Read Aphrodite's Workshop for Reluctant Lovers Online
Authors: Marika Cobbold
âThat figures,' the boy said. âI'd give her another go, though.'
âWould you now?' John said. He smiled. âMaybe I shall too then.'
I SLEPT WELL IN my new flat and awoke refreshed. I had put on some weight. âYou look really well,' my friends told me. âRelaxed, more your old self.'
Coco agreed.
That cowed look is just so last year
.
And yet.
And yet what?
Coco snapped.
What's there to and yet about? You're free of the bastard
.
Don't call him a bastard
.
What would you like me to call him?
I thought about it.
Oh I don't know, just go away
.
âWhat do you mean and yet?' Matilda asked.
We were sitting at the kitchen table; through the window I watched a pale autumn sun setting behind Albert Bridge.
âLast week you were telling everyone that you'd never been more content. You said you woke every morning while the builders were in thanking God that you weren't having to cope with Dominic going ballistic at every little thing, especially when they broke the teapot. The freedom, you said, not answering to anyone: you loved it. The relief, you said, of not being watched and harangued at every turn. What's changed?'
I pushed one of the mugs of tea across the table top towards her and picked up the plate.
âIced bun?'
âDon't change the topic,' Matilda said.
âOK. I'm sorry. And I don't suppose it's him I miss, not exactly. But I miss
something
. Maybe it's my dreams. The future is like a doily with all these cut-outs: the ski holiday planned for the new year, the weekends with his friends in the Cotswolds, his nephew's wedding in France. I mean it's not as if I can't travel without him, it's just, oh I'm not sure what the issue is exactly other than that I feel so very sad.'
âThat's understandable,' Matilda said, her hand hovering above the plate of sticky buns, retreating then swooping down like a bird of prey. She bit into the bun, eating fast as if that way there would be fewer calories. âBut you will find someone else eventually, someone nice even.'
âThat's part of the sadness, I reckon. I might well find someone, but then what do I do with him? Sleep with him, yes. And then what? Because eventually it would end the way it always does, in disillusionment and ugly strife.'
âCome on, it doesn't
have
to be like that.'
I sighed.
âI wish I could believe that. I can't work, Matilda. I can't go on writing my nice books about nice people meeting other nice people and falling in love and living happily ever after. From where I am now I simply can't imagine how I ever could. It all seems so long ago. But without my work I feel naked and chilly to the bone. No, worse, I feel pointless. I have no purpose. I can't live without purpose. I wonder if that's what you'd feel if you had lived all your life in Soviet Russia or Communist Poland when the whole
idea of Communism collapsed? I've often wondered what it must have been like. There you are, having worked and sacrificed and suffered all in the belief that you were serving a higher purpose, creating Utopia for your children and their children â'
âDid anyone actually think that?'
âI think so. And then one day you're told that actually it was all a huge mistake and, as if that's not bad enough, you're supposed to go out there and dance around the square or hacked-down wall or whatever, celebrating the fact that your entire life's been a sham.'
âI'm not sure I would equate romance with Communism.'
At midnight the phone went.
âI know I promised not to call but, darling, I miss you.'
I sat up against the pillows.
âDominic.'
âI'm sorry, did I wake you?'
âYes, sort of. But it's all right.'
â
I'm
not all right,' he said. âI know it serves me right. I've been a pig. I don't deserve you but, darling, I'm just lost without you.' His voice was low and intimate. It was the voice of a lover.
I didn't know what to say so I said nothing.
He continued, âDarling, don't you miss me even a little bit?'
âYes.' And with that yes I stepped back into my life and the time away seemed just like a dream.
I opened the door and watched him stride up the stairs. At the sight of me he paused then he smiled, penitent, jubilant, his arms wide open to clasp me to him.
Coco appeared in front of me frenetically rowing a lifeboat, calling my name. I turned my back on him and led Dominic inside. I opened a bottle of red wine. I wasn't sure why I did that when I knew perfectly well that he preferred white.
He looked at the red liquid as he took the glass from me.
âRed. Very nice. Thanks, darling.'
He stayed the night in my bed. Coco spent the night locked in the walk-in-wardrobe.
âIt's like coming home,' Dominic said after we had made love again the next morning. âOh my darling. Oh my love, my life.'
Back in the early days he used to whisper those words and I had felt like a special being, anointed by love. I wanted to feel that way again. I tried hard. But instead I felt as if I were watching a love scene in the company of my mother.
As it was Saturday, I suggested we visit the local farmers' market. I was in two minds about those markets. I enjoyed the experience of walking between the stalls with a hand-woven basket in the crook of my arm. I liked the open air and the way the other shoppers bustled around smiling instead of shuffling and shoving their way along crowded supermarket aisles. Yet in some way I felt I was just a victim of another trend. âDarling, how lovely, shit-covered eggs straight from the hen's bottom.' And, âUnpasteurised cheese with real flies, how marvellously geniune.'
As a rule I valued solitude, but weekends on my own had made me feel lonely. Walking around the market with Dominic I enjoyed being part of a couple again, shopping for lunch for two, handing him a taster of cheese and discussing how much was needed of the Beaufort and how much of the Stilton. Other than the cheese we bought a couple of dressed crabs, which led me to wonder, as always,
why a shellfish broken into its constituent parts was known as âdressed'. As usual, I decided not to ask. I had a feeling there was an obvious answer that everyone knew but me.
Dominic disappeared only to return a few minutes later with a bunch of red roses.
âRoses for a rose,' he said, laughing at his cheesy joke, and all around us people were smiling. Babies in prams, puppies and lovers were all part of a delightful breed adored by, well, by most people, other than those who found the sight of any of these quite sick-making.
On our way home we passed the Bathroom Shop.
I stopped.
âI need one of those shelf things you put across the bath tub for soaps and sponges and stuff,' I said. âDo you mind?'
He said he would wait outside in the fresh air.
âLeave the basket with me,' he added.
Inside there were several of those shelves to choose from. There was also an entire section with soaps and one with soap dishes and toothbrush-holders and such like. I went to the door and signalled to Dominic to join me but he shook his head and held up a lit cigarette. Following a very interesting discussion with the shop assistant about soap versus gels I was given two samples of each kind. I then bought a soap dish, a rose-scented soap and a honeysuckle shower-gel.
Outside Dominic was finishing a cigarette. He glared at me as he flicked the butt to the ground.
âHave you no idea of time?'
âWhy didn't you come inside? There were some lovely things.'
âYou know I don't share your love of shopping. Anyway, I had this.' He picked up the basket and the bags from around his feet. âSo can we go now? I'm cold and I'm hungry.'
âI'm sorry,' I said as I tried to relieve him of the basket. âThey were just so nice in there and had such nice â'
âYou said.' He glanced at the small bag in my hand. âSo did you get the bath-tub shelf, or whatever you call it?'
I looked down at the bag myself.
âNo, no, I didn't.' I laughed. âSilly me.'
He sighed, a sigh so deep it could be heard above the roaring traffic on Chelsea Bridge Road.
Once we had eaten the crab and cheeses Dominic was in a better mood.
Looking around him he said, âYou really have done well with this place, darling.' He sat down next to me on the sofa with his mug of coffee. âI feel really at home.'
My smile froze. My back stiffened and I put my mug down on the table.
Dominic leant back against the cushions with an air of belonging.
Was that banging I heard from my bedroom? One final smash and Coco came bounding past, out of breath and with his hair in disarray, carrying a half-closed suitcase with a pair of striped trouser-legs trailing the ground.
Save yourself while you can
, he called over his shoulders.
Dominic opened his eyes and smiled fuzzily at me.
âYes, I really feel at home here.'
I got to my feet.
âI have to go out now,' I told Dominic. âI'll lock up behind you, shall I?'
*Â Â Â Â Â *Â Â Â Â Â *
When I saw Charlotte Jessop next I was anxious to find out whether she believed that my decision to break up with Dominic and not to rekindle our relationship might be a result, not of logic or even the dictates of the heart, but because of the clown.
âWhat do
you
think?' Charlotte Jessop asked.
âMy gut instinct tells me that it's common sense and self-preservation kicking in at long last. But then again, is it just coincidence that Coco reappeared during this time?'
âI would like you to consider the possibility that Coco's reappearance was a necessary component in the process of you freeing yourself from what was, in fact, a textbook toxic relationship.'
âYou mean he's some sort of enabler?' Like most clowns there was nothing Coco liked better than to be taken seriously.
Right now he was sitting on a stool in the corner of the room, his stripy legs crossed, a pair of spectacles perched on his red nose, and as Charlotte and I spoke he rested his chin in his hand and nodded.
âAs long as we are both clear that he is simply another facet of your personality, another side of your internal dialogue,' Charlotte said.
I smiled and nodded.
âOf course.'
It was the end of the session and as I walked out of the room Coco followed me, crowing three times and hissing,
Judas
.
The cockerel crowed three times to Peter, not Judas
, I told him.
And, Coco, you are an imaginary clown
, not
the Messiah
.
There, I thought, Charlotte Jessop had nothing to worry about on my account.
At lunch later on that day, Bridget said in a voice elongated with thought, âYou really have been very clever, Geraldine.'
âHow do you mean, I've been clever?'
âBecause you have it all before you to enjoy⦠for the third time: new love, sexual excitement, setting up a home together. It's as if you are living a romantic groundhog day.'
I didn't know Bridget's husband's cousin very well but I remembered Angel-face telling me that she had recently got married again. It was hard not to notice that, at fifty-one, the same age as Bridget, Geraldine looked much younger. Not because she was especially unlined, although she did have a good complexion, but because of the light in her eyes, the easy laughter, the languid movements, which all spoke of a woman who had woken up next to her lover that morning. Bridget, on the other hand, had woken up next to her very nice decent husband of almost thirty years. As for myself, I exuded the nervous energy of someone in turmoil. I had noticed that morning that this was not so good for the complexion.
âDo you think Robert Mugabe is at peace with himself?' I asked. âThere he is, tyrant of the year, destroying his country, impoverishing and imprisoning his people, torturing his opponents and yet, and yet he has the most incredible skin for a man in his mid-eighties.'
The other two ignored me; rightly so, I supposed.
Geraldine said, âBut I always envy
you
, Bridget. There's something intensely romantic about a lasting love affair.'
âI wouldn't say that your cousin and I are in the throes of a love affair; I mean I can't believe that anyone is after thirty
years, other than in books.' As she said âbooks' she gave a perfunctory nod in my direction. âBut we do get on very well; I mean I wouldn't change him. OK, perhaps for George Clooney. No, we rub along very well, we really do. But ⦠well, I suppose it would be a more unusual couple than Neil and I who could still surprise each other at this stage. So it's predictable. We know the answers to each other. That's comfortable and secure, but â¦' Bridget's voice trailed off.
â⦠The problem is, it's the questions that are so exciting,' I said.
âAre you working on a new book?' Geraldine asked.
I nodded.
âTrying to.'
âOh but you must hurry up and finish it. I'm such a fan. You know it's partly through reading you that I plucked up the courage to get out of my first marriage. You feel very lonely when you're unhappy, don't you? And I was unhappy. Not because Charles was nasty, or a bully like your ex-boyfriend ⦠no' â she raised her hand to stop me from speaking â âyou don't have to say anything. As I said before, Bridget's told me everything. No, Charles was,
is
, a nice man, and he's the father of my children, but it wasn't right. For a long time it wasn't right. I felt such a lack at the very centre of my life, a big void where there should be warmth and comradeship and sex ⦠and your books, well, they put into words what it was that was missing; it's as simple as that.'