‘Here. Now. This life.’ He scratched the back of his neck as he looked at me, willing me to understand so he didn’t have to spit out the words.
‘I always imagined you holed up in a college somewhere, with books as pets and students instead of children.’ I drained my glass then refilled it. ‘I never had you down as a suit, a maker of money.’ That was always my ambition.
‘Nor I, but we do what we must.’ He didn’t need to sigh for me to hear his remorse. ‘Don’t get me wrong. I love Elle.’
Don’t we all, in our own, twisted way, changing ourselves in order to fit her exacting requirements. My transformation came first, way back in school, when I realised, if I was going to survive, I needed to fit in, to slip inside a different persona. I did what was required. I cut my hair, I changed my glasses, I discovered how to create the perfect smoky eye. I squeezed my limbs into too-tight jeans and learnt everything else I needed to know from MTV. I practised and I practised and I practised, all so I would be good enough, one day, for someone like him.
For it is entirely possible to be anybody, anybody at all, as long as you’re willing to work at it.
But Patrick didn’t need to change. He was already perfect. For me. But not for her. It was subtle, to the untrained eye, but his osmosis had a helping hand that brushed hair from his forehead, bought gifts of Burberry overcoats and custom-made shirts to replace the battered leather jacket and M&S jumpers. Took him on weekend retreats in Tuscany where he learnt to appreciate the difference between Barolo and Sassicaia. Hosted dinners and attended corporate events, mingling with wives and partners, swapping stories about ski weekends in St Moritz and New Year in the Maldives. Keeping up with the Jones’s at its best.
Because we all have something that we want. And Elle wanted to escape the stain of her father’s working-class roots. She wanted a different kind of life, a different kind of money that was both accepted and envied. A world that Patrick’s pedigree and intelligence could provide.
Of course he never saw it, never suspected, due to his utter disbelief that she had chosen him. Was that my fault too? Did I fail to protect him? To protect his true self from her intoxicating spell? The fact he’d chosen her wasn’t what surprised me, more that I’d never believed her capable of such blatant manipulation, of taking away my happiness for the sake of her own.
‘I’m not sure I can do this.’ He clutched his glass and looked at me.
‘What is it?’ Go on, go on, go on.
‘Nothing. I have nothing to complain about.’ He rested his hands on the table, fingers splayed, my traitorous eye as ever finding the platinum band on his third finger.
‘Everyone has something to complain about.’
‘Even you?’ A mocking eyebrow stretched high.
‘Even me. For example…’ I tilted my glass in his direction. ‘…This will shortly be forbidden.’
‘I’m surprised Elle hasn’t put you on some kind of pre-pregnancy detox.’
‘She has tried, believe me, but I refuse to spend my last days of freedom either juicing or partaking in sunrise yoga.’
He raised his pint. ‘I’ll drink to that.’
She never had asked what he intended to do that weekend. How he would pass the time while she stretched and starved her body on a yoga retreat in Ibiza. Happy instead to bathe in the ensuing compliments about the healthy glow that would result from the consumption of nothing but plant water for three days.
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