left, I went for a walk and while I was out, someone left a bouquet of flowers on the doorstep. It was massive, wrapped in layers of paper with the stems tied in a water bag – or so I thought. I took them inside, thinking they might be from Matt. Anyway, they slipped off the worktop.’ I pause, recalling the smell that reached me. ‘It wasn’t water in the bag. The police took a sample away. It was a pint of human blood.’

‘Jesus.’ Cath looks horrified. ‘Do the police think it’s Matt’s?’

‘They don’t know yet – they’re testing it.’ I look at her bleakly. So much blood. What kind of person would do that?

She shakes her head. ‘I had no idea what you’ve been going through.’ She pauses. ‘You should come and stay with me for a few days. It would be good for you to get away from here.’

For a moment, I’m tempted. But while so much remains unresolved, it isn’t the time. ‘I can’t – not right now.’

I wait for her to try to persuade me otherwise, but she seems to understand. ‘Amy? You need to keep reminding yourself, that even if the worst thing has happened and he is dead, he’s still treated you abysmally. It’s incredible that you had no idea what he was getting up to. He must be bloody good at covering his tracks. You’d think there’d have been clues.’

‘I know.’ My voice is tight. ‘But I’d always thought I could trust him. That he loved me. I was stupid.’ But as I say that, her eyes shift slightly. Frowning, I stare at her. ‘What have I said?’

But when her eyes don’t meet mine, I know there’s something she isn’t saying. ‘Nothing. Nothing at all.’

In the past, I wouldn’t have questioned her, but with everything that’s happened, my instincts are heightened. ‘Cath?’ There’s a hollow feeling inside me as I ask her. ‘Did something happen between you?’

Cath sips her tea. ‘No. Of course it didn’t. I’m your friend. I was in love with Oliver the scumbag, remember?’

‘You have to tell me.’ My voice cuts through the silence. ‘My entire life has fallen apart. If there’s something you know that I don’t, you owe it to me to tell me what it is.’

‘Jesus.’ Her face is ashen. ‘Alright. I will, because it will help you realise what a complete jerk he is – but it really was nothing. I came round here one afternoon to see you – it was after the first time Oliver hit me. You were out, but Matt was here.’ She pauses. ‘He asked me in – he could see from my face what Oliver had done. He was sympathetic, overly so, but I didn’t realise at the time. Inevitably, I got upset. He seemed so concerned. Then he put his arms around me.’ From the way she hesitates, I know there’s more.

‘He kissed you.’ I’m filled with disbelief.

‘He tried to, but I moved away in time. I was shocked that he’d even tried – it was the last thing I needed – or was expecting. I told him I wasn’t interested and to fuck off. Then I left. Talk about taking advantage of me at my lowest.’ She pauses. ‘Amy, I promise you nothing happened. You must know I’d never do that to you.’

I believe her, but I’m staring at her green eyes and pale skin, the soft haircut, imagining Matt touching her. ‘But you never told me.’

She looks stricken. ‘I thought it was a stupid mistake on his part. A misjudgement or a one-off. You seemed so happy. I wasn’t going to ruin the rest of your life for a fumbled kiss that didn’t happen.’

But it’s not the point. If she hadn’t stopped him, it would have. How many other times, with other women, didn’t he stop? Getting up, I fold my arms tightly around myself as I walk over to the window, staring out across the garden before turning to face her. ‘You still should have told me.’

‘You’re right. Of course I should. And it’s not an excuse, but at the time, I was a mess, as you know. Love makes people act irrationally.’ She looks at me pointedly.

*

An uneasy truce falls between us. But after she leaves, more doubts kick in. She only told me what Matt did because I pushed her to. If I hadn’t, if Matt had been here, if our wedding had gone ahead, I would be beginning married life naïvely believing that I was the only woman in the world for him.

The foolish woman, who still hasn’t learned from her mistakes. Already I’m regretting that I didn’t ask Cath more. Maybe something else happened between them. How would I know? When I used to trust instinctively, after Matt’s lies and Cath’s silence, I can no longer trust anyone.

1996

The scorching heat, those blameless blue skies, the banks of wildflowers, none of them assuaged your jealousy. Instead it grew like the bindweed in the hedgerows, spreading its stranglehold. Unmoderated. Unchecked.

For a while, you held it to yourself. Welcoming the stabbing pain you felt. It came from loving. Such agonising pain that could only come from such great love. But he didn’t see you, did he? Instead he only had eyes for Kimberley. You couldn’t bear it, could you? The new pain that racked you, of rejection, twisting your guts until you couldn’t breathe.

You’d waited so long. Been so patient. Waited for him to see you. But when he didn’t, you had to do something. In your world, people fought for what they wanted. Everything about your childhood had been a battle. It was how exam results were achieved, careers forged, relationships built. If you wanted them enough, you fought for them. But you forgot one thing. You can’t take love. Like the soft summer breeze, it has to be given.

Jess

It was easy to see why my mother was drawn to Matt. Good looking, he had charm; took her out for pub meals

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