At Happily_Married87's suggestion, the story from Sandra's side. It will help if you read 'Satin Dress' first.
Some people didn't like the abrupt ending of 'Satin Dress', some loved it. I took Happily_Married87's suggestion and told the story from Sandra's view. I had no preconceived ideas when I started to where it was going to end up. I just let the story take me.
If I had thought about it I would have written both at the same time. I didn't so there is going to be some disconnect 'tween this and 'Satin Dress'.
My thanks to AnAverageGuy61 for his tweaking.
I have said before, communication is an art and sometimes we send the wrong signals to the wrong people.
Daughters tend not to lie to their Fathers.
Don't take it too seriously. Please just enjoy the story. It's fiction like Great Expectations,
My Dad sat across from me, he was not happy. My Step Mum had her arm around my shoulders holding me. I'd stopped crying, for now, I was on the edge of bursting into tears at any moment. She'd been a better Mum to me than the one who gave birth to me. She'd been a Mum to me since she married Dad when I was 12, when my old Mum messed up a couple of years before. We didn't talk about it. It upset Dad.
After Brian left I tried to take the 'For Sale' sign down, I couldn't. Jonathan was no use, he just crawled away.
I phoned Dad and he and Mum came over, I'd been calling her 'Mum' for the last 15 years.
I waited outside for them and asked Dad to take the sign down. He did. I was still crying.
They helped me inside. Dad phoned the Estate Agent because he couldn't get any sense out of me. He put the phone on speaker. They told him that they had instructions on Tuesday morning to put the property on the market for a quick sale. And they had already had an offer for the asking price. During the conversation it came out that they suspected that the couple who owned the house were splitting up, that is why it was so cheap.
Dad glared at me and went to make some tea. Mum just cuddled me.
Dad brought the tea back and put the mugs in front of us. I had calmed down, enough to talk.
Mum said. "You'd better tell us the whole story, love." She held my hand.
"And don't leave anything out." Dad added.
I pulled myself together as best as I could, Dad wouldn't like it, especially when I got to what Jonathan had said.
I told them Jonathan from work had been chatting with me and a little bit of flirting for the past 6 months or so, he'd asked me out a few times, but I always told him 'No'. I was happily married.
I never responded to the flirting, but I did enjoy the attention. We did have lunch twice, but nothing happened.
"Did you tell Brian about those lunches?" Asked Dad.
"I did the first one."
"Not the second." I shook my head. "Why not?"
I shrugged my shoulders. That annoyed him.
He growled at me. "You know that was not an acceptable answer as a child, even less so now." Mum squeezed my hand gently.
"Brian wasn't happy after the first one, so I didn't tell him about the second."
Dad was less happy. "Has Brian met this Jonathan?"
"Yes, he doesn't like him, or trust him, but I have to work with him." I tried to hold my head up. "I told Jonathan there would be no more lunches after the second one."
"Why?" Mum said gently.
"I didn't want Jonathan to get the wrong idea, or Brian to get upset. He can be unforgiving when he's upset."
Dad didn't let up. "So that obviously wasn't the end of it, otherwise we wouldn't be sitting here now. Carry on." He was a little gentler with me.
"Jonathan backed off for a while, but he came back chatting and flirting about a month ago. I missed the attention when he stopped. But I didn't encourage him, I didn't Dad, really." The look on his face told me he didn't believe me, but it was true.
"Then three weeks ago he told me he might be moving away; he had the offer of another job down south. And he asked if we could go out on one date before he left. I still said 'No' because Brian didn't trust him, and I thought with the flirting he might want to do something that Brian wouldn't like."
"What about you? Did you want to do 'something' that Brian wouldn't like?"
"NO, Dad, I'm faithful. Brian is the only man for me."
"So what changed your mind?"
"Jonathan came to me on Monday and asked if we could have a date on Friday, I said 'No', he carried on. He told me that he didn't want to have sex with me. Well, he admitted he would liked to have done, but he respected me too much to destroy my marriage. So, if I went out with him there would be no sex, just two friends having dinner before he left, talking over the last year, the projects we'd done together. Just a memory for me of the good times we had at work. Something for me to remember him by, and there had been some good ones. He promised."
"And you believed him?"
"Dad, I've worked with this man for over a year, I've never known him to lie. Why would he start now?"
Dad just snorted at me.
"So, you agreed, and you told Brian that evening. How did he take it?"
"He wasn't happy, but he said it was my choice. I know he loves me. He warned me about Jonathan, but I told him there was going to be no sex. I knew he would worry about that, but Jonathan promised no sex. I told Brian that. Jonathan said maybe a little fun flirting, but he wouldn't take it any further."
"Did you tell Brian that bit? And was that all?"
"Well, No I didn't. He wouldn't like it. It was just going to be flirting, nothing would come of it."
Dad snorted again, twice in two minutes. I was in the shit.
"It would be exciting to go out with another man. Brian and I went dancing the other week, we told you about that, and the bottle of bubbly we won in the pub quiz. But it was all us together. I just wanted something on my own. Jonathan promised, there was no risk. But I don't think Brian saw it that way."
"Obviously not because the house went on the market the next day. He's treated you so well, and you wanted to go out with another man. One that he doesn't like and doesn't trust, what the fuck were you thinking girl."
I'd never heard my Dad use the 'F' word, well a couple of times when he and my old Mum had a falling out, and that was years ago. I don't think he was on my side. Shit. Mum stroked my hair, and I was crying again.
The tea was cold by now.
Dad went and made some more; I think he was upset with me.
He came back carrying the three mugs of tea, he stood at the door and looked at me. I wondered what he was looking at?
He came in from the kitchen, he said. "Is that all? I've known you for 27 years. I will know when you're lying."
He sat down putting the tea mugs on the coffee table.
"I've not seen that dress before, is it new?"
Oh shit.
"Erm yes, I saw it in 'Brides and Proms' on the way home on Wednesday and fell in love with it. I called in and they had one exactly my size. I tried it on, it felt so lovely. I had to have it."
I looked at him straight in the face. I knew what he was going to say next. I've known him for 27 years. He didn't disappoint. But I had an answer, an honest answer and he wasn't going to like it.
"Did you buy it for yourself, Brian or Jonathan?"
"I bought it for me, to make me feel good when I went out with Jonathan. Jonathan was no risk, he was safe. He promised. And Brian would get the benefit when I got home. Dad, please trust me." I squeezed Mum's hand. I don't think he believed me, but I could never hide a lie from this man. He knew me far too well. Those years after my old Mum left, when it was just me and him.
"Was it expensive? It looks like it."
"It wasn't cheap."
"So you bought an expensive dress for your boyfriend."
"No, it was for me, Brian would get the benefit when I got home."
"I take it Brian saw the dress?"
"Yes, and the stockings." I'd better be completely open and not try to hide anything.
"Stockings!" Dad was no prude. He knew what that meant.