‘Are you Mummy again?’ Felix asks me.
‘Morning, Felix,’ I say, sidestepping the question. There’s a loud whirring, crunching sound as coffee beans are pulverised into delicious submission. Amy covers her ears. When the noise finally stops, Sam asks Felix, ‘What do you mean, “Are you Mummy again?” ’
‘Yesterday Mummy wasn’t Mummy. She was an alien,’ Felix explains.
Sam looks at me, and I shrug as though I have no idea what he’s talking about. Right now, with him radiating all this freezing-cold Neptune energy towards me, doesn’t feel like the right moment to try and explain wish-based time travel.
‘Sometimes grown-ups have too much to drink, and it makes them act differently. It doesn’t mean they’ve been possessed by aliens,’ Sam says, handing me a coffee. Then he picks up a banana, which he peels and passes to Amy in one seamless motion.
‘Thank you,’ I say, hugging the cup in my hands.
‘If I drink too much, will I act differently?’ Felix asks.
‘No, it only happens with alcohol, which you don’t drink,’ Sam explains.
My coffee smells so good I want to cry, and I take a long, slow breath. When I look up from the mug, I see Felix observing me.
‘What’s my middle name?’ says Felix.
‘Huh?’
‘I’m trying to think of questions only Mummy would know the answer to, that the aliens wouldn’t.’
Damn, this kid is bright. How old did he say he was again? ‘Funny boy,’ I say, ruffling his hair in the way I’ve seen people ruffle kids’ hair on TV. Sam turns back to the coffee machine to make a cup for himself.
‘I’d be surprised if Mummy can remember her own name this morning.’
‘What’s your favourite number?’ Felix is not giving up.
‘Um, eight,’ I say, plucking a number out of thin air.
‘Ha! Mummy’s favourite number is eleven!’ Felix holds his arms out wide, as though this proves his point.
‘Do you even remember getting home?’ Sam asks me. His tone is light, but he won’t look at me.
‘Maybe not every element,’ I admit.
‘Felix, do you want to put the TV on for your sister?’ Sam says, lifting Amy out of her high chair and putting her down on the floor. She immediately toddles towards me and tries to hug my leg with her sticky banana hands. I move away so she can’t smoosh banana goo into my nice clean, fluffy jogging bottoms.
‘Can you wipe her hands?’ Sam asks, throwing me a wet dishcloth, which I miss, and it hits the wall behind me with a thwack.
‘Mummy would have caught that,’ Felix says, his voice an awed whisper.
Picking up the cloth, I try to clean the baby’s hands as best I can, but she’s still trying to hug me, so I end up holding her at arm’s length with one hand, while trying to clean off the goo with the other. When I look up, Sam and Felix are both watching me with the same suspicious expression.
‘Told you,’ Felix says, shaking his head, then he takes his sister’s hand and leads her into the next room.
As soon as they are out of earshot, Sam hands me a plate of buttered toast, and I wonder if I’m out of the woods in terms of everyone being annoyed with me. Sam’s wearing a grey T-shirt and faded navy-blue jeans, while his wavy brown hair is slightly mussed up at the side. He really is incredibly attractive. If I can shake this hangover, I wonder if sex might be on the cards. Surely that’s one of the perks of having a husband – you don’t need to get all dressed up, faff about with liquid eyeliner, or even leave the house; you can just get it on in your pyjamas. Would sleeping with Sam involve cheating on myself somehow? The thought hurts my brain.
‘So, you don’t remember falling asleep on the train? Me having to put the kids in the car and come fetch you from Alton station?’ he asks, in a tone that makes me think hot morning sex might not be on the menu.
‘Oh, shit. Did I? I’m so sorry.’
‘What happened yesterday, Luce? Let’s put aside the state you came home in, I got a notification on our joint account that you’d spent nearly three thousand pounds in Selfridges. Have you lost your mind?’
‘I, um . . . I wanted to treat myself. I never get to go shopping.’
‘Never get to go shopping – Lucy, you have a wardrobe full of clothes! We can’t afford to spend that kind of money, you know we can’t.’
‘We look to be doing okay,’ I say, waving my arm to indicate the beautiful house complete with shiny coffee machine and fridge the size of a small country.
‘Yes, we’re incredibly fortunate, but you know we’re over-extended. We need every penny we earn to cover the mortgage, the loan on the car, Maria’s salary, the new loft cladding, our pension contributions. You were having a go at me last week for buying new running trainers when we’re trying to pay off the eco-boiler, then you go and blow ten times that on one shopping trip?’
When he puts it like that, it does sound pretty irresponsible. Maybe I miscalculated how rich we are. ‘You’re right. I’m sorry,’ I say, sinking down in my chair. This conversation is depressing me. To think: you finally get a decent salary and money in the bank, but then you have to spend it all on boring stuff, like boilers and loft cladding, so there’s nothing left for fun shopping trips.
‘What’s going on with you?’ Sam asks, taking a seat at the kitchen table, his annoyance shifting to concern. I need to tell him the truth. Honestly, if I’m worried he’s going to think I’m insane, he’s already looking at me like I’ve lost the plot.
‘Sam, there’s something I need to tell you. Something strange.’
At first Sam’s eyes grow wide in disbelief, but as I go on, he hunches forward, eyebrows furrowed in concentration, hands clasped so tight his knuckles start to go white. I tell him about going to my old flat and then to Badger TV despite not remembering where I worked or what I did there. He listens attentively, not saying a word, the crease in his forehead deepening with every new admission.
When I’m done talking, he gets up from the table and draws me into a hug. Does he believe me, or does he think I’m making all this up to distract him from the spending spree? When he pulls away, I see the blue in his eyes has melted into pools of compassion. He believes me, and he isn’t cross any more.
‘We’ll get this sorted, don’t worry,’ he whispers, pulling me close again.
There’s something incredibly comforting about the feel of his arms around me, the oaky, clean smell of his neck. I could happily stay like this for hours. Good hugs are underrated. I don’t think any of my past boyfriends have been great huggers, it always felt perfunctory or transitory. With Sam, it feels like his arms are creating a forcefield around me. It’s as though his body is telling me that if he could, he would absorb my every worry or pain. When he finally pulls away, he picks up his phone from the table and says, ‘I need to make some calls. Stay here, relax, don’t exert yourself.’ Then he disappears into the next room.
Well, that went better than I could have hoped. I was sure Sam was going to think I’d lost my mind, that he’d rush me to the doctor to have my head examined. Maybe in a marriage you just believe each other, no questions asked.