Jenny was saying goodnight to the last of her guests in the hallway as I finished stacking the dishwasher with plates and glasses. One less job for her to do in the morning. It was time for me to head for my hotel and leave Jenny to enjoy a girls' evening with her sister and daughters.
I was glad the memorial service had been a success. They'd asked me to give a eulogy for Steve, Jenny's husband, and my best friend since we were five-year-olds. We'd drifted apart recently, so the request was a pleasant surprise. I'd missed Jenny and her daughters Emma and Iris, now grown up. Emma was a qualified paediatric nurse, and Iris was an accountant like her dad. Our forty-five-year friendship had flown by.
She came into the kitchen. "Alex, leave that. You've done so much for me already." Jenny was a petite, raven-haired woman with a soft southern Irish accent. It was good to see her smile. She'd been cheerful all day. I thought it might be a front. Although Steve died of stomach cancer six months earlier, there was no deadline on grief.
Jenny kissed my cheek. She smelled lovely. I put my arms around her in a friendly hug and she moulded against me, her head under my chin. It was an unguarded action by both of us. We were comfortable until we became conscious of our intimacy. I felt stirrings in my trousers, and I'm sure Jenny sensed them. We separated before either of us became embarrassed.
She looked in my eyes. "Your speech hit all the right notes, Alex. Steve was a generous, fun-loving man, but he could be a pain in the arse when he wanted to. You paid tribute to a real person. People laughed and cried in equal measure. Thank you." She touched my cheek affectionately.
I resisted the urge to kiss her. Now was not the right time. Would there ever be one? "It was an honour to be asked, Jenny. We had so much history together." I felt myself welling up and changed the subject. "The slide show went well."
"Oh my god, in those pictures of you two as kids, you could see the men in the boys." Jenny wiped a happy tear from her eye. I offered her my hankey. She laughed. "Alex, you must be the only man within twenty miles to use a linen hankey."
"I got them when I bought my black tie at an old gentleman's outfitters. `You'll be wanting a box of these for the ladies.' The old bloke wasn't wrong, was he?"
Jenny caressed her cheek with my hankey. I swallowed hard. The three years since I'd last seen her had not changed my feelings.
I carried on. "I should have got a roll of toilet paper for the other Connolly women. They laughed so hard at me and Steve in our flares. Emma said it was a miracle we ever got girlfriends dressed like that. Mary said mine were so tight she could count the change in my pocket. But Iris topped it by saying she could see where I kept my roll of notes. I dread to think what you'll all say when I'm gone."
Jenny dabbed her eyes, laughing at the memory. "I've sent them all home Alex. There's just me and you here now. Will you stay the night, please? I've prepared your room."
Jenny read the confusion in my face as I looked at hers for clues. I had been a frequent guest in their home. Steve and I often rolled up in a cab, in the early hours of Saturday morning smelling of beer and curry. But that was a while ago.
"I'd like that very much Jenny."
"I'll find the ice. We can have a nightcap in the lounge." She took a jug from the counter and noticed the single flower in the tiny vase. Jenny looked teary again. My hankey was getting good use. "You know, for a while I thought it was Steve being considerate on Saturday mornings. He'd creep into the bedroom with a pot of Lapsang Souchong and a single flower in a vase on the tray. His apology for the noise when you came in. Then I noticed it only happened when you'd stayed. It wasn't Steve, it was you apologising to me, wasn't it Alex?
I nodded. She walked over and moulded herself against me. Jenny held my head and kissed me passionately. My tongue was in her mouth and hers in mine. Her tits against my chest, nipples hard. The heat of her pussy against my thigh as she straddled it. My hard cock against her hip. Neither of us wanted to surface for air until we had to.
Jenny's arms were around my neck. "Now we know for sure, don't we Alex? After all these years, we know." She looked excited. I felt the same.
"You are my best friend's wife. I could never, would never, do anything to disrespect either of you. It was my problem to deal with. It was not easy. Especially when you came down, and we had breakfast together while Steve soaked his hangover in the shower."
Jenny looked at our ghostly selves sat at the breakfast table years ago. "I guess that silk dressing gown was a bit much." She smiled mischievously. "You trying to work out if I was naked underneath? Your eyes would follow me around the kitchen while I made scrambled eggs. It was so flattering." She answered my curious look. "Any woman expects a compliment when they are dolled up to the nines. But you looked at me like that with my hair pulled back and every spot and blemish on display."
I sighed. "I couldn't go on like that, Jenny. It was the only reason I went out with Una." (After I surprised my wife Sarah fucking her boss in the office after hours, it was a long time before I had another relationship. Jenny met Una when we double dated with her and Steve at a restaurant.)
"Una! I thought I was going to give you a hard time about her. Instead, I gave her a hard time about you. I told her not to mess you about or she'd be answering to me. She told me she'd take care when she was fucking you. She knew I was jealous." Jenny scowled at the memory.
"We finished not long after that night, Jenny. Una said there was no future with a man who was in love with his best friend's wife. I told her that was true."
Jenny's mouth was on mine again. My hands were in her hair. Her hands gripped my hips. We moaned in chorus.
She pushed me away, panting. "We need to talk Alex." My look said that was the last thing we needed to do right now. "Yes, we do, before anything more happens. I want no secrets between us. No lies of omission or commission. I've had enough to last a lifetime. I'm going to fix this face, before I look like a groupie for Kiss." She held the ice bucket like a shield. "You are going to take this next door and pour two glasses of the excellent Irish whiskey Steve keeps in that ostentatious globe drinks dispenser."
She was gone before I could argue, so I did as she asked. By the time Jenny returned wearing her reading specs, I'd had enough to drink, so the phrase, `We need to talk' didn't scare me anymore. She was carrying a folder.
"Will I need legal representation, Jenny?"
"The truth will set you free Alex."
I preferred the direction the evening was taking five minutes before. I hoped this was a brief detour and not a derailment.
"Why are we really doing this Jenny?"
"When the grief of losing Steve passed, the girls asked me if I would ever have another partner. I said I hadn't given it any thought. Who would be interested in me? They laughed, and both said Alex at the same time. I pretended to be surprised. Mary said I was a lousy actress because they knew I fancied you."
"So, where's the problem Jenny?" I reached out and touched her hair.
Jenny sighed, then held my hand to stop things getting out of order. "I felt like that about Steve at the beginning. Overlooked things I should have been more careful about. Mary said, `Don't throw yourself at Alex, which I almost did. Make sure he loves you. Make him tell you the truth, even if it's in his best interests to lie." Jenny's look was penetrating.
I squirmed in my chair. "That's so unfair. I'm on trial because of Steve's crimes?" She nodded. "You might not like the truth, Jenny. You might not like me."
She leaned over and kissed me tenderly. Was it for the last time? "Why did you and Steve drift apart after that holiday in Portugal? You hardly saw each other afterwards. You hardly saw me. It's been three years Alex."
It was the one question I thought I'd avoided by not seeing her. Because that her meant not lying to her or dropping Steve in it. It was an act of cowardice. I tried one last time. "Please Jenny. Steve's gone. What difference can it make now?"
"Tell me the truth Alex, then I'll tell you all about my truth. I was going to leave him. Steve was having an affair."
My surprise was genuine. "I didn't know Jenny. Honestly. I'd have tried to talk sense into him. Like I did when you went through a rough patch when the girls were little."
She smiled. "I was grateful for that. They needed their father. I never said thank you then. I wasn't supposed to let you know I knew he'd confided in you. So, thank you for that Alex." I thought I'd got away with it. "Now come and sit next to me and answer the question." I hadn't. Jenny folded her legs under her and patted the cushion next to her. The couch was a deceptively comfortable interrogation chair.
I sighed and took her hand. "Just remember, you asked for this." I couldn't look at her, so I focused in the middle distance as I recounted what happened on that holiday.
"You'll remember I was a late substitute for another bloke who pulled out of the trip with Steve and Larry and Bill, his new mates from the Round Table. I thought the long weekend would be a chance for us to catch up properly. We'd only grabbed the odd drink since I moved out of London."
"Steve jokingly grumbled that you'd dumped him. You know he hated his own company. That's where Larry and Bill came in, as substitute eating and drinking buddies. I didn't like them," Jenny confided.
I continued. "Neither me nor Steve were keen golfers, but when he suggested a weekend abroad with a couple of mates who were a good laugh, I thought, why not? Larry knew this hotel about an hour from Porto, run by an ex-pat English guy. We landed in darkness. On the minibus journey from the airport, Larry and Bill joked their golf had improved no end since finding this place. I said I could do with help on my swing and they collapsed laughing. I was not in on the joke."