once again I know I’m doing the right thing. His kiss is deep and serious, in contrast to the humour a few moments before. I close my eyes, ignoring Kerry telling me we should get a room as she opens the front door that is locked and walks out of it, slamming it without a sound.
Chapter Sixty-Nine
Ed
Jen is still sleeping as I head downstairs. The kids will be up soon and it looks like we’ve had a house party. My back is killing me. Sex on the stairs after a bottle of wine is not as good an idea the next morning as it was the night before. I’m not complaining this time though. Nope. I’m definitely not complaining about the sex thing this time because the sex thing now is . . . good. Apart from my bad back. And the friction marks on Jen’s.
I smirk as I wash up the glasses, put the wine bottle in the recycling and make a strong cup of coffee. Even with the bad back and a thumping headache, this is the best I have felt for months. I reach for the first-aid box but we’re out of painkillers. I turn to the kettle and notice a packet of Lemsips; they’ll have to do. I tear open a sachet and make one for Jen too. I open the lounge curtains while I wait for the kettle to boil, and return the cushions to the sofas. Beneath a cushion is one of Jen’s notepads. It’s open on a page that says ‘Oscar’s birthday’. It’s hard to explain how this can mean so much. To see her neat handwriting listing things that she needs to buy, things she needs to do: ‘Book a clown’.
A clown? We normally just do a bog-standard soft play ball-pit-type place. A tug at the pit of my stomach reminds me how hard she is trying, how hard it must be for her to get back to how things used to be. I close the notebook and put it into the kitchen drawer, then head upstairs and wake her with a trail of kisses along her shoulder blade.
‘Ugh,’ she replies.
‘I’ve made you a Lemsip.’
‘Lemsip?’ she questions groggily, then laughs.
‘What’s so funny?’ I question.
‘It’s . . . nothing. I think I’m still a bit drunk.’
‘We’re out of painkillers,’ I say by way of explanation.
She starts laughing again and sighs in a ‘you had to be there’ way. ‘Can I have coffee first?’
‘Dadddddyyyyy!’ Hailey’s voice shrieks up the stairs, making us both flinch. ‘Why are your pants hanging from the light?’
Jen throws her arm over her eyes and chuckles.
‘I’ll go.’ I kiss her and run downstairs where Oscar is jumping up and down on the sofa, singing to the tune of ‘Twinkle Twinkle Little Star’: ‘Daddy’s pants, Daddy’s pants, why I wonder why-they’re-on-the-light.’
‘That doesn’t even rhyme.’ Hailey’s glasses are removed and cleaned seriously; she returns her gaze to the pants in question.
‘There was a spider.’ My explanation is lame, agreed, but it’s the best I can do after a few hours’ sleep, a bad back and a hangover.
‘So why didn’t you use a towel or something?’ Hailey’s eyebrows meet as she stares at my boxers.
‘I panicked.’
‘But you’re not scared of spiders.’
I reach up and pull down my underwear. ‘We’d been watching a scary movie.’
‘Mummy doesn’t like scary movies.’
‘Who wants pancakes and chocolate spread for breakfast?’ Jen grins from the doorway. Oscar punches the air; Hailey’s eyes widen but are then replaced with a wary expression. I think of the last time she cooked with Jen and see that my daughter is thinking the very same.
Jen picks up on this and bends down in front of Hailey, tucking her hair behind her ears, and tracing the ‘H’ with her finger. ‘Do you know that the doctors in Greece think I might have had that nasty bug before I went on holiday? That it was making me act a bit strange?’ Hailey pulls at the edges of her dressing gown. ‘But I’m all better now, sweetheart, I promise.’
Hailey throws her arms around Jen’s neck and kisses her cheek. Jen glances up at me and stares over my shoulder.
My heart doesn’t stop but it feels like it does: that look in Jen’s eyes is back; it’s a second but it’s there.
Hailey skips into the kitchen with Oscar in tow. Jen stands, still staring past me, and I want to cry out loud, I can’t go back there. She passes me; I turn to watch, even though