* * * Maddie and Marcus * * *
So it's true what they say; being single brings you closer to your friends.
It's a Tuesday lunchtime in May, two months after Matt and Lucy's wedding. I'm queueing in a sandwich bar on Clerkenwell Road, feeling at a low ebb. My phone rings. It's my friend Olivia:
"Hey Sophie!"
"Hey."
"So I heard you split up with Don. How are you doing?"
"Yeah. Yeah. Not too bad, I guess."
"I've got to be honest with you Soph, I thought he was a total prick."
I laugh. I haven't seen Olivia for nearly eighteen months, but she can always be relied upon for an honest opinion.
"So I think it's time we got you back in the game," she continues. "My old school friend Maddie is getting married next weekend and I'm going to the reception. It will be full of eligible men, and I'd be delighted if you'd join me as my plus-one."
"What about James," I ask, referring to her fiancΓ©.
"Oh, he's away. Which gives us the perfect opportunity to catch up. So how about it?"
"Oh I don't know, Liv. I'm really strapped for cash. You know the flat was Don's so I've had to move into Emma's spare room. And I'm saving for a deposit, so-"
"Don't worry about a thing. I'm driving, it's a free bar, and I've already booked a room so we can double up. It will be just like uni. And there will be plenty of rich men there too, so your financial problems could be solved at the drop of a hat. So what do you say?"
I'm at the front of the sandwich queue now, and the boy behind the counter is trying to take my order, while several disgruntled office workers tut behind me.
"Okay, Liv," I sigh, "I'll come."
Later I'm soaking in the bath, sipping a glass of red wine. My friend Emma is out, so I've got the bathroom door open and I'm listening to the stereo playing in the lounge: Beth Orton's Central Reservation. It's the sound of my university days - another age - somehow both comforting and sad.
My thoughts turn to Kit, as they so often do when I'm alone. I wonder at how such a brief encounter moved me so, and set such enormous events in motion β set my life on a different course, even. My thoughts turn to the feel of his arms around me, his rough face pressed against me, his cock likewise.
I take a sip of wine, then my hand slides down my body. My breasts and belly are slick with bath oil, and my hand slips over them and beyond. In my mind, Kit's cock protrudes through his cheap suit trousers. My slippery fingers find my clit, and begin to circle, as I imagine taking him between my lips. In my mind I hear his sighs, as I sink back into the warm bathwater, sighing myself. Then my thoughts turn to Toby, as they must. Then my phone rings: "Fuck it."
I splash water over the floor as I fumble for the thing. The screen reads: "Olivia". I sigh again. Then, for some reason, I answer.
"Sophie. Hi! Listen, I am so glad you are coming to this reception."
"Mm hm."
"We are going to have such an amazing time."
"Mm hm."
"Yes! There are going to be so many eligible men there, my God, I almost wish I was single myself."
"Mm hm."
"This will be the best night of your life Sophie, I swear to God. So you're staying with Emma, yes? I'll pop round and pick you up at two o'clock on Saturday. Be ready!"
I hang up, then sink back into reverie as my hand slips back down my oily body.
Four days later, we're hammering down the M4 in Liv's red Mazda convertible. The roof is up, and the rain drums steadily against it. Liv is wearing a short black and white striped dress, white high heels, and too much make-up. Her messy black hair is sticking up in all directions. INXS is playing on the stereo:
"Some silken moment goes on forever, and we're leaving broken hearts behind. Mystify. Mystify me."
Liv leans over to turn down the music:
"So what happened with you and Don?"
So I tell her. I tell her everything. I recount how I met Don through my work friends. I tell her about the deep animal attraction that was there to begin with. I tell her how we moved in together. How we decorated the flat. How we created a life together. How whole weekends of fucking became intermittent nights, which became special occasions. How he didn't want children, and I thought I did. How I dabbled in cocaine, and he overindulged. How the arrogance that attracted me to him began to grate. How he started to spend more nights with his work friends. How some nights he didn't come home at all. I tell her about Matt and Lucy's wedding. I tell her about Kit β all about Kit.
"Fuck's sake, Soph!"
By the time we pull over for coffee, I feel lighter.
Olivia drinks two flat whites, chain smokes three cigarettes outside the service station, then we're back in the car. She drives at about ninety. It's still raining, and the motorway is shrouded in spray.
"So have you been in touch with Kit?" she asks.
"Only on facebook. He's in Thailand. He says I should go out there and see him." I laugh.
"Why not?"
"Oh Liv, you must be joking. He must be ten years younger than me. Every time he's tagged on facebook he's surrounded by 18-year old girls in swimsuits."
She shrugs. "Go see him. Have some fun. You've got nothing to lose."
"Thanks."
The wedding reception is in a country house hotel in the Cotswolds. It looks like a big affair. We drive twice round the vast gravel car park, but it's totally full. Eventually we park the Mazda in the narrow lane outside, where several other cars have been left half in the undergrowth. Liv pops the boot, and we take our luggage. Liv has a chic leather weekend bag. I have my flower-printed pilot case. The rain has thinned to a drizzle.
I saunter in the wood-panelled lobby while Liv collects the keys. There are several other wedding guests in the lobby, and I can see dozens more people gathering in the bar. The sound of chatter and laughter makes me feel uneasy. Liv returns with two keys, and presses one into my hand. "Let's go upstairs and drop the bags," she suggests.
It's room 204, on the second floor. We drop the bags and Liv goes into the bathroom to touch up her make-up, leaving me sitting alone on the edge of the big double bed. The window overlooks a small lake backed by trees. I watch a flock of geese flying in a perfect V formation against the steely grey sky. The weather is closing in again.
"Come on, Soph. Let's get drunk."
"I'm sorry, Liv. I just need five minutes."