You, Me and Him
Alice Peterson
First published in Great Britain in 2007 by Black Swan
This edition published in 2012 by
Quercus
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7th Floor, South Block
London
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Copyright © 2007 by Alice Peterson
The moral right of Alice Peterson to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Ebook ISBN 978 1 78206 323 0
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places and events are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
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To Elaine and Sue
CHAPTER ONE
My legs and feet shiver in the draught. The noise sounds distant to begin with and then I realise it’s right in my ear. ‘GET UP!’
It can’t be the morning?
Finn and I were bickering again last night. He hadn’t bothered to refill the filter jug and, on top of that, he’d left a teabag in the sink. ‘You only have to stretch an arm out to put it into the bin,’ I had demonstrated, holding the little stained and wrinkled bag in my hand. ‘Look! Pop! In it goes.’ I am becoming an old fishwife and I’m only thirty-one.
‘Are teabags the only topic of our conversation now?’
‘Only if you don’t put them in the bin.’
‘Why are you so crotchety? Is it that time of month?’
‘Shut up.’ I didn’t tell Finn I am three days late. ‘Anyway, what’s for supper? I’m starving.’ Finn and I have made a decision that he cooks once a week, on a Saturday.
‘I’ll cook us some steaks, won’t take long,’ he’d said, voice as light as a breeze.
‘And chips?’ I have been craving potatoes recently. Maybe I am pregnant?
Finn would love to have another baby. He is close to his twin brother, Ed, and would love George, our six-year-old son, to have a playmate. I would be happy to stop with one. I’m an only child and have a close bond to my parents. It is true to say that Clarky, my oldest friend from home, was my surrogate brother. Without him, I would have been lonely.
A small hand tugs at my cotton nightshirt again. ‘My brain won’t let me sleep anymore,’ George says.
Finn gets out of bed boasting that he can survive on the same amount of sleep as Margaret Thatcher. ‘Wake up!’ George bellows in my ear again.
‘Don’t shout.’
‘We might be getting old but we’re not deaf,’ Finn adds.
I yawn. ‘That’s something to look forward to.’
Finn is stretching out his arms, circling his shoulders and cracking his knuckles into place like he does every morning. He then starts to sing the familiar lyrics to Matt Bianco’s song ‘Get Out Of Your Lazy Bed’.
George joins in flatly.
I sit up and rub my eyes. I have a weird feeling in my stomach. I was having the strangest dream that I was marrying Clarky in a hot air balloon. I am terrified of heights and Finn of all people was officiating, dressed in a long dark robe and white collar, and finding the whole event inappropriately funny. He was roaring with laughter in between the vows. I smile to myself, remembering that when Finn and I announced our engagement Clarky wrote all the lovely things that everyone else writes in a congratulations card, but then, in tiny, almost illegible writing at the bottom, he wrote, ‘Remember, there are three of us in this marriage’.
I pick up the clock, trying to shake the dream out of my head. 7.19.
Finn ties the cord of his dressing gown into a clumsy loop around his waist and then briefly kisses me on the cheek.
‘Stop sexing her, Dad.’ George crosses his arms and waits impatiently.
Finn and I look at each other in disbelief before both laughing. Where did he get that one from? School is like the lucky dip. You don’t know what expressions they’ll come home with.
‘Mum’s cross because I said the word sex,’ George says.
‘Well, I reckon we should go make her one of our finest cooked Sunday breakfasts,’ Finn suggests and they leave the bedroom like two happy children, George clinging on to Finn’s dressing-gown cord and pretending his father’s a horse. ‘Giddy up, Dad!’
*
Sunday morning is officially my lie-in morning. Finn and George like to spend Sundays together doing their ‘boy’ things. This is another resolution Finn and I made six months ago. He needs to spend more time with his son. They cook breakfast and then Finn takes him to the car-boot sale. They love George at the car-boot because he spends all his pocket money within minutes, ‘bargain hunting’, as he calls it. He’s called the Whizz Kid by all the car owners. Last time George came home with a mustard yellow-coloured teapot in the shape of a house. ‘Look, Mum, look!’ I’d opened the lid and it was full of cobwebs, with a few squashed flies lying on the bottom. ‘It was only ten pence,’ George informed me as he shoved it back into its flimsy white plastic bag and then placed it on his bedroom floor, alongside all the other junk he’d bought from weeks before.
I would like more time to paint at the weekends. Mum tells me that when I was a child I was easy to look after because all I wanted to do was sit at my little white table with its glossy tablecloth and paint pictures of stars, people, our dogs, thatched cottages, the horses in the field, anything I set my eyes on.
I have turned George’s old nursery, that used to be divided from our bathroom by white sliding doors, into my art studio. I have a narrow glass desk with my silver laptop on it for graphic design work. Above it is a small shelf with art and design books, a photograph of Tatiana – Tiana for short, my oldest school friend – in a leather frame, and beside the frame is a large green frog which holds a ten-pence coin in its mouth. Mr Frog promises good fortune in business apparently. I have to kiss him each morning and take the coin out of his mouth at night to allow him to rest. It’s a ritual Tiana taught me and which she practises religiously. I often forget.
On the wall is a year planner that I designed, decorated with pretty silver shells. Each day is plotted out with neat boxes representing the meetings I have to go to. But the thing I love most is the old wooden case filled with tubes of oil paints. My studio is like a therapy box. If I had to sum up our home in one word it would be ‘clutter’, but this room is my own private ordered world where I don’t allow even Finn and George to enter. When I sit down in front of my easel I escape into my picture.
I lie back and open my paperback. ‘Unputdownable’ and ‘Compelling’ is written in bold type on the back of the jacket, which makes me smile. It’s been by my bedside for three weeks and I have reached page fifteen.
‘Morning, Rocky,’ I hear George say. Rocky is our wire-haired sausage dog. ‘Can’t reach, Dad.’ Our kitchen is designed for tall people with high cupboards that George needs to climb onto a chair and then stand on tiptoe to reach. Pots and pans hang on a rail above the cooker. A few minutes later … ‘Dad, what do I do now?’
‘Stand back – careful!’ We don’t let him anywhere near the hot stove. ‘They need more stirring. Remember, not too runny.’
‘They’re ready, Dad.’
‘No, they’re not.’ I
can envisage Finn showing George the sloppy egg mixture as it drips off the wooden spoon.
‘Can I put the eggs on the plates now?’
‘They aren’t READY.’ Finn’s sunny tone is already beginning to lose its edge. ‘Listen.’
A split second later: ‘Are they ready now?’
‘George! Don’t let Rocky lick the butter, get him off the table.’ I don’t feel so hungry now. Rocky yaps.
‘Butter the toast, that’s your job.’ Finn pops four pieces in the slots and pushes the lever down. The timer starts to tick.
Twenty seconds later. ‘Don’t force the thingy …’
‘It’s done. Look!’
‘Only on one side. Put it …’
‘Done!’
‘… back in.’
‘Mum won’t notice.’ I can hear George dropping the knife on to the floor and picking it up again.
‘That’s enough butter. Remember what I told you about cholesterol?’
‘Boring.’
‘Too much fat clogs up our heart.’ Finn is a cardiologist.
‘Boring.’ George starts to hum loudly.
‘You’ve only buttered one … oh, it doesn’t matter.’ I can picture Finn’s frustrated expression. ‘Careful,’ he says. ‘Whoops! Rocky can have that bit.’ Rocky is as fat as a pork pie because his diet consists of all the food that misses George’s plate or mouth.
‘I’m a good cook, aren’t I, Dad?’
‘Gordon Ramsay would be proud. OK, Mum likes marmalade on her toast.’
‘She likes Marmite and marmalade. I love Mum.’
‘So do I. George, it’s all over your fingers!’ Finn is now laughing wearily. ‘What are we going to do with you, Mrs Bourbon?’ George is called Mrs Bourbon because those are his favourite biscuits; Finn is Mrs Jammie Dodger.
‘I want a brother, Dad. Mrs Jammie D, how many spoons of coffee?’
‘Three, dear. STOP!’
‘When will I get one? Everyone at school has one.’
‘Don’t press the plunger down!’ There is now despair in Finn’s tone. ‘Soon,’ he answers George’s question. ‘Sugar … bacon’s burning … Trying to do too many things at once, aren’t we, Mrs Bourbon?’
‘I’d like a brother, don’t like girls.’
‘You’ll like them when you’re older.’
‘Why?’
‘You just will.’
‘Why?’
‘Because a life without girls is like … a life without biscuits.’
‘Without biscuits?’ George gasps incredulously. ‘I wouldn’t like that.’
I enjoy listening to their conversations. I can hear a frying pan being chucked into the sink, the hot grease spitting in the cold water, smoke rising. I can smell grease, bacon fat and eggs. I feel sick. I am going to be sick. I rush into the bathroom and kneel down by the loo, hand held over my stomach. What did I eat last night? Did Finn cook the steaks properly? I can’t be pregnant, can I?
Glasses and mugs slide across the tray as George attempts to carry it upstairs to the bedroom. I run back into the bedroom and take my position on the bed, placing a pillow behind my back and trying to look like a queen. The door handle is being turned, the tray rattles again with everything on it. ‘Careful, George,’ Finn warns.
‘Queen Josie! Wheels on meals.’ Rocky follows him, scuttling behind. Rocky’s legs are about an inch long. He’s often mistaken for a large rat. George informs me I need to buy him a tartan coat to keep him warm in the winter.
‘How delicious,’ I act out, licking my dry lips when he puts the tray on to my lap. George’s stripy pyjamas are stained with orange juice and Marmite. ‘But I can’t eat all of this, you must have some.’ George shakes his head adamantly. ‘I’m the Queen’s maid,’ he states proudly.
Finn takes his plate of eggs and returns to his side of the bed.
George sits in between us. I pick out one of Rocky’s wiry hairs that sits crookedly on top of my toast. ‘Mmm,’ I murmur with pretend pleasure. ‘Delicious!’ To wash the taste out of my mouth I take a sip of coffee. It’s as dark as liquorice and most of the coffee grains are still in it. ‘Did you bring the paper up?’ I ask Finn, almost choking.
‘I’ll get it,’ says George, springing up like a rabbit and leaving a trail of sticky toast crumbs behind him.
When he is out of earshot, ‘Want some?’ I offer Finn.
He shakes his head and I cram it into his mouth. We start to laugh. ‘Eat it!’
‘Josie!’ Finn shakes his head. ‘I’m feeling a bit sick, actually.’
‘Really?’ I’m smiling.
‘Thanks for the sympathy.’
‘Those steaks must have been off.’ Relief floods through me. Of course there is a simple explanation.
‘I don’t feel like taking George to the car-boot …’
‘No way! You’re going. I’m meeting Tiana.’
‘Prickman?’ Finn loves saying her surname. Tiana would like to meet someone just to rid herself of it.
‘Come on, Finn, eat.’ We both look at the messy plate and then try not to laugh as we give a large piece of toast to Rocky instead. ‘By the way, I liked the bit about a life without girls being like a life without biscuits.’
‘What’s a life without men?’
‘A life without men is a …’ I purse my mouth, thinking ‘… life without weather.’
‘Great,’ he says flatly.
‘Think about it. We’d have nothing to talk about if we couldn’t discuss the weather, would we? Makes life far more interesting.’
George crashes through the door with the newspaper and all the supplements fall out and scatter across the wooden floor.
After breakfast Finn takes the tray downstairs.
‘Mum!’ I hear George shout. ‘Look!’
I rush into his bathroom. What’s he done this time? He’s wearing Finn’s snorkel and flippers and is pretending to dive for treasure. His toy soldiers bob up and down in the water with him.
Another normal morning in the Greenwood household.
Normal to us, that is.
CHAPTER TWO
I think you can always judge a day by the supermarket trolley you choose.
I am late.
I fetch my trolley. When I picked George up from school this afternoon his thin arms were covered in black smudges. Ms Miles, his teacher, had met me at the school gates, saying in a deliberately loud voice that George had stolen her fountain pen in class and flicked ink all over himself and her new skirt. ‘I’ve given him a detention,’ she’d stated, the other mothers staring, ‘and four black clouds.’ If the children are good they get gold stars on the ‘happy side’ of a chart. If naughty, they get black clouds on the ‘sad side’.
I’d smiled, so relieved that it was nothing to do with bullying. ‘Mrs Greenwood,’ she had said with a scowl. I could almost see fire flaring through her nostrils. ‘This kind of behaviour must be taken seriously.’
George runs ahead of me now. ‘No dramas. You can have one toy or sweet, that’s the deal,’ I warn him.
It’s been nearly a week now … It could be stress? The run-up to Christmas is always stressful. I overheard one of the school-run mums saying that she hadn’t made the Christmas cake yet. Last year she’d forgotten to put the brandy in. The best part, she’d claimed with a bark of laughter. Where’s George gone? I look around frantically. Then I hear the curtain of the passport booth being pulled back.
‘George! Come here!’
It could be that I’m anxious about the new headmaster at George’s school? He starts next January. I fret about his teachers, too. If they don’t understand him and his behaviour, it makes life impossible. Everyone is talking about the sudden resignation of Mrs Liddell. She had a nervous breakdown.
I am never late.
I have a hectic job. I’m not complaining as I love my work, but it can be demanding at times. I work for a design agency called Gem Communications and my boss is called Ruby Gold, a high-powered, pinstripe-su
it-wearer who uses so much face powder that by the evening it has cracked like a clay mask above her top lip. Ruby exudes charm in a voice as smooth as caramel, but I am aware that I only have to put one foot wrong to be looking for another job. I can see her now in her executive leather chair, shiny blonde hair tucked neatly behind diamond-studded ears, telling me that Ruby Gold expects: ‘One hundred and ten per cent at all times.’ She has just employed a young South African girl called Natalie. We used to work in Ruby’s home, on the top floor of her spacious minimalist house, but as the company is expanding we need more than one room so we have moved into a modern office block in Hammersmith. If Ruby knew I was pregnant … I can’t think about it.
I am always on time. My period strikes as faithfully as Big Ben. I get out my list. ‘I love you if you buy me some tobacco, Jammie D’s and gin,’ Finn wrote on our kitchen blackboard this morning. I want to try and be prepared for Christmas this year. He and I are having all the family in London: my parents, Finn’s mother and her boyfriend, and of course Finn’s granny, so I need to be super-organised like the other mums and make my cake and Christmas pudding a month before. I can remember my mother making a cake every year and the best part was always when she gave me her leather handbag to rummage through and find some five-pence coins to add to the fruit mixture. Her handbag had exciting hiding places for lipsticks and powder compacts, and she always had lots of parking change in the zip compartment of her wallet. Carefully, I’d cover the silver coins in foil whilst saying a prayer that they would all land in my bowl.
‘I want three pounds, Mum.’ George pokes his head out of the booth and sticks his tongue out at me.
‘I want never gets. OUT, George.’
‘Please?’ He continues to pull the pale blue curtain back and forth, scratching the fabric against the rail. Then he sits on the stool and starts pressing the control buttons haphazardly.
I try to manoeuvre the trolley. ‘If you don’t get out now there’ll be no Slush Puppy.’ Finn gave me a book entitled, If You Behave, So Will Your Child. The author, her cheery face beaming from the jacket, tells me that I must not use blackmail or bribery in order to make my child behave; I am no better than a child myself if I adopt these methods.
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