healthier than in her root life, either through diet, a lack of red wine, exercise, or the cleansers and moisturisers she’d seen in the bathroom, which were all more expensive than anything she owned in her root life.
‘Well,’ she said to Plato. ‘This is a nice life, yeah?’
Plato seemed to agree.
A Spiritual Quest for a Deeper Connection with the Universe
She found the medicine drawer in the kitchen and rummaged through the plasters and ibuprofen and Calpol and multivitamins and runners’ knee bandages but couldn’t find any sign of any anti-depressants.
Maybe this was it. Maybe this was, finally, the life she was going to stay put in. The life she would choose. The one she would not return to the shelves.
I could be happy here.
A little later, in the shower, she scanned her body for new marks. There were no tattoos but there was a scar. Not a self-inflicted scar but a surgical-looking one – a long, delicate horizontal line below her navel. She had seen a caesarean scar before, and now she stroked her thumb along it, thinking that even if she stayed in this life she would have always turned up late for it.
Ash came back home from dropping Molly off.
She hastily dressed so he wouldn’t see her naked.
They had breakfast together. They sat at their kitchen table and scrolled the day’s news and ate sourdough toast and were very much like a living endorsement for marriage.
And then Ash went to the hospital and she stayed home to research Thoreau all day. She read her work-in-progress, which already had an impressive word-count of 42,729, and sat eating toast before picking Molly up from school.
Molly wanted to go to the park ‘like normal’ to feed the ducks, and so Nora took her, disguising the fact that she was using Google Maps to navigate her way there.
Nora pushed her on a swing till her arms ached, slid down slides with her and crawled behind her through large metallic tunnels. They then threw dry oats into the pond for the ducks, scooped from a box of porridge.
Then she sat down with Molly in front of the telly and then she fed her her dinner and read a bedtime story, all before Ash returned home.
After Ash came home, a man came to the door and tried to get in and Nora shut the door in his face.
‘Nora?’
‘Yes.’
‘Why were you so weird to Adam?’
‘What?’
‘I think he was a little bit put out.’
‘What do you mean?’
‘You acted like he was a stranger.’
‘Oh.’ Nora smiled. ‘Sorry.’
‘He’s been our neighbour for three years. We went camping with him and Hannah in the Lake District.’
‘Yes. I know. Of course.’
‘You looked like you weren’t letting him in. Like he was an intruder or something.’
‘Did I?’
‘You shut the door in his face.’
‘I shut the door. It wasn’t in his face. I mean, yes, his face was there. Technically. But I just didn’t want him to think he could barge in.’
‘He was bringing the hose back.’
‘Oh, right. Well, we don’t need the hose. Hoses are bad for the planet.’
‘Are you okay?’
‘Why wouldn’t I be?’
‘I just worry about you . . .’
Generally, though, things turned out pretty good, and every time she wondered if she would wake up back in the library, she didn’t. One day, after her yoga class, Nora sat on a bench by the River Cam and re-read some Thoreau. The day after, she watched Ryan Bailey on daytime TV being interviewed on the set of Last Chance Saloon 2, in which he said he was ‘on a spiritual quest for a deeper connection with the universe’ rather than worrying about ‘settling down in a romantic context’.
She received whale photos from Izzy, and WhatsApped her to say that she had heard about a horrid car crash in Australia recently, and made Izzy promise she would always drive safely.
Nora was comforted to know she had no inclination whatsoever to see what Dan was doing with his life. Instead, she felt very grateful to be with Ash. Or rather, and more precisely: she imagined she was grateful, because he was lovely, and there were so many moments of joy and laughter and love.
Ash did long shifts but was easy to be around when he was in, even after days of blood and stress and gall bladders. He was also a bit of a nerd. He always said ‘good morning’ to elderly people in the street when walking the dog and sometimes they ignored him. He sang along to the car radio.