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Authors: Jane Wenham-Jones

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Chapter Thirteen

My mother sniffed as only my mother can.

‘What on earth do you want to do that for? I would have thought,' she continued, without waiting for an answer, ‘that you had enough to be getting on with here, what with the house to keep clean –‘ here she paused to look in the corners for dust ‘– and your son to look after, now you are on your own.' The last three words were weighted with disapproval.

I breathed deeply. My mother spent the entire 18 years Daniel and I were together delivering regular, if veiled, criticisms of him, our marriage, and our lifestyle. But since he left, she has switched tack and makes it very plain that I was careless to lose him, because he is, after all, a man, which affords him a far greater status than I will ever have, even if he does happen to be a very poor example of the species.

Any man is better than no man, her warped thinking goes, which is why she spent 40 years complaining bitterly about my father's shortcomings yet refused to let him out of her sight. I sometimes wonder if he died of sheer desperation.

I spoke as cheerily as I could. ‘Because it will be interesting and a bit of fun and I might win some money to buy Stanley the new mobile phone he wants for his birthday.'

‘Hmm,' said my mother, crossly, knowing I had got her on that one because Stanley, being her only grandchild
and
a male, could do no wrong.

My brother, Anthony, the other light of her life, had so far failed to produce any offspring, being too busy drinking and chasing unsuitable women – a fact my mother resolutely refused to acknowledge — and had very sensibly gone to live 200 miles away in Nottingham.

So, in the absence of either him or a second generation of geniuses sprung from
his
loins, all her love – grandmotherly and otherwise – was lavished on Stanley.

‘I think he's looking a bit peaky,' she said now. ‘Are you feeding him properly?'

‘Don't you start,' I said. ‘I've had Daniel on at me about too many pizzas and not enough vegetables.'

‘Well
he
can talk,' my mother said. ‘I can't ever remember a Christmas when he finished his sprouts.' Here she paused again to see if there were any other festive misdemeanours she could dredge up and relive for the enjoyment of us both. Clearly disappointed that there weren't, she continued briskly, ‘I'll make sure he has something proper while I'm in charge.'

“Something proper” was an expression she had brought Stanley up on without realising that, for him, it had become synonymous with all he didn't like. As in “please don't make me have something proper, I want chicken nuggets”. Or “Connor's mum is cool. She doesn't make us have anything proper – we had ice-cream and crisps”.

‘So you'll do it then,' I said quickly, before she could start going through menus. She'd been here for half an hour so far and not yet taken off her coat but I could feel we were in for a long haul. ‘Charlotte would have him but he gets a bit fed up going round there too often and there's Boris to think of.'

I eyed the sprawled form of my slumbering cat, who always seemed to look even larger by the time he'd been under my mother's tender care for 24 hours. ‘I don't know what time I'll be back.'

‘I'll get him some chopped liver,' said my mother decisively. ‘All this tinned rubbish isn't any good for him either. Our cats always had proper scraps from the butcher's.' She looked me up and down and gave one of her sudden laughs. ‘Do they know you can't cook?'

It is always a double-edged sword asking my mother to do anything. On the one hand she'll clean the entire house, weed the garden, and rediscover the carpet in Stanley's bedroom but, on the other, will then provide a full catalogue of undusted ornaments, unmatched socks, and rose bushes inexpertly pruned, as well as her personal insights into where I am going wrong on the mothering front, which can last for several weeks.

Which is why I hesitated before asking her to step into the breach while I went for the
Cook Around the Clock
audition with Alicia. But Stanley hadn't seen much of his grandmother lately and I felt oddly uncomfortable about the idea of asking Charlotte.

Quite aside from the fact I knew Stanley would moan about having to share airspace with Becky again so soon, I was feeling guilty about keeping secrets from my best friend and didn't want my son saying anything unfortunate about having spotted Roger emerging from our shed.

He'd seemed perfectly satisfied with my explanation that there was a large, hairy spider in there, preventing my reaching the secateurs unscathed a result, no doubt, of having witnessed me screaming over many an arachnid over the years and accepted my good fortune in spotting Roger driving past at exactly the right moment to rescue me with equanimity. But I couldn't be sure that Charlotte would be quite so convinced.

I'd sent Roger a long, fervent text, detailing the cover story should we be forced to provide one – he having hastily returned Stanley's wave and then scuttled down the side path before you could say “squashed it” – while reminding him that comforting strange single women when you had a wife like Charlotte was
a very bad idea
and urging him to keep this Hannah at arm's length.

I'd heard nothing from him since and had barely seen Charlotte. She'd dashed in once between appointments, had half a cup of coffee, talked non-stop about the problems of trying to sell a two-bedroomed maisonette that housed 27 parrots and reeked to high heaven, and shot off again, but we hadn't had any sort of proper conversation and I felt awkward at the thought of one.

I wondered what she would have done if she'd seen Daniel in action with The Twiglet before I'd got wind of it and I couldn't help feeling that yes, she'd have got him by the short and curlies and demanded to know what was going on, but she'd probably also have told me. This made me feel bad.

On the other hand, what, so far, was there to say? It wasn't a crime to listen to a colleague's boyfriend problems and even if this Hannah was a bunny-boiler flake and had made that phone call, it didn't mean Roger had done anything wrong. Charlotte might be upset and furious with me for even suggesting it. I just had to hope that Roger had taken my words of wisdom to heart and was now giving Hannah a wide berth instead of one-to-one therapy on a nightly basis.

I decided that I would get myself round there once I'd been to London and try to have a quiet word with him to find out the latest.

In the meantime, my mother had agreed to be in the house to greet Stanley after school. She was insisting on staying the night too – “you know I don't like going home in the dark” – so, on the downside, she'd be there for breakfast but, on the upside, I wouldn't have to worry about what time I got back and she'd do the hoovering and very probably defrost the fridge.

‘I'll put you on a diet when I get back,' I told Boris when she'd finally gone. He purred loudly as I looked ruefully over my shoulder and viewed my backside in the hall mirror.

I'd put myself on one too.

Chapter Fourteen

The auditions were to be held in a hotel in Cricklewood at 2.30 p.m. and I was meeting Alicia at Willesden Green tube station at midday.

‘We can have lunch first and get our stories straight,' she'd said cheerily.

‘What shall I wear?' I'd asked.

‘Oh, anything,' she said airily. ‘Something bright's best – so you stand out.'

After another hour spent staring hopelessly at a wardrobe of unrelenting grey, brown and black, I‘d decided on a pair of jeans with butterflies embroidered on them, and a bright pink T-shirt I'd found in TK Maxx which would have apparently cost such a fortune before it was marked down to £9.99 that I couldn't not buy it even if it was a size too small.

I wore it over the top of a longer vest top so there was no danger of any stomach hoving into view and a pair of very high pink heels – another knock-down bargain — hoping for an illusion of slimness and elegance.

Since the shopping trip had put me even further behind on my latest exciting project from Mike – a 24-page brochure on a unique water-cooling system for home and office – I spent the train journey staring at his almost incomprehensible notes on the subject and trying to work out which way up the diagrams of the filter system went. By the time I was on the tube I felt ready for a lie-down.

I also felt quite nervous. As I tottered out of the station, trying not to break an ankle, I almost hoped Alicia wouldn't be there and I could turn round and go home again. But she was waiting right next to the entrance.

She looked different, younger somehow, from the last time I'd seen her. Her hair was in a thick plait down her back this time and she had almost no make-up on. She was wearing a short, flowery dress over jeans and green mules with glittery bits on them. She gave me a hug and then looked me up and down and grinned. ‘OK, Mum?'

‘I thought I'd be 19 and you could be 35,' she said, as I followed her along the road. ‘That's about what you are anyway, isn't it?' she asked innocently. ‘Or are you a lot younger?'

I laughed. ‘Come off it! I'm over 40. Why don't I say 40 and you say 20 – otherwise I'd have been very young to have a baby.'

‘Say you're 39 – sounds better.'

It did indeed. ‘Am I still with your father?' I enquired, once we were sitting on the pavement outside a little Italian café and had ordered paninis and mineral water. (‘Better not have wine till afterwards,' Alicia had instructed. ‘If they smell it on you, they might think you're a lush.')

Alicia considered my question. ‘Nah – he left us both when I was three months old. That's why we've got this extraordinary closeness. And I was thinking – this will give it a nice twist – I'm the one who can cook and you've never really got to grips with it. You've been working too hard holding down three jobs to support us both, so now I look after you.' She beamed.

‘I've already put down that I make a mean lasagne,' I told her.

‘Well, say that's all you can do. Tell them I do everything else – all the creative stuff.'

‘Can you cook really?'

Alicia shrugged. ‘Yeah, sort of. It's not that difficult, is it? And they're hardly going to check.'

‘They might as it's a cookery programme,' I said, marvelling at her nerve.

Alicia gave a dismissive snort. ‘I'll learn a couple of recipes. My mate, Shirley, carried on for about 20 minutes on how to knock up the perfect paella and she's never so much as made a bacon sandwich.'

‘So what happens when we get there?' I asked, sipping my water.

‘Shirl said there's a load more forms, then they'll film us talking about ourselves and then film us pretending to be playing the game and talking about our ingredients – what were your favourites?'

I shook my head in alarm. ‘Oh God, I can't remember!'

Alicia shrugged again. ‘Doesn't matter – just make it up. Everyone always brings chicken breasts. I put down pig's trotters just to be different.'

‘Ugh! Yuck!' I said as the waiter put a mozzarella and basil panini in front of me. He picked it up again, looking affronted.

‘Sorry,' I said, flustered. ‘I was talking about something else.'

Alicia laughed, pulled the top from her lunch and gave the contents – some sort of ham – a prod. ‘In Portugal,' she said gleefully, ‘I went to a restaurant where they had pig's face.'

I began to feel even more nervous as, an hour later, we approached the Majestic Hotel.

‘How many people do we have to speak in front of?' I asked as I hobbled through the big glass doors. The balls of my feet were already burning.

‘Not many,' said Alicia brightly. ‘Now don't forget to call me darling.' She tucked her arm through mine. ‘OK, Mum?'

We followed the signs in reception and went up to the fourth floor where we were directed to a huge room filled with people sitting about on chairs. There was a table at the back with pots of coffee and tea and orange juice. I went and got some water, trying to stop my stomach doing that jumping thing.

The usual young-man-in-black-T-shirt brought us some forms to fill in and said he'd be back to see us in a while. Alicia and I sat at a small table in the corner with the orange
Cook Around the Clock
pens we'd been given and perused the questions.

Have you ever been on television before?

Yes! I ticked proudly.

If yes, give names of programmes with dates.

Easy enough so far.

Who is your chosen partner for
Cook Around the Clock
?

‘Haven't we done all this already?' I asked Alicia, who was chewing her pen and looking bored.

‘Yes,' she said.

Relationship to you.

I stole a sideways glance at Alicia who was now thoughtfully sucking her ball point. She couldn't look less like my daughter – she was an olive-skinned, Mediterranean-looking exotic with glossy black hair, huge brown eyes, and a snub nose whereas I was pale and a bit blotchy with the ill-advised plum hair that would otherwise be a sort of mid-brown/blonde (I refused to think of small rodents) and a nose that at best could be described as substantial.

She scrawled something on the bottom of her paper and looked up at me. ‘I'm whizzing out for a cig,' she said. ‘Have you finished yet?'

‘Nearly,' I said, glancing back at the two pages of unanswered questions in front of me before watching her stride across the floor dropping her forms into the waiting hands of the young man who'd spoken to us earlier.

‘Are you done?' He appeared at my elbow moments later.

‘Almost.'

I rushed through the rest, putting the first thing that came to mind while he hovered.

Anything you'd be afraid to cook?

Well, yes, most things really …

By the time Alicia came back, several of the frighteningly young people from the TV company had been examining my form for some time.

As Alicia plonked herself down beside me, a very skinny girl with spiky black hair, black jeans and the regulation tight black top pointed across at us with a long purple nail and went into another huddle with a couple of the guys.

‘What do you think they're talking about?' I whispered.

‘Just saying how we're just what they're looking for,' said Alicia confidently. ‘They'll call us in to do our stuff in a minute.'

‘What did you write for your guilty pleasure?' I asked her.

Alicia grinned. ‘The same as my obsession …'

‘I put tuna mayo as my favourite sandwich,' I mused. ‘But really, you know – it's egg mayo with tomato and raw onion …'

‘They don't care,' said Alicia. ‘All they're interested in is whether –' She broke off as a beautiful young man with floppy brown hair with a single blond streak across the middle and dark brown eyes, walked over to us.

I saw Alicia look him over appreciatively but he fixed his gaze on me and said pleasantly, ‘You're not really her mother, are you?'

Alicia sat up straighter. ‘Of course she is!'

I looked up into his eyes – he had incredibly thick, glossy eyelashes – and hesitated.

He gave me a slow smile. ‘Are you?'

‘No.' I said.

Beside me, Alicia gave an audible hiss of exasperation. ‘But I think of her as my mother,' she said, ‘because my real mother died when I was a baby and Laura practically brought me up …'

The young man ignored her and held out his hand to me.

‘I'm Cal,' he said. ‘I'm the assistant director.' He looked down at the form in his hand. ‘You've been on
Rise Up with Randolph
, I see …'

Alicia rolled her eyes and shook her head in disgust. Cal was still looking at me. ‘I think I saw it,' he said thoughtfully. ‘You were very good.'

I laughed self-consciously. ‘Not really – I squawked like a fishwife.'

He laughed. ‘PMT, wasn't it?'

‘I don't know, really. It shouldn't have been because it was only Day 10 but, mind you, I do go a bit funny then sometimes – it's quite odd – though Day 19 is the time when I really – oh, I see,' I said, flustered, as Cal grinned and Alicia rolled her eyes some more. ‘You mean the subject of the programme? Yes, yes, it was.'

Cal was still smiling as I blushed. ‘I must have another look at it,' he said. ‘You could be just what we're looking for – for something else.'

‘What about this one?' put in Alicia, sounding cross. ‘What about
Cook Around the Clock?
'

‘I'm just coming to that,' said Cal pleasantly. He looked at her. ‘Weren't you on that programme with Randolph too?' he asked, one eyebrow raised.

‘Yes,' said Alicia reluctantly.

‘But not as Laura's daughter – so we can't use you for this. I'm afraid you can't go on television and pretend to be something you're not.'

Alicia shrugged. ‘This is a different production company,' she said boldly. ‘Why not?'

‘Because,' said Cal patiently, ‘it may still be watched by a lot of the same people. Our programme is on at 4.45 p.m., which still counts as daytime TV, so we'll be getting a lot of the viewers who watched at 10 a.m. on other channels. They tend to be the same group who are at home all day. Housewives and house husbands, of course –' He suddenly flicked a smile at me and I felt a funny little frisson run down my spine. ‘We can't risk –'

‘Why can't we be friends, then?' interrupted Alicia. ‘We could have made it up on the set afterwards and been inseparable ever since. We could even tell the story on air –'

Cal smiled again. ‘And promote a rival channel? I don't think so!'

‘OK, well, then we'll –'

‘I'm sure we can sort something.' Cal spoke over her, his voice firmer. Then he looked back at me. ‘You have a really interesting face. I'd like to use you …'

Alicia scowled. ‘So we can audition, yes?'

‘Laura and Alicia!'

We were called into a small room where there was a bloke behind a camera, the skinny girl who we'd been introduced to as Tanya, holding a clipboard, and a sound man carrying one of those big microphones covered in black furry stuff.

At the front of the room was a table with various objects arranged on a cloth. Alicia and I were directed to stand behind it.

Cal was at the back of the room. ‘Laura – could you just talk about yourself for a minute or two? Just tell us who you are and what you do.'

I cleared my throat. ‘Er, I'm Laura and I'm a sort of copywriter. Well, I am a copywriter but I have worked from home since I had my son.' I stopped. Cal nodded encouragingly. ‘Um, my son is called Stanley and my cat is called Boris.'

I stopped again. Tanya was looking at me with undisguised disdain, Alicia was frowning. Cal smiled. ‘That's great – a bit more? What do you do when you're not working? Are you married?'

‘I am separated,' I said. ‘I have an odious ex-husband called Daniel who has shacked up with someone else and when I am not working I make little Plasticine models of them both to stick pins in.'

It was meant to be funny but it came out of my mouth sounding bitter. I saw Tanya's eyebrows go up, but Cal laughed.

‘Go on,' he called.

‘I have a good friend called Charlotte,' I continued desperately, ‘who I also drink too much wine with when I'm not working. She spends most of her time in my kitchen even when she is working and then we eat biscuits …'

Tanya had put her clipboard down and was wandering about the room, looking bored. Alicia had closed her eyes. The cameraman didn't appear to be filming me but was looking out of the window.

Cal clapped his hands together. ‘Fantastic,' he called brightly. ‘Now can you pick up some of the objects in front of you as though they were your ingredients and talk us through them?' I looked at the table. There was a stapler, a couple of marker pens, a notebook, someone's mobile phone and a roll of Sellotape. I held the latter aloft.

‘Today,' I said, lamely, ‘I have brought a tin of tuna.' I grabbed the marker pens too. ‘And some tomatoes …'

Why ever did I let Alicia talk me into this? I thought, as I sank into a chair, hot-faced, while Alicia beamed at the camera and held forth wittily about her dreams of becoming an actress and the time she'd burned a turkey curry so badly that the neighbours called the fire brigade.

All I had managed, when asked for some kitchen anecdotes, was a lot of drivel about the best way to make scrambled eggs, which left everyone looking rather glazed. But Cal was still smiling as he came over.

‘That was terrific, both of you,' he said easily. ‘We'll be in touch, see what we can do.' He had his eyes on me. ‘I think you'd be good. Maybe we can pair you up separately with other people.' He pushed back the floppy bit of hair over his eyes. ‘Though this won't be my baby much longer, thankfully.' He nodded over toward the skinny girl. ‘Tanya and I are leaving to work on something else.'

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