SIX
On Thursday Patricia and I left Manchester and drove back to Newcastle through the Pennine Hills rather than taking the motorways. There had been no snow for over a week on the top, so the roads were quite passable.
It was the last day of our break and while I was a gentleman of leisure, if you can call therapy leisure, Trish was back at work the next day and on early shift at that. She would be working earlies until Saturday. She wanted to make the most of this last day by enjoying the hills, covered as they were by snow.
We arrived back at Trish's in the evening and did a quick shop, ate and went to bed. We made love as long-standing lovers do, very relaxed and undemanding of each other.
Next morning when I awoke, Trish had already gone off to work and I went to therapy. It was gruelling as usual but I worked hard and returned home exhausted but satisfied. Home now was Trish's flat, and though I'd hardly been there before, having my own place, it felt more like home than mine. I slept the afternoon away and was awoken by Trish's arrival. She drove me over to my flat to collect more of my clothes and toiletries.
After dinner we joined some of her nursing friends and spent an evening laughing at the sort of filthy jokes and anecdotes at which the medical profession excel; and drinking at which they also excel.
Thus on Saturday morning I awoke feeling very ill indeed. My painkillers did not react well to large amounts of alcohol. Once again Trish had gone off to work, leaving me with my stomach and head. I held my head and thought that I wasn't really helping Trish first thing in the morning. I was never awake in time.
I was not in the best condition to do serious thinking but I saw the personal recorder and played the recordings of all the conversations I'd had over and over.
The first thing I noticed was how everyone seemed to be so keen on me meeting my ex-wife. I could understand that. They had a memory of my relationship with her in the past, and it was reasonable for them to want us to rekindle that relationship. I heard myself on the tape saying over and over that I didn't know her.
The next thing was more serious and important. It seemed my children really needed me. How would I get round that one? Whereas Ann was now safely with someone else she obviously loved, my children needed me. It didn't matter that I didn't remember them; that was irrelevant. I had to find a way to get in touch with them. However something told me that the time was not yet. I would know when the time was right, wouldn't I?
I knew I would be making Manchester my new home. My friends from of old all lived there and I would be meeting more of them, but it would be as if for the first time. They would be new friends. What I had learned about those I had met, was that they were the best friends a person could want, but I didn't have a history with them.
My company was there. My history was there and I was becoming more confident I would eventually remember it.
However, now I felt more at home in Newcastle. I didn't have much of a history with Trish and our friends from the hospital, but it was longer and deeper than those in Sale. It would be a wrench to leave them.
From my point of view, Trish was beautiful, physically as well as mentally and emotionally; we were certainly sexually highly compatible and it wasn't just lust. We communicated intimately at every level. So why didn't I make my future with her? I loved her; I was in love with her. What was the problem with settling with her? Of course, I had forgotten she was set on going to her family in New Zealand.
It eventually dawned on me that the problem was that I was not a complete person. It was precisely that I had no history. I was living on inadequate data, and when the other data came through -- if it came through -- it might change things drastically. So what to do?
I concluded that it meant I couldn't make a solid commitment to Trish. She had always said she was not into commitment but some of her reactions belied that assertion. I surmised I may have been conceited but I thought she was falling in love with me.
I rang Trish at work, and we arranged to meet at our local pub mid-afternoon. As soon as she saw me I could see she knew we had to 'have the talk'.
"Trish, darling," I began, but she interrupted.
"Have you decided it's finished between us, Allan, is that it?"
I thought for a moment, though it seemed like an age.
"Trish. A lot has happened. I'm not sure where I stand."
"OK, carry on." She was steeling herself for bad news.
"I've found a family, a divorcing wife, money, and a company I own which may be under threat from my ex-wife."
"So are you saying it's still all in the air, as far as we're concerned?" she asked hopefully. "If it's open-ended I can live with that. I did say no strings when we started this relationship after all."
She paused, then, "You'll be going back to Manchester permanently, then."
"At the moment it seems so, but Trish, I don't want to end our relationship. Will you come and visit when I have a place to stay?"
She didn't need to think.
"Don't be daft, Allan," she giggled, "and you can come here as well. We came back the pretty way but it only takes a few hours by car along the motorways and the A1. And whatever happens we'll always be close. It's the sextra bit that's not clear," she smiled at her clever elision. "Sex. Do we carry on -- carrying on?"
"You want to?" I asked.
"Yes, I've sort of got used to the shagging bit. You're very good at it you know, thanks to my tuition of course."
She looked at me expecting a response; there was none because I was obviously biting back a smile. So she qualified with a grin, "and your innate ability, of course!"
"Of course," I answered smugly. We both laughed and went back to her place. Were we any clearer about where we were going with each other? I didn't think so.
"Do you feel any sense of being unfaithful to Ann?" she asked as we undressed in front of each other.
"She's shagging this bloke; she's moved in with him. We're divorcing, Trish," I muttered. "I don't know her. No, I don't feel bad."
We fell into bed and afterwards she assured me that while I had problems with my short term memory, I had forgotten nothing about the art of lovemaking.
For my part I assured her that being buried in that special place of hers between her thighs was the best, indeed the only real home I knew.
We got out of bed and made dinner, which we had with a bottle of wine. Spaghetti Bolognese with a side salad, simple but delicious. We watched some bland TV and then went to bed early. Trish was on early shift all week as a favour to a friend.
As I drifted off, it came to me that I had no trouble with my memory when it came to my relationship with Trish. It made me feel happy and optimistic.