Page 104 - What Is Not Yours Is Not Yours
P. 104

“I know whose idea it was to get married,” he said. “I don’t need to ask

               around—I was there. And so were you, just another stunner among the many,
               many stunners of London town, drunk on a sofa with one of your best mates—”
                   “Excuse me . . . the best mate may have been legless, but seeing as I’m a hero
               of the kingdom of alcohol, I was mildly tipsy. Also don’t forget to mention that
               this best mate was a moderately attractive man who’d never once made so much
               as a hint of a move on me in all the twenty-eight years we’d known each
               other . . .”

                   “Maybe he thought it was too obvious. I mean, Jack and Jill? Anyway the two
               of you were thirty-nine years old, prime of life, and both solvent to boot, so the
               man plucked up the courage to say . . . Hang on, what did I say again?”
                   Do you think that maybe we’re able to love someone best when that person
               doesn’t know how we feel? That’s what Jacob had said, and she’d looked at him

               and asked if he was about to say something weird to her. She’d rather he didn’t.
               Having weird things said to her was a large part of her day job and why couldn’t
               she have time off? Jacob’s answer was that he was about to say something
               weird, but only a tiny bit, and maybe what he wanted to say wouldn’t come out
               sounding as wrong as they thought it would. Maybe it would sound normal.
                   Let’s get married and have sublime blasian babies before it’s too late, Jacob
               had blurted after she’d nodded at him to continue. Jill stretched an arm out and

               refilled both their shot glasses. It was already too late for babies. She’d had a
               sort of deadly serious running joke with both her previous husbands that having
               children would have to wait “until the war’s over.” But none of the ongoing wars
               looked likely to ever end, and she could no longer see carrying a child in her
               future. Not physically, and not mentally either. Maybe that had always been the
               case.

                   “I’m not going to marry you, mate.”
                   “Oh. That’s . . . well, I mean, why not? Because I said blasian? Because we
               haven’t known each other for long enough?”
                   In her head she’d replied: Because I can’t just keep getting married all the
               time, and also because I’m pissed off with you for making me sit through two of
               my own weddings and one of yours before it occurred to you that maybe we
               should have tried it together first.

                   Aloud she’d said that they were too old, adding that they didn’t need to get
               married. She said they could just see each other, if he wanted. She advised
               sleeping the question off. Maybe he’d wake up and realize that he only wanted
               to get married when he drank a lot of soju.
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