Beats me where she was from. India, probably, but maybe Sri Lanka or Pakistan or some other country in that region. Maybe she was Turkish or Persian or even Arab, but she sure as shit wasn't Australian and when she realised she'd been caught staring at me, she smiled, revealing a mouth of slightly bucked, very white teeth.
I looked away from her and back towards my kids. Owen was six, nearly seen and Willow was ten, so they weren't really at the age where I could take my eyes off them for too long, least of all in a public park. I had the kids every second weekend on what I called the divorced father schedule. They were in my custody for just over sixty hours a fortnight, from Friday after school to when I took them to before school care on Monday, and during this time I attempted to make up for my lack of presence the other eleven and a half days.
Willow looked like her mum, tall and fair and skinny, whereas Owen took after me, with the same dark brown hair, dark brown eyes and olive skin. Isabelle, my ex, is five foot eight, a good two inches taller than me, and you could already see Willow was going to be taller than her brother.
'Your children are very beautiful.'
I turned to my left. The woman had somehow crept up and sat next to me on the bench seat without me even noticing. She was older than I'd initially though, probably in her late fifties, but slim, and definitely Indian or something, not Persian. She had a sub-continental accent. Trust me on that, I watched a lot of cricket and played in a social team made up mostly of men from that neck of the woods.
'Thanks,' I replied, once more averting my gaze. I wasn't really interested in conversation with a random woman and didn't want to say anything that might engage her.
'How long have you been separated from your wife?'
That got my attention. I squinted at her, trying to figure out how she knew.
'Three years,' I replied, my curiosity evidently more powerful than my desire to be left alone. 'How did you know?'
'You seem lonely.'
She delivered this assessment in a matter of fact tone, as if it were perfectly acceptable to sidle up to a random bloke and start making wild assessments. I turned away, shaking my head slightly at her rudeness, and wondered if her behaviour was some sort of cultural thing. Mind you, while I'm not usually the greatest at understanding accents, but hers wasn't overly strong. She'd obviously been in Australia quite some time, and one would have thought if she'd been here long enough to pick up a local twang, she'd been here long enough to know what was and wasn't kosher.
The woman laid a hand on my arm. 'My name is Chandni. What's your name?'
'Cody.'
'How old are you?'
'Forty-three.'
She smiled. 'Young.'
Young, fuck, I sure as fuck didn't feel that. I felt old and tired most of the time. I kept waiting for a break that never seemed to arrive, some reprieve from the daily grind and the anxiety that I medicated into a small a bundle as possible but which never truly left me.
'Did your wife find another man?' Chandni asked.
'No, I don't think so. The kids haven't mentioned anything.'
'Would you ever get back together with her? Reconcile?'
I shifted uneasily, unhappy with the conversation. 'No. No, that ship has long since sailed.'
'That's a shame.'
'It is,' I agreed. 'But it is what it is.'
We watched the children play. I shifted away from her a bit, uncomfortable with how physically close she was sitting next to me.
'My mother was a matchmaker,' Chandni said. 'We came to Australia when I was seventeen, and she taught me what she knew.'
'That's interesting,' I said, even though I thought it was nothing of the sort. 'Maybe if you had match made me or my ex-wife, you would have found us better choices.'
Chandni didn't miss the jibe, but nor did she react to it. 'I have a woman in mind for you. I think you'd like her.'
I'd had enough of this bloody twit and the nonsense she was spouting. 'I need to check on my kids,' I said.
'Your children can wait,' she said.
Her hand was still resting on my arm and as she spoke, her fingers curling around my forearm, gripping me tight. She was fucking strong, strong enough to make it impossible for me to simply shrug off her arm. I could either wrestle her off and create a scene, or I could sit myself back down and think of a new method of escape.
I checked to see if the kids were okay - they were - and chose option two. I sat myself back down with as much dignity as I could muster, and waited to see what would come out of her mouth next. I also took a good, hard look at her, just in case she was going to appear in tonight's news as an escapee from a secure mental health unit. She looked sane enough, though. Well dressed, too, and there was something about the cut of her clothing that suggested she wasn't short of a quid. But jeez, she was rattling on with some crap.
Chandni smiled beneficently. 'I must sound crazy.'
Like fuck was I going to say or do anything that was going to get her offside. 'Nah, not really.'
Chandni's smile widened. 'You're lying. You think I'm crazy.'
I scratched the back of my head and wondered what the fuck to say.
'You'd need a haircut,' she said. 'You'd also need to let your guard down. Give her a chance.'
'Look, lady, you probably mean well, but you're wasting your time. I've got no money. I live in a rented house out past Ipswich. I work in a landscape supplies yard. My ute is twenty years old.'
'You take very good care of your children.'
'They live with their mother. I only have them every other weekend.'
Chandni removed her hand from my arm. 'You're very uptight.'
'Well,' I said. 'I have my reasons.'
She stared at me expectantly.
'No,' I told her. 'Just no. Go and, go and do whatever it was you were doing before you came to speak to me. I'm not the sort of man your woman is after.'
Chandni placed her hand on my lower back and gently rubbed. I froze. The contact was completely unexpected and although I wanted to push her away, it felt good. Really good. Really, really, really good.
'Two hundred and fifty dollars I charge,' she whispered. 'Cash. You can pay me after your date.'
The spell broke. I stood up, grabbed Willow and Owen's bags. I didn't even glance at Chandi as I marched my way to the playground. The fucking scammer. Or lunatic. Or just a simple, run of the mill, crazy bitch.
I wasn't interested in dating. Wasn't interested in women. Wasn't interested in any of that bullshit, and I sure as shit wasn't interested in spending money to alter what was a perfectly comfortable home life. 'Lonely' my arse. Everyone got lonely sometimes. It didn't mean a fucking thing.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I would have chalked Chandni up as a scammer and forgotten all about her if I hadn't found the note.
After Isabelle and I had split, I'd started smoking again. I know, it's a terrible habit and I'm going to die, but who gives a shit. We're all going to die sooner or later. The catch is that the kids aren't supposed to know about it, which means I normally get up early to have a ciggie, try and sneak out for five minutes at some point during the day, and then catch up with a couple after they've gone to bed.
At twenty past nine, both were asleep. I grabbed my cigarettes and lighter from the top of the fridge, shoved them in my side pocket, and went outside to have a smoke. It was when I pulled the cigarettes out that a piece of paper fluttered to the ground. I leant down and picked it up.
Chandi the Matchmaker
95% success rate
Below it was her phone number.
It wasn't even a proper business card, just a scrap of paper with her details written on it in Biro, which is pretty fucking cheap considering the number of printing stores that will sell you a thousand cards for a hundred bucks. Surely if she was scamming people for $250 for each date, she could afford Vistaprint.
I sucked down the cigarette in record time as I stewed over her impudence and tried to figure out how she'd managed to get it into my pocket without me noticing. I can't tell you how fucking annoyed I was. I'd been single since Isabelle and I had split. I'd had sex with two women since that day.
The first had nicked the eighty or so dollars I had in my wallet and my cigarettes as she left. In hindsight I'm probably lucky she didn't take my kidney, because she was a down and dirty bitch, but enough alcohol and you get to the 'any port in a storm' stage and I'd just wanted someone to fuck.
The second had been a woman I worked with. A nice enough girl, but young and neurotic, and when I'd caught her going through my phone I realised I just didn't like her enough to deal with her insecurities. Besides, my marriage had taught me a valuable lesson; just because
you're
prepared to help someone through tough times sure as shit doesn't mean they're going to help you out. I wasn't yet ready, and Kelly needed someone stronger and more stable, someone more able to reassure her, than I was. The sex was great, and I liked her well enough, but as for a relationship? No.
Besides, my marriage had fucked with me. Isabelle and I had been together for a decade when, after years of IVF, Willow came along. Isabelle suffered horrible post-natal depression but still wanted a second child, so back to IVF we went. This time conceiving was easier, but the PND came worse than ever. My wife spent six months in a mother-baby unit.
When Owen turned two, Isabelle decided she wanted a third baby. I said no, absolutely fuck no, no way, you have got to be goddamn kidding. But, in hindsight, that was the beginning of the end, because when you want a wife, and she wants a baby, you've already got problems. She was resentful. She wasn't on birth control and she told me that if I didn't want another child, it was on me to stop it from happening. I bought condoms and started using them. Ridiculous really, because history had proven we couldn't conceive without help, but she wanted to take every chance she could, and I didn't want to run any sort of risk. The rift deepened.