‘All this?’
‘Well, redundancy. And… and deciding what to do next.’
She sighed. ‘But we have decided what to do next. We’ve talked and talked about it. All I want is to bring it forward by a year. I mean, why wait? And now it seems like, well, it’s never going to happen.’
He was silent.
‘Ben?’
‘Look,’ he said. ‘Maybe we should… well, just put the conversation, the decision on ice for a bit. I just… I shouldn’t have been so quick to promise….’
‘But, Ben—’
Before she could finish, a memory flashed into her mind, the way they do sometimes the morning after a big night. But this wasn’t a memory of dancing on tables or kissing a stranger or doing any of the things often associated with regretful post-binge flashbacks. This was a memory of pressing ‘buy now’ on a property site. Had she really booked a break in France for herself? The memory was vague, hard to pin down. She couldn’t remember any details – location, price. Perhaps she’d meant to but hadn’t seen it through.
Either way, she had to check.
‘What?’ he said.
‘Look, we need to talk about this,’ she said, sitting up, swinging her legs over the side of the bed and trying to sound more upbeat. ‘But let’s get some tea first, yes?’ She looked at her husband, crumpled in the bed, clearly feeling sick and felt a surge of guilt. Sure, he’d pooh-poohed the idea of a month away, but she’d sprung the idea on him last thing at night. He’d have probably at least agreed to the holiday plan if she’d waited until this morning. They could have worked out convenient dates. Then once he was there… something inside told her that he’d fall for France as much as she had. But going behind his back wasn’t the right way to do it.
She imagined how she’d feel if he’d done the same. It had all seemed so simple last night. So bloody obvious. But that was what the lethal cocktail of best friend and red wine did. Gave the illusion of ease when actually even going on holiday could be complicated.
But perhaps she was worrying about nothing. Best to see what she’d actually done before panicking about it.
‘Are you sure you don’t want me to get it?’ he said, once she reached the door, in a voice that was suddenly croaky and weak.
Ordinarily, she might have called his bluff and taken his non-offer at face value. But today her laptop was calling.
‘What would you do if I took you up on that reluctant offer?’ she said instead.
‘I’d probably cry. But I’d do it. I just hoped you’d take pity on me,’ he said, his eyes playfully puppy-like.
She shook her head. ‘Idiot,’ she said, with a small smile, then turned and walked her reluctant legs towards the stairs, and towards the laptop that held the answers she was looking for.
She reached the downstairs hallway and headed for the kitchen to get the kettle on. Ty had obviously been up for a midnight snack – the cereal cupboard was open and another newly opened box of Frosties had been knocked on its side. By the sink, there was a bowl with traces of cereal and a small pool of milk. Lily picked up the errant box, put it back in the cupboard, then walked to her laptop, left casually on the kitchen table, and opened it up.
She had a sudden flash of self-awareness, seeing herself in the kitchen as if from outside. There she was, tidying up after someone who didn’t give her a moment’s thought.
How many times had she had the ‘close the cereal cupboard and wash your bowl’ conversation with her son? At least once a week for the past eight years. Probably twice. So about eight hundred times. Eight hundred times she’d explained to her boy that now he was old enough to clear up his own mess, the buck stopped with him. And to have a little respect. And that cereal cupboards were a magnet for ants and flies if left open.
It wasn’t such a terrible thing, having to wash someone else’s cereal bowl. Some of her friends had three children, even four, and came down to sinks heaving with discarded crockery. It was just the thought of all those minutes of her life – probably at least four thousand she thought, doing the maths – completely wasted. She might as well have kept schtum and let him scatter Frosties in his wake wherever he went.
Outside, the early morning brightness had given way to a shower of rain. Water began to hit the window and, as she looked out at the view over the back terrace, with its plastic chairs and the pile of single-use barbecues left over from last summer, she was struck by the contrast between the view she’d absorbed every day for twenty years while doing the washing up, and the view she could have, displayed on her now open laptop. She tried to click on the picture to see further details, but realised the screen had frozen.