Jazz Jackson
double espresso...short, but with an added kick!
Helena peaked out the window from behind the curtains,
anxiety a knot in the pit of her stomach. The beam of the solitary street lamp
showed nothing aside from the neighbour's cat licking its arse on the hood of a
parked car. She swallowed, the motion painful in her suddenly dry throat. She
threw a glance at the clock on the wall and began to pace nervously, up and
down, up and down. Where was he? He should have been there ten minutes ago and
her husband, Greg, was due home in the next fifteen. Even if he arrived now
she'd have to bundle him into the back yard and through the kitchen door. She
simply couldn't risk Greg seeing him. The truth would destroy the foundation of
trust their fifteen years of marriage had been built upon. Well, initially
anyway.
Another glance at the clock. Two minutes had passed.
Helena could feel the heat rising in her face, no doubt colouring her cheeks in
spatters of pink. This always happened when she was angry, scared or frustrated.
Or all three, as she was now. She needed this, though. This...this bit on the side. This
release. It was the only thing that kept her sane in the humdrum
of the everyday life she shared with Greg.
Was that the purr of an engine? She raced to the front
door, yanking it open before the car had even come to a stop outside the house.
The engine cut out and the driver's door opened. The man who emerged had guilt
scrawled upon his face. He knew – goddamn it, he knew –
how important punctuality was, especially tonight, a Friday night, when Greg
might have left work early. He mouthed “Sorry!” as he jogged up the drive, his
bag bouncing against his hip with the movement.
Helena opened her mouth to speak, to tell him to shut
up and quit wasting more
time...but before the words could pass
her lips, there was a flash of headlights as another car came rolling up the
street. No, she shook her head, backing up towards the house. No!
Greg.
His car, a beat up old thing that had barely passed its
MOT, came to a halt in the middle of the street. With its engine still running
and headlights still beaming, the door creaked open and Greg, almost as creaky
himself, hoisted himself upwards and out of his seat. The look on his face said
it all. He knew. There was no lying her way out of this. They'd been
discovered. There'd be no more secret rendezvous. There'd be no more bi-weekly
fifteen minutes of illicit pleasure.
“Helena?” said Greg, his tone scorched by disbelief,
“What is this? What are you doing? I knew something wasn't right between us but...but I never
imagined this!”
She surveyed her husband, a portly, ruddy-faced man who
could have graced the cover of GQ
when they had first met all those
years ago. Guilt gnawed away at her but she couldn't deny her feelings. She
glanced up at the comparatively taller, much leaner man before her.
“Just give it to me,” she said, her voice a husky
murmur, “Just give it to me
dammit.”
“How long, Helena?” Greg cried, barrelling towards them
and shoving himself between their bodies, “Weeks, months? Tell me! How could you
do this? We were meant to be in this together!”
She gazed into his glistening eyes sadly and raised her
hand to cup his cheek. He jerked away with a hiss, as though her almost touch
had burnt. She curled the offending hand, using her fist to muffle the anguished
cry that erupted from her soul.
“A year!” she sobbed, “A whole year! I needed it. I was
weak. I couldn't help myself!”
Greg whirled around and grappled with the man behind
him. After a tense few seconds of shouting and slapping, the man's bag fell to
the pavement and its contents spilled out for all to see.
“Pizza! Pizza!”
Greg shrieked as he stamped upon the offending box furiously, spittle flying
from his mouth. The delivery man backed away, his hands raised in surrender.
“Go!” Helena wailed, “Flee while you can!”
He didn't need telling twice as he promptly swivelled
and dived head first into his car. The engine roared into life and the squeal of
tires upon tarmac announced his departure.
“All this time,” Greg hissed, still kicking at the pizza
box, “All this time you've been making me salads and
grilled fish and lecturing me about diabetes and you've been
munching down secret takeaway pizzas for a year!”
Helena, tears coursing down her cheeks, knelt down and
tried to pull the box out from beneath his feet. It was too tortuous to watch.
It had cost her a fiver! She wrenched it free, peeling back the lid as Greg
raged on. She sighed. Slightly smushed but edible. His boots hadn't infiltrated
the cardboard.
She shrieked as the box was pulled from her grasp and
watched in horror as Greg began tearing the pizza apart, piece by piece, and
shovelling it into his mouth. Stringy cheese coated his face and the sauce,
barbecue – her favourite
– smeared itself around his lips like
a grotesque imitation of lipstick.
Helena stared at her husband, hoping to God that
marriage counsellors were as cheap as pizzas.
About the author
Jazz Jackson is a Lincoln-based writer who harbors dreams to become a New York
Times bestselling author. In her spare time, Jazz, drinks copious amounts of
chai tea and blogs about her favourite subject: books. You can check out her
book reviews at http://swooningoverfictionalmen.wordpress.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment