A DOUBLE LIFE
It is hardly warm enough to warrant an evening in the garden but something about the house is pushing her out. After all these years, all the memories she made here in her teens and early twenties before Tom had so much as set foot inside its four walls, their home is already taking his side. So when he goes out for a smoke, savouring the single roll-up he still allows himself each day now that he is staring down the barrel of forty, she follows him into the starless night.
Pulling on a jacket, she brings with her the slightly too warm bottle of Sauvignon she picked up at the off-licence off Dartmouth Park Hill on her way home, partly to calm her nerves, partly for the excuse to partition off this section of her life, to annex it safely away from the day she has just left behind. The beginning of the end.
“Ten ninety-nine?” Tom takes a swig of his beer, incredulity written in the lines above the bridge of his nose. She follows his gaze to the bottle she is clutching by the neck and for a moment she feels herself on the cusp of laughter that will mutate into sobs if she is not careful. Screams that will reverberate through the house where their children sleep.
How the hell are they talking about the price of a bottle of wine? But he has no reason to suspect this is anything but an ordinary evening, the end of a day just like any other.
“How was work?” he asks as she takes a seat beside him on one of the worn garden chairs. It shifts precariously on cracked
You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.
Start your free 30 days