I hadnāt eaten much all day. At lunch-time, instead of stopping work, Iād foraged in my desk drawer for a half-eaten Mars bar that Iād vaguely remembered abandoning some days earlier. To my delight, I found it. I dashed off the paper clips and the worst of the fluff and, I must say, it was delicious.
So as I drove home I was hungry, and I knew there would be shag-all in the house. Food was a big problem for Garv and me. We subsisted, like most people we knew, on microwaved stuff, takeaways and meals out. Now and again ā at least, before things had gone weird on us ā when weād cleared our backlog of ordinary worries, weād spend a bit of time worrying that we werenāt getting enough vitamins. So weād vow to embrace a new, healthier way and buy a jar of multivitamins, which weād take for a day or so, then forget about. Or else weād go on a mad splurge in the supermarket, pulling our arms out of their scurvied sockets lugging home heads of broccoli, suspiciously orange carrots and enough apples to feed a family of eight for a week.
āOur health is our wealth,ā weād say, pleased as punch, because it seemed that buying raw foodstuffs was an effective thing to do in itself. It was only when it became clear that the food had to be eaten that the trouble would begin.
Immediately events would set about conspiring to thwart our cooking plans: weād have to work late or go out for someoneās birthday. The ensuing week was usually spent in edgy awareness of all the fresh fruit and vegetables clamouring for our attention. We could hardly bear to go into the kitchen. Visions of cauliflowers and grapes constantly hovered on the corner of our consciousness, so that we were never truly at peace. Slowly, day by day, as the food went off, weād furtively throw it out, never acknowledging to each other what we were doing. And only when the final kiwi fruit had been bounced off the inside of the bin did the black shadow lift and we could relax again.
Give me a frozen pizza any time, far less stressful.
Which is precisely what I bought for that eveningās meal. I mounted the pavement, ran into the Spar and flung a couple of pizzas and some breakfast cereals into a basket. And then Fate intervened.
I can go without chocolate for weeks at a time. OK, days. But once I have a bit I want more, and the fluff-covered, lunch-time Mars bar had roused the hungry beast. So when I saw the boxes of handmade truffles in a chilled compartment I decided in a mad splurge of go-on-you-divil justification to buy myself one.
Who knows what would have happened if I hadnāt Did something as benign as a box of chocolates alter the entire course of my life
Garv was already home and we greeted each other a little warily. We hadnāt expected that this evening would be just the two of us; weād been kind of depending on Liam and Elaine to dilute the funny atmosphere between us.
āYou just missed Donna,ā he said. āSheāll call you at work tomorrow.ā
āSo whatās the latestā Donna had a messy, high-concept love life and, as one of her best friends, it was my duty to provide advice. But she often consulted Garv to get what she called āthe male perspectiveā, and heād been so helpful that sheād rechristened him Doctor Love.
āRobbie wants her to stop shaving under her arms. Says he thinks itās sexy, but sheās afraid sheāll look like a gorilla.ā
āSo what did you adviseā
āThat thereās nothing wrong with women having hair āā
āRight on, sister.ā
āā but that if she really doesnāt want it, she should say that sheāll stop shaving under her arms if heāll start wearing girlsā knickers. Sauce for the goose and all that.ā
āYouāre a genius, you really are.ā
āThanks.ā
Garv pulled off his tie, flung it over the back of a chair, then raked his fingers through his hair, shaking away the vestiges of his work persona. For the office his hair was Ivy League neat: shorn close at the neck and sleeked back off his face, but off-duty, it flopped down over his forehead.
There are some men who are so good-looking that meeting them is like being hit on the head with a mallet. Garv, however, isnāt one of them; heās more the sort of man you could see day-in, day-out for twenty years, then just wake up one morning and think, āGod, heās nice, how come I never noticed him before nowā
His most obvious attraction was his height. But I was tall, too, so Iād never gone around saying, āOoh, look at how he towers over me!ā All the same, I was able to wear heels with him, which I appreciated ā my sister Claire had been married to a man who was the same height as her, so sheād had to wear flats in order that he wouldnāt feel inadequate. And she really loves shoes. But then he had an affair and left her, so everything works out for the best in the end, I suppose.
āHow was workā Garv asked.
āMostly awful. How was yoursā
āBad for most of the day. I had a nice ten minutes between four-fifteen and four-twenty-five when I stood on the fire escape and pretended I still smoked.ā
Garv works as an actuary, which makes him a cheap target for accusations of being boring ā and on first meeting him you might confuse his quietness with dullness. But in my opinion itās a mistake to equate number-crunching with being boring; one of the most boring men I ever met was this gobshite novelist boyfriend of Donnaās called John ā you couldnāt get more creative. We went out for dinner one night and he BORED us into the ground, loudly monologuing about other writers and what overpaid, meretricious bastards they were. Then he began questioning me about how Iād felt about something or other;
probing and delving with the intimacy of a gynaecologist. āHow did you feel Sad Can you be more specific Heartbroken Now weāre getting someplace.āThen he hurried to the gentsā and I just knew that he was writing everything Iād said into a notebook, to use in his novel.
āYouāre not to be jealous about Liamās flatscreen telly,ā I said to Garv, happy to pretend that his subdued mood was down to his mate having more consumer durables than him. āDidnāt it attack him It might have to be put down.ā
āAh,ā Garv shrugged the way he always does when heās bothered, āIām not bothered.ā (Though happy to discuss Donnaās problems with her, youāll note his reluctance to talk about his own feelings, even when theyāre only about a telly.) āBut do you know how much it costā he blurted.