The Closer You Get - Mary Torjussen Page 0,6

hand with your bag?”

“No, no, thanks.” I took the card from her. “I can manage.”

I stood by the lift, shaking. This was the most daring thing I’d done in my entire life and now that the moment had come it was as though I was watching myself from outside my own body. The lift pinged and opened. I walked in, gripping my bag. My finger slid over the button for the second floor. The lift suddenly seemed claustrophobic and by the time its doors opened I felt light-headed. I dragged my bag down the corridor toward the room, my heart beating fast. Outside the door I stood for a second, hardly able to breathe. This was it. Once I went in, there was no going back.

CHAPTER 4

Ruby

It was only when I was safely in the hotel room that I could let myself relax. I kicked off my shoes and quickly unpacked my bag. I hung up my clothes and when I lined up my toiletries at the side of the bathroom sink, I caught sight of myself in the mirror. My makeup was a mess from crying and my face was flushed with relief and excitement. I started to smile and found I couldn’t stop.

Quickly I cleaned my face. My eyes were still swollen and my cheeks were pink, so I reapplied my makeup, then added a dab of perfume to my throat and wrists. The sweet familiar smell always calmed me. I looked at my phone. No messages, but I wasn’t really expecting one. My stomach rumbled and I realized I was starving. I couldn’t face going downstairs to the restaurant, so I rang room service and ordered wine and sandwiches.

It was strange to be alone in a hotel room, propped up on pillows, with only the television for company. The usual Friday-night programs were on, ones that I’d watch with Tom. He and I would have a drink and sometimes we’d chat, but often we’d watch in silence. It took a lot to make us laugh; if he was the wrong side of the bottle, I’d always let him go first. That night I couldn’t concentrate long enough to focus on anything. I kept thinking of the conversation I’d had with him that evening. I’d expected insults to be hurled at me, recriminations to be shouted, his face close to mine, his spittle showering my mouth. I thought I’d be made to feel bad, no matter what that took. The longer I held out, the harder he’d try. I used to cave in, but over the last year or two I’d started to retreat into myself, distancing myself from what he was saying, as though he was talking to someone else. He’d noticed, of course he had, and he’d ramped up his efforts. It wasn’t a game; it was more like war.

I’d anticipated having trouble getting out of the house, not because he was violent—he’d never touched me when we were arguing and would stay at least an inch away—but because he hated not to have the last word. It was wearing, to say the least. Sometimes he’d bring up an argument he’d lost years before and try to win it afresh. I’d thought that might happen tonight, too, and frowned. I’d been let off lightly. Why was that? I felt a pang of guilt as I thought of the messages he’d sent since I left the house. He wasn’t always horrible, I knew. He could be kind and generous, too. Those messages reminded me of the man he’d been when we first got together.

Just then I heard a noise in the corridor and leaned forward, straining my ears. I could hear the fire door that split the corridor slowly shut, and then a thud. I jumped to my feet and threw open the door.

A porter was pushing a drinks cart along to the next room. “Sorry!” he said. “That door’s a nuisance. I hope I didn’t disturb you.”

“No,” I said, disappointed. “No, it’s okay. I thought you were bringing me something to eat.”

I went back to the television and started to flick through channels again. Soaps. Game shows. The news. Nothing that could interest me now. I hadn’t thought of bringing a book to read and wished I’d brought my iPad with me. Out of habit I

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