Read We Are All Made of Stars Online
Authors: Rowan Coleman
There is nothing to say, so neither of us speak. Instead we just sit in the café, sipping cold coffee. Taxi drivers come in and out. Conversation and laughter, life, going on around us, everywhere except for the four square feet where we are. Here, life is standing still, and there's a kind of bond between us â a survivor's bond, perhaps. Or just the bond of the broken-hearted. But I feel it; it's comforting.
Meeting Hugh's eyes, I notice that behind his glasses he has hazel eyes that seem kind and warm. He doesn't hate me, the way that I thought he might, the way that he perhaps has a right to. He sees me. He sees why I did what I did, and he understands.
âI thought that if I delivered the letter to you before your mum died, I could be a hero, at least in your lives if not in my own. I had an idea that I could at least save
something
â save you, save Grace. Make something that was terrible, better, but it was a stupid idea. A thoughtless one. I shouldn't have given you the letter at all. I should never have written it. I just wanted to feel important, somehow, to someone. To feel that I mattered. It was selfish, and I am so, so sorry.'
Hugh sighs, shakes his head. âWould it have been any better if you hadn't delivered the letter?'
âWell, you've moved on. You had grieved, and now I've dragged you back into pain that I imagine took you years to recover from. So yes, yes, I think it would have been better.'
I glance across the road at Marie Francis. At this time of night, it looks dark and closed, but that's just because you can't see the ground floor from behind the wall.
âAre you late for work?' he asks me.
âI'm not due in. I was only going in to tell Grace what I'd done.'
âHow long has she got?' he asks.
I remember my dead phone and hope it's not too late, that the choice hasn't been taken out of our hands.
âI'm not sure,' I say. âI can find out, if you give me a moment?'
He nods. âI need to know if I have time to think, or if there is anything to think about.'
Mandy, the night nurse on duty whenever I am not, is surprised to see me.
âWhat are you doing here?' she asks. âSurely you've got something better to be doing with that lovely strapping husband of yours?'
âI wanted to check in on Grace. I've been thinking about her; how is she?'
Mandy checks her notes.
âStable, comfortable. Keris is visiting with her now. She's peaceful. Why?'
âWhy what?' I lean against the desk, wondering if this is the news that Hugh will want to hear.
âWhy have you come all this way to ask about Grace? Why not call?'
âYou know, sometimes a patient just gets under your skin,' I say.
It's clear that Mandy doesn't believe me, and she knows that I know that, but she doesn't question me further.
âWell, she's stable for now, pain-free.'
âHow long do you think?' I ask her.
âWe never answer that question. You know that,' she says, bemused. âStella, what's going on?'
I glance at Grace's closed door; the low light that radiates from it seems so comforting and secure. Am I bringing a whirlwind into her life? Am I bringing the chill of anger and regret into what should be a peaceful death?
âGrace asked me to do something for her, and I ⦠I'm not sure if I have enough time to do it. That's all. I got sidetracked and I forgot, and I'm hoping that I'm not too late. I couldn't rest. You know how it is.'
Mandy gives me a decidedly sceptical look. âAll I can tell you is she's comfortable. It could be another day or two, it could be hours. You know how it is.'
âOK, thank you.' I attempt a reassuring smile.
âWhat is it?' She reaches across the desk, taking my hand in hers; her fingers feel so warm and strong. âYou're freezing! At least have a cuppa as you're here, and talk to me. You seem like you might need someone to talk to about something.'
I squeeze her fingers back and let them go.
âThank you,' I say. âBut I'm fine, honestly. I can't stay for a tea. Vincent is waiting for me.'
âOK.' She accepts my explanation, but I see her face is full of concern. âStella ⦠you look ⦠just tell me, are you OK?'
I think for a moment. My fragile life, constructed of matchsticks, has disintegrated around me. And yet, I do feel OK. I feel somehow free. Sometime in the last twenty-four hours, I reached the very bottom. I'm here, I've arrived, and it's survivable. Now all I have to do is find a way to surface again and the courage to take another breath of air.
âEverything will be OK, one way or another,' I tell Mandy, and I walk back into the night.
Dear Deborah,
I hope this letter finds you better than it does me. I must admit I've wondered how you will take the news of my demise; if it will be with ill-concealed glee or something a little more sober. I hope you're not completely delighted to hear of my passing. I hope you remember some of those twenty years we were married to each other as happy.
Deborah, I want to apologise for the way that I treated you, over the matter of our divorce. I thought that I had fallen out of love with you, and in love with another woman. But the truth is, it wasn't love, or even lust, that drove me to end what had been a very satisfactory marriage; it was fear. Suddenly I felt old and afraid. I think I thought that having a new wife, a wife twenty years younger than me, might make me somehow immortal.
The truth is, Deborah, I think she probably drove me to the very edge of this early grave I am about to find myself in. It took about a year for me to wake up and come to my senses, and perhaps you will be glad to know that the last eight years have been wrought with regret. How I have missed you. Your quiet passion for life, your grace, your scent. The smooth plane of your cheek, the way your hair fell against the back of your neck. Your familiarity, your calm.
Of course you will say that I am just a stupid old man who always wants the opposite of what he has, and you are right, I expect. You remarried, of course. I always knew Kevin carried a torch for you. I do hope that you are happy. In the divorce settlement, I got the fisherman's cottage in Devon that I know you always loved, but now I am bequeathing it to back to you, in the hope that sometimes you will remember our first summer there, when we did nothing but make love and laugh all day.
Your first husband,
George
âRight, then.' Ben takes the key from the receptionist, and we head towards a tiny and suspect-looking lift.
When it opens, it looks like a small, mirrored, upended coffin, with barely enough room for one. Panicking, I look around for some nice reliable stairs to idle up, but if there are any stairs, they aren't around here. There's no emergency exit â that just about sums up my entire life.
âAfter you,' Ben says. Without an escape route, I see no alternative but to step inside the tiny box, and Ben follows me.
At once we are thrown into uncomfortably close proximity, and I am excruciatingly aware of every inch of Ben that I already, at least in theory, know so well. His hair, blacker than black, thanks to semi-permanent gloss, which he doesn't know I know he applies (but is fairly obvious due to the blue tide marks behind his ears). The scar on the back of his neck from when he fell off his Chopper bike doing wheelies when we were nine. His arms, mostly bare; the curve of his forearm; the small of his back. I've never thought about ⦠about what's under his trousers before. And how can it take so many seconds for a lift to go up two tiny floors. He raises an eyebrow at me, as if he's somehow sensed my mental skimming over his genitalia, and I close my eyes. Is he thinking about me naked? Am I thinking about me naked? I don't know when I last shaved. Will he expect me to be bare down there like an adult film star, when I am entirely as nature intended me? Perhaps we can turn out all the lights.
The relief is palpable as the lift door slides open and we tumble out of it.
The corridor is narrow and long, with an odd-angled curve at the end, following the unorthodox cutting and shutting together of a row of crumbling terraces.
âRoom thirty-twoâ¦' Ben says, tapping the key card against his chin as we follow the trail of numbers. Finally we stop in front of a white-painted door bearing our number. Ben jiggles the key card in and out of the lock several times before finally the red light flashes green and it releases the lock. He pushes the door open and stands back to let me in first. I keep expecting him to laugh and change his mind, to point and guffaw and say something like, âI really had you going. Christ!' But he doesn't; he's very quiet. And so am I. This feels more like a condemned man's last walk to the electric chair than a lovers' tryst.
The room is not nice,
exactly
. It might have been, once â about fifteen years ago â but if you squint, and don't notice the threadbare curtains, the coffee stains on the carpet, the shadow of an iron burn on the carpet next to the bathroom, or the greying nets, then, yes, it's OK. It beats a hospital room, any day of the week. It's clean, at least, and with the bedside lamps turned on, it's pretty cosy. It's not a terrible place to have sex.
The trouble is, now we are in the room, I have no idea what to do. I look at Ben, at a loss.
âWell, you're the one with the six lovers,' I tell him. âYou start.'
âNot six lovers all at once,' he says. âShit, I don't know. Shall we have a drink?'
âDid you bring anything?'
He looks crestfallen then nods at the mini kettle in the corner.
âCup of tea?'
I can't help but cover my mouth with my hand, and he smiles. He takes a step closer to me.
âWe should kiss,' he says. âThe last time I kissed you, I wasn't at the top of my game. But I'm sober now, and also germ-free.'
âHave you got a certificate to prove that?' I ask him. This time his smile is shy, nervous. It's nice. I like the fact that he isn't treating this like a joke. If he did, I'm sure I would lose my courage much sooner.
âAbout those six girls,' he says. âThere were only three of them. And I'm not sure one counted.'
He takes another step closer to me and places his hands carefully on my hips. I gaze resolutely downwards.
âIt's going to be hard to make out with the top of your head,' he says.
âI was just thinking about other stuff, you know. Practical stuff like ⦠like condems. I mean condoms.'
âI've got it covered,' he says. âWell, it's not covered yet, but it will be.'
It's a terrible joke, but we both have to repress a snigger.
âI think let's stop with the talking and try the kissing again,' Ben says.
Taking a breath, I look up and see him, his face right there. That dear face that I've always known, that sweet mouth. We slowly move together, our lips meeting hesitantly. It feels weird and strange. I close my eyes and concentrate on the faint pulsing of blood under his skin. His tongue tests my mouth, and I remember the last kiss, when I had resisted, and teeth and gums and saliva were in all the wrong places at all the wrong times. This time I let him lead me into the kiss; I let him explore my mouth, and then I reciprocate. It's almost like writing a song, a balancing act of discovery, each of us sensing the other as we look for harmony. Pretty soon, much sooner than I feared, it starts to feel right, this kiss. If my eyes are closed and I don't let myself think too much about who I am kissing, it starts to feel really good. My arms snake upward around his neck, and I'm pulling him closer to me, enjoying the resistance of his firm body against my soft one, and then he moans with what I imagine is desire. Ben moans, and because it's Ben, I freak out and let him go.
âWhat?' he says, taking a breath. âI thought it was going quite well.'
âNothing, nothing,' I say. âIt was just you made a noise, and you know. It was like you were getting into it.'