"You forgot your lunch this morning," David said when Mary came home.
"Mmmm," she said, her mind still on other things.
"I took it over."
"You what?" facing him now and paying attention.
"I took your lunch to your work. Well... where you used to work." He paused, waiting for a response. She looked at the floor for a second.
"They said you hadn't worked there in over a month. I felt like a complete idiot, standing there with two rolls and a cupcake."
"A cupcake? Did you make your special cupcakes?"
He sighed. "Yeah, I had time, you know, to get there before lunch. I thought it might be a nice surprise. There are eleven more in the freezer."
"Sorry darling," she said. "That was very thoughtful of you... I suppose you want to know where I was?"
"Well, yeah, I mean, wouldn't you?"
"I wish I could tell you, but I can't, sorry. I know that sounds wrong, but darling you mustn't worry. It's just a job."
"I thought you had a job."
"I did, I do, just a different one, for a short time."
"How long is a short time?"
"I don't know for sure, but not much longer."
"Where is this job, you know, in case you forget lunch again?"
There was a long pause and a grimace.
"You can't say?"
"No, sorry."
"It's not local for sure, you're doing three times the mileage. Are you working for MI6 or something?"
She raised an eyebrow.
"Oh -- stupid question if you were, you wouldn't be able to say. Good excuse. Oh, what the hell I guess it doesn't matter -- I mean about your old job. If you don't work there now, no one will care if your husband looks like an idiot... If you want to lie to me, I suppose that's up to you. You know -- for better, for worse; all that stuff. At least you come home every night. Do you think being made to look like an idiot classifies as 'for worse'?"
"I didn't actually lie to you and I didn't make you an idiot. It was just bad luck, you were being kind, you didn't deserve it backfiring on you."
"But you can't tell me what it's all about?"
"No." She suppressed a sigh. "I wish... I wish I could, but look at it like this if I'd said I wasn't there because I was robbing a bank, would you want to know?"
"Ah, so you're offering me plausible deniability?"
"Exactly. I'm glad you understand. There are reasons... very important reasons. Even if you were an idiot, which you are not, you are a well-meaning one and I love you." She turned to face him.
"I never spoke a lie to you. Just because I have to keep something secret, it doesn't mean I'm lying. Not telling is not lying."
"Mary, come on, even if you didn't lie, you kind of acted a lie."
"I can see that you're upset," she said, stroking the back of his head. "I guess that's understandable, and I wish I could do something. All I can do is remind you that I love you; you know that don't you."
"So you're not leaving me?"
"What? No. Why would I do that?" she said, for the first time sounding shocked.
"I guess it's what guys worry about when it turns out their wife has been misleading them for a month."
"Guys? Other guys might, I suppose," she said. "But you're not other guys are you? Don't let ideas like that get in your head and worry you. Keep on painting, your art is more important than any that job I'm doing. My money will still be coming in. There is nothing to worry about."
"So this new job pays the same?"
"Yeah. In the long run, a bit more I think."
"But you said it stops soon."
"There will be a bonus at the end."
"So is that why you took it?"
"Partly. The rest is what I can't tell you about."
She took off her jacket and started to unbutton her blouse. "Come to bed with me. Make love to me. Believe what my body tells you."
He shrugged, getting to his feet, patiently gazing at her.
"Mary, your body did the lying, your body didn't go to work."
"Not to my old work. No." She suppressed a tiny giggle. "Can we sleep now? It makes me tired."
"What makes you tired?"
"This other work, all that mileage."
"Shall I sleep in the spare room?"
She stopped him, forcing him to look at her. "David Williams stop being paranoid and stupid. Listen to me. There are two truths you must never forget. One, I will always love you. Two, I have a special job for a short while, and there is a very good reason why I can't tell you about it. Do not worry about it. I'm quite safe, we're both safe. The only danger is if I tell you. Now come to bed."
"You're not very good at this secret stuff are you."
"No." A wan smile crept across her face. "No, I'm not, and I hate it, but I'm still not going to tell you."
After a less than perfect night's sleep, David woke to find that Mary had already left. Being told not to worry, is a sure-fire way to spend the day being anything but relaxed, and then it got worse. He found the note.
Darling,
I'm really sorry about last night. We got ourselves in a muddle didn't we and I know I didn't help. Remember what I said. Everything is okay, and it will go on being okay, but for now, I have to do this new job. I think it will be easier if I stay away until this is all done. The job comes with somewhere to stay, and meals are included, you don't need to bring lunch. Enjoy the cupcakes. They are very good, I ate one and stole some to take with me. If I kept coming home you'll keep on asking questions. That won't do either of us any good. It will put you off your work, and I'll hate saying no to you all the time. I will keep in touch."
The next day, forty-seven miles away, in a big, almost empty mansion, she tucked the sheets around the old man and kissed his forehead.
"Marie," he whispered. "Water."
She took three steps away from the bed and took a new jug of iced water from the fridge in the corner of the room. When she returned the old man had closed his eyes. She set the jug on the table and sank back into the armchair. She ticked the last batch of medicines on the chart and settled into another day of waiting.