Читать книгу Obsession: The bestselling psychological thriller with a shocking ending - Amanda Robson, Amanda Robson - Страница 33
~ Jenni ~
ОглавлениеI have waded through the day, feeling as if I am pushing through mercury or lead. Every movement has been difficult; my limbs have become metallic, the air laced with dread. There were brief, tiny moments when I forgot what had happened. As I held Luke and Mark’s hands and we ambled to the play park. As we queued by the ice-cream van, an autumn breeze moving from the river to caress our faces. For a few seconds I forgot.
When the children were at school I went to church – the church where we married, by the river in Stansfield. Wren architecture. Ancient yew trees. My mind rushed back to our wedding day. I was back walking down the aisle arm in arm with my father, the organ deep throated and resonant, pumping from the balcony, the tremble of my bouquet of lilies magnifying the trembling in my fingers. What haunted me most was the memory of the vicar wrapping a cloth around our hands and saying,
‘Those who God hath joined together, let no man put asunder.’
Do you remember, Craig?
Home from your shift at the fire station, you stand too close to me as I lay the table. You start to help me. The air around you has an aura. I don’t want to be near you. You smell of sex with someone else. Your behaviour has sullied you. The stench of your betrayal will never leave me. You lay the cutlery, I lay the place mats, and when we come close I lean my head away.
We sit around the kitchen table together to eat lasagne; the children’s favourite. I push it around my plate with my fork, watching the fat from the cheese coagulate on my plate. No one is talking. I cannot watch you lift your fork to your mouth and swallow without thinking about where your mouth has been.
When the meal is over I snuggle Luke and Mark in front of a film and start to clear the table. As I am loading the dishwasher you come up behind me, kissing me softly on the side of my neck.
‘I’m so sorry, Jenni,’ you whisper.
Somehow we steer through the evening. We put the children to bed. We sit next to each other on the sofa with a glass of wine each. You are too close to me again, your leg against mine, burning into me. Making me feel hot. Making me feel sick.
‘Please forgive me,’ you beg.
Is forgiveness to be the crux of our relationship now?
You take my right hand in yours. I allow it to rest limply in your sweaty palm and we sit listening to the sounds of the evening. Next door’s television reverberating through the party wall. An aeroplane. A police siren. People laughing on their way to the pub. I place my wine glass on the coffee table and stand up.
‘I’m going to bed. You’ll have to sleep in the spare room for a bit.’
By morning Rob’s receptionist has to allocate his late morning emergency appointment to me because I have told her I’m in meltdown; I can’t cope. I lay awake all night in our marital bed, the faint scent of your hair still on the pillow next to me, unable to sleep without you, missing the warmth of your body and the soothing resonance of your breath. I had no sleep all night, and the groundless feeling of panic that I have been trying to suppress since the loss of my mother has risen to a perpetual internal scream that I can’t pull away from.
So I am Rob’s priority patient, his cheery voice announcing my name over the internal speaker system as I walk towards his consulting room, trying not to trip over Lego from the children’s box in the corner of the waiting room. I knock on his door and receive the cursory, ‘Come in.’
His small room looks as if it has seen better days, complete with its chipped desk and obligatory couch with a paper towel spread across it. When invited I sit on a small leather chair opposite his desk and find myself distracted by a photograph of him with Carly, Pippa and John, presumably before Matt was born. They must have been walking in the Lake District or Wales; they’re standing in front of a rocky peak, dressed in waterproof jackets. Carly is wearing no make-up and looks very relaxed and happy. Far more relaxed than I have seen her for a while.
‘How are you?’ Rob asks.
My mouth opens and no words appear; tears stream down my face, their salt biting into my skin.
‘What’s happened, Jenni?’ he asks gently.
‘It’s Craig. He’s been having an affair.’
He exhales. ‘Stupid bastard.’
Rob’s words resonate inside me, and for the first time since I found out, I laugh. A nervous laugh, not a real laugh.
‘Exactly,’ I say, pretending to be confident.
‘Jenni, keep calm. There’s so much that can be done to help with relationship difficulties.’
‘That’s just it,’ I say, fighting for breath between sobs. ‘Until yesterday evening I didn’t think we had any relationship difficulties.’
I sit wrapped in his eyes. Something about his green-grey irises flecked with peppery dots suffocates my tears. But the scream inside my head continues. The scream inside my head that I think will never stop.