Don't let me get like that! I prayed to whatever powers might be listening. Don't let me be someone who hurts people, and says it's not my fault, and is secretly smug about my fatal attraction. (If I had any. I felt like a fraud.) I don't want to be beautiful any more. I don't want to be a sex goddess. I just want my friend back.
I found I was crying, helpless tears oozing out of my eyes and trickling down my cheeks, probably making snail-tracks in my makeup. The cab driver was watching me in the mirror, but I didn't care. I fished in my bag for a tissue, but I hadn't brought any.
âBreak up with your boyfriend?' asked the driver.
âNo,' I said. âMy girlfriend. My best friend.'
âOh. Like that, is it?'
At the time, I didn't catch the inference. It wasn't important. All that mattered was I'd hurt Georgie â I'd betrayed her â and I didn't know how to put it right.
Chapter 10
When the sky began to roar
'Twas like a lion at the door;
When the door began to crack
'Twas like a stick across my back;
When my back began to smart
'Twas like a penknife in my heart;
When my heart began to bleed
'Twas death and death and death indeed.
FOLK RHYME
When I set out to write this book, I meant it to be light-hearted and funny, a flippant account of three girls, and three wishes, and how we tried to help those wishes come true. I didn't know if they would or not, I just thought it would be entertaining to make a story of it, good practise for an aspiring writer. I meant to leave out the dull bits, the dark bits, the moments of gloom and despondency, the small failures and petty humiliations â but of course they crept in. As soon as you start to think about people, and life, you have to deal with the dark side. It's always there: the black underbelly of comedy, the shadow behind the light romance. Without it, my story would be only half-coloured, the characters only half-alive. I thought I could joke about it, make a mockery of the bad times â but it hasn't worked out that way. The problem is, I suppose, that nothing very dreadful has ever happened to me. (Yet.) Georgie lost a husband to alcoholism; Lin was betrayed by the man she adored and then ran off with someone else, who died after an excess of drink and drugs. I was just dumpy and dumped â and I dealt with one and got over the other. But writing this, I learnt to see through my friends' eyes. My experience has widened even as I took on theirs. I've grown up, and the story has grown up, and I don't know where it's going any more.
All of which brings me to this chapter. If you thought things were bad at the end of the last one, just wait. Up to now, I could be flip about the bad stuff: I made comments about worst fears being realised, and shit-fan situations, but there was no big tragedy, no major catastrophe, only everyday disasters. But this is the point where the jokes stop, where there's nothing to laugh at any more. And I'm scared to write it, because I don't do gloom and doom; it isn't my thing. I just have to tell it the way it happened, and keep hoping it'll work out in the end.
At Ransome on Friday, Georgie wasn't talking to me. I asked Lin to explain things to her â âThere was nothing between Cal and me. He was pissed and being provocative: that's all' â but Lin looked sad, and faintly unconvinced, and said she didn't think she could do anything. When Cal headed my way I begged him to sort it out, but he said Georgie wasn't talking to him either.
âShe'll speak to you first,' he said. âBet you fifty quid.' He was leaning on my desk as he said it, and at that precise moment Georgie went past. She paused for a second, fixing us with a stare that would have split the atom, then walked on, ignoring my pleas to
Listen, please listen
 . . .
âBugger,' said Cal.
âWould you mind not coming near me,' I said, âfor the next year?'
He gave a resigned nod and returned to the Design Department, leaving me to sink quietly into a morass of misery and frustration.
Later, Lin admitted to me that she was going to the pub after work with Georgie. âShe needs someone with her,' she said. âIvor's been a star. He's babysitting again â though it's only Meredith tonight, so he might get some peace and quiet.' I thought it unlikely, but didn't say so. I suggested coming along with them to the pub and attempting to patch things up, but Lin was discouraging.
âLook,' I said, â
nothing happened
. You couldn't think â you
can't
think I would've . . .'
âYou flirted with him, didn't you?' Lin sounded more unhappy than accusatory. âHe was coming on to you, and you didn't exactly repulse him.'
âHe wasn't serious. It was just words. He kept saying how much he loved Georgie. But she's hurt him so deeply, I think he wanted to hurt her back, so he used me.'
âAnd you let him.' Lin turned to go. âI think you should leave it for now. Maybe in a couple of weeks . . .'
But I didn't want to leave it. That was like an admission of guilt, and although I
felt
guilty, when I went over the events of the previous evening in my mind I didn't think I'd been leading Cal on. Instinct told me that the longer I left it, the harder it would be to put things right. But I didn't want to go to the pub alone, so I went to find Laurence, hoping this would be one of his going-out-with-the-gang nights. By then it was late-afternoon, and the undercurrents in the office had become overcurrents. Everyone knew there was something badly wrong, and most of Ransome was waiting with bated breath for the big explosion.
Except, as it turned out, for Laurence.
âNot tonight,' he said. âSorry, Cookie. Hector's giving a dinner party for some of his chums from work.' Hector, Laurence's partner, was in the social services. âI have to get out my pinny and put the beef in my Wellingtons.'
â
You're
not the cook,' I said. âI know that. What's more, I don't believe you have a pinny.'
âI do now,' he said. âIt's got Princess Di on it.'
I laughed, if half-heartedly, and went back to my desk.
Cal was there. âYou going to the pub?'
âYes, butâ'
âGood. We'll go together. Georgie shouldn't be blaming you for what happened yesterday. It was my fault, not yours. You didn't even encourage me.'
âThis isn't a good idea,' I said. âAnyway, Georgie isn't talking to you.'
âDoesn't matter.
I'm
going to talk to
her
. I'm off on holiday for the next fortnight, and I want this business sorted before I go. I won't leave you to deal with the fallout; it isn't fair. I may be an arsehole, but at least I'm not afraid to say so.'
âI
really
don't thinkâ'
âYes you do. You think much too often: that's the trouble with women. Time for action.' He had obviously had an attack of grim resolve, and there was no point in arguing, though I tried.
Around half-past five I saw Lin and Georgie leaving. Cal and I followed after six â he was always the last out of Design â with me looking furtive, making sure there was at least a yard of clear space between us at all times. He paid no attention. When we reached the pub I hung back, feeling a coward, unwilling to be seen walking in with him â but Cal seized my wrist and pulled me through the door in his wake. It wasn't the entrance I would have chosen. Across the room, Georgie looked up at exactly the wrong moment. Lin told me later she was on her second double gin with very little tonic, and the glitter in her eyes would have daunted a black mamba. Cal took in the scene with a stiffened lip, bought drinks for both of us, and headed for Georgie's table. I lagged behind.
âGive us a moment,' he said to Lin.
âNo,' said Georgie. âDon't.'
Lin got to her feet, hesitated, then joined me. We didn't speak, just waited at a safe distance, trying to look as if we weren't watching the confrontation at the table.
âFuck off,' Georgie said.
âIf you wish. But first, we need to straighten something out. I made a pass at Cookie last night, yes, but she brushed me off. She's a good friend to you; she always has been. Stop blaming her for something
I
did. She wouldn't even flirt with me.'
âIt's not important,' Georgie said, sick at heart. âYou wanted
her
, not me. I can't â I can't bear to look at her.'
âDon't be silly,' Cal snapped. âOf course I want you. But we keep fighting, and Cookie was there â she looked great â she was kind to meâ'
â
Kind
to you? How generous of her!'
âYes, kind. It's an attractive quality. You should try it some time.'
âHow dare you!' Her face blazed. âYou don't have the
right
to lecture me! You're a married man screwing around, and you think you can take the moral high groundâ'
âI'm not screwing around. I wish I was.'
âYou
bastard
!'
âI've had enough of this. All I get from you these days is tantrums. Yes, I'm married â you knew that all along. I thought we had a good thing goingâ'
âYou made me fall in love with you!' Georgie all but screamed, abandoning any attempt at reason.
âI didn't mean to. I didn't want to fall in love either. I can't deal with it any more than you can. When you go with other men it destroys me, but I can't leave my wife, I can't leave my
family
. I don't think there's any way out of thisâ'
âThere is,' Georgie said, going from stormy to stony in rather less than a second. âThe way out's over there.' She pointed at the door.
âIf that's what you want.'
âIt's what
you
want. You said so.'
It was another half hour before Cal finally walked out, looking furious, and wretched, and bitter. Georgie was left alone, looking â bitter, wretched, and furious. Same old scenario, but that didn't make it any less painful. Lin went over to her; I followed more slowly.
âI don't want to see you,' she said to me, I hoped with less acrimony than before. âWhat I want to see is another gin. A triple.'
I got her the drink and went back to the bar, taking up a position beside a refugee from Ransome (Sales) who had evidently come to spectate. Georgie was going to feel like hell the next morning â if not sooner â but I knew it would be no use trying to stop her. As the evening progressed I saw Lin failing in the attempt, and Georgie getting through a couple more large gins, with only a packet of peanuts to soak up the alcohol. Booze doesn't solve your problems, I thought, but at least it makes you feel like shit. Tomorrow, Georgie would be too busy with her hangover to agonise over Cal, if only for a few hours.
Some time later, she called me over. âYou're still here,' she said accusingly.
âIt's a pub,' I responded. âI wanted a drink.'
âWhat really happened with Cal?' she asked, not looking me in the face.
âWe talked about you. He said he loved you. He said you were in his bones, in his blood. He's desperate for you.'
âThen why did he go?' She looked up at me now, her eyes filling. âWhy does he always go?'
âYou never ask him to stay.'
âI shouldn't
need
to ask him. He should . . . he should . . .' She groped for phrases that wouldn't come.
âHe should stay even when you tell him to leave?' I suggested.
âYup.' Sometimes, there is clarification at the bottom of the bottle.
âIt's time you talked to him without rowing,' Lin said optimistically. âOn Mondayâ'
âHe won't be there on Monday,' I said. âHe's off for two weeks. Holiday.'
âWhat?' Georgie's fury returned, first in a trickle, then in a flood. âHe left me â like that â and he's going away? Two weeks â
two weeks
â and he just walked out! He can't â he
can't
â' She banged her glass down on the table. They'd run out of tumblers: it was only a wine glass, and it smashed. She crushed the pieces in her hand; the blood ran over her fingers. Her face distorted.
Lin and I stared in horror. âGeorgie, your hand â !' Lin gasped, groping for tissues in her bag. She was the sort of person who always carried tissues.
âI won't let him!' Georgie was saying, fumbling with her mobile. âI won't let him just
go
. I must talk to him.
Now
.' She pressed out the number, but evidently there was no answer.
âIt'll be on recharge,' I said. âProbably silent. He'll have gone to bed by now.'
It was the wrong thing to say.
âWith her!' Georgie said. âBloody Christy. I can't stand it. If he loves me, why is he in bed with
her
? Why is he going on holiday with
her
? What kind of love is that?' She picked up her bag and made for the door with an alarmingly steady step. We ran after her.
Outside, she hailed a cruising taxi and got in, thrusting Lin away when she tried to follow.
âWhere are you going?' Lin demanded.
âI must see him. I
have
to see him. He can't just walk out on me and bugger off on holiday with his wife . . .'
âWhat're you going to do?'
Georgie slammed the door, and the taxi leaped forward. âBoil the rabbit!' she screamed.
Fortunately, we were on a main road and the closing-time rush hadn't yet started. Taxis streamed past, many of them for hire. I grabbed the next one and we jumped in. âFollow that cab!' Lin cried, getting carried away.