plan their redecoration. In fact, she had done nothing more than go downstairs, eat some breakfast and come back upstairs again. She felt heavy and inert; slightly depressed by the weather; unable to galvanize herself into action.
âHi, Giles?â she said into the receiver.
âHow are you doing?â said Giles cheerily down the line. âItâs lashing it down here.â
âFine,â said Maggie, shifting uncomfortably in her chair. âItâs raining here, too.â
âYou sound a bit down, my sweet.â
âOh, Iâm OK,â said Maggie gloomily. âMy back hurts, itâs pissing with rain and I havenât got anyone to talk to. Apart from that, Iâm doing great.â
âDid the cot arrive?â
âYes, itâs here,â said Maggie. âThe man put it up in the nursery. It looks lovely.â
Suddenly she felt a tightening across the front of her stomach, and drew in breath sharply.
âMaggie?â said Giles in alarm.
âItâs OK,â she said, after a few seconds. âJust another practice contraction.â
âI would have thought youâd had enough practice by now,â said Giles, and laughed merrily. âWell, Iâd better shoot off. Take care of yourself.â
âWait,â said Maggie, suddenly anxious for him not to disappear off the line. âWhat time do you think youâll be home?â
âItâs bloody frantic here,â said Giles, lowering his voice. âIâll try and make it as early as I canâ but who knows? Iâll ring you a bit later and let you know.â
âOK,â said Maggie disconsolately. âBye.â
After heâd rung off she held the warm receiver to her ear for a few minutes more, then slowly put it down and looked around the empty room. It seemed to ring with silence. Maggie looked at the still telephone and felt suddenly bereft, like a child at boarding school. Ridiculously, she felt as though she wanted to go home.
But this was her home. Of course it was. She was Mrs. Drakeford of The Pines.
She got to her feet and lumbered wearily into the bathroom, thinking that she would have a warm bath to ease her back. Then she must have some lunch. Not that she felt very hungryâ but still. It would be something to do.
She stepped into the warm water and leaned back, just as her abdomen began to tighten again. Another bloody practice contraction. Hadnât she had enough already? And why did nature have to play such tricks, anyway? Wasnât the whole thing bad enough as it was?As she closed her eyes, she remembered the section in her pregnancy handbook on false labour. âMany women,â the book had said patronizingly, âwill mistake false contractions for the real thing.â
Not her, thought Maggie grimly. She wasnât going to have the humiliation of summoning Giles from the office and rushing excitedly off to the hospital, only to be told kindly that sheâd made a mistake. You think
thatâs
labour? the silent implication ran. Ha! You just wait for the real thing!
Well, she would. Sheâd wait for the real thing.
Roxanne reached for her orange juice, took a sip and leaned back comfortably in her chair. She was sitting at a blue and green mosaic table on the terrace of the Aphrodite Bay Hotel, overlooking the swimming pool and, in the distance, the beach. A final drink in the sunshine, a final glimpse of the Mediterranean, before her flight back to England. Beside her on the floor was her small, well-packed suitcase, which she would take onto the plane as hand luggage. Life was far too short, in her opinion, to spend waiting by airport carousels for suitcases of unused clothes.
She took another sip and closed her eyes, enjoying the sensation of the sun blazing down on her cheeks. It had been a good weekâs work, she thought. She had already written her two-thousand-word piece for the
Londoner
on holidaying
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Finny (v5)
Alessandro Baricco