A Hundred Ways to Break Up (Let's Make This Thing Happen 2) (8 page)

BOOK: A Hundred Ways to Break Up (Let's Make This Thing Happen 2)
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And all the time, the tip of his tongue drew delicate circles around her clit, teasing that most sensitive of places, occasionally flicking across it and sending bolts of pleasure stabbing through her belly.

He started to thrust with that hand, sliding fully in and then pulling back until the tips of his fingers were just teasing her opening, before sliding deep again. There was a strength to that action, a sense of careful control, as if he could carry on forever, relentlessly driving her to heights of–

She was close!

All of a sudden, taking her by surprise in its abrupt intensity.

There was something about the way he was driving those fingers into her, about the impact of knuckles and thumb against her as he thrust deep, and the rapid flicking of his tongue, now passing back and forth directly over her clit.

She reached down, and held his head hard against her, so that now he didn’t have room to keep thrusting those fingers and it was only the flicking of his tongue, orchestrating everything, building it all up to a peak.

She pulled his face even harder against her, felt a sudden tightening, a tremor of muscles deep inside her, and then she was bucking against him, grinding herself against his face, using him to milk every last drop of sensation out of her climax.

§

With a little reluctance, she let go of his head. He eased away, his mouth still against her, and drew in a deep breath, then slumped against her. She thought he was going to stay like that, but then he rolled his shoulders, pushed himself away from her, and hauled himself up onto the sofa beside her.

They settled into a position that echoed how they had been earlier, Emily tucked into him, her head on his chest, her arm draped across his belly.

They dozed and woke, shifting position occasionally as stiffness settled in.

Finally, Emily forced herself to stay awake. It had gone dark outside, and she needed to get home. She hadn’t come up with a decent reason to stay away for a night so soon after last time, and she didn’t want to stir up Thom’s suspicions any further.

She sat, and put a hand on Ray’s arm to rouse him, and it was not long after she managed to wake him that all Hell broke loose.

11

“You don’t have to go, you know.”

“I do. You know I do.” He was doing that thing again, the thing that somehow combined innocence with a small boy’s mischievous sense of doing just about anything to get what he wants. “I told you I can’t stay out another night. I have to go home, Ray. You know that.”

There was a brief flash of pout – the spoilt small boy thing again – and then he shrugged, smiled, and his entire face was transformed. “I’ll walk you out to Caledonian Road,” he said. “Make sure you get a cab safely.”

She leaned forward and kissed him on the cheek. “I love you,” she whispered, so softly it was almost inaudible. She swallowed, and pulled away. She hadn’t meant to say that... it just spilled out. She didn’t even know if it was true, hadn’t allowed herself to dwell on it or think it through.

It was just there.

Out.

He stood, but didn’t say anything. Maybe he was being sensitive, understanding what a big thing that was for her. Maybe he hadn’t even heard.

“I’ve got to go,” she said again, as if repeating that would somehow move them on past this moment.

She turned and went out into the passage.

At the front door, he stopped her with hands on her waist. Turned her, so that he could kiss her. Then he reached for the door, released the catch and pushed it open and instantly there was a jabber of voices and the night was light up by a barrage of flashes.

Ray’s hand on her upper arm, gripping so tightly it must surely bruise, hauled her back inside and he slammed the door.


Fuck
.”

“What is it? What’s happening?” It had all been so quick. Out in the street, and on the short set of steps leading up to the front door, there was a knot of people. Maybe a dozen of them. Cameras flashing, quickfire. Voices raised, competing with each other.

“Ray! Ray!”

“Who is she, Ray?”

“Where’s Róisín, Ray? What does she think of your new–?”


Ray!
Over here, Ray.”

Now the two of them stood in the passage, the door shut. A series of expressions rushed over Ray’s features, then he muttered “
Fuck
” again and slapped a hand against a wall.

Then, more softly this time: “Fuck...”

“Did that hurt?”

She stood there, arms folded, one eyebrow raised. Ray opened his mouth to say something, then stopped, met her look, and laughed. “Yeah,” he said. “Too damn right it hurt.”

“So I guess they’re onto us?” She was trying to make light of it, trying not to give into the panicked rush of thoughts filling her head.

Did they know who she was? Even if they didn’t have her name, had they managed to get any usable photos of her in that instant when the door had been open and the cameras flashing? Were the two of them going to be plastered all over the Sunday tabloids? It was early enough still for them to make the later editions; if not, would they be in the papers on Monday? And forget the papers: would those snatched photos be all over the internet tonight, or tomorrow? All through the social media?

If the paparazzi had any half-decent photos, or if they knew her name... it was no longer even a matter of whether Thom would find out, but
when
...

“God, Ray,” she sighed. “This isn’t good, is it?”

She slipped into his arms, the fit against his body perfect as ever.

Gently stroking her hair, Ray said, “This takes me right back: I haven’t had the press on my doorstep since... well, it’s been years and there was a trashed Lamborghini and three Belgian girls involved in the story.” He was trying to joke, but not doing very well.

“You wouldn’t think they’d be interested,” said Emily. “Surely you’re allowed to have a life, and it’s not as if
I’m
anybody.”

“I haven’t been allowed to have a life since I was nineteen. And it doesn’t matter who you are: they don’t care. Oh yes, if you turn out to be some other minor celebrity then it gives them a juicy angle, but that doesn’t really matter. I’m Ray Sandler, I’m still married as far as they’re concerned and now I’m sleeping around again. That’s all they need.”

“You might not have been allowed a life, but
I
have,” she said. “And now they’re going to dig, and keep on digging until they have what they want. My name’s going to get out there and suddenly I won’t have any privacy, and Thom’s going to find out, everyone’s going to find out...”

She could feel him nodding as she spoke. Now he said, “And how do you feel about that? How do you feel about Thom knowing? How do you feel about him, full stop?”

“I don’t know. I’m scared of him finding out, because he’ll take it badly. He’s not violent, not physically, at least, but he really does know how to twist the knife. But I can handle it. I’ve set myself up for this, I can take the blows. But more than that, I don’t want to hurt him, Ray. We’ve both become different people and our marriage is dead, but I don’t want to cause him pain.”

“Maybe you need to tell him before your name gets out there. It’s like you told me: you have to try to understand what you can control and learn to let go of what you can’t – if you tell him first then you’re still in control.”

“You were listening.”

“Raptly.” They both laughed.

They moved apart. Ray turned to walk through to the back of the house and Emily followed.

“What I want to know is who told them?” said Ray. “They don’t just start doorstepping you without reason. Nobody knew you were here, apart from your friend Marcia: do you think she–?”

“No. Marcia’s flaky, but she’s not stupid and she’s not disloyal. I trust her more than I trust anybody.” She stared at Ray’s back, wondering what was going through his mind. She swallowed, then went on: “If you want to know who told them, you need to look closer to home than that.”

She said nothing now, leaving Ray to work it out.

“No,” he said, finally, glancing back over one shoulder. “Mo wouldn’t–”

“I saw him, Ray. He was out there, watching the baying mob.” Mo had been standing by a car on the other side of the road. Leaning back against the driver’s door, arms folded, smiling. Just a glimpse, in that brief moment before Ray had slammed the house door closed again, but it had been enough.

“Shit,” he said. “I need to have words with him. He gets carried away.”

So it was fine to be angry if it had been
her
friend who had leaked to the press, but now Ray knew it had been Mo he was back-tracking. She bit back on saying that out loud, though. Now wasn’t the time to fight. They were both wound up. Both
scared
: this changed everything they had together. No more cloak and dagger, hiding in the shadows, feeling that they were out-smarting the world.

“So what are we going to do?” asked Ray.

He was really asking
her?
He normally had all the answers.

“I need to get out of here,” she said. “I need to get home. Work out how I’m going to handle Thom.”

He nodded. “Cool,” he said. “I’ll haul Mo in, find out exactly what he’s been saying.” Then, with that mischievous grin again: “We could always just slip away,” he said. “Get out of the heat until it all calms down. I have a place. A chateau in the Loire valley.”

“A
chateau?

“Well, yes,” he said. “Nothing too grand. It’s not quite Ronnie’s place.”

“Ronnie’s place is a thirty-two bedroom mansion, Ray. On the scale of zero to impressive, there’s still plenty of room at the impressive end for a chateau that’s ‘not quite Ronnie’s place’...”

Ray shrugged. “What can I say? I’m a rock star, babe. So how about it?”

She let herself laugh. She couldn’t help it, with him standing there with that impish look on his face as he offered her a mere chateau to hide in. “No, Ray,” she finally said. “We can’t run away. You have an album to finish and I have the tatters of a life to sort out. Time to man up. Do you think they’ll be out the back, too?”

The first time she’d come to Ray’s London house – she hadn’t even thought, but of course he must have others around the world – they’d entered through the back garden, where a door set into a high wall opened onto one of those pocket handkerchief London parks.

“One way to find out,” he said. “You sure?”

§

They slipped through the back garden in darkness, the way lit only by the glow from Ray’s phone. At the door they paused. Ray turned and somehow his arms were around Emily and he was kissing her forehead, her cheeks, her mouth, the line of her jaw.

She pressed against him, reveling in the thrill of a body against her that was still new to her. A man who had said–

“I love you, Emily. We’ll get through this, okay?”

She pulled away, nodded, then realized he probably couldn’t see in the gloom. “Yes,” she said. “We will.”

He reached for the latch, and eased the door open a short way.

There was no sign of anybody waiting out there, no sudden barrage of flashes.

He took her hand, pulled the door open and led her out into the park. “Come on, babe,” he said. “Let’s get you into a cab.”

12

All the way home, she clung onto Ray’s advice.
Her
advice.

It’s like you told me: you have to try to understand what you can control and learn to let go of what you can’t.

The press were clearly after Ray. Mo had been building up the buzz about his comeback album, feeding them stories about unannounced gigs and his private life, and goodness knew what else. She didn’t know what details they had, but she couldn’t control any of that. What she
could
control was how much
she
knew, so she spent the train journey home checking websites and social media for anything new about Ray.

There was nothing. Not even on the Angry Cans Facebook page, which would be where Mo would seed things. Had Ray got to him already and stopped him, or was the over-zealous publicist just biding his time?

So nothing was out there yet. Surely that was good? Maybe Ray was being over-dramatic, and when the press found out she was a nobody they would lose interest.

Or maybe the hacks were talking to Thom already, getting the slighted husband’s side before they published.

§

She felt sick.

She didn’t want to get into her car, so she stood there like a fool in the station car park as if she had nowhere to go.

She took her phone out and checked for messages, but there was nothing. She’d exchanged a couple with Ray on the way home. He was being solicitous, reassuring her, trying to make sure she was okay but with nothing really to offer to convince her that they would get through this.

She pressed the button on her key fob and the car unlocked with a flickering of lights, taking her briefly back to the stutter of camera flashes when Ray had opened his front door.

She climbed in and started the engine.

Control what you can and let everything else go.

That was all she could do.

§

She parked, let herself in, went through and the front room was in disarray, with cans, magazines, shoes, the remains of a takeaway dinner – all cluttering every available surface. And central to the disarray was Thom. He was occupying the sofa, his legs stretched out, feet on the coffee table amongst the beer cans. Shirt untucked, a yellow curry stain just below the collar. Another beer can in one hand, resting on the sofa beside him, an American cartoon show on the TV.
Family Guy
or
South Park
or something – she never knew the difference.

He looked at her and she didn’t know what he was thinking, what he might know, but more than anything else, she wanted to know... “Where did you go, Thom? What happened? Why aren’t you the Thom I married?”

She hadn’t planned to say anything. All she’d clung to was the possibility that she might just get upstairs without any kind of confrontation.

He looked confused now. How do you answer questions like that? It would be hard to do even if you were sober.

He didn’t know about her and Ray. Not yet. He wouldn’t be sitting there with that look on his face if he knew.

BOOK: A Hundred Ways to Break Up (Let's Make This Thing Happen 2)
5.34Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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