about the actual getting pregnant bit?â
âOh, right. Well, for a start thereâs no actual sex involved. Youâd have to be -I mean, if you agreed, that is - artificially inseminated. Tom - heâs my chap - and I agreed we shouldnât involve fertility clinics just in case somebody blabbed to the press. But according to all the books and articles Iâve read, do-it-yourself artificial insemination is dead easy. Apparently when lesbians want to get pregnant, they put the bloke whoâs agreed to father the child in another room with a few dirty mags and get him to come into a jar. His sperm is then transferred into a turkey baster which is a bit like a huge eye dropper. The woman then sticks this up inside her and simply squeezes the rubber top to release the sperm. Itâs easy.â
âEasy,â Beverley repeated. She took a glug of her kir. âEasy bloominâ peasy.â
âI know I could make a good mother,â Naomi said, almost pleadingly. âIâd try to be the exact opposite of ours. I just want a chance to prove it.â
She paused and stared into Beverleyâs eyes.
âPlease, Bev,â she pleaded, âI know Iâm asking for the moon, but please be the one to give me that chance.â
Beverley took another sip of her drink. For a moment Naomi looked like the needy, vulnerable little girl she used to collect every afternoon from Gearies School.
âLook, Nay, I have a pretty good idea what it must feel like to be told you canât have children, but you said it - what youâre asking of me is absolutely huge. I mean, to carry a child - and using my egg, it would technically be my child - to give birth to it and then give it up... Iâm just not sure I could...â
âBut will you at least think about it?â
âYes, I will. Promise.â
Beverley decided to change the subject in order to give herself time to think.
âSo, tell me about this Tom, then,â she said, âwho is he? Someone famous?â
Naomi dabbed her under-eyes with her napkin and gave a half-smile.
âFairly. Heâs Tom Jago, the drama director. You know, did that amazing production of Blue Remembered Hills for the BBC last summer - won all those awards.â
Beverley nodded, but was none the wiser.
âWeâve been together just over a year. I tell you, Bev - not only is he amazingly talented, but heâs also a bit of a dish.â
âTheyâve all been good-looking, Nay - and rich. The bit you always seem to find difficult is hanging on to them for more than three months.â
âI know. Itâs the job. Iâm always working. How can you make a relationship work when one of you is constantly putting in fourteen-hour days?â
Beverley knew full well it was her sisterâs personality which put men off rather than the hours she worked, but she decided to let it go.
âFunny,â she said instead, âI suppose I always imagined you settling down eventually, but it never occurred to me for one minute that you might want children. Youâve never shown the remotest interest in them. For Godâs sake, Nay, you bought Natalie a Prada handbag for her first birthday.â
âOh God, didnât she like it?â
âWell, she didnât say she didnât, but then again she couldnât speak yet. She did love playing with it, though. She kept her Duplo men and bits of soggy old biscuit in it.â
âI suppose she was a bit on the young side. Iâm no Maria Von Trapp, am I?â Naomi said. âBut what do you expect? I donât know how you did the mothering thing, Bev - I mean, what sort of maternal role model did we have? Iâve always been so scared that Iâd repeat our motherâs mistakes. Then, a year or so ago, things began to change. Whenever I went out, I found myself gazing into prams and getting all soppy and tearful. Did you know, Beverley, new-born
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