A Compromising

  Position

  Carole Matthews

  First published in Great Britain in 2002 by Headline Publishing Group

  Copyright © Carole Matthews 2002

  This edition published by Carole Matthews INK Ltd 2014

  The moral right of the author has been asserted.

  All characters and events in this publication, other than those clearly in the public domain, are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  With heartfelt thanks to ‘Mad’ Mike Bentham for advice and stories covering a wide range of illegal substances and activities. For knowing more than one person should about general loss of control of bodily functions – intentionally or otherwise. For being a one-man soap opera, disaster zone, fat boy and all-round top bloke. And, last but not least, for being able to burp ‘The Archbishop of Canterbury’ . . . You are unique and an inspiration . . .

  And to ‘Lovely Kev’

  For all this and a little bit more . . .

  ‘Have you got your mobile . . .?’

  ‘Have you got your briefcase . . .?’

  ‘Have you got the notes for your talk . . .?’

  ‘Have you got any idea where you’re going . . .?’

  ‘Have you got petrol in your car . . .?’

  ‘Have you got a warm coat . . .?’

  ‘Have you got money for a drink . . .?’

  ‘Have you got your sunglasses . . .?’

  ‘Have you got your reading glasses . . .?’

  ‘Have you got business cards . . .?’

  ‘Have you got your ticket . . .?’

  ‘Have you got your pants on the right way round . . .?’

  ‘Have you got your pants on at all . . .?’

  CONTENTS

  Acknowledgements

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-One

  Chapter Forty-Two

  Chapter Forty-Three

  Chapter Forty-Four

  Chapter Forty-Five

  Chapter Forty-Six

  Chapter Forty-Seven

  Chapter Forty-Eight

  Chapter Forty-Nine

  Chapter Fifty

  Chapter Fifty-One

  Chapter Fifty-Two

  Chapter Fifty-Three

  Chapter Fifty-Four

  Chapter Fifty-Five

  Chapter Fifty-Six

  Chapter Fifty-Seven

  Chapter Fifty-Eight

  Chapter Fifty-Nine

  Chapter Sixty

  Chapter Sixty-One

  Chapter Sixty-Two

  Chapter Sixty-Three

  Chapter Sixty-Four

  Chapter Sixty-Five

  Chapter Sixty-Six

  Chapter Sixty-Seven

  Chapter Sixty-Eight

  Chapter Sixty-Nine

  Chapter Seventy

  Chapter Seventy-One

  Chapter Seventy-Two

  Chapter Seventy-Three

  Chapter Seventy-Four

  Chapter Seventy-Five

  Chapter Seventy-Six

  Chapter Seventy-Seven

  Chapter Seventy-Eight

  Chapter Seventy-Nine

  Chapter Eighty

  Chapter Eighty-One

  Chapter Eighty-Two

  Chapter Eighty-Three

  Chapter Eighty-Four

  Chapter Eighty-Five

  Chapter Eighty-Six

  Chapter Eighty-Seven

  Chapter Eighty-Eight

  Chapter Eighty-Nine

  Chapter Ninety

  Chapter Ninety-One

  Chapter Ninety-Two

  Chapter Ninety-Three

  Chapter Ninety-Four

  Chapter Ninety-Five

  Chapter Ninety-Six

  Chapter Ninety-Seven

  Chapter Ninety-Eight

  Chapter Ninety-Nine

  Chapter One Hundred

  Chapter One Hundred and One

  Chapter One Hundred and Two

  Chapter One Hundred and Three

  The Cake Shop in the Garden

  About the Author

  Getting in Touch

  Praise for Carole's Novels

  Also by Carole Matthews

  Chapter One

  Have you ever seen one of those weepy films where the distraught and usually love-lorn heroine cries silently and beautifully, tears coursing down her perfect Estée Lauder foundation leaving not a blemish? Yes? Makes you want to weep, doesn’t it?

  I don’t cry like that – I howl. Like a banshee. A banshee who’s been hit about the head with a baseball bat. And I go bright red and blotchy round my neck and my eyes swell up as if they’ve been punched by Lennox Lewis. My nose generally contributes too, producing, on average, two buckets of dribble per second. Nice.

  This is what I’m doing now. Howling. Why? Because I, Emily Miller, have left my boyfriend of five years, one Mr Declan Patrick O’Donnell, fully paid-up member of the Bastard species. And, in doing so, have rendered myself homeless.

  At the tender age of thirty-two, you’d have thought I’d have the wherewithal to get it together by now, wouldn’t you? But no. At this point, my tissue disintegrates, having clearly reached its Critical Snot Limit. The receptionist looks at me with a mixture of pity and terror. Oh, I forgot to mention, I’m not indulging in this bout of hysteria alone. Oh no. I am doing it in the reception area of the Hampstead Observer, a nineties conglomeration of uncomfortable tan leather sofas, stainless steel and beech coffee-tables and undernourished yucca plants in terracotta pots.

  I sniff and make a little gulpy sound. The receptionist clutches her phone nearer to her, and tries to give me an encouraging smile which basically says, ‘Pull yourself together, woman!’ The trouble is, my lip wobbles alarmingly every time I fight to stifle a sob, so in the end I give up and blub some more.

  ‘Is Cara there?’ the receptionist whispers in a pantomime style. The look in her eyes reminds me of that bit in Watership Down where the nice bunny gets caught in the headlights of a not very nice car. I take it that Cara isn’t at her desk. The receptionist lowers her voice a bit more, but I can still hear her. ‘I have a slight emergency.’ Ha! She does? If only she knew. ‘Her friend’s here. In reception. Now. She’s a bit upset.’ She smiles at me like I’m completely insane. And I have to admit that I probably do look a tiny bit unhinged at the moment. ‘Tell her to get down here,’ she hisses. ‘Quick!’ She hangs up and looks reassuringly at me. ‘She won’t be
long.’

  I nod speechlessly.

  ‘Are you all right?’ the receptionist asks kindly, if a little pointlessly, since it must be obvious to anyone with half a brain that here is a woman more devastated than she has ever been in her entire life.

  I heave out, ‘I’m fine. Thank you.’ But I’m not fine. I doubt I’ll ever be fine again. And with that thought, I dissolve into tears once more. There’s nothing quite so bad as someone being kind to you when you most need them to be, is there? Except for someone being cruel and unkind on an unprecedented scale when you least expect it, of course.

  I don’t know quite where to start really. Should I explain about Cara, my closest and most irritating friend and confidante? Or should I just cut straight to the chase and talk about Declan, ex-boyfriend as of half an hour ago, and his stupendous, mind-blowing betrayal? Oh, I don’t know. How on earth can I be expected to think straight when I’m creating my very own papier-mâché sculpture with a Kleenex?

  Just let me make one thing perfectly clear. This is totally and utterly Declan’s fault. One hundred per cent. You know when you hear people discussing their friends’ relationship break-ups and they say stuff like, ‘Well, it was six of one and half a dozen of the other . . .’ or, ‘No one’s really to blame . . .’ or the equally vacuous, ‘They just drifted apart . . .’? Well, it’s all bollocks as far as I’m concerned. Ducks drift apart. Humans get pushed away. No one will ever say that about this particular situation. I did not drift, I was shoved. Heartily. If I were a soap star instead of a boring old English teacher, this would fill the pages of the tabloids. You mark my words. The demise of our lovey-dovey coupledom is entirely due to my bastard boyfriend. Ex-boyfriend. And, very soon, when you know the whole story, I think you’ll agree.

  Chapter Two

  Adam stood up and had a quick glance round the office again before he spoke. ‘Cara’s not here,’ he said. ‘I’ll pass the message on as soon as she comes back.’

  He replaced the telephone receiver on its cradle. The news desk was empty – apart from the Himalayan mounds of paper in this supposed age of the paper-free office and Cara’s usual barricade of bells, Buddhas and Oriental what-nots – but then it was late in the day and, apart from those on the newspaper’s aptly named graveyard shift, they should all be heading home or, more probably, to that home-from-home the British call ‘the pub’.

  ‘Where’s Cara?’ he shouted to no one in particular.

  ‘Our esteemed News Editor is in the toilet,’ Chris supplied.

  Adam sat down again. ‘She’s been ages.’

  ‘She’s probably Feng Shui-ing her arse.’ Chris leant nearer to his computer screen. ‘Bloody hell. Look at this.’

  Adam raked his fingers through his hair and clasped them behind his neck. ‘It’ll make you go blind.’

  Chris closed his eyes and fumbled around his desk with his hands, knocking over his pen-holder. ‘What?’

  They both laughed tired laughter. It had been a long day. Not long as in interesting, long as in the most boring day imaginable. To say that it was a slow news day was an understatement of mega proportions. As Chief Photographer, Adam had been sent out to take snazzy pictures of a car that had been vandalised by the owner’s batty sixty-two-year-old female neighbour (who refused to be photographed), a child who had won a place to the local theatre school and a man whose lost dog had returned home of its own accord after two weeks missing in the wilds of Belsize Park. Not much to get the old adrenaline whizzing round the veins, although it was a very cute dog – some indeterminate ball of frantic fuzz that had adored Adam on sight and liked to lick a lot. Adam sighed inwardly. If only women were the same.

  Adam shuffled his chair over to Chris’s desk where his friend was doing what he did for the majority, if not all, of his working day – surfing the Internet. His favoured sites were those that contained the headings nude, naughty, NAKED and NIPPLES – among other things.

  ‘Now that is a sight for sore eyes,’ Chris said, breathless with admiration as he pointed at the image on the screen.

  Adam peered over Chris’s shoulder and pursed his lips. ‘Not bad.’

  ‘Not bad?’ His friend scowled at him. ‘Are you gay? That is the most luscious pair of legs you’re ever likely to see. I would give up all of my worldly goods to walk arm-in-arm with a young lady of such delicate beauty.’

  ‘I don’t think a fiver would get you very far.’

  Chris looked crushed. ‘No?’

  Just then, Cara came out of the ladies’ loo and walked across the office. She cuffed Chris across the head as she passed behind him. ‘You’ll go blind.’

  ‘It’s been done,’ Chris and Adam replied in unison.

  ‘It’s also very politically incorrect. I could report you for sexual harassment in the workplace,’ she warned. ‘You do know that it’s now a sackable offence to surf porn sites?’

  ‘It’s research,’ Chris countered. ‘For an exposé piece on the dark side of technology.’

  ‘Yes. Right. And Davina McCall’s going to be the next Prime Minister.’ Cara went to ease Adam out of the way. ‘Let me see.’

  ‘You haven’t got time.’ Adam shielded the screen. It wasn’t nearly as bad as some of the stuff Chris liked to surf, but he didn’t feel happy about one of the bosses seeing it. ‘There’s an upset woman in reception asking for you.’

  ‘Who?’

  ‘Bethany didn’t say. Sounded urgent though.’

  Cara scooped up her coat. ‘I was about to head for home, anyway. Will you tie up any loose ends for me please, Chris?’

  ‘Ja, mein Führer,’ he said, throwing a Gestapo salute at her.

  ‘I’ll see you boys tomorrow.’

  ‘Not if we see you first,’ Chris muttered under his breath.

  ‘I heard that,’ Cara said.

  Adam smiled at her, ‘Hope it’s not bad news.’

  ‘If it’s who I think it is, it probably will be.’

  ‘We’re going to the pub if you want to join us,’ he offered. ‘If she’s nursing a broken heart, strong drink works wonders.’

  Cara shook her head. ‘I think this is going to be a tea and sympathy job.’

  ‘Have fun,’ Adam said.

  ‘You too.’ Cara eyeballed Chris and then the corner of her spotlessly neat desk and the Burger King polystyrene box poised conspicuously at its outer reaches. ‘Chris. Burger. Out of my wealth corner. Now.’ Then she turned and marched crisply out of the office.

  Chris looked up hazily, still intent on drooling at the screen. ‘Adam, do you think Cara’s a lesbian?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘She eats a lot of vegetarian food.’

  ‘I don’t think the two things are necessarily connected, mate.’

  ‘Oh,’ Chris said. ‘You sure?’

  Chapter Three

  ‘Oh, heavens-to-Betsy!’ Cara is standing at the steel swing doors that open out into the reception area, coat slung over her arm, hands on her hips in a nonchalant-aggressive pose. Cara doesn’t do swearing. She says it sends out little poisoned arrows into the universe which come back to fall on your head when you’re least expecting it. I dread to think how many ‘bastard’ and ‘bugger’ arrows are up there waiting for me. It’ll be like the Battle of Hastings if they ever decide to let fly.

  As a consequence of her non-swearing policy, all of Cara’s expletives come straight from the Beatrix Potter and Enid Blyton book of bad language. This is just one of her deeply irritating habits. Sometimes I really wish that she’d let go and have a really good ‘fuck’ every now and then – metaphorically speaking. That’s the other thing that Cara doesn’t do at the moment – she’s been celibate for over a year now. She says by choice, I say by default. Cara thinks she’s being saintly and going through a period of spiritual cleansing, whereas I think she’s desperately unlucky and hugely frustrated. Whichever way, it makes her very bad-tempered.

  Cara tuts and bustles across to me, sending a ‘thank you’ glance at the relie
ved receptionist. She dumps her coat and throws her arms around me. ‘What have you been doing?’ she sighs.

  And despite all her idiosyncrasies, quirks, foibles and fetishes, she really is a dear, dear friend who would abandon everything to help you out of a crisis. Even though you have to indulge her belief in the healing power of hugs. Cara tries to squeeze the last breath out of me, and although I’d finally managed to get the weeping under control, it starts again. ‘I’ve left Declan,’ I say in between sniffs.

  Cara eyes for the first time the two very large suitcases which stand stoically beside me on the floor. ‘Oh flip. This looks permanent.’

  ‘It is.’

  ‘You can’t leave him, Emily.’ Cara holds me away from her and fixes me with her most earnest stare. ‘Where will you go?’

  ‘Er . . .’ I can’t help but look at my suitcases.

  ‘Oh no,’ she says before I have the chance to get even one syllable out of my poor trembling mouth. ‘Oh no.’

  ‘Oh no, what?’

  ‘Don’t even think about it,’ my friend says in a threatening tone.

  ‘It won’t be for long.’

  ‘You’re right. It won’t!’

  ‘Cara!’ I am gobsmacked. ‘You’re supposed to be my friend.’

  ‘I don’t want you living with me,’ she says. ‘You’re untidy.’

  ‘I’m not,’ I protest.

  ‘You never put the lid back on the toothpaste,’ Cara says.

  ‘That was one incident, Cara. About ten years ago.’

  ‘You leave the loo seat up,’ she says as if it’s a hanging offence.

  ‘You’re just anally retentive,’ I point out. ‘Howard Hughes was probably more relaxed in his bathroom than you are.’

  By now, my tears have been shocked into an arrested state. Look at me – I have come to my friend in my hour of need and she is about to close the door of her three-bedroom, Victorian terraced cottage in my face. ‘You’ve got a perfectly nice spare room,’ I choke out.

  ‘I stack my ironing in there.’

  ‘Well, thank you, friend.’ I can’t believe this. Cara’s spirituality is about as substantial as a pair of seven-denier tights and you can poke holes in it just as quickly. ‘I am trying not to be hurt that your ironing pile takes precedence over your closest friend. If you knew what had happened, you wouldn’t deny me.’ My chin gives an involuntary shudder. ‘This is not your common or garden everyday break-up. This is serious stuff.’