NINE
Emma and Lewis agreed to return to Syntex separately, though she felt that if Lewis had been with her she would have avoided a potential flashpoint with Royle. She needn’t have bothered though as he was out of the office for the afternoon. The girls, however were a different prospect.
‘You’re late missus!’ hooted Jane when she entered the office, ‘You’re lucky Royley’s up with the Sales team til 4 o’clock’.
Emma glanced at her watch. Twenty minutes late – not a sackable offence but enough to get her ear bent. She silently thanked her good luck.
‘I know’ she replied, ‘I had to go and see a man about a dog’ Or is it a rat? her mind corrected.
‘Oh aye?’ chimed in Elaine, rolling back out of her pen, “and which man was this seeing as Lewie’s not here either..?
Louis Sanderson.
Emma smiled at the memory and offered a big stage wink. ‘Wouldn’t you like to know?’ she teased, skipping to her desk and tossing her hair with her hand.
The girls laughed.
‘Where is he anyway?’ she asked innocently, looking at the piles of stuff on Lewis’s as yet inhabited desk.
‘Well, Little Miss Innocent’ Elaine chided in a sing-song voice ‘I was just dropping the quarterlies on your desk when I saw him getting into that Shaguar of his. Funny how you appeared a few minutes later, eh?”. She clucked her tongue and shook her head.
“Aha..” winked Emma
Maggie popped her head up from her desk.
‘Don’t let her wind you up ladies, she’s been into town to tax Simon’s car! Haven’t you?’
Emma was glad of Maggie’s efficiency and the fictional appointment she had put in her Outlook calendar. ‘Damn you and your snooping!’ she mock-scolded and Maggie beamed. Emma was sure she had really tried to discover her whereabouts to stay in the hunt for Lewis’ attentions.
‘Well, ok’ said Elaine, frowning ‘but if we find out you’ve been having secret luncheons with our man with the tight ass then we’ll strap you to the copier and distribute your tits all over the site.”
"’Yeah, in A3!’ Jane added and Maggie giggled,.
‘Thanks, I could do with a boob job.’ Emma replied settling into her chair. The others laughed and returned to their jobs. Once seated, her smile slipped and her thoughtful countenance returned. She had dreaded the banter with her friends more than the potential showdown with Royle, knowing she had to stay chirpy until she could hide in her pen and think. She was bursting to talk to someone, to get some advice but as much as she loved her friends she knew she couldn’t. The truth was she wasn’t sure she could talk to anyone about it until she’d had time to think herself and there was so much to think about.
She switched her PC on and waited for it to boot up, staring down at the car park as she had done 24 hours ago. A whole day ago yet it seemed like a month. Even lunchtime seemed days away. It was if time had stretched out and the more she thought about things, the slower it seemed to pass.
The computer binked and she looked at the screen.
Go on then, tell us what happened!
Jane. Emma sighed. She wasn’t in the mood for tittle tattle right now. She opened up the messenger and saw she was chatting with Elaine as well. Emma realised that she had probably been the talk of the office since ever since missing their lunch at the pub. She typed back:
I told you – nothing! I went to tax the car, honest!
I wish I had met Lewis now, the fuss you’re making!
Yeah right and Royle is my secret love interest!
What are u doing tonight? We could go on a dbl date!
Emma typed back:
You’re crazy! I’m watching a chick flick, killing a bottle of wine and pampering myself.
Alone! Now I need to get some work done. Speak later x
She had to decide on her course of action but she found herself torn. Miss Sensible, her mental companion from yesterday told her that she should confront Simon and get everything out in the open. Forget about Lewis, about his stories and his opinions of Simon – let her husband be trialled before he was judged. Why throw away everything she had for a complete stranger?
Yet arguing vehemently with Miss Sensible was a newer voice of Miss Impulsive. How long had she been disappointed with her lot and wanted more? How long had she wanted a newer more exciting man to arrive in her life and inject some thrill and romance? Two years, four years? Now he was here, he not only gave her what she wanted but also gave her a reason as well.
She sighed and told the voices in her head to shut up. She opened up a spreadsheet and tried to concentrate on some figures for next months operations review on the Excalibur project. The numbers danced in front of her eyes and she couldn’t concentrate on any one column for longer than 30 seconds before she found her mind eyes wandering off screen and staring into space. In her daydream she saw Simon and Lewis, dressed as knights, with broadswords and maces, slugging at each other while she, Princess Emma watched, thrilled and scared from her throne on the edge of the arena.
The air was heavy with thudding, grunting and clanging as the two men fought for her honour. So deep was her reverie that she could see the banners on the tents flapping in the wind, smell the dust and hear the phone ringing.
The phone was ringing.
She snatched up the receiver, not sure how long it had been ringing for.
‘Syntex, Emma speaking”
The ringing continued and she suddenly realised that it was her mobile, not the office phone. Cursing, she fumbled in her handbag and could see from the screen that it was Simon calling.
She hesitated before answering. Did she really want to speak to him now? She had to do it some time.
‘Is that yours, Em?” called Maggie over the top of the partition.
‘Yes I’ve got it’ she shouted back. She realised it had probably been ringing for quite a while when abruptly, it cut off. He’d either hung up or the answer phone had kicked in. She waited a minute and sure enough, the phone bleeped to let her know she had a new message waiting.
She slowly realised that she’d been holding her breath since the phone stopped ringing and let it out in a whistling sigh. She’d avoided talking to Simon, at least for the time being but she couldn’t put it off forever.
She dialled her voicemail and listened.
Hi. Listen I’m sorry about last night. I guess you’ve got every right to be upset and I want to make it up to you. I’m going to be working a little bit late tonight but if you want to get the train into Manchester we’ll have dinner together. Just you and me, no corporate stuff, no business guests or clients. Just Simon and Emma, ok? I’ll meet you at Luigis. It’s been ages since we went there. Call me back when you can.
There it was, plain and simple, said Miss Sensible. Your husband still loves you and has just been busy of late. He’s obviously sorry because he has gone to the trouble to arrange this. Have a cup of coffee, and put this Lewis from your mind. The only reason he told you all that rubbish at lunchtime was to get back at Simon.
The more Emma thought about this, the more she was inclined to agree. She couldn’t deny the attraction to Lewis and the fact his appearance ticked a lot of her boxes, but the stuff about Simon - she couldn’t reconcile that with anything.
There was a ‘bink’ and a message flashed on her screen.
So then, what are you up to tonight?
Emma sighed and nearly shouted out her answer. I’ve told you a hundred times you silly women, stop going on about it! With a venom and passion born of guilt and frustration she typed back.
Leave it will you? How many more times the answer is the same!
Are you that desperate for something to be going on??
She waited for a gasp or an “oooh” or a sarcastic comment from her teasing friends to float over the top of her cubicle, but there was nothing; just the clack of keyboards and the hiss-hum of the air con units.
Eventually a message popped back up on her screen
Sorry. Thought you might have had time to think. maybe I made a mistake. I’m too impatient; rushing for things I can’t have
She frowned and read the words twice and then looked at the screen ID. Anderson, L (Sales)
Her hand flew to her mouth and she gasped as if ice water had been pumped though her.
Lewis!
Damn her friends and damn her impetuousness. She rattled out a reply before he logged off.
Lewis! Sorry I thought you were Elaine.
I’ve been teased about where I was this lunchtime!
Oh right. Sorry about that – you girls, eh? But you’re not mad at me then?
No not mad, just a little confused and taken aback.
It’s a big thing you know? Big and fast.
Sure. I know and I also know I can’t say sorry :¬)
That’s ok. I know now you did what you did out of decency.
Like I said, it wasn’t really a shock which was all the more weird.
It was all weird. But strangely comfortable. Emma suddenly found it extremely easy to talk to Lewis this way. Her confusion was eased slightly by the screen and wires between them. There was no human physical barrier, no eye contact, no body language. She could see now why Elaine liked chatting to other blokes on the net in his way – it was communication at its most basic and she knew Elaine used this anonymity to fantasise about what her cyberblokes looked like.
In Emma’s case, however she could picture exactly the man she was chatting to – too well. If she closed her eyes she could still see them sat at the table in the pub, could smell him, touch his hand, lean over and kiss him…
Her heartbeat was increasing again and she felt a flush in her cheeks. Suddenly all her conflicting thoughts of the last few minutes evaporated. Talking to him again made her think about her long-established fantasy and of how she had felt yesterday, showing him around the factory. She wanted to see Lewis again, despite everything, despite Simon’s phone message. Suddenly she wanted to confess everything to him
A message flashed up again.
That makes it easier.. doesn’t it?
Maybe it does.. Can I tell you something really stupid?
Nothing you say is stupid, Emma
She smiled and typed on, not quite believing what she was saying but knowing somehow it felt right.
It might sound a bit cheesy!
Go on, I love cheese..
She smiled again and with a long juddering breath, typed
For ages now I’ve dreamed of meeting a total stranger and escaping
my marriage. I have this weird notion that maybe if I wish hard enough I can make it happen, just like think you can when you check your lottery ticket
And what do you think now…?
She blushed and swallowed.
Maybe I’ve got six numbers….?
The message box flashed.
So do you think I’m your dream ticket?
She rattled back her answer.
It’s worth a gamble :-)
In that case, can you meet me tonight. For dinner?
Emma’s head was spinning now. Two dinner invitations from her two knights. She hesitated before typing back.
I might be going out with Simon
The response was quick. Each line flashing onto her screen like a hammer blow.
You sure he won’t stand you up, or be late, or come up with another cock and bull excuse?
I’ve seen him operate, Emma. I know him. He’s your fella but I see the real him.
Keeping people around him dangling, messing them around.. I doubt he’ll even show up..
Then after a pause, he continued:
Sorry :-( you got me going again..
She was confused now. She looked at the photo of her and Simon on the desk in front of her.. looked at the open conversation on the screen.. which way to turn?
She put her head in her hands and racked her brains.
She replayed the conversation of earlier, then foiled it with the voice message from Simon and all the happy times they had had.
Would have again.
‘Oh Jesus’ she moaned through her hands.
She opened her fingers and stared at the last message from Lewis again and then at her phone on her desk. Suddenly, something clicked in her head and the fog of the last day seemed to lift. A piercing shaft of rational, calm thought pierced the clouds in her brain and let the reason shine in.
Clearly now, and without prejudice her thoughts seemed to return.
She knew she’d been kidding herself all along and she was stupid to believe otherwise.
What was she thinking? It would never work in the long term.
All the things he’d told her – how much of it was true now?
She knew what she had to do.
* * *
For the fifteenth time in the last half hour Emma wished she smoked. She’d tried it a couple of times but could never really seem to get the appeal or feel comfortable. She ended up either burning her wrist or tapping ash on herself. Now, she just wanted something to do with her hands to stop them drumming on the bar.
She checked the huge old clock on the wall behind her.
8.25.
Where the hell was he?
She caught the waiter’s eye which wasn’t difficult as there was hardly anyone in the restaurant and in any case, he’d been eying her up since she walked in nearly three quarters of an hour ago.
‘White wine please. Large. In fact bring me the bottle’
It was her third. He raised his eyebrows and perhaps began to doubt whether she was worth moving in on. Emma didn’t care any more.
‘Will your guest be much longer, madam? Would you like to see a menu?’ he asked with raised eyebrows, tapping subtly at his wrist.
She frowned and looked round, expecting to see a queue out of the door. It was hardly buzzing, she thought.
‘I hope not’ she sighed. ‘Give me a few minutes and I’ll order’. Her appetite was fading now anyway.
The waiter brought her wine in a chilled cooler and was just filling her glass when a voice behind her spoke.
‘I’ll have a drop of that, too please’
She jumped and looked up, half because the voice had startled her but mainly because she recognised it.
‘Sorry I’m late,’ he continued, ‘spot of car trouble.’
‘Is everything ok?’
‘Yeah, no problem. Everything’s sorted now.’
‘Good.’ She sipped her drink, feeling at ease now, the pent up feeling and frustration of the last half hour dissipating as the alcohol did its trick
He sat next to her and took her hand.
‘Sorry’
She laughed.
* * *
Simon watched his wife as she ate and was struck by how gorgeous she looked; perhaps the first time he had looked at her properly in months. She still had the little trick of tucking her hair behind her left ear as she forked spaghetti into her mouth.
The rain continued to tick against the window and with it came the threat of sleet. Six years ago they had sat in the same corner booth of this little Italian restaurant just off Picadilly and shared their first meal out together. They had returned many times since, but none was as significant as this.
They talked and chatted as if they'd just met; laughing like their first date - swapping forks and trying each others' food, their eyes never once leaving each other.
But he was too keyed up to really enjoy his food; he pushed his pasta round the plate and the few mouthfuls he had eaten felt like they were about to make a reappearance. He swallowed the rest of his wine quickly.
He knew he’s been acting like a kid in a toy store, he’d had his pick of the women and power was such a damned aphrodisiac. He’d treated Emma like dirt, constantly letting her down, messing around with other girls, but no longer. No, he’d turned a corner.
Damn it, though. The one night when he’d decided that enough was enough, he was late because some bastard had let his tyres down. Not one but all four. Throughout the drive in to town he had wondered who had done it and now he thought he knew.
He had so much to say but didn’t know how to say it, if indeed he could. Sorry was one word he could include in every sentence, and he longed for their chit-chat to finish so he could perhaps form his words.
But it was too late.
Before he had arrived, he had a suspicion that after five years this woman that he loved (still loved despite his inability to express it) was lost to him. Marriages were supposed to last a heartbeat these days, yet here was Emma and himself nearly up to wood on the anniversary scale. He’d lost the deal this time
He watched her finish the last of the carbonara sauce with her garlic bread and then she reached out to stroke his cheek, her eyes full of something he hadn’t seen in ages.
Happiness.
The words he wanted to say evaporated and he realised there was no way back now. The damage was done. If he was a real man he’d do something about it.
But at the end of the day he wasn’t. He was a coward and he had seen enough.
He drained his glass, left ten pounds on the table and stood up.
With a final glance over his shoulder to the booth near the window he left them to it; Emma, caressing the face of the man he had once stitched up, and who had just returned the favour.
Simon walked out into the Manchester rain, alone and hollow.
* * *
Simon watched his wife as she ate and was struck by how gorgeous she looked; perhaps the first time he had looked at her properly in months. She still had the little trick of tucking her hair behind her left ear as she forked spaghetti into her mouth.
The rain continued to tick against the window and with it came the threat of sleet. Six years ago they had sat in the same corner booth of this little Italian restaurant just off Picadilly and shared their first meal out together. They had returned many times since, but none was as significant as this.
They talked and chatted as if they'd just met; laughing like their first date - swapping forks and trying each others' food, their eyes never once leaving each other.
But he was too keyed up to really enjoy his food; he pushed his pasta round the plate and the few mouthfuls he had eaten felt like they were about to make a reappearance. He swallowed the rest of his wine quickly.
He knew he’s been acting like a kid in a toy store, he’d had his pick of the women and power was such a damned aphrodisiac. He’d treated Emma like dirt, constantly letting her down, messing around with other girls, but no longer. No, he’d turned a corner.
Damn it, though. The one night when he’d decided that enough was enough, he was late because some bastard had let his tyres down. Not one but all four. Throughout the drive in to town he had wondered who had done it and now he thought he knew.
He had so much to say but didn’t know how to say it, if indeed he could. Sorry was one word he could include in every sentence, and he longed for their chit-chat to finish so he could perhaps form his words.
But it was too late.
Before he had arrived, he had a suspicion that after five years this woman that he loved (still loved despite his inability to express it) was lost to him. Marriages were supposed to last a heartbeat these days, yet here was Emma and himself nearly up to wood on the anniversary scale. He’d lost the deal this time
He watched her finish the last of the carbonara sauce with her garlic bread and then she reached out to stroke his cheek, her eyes full of something he hadn’t seen in ages.
Happiness.
The words he wanted to say evaporated and he realised there was no way back now. The damage was done. If he was a real man he’d do something about it.
But at the end of the day he wasn’t. He was a coward and he had seen enough.
He drained his glass, left ten pounds on the table and stood up.
With a final glance over his shoulder to the booth near the window he left them to it; Emma, caressing the face of the man he had once stitched up, and who had just returned the favour.
Simon walked out into the Manchester rain, alone and hollow.
THE END