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“What’s going on with you and Aaron?”

So she has noticed. I try not to tell her anything bad about Aaron because she doesn’t need an excuse to think less of him — the shag-happy sperm donor who got her teenage daughter pregnant. She’s made allowances and he’s won brownie points for standing by me, for helping me with school, for quietly becoming one of the family. But it wouldn’t take much for that to change. I don’t want it to change over this. I never want it to change.

So I tell her what I can, that he’s hurting, that I tried to help, but he wouldn’t let me in. That I thought he might have called this morning to ask me to come to the funeral with him. I don’t need to tell her that he didn’t.

“You’re not going to like what I’m about to say,” she says softly.

I hold my breath.

“Not everyone deals with things the way we think they should. You’re someone who shares everything. Mostly.” She doesn’t look at me, but I know what she’s thinking. “Aaron doesn’t strike me as that kind of person. He’s” — she pauses for a few seconds — “I don’t want to say ‘distanced’…”

Then don’t. I want to say. It sounds so cold and harsh. But it also sounds true.

“Robert’s like that too,” she says.

“He is?” I feel Mum’s cheek move as it rests on my head and I think she must be smiling.

“Robert is a lot older than Aaron. He’s learned that depths are better hidden behind a lot of affection and bravado. But there are things I still don’t know about him, or understand, and there are times when we fight and I don’t know how to reach him.”

Mum and Robert fight? I never think of them fighting. Not like Mum did with Dad.

“When Robert’s brother died I worried all the time about how he was feeling. I tried to make sure that I was here for Jay, so that Robert didn’t feel the pressure too much. I called his sister-in-law, to make sure that she was OK because I didn’t want Robert to have to call her and be reminded about losing his brother.”

This all makes sense to me.

“But I was doing all of this because it made me feel better. I was so involved in being the good wife that I never stopped to offer Robert what he wanted.”

“What did he want?” I ask.

“Nothing.”

I lift my head off her shoulder and look up. “I don’t understand.”

“Neither did I,” she says, with a sad smile.

AARON

The pub is filling up around me. I’ve downed three whisky macs and the walls are starting to slide. Someone sits next to me smelling of burgers and it makes me feel a little ill.

“Cider,” I say.

The barman ignores me and serves the guy next to me, who walks away with his drinks, taking his burger breath with him.

“Can I have a pint of cider, please?” I say. I know this is what I say because I’m concentrating on making the words sound exactly as they should. Not slurred. Not too careful. I know how to seem sober.

The barman is looking at me.

“What’s my name?” he asks.

His name? Oh yeah, we’ve had a conversation about names, about Neville’s brother Greville, and the man at the end of the bar introduced himself and then he made me try and guess the barman’s name. Which was… what?

“Ste,” I say in a flash of brilliance.

“Ste-ven,” he says, watching me suspiciously.

“He knows that,” says Old Man at the End of the Bar whose name I actually can’t remember. “He’s winding you up.”

“Cider for him too,” I say generously.

“Make that a Bombardiers,” Old Man corrects me.

“Bombadoodlers then,” I say carelessly. SteVEN the barman looks at me strangely, but serves our drinks.

I drink mine too quickly and feel a hiccup brewing ready to burst. I swallow it down as it rises and I feel the fizz of bile in the back of my nose. I sip more cider and look at the plastic box of ashes on the bar. Someone brings back some empty glasses. There’s a half-pint glass amongst them and I sploosh some cider into it and push it next to him.

“Cheers, Neville!” I declare and clink my pint against the mini one I’ve poured.

The barman wipes up the pool of cider I’ve dribbled on the bar as he collects the other empties. He leaves Neville’s drink where it is.

My pint glass is almost empty. Probably because half of it got poured into Neville’s. I need something else.

I can’t seem to not want to drink something. My hands need to hold something, my mouth needs to sip something, my throat needs to swallow something.

“Can I buy you a drink?” I say to the next person who walks up to the bar.

“OK.” It’s a girl. She has big boobs. They are not in any way subtly dressed and they are at eye-level to someone sitting slumped on a bar stool.

Neville would approve.

“Can you buy the drinks though?” I say to the boobs and hand their owner a twenty. “Cider for me. No. A vodka. No. Both. And whatever you fancy.”

“You?” she says with a smile.

“Me,” I repeat, a bit lost. She orders the drinks and the barman pretends he doesn’t know that the vodka and cider are for me. So much for his ethics on my sobriety.

“What’s that?” she says, looking past me to the box on the bar.

“Neville,” I reply.

“Neville?” She takes her drink and hands me the change. There’s not much, but there’s lots more in my pocket.

“Neville Robson,” I say. “Used to drink here.”

When I look at her, I see that her face has slipped in disgust as she realizes that I’m sitting here drinking with a dead guy. Her boobs have stayed pert though, so I content myself with a last glimpse of those puppies before she takes them with her back to the crowd in the corner. What time is it?

It’s half past six.

I should probably go and sprinkle Neville in the beer garden. After I’ve finished my drinks.

Oh. The vodka’s gone already. When did I drink that? Whatever. I drink the cider.

I really need a piss. I get off the stool and the floor tilts so that I have to hang onto the bar a moment. The barman hasn’t noticed, but Old Man at the End of the Bar has and I see him give me a knowing smile.

I go to the loo. I’m sick in one of the cubicles then I wee on it. When I come out there’s a couple of guys at the urinals and I nearly bump into one of them on my way to the sink. He says something but I’m not really paying attention. That’s why I bumped into him in the first place.

I wash my hands and look up at my reflection too fast. The toilets rock back and forth in my reality and I have to lean my head on the mirror and close my eyes until it stops. When I open them my reflection is just a slab of skin with a giant Cyclops eye in the middle of my forehead. I alter my focus until I have two eyes, blurry, but less weird to look at. Then I push myself back off the glass.

I don’t look good. I’m not wearing my suit jacket any more and my shirt is unbuttoned further than it was when I left the house. Where’s my dad’s tie? For a moment I panic and pat all my pockets until I discover it in my trouser pocket. I take it out and see that there’s a stain on it. Where did that come from?

Looks like mayonnaise.

Oh yeah. I had a sandwich at the bar earlier — most of which is now in the second toilet from the end; some of which appears on be on my dad’s tie.

I look back up at the me in the mirror. I don’t like what I see. I see someone who lets his friends down. Neville, Chris…

Chris. I miss you so much, mate. I’m so sorry.