Chapter Nine
Natalie had expected Steve and Jill’s place to look more or less exactly like Meg’s, a huge sprawling Victorian mansion, only probably tidier and decorated in more of a contemporary style. She was almost right, except that it was one of three apartments that the house had been converted to in the nineties.
Whereas Meg’s house was all quirky little rooms, pantries and parlours, Steve’s place was open-plan, polished wood flooring and flat white walls. The main living space included a stainless steel state of the art kitchen at one end and Steve’s draftsman’s table at the other.
‘Livework space,’ Steve said, melding the two words into one as he showed Natalie in. ‘That’s what it’s all about these days. Multi-purpose living.’
‘Multi-purpose living!’ Natalie replied. ‘I’m impressed. It’s hard enough to find any purpose to living at all when you’ve only had three hours’ sleep and your jeans don’t fit you any more.’
Natalie winked at Jess, who was sitting quite gingerly on the edge of a long orange sofa with such a low back and arms that to lean on it would be to take your life into your own hands.
‘Look at you,’ she said to Jess. ‘You look great, not a bulge or a spare tyre to be seen. I want to be you.’ Both Jess and Natalie were surprised by how sincere she had sounded, Jess because she was convinced that she must be the least attractive adult here and Natalie because she had never wanted to be anyone but herself before in her entire existence. Even when her life was at its most difficult and unsatisfactory in her twenties, she had always rather liked being herself.
‘You don’t want to be me,’ Jess exclaimed with a laugh. ‘I’m a total neurotic. I had us all up in the night because I thought Jacob was wheezing. I made Lee take us to casualty! Two hours, we were waiting for. In the end the doctors said he was snoring.’ She held up her thumb and forefinger. ‘I felt about this big.’
Jess cringed as she thought back on the events of the previous night, which since daylight had arrived seemed like one of the tangled and backwards stress dreams that she was frequently prone to these days. Except it had really happened.
She had woken with a start and for a while she couldn’t understand why. Jacob hadn’t been crying and for once she didn’t need to visit the bathroom. And then she heard this noise, a long, thin, rattling whistle that was coming from Jacob’s cot. There was a beat of silence and then the sound came again.
‘Lee!’ Jess prodded her boyfriend sharply in his ribs with her elbow.
‘What!’ he moaned. ‘’Syour turn.’
‘Lee!’ Jess elbowed him again. ‘Wake up.’
Reluctantly Lee sat up, rubbing the heels of his hands into his eyes.
‘Listen,’ Jess said intently. She was wide awake now and every muscle in her body was braced for disaster.
‘Oh yeah,’ Lee said groggily. ‘He sounds like a dolphin.’
‘He’s wheezing,’ Jess said anxiously, feeling her own chest tighten reflexively. ‘Do you remember I told you I had asthma as a kid, it was pretty bad. I had to go to hospital once.’ She gripped Lee’s forearm. ‘I think he’s having an asthma attack.’
‘He’s snoring,’ Lee said, flopping back down onto the bed.
‘He’s wheezing,’ Jess said. ‘I’m sure of it. Do you know how long a baby can go before getting brain damage if it’s not getting enough oxygen?’
Lee sat up again, sighing heavily as he kissed goodbye to any slim chance he had of sleep that night.
‘What do you want to do?’ he asked Jess resignedly.
‘We have to take him to A & E.’ Jess was already out of bed with the light switched on as she pulled her jeans up over her pyjama bottoms and reached for a jumper to cover her top half. Blinking in the sudden glare, Lee followed suit, and roused by the shock of electric light Jacob began to cry.
The rest of the night was a blur of street lights and hospital smells and bad instant coffee. Jess had cried when the triage nurse had told her she would have to wait, because she was certain that her baby couldn’t wait that long to be seen. With every passing second she imagined something worse that might have caused the noise. It hadn’t helped when Lee innocently pointed out that now Jacob was awake he had stopped snoring and perhaps they could all go home?
‘I expect you of all people to care about what happens to our son,’ Jess admonished him tearfully.
‘I do care,’ Lee told her. ‘I was trying to comfort you. I mean look at him. He looks OK.’
It was true, Jacob was now alert and sitting in his dad’s lap. He was looking around him at the busy waiting room, his eyes bright with curiosity at all the strange sights and sounds.
‘I don’t want you to comfort me,’ Jess told him crossly. ‘I want you to worry too.’
And then as they had waited, the sleeping drunk who had been sitting opposite them had let out a long loud rattling snore and Jacob had laughed. It was his first genuine laugh and his little shoulders shook as a real chuckle gurgled up from his tummy.
‘Did you see that?’ Lee exclaimed with delight. ‘He laughed! Our little kid laughed, do it again Jakey, go on, son!’
And sure enough as the inebriated man snored again Jacob laughed.
‘He can’t be that ill, can he?’ Lee said as he grinned at Jess. ‘Not if he’s laughing?’ And Jess had been unable to be worried for those few moments as she watched Jacob’s face light up with laughter. She got the feeling that as long as he was smiling everything would be all right.
It was then that they had finally been called in to see the paediatrician. They were out again in less than fifteen minutes.
‘Well, it’s impossible to know for sure if he had a wheezy chest before, but I’d say probably not because it is clear now,’ the doctor said after listening to Jacob for a few minutes. ‘He hasn’t got a cold or a fever, his oxygen levels are good. I don’t think he’s had an asthma attack. Sounds like he might have been snoring.’
‘That’s what I said,’ Lee said triumphantly, belatedly realising that probably wasn’t the best response when it came to staying in Jess’s good books.
‘Did you have the central heating on?’ the doctor asked.
‘Yes,’ Jess said anxiously. ‘But only a bit – I’m worried about it getting too hot or . . . too cold.’ She trailed off, suddenly aware of how foolish she must seem. A typical overanxious, first-time mother, wasting everybody’s time.
‘Central heating causes a lot of bunged-up noses,’ the doctor told her with a weary smile. ‘Which in turn causes snoring. You do have a family history of asthma so you should keep an eye on him, but I don’t think you have anything to worry about this time.’
‘I’m sorry to have bothered you,’ Jess said meekly.
‘Ah well, better to be safe than sorry,’ the doctor replied, glancing sympathetically at Lee. ‘And try not to worry so much.’
‘The thing is, how are we supposed to know?’ Natalie asked Jess after she had recounted her tale. ‘How do we know what it sounds like when a baby snores? We don’t. We have no precedent. I would have done the same thing.’
‘You wouldn’t have,’ Jess said.
‘Well, no I wouldn’t,’ Natalie admitted. ‘But only because you are a proper mum who even thinks to worry about things like that. It never crosses my mind that anything is ever going to be wrong with Freddie. I sort of think he’s indestructible.’
‘It’s official then,’ Jess said with a weak smile. ‘I wish I were you.’
‘I’ve got us snacks,’ Steve said, gesturing at a table of what looked like seeds and possibly pulses. ‘I know you like cake, Natalie, but Jill’s got us on a special diet. It’ll change in about two weeks. We’ll only be eating carbs again, or bananas. Or oily fish. She’s a big fan of diets, is Jill.’
‘Couldn’t you tell her that you don’t want to go on the diet with her?’ Natalie suggested.
‘Well, I could,’ Steve said with an affectionate smile. ‘But she’s a barrister. Very hard to argue with.’
When Frances arrived with Henry, Natalie was disappointed to see she did not have Meg, James and Iris in tow.
‘Where’s Meg?’ Natalie asked Frances before greeting her, which a second after she had opened her mouth she realised was probably something of a faux pas, particularly where prickly Frances was concerned.
‘Ill, apparently,’ Frances said as if Meg was being terribly rude by being unwell.
‘Oh dear.’ Natalie glanced at Jess. ‘I might go and see her later, do you want to . . .’
‘She doesn’t want visitors,’ Frances said, her voice taut with incredulity. ‘She told me to leave!’
‘Did she?’ Natalie was surprised. Telling someone to leave didn’t sound like Meg at all. The woman was patience personified and she was always putting everyone before herself. ‘She must be really ill then.’
‘Do you think so?’ Frances said, seeming to brighten up a little.
‘Oh yeah,’ Natalie reassured her. ‘I mean, you’re probably her closest friend. If she spoke like that to you she must be feeling awful.’
‘Oh dear,’ Frances said, her edges seeming to soften as she considered Natalie’s comment. ‘Poor Meg. She did look awful actually . . .’
‘Green tea anyone?’ Steve said, producing a Japanese tea set steaming with the aromatic brew.
Natalie wrinkled up her nose. ‘Now, Steve,’ she said. ‘I think we all know a baby group wouldn’t be a baby group without one of these.’ She plonked the now ubiquitous Jamaican ginger cake on his perspex coffee table. ‘And have you got any coffee? I don’t mind instant.’
The aerobics class didn’t go quite as well as Baby Music.
It was as if everyone was just a little bit off kilter, literally in Natalie’s case as she fell over trying to do one of the exercises, landing hard on her back to save Freddie from getting squashed by her weight, a fall which shot an intense spasm of pain up her spine. Steve, she supposed, wasn’t quite as relaxed as he was at Baby Music, because he was the only man and despite his best efforts not to care about it, he obviously did a little.
He had been waiting in his jogging bottoms and T-shirt as Natalie came out of the ladies’ changing room. She and Freddie had been the first to emerge because she hadn’t technically changed, she had just turned up pre-prepared in her loose jersey trousers and long-line T-shirt, not realising that other people were going to bring actual exercise wear to the class. She had expected it to be nothing more than a laugh, just like Baby Music, so when she found Steve clutching Lucy to his chest and trying to look anywhere rather than at the women leaving the previous aerobics class she was privately glad that someone else was as uncertain about this as she was.
‘They are all going to think I’m a letch, aren’t they?’ Steve said under his breath, nodding at the other women who were waiting with their babies for the class to begin.
Natalie laughed. ‘Don’t be daft,’ she said. ‘All women think you are fabulous. They all fancy you because you are here with your baby. Ironically a man with his baby is perhaps one of the most attractive sights to a single or indeed married lady.’
‘Really?’ Steve looked alarmed, eyeing the gradually increasing group of ladies now with some trepidation. ‘Jill would kill me if she thought anyone fancied me,’ he said with charming anxiety.
‘No she wouldn’t,’ Natalie reassured him. ‘We like our men to be fancied. What we do not like is for them to fancy others. That is when you risk wandering into the realm of sudden and violent death.’
Steve laughed, his cheeks pinking up a little.
‘Seriously though, Natalie,’ he said. ‘You’re a gutsy kind of woman aren’t you, quite like a bloke really?’
‘Really?’ Natalie said, glancing down at her capacious breasts in mock dismay. ‘Is that how you see me?’
‘No,’ Steve said, now turning a lovely shade of cerise. ‘What I mean is that out of all the girls in the group you’re the one who I get the impression has known the most men . . .’
‘Oh I see,’ Natalie said with theatrical haughtiness as she struggled not to laugh.
‘No, I don’t mean like that,’ Steve hurried on, his complexion now more of a deep fuchsia. ‘I meant to say that you are a woman of the world, so if you were a bloke what would you think of me? Would you think I was weak for being at home with Lucy, would you think I was failing as a man?’
Natalie attempted to consider the muddled question as she looked at Steve, who now most resembled an overripe strawberry being flambéed.
‘I think,’ she said after a moment, ‘that you are stronger than most regular men. After all, here you are in the middle of a lot of ladies in Lycra, with your baby girl in your arms because you want to give her the best babyhood you possibly can, regardless of stereotypes and what is expected. That takes real guts.’
Steve smiled, his colour calming. ‘Would your Gary ever do anything like this?’ he asked her.
‘Well, he couldn’t,’ Natalie told him with conviction. ‘But only because he’s busy building very complicated structures practically with his bare hands and brute strength alone.’ She paused and then added before she knew what she was saying, ‘But seriously, Steve, I’d give anything to have Freddie’s dad with me. Anything.’
It was the unexpected sting of tears behind her eyes that made Natalie suddenly have to turn away from Steve and the other members of the baby group as they finally emerged ready for action from the changing room.
Ever the gentleman, Steve, probably assuming that she was missing her husband, stood between her and the others while she took a second to compose herself. Natalie hugged a wriggly Freddie a little closer to her chest and took a deep steadying breath. Why was it, when she had spent so long rigorously making herself get used to the idea of bringing up Freddie on her own, that every now and then a feeling like that one would overtake her and practically drown her in longing? It had to be because she now knew that Jack was back in London. He was close, really close, but still almost impossibly out of reach.
And so Natalie hadn’t been able to enter into the class with quite as much gusto as she wanted to, still shaking off that feeling of loss for something she had never actually possessed.
And as for the others, well, Tiffany looked pale and drawn as she performed the exercises with expertise and grace, her smooth oval face perfectly still, hiding all the fears and insecurities she must be feeling as one so young cut adrift from her parents. Jess looked tired and worn down with worry and a night in casualty. And as for Frances – Natalie thought that Frances was probably born slightly off kilter, never quite fitting in comfortably with anyone around her. Despite her pristine new gym wear which had probably been bought just for the occasion she looked utterly out of place.
As Natalie stepped from side to side without much enthusiasm she contemplated the other and much more pressing reason why she was feeling so jangled and off beam. Because in a bid to avoid telling Jack that she was bringing up his secret love child she had done the only thing she could think of that would mean Alice wouldn’t totally kill her next time they spoke. She had told her mother instead, and now that she had she was torn between an oddly comforting feeling of relief and sickening certainty that she was going to seriously regret her decision.
Most disconcertingly, it hadn’t been as horrible as Natalie had expected. She was prepared for smugness, hilarity, scorn and disgust from her mother. But surprisingly she had received none of these things. Instead when she delivered the news in a deliberately light-hearted, this-is-how-it-is-and-I-don’t-care-what-you-think-so-there style there had been a long silence on the other end of the phone.
‘I see,’ Sandy said finally. ‘So I’m a grandmother, am I?’
‘Yes, at last,’ Natalie said, rolling her eyes and sighing like a teen as she slipped the pad with Jack’s numbers on it under the base of the bedside lamp so she could not see it.
‘And how are you coping?’ her mum asked her. Natalie had not quite known how to answer the unexpected question. She was waiting and prepared for ‘And who exactly is the father and what were you thinking, a woman of your age, having unprotected sex when you should know better?’ But certainly not any kind of expression of concern, unless it came with some barbed backhanded insult.
‘Um . . .’ Natalie considered the question. ‘Actually, really well. It’s hardest at night with no one to take turns with, I suppose, and I’m exhausted. But I love him so much, Mum, he has changed my life completely and for the better.’
There was another pause.
‘If you liked I could come and stay for a bit?’ her mum asked her. ‘Be someone to take turns with for a while?’
This time Natalie was stunned into silence. It was the fact that her mother had asked her that surprised her. She had been fully prepared to have to forcibly put Sandy off with all sorts of excuses once she found out about Freddie. But for her mother to actually ask her opinion about something was new; disconcerting and different. Natalie was surprised by a sudden pang in the pit of her stomach, and when she tried to work out what had caused it she realised it was a simple impulse she had never expected to feel again. She wanted her mum. It was such a jolting and strong sensation that she felt tears in her eyes.
‘I would actually,’ she said, almost incredulously.
‘Fabulous, darling,’ Sandy said happily, sounding suddenly much more like her old cocktail-lounge self. ‘I’ll be over on the first flight! I presume that I need to buy a ticket to London?’
‘Yes of course,’ Natalie said, already panicking about whether or not she had done the right thing. ‘Where else would I be?’
‘Well,’ her mum said, with a voice as dry as the Gobi Desert, ‘I thought you might be in China.’
When they left the sports centre Natalie had asked both Tiffany and Jess to accompany her to see how Meg was, but neither accepted. Tiffany said she had to be at a meeting with her teachers and her social worker to talk about what was going to happen with her exams, and Jess said she was desperate to at least try to get some sleep.
‘That girl is unreal,’ Jess said as they watched Tiff wheel Jordan off down the road. ‘Look at how she copes and then look at me. I’m so pathetic. Snoring. I took my baby to hospital for snoring.’
‘You are not pathetic,’ Natalie said. ‘You have problems and weaknesses like the rest of us, but at least you face up to your worries and deal with them. At least you don’t hide from everything that’s going on around you, hoping that somehow everything will work itself out without you having to actually do anything.’
Natalie heard the frustration in her voice as if she were listening to a stranger. Normally she made a point of never letting anything she did get to her because she always said that once a decision or action was taken you could never really undo it, even if you tried. She made a point of facing up to the future that she had a created for herself, whether or not it was something she wanted. Only since Freddie – since Jack if she was honest – she had felt a little less brave.
It had to be the pregnancy hormones, she told herself. After all, they had been present from almost the very first moment she had spent with Jack. It was probably her elevated oestrogen levels that were responsible for how she thought she still might feel about the wretched man to this very day. It must be the hormones that made her teary at the thought of her mother, and now she came to think of it, it was probably because of them that she had told all her new friends she had a fake husband, a fake husband who was gradually taking on a Frankenstein’s-monster-like life of his own.
It had to be some internal enemy that was altering her so drastically, because she couldn’t allow herself to believe that this confusing maelstrom of emotions would be coming from the rational and sane part of her.
What had troubled her most since Alice had called her to tell her that Jack was back in town was that now instead of being just somewhere, he was here in this city, maybe only a couple of miles away from this very spot where she was standing. What Alice didn’t understand, what none of her new friends would understand even if she felt able to tell them, was that it was because she wanted to see Jack so much, and wanted to share their son with him, that she was so terrified of seeing him, let alone telling him about Freddie. She could accept his rejection of her because she still hoped her naggingly persistent feelings for him would fade as her hormone levels returned to normal. But what if, as she half feared and half hoped, the very thought of being a father sent him packing to the other side of the world on the first available flight? Perhaps it would be better to tell Freddie that his father had died in a car crash than tell him his daddy didn’t want to know him, after all, that was what Sandy had told her about her own father. It was the one lie her mother had told her that she had belatedly appreciated, and the one she had certainly wished she had never investigated. Natalie remembered briefly a wet and freezing February afternoon in Brighton nearly twenty years ago, and the man who had stood on his doorstep telling her in hushed but urgent tones to go away and leave him alone. At least when she had thought he was dead she could fantasise about how much he would have loved her, and how different their lives would have been if he had survived.
But she knew she could never set Freddie up for a meeting like that one, and when it came to it she didn’t have any control over what might happen in the future except to try to make the right decisions now. And that would be a first for her.
Natalie looked at Jess’s face, so honest and open that you could almost see every minute of her sleepless night illustrated on her exhausted features. Jess who wanted to be her, who thought she was so capable and together. Suddenly Natalie desperately wanted to be able to tell Jess everything about her life, the whole sordid truth. But as they stood in the chill and bluster of that March morning, Natalie realised she had no idea how she would begin to explain just what a mess she had made of everything.
Jess, Meg and the others thought better of her, they might even actually admire her a little bit. She didn’t want that to change. She liked being the woman who was the friend of Jess and Meg. She liked that version of herself.
‘What’s up?’ Jess asked her with a smile, cocking her head to one side. ‘What awful problem are you hiding from now?’
Natalie laughed and shrugged.
‘Oh, just that my mum’s coming to stay,’ she told Jess with mock heaviness. ‘Today.’
Jess laughed. ‘Is she that bad?’ she asked.
‘It depends,’ Natalie said, reverting to that easy, apparently enviable version of herself who didn’t have a real care in the world. ‘If you don’t mind having a cross between Joans Collins and Rivers as a parent, only minus all their maternal instincts then no – it’s not a problem.’ She grinned at Jess. ‘I spoke to her last night and she sounded almost human, and before I knew it I’d asked her to stay in a moment of weakness. But I know exactly what will happen. She will waltz in, criticise me for getting myself in this situation in the first place and then try to sleep with Gary . . .’
‘Gary’s home?’ Jess said, her eyes widening. ‘She’d try to sleep with your husband?’
Natalie blinked at Jess for a second or two before her life story caught up with her.
‘Oh no, Gary the electrician I meant. It’s a very common name,’ Natalie said quickly.
‘Oh, how confusing,’ Jess said. ‘So what situation have you got yourself in?’
‘Being . . . married . . . to a man . . . who . . . works in Dubai of course,’ Natalie said, adding each word to the sentence as it occurred to her. She was fairly sure she had managed to pull the fib off and was trying hard not to think about the further complication she had somehow managed to create for herself in the blink of an eye.
‘She can’t be that unreasonable, can she?’ Jess asked her. ‘After all, you can’t pick who you love based on their geographical location! And at least you are married. If you knew how much grief my mum gives me about that . . .’
Natalie thought about her mother, who was even now winging her way towards Heathrow. ‘She can be that unreasonable and worse still she’s cunning. It’s like playing a game of chess with a malicious fox.’
Jess laughed out loud. ‘You are funny, Natalie,’ she said. ‘If she’s that bad then why on earth did you ask her?’
Natalie looked sideways at Jess. There weren’t enough words left in the English language to fully answer that question.
‘Well, she is my mother after all,’ she said instead with a shrug. ‘And in some cultures that’s considered to be quite an important thing. Plus she volunteered to get up in the night with Freddie now and then, and I’d give Dracula B & B if it meant I got a good night’s sleep again.’
When Meg opened the door she looked terrible. But it wasn’t an ill terrible. It was obvious to Natalie that she had been crying.
‘What’s happened?’ Natalie asked her, pushing Freddie’s buggy into the hall and then putting her arms around Meg.
‘It’s all f . . . f . . . falling apart,’ Meg managed to tell Natalie. ‘It’s all . . . all . . . ruined!’
A little while later Natalie and a much calmer Meg sat at the kitchen table while James choo-chooed a train around their legs and the babies slept top to tail in Iris’s cot.
‘That was a pretty harsh thing to say,’ Natalie said, when Meg had finished telling her what had happened, keeping her voice expertly neutral so that her son would only hear the tone and not tune into the words.
Natalie didn’t like the sound of what Meg had told her one bit. She didn’t have direct experience of the end of a serious relationship herself, but she had been there when Alice’s marriage to her ex-husband Frank had begun to disintegrate soon after they had launched Mystery is Power. And it was during Alice’s divorce that Natalie had realised something that might be worryingly pertinent now. All couples fight, shout and scream and say hurtful things to each other in anger. But they only ever seem to say the really violently cruel things, to vocalise their deepest and darkest resentments that they have been harbouring for years, when one of them is about to leave.
Natalie was certain, however, that Meg didn’t want to hear that particular theory just now and after all, she didn’t know Robert at all. She had never seen Meg with her husband. She might be completely wrong, and she sincerely hoped that she was.
‘But everything he said is true,’ Meg said bleakly, pinching her temple for a second as she gathered her thoughts. ‘I mean, look at me. I look old and fat and like a mum. I don’t look like a desirable woman any more, I don’t feel like one. I have to face it, I’m not the kind of woman men look at and want to have sex with – I wouldn’t want to come home to me either.’
Natalie looked at Meg. She was tired. Her nose was red and swollen as were her eyes, and she was bundled in three or four layers of mismatched knitwear that probably made her look much bigger and far more shapeless than she a really was.
‘Rubbish,’ she said firmly. ‘You are a sexpot! You’ve just gone a bit off the boil that’s all. You are a very attractive woman. It’s just that you insist on hiding somewhere underneath all those jumpers. Never mind quality time for you and Robert – how about some quality time for just you? When you feel good about yourself other people start to feel good about you.’
Natalie tried to ignore the fact that she was doling out the kind of advice that she could do with taking herself. She wasn’t sure what was going on with Meg and Robert, but she was sure that if anything was fixable it was the way Meg looked, and more importantly the way she felt about how she looked. Natalie knew she could help her with this.
‘What do you mean quality time for just me?’ Meg asked her.
‘I mean that you need to take some time to peel off all those cardies and get back in touch with your inner sexual being,’ Natalie replied.
Meg looked worried.
‘I reckon,’ Natalie continued, ‘that when Robert got in last night he was very tired and already in a filthy mood. He took it out on you, which sucks but it doesn’t mean that he’s spent today filing for divorce or that your whole life is over. I bet you when he gets in tonight he will be feeling really guilty and really sorry.’
‘Do you think so?’ Meg asked her. She looked so hopeful that for a moment Natalie wondered if she was on the right track; what if her plan wasn’t enough to fix things? But she had to try to help her friend, and this was all she could come up with.
‘I do think so,’ Natalie replied without a hint of caution. ‘And when he does I want you to capitalise on that guilt, maximise his bad feelings. Take the moral high ground. Be sweet and understanding and then demand that he makes a date with you for Saturday night. Make him promise to keep it free for you. I’m sure Frances will look after the kids.’
‘Robert’s very hard to demand things from . . .’ Meg said uncertainly.
‘It’ll be fine!’ Natalie said, dismissing the worry with a waft of her hand. ‘And when he sees you tomorrow evening it won’t be downtrodden dowdy old Meg that’s waiting for him . . .’
‘Dowdy?’ Meg asked her.
Natalie patted her hand.
‘Figure of speech – it will be glamorous, sex-kitten, hot-stuff Meg draped over this very table in the finest lingerie that money can buy, except in this case you’ll be getting a freebie from me.’
‘What?’ Meg looked confused.
‘I’m going to take you into work tomorrow and sort you out with some sexy knickers!’
‘Ohhh,’ Meg said, as the extent of Natalie’s plan dawned on her. ‘Oh. I don’t know, Natalie. I’m not sure.’
‘What do you mean you’re not sure? Of course you’re sure. We are talking about free shopping here!’
‘But will it work?’ Meg was disappointingly dubious.
‘Of course it will work. Men are not complicated beings. There is no straight man alive on this planet or any other that doesn’t go wild for a push-up corset and stockings. God only knows why, but they do, and what’s more it will make you feel empowered.’ A thought occurred to Natalie. ‘In fact, while I’m at it I’ll get Jess to come too – there’s another girl who needs empowering.’
Natalie was enjoying her latest role as lifestyle guru, not that the irony wasn’t lost on her, merely filed away in a mental drawer labelled ‘Facts I don’t want to face thank you very much’.
‘Are you’re really saying that silky pants can solve everything?’ Meg asked her, the load of worry on her face lightened by the hint of a smile.
‘I am,’ Natalie told her triumphantly.
‘There’s just one more thing,’ Meg added.
‘What’s that?’
‘I won’t have to wear a thong, will I?’ Meg lowered her voice. ‘I’ve had terrible trouble with haemorrhoids since Iris was born.’