Second and final part. It will make more sense if the first part is read first. Both parts are quite long.
'Steve Wright's Sunday Love Songs' is a real BBC Radio 2 programme: Nine till eleven am GMT every Sunday. I'm not sure if they still do the long lost friends item.
In any case, they never connected Kevin and Nicola with each other, since they are both fictional characters!
All characters in sexual situations are over eighteen.
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We left Kevin searching and worrying about Nicola who seemed depressed and intent on avoiding him. Now, having received a love letter from her with mixed messages, he travels to his childhood home for Christmas, hoping that Nicola will go home for Christmas as well.
Christmas is really the only time my siblings and I, Kevin Connors, find ourselves together in our parents' house. This particular year, Patrick was bringing his steady girlfriend, Marie, before driving away the day after Christmas to her parents' place.
I was somewhat surprised that my parents assigned them to the guest bedroom, leaving Lorraine and I to fight over the remaining bedroom with a double bed. We tossed a coin and I lost. I was not particularly bothered, since the room I was left with, while having only a single bed, was my old room.
The three of us got on well together, though we saw little of each other over the course of the year. Lorraine was working and living in Newcastle and Patrick was in Leeds.
I had my parents to myself for Friday night. Lorraine arrived on the Saturday morning and Patrick and Marie would join us on Sunday afternoon.
Lorraine was always fun. She was loud and always happy, always laughing. Once settled in and having assured our parents she would be in all night, she dragged me out shopping.
Of all the women in the world, for me there is only one who makes shopping fun: Lorraine. She prattled on about life, asking my advice on clothes, and on presents for Mike and the parents. After an exhausting two hour marathon, she propelled me into a coffee shop and ordered coffee and sinfully creamy cakes.
"Something's not right in your life Li'l-bro," she said seriously.
Li'l-bro was her joke. Mike was 'Big-bro', even though now as adults, I was three inches taller than he was.
"Come on, spill, what's wrong?"
Lorraine was like that. When I started walking Nicola to school, she caught on immediately and teased me that I was in 'lurve' as she put it. When I went to spend the deflowering weekend with Nicola, she knew exactly what I was doing and even covered for me at home. She was always one highly perceptive girl, now a woman and even more so. She also knew when I tried to bullshit her. Only the truth would do.
"You know about a BBC programme on Sunday morning called 'Sunday Love Songs'?" I asked her.
She did, though she did not listen to it. Very wise, I thought. I then told her the whole sorry tale, ending by showing her the letter. Yes, I was still carrying it round with me! Inside pocket, against my heart of all things!
"Always thought you were special," she said abstractedly, then shook herself, "OK!"
"OK?" I puzzled.
"Catalogue of misunderstandings. I could go into that in detail, but it boils down to one thing. She is madly, besottedly in love with you."
I opened my mouth to speak but she had not finished.
"And you are in love with her."
She sat back with a satisfied smile, as if she had solved all the world's problems. Not mine!
I sat forward, ready to refute her assessment.
"Don't argue," she said with a dismissive gesture, her eyes sparkling, "I'm right."
Ever the optimist!
I collapsed, waving vaguely at her to continue. I realised I had missed my gorgeous little sister.
"She fell in love with you when you had that weekend with her at school. You must be some lover, Bro! But she had no experience of boys in general, so she went ahead and got it. Oh, yes, even down among us a couple of years behind, it was common knowledge that she was playing the field. God! Did we feel jealous -- she could get any guy she wanted without any effort.
"And that story that she ended up with you after the prom was true?" she asked with a giggle.
"She tricked me."
"Of course she did."
"No," I said petulantly, "it was Cloe wanted Nick's partner. I ended up taking Nicola home."
"God!" she expostulated. "You're still so naΓ―ve! It was the other way round! It was Nicola that wanted you! Cloe and she organised it between them."
"You mean?"
"Yes."
"Oh, bugger!" I had suffered another revelation. "I turned her down, I insisted on a condom, and she didn't want to use one, so I walked away."
"I'm impressed!" she laughed. "You see how hard that must have hit her, don't you?"
I explained about my comment about Chlamydia, and her response. She smiled lovingly.
"Kev," she said sweetly, "you showed you cared even when you turned her down. Can't you see how that will have affected her? How many other boys would even have turned her down? But to care enough for her to warn her, well!"
I smiled. What else could I do? Her praise was worth ten times anyone else's.
"I think that when you went your separate ways," she went on, "and she had various relationships, unconsciously she compared them to what she had with you--"
"I can't believe," I interrupted her, "that one weekend of sex--"
"No, no, no!" she interrupted in her turn. "You're thinking like a typical male! It was the whole package she missed and compared others to, all those years of friendship in lower school, your strength in refusing her, and yes, the sex that weekend, all rolled into one."
I shook my head, but she was continuing.