It will definitely help to have read part one! Some sex in this part.
NINE
Not for the first time, Angela's thoughts and emotions were in turmoil. One or other of the paramedics was working on Gerard most of the time, but the noise and the lurching of the aircraft gave her little room for thought. Then she accompanied the stretcher into the hospital until Gerard was taken to Intensive Care and she had to wait in the waiting room until a nurse came to see her.
"We're monitoring him and he's been sedated to help him. He won't be conscious until tomorrow afternoon. Go home and get some sleep."
"Will he be all right?" she asked; it had all seemed so much of an emergency.
"The chances are in his favour; you looked after him very well. If his heart holds out, and it seems strong enough, he should pull out of the lung problems, but you need to be rested."
She nodded and thanked the nurse and left the hospital, walking out into the damp darkness. She was grateful that Gerard had been brought to their local hospital, though 'local' was five miles away from where he lived. It was sleeting lightly, and she wondered if it was snowing up in the hills where Joseph was.
She considered phoning her brother for a lift, but couldn't face him and his sanctimonious and critical comments. She hailed a taxi and paid the extortionate fare to Gerard's flat. She remembered her car was at Joseph's and that she would be without it for a while.
Joseph! In a moment of clarity she remembered that she had made an arrangement with him to stay the week. She had shown him by a number of hints that she fancied him, and then had left him without a backward glance to go with Gerard to hospital, and had done that after everything she had learned about Gerard and what he had done to Joseph!
The taxi arrived at the house and she paid the driver and made her way in. It was cold in the house and she fired up the central heating and switched on the electric fire in the living room.
She was hungry. She looked in the fridge and realised that by leaving on Saturday morning early, she had not done the shopping. The fridge was full of ready meals. Gerard had done the shopping! She selected a beef risotto and microwaved it. It was passable and filling, but she couldn't help but think about Joseph's cooking.
As she ate she thought idly over what had happened. Why had she left Joseph to come back with Gerry? Then it came to her. Gerry had no one else. The thought came as a shock. She knew nothing of his present family and it had never occurred to her to ask. His 'friends' were really only acquaintances; she wondered how many of those who drank with him would lift a finger if he were in trouble. Most of their close friends were her friends, and even they did not seem to warm to him. The exception was her brother, and she had given up trying to understand him years ago.
After Angela and Gerard had met at a club and had started to date, she thought it prudent to ask around about his background, only to find that no one knew his history, though it was common knowledge he hailed from Wigan, a satellite town west of the city. For most people it was enough that he was entertaining and generous with his money.
He had told her that the town was Wigan, but that he was sick of people cracking jokes about Wigan Pier and pies.
He was so attractive that she had been delighted when he had made overtures to her. Though he spoke of his childhood in Wigan and his following its rugby club, and though he talked about his University life at Cambridge and his successes as a sales managing director, she, like everyone else, still had known nothing about his family or his social life before he arrived in their area of the city. It simply never came up.
Now she thought she knew why he kept quiet about his past and the secret it held.
Really she already knew it was over with Gerard. She knew he did have redeeming qualities and she had been able to cope with his manipulative and domineering ways, but it was the moment he had left her on the hillside, then his aggressive and violent confrontation with her at Joseph's, and of course the business of Joseph's wife and child that clinched it for her.
She would move her stuff out the next day. Her flat began to feel very attractive and she needed to take stock of her life. Then she remembered she had no car. She recalled that she was on Gerard's insurance on his second car; he had never allowed her near the Porsche, but she could use the Lexus.
Her thoughts drifted to Joseph and she felt a rush of warmth. Joseph was the diametric opposite of Gerard. Her mind filled with the memory of her short time with him. He was so peaceful, calm, collected and thoughtful for her all the time, self-sacrificing even.
After Gerard's dreadful behaviour towards him, he went out after him in case he was in trouble, brought him back and was responsible for his survival. She still could not fathom how he could do that to the man who stole his wife and child and who had tried to humiliate Joseph further by attempting to adopt the little girl.
Angela wondered if Gerard was right and that she would not be able to survive living the life that Joseph lived? She had always been a city girl as Gerry had said, used to all the luxuries that city life affords.
Then she remembered her misgivings about Joseph's adequacy as a husband, and her worries about his solitary state.
She was realistic enough, she thought, to know that it was one thing to go there for a break from normal life, quite another to live like that.
She decided to ask Greta. Greta would have answers. Greta was wise beyond her years. She picked up the phone and dialled.
"Greta," said the woman at the other end abruptly. It was her way: efficient and decisive.
"Greta it's Angela. Could you come round tomorrow morning?"
"Yes. I'm on nights from tomorrow. What time?"
"Early?" Angela said tentatively.
"Eight?" came the immediate reply.
"Thanks. Come for breakfast?"
"OK." Click.
That's Greta,
thought Angela,
never a superfluous word.
She went to bed feeling much better. She had not noticed that contrary to her usual practice, she had not switched on either the radio or the TV all evening.
Next morning she told her friend that she was leaving Gerard, and would Greta help clear her stuff out of his house. Greta asked why and Angela asked if they could talk about it when the move was complete. Greta shrugged and agreed. The sleety rain had stopped and the day was fine and sunny if cold, so the move went without a hitch.
"You remember me telling you about Gerry leaving me on a mountainside and this man Joseph finding me and saving me?" Angela began after they had eaten lunch.
"Keith picked you up, didn't he?"
"Pompous little prick," muttered Angela, "accused me of knowing Joseph before and making up the story to stay with him."
"That's what Gerry told everyone - not true?"
"Not true. How could Gerry have known that? No one knew where I was until Joseph went down the track to send my text and let the mountain rescue know. He saved my life, Greta, I would have died of exposure if his dog hadn't found me."
"Gerry said that was a load of baloney."
"He would. Anything to avoid admitting he could have killed me, going off like that. Anyway, Gerry certainly learned about exposure when he came to the cottage after me."
"Gerry came after you? That's why he's in hospital now?"
"In his Porsche, in a snowstorm. Of course he was his usual aggressive and overbearing self. He insulted Joseph very badly and told me β
told