I hate myself for crying, itâs so pathetic. But I feel exhausted, these past few weeks have been so hard on me. And Tom and I have had another row aboutâinevitablyâRachel.
Itâs been brewing, I suppose. Iâve been torturing myself about the note, about the fact that he lied to me about them meeting up. I keep telling myself itâs completely stupid, but I canât fight the feeling that there is something going on between them. Iâve been going round and round: after everything she did to himâto usâhow could he? How could he even contemplate being with her again? I mean, if you look at the two of us, side by side, there isnât a man on earth who would pick her over me. And thatâs without even going into all her issues.
But then I think, this happens sometimes, doesnât it? People you have a history with, they wonât let you go, and as hard as you might try, you canât disentangle yourself, canât set yourself free. Maybe after a while you just stop trying.
She came by on Thursday, banging on the door and calling out for Tom. I was furious, but I didnât dare open up. Having a child with you makes you vulnerable, it makes you weak. If Iâd been on my own I would have confronted her, Iâd have had no problems sorting her out. But with Evie here, I just couldnât risk it. Iâve no idea what she might do.
I know why she came. She was pissed off that Iâd talked to the police about her. I bet she came crying to Tom to tell me to leave her alone. She left a noteâ
important (
underlined three times)âwhich I threw straight into the bin. Later, I fished it out and put it in my bedside drawer, along with the printout of that vicious email she sent and the log Iâve been keeping of all the calls and all the sightings. The harassment log. My evidence, should I need it. I called Detective Riley and left a message saying that Rachel had been round again. She still hasnât rung back.
I should have mentioned the note to Tom, I know I should have, but I didnât want him to get annoyed with me about talking to the police, so I just shoved it in that drawer and hoped that sheâd forget about it. She didnât, of course. She rang him tonight. He was fuming when he got off the phone with her.
âWhat the fuck is all this about a note?â he snapped.
I told him Iâd thrown it away. âI didnât realize that youâd want to read it,â I said. âI thought you wanted her out of our lives as much as I do.â
He rolled his eyes. âThatâs not the point and you know it. Of course I want Rachel gone. What I donât want is for you to start listening to my phone calls and throwing away my mail. Youâre . . .â He sighed.
âIâm what?â
âNothing. Itâs just . . . itâs the sort of thing used to do.â
It was a punch in the gut, a low blow. Ridiculously, I burst into tears and ran upstairs to the bathroom. I waited for him to come up to soothe me, to kiss and make up like he usually does, but after about half an hour he called out to me, âIâm going to the gym for a couple of hours,â and before I could reply I heard the front door slam.
And now I find myself behaving exactly like she used to: polishing off the half bottle of red left over from dinner last night and snooping around on his computer. Itâs easier to understand her behaviour when you feel like I feel right now. Thereâs nothing so painful, so corrosive, as suspicion.
I cracked the laptop password eventually: itâs . As innocuous and boring as thatâthe name of the road we live on. Iâve found no incriminating emails, no sordid pictures or passionate letters. I spend half an hour reading through work emails so mind-numbing that they dull even the pain of jealousy, then I shut down the laptop and put it away. Iâm feeling really quite jolly, thanks to the wine and the tedious contents of Tomâs computer. Iâve reassured myself I was just being silly.
I go upstairs to brush my teethâI donât want him to know that Iâve been at the wine againâand then I decide that Iâll strip the bed and put on fresh sheets, Iâll spray a bit of Acqua di Parma on the pillows and put on that black silk teddy he got me for my birthday last year, and when he comes back, Iâll make it up to him.
As Iâm pulling the sheets off the mattress I almost trip over a black bag shoved under the bed: his gym bag. Heâs forgotten his gym bag. Heâs been gone an hour, and he hasnât been back for it. My stomach flips. Maybe he just thought, sod it, and decided to go to the pub instead. Maybe he has some spare stuff in his locker at the gym. Maybe heâs in bed with her right now.
I feel sick. I get down on my knees and rummage through the bag. All his stuff is there, washed and ready to go, his iPod shuffle, the only trainers he runs in. And something else: a mobile phone. A phone Iâve never seen before.
I sit down on the bed, the phone in my hand, my heart hammering. Iâm going to turn it on, thereâs no way Iâll be able to resist, and yet Iâm sure that when I do, Iâll regret it, because this can only mean something bad. You donât keep spare mobile phones tucked away in gym bags unless youâre hiding something. Thereâs a voice in my head saying, , but I canât. I press my finger down hard on the power button and wait for the screen to light up. And wait. And wait. Itâs dead. Relief floods my system like morphine.
Iâm relieved because now I canât know, but Iâm also relieved because a dead phone suggests an unused phone, an unwanted phone, not the phone of a man involved in a passionate affair. That man would want his phone on him at all times. Perhaps itâs an old one of his, perhaps itâs been in his gym bag for months and he just hasnât got around to throwing it away. Perhaps it isnât even his: maybe he found it at the gym and meant to hand it in at the desk and he forgot?
I leave the bed half-stripped and go downstairs to the living room. The coffee table has a couple of drawers underneath it filled with the kind of domestic junk that accumulates over time: rolls of Sellotape, plug adaptors for foreign travel, tape measures, sewing kits, old mobile-phone chargers. I grab all three of the chargers; the second one I try fits. I plug it in on my side of the bed, phone and charger hidden behind the bedside table. Then I wait.
Times and dates, mostly. Not dates. Days.
Sometimes, a refusal.
Thereâs nothing else: no declarations of love, no explicit suggestions. Just text messages, about a dozen of them, all from a withheld number. There are no contacts in the phone book and the call log has been erased.
I donât need dates, because the phone records them. The meetings go back months. They go back almost a year. When I realized this, when I saw that the first one was from September last year, a hard lump formed in my throat. September! Evie was six months old. I was still fat, exhausted, raw, off sex. But then I start to laugh, because this is just ridiculous, it canât be true. We were blissfully happy in September, in love with each other and with our new baby. There is no way he was sneaking around with her, no way in hell that heâs been seeing her all this time. I would have known. It canât be true. The phone isnât his.
Still. I get my harassment log from the bedside table and look at the calls, comparing them with the meetings arranged on the phone. Some of them coincide. Some calls are a day or two before, some a day or two after. Some donât correlate at all.
Could he really have been seeing her all this time, telling me that she was hassling him, harassing him, when in reality they were making plans to meet up, to sneak around behind my back? But why would she be calling him on the landline if she had this phone to call? It doesnât make sense. Unless she me to know. Unless she was trying to provoke trouble between us?
Tom has been gone almost two hours now, heâll be back soon from wherever heâs been. I make the bed, put the log and the phone in the bedside table, go downstairs, pour myself one final glass of wine and drink it quickly. I could call her. I could confront her. But what would I say? Thereâs no moral high ground for me to take. And Iâm not sure I could bear it, the delight she would take in telling me that all this time, been the fool. If he does it with you, heâll do it to you.
I hear footsteps on the pavement outside and I know itâs him, I know his gait. I shove the wineglass into the sink and I stand there, leaning against the kitchen counter, the blood pounding in my ears.
âHello,â he says when he sees me. He looks sheepish, heâs weaving just a little.
âThey serve beer at the gym now, do they?â
He grins. âI forgot my stuff. I went to the pub.â
Just as I thought. Or just as he thought I would think?
He comes a little closer. âWhat have you been up to?â he asks me, a smile on his lips. âYou look guilty.â He slips his arms around my waist and pulls me close. I can smell the beer on his breath. âHave you been up to no good?â
âTom . . .â
âShhh,â he says, and he kisses my mouth, starts unbuttoning my jeans. He turns me around. I donât want to, but I donât know how to say no, so I close my eyes and try not to think of him with her, I try to think of the early days, running round to the empty house on Cranham Road, breathless, desperate, hungry.
I wake with a fright; itâs still dark. I think I can hear Evie crying, but when I go through to check on her, sheâs sleeping deeply, her blanket clutched tightly between closed fists. I go back to bed, but I canât fall asleep again. All I can think about is the phone in the bedside drawer. I glance over at Tom, lying with his left arm flung out, his head thrown back. I can tell from the cadence of his breathing that heâs far from consciousness. I slip out of bed, open the drawer and take out the phone.
Downstairs in the kitchen, I turn the phone over and over in my hand, preparing myself. I want to know, but I donât. I want to be sure, but I want so desperately to be wrong. I turn it on. I press one and hold it, I hear the voice mail welcome. I hear that I have no new messages and no saved messages. Would I like to change my greeting? I end the call, but am suddenly gripped by the completely irrational fear that the phone could ring, that Tom would hear it from upstairs, so I slide the French doors open and step outside.
The grass is damp beneath my feet, the air cool, heavy with the scent of rain and roses. I can hear a train in the distance, a slow growl, itâs a long way off. I walk almost as far as the fence before I dial the voice mail again: would I like to change my greeting? Yes, I would. Thereâs a beep and a pause and then I hear her voice. Her voice, not his.
My heart has stopped beating.
Itâs not his phone, itâs hers.
I play it again.
Itâs voice.
I canât move, canât breathe. I play it again, and again. My throat is closed, I feel as though Iâm going to faint, and then the light comes on upstairs.