relationships are all about trust and equality. If one person shares, then the other person
should share, too. I mean, you didn't even tell me you were going to be on television.'
'It was just a dumb interview, for Chrissakes!' A girl with six shopping bags knocks yet more
heather out of Jack's basket, and in frustration he dumps it on a passing motorcycle courier's
pannier. 'Emma, you're over-reacting.'
'I told you all my secrets,' I say stubbornly. 'You didn't tell me any of yours.'
Jack gives a sigh.
'With all due respect, Emma, I think it's a little different-'
'What?' I stare at him in shock. 'Why… why should it be any different?'
'You have to understand. I have things in my life which are very sensitive… complicated…
very important…'
'And I
than yours? You think I'm less hurt by you blurting them out on television?' I'm shaking all
over, with fury, with disappointment. 'I suppose that's because you're so huge and important
and I'm — what am I, again, Jack?' I can feel my eyes glittering with tears. 'A nothing-special
girl? An 'ordinary, nothing-special girl'?'
Jack winces, and I can see I've hit home. He closes his eyes and for a long time I think he isn't
going to speak.
'I didn't mean to use those words,' he says, rubbing his forehead. 'The minute I said them, I
wished I could take them back. I was… I was trying to evoke something very different from
that… a kind of image He looks up. 'Emma, you
'I'm going to ask you again!' I say, my heart pounding. 'What were you doing in Scotland?'
There's silence. As I meet Jack's eyes, I know he's not going to tell me. He knows this is
important to me and he's still not going to tell me.
'Fine,' I say, my voice lurching slightly. 'That's fine. I'm obviously not as important as you.
I'm just some amusing girl who provides you with entertainment on flights and gives you
ideas for your business.'
'Emma-'
'The thing is, Jack, that's not a real relationship. A real relationship is two-way. A real
relationship is based on equality. And trust.' I swallow the lump in my throat. 'So why don't
you just go and be with someone on your level, who you can share your precious secrets
with? Because you obviously can't share them with me.'
I turn sharply before he can say anything else, and stalk away, two tears rolling down my
cheeks, trampling the lucky heather underfoot.
I don't get home until much later that evening. But I'm still smarting from our argument. I
have a throbbing headache, and I feel on the verge of tears.
I open the door of the flat to find Lissy and Jemima in a full-scale argument about animal
rights.
'The mink
room. She breaks off and looks up. 'Emma! Are you all right?'
'No.' I sink down onto the sofa and wrap myself up in the chenille throw which Lissy's mum
gave her for Christmas. 'I had a huge row with Jack.'
'With
'You saw him?'
'He came to… well, to apologize, I guess.'
Lissy and Jemima exchange looks.
'What happened?' says Lissy, hugging her knees. 'What did he say?'
I'm silent for a few seconds, trying to remember exactly what he did say. It's all a bit jumbled
up in my head now.
'He said… he didn't ever mean to use me,' I say at last. 'He said I got in his thoughts. He said
he'd fire everyone in the company who teased me.' I can't help giving a half-giggle.
'Really?' says Lissy. 'Gosh. That's quite romant-' She coughs, and pulls an apologetic face.
'Sorry.'
'He said he was really sorry for what happened, and he didn't mean to say all that stuff on the
TV, and that our romance was… Anyway. He said a lot of things. But
heart beats with fresh indignation. 'He said his secrets were more important than mine.'
There's a huge gasp of outrage.
'No!' says Lissy.
'Bastard!' says Jemima. 'What secrets?'
'I asked him about Scotland. And rushing off from the date.' I meet Lissy's eyes. 'And all those
things he would never talk to me about.'
'And what did he say?' says Lissy.
'He wouldn't tell me.' I feel another sting of humiliation. 'He said it was too 'sensitive and
complicated'.'
'Sensitive and
complicated secret? You never mentioned this before! Emma, this is totally perfect. You find
out what it is — and then you expose it!'
I stare at her, my heart beating hard. God, she's right. I could do it. I could get back at Jack. I
could make him hurt like I've been hurt.
'But I have no idea what it is,' I say at last.
'You can find out!' says Jemima. 'That's easy enough. The point is, you know he's hiding
something.'
'There's definitely some kind of mystery,' says Lissy thoughtfully. 'He has all these phone
calls he won't talk about, he rushes off mysteriously from your date-'
'He rushed off mysteriously?' says Jemima avidly. 'Where? Did he say anything? Did you
overhear anything?'
'No!' I say, flushing slightly. 'Of course not. I don't… I would never
Jemima gives me a close look.
'Don't give me that. Yes you did. You did hear something. Come on, Emma. What was it?'
My mind flashes back to that evening. Sitting on the bench, sipping the pink cocktail. The
breeze is blowing on my face, Jack and Sven are talking behind me in low voices…
'It was nothing much,' I say reluctantly. 'I just heard him say something about having to
transfer something… and Plan B… and something being urgent…'
'Transfer what?' says Lissy suspiciously. 'Funds?'
'I dunno. And they said something about flying back up to Glasgow.'
Jemima looks beside herself.
'Emma, I do not believe this. You've had this information all this time? This has to be
something juicy. It
have a Dictaphone or anything with you?'
'Of course I didn't!' I say with a little laugh. 'It was a date! Do
on a…' I tail off incredulously at her expression. 'Jemima. You don't.'