Authors: Hannah Tunnicliffe
Nina sighed and leaned over, putting her head on Rosie's shoulder, âI'm scared too. I am. But we'll make it work. Somehow.'
âBut Lars â¦'
He was fist pumping to the music now. He really did look like some kind of caricature.
âI love him, Rosie.'
âBut â'
âHe's a good man.'
Eddie was joining in now; hopping about on the grass, spilling his beer. Rosie stared at him. Helen sat up, nodding in time. Max passed Helen the cigarette and laughed at the two, dancing men.
âBut can he give you ⦠what you want?'
Nina lifted her head and looked into Rosie's face. âWhat more do I want, Rosie?'
Chapter 15
Max
M
ax stares, his legs and feet hanging over the edge of the deck like a kid. He rubs his face. The clouds are wispy and streaky, as though
p
ainted with a dry brush
, the lawn dark and thick. Juliette brings him coffee in a large bowl, dusted with chocolate powder and thick slices of hot bread with melted butter and
f
ragrant
strawberry jam. Max lifts a piece of toast to his mouth, bites and chews. Max is used to avoiding thoughts and feelings that do not serve him; that make him feel uncomfortable. The judgements of others, the unsettling sense he might be drinking too much. Thoughts of his mother, his father, his childhood. Grahame Park. All of that. There is a place, like a black hole, that he tips it all into. It's deep and vast. It is a sinkhole. But right now last night's memories shower him in tiny, disjointed pieces.
Snake hair, Helen's hand, grass against his face, his lips
.
Shame sloshes over him.
Max watches Sophie at the edge of the garden. She has brushed her hair and put on a bit of makeup; or at least Max assumes so; it's hard to tell from where he is. She has a dress on. Max waves. âHi,' he calls out but Sophie doesn't reply. Beth walks from the other side of the garden towards her carrying a handful of flowers. They stand next to each other, looking out. Talking, but Max can't hear what they are saying; they're both too far away. Sophie looks at her bare feet.
Women are mad. Whenever Max finds a way to understand them, off they go being stranger and more baffling than before. Like when they start wanting promises and pieces of him, tokens to show Max is theirs. Girls were always asking for things from Max's apartment. Can I take that book? This t-shirt? Do you mind if I borrow this record? And the photo taking â her arm stretched out, holding her mobile phone, lips pushed into the side of his face. Checking out her face in the screen â the way her lips look, whether the angle gives her a double chin. Lifting the phone higher, adjusting, giggling, taking photos of the giggling too. Then, after, the messy, unravelling stuff. Max doesn't get involved with all that. The tears and the questions. The conversations late in the night, in the dark, that go round and round. Max, already thinking about the next gig, the next place, the next drink. He isn't cruel. At least he doesn't think he is. They both get something out of it. Sex. A t-shirt. A selfie. A blowjob. It works out for everyone, he tries to convince himself.
Juliette and the girls, Helen and Nina and Rosie, are setting up the outside table for brunch. Max glances over to them, trying not to look at Helen who is apologising to Juliette.
âI just checked my phone; she sent a message a few minutes ago. She says she is going back to Paris.'
Nina is holding a fistful of cutlery. âDid she say why?'
Helen shakes her head. Max turns away.
Snake hair, grass.
âShe's been acting kind of ⦠erratic lately.' Max hears Helen sigh. âI don't know if that is unusual or not. I mean, we were closer when we were kids. Sorry Juliette, she won't be here for lunch.'
âIt's no problem for me,' Juliette says.
âI'm sure she will be okay,' Rosie reassures.
âShe did mention a friend living in Paris â¦' Helen murmurs.
Max squeezes his eyes shut, urging the thoughts into that dark recess of his mind.
Breathe. Don't think.
The sea, nearby, makes the air taste so clean and fresh he wants to drink it up all day, like a milkshake. It isn't the same in Paris; the air is full there. Full of dust, car exhaust, hopes and worries. Max's thoughts travel down through his body. It is a miracle it still works like it does, given the way he regularly punishes it. A miracle of blood moving through veins, oxygen in the blood, lungs expanding and falling without conscious thought. Max takes a few deep breaths and opens his eyes. Sophie and Beth have settled on the grass, Sophie cross-legged and slouching and Beth kneeling behind her. They could almost be the same age from this distance. Beth is braiding Sophie's hair into a kind of crown, the black tips woven through. Sophie looks happier than she has been. Beth glances up at Max and Max smiles but she doesn't return it. In fact it seems that she is frowning at him.
Juliette lays a hand on Max's shoulder. âBrunch is ready.'
A linen tablecloth spread on the outdoor table, the corners weighted by small silver drops on clips. The glasses sparkle in the late morning light and the silverware glints like mirrors. Helen and Nina have placed fat, open roses into short vases and Rosie has rolled a sprig of rosemary into each napkin. There is a breeze against the nape of Max's neck as he reaches out for a piece of warm bread.
In France, Max has eaten food he could barely have imagined in England â oysters sweet and salty, periwinkles, liquorice-like fennel, soft cream cheeses with ripe fruit. For brunch today Juliette brings out steaming pots of mussels cooked with cider and herbs, local sardines and violet artichokes marinated in garlic with thin slivers of mint. Max eats furiously, trying to avoid watching Helen talking to Juliette, their heads close together.
The mood today is electric and prickly. It reminds Max of
accelerando
; the drumbeat getting very slowly faster and faster. The crowd growing anxious. Feverish. Desperate. Wanting, wanting, wanting. Like it could go either way â break into the song or dissolve to nothing â everyone driven mad with the urgent hope it will go to song. Timing is everything.
Max glances around the table. Rosie is listening to Lars tell a long story and down the end of the table Hugo is glaring at her. Nina is attempting to engage Hugo in conversation about his son, Patrick.
âIt's a challenging age,' Max hears her say.
âThey're all challenging ages,' Hugo replies, still avoiding eye contact.
âThey just want their mummies,' Nina says. âExcept Sophie, a daddy's girl from day dot.'
Max looks to Sophie now seated at the table. She is staring out at the garden with her mouth slightly open. Like she is waiting for someone.
â
I
want their mummy,' Hugo says, in a weird voice. Nina and Max glance at each other. Hugo's expression is mutinous.
âHow long have you known about Eddie and Rosie?' he asks without looking at anyone in particular. Then, loud enough for almost everyone to hear, âEddie and Rosie?
Fucking
?'
âWhat?' Max asks, half laughing. He looks around the table. Sets of eyes, blinking back at him. No one else laughing. Rosie and a few others not yet listening. Beth staring.
âJesus!' Nina hisses. She cocks her head at
Sophie, who is looking at Hugo now too. Nina leans
over towards Beth. âI'm so sorry, Beth.' Then back to Hugo, voice lowered. âThey're not â¦
fucking
, Hugo. God.'
Beth's cheeks have turned as red as her hair. She's blinking fast and glancing around without saying anything, trying to work it all out.
âThey're not
anything
. Other than friends.'
Hugo glares. âNo? But they
were
.'
âThat was a thousand years ago, mate,' Max protests.
Sophie looks between the three adults. âWhat?'
Nina shakes her head. âNothing. Rosie and Eddie used to date. A long, loooong time ago.' She tries to sound light-hearted. Max glances at Beth, who is slowly returning to a normal colour.
âOh right,' Sophie says, shrugging. âThat.'
Max looks back to Hugo. He seems enraged and terrified all at once. His face is both red and pale â it seems impossible, but there it is. He throws his head back. âHa! Of course you know. Everyone knows, right?'
Rosie is looking over now. âWhat's going on?' she asks Nina.
âEveryone knows
what
?' Helen asks, narrowing her eyes at Hugo.
âEddie and Rosie. Fucking,' Hugo replies.
âSteady on â¦' Max says, holding up both his hands.
âHugo!' Rosie glares at him and then glances at Sophie.
âIt's fine,' Sophie says, unfussed. âI already know.'
âSee!' Hugo cries out.
âWe talked about this â' Rosie starts.
âHey, dude, language ⦠I don't think â¦' Lars adds, frowning.
Hugo ignores him. Eddie holds up his palms. âWhoa, Hugo. Like Nina said â that was a looooooong time ago.' He blinks at Beth before adding, âThere's my lady, right there, man.'
âYeah, this week,' Hugo mutters.
Rosie catches Beth's eye. âDon't listen to him, Beth.'
âYeah, don't listen to me, Beth. No one else does. Join the club,' Hugo snorts.
âHugo, please â¦' Rosie begs.
âPlease what?' Hugo shouts.
Helen answers for her. âStop being a despicable piece of shit.'
Max's breath quickens. This is
exactly it â
accelerando
. Hugo sits up straighter in his chair.
âExcuse me?' he says, his face blotchy, eyes wide.
âYou heard. Stop bullying
your wife. Stop making everything about you. We're sick of
it.' Helen is leaning forwards in her chair now.
âYou don't know anything about me,' Hugo hisses.
âYeah?' Helen asks, jabbing her index finger at him. âWe know you're making Rosie feel bad. That's all we need to know.' She looks at Max. âRight?'
âRight,' Max replies. His heart is thumping. His hands are making fists under the table. It feels good that Helen needs his back-up, that they are back on the same team.
Please let me hit him
, he thinks,
please let me hit him
. Feeling like he's back in the schoolyard; in Grahame Park.
âHelen â¦' Nina murmurs, she is rubbing Rosie's back.
âWhat?' Helen demands. âHelen, what?'
âIt's their marriage,' Nina says softly.
âOh, for God's sake!' Helen cries, shaking her dark head and pointing again. âHugo is an arse. He's always been an arse.'
Max is nodding.
Let me hit him, let me hit him.
He's almost twitching in anticipation.
âYou know nothing about me, Helen!' Hugo roars. âOr marriage. Or any kind of commitment. And
you
.' Hugo points at Max as he stands. â
Especially
fucking you!'
Max rises to standing and they eyeball each other.
Let me hit him!
But Hugo sinks back down into his chair. âActually, I'm not going anywhere. You can fuck off, Helen.'
âYou can't speak to her like that, mate,' Max warns, jabbing at the table. âThis is
my
fucking house. And my fucking birthday.'
Helen stands now too. Max and Helen, standing together, pointing at Hugo.
âHugo, don't you
dare
upset Rosie any more! You can't bully
me.
So your wife slept with Eddie, it was a lifetime ago. You don't have a past? For fuck's sake. Get over it.'
âPlease!' Rosie suddenly cries out. âAll of you ⦠please!'
âAny more secrets, Rosie?' Hugo yells at her.
âHugo, man, this isn't a big deal,' Eddie says soothingly. âIt was well before you were on the scene. Like Helen said, it's in the past.'
Hugo shakes his head. âIt's not in my past, Eddie. It's here, right now, and I'm wondering what else my wife has to share with me. Things I should have known about. Reasons why she doesn't want to sleep with me, barely looks at me anymore.'
Nina pulls Rosie closer to her. She is sobbing hard now, Max can tell by the way her shoulders are trembling.
âBloody hell,' Max's fingers uncurl. Hugo's lips are quivering. He looks less threatening than he did a second ago. Max glances at Helen but she is still standing. Just in case.
âI don't think this is the place â¦' Lars says, looking to Nina.
âI think this has got out of hand,' Nina agrees. She looks a little pale. âPerhaps we all need some time out to think. Breathe.'
âRosie?' Hugo asks for his wife but her head is hanging. âRosie?' he tries again, now begging. âTalk to me. I'm your husband. Why can't you even talk to me?' His colour is returning to normal, his expression more wretched than angry.
Rosie doesn't lift her head; she leans back into Nina.
Hugo stands up. âGoddamn, Rosie,' he says sadly. âWhy can't you choose me?
Us.
For once.' He looks around the table. âIt's always them. You always choose them.'
Nina pats Rosie's back in long, consoling strokes. She gives Hugo a funny look, a little like pity, a little like an apology. Everyone is staring at Hugo. He blinks and sways.
âSorry,' he mumbles. âSorry â¦' and then walks into the house. Helen and Max look at each other and return to their chairs. There is silence. They all take a breath, like they are one person.
âShit,' Sophie whispers, her eyes wide.
âSophie,' Lars admonishes half-heartedly.
Everyone looks at the table, at the used dishes. The empty mussel shells, salad dressing puddling around limp mounds of cucumber, bread cooling and hardening. Rosie finally lifts her head, her makeup smudged, her eyes wet. She sniffs.
âYou okay?' Max whispers.
Rosie shrugs. She looks over at Beth. âAre you okay?' she asks.