ACTION LIST
Buy presents which are meaningful for friends and family but are also cheap.
Don’t eat everything at parties.
Don’t drink too much at parties—makes me too honest.
Be nice to Paul.
Be nice to me.
Go to gym six times a week, two hours on Saturday morning.
Enjoy work.
1st December
I am miserable. John has not called. He was back over a week ago but Medina, his PA, says he is out of the office and can’t be contacted. He hasn’t texted or phoned or left a message on my machine or anything. Karen says he hasn’t left a message and I trust her. Haven’t told her about him, that I like him, but I think she guesses.
2nd December
Still miserable. Still hasn’t phoned. Paul asks why I’m distracted. I just say pressure of work and that I may be made redundant and that I’m looking for a new job. I’ve had about fifteen since I’ve been going out with him, but that includes temporary work. I want to be a travel journalist and get paid for travelling but don’t know how to do it. So far my jobs have been in every conceivable field bar the one I want.
I got a week on the Mail on Sunday once, as a junior reporter at the start of the Gulf crisis. Told them I’d worked on the South China Morning Post and on regionals. They gave me a break. I got them a scoop (first British family to escape). Made page three (only beaten to front page by torpedoes being sent off). But second week they discovered I was just a wannabe so gave me the push. Ironic that when I’d managed to prove myself in one week they didn’t give me another chance. But that was life. And it proved that I could do it—given the chance. But here I was, working for Rogerson Railways, hoping to become a travel writer.
3rd December
John still hasn’t phoned. He has forgotten about me, obviously. Am getting the Guardian and UK Press Gazette. Must focus on something positive. Plus have lots of parma ham and port dinner parties to prepare for. And go to. The dinner parties Paul’s friends organise obviously sing from the same cookery book. Some are Delia. Some are Nigella. Some are Oliver. All taste the same. All finish with some sort of chocolate decadence and all finish with men as pissed as farts. And the women drive home. And the conversation is always the same.
4th December
I’ve given up on him. He’s not going to phone. He blew on my calves and rolled about with me half naked and didn’t even get to second base, but that was it. My wet dream has to stop at that point. I have to wake up and smell the roses. I love Paul. Forget John. He’s an unknown. The deep blue sea. Better the devil and all that.
5th December
He phones. Back to the deep blue sea.
John—‘Sorry I haven’t called.’
Keep cool.
Sarah—‘Don’t worry. I’ve been very busy.’
John—‘Really? Medina said you phoned quite a bit. Six times in three days, in fact.’
Sarah—‘Must have been another Sarah.’
John—‘No, she said it was you. The one she overheard calling me a rude wanker. Anyway, I was in a stream of meetings, so very busy.’
Sarah—‘How was the holiday?’
John—‘Fine. Lots of sunshine.’
Sarah—‘And sex?’
John—‘Some.’
I shouldn’t have asked. It made me feel sick to think of him with Amanda. But why should I worry? He wasn’t mine. We’d just had a grope after all.
Sarah—‘That’s nice.’
John—‘No, it wasn’t actually. It was quite disconcerting. I thought about you all the time. I kept seeing your face in my head.’
That’s nice, I thought.
Sarah—‘That’s nice. I’ve been thinking about you too.’
John—‘When do you want to meet next? Tomorrow?’
Sarah—‘I can’t do tomorrow. Have a date I can’t break—’ (true) ‘—with Paul and friends.’ False—just friends, but didn’t want to break it.
John—‘When can we meet, then? Can you do a weekend?’
Sarah—‘How will you explain that to Amanda?’
John—‘She’s moving out of the cottage soon. She doesn’t know about you but suspects. I’ve told her it’s nothing. Which of course it is, isn’t it Sarah?’
Sarah—‘Of course. I’m just a bit on the side, John.’
John—‘Quite.’
Sarah—‘I can’t do a weekend, but I may be able to manage an evening. Can you come over to my flat and stay the night?’
John—‘I should think so.’
Sarah—‘Fine. Next week.’
6th December
Called into the boss’s office. Edward Benjamin. In his forties. Bright, drinks too much, ruddy-faced. Likes me, but not sexually. Level-headed. Worked with John lots.
Nine a.m. I’m being made redundant. Nothing personal. Culling at Central Office pre-privatisation. I’m a good one; they want to keep me. But I can take redundancy and cheque if I want it. Either that or I can move to a new department. Do I want to move to one of the regions? Rogerson Railways Southern? John Wayne has suggested that he needs a good PR. Would I like to work for him?
I think hard.
Sarah—‘No. I would rather take the money. Next question.’
Edward—‘Are you having an affair with John Wayne?’
Stunned silence.
Sarah—‘No, er, isn’t that personal?’
Edward—‘It’s been noted you’ve been talking to him a lot recently and calling his office.’
Sarah—‘That was just on business.’
Edward—‘I understand, Sarah. But remember John is amoral. He doesn’t know right from wrong. He’s a womaniser and plays with the minds of young ladies, as he does their bodies.’
For some strange reason this turns me on. I smile. Edward sees it.
Edward—‘Just be careful, Sarah. I like John, but he’s no good for you and no good for women. OK?’
Sarah—‘OK, Edward. Thank you for your concern but I think I can look after myself.’
15th December
Last day in the office. Huge bunch of flowers. John due to meet me at Liverpool Street Station. He’s staying at the flat. Karen has decided she will stay with her boyfriend tonight. I’ve asked her to. Train journey takes for ever. We don’t say anything. Just look at each other through the foliage. He asks who the flowers came from. I say an admirer. In reality they came from a PR company that wants me to work for them.
Six-thirty p.m. we arrive at my flat. Only thing I have in the fridge is vodka and fresh orange juice. I fix two drinks. Then order pizza. I don’t eat pizza, but John does and I’m not hungry. For food anyway. I want him to blow on my calves again. This time I’ve waxed.
Six thirty-five p.m. TV on. Clothes off. He rips my knickers. La Perla, £55. Why do I bother? I tell him he can buy me more. He says he will. Rolling around. Trying to tease one another into submission but neither gives up. He doesn’t want to ‘take me’, he wants to save the moment until Amanda has moved out. Do I understand? Yes, I do. But that doesn’t stop me trying to tease him into submission. It doesn’t work. He is controlled and in control, and it’s wonderful and illicit and dangerous and I’m high on him and his touch and just being with him for the moment.
Seven thirty-five p.m. Pizza boy arrives. I pay him. Dressed in dressing gown. He smiles. Takes money and leaves.
One a.m. Still rolling around. Naked. John says he will sleep in Karen’s bed. If he sleeps with me, he may be tempted. He tells me Karen keeps all her underwear under her pillow. She is a size 12-14 and likes M&S cotton.
One-twenty a.m. Watch bedroom door, wondering if he will come in and ‘take me’.
One twenty-five a.m. He doesn’t. Fall asleep.
16th December
Eight a.m. John goes. Very cool. Make him toast. He says it’s slightly burnt. I apologise. No kiss on cheek. Seems too clichéd. I’m not going into work today, but don’t want to wish him a ‘nice day’. He tells me he is having dinner with his work colleagues. I ask him not to mention that he’s seen me naked or that my cuffs and collar don’t match. He says he will.
Eight-thirty a.m. I’m daydreaming and call Catherine. Catherine tells me she is in lust and love with yoga teacher and wants to come round and talk about him and how wonderful he is at sex. I tell her about John. She understands why (she knows about abortion and no sex and stuff).
Nine-thirty a.m. Catherine comes round and talks about Liam. Solidly for three hours.
Twelve-thirty p.m. We go to Pizza Express and get a salade niçoise and Diet Coke (me) and cheese pizza with extra mushrooms and apple juice (her). She tells me more about Liam and then I start to talk about John.
Two-thirty p.m. Still talking. People on surrounding tables stop talking and listen to our conversation. Far more interesting.
Catherine—‘When I’m with him I just want to rip his clothes off.’
Sarah—‘It’s lust, not love, then.’
Catherine—‘But I think about him all the time.’
Sarah—‘What about Freddie?’
Catherine—‘I can’t bear for him to touch me. And anyway I know he has seen other women. Once I found scratch marks on his back and he admitted there was someone else, but only a one-night stand.’
Sarah—‘Why are you still with him?’
Catherine—‘There was no one else and he said he would never do it again.’
Sarah—‘Do you believe him?’
Catherine—‘No, but I don’t care now.’
Sarah—‘What are you going to do?’
Catherine—‘Freddie wants to move to Richmond. I want to stay put, for obvious reasons. He’s buying a place there. Think he’s almost completed.’
Sarah—‘Have you seen it or had any say on where in Richmond?’
Catherine—‘Freddie never asks, Sarah. He just does something and expects me to follow his lead.’
Sarah—‘And you’re not going to this time?’
Catherine—‘Right. All I can think about is Liam. When I’m with him, the next time I’m going to be with him. It’s nearly Christmas and I’m wearing skirts up to my bottom and don’t care. He makes me feel sexy and wanted and it’s wonderful. He’s also experimental.’
Sarah—‘In what way? With sex?’
Catherine—‘Fruit and chocolate, and he does things Freddie would have never considered.’
Sarah—‘Like what?’
Catherine—‘I wouldn’t like to say.’
Then she spends the next hour saying what she wouldn’t like to say. How flexible, focused, fun and fuckable Liam is, and how she never gets to bed but he doesn’t want her to stay the night at his place ever or stay over at her place ever. And how the oral sex is good. And the anal sex is good. And how well-endowed he is and how size matters. Which disturbs me, but I say nothing.
Catherine—‘He keeps asking about my parents. He seems concerned that they are both dead and asks if they left me OK financially.’
Sarah—‘Does he think you’re loaded, then?’
Scowl.
Catherine—‘No.’ More upbeat. ‘But perhaps I should tell him I am and then he’ll ask me to marry him.’
Sarah—‘Do you want to marry him?’
Catherine—‘At the moment I want to spend the rest of my life with him. All I can think about is being with him. Smelling him. Touching him. When I go to his classes all the other girls lust after him. When he stretches our inner thighs he steps over us, and the girls try to look up his shorts and he looks at me and I look at him and we know what we will be doing in two hours’ time and that this exercise is just the warm-up.’
The conversation continues. The surrounding tables are silent. The closest ones have had three cups of coffee and are phoning their offices, telling their bosses or secretaries that the meeting has overrun. I suggest she tries Pilates instead.
17th December
Seven a.m.
Message received:
Thinking of you. Can I call?
Message sent:
Yes, call me.
Phone rings.
‘Hi. Where are you?’
Sarah—‘Still in bed.’
John—‘What wearing?’
Sarah—‘Nothing.’
John—‘Pity. Much sexier with something on. Put something on.’
Sarah—‘When I have something on, knickers for example, you rip them off. So why bother? And I’ll wear or won’t wear what I like, OK?’
John—‘Sarah, I would really like you to put some lacy knickers on. Do you have lacy knickers?’
Sarah—‘Yes.’
John—‘Could you please put them on for me?’
Sarah—‘Yes.’
Sarah gets lacy knickers and thinks, This is stupid, but, hey, it’s seven a.m.
John—‘Have you got them on?’
Sarah—‘Yes.’
John—‘Where are your hands?’
Sarah—‘Where would you like them to be?’
John—‘In between your legs.’
Sarah—‘Where are your hands?’
John—‘I’m in the office. I’m not going to start wanking off in my office.’
Sarah—‘Why not? You’re asking me to do it.’
John—‘OK, then.’
I hear fumbling.
Sarah—‘You’re pretending.’
John—‘Suppose I could fake it, but it’s got to be quick. I’ve got a 7.30 meeting and I’ve got to be on time.’
Sarah—‘Then start talking and turn me on.’
John—‘You’ve got to turn yourself on, but I’ll talk you through it. We’re in a restaurant. Late lunch. Midsummer. You’re wearing a skirt. Silk. Just below the knees. Tight white top and cardigan. Lacy knickers.’
Sarah—‘How can you tell?’
John—‘I can tell. It’s my story so I can tell. Shut up and listen. You’re wearing lacy knickers.’
Sarah—‘You’ve already said that.’
John—‘Shut up. Do you want to come or not?’
Sarah—‘Yes.’
John—‘You sit down on the other side of the table. I ask if you can sit by me. I ask you to go and take your knickers off and return and give them to me.’
Sarah—‘Mmm. But that’s not exactly original. Didn’t Sharon Stone or someone do something like that in a film?’
John—‘She nicked the idea from me. Don’t interrupt. You do it. You go and take your knickers off and return, hiding them in your hand. You hand them to me as the waiter appears for our order. He sees what you are doing and you’re embarrassed, but he says nothing. You sit down opposite me. We order. Something light.’
Sarah—‘What do I have?’
John—‘It doesn’t matter.’
Sarah—‘It does matter. Can I have sushi?’
John—‘It’s not a Japanese restaurant, but if you want sushi you can have it. Shh, just listen and come. I ask if I can see you. See between your legs. You agree. I drop my napkin.’
Sarah—‘Bit obvious, isn’t it?’
John—‘That’s the sex in it. Stop interrupting. I bend down to pick it up. As I do so, I move your legs apart and watch you. I move my hands slowly up your thighs and almost reach you, but stop short. I pick up the napkin and call the waiter to order some wine and water. When the waiter has gone I ask you to put your hand down your skirt and to gently start playing with yourself. Move yourself closer to the table so people cannot see. You’re starting to get wet.
‘I ask you to move to my side and sit by me to read some papers I have brought with me. As you do so, I move closer to you and lift your skirt and move my fingers into you, which makes you flushed and vulnerable and nervous the waiter might return at any moment. Apart from the tablecloth you are on show. The restaurant is half full and you’re on show and starting to feel very turned on, and can’t stop yourself. You’re so wet now, Sarah.
‘The waiter returns. I take my fingers from you and ask you to move back to your seat. He delivers the food. He returns with the wine. Asks me to try it. I say it will be fine. Then the water. I eat the food and feed you some of mine and you feed me some of yours. We drink the wine. I dip my fingers into my glass and ask you to come to my side of the table again. You do. Once again I put my hand down your skirt. This time my fingers are moist and I gently stroke you. I’m talking to you all the while about business and asking you questions which you are increasingly not able to answer. You are more aware that people are looking at us, but you can’t help yourself. You can’t help yourself, Sarah, and I’m stroking you more urgently and you want to open your…’
Sarah—‘Aghhhhhhhhhhhh…’
John—‘And you come.’
Sarah—‘Have a nice meeting.’
John—‘I will. I also need a tissue now.’
Sarah—‘Sure Medina will get one for you.’
John—‘Er, no. She does most things, but this I think I will do by myself.’
Sarah—‘Thank you. Lovely wake-up call.’
John—‘Next time I see you. I want to do it for real.’
18th December
Seven a.m.
Message received:
Been thinking of you. Can I call?
Message sent:
Yes.
Five past seven to seven twenty-five a.m.—phone sex.
This time a crowded beach. Sand gets everywhere. Make myself come thinking of him…
Message sent:
7.30
Just have.
19th December
Seven a.m.
Message received:
Been thinking of you. Can I call?
Message sent:
Yes.
Five past seven till seven twenty-five a.m.—phone sex.
This time a board meeting. On the table. In front of all the directors. Purpose of meeting: a lesson in customer focus. How to give and receive it. How to manage expectations. Benefits and concerns—
20th December
Seven a.m.
Message received:
Been thinking of you. Can I call?
Message sent:
Only if you make me come.
Five past seven to seven fifty-five a.m.—phone sex.
In cinema. Matinée. A comedy. Back row. Semi-crowded. Coming at an inappropriate moment. Having to be quiet. No screaming. Difficult for me. Very wet. Very turned on.
21st December
Seven a.m.
Message received:
With Amanda this week. Will be difficult to call. Hope you have a good Christmas. Will call after Christmas. Big kiss. Keep wet and wild.
Message sent:
You too. I will.
24th December
I don’t feel Christmassy. I feel lustful and in party mode but not for and with my boyfriend of five years. I go to church more times in a week than I do all year. With my family, his family, friends. We sing carols and say prayers. But Paul’s not in my head or my understanding. Not in my eyes or in my looking. Not in my mouth or in my speaking. He’s still in my prayers and in my thinking. But not the way he was—five years ago. I’m thinking of John. I’m thinking of what John will be like. If I will see him again. If he will decide to stay with Amanda or if he will decide to give me a try. Or if he will find another squeeze to be festive with this season.
I wonder how I can break it to Paul that we should perhaps give each other space. The ‘I need space’ line. You know—the one that precedes ‘I’ve found someone else’ if you’re pressed. I can’t do it before Christmas. It will ruin his holiday. He’s doing well at work, expecting a large bonus, going to buy a new house and seems happy. I haven’t been asking or hinting about marriage because, hey, my mind’s been on something and someone else—so I’m cooler but also more energised with Paul, because I’m thinking of John and Paul gets the benefit of John’s influence. Win win win situation, methinks.
Spending Christmas with cousins. Paul picking me up from my flat. Karen staying with her on-off boyfriend and his family. Exchange gifts. Leave flat at five p.m. and drive to Weston Turvill. Paul says he wants to stop off at a pub on the way. We pull into the car park. Six-thirty p.m. Paul hands me a little black box.
Paul—‘Will you be my wife?’
Stunned. Have been thinking about John all day and on the journey, and thinking about breaking up with Paul. Now he proposes. He hasn’t gone down on one knee. He is proposing to me in a car park. Of a pub. On Christmas Eve. Do I say no and ruin his Christmas so he has to spend it with my parents and cousins knowing that I don’t want to marry him? He’s bought the ring. I open the box. It’s lovely. Diamonds. Four. He’s chosen it without consultation, but he’s chosen well.
Paul—‘I chose it. I hope you like it.’
I don’t look at him. I think fuck. What the fuck shall I do? Devil or deep blue sea? John is lust. I know that. I’ve just met him. I know that. It’s sex. I know that. Paul is my love, my soulmate, but there’s a problem. I know that. What the fuck do I do? Can I call a friend? No, I cannot. I choose.
Sarah—‘I would love to be your wife, Paul.’
I lie.
He kisses me. I kiss him back. We go to the pub and order champagne and look into the log fire and tell the girl serving us that we’ve just got engaged and she’s happy for us. Happier than I am for us. I look at Paul and know I love him, but also want to tell him stuff that I can’t tell him. I love him but can’t talk to him any more. I can’t open up to him any more. I can’t tell him I resent him. Not now. Not now, as he has just proposed and given me this ring, which he proceeds to tell me cost more than £1500, which somehow takes the magic out of it.
After an hour drinking champagne we return to the car. Holding hands. Arrive at my cousins’. He tells me he hasn’t asked my father. He goes to the house first. He goes to my father, who is sitting by himself in the sitting room. My mother and cousins are in the kitchen. I go into the kitchen and make small talk with my cousins and try to ignore my mother.
When Paul returns I go in to see my father while Paul breaks the news to my mum. As I walk to the sitting room I can hear silence, then screams of delight coming from the kitchen. I hope they don’t follow me in. I want to be with my dad at this moment. He smiles at me as I enter the room.
Dad—‘I’m very happy for you, Sarah.’
Sarah—‘Thank you, Dad. He’s lovely, isn’t he?’
Dad—‘I hope he will make you very happy. Are you happy, Sarah?’
I look at him as though he can read my mind or my face or see through me that I’m not quite sure. But I think it’s just the way it’s come out. No. I look at his face and it’s a genuine question. He asks it again.
Dad—‘Are you happy, Sarah?’
Sarah—‘Yes, Dad. He’s a very good man. He loves me very much.’
Dad—‘Do you love him? Will he make you happy?’
Sarah—‘Yes, I think so. Yes, I do.’
Dad—‘Good, Sarah.’
He looks at me and says nothing. As if he knows but will let me lie in my own bed and sleep in it and learn from it.
Mother comes in with cousins. Hugging me and kissing me. Mother cries. It’s for herself. She’s got her daughter off her hands to a well-off young man. She has something to tell her friends. Her coterie of Hyacinth Bucket ladies who lunch. I can see in her eyes she is planning the big white wedding. Boasting about how wonderful the groom is. What a nice family they are. The church. Who she will invite. Who she will tell. What dress she will wear. All the things that are not important. How it will be her day. And I don’t want her there. For fuck’s sake, I don’t know if I want to be there.
Dad—‘When are you going to get married?’
Paul—‘Well, probably in about nine months. We were thinking September. Why wait? We’ve been going out for over five years.’
Dad—‘The weather will still be good then. Good idea.’
I’m given a glass of champagne and drink it quickly. Then another. And another. We drink until four a.m. the following morning. Christmas Day. And then make our way to the bedrooms. I cuddle up to my fiancé. I feel good and comforted but disturbed. I should be ecstatic but I’m not. I should feel secure but I’m not. I love Paul. There is no doubt. But until this moment in time, this very moment in time, he’s been far from my thoughts and my dreams. And I think of John and how I shall tell him and how I shall broach the subject.
Sarah—Hi, John, did you have a good Christmas?
John—Yes, Sarah. Did you? Get anything nice?
Sarah—Well, yes, actually. I got a really lovely diamond ring and I’m going to marry Paul. OK? In September. Big white wedding. Would you like to come?
Yes, I can see it now.
25th December
Blur. Turkey went in late so we ate at six in the evening. Lots of laughter, tears and dirty jokes. Feeling numb. Holding Paul’s hand a lot. Dad keeps looking at me as though he knows. He smiles and stares at me. And then at Paul. Mother totally oblivious of everything. I wonder if she really is my mother or if I was swapped in the hospital. I am so unlike her. She is horrible. Like Hyacinth without the humour.
26th December
Early start. We set off to Paul’s parents. Back to Chelmsford. Paul rang his parents on Christmas Day to tell them the news. He tells me they are delighted. When we arrive at their home the only one there is his brother Mark. His parents and younger brother are at church. They are Catholics and Irish and Mark doesn’t believe and is the rebel and is the one out of all the family (including Paul) I most like and respect. He’s honest with his anger. He’s the black sheep and talks to his parents, whereas Paul and his other brother Andrew don’t. They are economical with information. Don’t think it’s an Irish thing. Or an Irish Catholic thing. Or a son-parent thing. Perhaps it’s a combination of the lot. Anyway. They don’t talk.
Mark hugs me and says, ‘Hello, sis.’ And I cry. It’s a genuine hug and I think he’s genuinely happy to be having a sister and I’m genuinely happy to be having him as a brother. Only children miss out on that. Got to play with all the toys, but would have liked a brother. Preferably an older one who would invite his friends round. Potential boyfriend material.
The others arrive about ten a.m. Hugs all round. More champagne. More turkey—this time at a reasonable time. No TV allowed. Just games. Mark likes to win. Even with his new sister-in-law. I like being part of this family. They are nice people. I prefer them to my own family. They seem to like each other. There’s always a tension with mine. Sort of dysfunctional but I love them all. As individuals. Just not together in one room for any given period.
I should forget John. This is what I want. A proper family. Nice people. People who will accept me for what I am. Er—hold on one minute there. They won’t accept me for who I am. They don’t know who I am. I’ve been seeing someone else. They don’t know about the abortion. They would be devastated if they knew. Paul has not told them. They don’t know about our problems. Paul won’t tell them and neither will I. They won’t accept me for who I am. They accept me for what they perceive me to be. Which isn’t me. Which isn’t me.
Boxing Day afternoon I find myself for a few minutes alone. Sitting on the toilet. Contemplating life. And finding space. I think, Shall I go through with this? I’m deceiving everyone, but especially myself. Do I come clean with Paul? Do I say, By the way, I’ve met someone else, but it’s just a sexual thing? A fling? Or do I keep my big mouth shut. After all, John is a womaniser. He’ll get bored of me—right? He’s amoral and I’ll grow to hate him as he’ll treat me badly, and Paul, despite the fact he won’t sleep with me, is a nice guy. He’s a lovely guy and I love him. But I’m sleeping with someone else. Well, not exactly sleeping with. We haven’t actually done it yet. Phone sex? Does that count? It’s not even oral sex. Does rolling round naked count? Or snogging? Or thinking about it? According to the church if you think about it, it’s as good as doing it. Then again, it may all fizzle out with John anyway, so why rock the boat and tell Paul? He’ll be upset and I love him.
Keep it to yourself, Sarah.
So I do. For Christmas. I smile and drink and get drunk and get a headache and a fucking migraine which bangs away at my head. And I fall asleep and Paul tells me that despite the fact we are engaged it would be nice to wait. And that we can hug naked and would that be all right? Wait for the wedding day before we make love properly? Wait nine months. Nine fucking months to make love. Do I understand?
No, I don’t, but I will have to try to understand. Yes, I understand.
He tells me he proposed because we had been long enough going out, and that we had had our ups and downs, but now that I had left the Situation Manager’s role at the railways I would be getting a job locally, and that he had done well in the City and was expecting a big bonus and that it was the right time to do it.
So, nothing to do with spontaneous romance, then, or an undying urge to want to spend the rest of his life with me. Nice. But practical, I suppose. Practical. I don’t think I will ever be poor with this man, or feel insecure. I may feel unloved and unwanted and stifled and controlled and aching for affection. But I will never want for food or clothing or material comforts. All things that matter to my mother and which I don’t give a fuck about. But perhaps this is what marriage is all about. Compromise and seeing a sense of what is and isn’t important. After all, romantic love dies, doesn’t it? And marriage evolves into friendship. It’s just that I thought that happened when you were in your sixties, not just getting married. And perhaps waiting will increase the excitement. After all, Paul is wonderful and I love him and he loves me. Or what he wants me to be or what he thinks is me. Which isn’t the same thing—but does that matter?
New Year’s Eve
I haven’t contacted John. I haven’t answered his calls. I haven’t answered his text messages. What can I say to the man? I’ve got to do it at some stage, right? He’ll get bored with me and I won’t need to chuck him—he will chuck me. Right? At some stage, before September. It’s nine months, after all. He’ll get bored with me in nine months. And I live in Chelmsford and he lives in Surrey and I don’t work for the railways any more. So it will be difficult.