CHAPTER ELEVEN: Lost
Jennifer Morris had thought long and hard over the nearly thirty-minute car journey home through relatively quiet roads from the hospital on Monday night. She really wanted to talk to someone, anyone, about all the confusing thoughts and hopes and wishes, desires even, which filled her head with the tumult of conflicting indices.
She briefly toyed with the idea of ringing Richard, even though she had recently forced him to agree never to call her again. She was racked with guilt over her affair, fearful of the inevitable fallout once Bob, or Tommy, as he appeared now to be, found out all the sordid details. Bob finding her in bed with her lover was the very last thing she had envisaged when she had set out to continue the affair, so brief had the original mistake been. Some day, some time probably soon, Bob will remember what happened. Then what? Would Jennifer survive the fallout?
As for Richard, he was an absolute arse. Stupid! Everything about what happened was crazy. She knew why Rich wanted to bed her in her own bed, to get one over Bob. Rich was stupid to agree to start up and she was stupid to suggest it in the first place, in fact, thinking about it, Richard was the one who was working on her to give in, not the other way around. She was going to be forty years old next year. Forty and happily married. She had no reason to feel insecure about that did she? What had she found so distressing about that, which led her down this path? Married for twenty years. It just didn't seem possible that it could all crumble around her ears.
Was this what she wanted when she set out to charm the handsome, desirable but difficult Robert Morris to her bed, over twenty years ago? Was it design or desperation that made her chose a man fifteen years older than her as a mate when she herself was at such a tender age? He brought her security; she had to be grateful to him for that.
He had seemed to be a confirmed bachelor when they met. Several of the more mature women at the factory where they both worked had tried to snare the poor man. Bob had resisted all approaches until Jennifer Diplake, spinster of this parish, set out her stall to trap him into making an honest woman of her for the rest of her natural life. Yeah, right, so how long did that honesty last?
Bob already had a tiny mortgage on a small house he almost owned outright at the time. He was a maintenance engineer at the company where Jennifer had started working a few months earlier, shortly after leaving secretarial college. He used to come into the office all the time. Bob was a quiet, reserved man; polite but rarely initiated conversations, only speaking when spoken to. He dressed well, when he was able to discard his customary brown work overalls and socialise with his colleagues once a month or so. The company used to organise regular subsidised and therefore oversubscribed outings throughout the year, to keep their workforce entertained and happy. In the summer they staged picnics in local parks, the seaside or to National Trust properties. In the winter they watched winter shows, and organised dinner dances. Bob reluctantly went in for most of these entertainments. The factory was mainly geared to assembling small parts, so was primarily staffed by women, some married, others single or divorced. Therefore the available single men were at a premium and coercion was a tool much used by the primary organising committee, who had controlling fingers spread through the factory as efficient as any terrorist organisation.
Well, Jennifer thought as she drove home from Chesterfield, she had won him over in those early months of their acquaintance, had kept and married him, and they had enjoyed a great family life together. Just a couple of stupid mistakes on her part with Richard and that Western teacher but she had been blessed with what looked like some kind of reprieve at the eleventh hour. She had to hold on and see this thing out to the end, hoping that Bob would forgive her, if he remembered what happened at all.
Jennifer knew that she loved Bob. She was certain of that. It was just an age thing she was going through, she told herself. She was approaching forty, she felt she was getting old and her children were growing up into adults and leaving her behind. Although Bob was so much older than her, he did not seem to feel his age at all; his body was tight, firm and, she had to admit sensual. She still desired him. He was a considerate lover, better than anyone she'd ever had.
She couldn't explain why she been so stupid and insecure to have done what she had done but that part of her life, she determined, was now over and done with. She declared to herself that she would never again be caught out like that. And there was only one way to guarantee never to be caught out again and that was to be completely honest to her man and maintain her innocence from this point on.
By the time she got home that evening, the kids were already in bed and their lights out, ready for the school day the following day. She thanked Emma, lovely, loyal friend Em, who she hugged for an extra long time, trying to assuage her guilt without completely breaking down and losing it.
"Tell me, Jen?" her friend asked, as she rubbed Jennifer's back, "What's going on? JJ's really concerned about you and you're so upset."
"JJ's upset?" Jennifer fought back a sob, "She doesn't know the half of it!"
"Are you and Bob break-"
"No!" Jennifer snapped, then calmer as she released her grip on Emma, "No, not that, of course not. Emma, Bob is in hospital in Chesterfield."
"No!" Emma gasped, "How is he?"
"He's up and about and has been for a couple of days," Jennifer answered, "Hopefully they will let him home in the next two or three days."
"Has he been there all week?" Emma asked.
"Yes," Jennifer had been rehearsing all the way home how she was going to explain this to Emma, "Bob was taken to hospital in Chesterfield after he stumbled into an attempted rape while he was on his usual run on Sunday. He was playing the hero, got beaten up for his pains and left in a coma."
Emma was astounded, "Never! Is he gonna be alright?"
"Yes, he's going to be fine, he came out of the coma a couple of days ago," Jennifer smiled, "The surgeon left him in the coma after the operation for about four or five days. I told the kids a white lie that Bob was on a course so they wouldn't worry about him. His eyes are black and blue and can't take strong light at the moment."
"Thank God he's alright!"
"But..."
"But? What do you mean, Jen, but?"
"Well, Bob took a blow to the head and ..." Jennifer hesitated a moment, "He's lost his memory, Em, he doesn't remember me or the kids, or anything at all since his early twenties."