Saturday Morning

We are waist-deep in water and marching. At the poolside our instructor bounces on her toes, her compact body tight-sprung like one of the machines in the gym. ‘That’s it ladies!’ she calls, ‘keep working!’ Maggie marches behind me as the circle rotates. If she wasn’t so keen on Aquafit it’s unlikely I’d be here, not on a Saturday morning, but then friendship, like marriage, is sometimes a matter of compromise.

The class is halfway through. The dance music is pounding. I’ve nearly finished a To Do list in my head when I catch sight of a figure crossing the far edge of the pool – a girl of about twenty, her hair a mass of curls. She raises a hand to wave at someone, and as she smiles my list breaks apart and all at once the past comes crashing in. I jerk my chin back with a gasp as if to keep from taking in water.

‘Careful, Tess!’ Maggie is at my shoulder. I start moving again before there’s a pile-up behind me, trying to keep track of the girl as she heads towards the diving boards to scale the silver ladder.

The lesson continues. It’s only a girl, I tell myself. A girl swimming, that’s all.

Our instructor is bouncing with new urgency, her voice more insistent, the same tone used at fairgrounds when the rides speed up. Twelve women jump on the spot, spinning invisible hoops on their forearms until their muscles burn. The girl dives into deep water and disappears.

In the changing room, citrus shampoos mingle with the chemical tang of chlorine as we go about the business of dressing and undressing. Pool noise swells and fades with every flap of the swing door.

‘Honestly Tess, there it was, large as life. Larger. It practically needed its own introduction.’ Maggie is drying her hair with a beach towel. ‘He didn’t have a moustache in the photo. You need to be prepared for something like that. It was…’ she reaches for the word, ‘…transfixing. Over dinner, I had to stop myself from feeding it.’

I laugh and button my shirt.

‘And it wasn’t just the facial hair. I mean that doesn’t have to be a deal-breaker, but there were other things he didn’t mention. Like his age.’ Beside us a woman has a foot on the bench and is buckling her roman sandal with infinite care. Never too concerned about discretion, Maggie doesn’t seem to notice her lean nearer.

‘His profile said forty-nine, but if he was a day under sixty, I’m an Olympic athlete. Why do they think lying is all right?’

The internet dating has been going on for a while, but the only men she’s meeting seem to be deficient in some respect: the one who never paid for anything; the one who turned out to be married; the one who had a previously undisclosed enthusiasm for re-enacting historic battles.

‘We could try Salsa dancing,’ I say, thinking that might yield a few possibilities. ‘Do people still do that?’

Maggie says they do, but wouldn’t I rather go with Pete? For a moment I try to picture us in a community hall gyrating our hips. It’s been suggested in the room of the two-seater sofa that we should spend more time together – could a Latin beat improve the rhythm of our marriage? Possibly. But Pete’s never been much of a dancer – six foot three, beardy, size twelve feet, he’s more at home on a rugby pitch. Anyway, that isn’t a conversation for the communal changing room and, still musing on the idea of a shared hobby, I wring out my costume as Maggie tells me about a fantastic dress she’s spotted.

‘Just your colour,’ she says, sliding a comb through her bob.

‘Do I have a colour?’

‘You know you do … Colour me Lovely?’

A birthday gift three years ago – how could I forget the Colour me Lovely lady? I stood in her living room for an hour while she held material swatches against my face and told me I should be wearing more prune, ivory and sage green. She also said I could do topaz, lemon and pink (as long as it was tawny rather than baby). I thanked her, put my cycling helmet back on and pedalled home.

Maggie slows the comb. ‘That was fun, wasn’t it?’

My agreement seems to make her happy, and she sings to herself as she fastens an earring. On paper we may seem unlikely friends, but shared childhoods can easily thicken water to blood, and forty years on from our first meeting in a Stevenage back garden where we made perfume from fistfuls of her mum’s roses, Maggie’s more like my sister. A louder, more extravagant sister.

‘Doing anything this afternoon?’ I ask.

‘Not especially.’

Her response is uncharacteristically brief and I raise an eyebrow. ‘Another date?’

She smiles, ‘Something like that,’ and whisks her make-up bag to a bank of mirrors. Whatever it is will keep until next Saturday, or a mid-week phone call.

The key to my bike lock isn’t in the pocket of my jeans, or the pouch of my shoulder bag, and I’m on my knees feeling under the bench, when I hear someone say Excuse me. I look up. Her curls are wet now, but it’s the girl from the diving boards. At close range, the resemblance turns my heart: the same almond-shaped eyes, arched brows, wide mouth. I move aside. She grabs a towel from the hook and enters a cubicle to dress.

When Maggie reappears I’m sitting on the bench with the bag gaping open on my lap. My legs feel useless, as if from the effort of treading water.

‘Are you all right?’

‘Fine.’

She regards me with a frown, and I nod to reassure her, to reassure myself.

‘Just… I can’t find my bike key.’

‘Tessa, you and keys.’ Together we finish the search.

It’s usually me with an eye on my watch, but today it’s Maggie who’s eager to be off into the Cambridge sunshine. But I don’t ask any more questions – wherever she is or isn’t going is her business. She brushes my cheek in a quick goodbye.

When she’s gone I remain on the bench, not wanting to admit what I’m waiting for, or rather who. In a few minutes the girl has finished dressing. I stand, ready to leave. My pulse throbs high in my neck as I approach and ask for the time.

She glances down at her sports watch then into my face.

‘Twenty-past twelve.’

‘Thanks.’

It is remarkable, her eyes are green, and at the corner of her lip is a beauty spot. I hesitate, wanting to speak, wanting to say You look like someone, someone I knew years ago. Could she be a relative? A distant cousin? But nothing comes. Instead I’m simply staring at her while women file past us barefoot towards the pool. The changing room is too hot and I have to get out.

‘Sorry,’ I say, accidentally brushing her shoulder in a move to the door. Sorry. Sorry.