An Illicit
Romance
Julie-Ann
Corrigan
Hazelnut Latte with a
sprinkling of nut meg - a guilty pleasure
Margarita was standing in the kitchen brewing the morning
coffee. She spent as much time scooping it back out of the filter
as she did putting it in.
Graham said she always used too much coffee. Making the coffee had always been Graham’s job in the
mornings, but since her early retirement, it had become her job.
Margarita flinched even now at the word retirement.
Graham appeared in the kitchen; tie neat, hair slicked
forward too much over his bald patch, ‘What are you up to today?’ He
was adding more water to the thick liquid Margarita had handed to
him. It was still too strong.
‘Today’s the loft
day. I’m finally going to sort my box,’ she said, eyeing up
her husband’s tampered-with coffee.
‘I really wish you’d boarded the loft
before now, it’s going to be awful clambering about up there – I’m not getting
any younger, you know.’
‘I know.’ Graham looked too hard at Margarita’s sensible
dressing gown. ‘You know how it is with work and everything, never enough
time.’ Did he expect her to board the loft, seeing as she
wasn’t working? ‘Don’t worry I’ll
do it this weekend. Just don’t nag me.’ He poured
the coffee down the sink and kissed his wife. ‘Leave your
box today Marg. Don’t go ferreting around up there until I’ve boarded it
for you, okay?’
‘Okay.’ Margarita replied.
*
* *
Margarita had been in the cramped loft for what
felt like hours.
Getting older was no fun, she thought, as she took a too
large step to get to the next plank.
She ignored the pull in her calf
muscle, determined to get to the enormous box that was perched precariously at
the far end of the loft.
The aches in her body dulled as she contemplated the fun
she was going to have looking at all the old photos; reading letters from
friends.
She’d thought
after her retirement, she’d have all the time in the world. There were so many
things she wanted to do; a whole world left to explore, maybe research her
family history. And … rediscover her passionate love for her
husband.
Graham was ten years younger than Margarita. It
had never been a problem, ever.
Until she retired. Until then
their easy love and comradeship had seemed to offset any friction that might
have occurred because of their respective busy jobs. Friends were
continually telling them how lucky they were to rub along so easily together.
Some of these same friends hinted at their childlessness
and how much easier it was for them - because they didn’t have
children. Margarita and Graham were unbothered by these early
cutting remarks. They married because they loved each other. Children were secondary to their needs. So
when children never happened, neither of them was at all concerned.
Margarita paused in her loft
quest and allowed herself to reminisce thinking of those early days; fending off
the ‘when are you having
children?’ remarks.
Margarita continued to pull the box along the
loft. It snagged on a plank, looked unsteady for a moment, but
was then sitting in front of her. There, she’d got it. Her
excitement at finally conquering the box
was overshadowed by thoughts of her husband. This box was
filled with memories; of holidays and special occasions. They took few photos
these days, probably because they did so little together. He was consumed by his
job, never really wanting to take holidays, too tired to socialise.
Margarita was
desperate to start seeing the world now she had the time, but she only felt
strangely trapped by her freedom. Graham had another ten years left at
work. How could she wait that long?
Margarita had been a physiotherapist all of her
life. Her job had demanded organisation and
efficiency. She was straightforward but knew one of her more
unappealing traits was her need to be in control. Since she
had more time on her hands, this trait had manifested itself into
bossiness.
She knew this because Graham had told her so only the
other day. In all fairness, he had qualified his comment by saying
that is was her bossiness that had first attracted him to her.
Margarita had by now taken the battered box out of the
loft. She sat on the landing, made herself as comfortable as
possible and tentatively opened the lid.
In one encompassing glance, she viewed the whole of their
marriage. She tucked arthritic knees under her chin and
began.
The most recent correspondence and photos lay on the
top. Margarita put her hand and forearm down into the depths
of the box and pulled the last twenty years out. As it
spilled onto the floor, she pushed it out of the way with her foot. She
dug again into the box, retrieving their first ten years of life
together. The part she, more than ever today, was compelled to
examine.
There it was.
What she’d been subconsciously
waiting to find.
A faded black and white photograph of a much younger
Margarita with a broad, blonde-haired young man. They were
sitting on a grassy embankment.
In the background was the old
Victorian building in which Margarita had worked and then managed for over
twenty-five years. Just by looking at the old photo, she saw the
sheer love, the determination of youth as the pair gazed at each other.
She had all but forgotten about her illicit
romance. Sitting on her immaculately clean landing, old feelings
flourished. The pain in her knees disappeared as quickly as the
adrenaline had begun to flow.
Margarita was now, quite furiously, pulling out other
photographs. There was a batch taken in the old gymnasium of the
Physiotherapy Department; lots of images of the statuesque blonde
man. With her experienced physiotherapist’s eye, she saw the
pain in the young man’s eyes as he struggled to walk with the aid of the
bars. The photographs represented the recovery from the
horrific injuries he’d sustained from his motorbike accident. Margarita
vividly remembered his slow and painful journey. She was in
many of the photos. She was his physiotherapist and as she fell in
love with her blonde patient, she’d felt his pain as if it were her
own. The surgeons, in their usual pessimistic way had told him
he would never walk again.
Margarita was determined to prove
them wrong. She used all her skills to rehabilitate him to his full
potential. It took a long time.
But in the end, neither of them minded how long it
took. Because each day in the Rehabilitation Centre represented
another day in which they could be together. Another day
they could fall more in love.
Another day in which she could well be, severely
disciplined.
She pulled out another photograph, this time of herself
and a tall, elegant woman, well into her fifties. Her old
boss. By only looking at the photo, she felt the dread. She
remembered clearly the day she’d been called into Mrs Clealand’s
office.
She’d been made to wait outside for a good twenty minutes
before her formidable boss called her in. It was a
ruse Margarita and her young collegues knew well. ‘Makes
you more acquiescent, you know.’
Josie had once observed. ‘You’re so bloody terrified by the time she gets you
in there you’ll do anything she bloody well asks.’
Margarita thought briefly of the now dead Josie and
quickly felt guilty that she’d not thought of her for years. How could
she have forgotten Josie?
But like many things, she had
forgotten.
Margarita finally sat down in Mrs Cleland’s office; the
smell of cinnamon biscuits putting her at dangerous ease.
‘So, Mrs
Hepworth, you appear to be achieving marvellous results with our young
motorcycle boy.’ Margarita didn’t know if it was a compliment or
not. Did Mrs ‘See-Everything’ know about her and the patient?
‘Yes,’ was all she could muster as redness seeped up
above her starched white uniform.
‘Margarita, you are very young and very
married. You have a marvellous career ahead of you. What
are you doing?’
Margarita had no idea what to say. She was
ashamed; she felt like an idiot, but was beyond rational thought.
‘I love him, Mrs Clealand, and he loves me. I’m
going to get a divorce.’
Margarita didn’t know who was more
shocked at this statement, Mrs Clealand or herself. Only for a
moment did she worry her blonde Adonis
felt the same.
There was a barely audible tap on the door, Mrs Clealand
snapped, ‘Come in!’
The blonde head poked around the door, news travelled
fast around the Rehabilitation centre. His voice
was strong and clear. Margarita loved him even more.
‘Mrs Clealand, is there something we need to
discuss?’ He glanced at Margarita reassuringly.
‘Yes, there is.’ She pulled
herself up to her full height, ‘You’ve made a substantial recovery under the
care of one of my best and most promising junior member of staff.’ Her
face softened. ‘As the Senior Physiotherapist here, I will be discharging you
from her care, as of today.’
Mrs Clealand pretended to shuffle
some papers and not looking at either of them carried on, ‘I know nothing, I
only hope you both know what you are doing. Please leave
now – and Margarita, make sure you finish your morning duties, you have a busy
afternoon ahead of you.’
Margarita still remembered how despondent and yet at the
same time, euphoric she’d felt.
Mrs Clealand was not going to sack
her, but she still had to confront her young husband and more terrifying, her
own mother.
Divorce was still a dirty word in the early seventies …
at least it was in Margarita’s middle-class family.
Margarita’s career had weathered the considerable
storm. Not that many years after the illicit affair and a
convivial divorce, she was chosen as Mrs Clealands natural
successor. Mrs Clealand had called her a born leader and Margarita’s
career blossomed. Margarita smiled at Josie’s response to her
promotion, ‘You still don’t get to
boss me around missy.’
No one bossed Josie around, only the
blonde Adonis had got away with that. Again
Margarita felt guilty about not remembering her old friend enough. She
made a mental note to visit her grave with Graham later that week.
Thinking of her contemporary husband brought Margarita
away from her nostalgia.
She looked at the time, ‘Goodness, I really must go and start making
dinner,’ she said to
herself. She unfolded stiff knees, pushed everything into a corner
picking up only a few photographs to peer at downstairs whilst
cooking. She couldn’t help it.
*
* *
She
hadn’t left herself enough time to prepare the casserole and felt a little bit
cross with herself. She’d spent too much time upstairs; tripping down
memory lane. Graham wouldn’t say a thing – she knew – but nevertheless
she felt guilty. In the old days before she had retired they would have
laughed and sent out for a takeaway.
But for some reason now she felt she
should be keeping the home fires
burning, her mother’s voice
reverberating in her head.
She heard Graham’s Jaguar
pull into the drive. Maybe they could have eggs on
toast.
‘I’m home Marg!’ Graham
shouted. As he entered the kitchen, he brought in a strong smell
of autumnal evening air.
Margarita quickly pushed the old photographs underneath
the newspaper. She had a feeling this wasn’t the best time to be showing
them to Graham. He didn’t look quite his usual self.
‘Are you all right, darling? You look a
little distracted.’ She forgot about her day and concentrated on her
husband.
‘Had a bit of strange day, as it happens,’ Graham undid
his tie and uncharacteristically, threw it onto the kitchen table. ‘It
would seem Marg, that I’ll be joining you in retirement.’
Graham appeared older than when he had left for work
earlier in the day.
‘I don’t understand – you don’t want to retire yet, do
you?’
‘Well no - not really. The
company’s been taken over and most of the over fifties, in middle management,
well, have been given a very lucrative retirement package.’
‘Including you?’
‘Yes, definitely including me.’
Margarita thought for a terrible moment he was going to
cry. She noticed the way he limped along the kitchen; his bad
leg always got worse when something was bothering him; as though the burdens on
his mind affected the damaged muscles in his body. Mind and
body always truly connected.
Graham sat down heavily. He pulled
the newspaper towards the end of the table pretending the conversation was over;
Margarita’s day’s work slid out.
The faded photos dropped onto Grahams
lap.
An invitation to sort things out.
‘You’ve been busy.’ Graham
said. ‘I told you I’d fix the loft … this weekend.’
Margarita felt a pang of guilt. She knew
that doing the loft was a major exercise for Graham. Her gaze
trailed down to his bad leg; she felt guiltier than ever. It bothered
him more than he would ever let on.
It was too much … she expected too
much.
He still hadn’t looked at the photographs.
Margarita studied her husband, at the same time trying to
find the right words to soothe his slightly bruised ego regarding his unexpected
news.
‘Maybe it’s not a bad thing Graham – you know, being
retired.’ She looked at him for reassurance and carried on, ‘We can
spend more time together, go and see the world.’ His
expression softened, she felt she could make a joke, like she used to, ‘Maybe
you can start making the coffee again in the mornings.’
As Graham chuckled, he began to look at Margarita’s
photos; staring intently at the black and white fading image of Margarita and
the blonde Adonis. It
was as if a shadow had crossed his face.
Margarita sat directly opposite her husband … and waited.
‘It must be over twenty-five years,
Margarita.’ He glanced at his beloved wife. ‘You haven’t
changed at all.’
‘No, I have my mother’s genes, I think.’ She
got up and walked behind his chair, peering at the photo with him, ‘It’s your
hair, Graham – you have so much less of it now.’
‘Mmm – and
it’s considerably whiter.’
He encircled her waist with his arm
and hugged her like he hadn’t done for a while. ‘It seems
like only yesterday, yet at the same time, a lifetime ago.’
‘Can you remember that day in Mrs Clealand’s
office? You came in like a knight in shining armour and “saved”
me. I knew then that we’d grow old together.’
‘Margarita, you never needed saving, that’s why I fell in
love with you.’
‘We were a bit naughty weren’t we? An illicit
romance - who would think it – looking at us now?’ Margarita
started to giggle uncontrollably.
Graham got up, now not limping and
kissed her.
‘Well, my darling we’d better start planning some
holidays, don’t you think?’
Margarita knew they would be all right.
Together they always got through everything.
Bio:
Julie-Ann writes short stories and
articles. She has had short stories published in collections and one of her
recent articles was published in Beat Magazine (see her interview with Laura
Wilkinson here:
She has recently completed her first novel and is now
working on her second.
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