Julia Gets a Life (14 page)

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Authors: Lynne Barrett-Lee

BOOK: Julia Gets a Life
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            She doesn’t. Instead she reads;

 

            ‘Options.          1. Keep, plus advise Malcolm, but ? future of relationship

                                    2. Keep, plus advise Malcolm plus
end
relationship (firmness. ? Paternal rights etc.)

                                    3. Keep, but tell no-one who Father is. (?work problems/

                                      potential psycho. damage to child etc.)

                                    4. Have abortion. Big step. Think!Think! Think!

 

            Mum, this is gross! And who’s Malcolm? And what exactly is going on around here...’

            ‘Emma, it is not your mother. It is me.’ (Lily.) ‘ Max! Go and fetch me a piece of toilet paper, please. I need to blow my nose.’

            ‘But..’

            Me. ‘
Do
it.’ He does. Lily slides her eyes after him and then snaps them back to Emma.

            ‘Pshhh! Okay, Emma. I am pregnant. I do not want a baby. I do not know what to do. I am a fool. I am...’

            ‘Oh, Lily! A baby! Oh, but that’s brilliant! Oh, how could you not want it? We’ll help you, won’t we? Mum? I’m old enough to babysit now, and I could help look after it after school, couldn’t I, Mum? We’re doing baby and childcare next term anyway, aren’t we, Mum? And it would be like, cool - you know. With you having looked after us, and... Oh, Lily, it’s so brill!’

            Oh God.

            Oh
God.
Why can’t I be more careful about leaving incriminating scraps of paper around the house? Why didn’t I learn my lesson after last Christmas’s game of dirty words scrabble?      (Consequence of which was that Max woke us on Christmas morning not to ask if he could open his presents, but to ask us instead what ‘fellatio’ meant and to query the ‘d’ in todger.)

            But Abortion. Oh
dear
! What a horrible thing to have to have an opinion about. What a stressful thing to have to take a stance on. What a crushing weight of responsibility to have dumped on me on a day when all I wanted to do was moon around thinking about what to wear for Date 2 with Howard tonight.

            Okay. Have sent Lily back to bed to help pull her face/body/psyche into shape. Now think.

            Ummm.

            Put yourself in similar position and consider best available option.

            Ummm.

            Imagine you’re pregnant
now,
by Howard.       

            No, no, NO! Straight back to fluffy bunnies etc. plus opportunity to buy really nice buggy (had buggies and changing bags and cot duvets during that long, miserable ‘pastels only’ baby merchandising decade.)

            Imagine number of unwanted children in western world, coupled with spiralling family planning crisis in developing world. Consider ramifications of Mother Only as childrearing option (football, satellite programming fluency, doing ‘absolute last word on subject’ type discipline etc.). This is more like it.

 

            Termination - for and against (eat, for security purposes, after considering)

 

For

Doesn’t want a baby

A woman’s right to choose

Career/home/lifestyle difficulties

Will not have to marry (co-habit/share in upbringing with etc) unsuitable man.

Unwanted child bad thing to bring into world

Against

Wrong/ act of murder etc. Foetus is living thing

Will scar conscience horribly etc.

Father’s right to have child also

Will possibly regret

May damage reproductive system

           

            Oh, this is
awful
. Especially given that I always had such a solid set of opinions in place about abortion. But it’s like everything else, isn’t it? For the majority, opinions are not informed by experience. I’m not qualified to advise Lily because I haven’t been in that position myself. When I found myself (accidentally) pregnant with Emma, I couldn’t have been more delighted a) because I was working at Arseface and Letcher (not their
real
names, obviously) Portrait Studio and hating it passionately and b) because my then best friend had a baby and therefore didn’t have to get up and go to work in the mornings, and could instead stay in wearing only a dressing gown and day old mascara. Always (still is) my idea of heaven. Also, I loved my husband deeply, and was infused with all the usual sentimental feelings about having his genes intermingled with mine to produce a super-being.

            Then I think of Malcolm Woodwork Teacher and can visualise a part of Lily’s plight.

 

            Lily woke up again at about midday, and we ate Pringles and taramasalata for lunch. Then, based on her estimate of being six weeks pregnant, we decided on a provisional plan of action. This would involve;

            Doing another pregnancy test

            Visiting Doctor with view to counselling or similar

            Giving all options deep and reflective thought

            Making firm decision in next two weeks

            Telling another significant person in her life (think who) for balance of opinion

            Not panicking.

           

            She left at half past two (having offered to come back and babysit M and E, in case of extreme lateness, i.e. sex with Howard) and said;

            ‘I’ve made up my mind. I’m going to have an abortion. Can you help find me a clinic?’

 

Chapter
12

 

 

            After Lily left, I looked in the Yellow Pages and was astonished to see that
Abortion
Advice
was the second entry. Just like that, as bold as you like. It said to look under pregnancy, which I did, and there were about a zillion to choose from. Abortion, it seems, is now part of the social landscape, like the National Lottery and supermarket loyalty cards.

            I rang the one with the small display ad, as per Richard’s usually failsafe system (lineage: cheapskates, big display: sharks, and never call AAAA1111 plumbing/ taxi/ emergency gas repair ltd - very big sharks with £150 call out charges). I told the lady (who sounded
very
old - Marie Stopes maybe?) that I was enquiring for a friend.

            ‘Yes, dear,’ she said in that very predictable knowing way. I was about to add ‘really, I actually am’ but decided that would make her even more likely to think it was me with the unplanned pregnancy. So I asked her to send me a pamphlet instead.

            ‘But don’t you want to make an appointment?’ she asked.

            ‘But it’s not...not yet, thank you.’

            And then I felt really guilty for even being embarrassed to have someone who didn’t even know me thinking that I was considering having an abortion, as if having an abortion was a nasty wicked thing to do (even if from some perspectives, and to some people, it patently is, but then they don’t know the circumstances, do they?) And who was I, the lady at the abortion clinic or anyone else to judge what a woman did in those circumstances? Given that it was they that were going to have to live with whatever decision they took. And so on.

            And all I wanted to do was arrange my date with Howard, spend at least three and a half hours getting ready for it, and sing.

 

Chapter
13

 

            We’ve just been to see
The Devil Wears Prada
.

            I was secretly quite astonished that Howard agreed to come and see something so blatantly girly (Richard would not have gone in a zillion years - not even if Sharon Stone was in it - though other, more perfect husbands would, of course, to be kind to their wives). But Howard seemed really keen. I had expected him to suggest something involving car chases/ male bonding/ petty criminal activity etc., but he said,

            ‘Great! I’ve been meaning to catch that for ages.’

            It has been out for ages, of course, but our local cinema now has so many screens that they are probably still running
Born Free
in screen 87 at 4.35 am on the last Friday of every month with an R in it, or something. Such progress! I
love
the pictures.

            I didn’t take any Pringles (fledgeling relationships are sensitive to overt displays of anti social behaviour - which sneaking savoury snacks into cinemas clearly is), but instead said I’d like a small bag of salted popcorn. Which was a big mistake because it was only then that Howard said he wouldn’t have anything, as he wasn’t hungry. Typical! I then had to eat them as unobtrusively as possible (by sucking, mainly) so that he wouldn’t have my piggery thrust in his face.

            But it was a great film. One of those films where the audience all come out feeling like they love one another. Which would explain, I suppose, about orgies and so on when people went to shows like
Hair!
in the sixties.

            So now we’re in the car, in the queue to get out of the car park, and the sky is all big and spangly and velvety and full of the mysteries of the universe and the stars of all the dead souls who’ve gone to heaven, and though neither of us has acknowledged it yet, we have arrived at the pivotal moment. I say,

            ‘Meryl Streep was brilliant, wasn’t she?’

            ‘Oh, she always is, isn’t she?’ says Howard, negotiating the exit bollard/young shrub landscaping arrangement and glancing across to check the road is clear. His eyes are so
shiny.
‘Did you see her in
The Hours
? So
compelling
.’

            And so on and so forth till we approach the area in which Howard lives and which is on the way to where I live, and where it will be necessary for one of us to make reference to if and where we will have coffee and sex. But instead, Howard says.

            ‘Do you fancy a kebab?’

            I don’t. I
love
kebabs, of course, and have been denied them as a marital food choice since Richard found a chargrilled weevil in a shish, in ‘85. But I have sucked and chewed popcorn so carefully and for so long that my stomach thinks it has been fed a five course meal (which proves what they say about sucking chocolate) and I want a kebab now like I want to undergo liposuction under local anaesthetic. Also, I am a garlic free environment and wish to remain so for the duration. Ditto chilli, cabbage and that particularly pungent liquid fat that seeps out of the meat and soaks into the pitta bread. Which is dreadful, because everyone knows that men really can’t stand women who don’t enjoy their food. Especially ones that pick bits out of anything foreign with their faces wrinkled up in disgust.

            ‘Mmm, yes. Why not? Do you know somewhere good?’

            Of course Howard knows somewhere good. He is a single young buck with limited cooking ability and a big, mansize appetite to deal with. He knows exactly the sort of kebab house you’d expect him to know. Open half the night, manned by two chirpy Cypriots (father and son - son doubles as Psychology lecturer at the University, by day, apparently), Awesome Kombat Death Zone arcade game blinking in the corner, row of metal bowls full of (surprisingly fresh looking) salads, and starburst fluorescent stickers saying Chips £1.00! With Mayo £1.20! Currey Sauce’s Available! etc. But no rum-babas. Kebab houses always had rum-babas in the seventies, I tell them, but they look at me as though I have recently beamed in from planet twit. Not in Wales they didn’t, apparently.

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