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Coco Pinchard, the Consequences of Love and Sex: A Funny, Feel-Good, Romantic Comedy

Page 27

by Robert Bryndza


  I realised then and there that Regina Battenberg was no longer my nemesis.

  ‘What are you going to do?’ I asked.

  ‘I’m not sure,’ she said. ‘I’ve earned all this money. I thought maybe I should start to enjoy it. My son and his wife live in Australia, and they’re expecting. I think I might pay them a visit, let my hair go grey, and fade into delicious obscurity.’

  She gave me another big hug. As she was leaving I asked if she knew what Angie was doing.

  ‘The last I heard she went to Burning Man,’ said Regina.

  ‘Burning Man? The thing in the desert?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘The hippyish thing with no mobile phones, no hair straighteners… no irony?’

  ‘That’s the one dear,’ she said. She kissed me on the cheek and made her way down the steps. At the end of the road hailed a taxi. She still had to go and apologise to Martin Amis and Sue Pollard. Quite why, I’m not sure. We’ve said we’ll keep in touch. I’ve no idea if we will.

  Adam came home late after his double shift at the bar. I showed him the letter, and explained to him what had happened.

  ‘We should go for it,’ I said. ‘We should accept the offer and move to the farm.’

  ‘You won’t regret this Cokes, I’m going to make an amazing new life for us,’ he said and threw his arms around me.

  Thursday 4th July

  So much has happened in the last 24 hours. After his initial excitement, Adam has gone into panic mode. We phoned Bonham & Son last night and accepted the offer. I then phoned Chris and told him we were going to buy Strangeways farm.

  Then Adam quit his job at the bar, and I booked a removal company to come and re-pack everything.

  ‘I’m so unprepared to start a micro-brewery,’ said Adam. ‘That batch of beer I made was disgusting… What are we going to do?’

  ‘We need a habitable house first. I’m not having our baby live in that place with the single glazing, Formica and floaters in the loo…’

  Friday 5th July

  We met Chris and drove out today to Strangeways Farm. When we opened up the house, my nesting instinct kicked in with a vengeance. I marched round, with Chris and Adam running after me.

  ‘These have all got to go,’ I said pointing at the crumbling appliances in the kitchen.

  ‘I’ve got my baby belling stove, and that Euro 2008 beer fridge which could tide us over,’ said Adam.

  ‘No. I want a completely new kitchen like the one I’ve got at home.’

  ‘Cokes. You could have the baby any day… isn’t it too much?’

  ‘You wanted to do this Adam, and I do too. But our baby must have the same quality of life as we do in London. Like the Queen Mother wanted when she was booted out of Buckingham Palace.’

  ‘She wasn’t booted out, her daughter became Queen,’ said Adam.

  ‘And what she actually said was that she wanted to be kept in the style as to which she was accustomed,’ said Chris.

  ‘You got that Adam? The style to which I am accustomed. So we’re having a new kitchen.’

  ‘Have we got enough time?’ he asked.

  ‘Well you’d better get cracking,’ I said. Adam nodded nervously and wrote it down. We then went upstairs.

  ‘This bathroom needs to be ripped out. I want a shower and a bath, no worries if we can’t get a bidet; I only ever used ours at Christmas to defrost the turkey. Put in a heated towel rail and new double-glazed windows. In fact double-glaze the whole house. No, triple-glaze!’

  We then went to the bedrooms.

  ‘Hire a skip, get rid of it all…’ I said shuddering at the wonky little single beds. ‘What’s under these carpets?’ Chris and Adam hurried to the corner and pulled up a piece of the thin moulding carpet. Underneath were floorboards.

  ‘Lovely. Hire a sander and a polisher.’ We came back downstairs.

  ‘I want a new front door, and a new back door, thick wood with proper locks and no glass. I want a new toilet down here.’ I said as we came into the hall. ‘We also need fast broadband, telephone, a Sky box, and a letter box with those little bristles on it.’

  ‘Why with bristles?’ asked Adam. A gust of wind roared round the house and lifted the letterbox up with a thwap.

  ‘That’s why… Have the central heating checked. If there are any doubts, have it replaced. Ditto the loft insulation.’

  ‘I love a woman in control,’ said Chris looking at me with Judy Garland-esque love in his eyes.

  ‘I’m nesting,’ I said.

  ‘Extreme nesting,’ said Adam staring at the pad.

  ‘That sounds like an amazing idea for a reality show,’ said Chris, ‘Extreme nesting!’

  ‘You were a bit theatrical there,’ grinned Adam as he drove us back home along the M25. ‘It was for Chris’s benefit, yes?’

  ‘No. I was serious Adam. You had this idea to move and I’m now on board a hundred per-cent.’

  ‘You need to be realistic Coco. Everything you asked for, in less a month?’

  ‘I am realistic. I know what you can achieve. You need to make it happen.’

  ‘Have we got enough time?’ said Adam.

  ‘I don’t know. But if anyone can do it, you can,’ I said. Adam was quiet for the rest of the journey home.

  Saturday 6th July

  Our solicitor Mr Parkinson phoned this morning to say that contracts on the house will be exchanged in twenty-eight days. I was on the computer choosing new windows when Adam answered the phone.

  ‘That’s far too slow!’ I said. ‘Tell him there’s a baby on the way. Tell him I’m not crossing my legs and holding it in for anyone!’

  ‘I’m not saying that!’ hissed Adam with his hand over the receiver. I heaved myself up and grabbed it from him.

  ‘Hello Mr Parkinson, I’m very pregnant,’ I said.

  ‘Ah, hello… um, Ms Pregnant,’ said the solicitor.

  ‘No, my name isn’t ‘very pregnant’, I’m Coco Pinchard, homeowner, and I am very pregnant. We need you to move a bit quicker please with this whole house selling thing.’

  ‘Mrs Pinchard I assure you, I’m moving as fast as I can, but you have to understand there is a process.’

  ‘Mr Parkinson, I’m going through my own process here,’ I said. ‘My boobs are already producing milk…’

  There was a pause.

  ‘They are?’ he asked uncomfortably.

  ‘Yes, and at any moment my mucus plug could disintegrate, and my waters break… I’m only a sneeze or a spicy curry away from pushing this baby out.’

  ‘Coco, stop!’ hissed Adam trying to grab the phone from me. I batted him away.

  ‘And Mr Parkinson, do you know how difficult it’s going to be to get me to move out if this baby arrives? I’ll be nesting… Do you want to have to deal with a territorial nesting woman?’

  Mr Parkinson cleared his throat awkwardly.

  ‘Well, um Mrs Pinchard, I’ll take this all on board and see what I can do.’

  ‘Thank you,’ I said.

  ‘Jeez Coco,’ said Adam when I came off the phone.

  ‘Jeez what? I’ve had to listen to doctors and midwives talking about me like a farm animal. I might as well use all this indignity to my advantage.’

  Sunday 7th July

  With terrifying efficiency I have chosen a kitchen and bathroom for the new house, hired a company to supply new windows and doors, and found a contractor who will do it all in the next three weeks.

  Mr Parkinson rang and was relieved when Adam answered. He said he’s managed to work a miracle and all parties will be coming round tomorrow to exchange contracts.

  Result.

  Monday 8th July

  I lay awake last night imagining what our new owners would be like. It would be wonderful if they were creative types. A Turner Prize-winning artist, or a prominent left-leaning journalist, an actor – or even a writer. Well maybe not a writer, or at least not one who is more successful than me. I still nurture the fantasy of having a
blue plaque installed on the wall outside reading: COCO PINCHARD, WRITER, LIVED HERE 1967 - … actually, the blue plaque can wait. I have a lot more life I want to live. Still, it does make me realise just how bloody long this has been my house. It will be surreal to finally leave.

  I was still tidying up old tights and Rocco’s squeaky toys when the doorbell rang. The new owners and their solicitor accompanied Mr Parkinson. The new owners weren’t remotely arty, a rather fat sweaty banker in his fifties and a mousey woman with a bowl cut. They introduced themselves as “the Warburtons”. As if they were a vaudeville act, not two individual people.

  ‘Good lord woman, I can see why the urgency to move!’ said Mr Warburton, taking in my huge bump. Mrs Warburton was terrified of dogs and screamed when Rocco padded up and stared at her.

  ‘He’s very loving,’ I said, but she began to hyperventilate so I let him out in the garden. Adam showed everyone into the kitchen and we all crowded round the breakfast bar and went through the paperwork. Then we all signed the contracts, and that was it. I thought it might have been more memorable.

  ‘Right,’ said Mr Parkinson eyeing my bump as if it were about to explode. ‘All parties are going to work very hard to get this finalised in the next ten days? Yes?’

  Everyone nodded.

  ‘Bloody good to hear,’ said Mr Warburton. ‘Poor old Celia is getting hotel fatigue.’

  ‘That soon?’ I said. ‘I’m not due till the eighth of August…’

  Mr Parkinson looked exasperated. ‘Mrs Pinchard, we’ve all worked very hard to put this through at an extraordinary speed for your impending offspring.’

  ‘I’m not a farm animal!’ I said. ‘I will give birth when I give birth. Do you know how hard it is? People think it’s easy…’

  ‘Oh it’s not easy dear, both mine were breach, seventeen stitches,’ said Mrs Warburton.

  ‘Why do people have to say things like that?’ I shrilled. ‘It’s not helpful!’

  There was an awkward pause.

  ‘Look, let’s let nature take its course,’ said Mr Warburton. ‘Celia, I’ll buy you that cruise on the QEII you keep harping on about.’

  ‘I want one of the big suites,’ she said warming to this. ‘And I want to sit at the Captain’s table.’

  ‘If you’re really good, I’ll pay him extra to bounce you on his knee with no knickers on!’ Mr Warburton said raising his eyebrows at Adam conspiratorially.

  ‘Fine,’ said Celia. ‘Nice to meet you all, I’ll be waiting in the car.’ She hitched her handbag over her arm and left.

  ‘So we’ll complete? When?’ snapped Mr Parkinson.

  ‘You will aim for Coco’s due date and if anything happens before, I’ll work out a solution,’ said Adam taking me in his arms. ‘Is that okay Cokes?’

  I nodded and put my head against his chest.

  ‘Fine,’ said Mr Parkinson. As everyone left, they must have thought we were nuts. I feel we are a bit nuts too. The solicitors went off down the steps to the front gate as Mrs Cohen came out with a duster.

  ‘Hello,’ said Mr Warburton stopping to eye her up. ‘I’ll be your new neighbour.’

  ‘Hello, I’m Mrs Cohen,’ she said pocketing her duster and shaking his hand.

  ‘We’ll have to have you over, my wife Celia does a beautiful fondue pot.’

  ‘Oh. That would be lovely,’ giggled Mrs Cohen coquettishly.

  Adam squeezed my hand and indicated we should go inside. We said goodbye, but Mr Warburton was blind to us and only had eyes for the bony Mrs Cohen.

  Tuesday 9th July

  We have dusted off my credit cards to tide us over until we receive the money for the house.

  And Rosencrantz is coming out of rehab on Thursday…

  Wednesday 10th July

  I had my thirty-six-week appointment with midwife Justine today. It was very hot and all the windows were open at the surgery.

  Things were a little awkward; the last time we’d met was at Rosencrantz’s intervention/baby shower.

  ‘Have you decided which hospital you want to give birth in?’ she asked as she tested my urine sample with a little stick and measured my blood pressure.

  ‘I can choose?’

  ‘Yes, the NHS has ‘choose and book’. You can look at hospital statistics, mortality rates, what the food is like, if there’s free parking… You can even write a review!’

  ‘Sounds just like Amazon.’

  ‘But obviously the hospital can’t guarantee same-day delivery,’ she joked. ‘Some women spend days in labour!’

  ‘I’m going to go for University College Hospital. Can I have a Caesarian through choose and book?’

  ‘I don’t recommend it, if the mother doesn’t need it. It might be nice and quick like opening a tent flap, but there’s weeks of recovery, and you’re moving to a farm.’

  ‘I won’t be shovelling manure for a while,’ I said. She then explained how during a vaginal birth the baby is coated with some ‘rather marvellous bacteria’ that are crucial for the baby’s immunity… she then asked if I’d like a laxative before the birth so I don’t ‘mess myself’ during labour… I long to get this baby out of me, if only to stop these deeply embarrassing conversations.

  When I got home my Skype began to trill. It was Meryl. She was back in her living room! The geese were taking flight above her hair, and Tony was beside her, bouncing Wilfred on his knee.

  ‘Ooh, look at you Coco! About to pop!’ she said peering into the webcam.

  ‘Hi Meryl I’ve just had my thirty-six-week check-up,’ I said.

  ‘With the midwife whose father does tricks?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘It’s a pity he can’t magic your baby out,’ said Tony. ‘Meryl’s labour was epic! Hours and hours of pain…’

  ‘Yes, it was,’ said Meryl. ‘A hundred and twenty-six hours I was in labour, Coco! A hundred and twenty-six! I was only one hour off that film, ‘127 Hours. And I would rather have cut my own arm off, believe you me.’

  ‘Meryl…’ I said.

  ‘Apparently Coco, I had a very stubborn cervix. It refused to dilate. I went through six midwives; they all gave me a membrane sweep. Even the one with the false stick-on nails, after which, if I hadn’t been in terrible agony, I’d have asked to speak to her superior.’

  ‘Meryl please…’ I said.

  ‘You know what did it in the end? Tony offered to do a membrane sweep himself. He popped his fingers in and within ten minutes I was fully dilated… I think it’s because of all the woodwork he does, planing the coffins. His hands are much rougher which really helped disperse the cells in my vag…’

  ‘Meryl I don’t want to know!’ I said. She looked a bit hurt. Why do people think I want to hear this? It’s fine to talk about it when it’s not happening to you. But this is real and happening to me now, and I’m scared.

  ‘Yes. Point taken. I’m sorry dear,’ said Meryl. ‘Do you notice something?’ she added excitedly.

  ‘Yes… Of course, you and Tony are back together,’ I said.

  ‘What? Oh yes we are, no I wasn’t talking about that. Look, we’ve got new curtains!’

  Meryl angled the webcam round and proudly showed the new purple curtains she’d made with matching tie backs, and a ruched pelmet.

  ‘They’re very nice,’ I said. ‘But when did you two reconcile?’

  ‘Throwback Thursday!’ grinned Tony bearing down on the webcam with a red face. ‘I won her back with the Throwback Thursday picture of us in ‘A Clockwork Orange’!’

  ‘He didn’t know anything about Throwback Thursday,’ said Meryl. ‘He just happened to post it on a Thursday…’

  ‘Yes! I didn’t know about it I just happened to post it on a Thursday!’ he repeated. ‘We’ve decided to call it quits.’

  ‘Yes, that Mai Ling wasn’t all that she cracked up to be. Chinese people can be very cruel,’ said Meryl. ‘She kicked the next door neighbour’s cat!’

  ‘And besides, if we split the proceeds of this h
ouse we’d have to downsize drastically,’ said Tony.

  ‘Which neither of us wants to do,’ added Meryl patting his knee.

  ‘Well, congratulations,’ I said. ‘Look I’ve got to go. I’ve got lots to do and Rosencrantz is coming home tomorrow.’

  ‘That’s why I called,’ said Meryl. ‘Do you want us there? I can whip up a flan and we can come down in the hearse, no problem…’

  ‘No, I think we’re just going to keep things low-key.’

  ‘Okay dear. Do keep in touch about the birth! And Tony is here if you need him!’

  Tony wiggled his fingers and raised his eyebrows. I quickly hung up, feeling nauseous.

  Thursday 11th July

  I had a phone call last night to say Rosencrantz would be leaving Pathways at seven in the morning. I got up very early and scoured the house for painkillers, and anything containing alcohol, including mouthwash and anti-bacterial hand gel.

  ‘I really don’t think Rosencrantz is going to drink anti-bacterial hand gel,’ said Adam as I bustled about with a bin-liner.

  ‘But you’re not an alcoholic, it might be quite nice with a mixer… Maybe I should sling out the mixers too,’ I said dragging the bin liner into the kitchen.

  When the house was clear, we drove over to West London. The clinic sat on a non-descript street of terraced houses. Shortly after six, Rosencrantz emerged wearing the same clothes he’d had on when he went in. His black eye had healed, his hair was longer and he had lost that thin haunted look. He bowled into me and we had a long hug.

  ‘I’m so sorry Adam,’ said Rosencrantz bursting into tears. Adam looked at him for a second and gave him a big hug too.

 

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