

  Once inside the old, stone terraced house, I was ushered into the living room. There, sitting on a leather corner sofa in a room that was clearly too small to accommodate it, was Matt. The Matt from the photos on his profile – thank God. Tall, skinny, hair spiked up in a way I hadn’t seen since the noughties. Kind of goofy-looking but in a charming way. Next to Matt was a boy of about ten.

  ‘Cara!’ Matt said with delight, jumping to his feet to give me a hug with a familiarity that you don’t usually expect from someone you haven't actually met before.

  ‘Hi,’ I said. It was about all I could say. Not only was I nervous, like almost everyone is on a first date, but something just didn’t feel quite right.

  ‘OK,’ Lizzie said with a clap of her hands. ‘I’m going to get going. There’s pizza money under the vase by the door, plenty of pop in the fridge. I’ll try not to be late. You three have fun.’

  ‘Great, bye, Mum,’ Matt called after her.

  ‘Bye, Gran,’ the boy said without taking his eyes off the TV.

  I didn’t know what to say. I was just frozen on the spot, standing next to the door. What had I walked into? Should I just leave?

  ‘I’m so glad you came,’ Matt said. ‘This is Kieran.’

  ‘Hi, Kieran,’ I said politely.

  He said hi without looking at me. He was far too engrossed in the TV show he was watching. It was one of those real-life police shows where they follow officers around on car chases and drug busts. I wasn’t entirely sure it was appropriate for a child of his age, but what do I know?

  ‘Is this your son?’ I asked.

  ‘What? No! Of course not,’ he replied. He seemed offended I had asked. ‘Don’t you think I would have mentioned that I had a son, if I had a son?’

  ‘Sorry,’ I said quickly.

  ‘No worries, come sit down,’ he said, nudging me towards the sofa, ushering me down next to Kieran.

  It turned out that Kieran was Matt’s nephew – his older sister’s son. It didn’t sound as though his sister was a very hands-on mum; it seemed more as if Lizzie took care of him. It became very quickly apparent that Lizzie had gone out on a date and that my date with Matt was taking place at the house, with Kieran on the sofa, watching his police shows.

  Honestly, I was in shock. I didn’t know what to do. Matt definitely should have mentioned to me that this was what the plan for this evening was, right? Unless it changed last minute but, still, he could have texted me.

  ‘Do you have any kids?’

  ‘None that I know of,’ I joked. I love making that joke. When men make it I find it kind of gross but there’s something so funny about a woman saying it.

  ‘What?’ he replied, a little taken aback by my reply.

  ‘None that I know of,’ I said again, saying it slower this time so he could tell I was kidding.

  ‘Right… yeah…’ he replied awkwardly. ‘I guess we all could, when you think about
it.’

  We really couldn’t.

  So we ordered pizza and we watched old episodes of Road Wars and Banged Up Abroad because it was the only thing Kieran was interested in.

  My job, which is honestly the least interesting thing I could talk about right now, given how bizarre my date is tonight, involves knowledge of different locks. This was something Matt knew about so, as we watched a young man being arrested for having a belly full of cocaine condoms (seriously, why are people letting a kid watch this kind of thing?) he leaned over and assured me that he had a pair of handcuffs that ‘not even I would be able to get out of’. The look on his face was so smarmy. The unsubtle grin, the even less subtle wink – clear indicators that Matt already thought he was in there. At that point, manners be damned, and after two hours of enduring, well, whatever this weird non-date was, I knew that it was time to leave.

  I opened my mouth to announce my departure when Matt’s mum, Lizzie, burst back through the door with a gentleman who, based on his appearance, I could only imagine she found in the eighties. He had the big hair, the tight trousers, he even had the self-important swagger of a rock star. For some reason he had a dodgy fake tan job, making his leathery skin an intense shade of dark orange.

  They kissed their way through the door clumsily. Lizzie’s date was clearly going to be continuing here at the house. Upstairs. I really didn’t think this date could get any more awkward but Matt’s mum heading upstairs for a jump with Tan Halen certainly added a new level of cringe.

  ‘You crazy kids can get out of here,’ she told us, drunkenly stumbling forward towards the sofa, subtly handing Matt something before cranking up the volume of the TV and heading upstairs with her date.

  And so, we left. We left the house, with Kieran downstairs, watching people get banged up, and Lizzie upstairs… I’m not going to finish that sentence.

  ‘Thanks for hanging out,’ Matt said to me as soon as we stepped outside. ‘Family is really important to me. It says a lot about you.’

  ‘Well, if your mum needed a babysitter last minute, what can you do?’ I replied, although I still thought it was weird that he didn’t tell me.

  ‘Oh, it wasn’t a last-minute thing, I just thought I could kill two birds with one stone, get the pizza paid for, you know?’

  ‘So the date you planned was babysitting?’ I asked.

  ‘Yeah,’ he replied. ‘What, you think I just hang out with kids for fun?’

  Matt laughed to himself obliviously before holding up what his mum had handed him – two £10 notes.

  I pursed my lips, speechless. Well, of all the dates I’d been on, no one had ever tricked me into babysitting with them.

  ‘At least we can go on a second date now,’ he said. ‘Now I can afford to go halves.’

  I felt as if I had hit my limit multiple times over the course of the babysitting date, but this was my last straw. No more manners, no more sparing feelings.

  ‘I don’t think so,’ I replied. I forwent my usual polite friendliness to be firm.

  ‘What? No, come on,’ he said. ‘I’ll give you half my babysitting money, seeing as though you were there too, how about that?’

  So here I am, standing outside on a warm summer evening, being offered £10 to go on a second date with Matt. I can just about make out his mum’s excitable giggles coming from her open bedroom window and I sincerely hope Kieran hasn’t turned the TV down.

  ‘Keep the money,’ I tell him. ‘Use it to take Kieran out for an ice cream.’

  Or just put it towards his therapy.

  ‘But what about our date?’ he asks. ‘Or our second date?’

  Matt looks so disappointed. I think he thought this date had been a roaring success.

  ‘Sorry, I just… I don’t think this is going to work out,’ I tell him.

  This is the first time I’ve had a date bad enough to actually tell the guy a second date isn’t going to happen while I’m still on the first one. Then again, tonight wasn’t a date, was it? It was babysitting.

  ‘What?’ he says, and yes, amazingly, he is surprised.

  ‘I’m sorry,’ I apologise again, although I’m not sorry, I’m horrified. ‘It’s just… it’s not going to work between us.’

  Matt's face falls. His enthusiasm fades. I’d go as far as to say his usually goofy mask slips off.

  ‘Bitch,’ he says simply.

  I feel my eyebrows shoot up with a force. I’ve never been called a bitch before. Sure, it bothers me as a woman, and as a human, but on a personal level I don’t care what Matt thinks of me; all I care about is getting out of here.

  I turn on my heel and begin the walk to the train station, which thankfully isn’t far.

  I just want to get home, kick off my heels, get into my own bed and just be alone.

  Obviously I’m not happy being single, otherwise I wouldn’t have resorted to trying to find love on dating apps, but right now, tonight, I feel lucky to be able to go home alone.

  I’d rather be single than be with someone like Matt.

  2

  Who is the most annoying: an actor, a dancer, or a double bass player?

  I’m not telling you a joke – unless you count my life as being a joke, which I suppose you could – I genuinely can’t tell which one is the most annoying.

  I’m not sure what woke me up this morning. I think it was the sound of a double bass, crashing, rather than drifting, its way through my open bedroom balcony door, which I opened last night because it was too hot to sleep. Now it’s too noisy to sleep instead.

  I rent a one bed apartment in central Leeds in a really great location. Well, at least I used to think it was. It has a small balcony off both the bedroom and a cool open-plan living space with a view across the city centre, starting at the swanky Victoria Gate shopping centre across the road, stretching across Leeds. I can see all the sights, including the Pinnacle building that stands tall in the centre of the city.

  I remember the day I moved in here: after I’d spent hours and hours unpacking and setting things up, the day turned into night and I looked out of my bedroom window and saw the word ‘Pinnacle’ shining in big, bright white letters. Having grown up in a small village just outside Leeds, and suddenly finding myself in a super cool city-centre apartment about to start my dream job, it felt like a very appropriate message to have floating out there in the night sky. I felt as if I had finally made it.

  When I got in last night, after my disastrous date, I kicked off my shoes, stepped out of my clothes and, as I climbed into bed, ready to put the evening behind me, I noticed that the lights in the Pinnacle sign were out in almost all of the letters – all of them except the L. Last night, having a big, bright, impossible-to-miss L for loser hovering outside my bedroom window felt even more appropriate.

  One of the perks of mostly working from home is not only being able to go on ultimately disappointing midweek dates without having to worry about what time you get in, but also being able to sleep in whenever you feel like it. But, living where I live, I have no such luck.

  Originally I thought it was an awesome, artistic place to be, sandwiched between Northern Ballet and Leeds Playhouse, and being a creative person I felt as if I was living in the heart of creativity and expression. Unfortunately, this means that my building is full of musicians, actors, and dancers, and they are a little too expressive, especially when it comes to rehearsing.

  Right now I can hear the thudding of feet above me, the almost creepy sound of a double bass from somewhere below, and if I hear the person in the flat next door to me bellow, ‘Ready to lower boats, sir!’ one more time, so help me God…

  I have managed to deduce, from what has been put on the notice board downstairs, that at the moment most people are rehearsing for either Le Diable amoureux or Moby Dick. I am literally trapped between the devil and the deep blue sea, and even when these two shows are over, there will be different plays, different ballets, new people renting the apartments that surround me. That’s why I am in
the process of trying to find somewhere new to live. I genuinely live in fear of Stomp coming to town.

  While my job is a creative one, it is one that requires a great deal of care and concentration too.

  My mum tells people that I lock people up for a living, which usually makes them think I’m a police officer. My dad tells people I lock people up and watch them try to escape, which usually makes them think I’m some kind of dominatrix.

  I work for Houdini’s Great Escape, a company that has escape rooms up and down the country. Their flagship branch is right here in Leeds and I was lucky enough to bag a job designing rooms for them.

  I’ve always loved puzzles. Jigsaws when I was a kid, a little pocketbook of Sudoku when I used to commute, endless puzzle apps on my phone – all far easier than playing the dating game on Matcher, that’s for sure.

  Escape rooms are basically just a room full of puzzles of all different types. Figuring out number codes, opening puzzle boxes, finding hidden messages on the wall, and locks. Lots and lots of locks. Each puzzle needs to lead seamlessly and sensibly into another, ultimately leading up to the unlocking of a door.

  I come up with themes for the different rooms, draw up blueprints, and create the pathway that players will follow. I absolutely love it, but it’s so hard to do when you can’t think straight, and one little mistake could throw the whole room off.

  I’ve known for a while that I need to move if I want to get my work done in peace, and I thought I’d found somewhere, so I gave notice that I was moving out of here. Except things fell through with the new place and my landlord had already found someone else to move in here after I moved out, so now I'm having to try and find somewhere against the clock. You’d think this would motivate me, and it does, but I do need to get on with my work too. I have a few places I’m going to look at next week. One of them has got to be OK, right? OK will work, so long as it’s OK and quiet.

 

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