A Spy by Nature - Charles Cumming [70]
‘I hate fighting with you,’ as if we have done it many times before.
‘Me too.’
I sit down on the sofa opposite hers.
‘Can we talk about it?’
She emphasizes the word ‘can’ here as if it were a test of character. I do not know how to respond except with the obvious:
‘About what?’
‘About Fortner.’
His name balloons out of her as if he were sick.
‘Of course we can. If you want to.’
Her voice is very quiet and steady. It is almost as if she has prepared something to say.
‘We - Fortner and I - haven’t shared a bed for more than a year. For longer than you’ve known us.’
My pulse skips.
‘I’m sorry. I had no idea.’
I regret saying this immediately.
‘We’ll work it out,’ she says hopefully. ‘I just can’t be beside him in a bed right now. It’s not anyone’s fault.’
‘No.’
‘We’re just kind of going through this thing where we’re not attracted to one another.’
‘Or where you’re not attracted to him?’
She looks up at me, acknowledging with a softened expression that this is closer to the truth.
‘Have you talked about it? Does he know how you feel?’
‘No. He thinks he’s moved into the spare room because I can’t stand his snoring. He has no idea it’s because I don’t want to sleep with him.’
A brief quiet falls on the room, the lull after a sudden revelation. Katharine drinks her coffee and plays with a loose thread on her dressing gown.
‘There’s some history to it,’ she says softly, still staring into her lap. ‘When I met Fort I was very vulnerable. I’d just come out of a long-term relationship with a guy I’d met in college. It had ended badly and Fort offered me the kind of support that I needed.’
‘Was he a rebound?’
Katharine doesn’t want to admit this either to herself or to me, but she says:
‘I guess so. Yes.’
She looks up at me and I can only hope that my face looks receptive to what she wants to say.
‘Before I’d even really thought about it we’d gotten married. Fort had been hitched before - kids, divorce, the usual pattern - and he really wanted to make it work this time. He hasn’t had access to his children for more than ten years. But I was still kind of hung up on this guy and Fortner knew that. He’s always known it.’
She takes a deep, almost stagey breath.
‘I wanted to have kids, to make a family like I’d known it growing up, but he was reluctant to start again. Fort’s daughters are your age, you know, and he doesn’t think it’s fair on children to become a parent when you’re close to fifty. But I didn’t agree with him. I thought he didn’t want to have kids because he didn’t really love me. That was the state my mind was in. And after my father died, I thought there was something almost reverent about being a parent, like if you had the chance to be one you shouldn’t throw that away. Maybe you felt that too after your Dad passed away. But I was… I was…’
She is suddenly tripping over her thoughts, too scared to hear them come out.
‘Tell me.’
‘Alec, you can’t ever tell him that I told you this. OK? There’s only a handful of people in the world that know about it.’
‘You can trust me.’
‘It’s just I wanted children so badly. So I did a terrible thing. I tricked Fort into getting us pregnant. I stopped using my contraception and then when I got pregnant I told him.’
‘How did he react?’
‘He went crazy. We were living in New York. But Fort, you know, he’s totally against termination so he agreed that I could keep her.’
There’s only one possible outcome to this story, the worst outcome of all.
‘But I lost her. Three months in, there was a miscarriage and…’
‘I’m so sorry.’
Katharine’s face is an awful picture of despair. In an attempt to appear resilient, she is struggling to bury tears.
‘Well what can you do, huh?’ she says, with a shrug of her shoulders. ‘It was just one of those things. I was paying the penalty for deceiving him.’
‘Is that how you see it? Divine retribution?’
‘It gives me a sort of comfort to see it that way. Maybe