So,
what do you do?” he said.
“I’m
a…scriptwriter,” I said. That was my first lie.
He
raised his eyebrows. “What sort of stuff do you write?”
I
tried to sound modest. “TV dramas mostly. The odd film.”
I gave a tiny shrug and dipped my head, trying to imply that this was
not a big deal.
He
leaned in a fraction closer, close enough for me to smell him.
“Really? Nice one.” He smelled expensive. He looked impressed.
He seemed to think it was a big deal.
Rather
a shame that it was all lies. I didn’t quite know where they were
coming from. It was as if someone else was speaking to him, not me.
Five minutes later, and I’d been nominated for a BAFTA, had an
office in Soho and was thinking of setting up my own production company.
Well, I figured I might as well enjoy myself – and I was hardly
going to tell him the truth. That would have sent him packing within
seconds.
I
wasn’t lying for any sinister reason. I’d been minding my
own business, wondering if my trousers looked as tight as they felt,
while I waited for Becca to come back from the bar with our drinks.
Then he’d appeared beside me, sliding along the couch, one arm
slung over the back of it. Jack. A pretty boy in a loud shirt. Young
and cocky and definitely, oh, transparently, on the pull, but
he’d been so charming and funny and…OK then, he’d
been so damn good-looking, I couldn’t resist playing along with
it, trying on a new persona to see how it fitted. And for ten minutes,
it fitted wonderfully. I even convinced myself.
Then
my phone bleeped. A message.
I
glanced at it covertly. NATHAN HUNGRY, it said. The two words were enough
to make me break off right in the middle of my Hollywood story. Nathan
hungry? Already? Oh God.
Don’t…don’t
go and LEAK now, I told myself fiercely. I could feel that familiar
tingle starting at the very thought. Please don’t start leaking
here in public, not when I’m wearing my best, dry-clean only Kenzo
top…
“Sorry,”
I said to Jack. I pulled a rueful, shit-happens face. “Gotta make
a call. I’m meeting someone else for a drink and they seem to
be early.” It was the most truthful thing I’d said all night.
“Oh,”
he replied. He looked up at me through lashes so sooty and thick they
should rightfully have been on a woman. “Can I take your number
then?”
“Tell
you what,” I said, “I’ll take yours.”
We
shook hands. “Nice talking to you, Sadie,” he smiled. His
hand felt cool and firm. Long fingers. No rings.
“Nice
talking to you, Jack,” I said. I meant it. I hadn’t
felt so creative for weeks.
I
dialled home as soon as he’d made the return swagger to his mates,
who promptly started slapping him on the back and making simian whooping
noises. “Alex, it’s me,” I said. I kept my voice low;
Jack had obviously made some comment or other about me as his whole
posse was straining their designer shirt collars, leaning over for a
good look. “Is everything all right? He’s not due a feed
in ages. Are you sure he’s hungry?”
“He’s
been bawling his head off, Sade. I’ve checked his nappy and that’s
OK, and he’s not too hot or too cold or anything…”
“He’s
probably tired. Or windy. He can’t be that hungry. I fed him just
before I came out.” I could hear a wail down the receiver behind
Alex’s words. My boy. How could I have abandoned him? I felt like
running out of the bar there and then in my best strappy heels, sod
the stupid night out.
Before
I could move, though, Becca walked into my line of vision and plonked
two tall glasses on the table in front of me. The ice clinked, and my
mouth felt dry.
“He’s
just tired,” I repeated into the phone, more forcefully this time.
I couldn’t take my eyes off the gin swirling languidly through
the tonic. It looked so wonderfully viscous, so wonderfully…alcoholic.
“He didn’t sleep much today. Why don’t you try putting
him in the sling and walking him about? Please, Alex.” We’d
only just got here and I was about to be magicked back to Motherhood
Central before I’d even had a chance to lift my drink. Maybe it
was a punishment for all those lies.
“All
right,” he said. He didn’t sound convinced.
The
wailing started up again and I squeezed my eyes shut. This was a mistake.
I shouldn’t have come.
Becca
grabbed the phone. “She’ll call you back in ten minutes,
OK? Bye now.”
I
took a thankful swig of my drink. The ice cubes rattled down to butt
my lips, and tonic bubbles popped on my tongue. The alcohol sank into
me deliciously. I imagined it swirling through my bloodstream in the
same languid way.
“Thanks,
Bec,” I said.
She
was staring at me, brown eyes scrunching up into a frown. “Sade…I
think you’re…I think something’s happening,”
she said. She gestured to my top. “What’s that?”
I
glanced down to see a telltale wet patch on my chest as the milk seeped
sweetly out of me. “Oh Christ,” I moaned, trying and failing
to cover it up with my arm. “Oh, bollocks!”
The cab
sped through the dark city, and I leaned my hot cheek against the window.
“Don’t
worry,” Becca said, giving my arm a squeeze. “We can try again
next Saturday.”
“We’re
going to dinner with Alex’s sodding boss next Saturday,” I
reminded her. I grimaced. Mine and Alex’s first night out together
since Nathan had been born five months ago – and it wasn’t
going to be quite the romantic get-away I’d been hoping for. We
could hardly start holding hands and snogging drunkenly over the table
at his new boss’s dinner party. Not unless I was planning to completely
ruin Alex’s career anyway.
“Sometime
in the week, then,” she said. “Look, it’s not a big
deal. Honestly. If you’ve gotta go, you’ve gotta go.”
I
returned the squeeze. “Cheers, Bec.” I sighed. “I’m
sorry – I’m sure there’s nothing wrong, but…”
“I
know. I know! It’s all right, you don’t have to say it.”
People
were spilling out of bars and restaurants, loitering in clusters on the
pavement, heads tipped back in laughter under the flashing neon signs.
They had all the time in the world to hang around. Maybe they’d
go on to a club now or over to someone’s house for a smoke. They
could stay out until the first pink blush of dawn if they fancied it,
then lounge in bed all the next day, read the Sunday papers with their
feet on the sofa, doze in front of the EastEnders omnibus. Bacon, eggs,
fags, coffee, hangover. Such enviable freedom. Such a different world.
“There’s
Pete!” Becca said suddenly, banging on the car window and waving
like a maniac. “And Zoe!” She leaned forward. “Could
you stop here a second, please, mate?”
As
the cab pulled in to the roadside, she turned to me. “Mind if I
jump out? I haven’t seen them for ages,” she asked. Then she
paused. “Or – do you fancy joining us?”
I
shook my head. “Duty calls,” I said after just a tiny hesitation.
“Have a good one.”
I
watched out of the window as she went. She turned and waved, her long
dark hair tumbling over her pale suede jacket and then she was gone, linking
arms with Zoe, swallowed up by the crowd.
As
the cab roared away towards Battersea Bridge and home, I lurched on the
slippery vinyl back seat and had the sensation that I was being pulled
in half. Part of me wanted to yell to the driver, Stop! I’ve changed
my mind! Pete and the others would be going clubbing probably or to someone’s
house party, and there would be loads of speed and E around. It had been
so long, God, just SO long since I’d done anything like that, what
with pregnancy and motherhood and all the zombifying tiredness…
NATHAN
HUNGRY, I remembered. And the very thought of his frantic wailing was
enough to kill stone dead in an instant any ideas about going out clubbing.
So that was that.
“Sorry,”
I gabbled to Alex when I got back, and Nathan was still scarlet-faced
with sobs. Alex was jiggling him around as best as he could but every
jiggle just seemed to shake another cry from our son’s unhappy red
mouth. I reached over and took him, and his breath gasped out into my
shoulder at once; hot, tearful relief.
“Here
I am, sweetheart,” I whispered, hurriedly undoing my top and letting
his mouth fasten upon me. “Mummy’s home.”
My
night out had vanished into the ether. Already, the feeling of being in
the bar, the squishy couch beneath my legs, the smell of smoke and perfume
and beer – already it seemed like fragments of a dream I was struggling
to remember. It was slipping further and further away by the second.
Nathan
sucked hard and frantically for a few moments, then his body relaxed against
mine in limp exhaustion and his breathing slowed. His eyes shut dreamily
and his face softened in the ecstasy of warm milk. My boy. My ever-ravenous
boy. I stroked his cheek, held him tight to me.
“He
just wanted you,” Alex was saying again, shrugging his shoulders
in a What was I supposed to do? gesture. “He went mad when
I tried the bottle. It was like I’d offended him. He just...”
“It’s
OK,” I said, not looking up. “Don’t worry about it.”
Like
a well-oiled machine, Alex’s hands moved for the remote, his beer
and today’s paper at my words. Permission to relax again, sir!
He sat down and opened the newspaper with a flourish.
As
I leaned back carefully on the sofa, Nathan still attached, I felt the
rustle of paper in my pocket. Then I remembered. Jack’s phone number.
Jack! He had been nice-looking, hadn’t he, with his dark lashes
and laughing mouth? He’d liked me, too. Well, he’d liked the
BAFTA-nominated scriptwriter, anyway. Probably would have run a mile in
those expensive leather shoes of his if he’d known the truth.
I
tried not to smirk too obviously at the novelty of having been chatted
up. It had been a long time since anybody had given me so much as a first
look, let alone a second one. Not that I was wanting second looks,
you understand, I was a million miles from those out-on-the-pull days
but… Well, you know. Nice to be noticed, wasn’t it? Seen as
somebody to desire again, rather than just looked straight through as
one more child-bearing mothering machine behind a buggy. And it was dead
flattering that somebody as good-looking as Jack had seen something else
there; some last vestige of sex kitten-ness inside me. Well, hopefully,
anyway. Of course, maybe he had just been on the lash, and desperate.
Nathan
opened his eyes and blinked, his curled pink fists resting contentedly
on me. My deliciously chubby boy with his dimples and solemn blue gaze.
I ran a finger down the side of his face and felt a twist of guilt at
the sight of a tear still clinging to his eyelashes.
The
washing machine chuntered in the background. The telly’s drone was
interspersed with periodic bursts of moronic-sounding canned laughter.
Alex poured me a glass of red wine and flicked through the newspaper.
Everything – and everyone – was in their place.
I
reached out a hand to him across the chasm of sofa between us and he took
my fingers, stroked them absentmindedly as he frowned at the sports pages.
Then
he looked up. “Sorry,” he said.
“What
for?”
“For
wrecking your night out. For dragging you home.”
I
heaved our son up to my shoulder and patted his pyjama’d back gently.
He had fallen asleep and his breath sighed out, sweet and milky against
my face. “It’s all right,” I said, trying to ignore
the flash of resentment I’d felt. I could do it again another night,
after all, couldn’t I? “Honestly. Becca was cool about it.
She saw Pete and Zoe on the way back, so she went off with them instead.”
Alex
looked faraway for a moment, and I knew that, like me, he was wondering
which club they were all at, imagining thudding bass-lines, amphetamine-fuelled
dancing, sweat and shouting and bare flesh.
He
rolled his eyes. “It’s great having kids, isn’t it?”
“Oh
yeah,” I agreed. “Who needs a social life, anyway?”
“Exactly,”
he said, reaching over to grab the remote and flip channels. “Especially
when Match of the Day is about to start.”
I
put our full-bellied, slumbering son back in his cot and watched him for
a couple of minutes as he lay there breathing in the half-darkness. Then
I tiptoed into Molly’s bedroom and tucked her duvet around her.
She was cuddling her Fizz doll in her sleep, and smiling, her hair a mass
of blonde fluff on the pillow.
My
beautiful children. I was grateful, really, of course I was. I wouldn’t
have swapped them for the wildest social life in the world. It just seemed
a shame that one life had to end so abruptly when another began.
I
didn’t mind the sacrifice of endless nights in front of the telly
so much but I worried that Alex did. He’d been the uber-party animal
in the pre-kids days, always getting invites for the hottest nights out,
scoring the best drugs, suffering the worst Sunday come-downs. When we
first started seeing each other, I had felt swept along by his energy
and stamina, his passion for life, love, everything.
Those
days seemed long-gone. In my most miserable, sleep-tortured moments, I
couldn’t help wondering if he was secretly longing to escape the
domestic confines of parenthood, and abandon us for
some dark-eyed, lithe-limbed lovely in a sweaty nightclub, where life
was easy and everyone was dancing.
I
went downstairs again, suddenly anxious to know if this was indeed what
he was feeling, but he was snoring on the sofa. Gary Lineker burbled away
about Arsenal’s defence tactics in the background as I shook awake
south London’s one-time party king. Then we went to bed.

You can buy a copy of Any Way You Want Me here
(Amazon) or here
(Pan)
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