What Alice Forgot Page 90
“I’m fine,” began Alice.
“Oh good, I’m so pleased. Frannie was making such a fuss about it. I said, ‘You watch, she’ll have her memory back by Monday.’”
“I’m remembering some things,” began Alice. Should she ask her mother about Nick and the kiss in the laundry?
“Wonderful!” Her mother wavered and then obviously decided to take the optimistic approach. “Wonderful! Now, darling, I wondered, when you said at the hospital that you and Nick might be getting back together, is that something that I possibly shouldn’t have mentioned to anyone? Because I happened to run into Jennifer Turner today at the shops.”
“Jennifer Turner?” The name didn’t mean anything to her.
“Yes, you know. That fierce sort of girl. The lawyer.”
“Oh, you mean Jane Turner.” Mmmm. The first face she saw when she woke up in this strange new life. Jane who was helping her divorce Nick.
“Yes, Jane. She wanted to know how you were. She said you hadn’t been answering her texts.”
Texts. What did that mean?
“Anyway, I said you were fine, and then I mentioned that you and Nick were getting back together. Well, she seemed quite taken aback. She said to tell you that you must not, under any circumstances, sign anything. Went on and on about it. I wondered if maybe I shouldn’t have said anything? Have I messed up?”
“Of course not, Mum,” said Alice automatically.
“Thank goodness, because Roger and I are just thrilled. Thrilled! We were thinking we could take the children for a weekend and you and Nick could go somewhere romantic. That was the second thing on my list. I’ll just cross it off. You say the word. We’d love to have them. Roger said he’d even foot the bill for a meal at somewhere fancy-schmancy. He’s so generous like that.”
“That sounds great.”
“Really? Oh, I’m so pleased because I mentioned it to Elisabeth and she said she thought once you got your memory back that you would be ‘singing a different tune.’ But you know, she takes the pessimistic approach to things these days, poor thing, and that was my third reason for calling. Have you heard from her by any chance? I’m desperate to know if she’s got the results yet. I’ve been ringing and ringing and no answer.”
“What results?”
“Today was the blood test. You know, for the last egg. Oh, wait a minute, I always get that word wrong. Embryo.” Her mother’s voice broke. “Oh, Alice, I’ve been praying and praying and sometimes I have to admit I get a bit cross with God. Elisabeth and Ben have tried so hard. Just one little baby isn’t too much to ask for, is it?”
“No,” said Alice. She looked at Dino’s fertility doll sitting on the counter. Why didn’t Elisabeth tell her there was a blood test today?
Her mother sighed. “I said to Roger, I’m so happy myself now, why can’t my girls be happy, too?”
Elisabeth’s Homework for Jeremy A lot of people have left messages for me today.
Mum has called five times.
I just saw a missed call from Alice.
Oh, and the nurse has called twice trying to give me the results of today’s blood test.
Layla has called, probably wondering where I am, because I went out at lunchtime and for some reason I just never got the energy to go back to the office. She probably thinks it’s because she offended me by not asking about Alice.
Ben has called three times.
I don’t seem to be able to call anyone back. I’m just sitting here behind the wheel of my car outside your office, writing to you.
Now the phone is ringing again. Ring, ring! Ring, ring! Engage with the world, Elisabeth! Go away, all of you.
Alice was hanging clothes on the line (it was taking forever) when the phone rang again. She had to run to answer it.
“Hello?” she said breathlessly.
“Oh, hi, it’s me,” said Nick. He paused. “Nick.”
“Yes, I recognized your voice actually.”
You kissed another woman in the laundry! I can’t believe you did that! Should she mention the kiss? No. She should think about the right way to approach it first.
He said, “I just thought I should call and see how you, how your ah, your head, your injury, is today. Were you okay driving the children to school?”
“It’s a bit late if I wasn’t,” said Alice tartly. Last night she’d had to iron all their school uniforms, do all the cleaning up, and make very specific lunches for each of them (after Tom had politely pointed out that was what she normally did on a Sunday night).
“Oh, good,” said Nick. “So, I assume, you’ve got that memory thing all sorted out?”
“Well, I’ve got one memory back,” burst out Alice. It appeared she was going to mention the kiss after all. It was physically impossible not to mention it. “I remember you kissing that woman in the laundry.”
“Kissing a woman in the laundry?”
“Yes. At a party. I came in to get a drink.”
There was silence and then Nick laughed sharply.
“Sitting on the washing machine, right?”
“Yes,” said Alice, wondering how he could sound so smug, as if this point went to him, when it so clearly went to her.
“You remember me kissing a woman sitting on our washing machine?”
“Yes!”
“You know what? I never even looked at another woman while we were together. I never kissed another woman. I never slept with another woman.”