Prologue
It was my old friend Leigh Nicholls that told me to start living for myself. We have always been there to pick each other up since we were at junior school. She has always been part of my life and I love her like a sister.
As we sat in her favourite restaurant on that fateful July evening, it seemed like she was the only thing I had left in my rapidly diminishing world.
The things she set in motion that night helped to transform me. She was my saviour.
We've shared a lot in the last forty-five years.
I can't wait to get home and tell her what an absolute slut I have been for the last few months.
I took her advice and aged fifty, I have finally started living for myself.
And God, has it been fun!
One
As I waited for the final divorce papers to come through, everything seemed fine with the world. It had gone on too long and I wanted closure. Eighteen months of solicitors, arguments, counter-arguments and finally a compromise agreement that left both of us relatively satisfied and anxious to move on. I got the house, so the feeling of rejection was tempered by at least having a roof over my head. The rest of the settlement meant I would want for nothing for the rest of my days as long as I wasn't too frivolous.
Then the envelope landed on my doormat and I was about to crack open the champagne. When I read the contents, the only thing that cracked was me. I was in floods for days and felt utterly empty, bereft and alone.
I was coming up to the dreaded fifty and I was all by myself in this great big, unforgiving world. The kids had flown the coop -- one settled in New Zealand with her partner and twins, the youngest doing his Post-graduate degree in Edinburgh. My ex-husband was off with his new, younger model -- a clone of me as I had been some fifteen years earlier according to the bush telegraph.
Robyn Hall-Evans aged forty-nine and three-quarters. Welcome to your new life on the scrapheap. Life hadn't begun for me at forty -- it had started the downward spiral that led me to where I was now. What chance had I as I approached fifty?
The first thing I did was to ditch the Hall-Evans part of the equation and after twenty-six years, went back to being Robyn Christie again. It felt cathartic for a while, then merely reminded me of how far I had travelled in that time to arrive back in exactly the same place I started.
Most of the so-called friends we had made over the years made all the right noises about 'poor old Robyn' then quietly forgot about me. A single woman didn't suit the demographic of their insular little worlds of genteel dinner parties and bridge nights. It bothered me at first, then I realised I was better off without them.
I didn't even have work to distract me. My ex-husband was a very well-paid, senior executive and once the kids were old enough to go to school, I just seemed to fall into the role of mother and housewife and my old, unlamented job was never mentioned again. In the early days, it suited me and after a few years I began to get involved in village life -- the usual round of committees, organising fetes and fund-raisers.
Now I could barely raise the enthusiasm for that, as I began to see in the older single women, the very thing I was destined to become myself. It quite frankly terrified me and I found myself making excuses not to be part of that world anymore.
I felt like I was in a giant bathtub that was emptying rather too rapidly -- the current whirling about me, dragging me ever closer to the plughole, down which I was about to disappear without trace.
Just about the only thing I managed to keep up with was my gym work. I started after having William as I found it hard to keep weight off and had stayed with it ever since. It became just about the only solace in my life -- the ten minute drive to the gym in a nearby town, flogging myself into the ground for an hour, doing the machines or pilates or yoga, then a leisurely shower, a skinny latte and a few words with some of the ladies I knew by sight.
Then it was back to my idyllic little cottage on the edge of the village green with the gin bottle screaming at me from the drinks cabinet. My next challenge was to see how long I could let it scream without me screaming back. Some days it didn't take long and those were the days I hated myself more than ever.
As for sex, I had barely even thought about it for a long time. It had not been a pleasant menopause and that contributed in part to an already rapidly declining relationship. I was not easy to live with, but a complete lack of understanding of my condition made a bad situation even worse.
I was in regular contact with Leigh during that period and even though she lived sixty miles away we saw each other regularly. I put on a brave face at our meetings, but Leigh being Leigh, and having known me since I could form basic sentences, knew I was in a bad place.
About a month into my new-found 'freedom', we sat in a pub garden halfway between our respective homes one Friday afternoon. At least the drive meant we weren't tempted by wine or gin. We sat, nursing spritzers as we always did, making them last so we could chat once our lunch was done.
Leigh looked at me over her half-moon glasses. Four kids and two marriages had left their toll on her, and over the last few years she had gone from being a head-turner to looking her age.
"So, you're looking good on the surface, babes. That gym work is obviously paying dividends." She patted her ample tummy. "Wish I had the willpower. So which rich village bachelor has our Robyn got her beady little eyes on then? Must be fighting them off with a shitty stick, I reckon!"
I knew she was probing me and the beady little eyes she referred to rolled in my head in exasperation. "Give over, Leigh. The only thing I'm fighting off has 'Gordon's' writ-large on the label. I'm down to marking the fucking bottle each night. How sad is that?"
"So no-one riding across the village green on a white charger to fall at your feet in supplication?"
I barked a mirthless laugh. "Hardly. Most nights it would be me falling at
their
feet, but bloody dead drunk." I closed my eyes for a moment. "What a fucking mess I am, Leigh. Going through the motions of keeping fit, then drinking myself into oblivion." I took a drink of warm wine and soda. "And I don't even think about sex because if I did..." I trailed off for a moment, tears welling in my eyes. "Christ, Leigh -- this fucking faΓ§ade I'm wearing. My drinking, my exercise kick. It's all for one reason and I am so fucking scared, I can barely think straight."
She held out a hand to me. "Come on, tell Aunty Leigh everything. You know it always works -- I'm here for you and you're here for me."
I took a deep breath and looked around the garden to make sure no-one would overhear me. I moved closer to her and kept my voice low. Somehow I got it all out without crying.