Read Love Is a Four Letter Word Online
Authors: Claire Calman
âYou were wrong. He did get sick of me.' Bella tucked the mats into a drawer, and stood at the sink, looking out at the garden. âHe did the ultimate escape trick. He died. Men, eh? So unpredictable. Just when you think you know where you are with one, he goes and gets himself killed. Still, it's cut down on the ironing.' Will came and stood behind her. His arms encircled her, held her tight. She remained rigid.
âGod, I'm sorry. I'm so sorry. I wouldn't have teased you. I'm an idiot.' He whispered into her hair. âWhy on earth didn't you tell me before? Do you mind talking about it? Of course. What a stupid question.'
âNo. It's OK.'
She told him the bare facts. One paragraph. News in brief. In her head, she saw it typeset on a newspaper page:
Death fuels concerns over site safety
The death of a surveyor has reawakened concerns over safety standards in the construction industry. Patrick Hughes, 34, died late on Tuesday evening after sustaining severe head injuries and internal haemorrhaging when part of a brick chimney stack collapsed on him on a building site in Vauxhall, south London. He was rushed by ambulance to St Thomas's Hospital, but doctors were unable to revive him and he died without regaining consciousness. Mr Hughes was assessing the stability of an adjacent wall when the accident occurred. The Health and Safety Executive has launched an inquiry.
Was that Patrick, those neat, flat little words in black on flimsy newsprint? When it had appeared in the newspaper, she had wanted to buy up every copy. Tomorrow, people would be using it to protect their
floors, stuff into wet shoes, line cat litter trays; tomorrow, it would be thrown away, old news, forgotten.
âBella?' Will started to turn her towards him.
âI'm OK. Honest.' An automatic smile.
âAre you?' His voice was low and gentle.
She could feel his warmth, solid and reliable at her side as he moved to see her face. She wanted to lean against him. How good it would be just to let go, give herself up to him, let herself be held and comforted.
Her head moved a fraction, barely discernible, and Will clasped her more tightly to him. For a moment, for one moment, he felt her give and he held her as tenderly as if she were a frightened child; his hand stroked her hair. Then she stiffened and drew herself straight, shook her head with small jerks. Patted his arm with distant affection.
âCome on, Will. You're not my therapist or social worker. You don't have to put on your special concerned voice for my benefit.' She turned away from his face, stung as if she had slapped him. Easing herself from his grasp, she picked up a cloth and started wiping the table, sweeping the crumbs into her cupped palm.
âI'm sorry. It's not â it's not how it seems,' she told the crumbs. âI can't. But I'm fine. Really.'
She felt the brief pressure of his hand on her arm, then he turned to the sink and covered the silence with the reassuring clatter of washing-up.
Could she use the phone, she asked Will, to pick up her messages from the answerphone.
âOf course. You don't need to ask.'
There was a call from Viv â âSorry, just remembered you're staying with Mr Wonderful for the five-day shagfest. We're suffering from a lack of gossip and a lack of your chicken in lemon sauce. Don't forget me
just because you've found your soulmate' â and another call from her dad; she still hadn't responded to his last one. Sorry, she said to Will, would it be all right to phone her father as well.
âYou're so polite.' He shook his head, amused. âI keep saying, treat the place as home.'
âHi, Dads. It's me.' She covered the mouthpiece with her hand, whispering to Will. âI can't be long.'
Will made a âT' sign.
âTake as long as you like. No rush.'
She nodded and pouted him a kiss.
âNo, it's just I'm on someone else's phone.'
She heard Will's voice, deliberately audible from the kitchen: âYes, folks, that's me. Someone else. Not “my boyfriend”, not “my partner”, not “Will” even, just “someone else”. She loves me, nah, nah, nah â¦'
Fine, she said, she was fine â house fine â damp actually being treated that very moment â OK, not at that actual moment, but that day and tomorrow and soon it would be done and she could unpack and live like a real grown-up â yes, work fine, bit dull but paying the mortgage and keeping her in croissants â painting, surprisingly fine, she was less rusty than she'd thought â no, silly, not nearly good enough for that â yes, of course he could see them some time â
âHow come I'm not allowed to see them then?' Will called through.
âDon't be so nosy,' she called back. âGet on with the tea, boy.'
âOh. That's Will,' into the phone. âWell, he's â y'know ⦠hmm ⦠yes, I guess he is really.' She might as well admit it. She couldn't sidestep the issue for ever.
âQuite a while. He originally came to do the garden, which, incidentally,' she said as
he came back into the room with two mugs of tea, âis in dire need of attention. He's falling way behind in his duties.'
Will came up behind her, put his arms around her and whispered in her ear, âThat's because I keep getting distracted.'
She shook him off and waggled her fingers at him to wave him away.
âYes, yes, he is.'
Will was standing very close.
âIs what, is what?' he said. âGorgeous? Lickable? Most Rampant Man on the Planet?'
âIs right
here,'
she hissed at him. Will wrinkled his nose.
âNo, no, don't be leaping ahead, Dads. That's not on the agenda.'
âWhat isn't? What isn't?' said Will, nibbling at her neck. Bella covered the mouthpiece.
âGo away, Annoying Person. I'm trying to have a sensible conversation with my esteemed father here.'
Will stuck his tongue in her ear and waggled it about slurpily. She grabbed his sleeve and raised his arm to her ear to wipe it â âYou're disgusting,' she mouthed. He smiled and shrugged â âI know.'
She dropped her voice and turned her back to him.
âFunny, playful â yes, hmm-mm, very bright, thoughtful, direct. Sensitive, too. OK, if you like that sort of thing, I guess.'
Will craned his face round into her vision and beamed at her. She shoved him away.
She laughed. âNo, no, not a wimp.'
There was a pause. A long pause. Bella was frowning.
âIt's a bit tricky. He's very busy.'
âNo I'm not,' said Will.
The volume dipped again. Will tried to get closer to hear. Bella kept him at elbow's length.
âShe is. You know what she's like.'
âIt'll put him off and then she can play her sympathetic-but-not-at-all surprised part.'
âMmm. You always say that. Possibly. I'll consider it. No promises. Yeah. Bye, Dads, bye.'
Will was standing with his arms folded.
âThey want to meet me, don't they? You can't hide me from them for ever.'
âIt's the other way round, silly. I'm protecting you from them. Her. We'll go if you insist, but don't blame me when it all goes horribly wrong.' She stomped upstairs. âCan I run a bath?' calling back over her shoulder.
âYou don't need to ask, for the 45th time. Only if I can come and molest you with my rubber duck.'
âHmm? I've never heard it called that before.'
âI had such rude thoughts about you last night, you have no idea.' Will rested a glass of chilled rosé on Bella's tummy for a moment as she lay in the bath. The circle of cold sang against her skin.
âTell me,' she said.
âTell you my fantasy? You sure? It was pretty rude.'
She nodded.
âIt is a hot, hot day and I have been walking for hours across the downs. At last, I come to a meadow with long grass, rippling like water in the wind. Far off, on the other side, I see a splash of colour â an orange blanket spread out with a figure lying on it in a white dress. I weave a cautious path through the grasses, then stop a few yards away. I am very thirsty but now I notice nothing but you. Your hair allows me only a tantalizing glimpse of your face, your eyelids flickering as you dream. A gust of warm wind lifts your dress, sliding it higher up your legs. For one brief moment, I am treated to a flash of white cotton at the tops of your thighs, then your dress settles once more.
âI do not want to alarm you, but I am feeling so hot and flushed and I can see you have a cool-bag with
you. Perhaps you have water. I start to sing quietly, to waken you gently: “⦠and when she passes, each one she passes goes âAaah â¦'⦔ Your eyes flicker open, I reassure you, and you give me chilled water to drink, gesture to the ground by your side. Drowsy from the sun, we lean back on the blanket. Slowly, your hand strokes up my side and round to my chest. You start to unbutton my shirt, saying I must be very hot. You pour a little water into the well of your palm and rub it into my chest, cold against my skin.
â“I'm hot, too,” you say. “You must cool me down.” I kneel beside you and drizzle water from the bottle over your dress. The wet cloth clings to you, outlining your luscious curves, moulding itself to your shape. “Blow on me,” you say, looking down. I begin at your feet, blowing cool breaths between your toes, over your insteps, around your ankles. Your murmurs mingle with the breeze, the whispering of the grasses.
âAs I blow just above your knee, you tremble and your legs ease apart a little way. “More,” I say, blowing along your thigh, “part for me.” The V of your legs widens, welcoming me in. I blow softly, then, as I breathe in, I take in your scent. Intoxicating. I cannot resist. My tongue plays around your inner thigh, flicking higher and higher. My lips press against you. The softness of your skin is like silk against my cheek, my chin.
âI nudge my head forward beneath the white awning of your dress. I am so close to you now. I can see your knickers clinging to you damply. I want to pull them off, tug at them with my teeth ⦠but first I must tease you a little more. My breath finds you again and your murmurs are deep, almost moans. At last, you arch towards me, pushing yourself against my mouth and Iâ
âBella?'
She clambered out of the bath, sloshing water over the rim, and sat astride him, kissing him, her mouth hard on his. He scooped his hands under her and pulled her close.
âSorry I'm getting you all wet.' Bella tugged at his belt.
He slid his hand between her legs.
âYou certainly are,' and he laid her out in front of him on the bathroom floor.
They talked late, murmuring into the early hours. Will asked if she'd mind leaving the bedside light on for a while.
âI want to see your face.'
His fingers stroked the length of her upper arm.
âIt's funny,' Will said, âsometimes I feel you're not really here. I want to say I miss you but it seems silly when I can see you in the room with me. Um, I'm sorry if I upset you earlier. About Patrick. I wish you'd told me before.'
âI'm sure you don't want to hear me droning on about my exes.'
âHardly droning on. We've all got a past.'
âReally, Will. You wouldn't like it if I started making comparisons â “Oh,
Patrick
used to do that too â that aftershave smelt quite different on
Patrick â Patrick
loved being touched like this in bed â ”'
âThanks, Bella. Why do you do that? You know that's not what I meant. You're just being â I don't know â thingy.'
âI'm just being thingy? Well, that makes everything so much clearer. I'm so glad we've sorted that out.'
âNow you've got your Snow Queen voice on. I always feel like I'm interrogating you if I dare to ask you anything, like you've sworn some blood oath never to divulge how you feel. I'd like to think you can tell me stuff.'
âThere's nothing to tell.'
He sighed.
âCan I just ask â I mean, you must miss him, right?'
In her mind, Patrick watches her, his face half in shadow, his expression veiled. He does not speak.
âIt's not â you don't â you couldn't understand. I'm sorry.'
âI might. I lost my stepdad, remember? I'm not a bereavement virgin. Won't you even let me try? How do you know if you won't tell me?'
âWill. Please don't.' She closed her eyes, silently speaking to Patrick: âPatrick. Please don't.'
âI'm sorry, Bella. I'm sorry. The last thing I want is to hurt you. I'm being selfish, I know â but I just want you to love me â as much as you obviously loved him.'
There was a barely discernible shake of her head, then her eyelids flickered and she was silent. She felt his soft kiss on her brow, the breath of his silent sigh.
He reached over to turn out the light and she heard his whisper in the darkness,
âI wish I could really know you.'
After a mere eight days rather than the promised five, the DAMP was done, the walls replastered and painted, and there was no excuse for her not to return home. Bella repacked her clothes into her holdall, took her dress, her tops down from the hangers in Will's wardrobe, retrieved her underwear from the drawer. She knew now that she shouldn't have stayed with him, how much worse it was bound to make her feel.
Will watched her as she retrieved her bits and pieces from the bathroom, as she zipped up her toilet bag with a final flourish.
âCome on, sweet pea. I feel like we're getting divorced or something. You don't have to take every little last thing with you. Leave some stuff. Here â ' He started shoving aside his own deodorant and shaving foam. âLet me clear you some more space.'
She laid a hand on his arm.
âThanks, Will. Really. But it's not necessary. I need to have my things around me at home.'
âI â well â I thought, maybe â¦'