Summer Tyres

Summer Tyres

Do you want your potatoes with rosemary, or just plain? asked Martha without turning away from the cooker.

The pan hissed, the rosemary released a resinous, summery scent, and outside, February was piling yet another blanket of snow onto the window ledge. The cottage felt warm, filled with the smell of supper and something long-familiar, almost imperceptible, like the scent of your own hair.

With rosemary, please, replied Andrew from the hallway. The sound of a zip, the muted thump of boots on wood, then silence. He always did that: hed arrive, take off his shoes, and stand in the entryway for a few moments, as if exhaling the outside world before stepping into the house.

Martha stirred the potatoes and turned down the heat. For twenty-three years, shed been turning down the heat at just the right moment. For twenty-three years, shed known to add rosemary at the end, otherwise it would turn bitter. The little things that made up what people called a family.

How was your day? she called out.

Dont ask, he replied. One meeting after another. That blasted tender.

She nodded, though he couldnt see her. The tenderthe latest unwelcome lodger in their cottage. For the past two months it had sat at the kitchen table, elbowed in on conversations, justified late returns. Martha didnt ask questions. She was a wife, not a detective.

Andrew entered the kitchen in socks and lounge trousers, set his phone on the worktop by the sink, and reached into the fridge for water. Martha glanced over. Fifty-one, broader in the shoulders than he used to be, thinning on tophe kept his hair cropped close so it was less obvious. Familiar. The face that had shared a pillow with her more times than she could count.

Shall I make a salad? she asked.

No need, Im not all that hungry.

He took his water and retreated to the living room, turned on the television. The usual background hum, someone talking about the weather. Martha dished up the potatoes, covered them to keep warm, reached for a tea towel.

Andrews phone, left on the edge of the counter, pulsed softly.

She hadnt meant to look. Her gaze fell idly on it, the way your eyes land on anything when your hands are occupied and your mind elsewhere. A name lit up the screen: Tyre Shop Dan. Underneath, in the preview, a few words.

She read them once. Then again. Then put down the tea towel and picked up the phone.

Miss you, love. Will you come tonight?

The phone had no lock. Andrew never botheredsaid he had nothing to hide, that passwords were for people living a double life. Martha opened the conversation.

Messages stretched back to October. Four monthsno, nearly half a year. She scrolled up. Each message was a step further downwards, as if descending into a cold, damp cellar. You looked so handsome today. I thought of you all night. Im going mad waiting to see you. Call me when you can, darling. And his replieswarm, alive, nothing like the words she was used to hearing from him.

Martha put the phone back on the counter. The potatoes steamed under the lid. Snow kept falling outside. The television droned on in the sitting room. Nothing had changed, yet everything was changed.

She picked up the phone once more. Found the number in the thread. Dialled from her own mobile.

Ring. Another. A third.

Yes? A young voice, slightly husky, a note of surprise.

Good evening, Martha said. Her own voice sounded unfamiliar. Even. Almost calm. Is this the tyre shop?

A pause on the other end. Brief, yet distinct.

Erm, no, I think you might have the wrong number.

Maybe, Martha said. Whats your name?

Another pause. The voice, warier now:

Holly. And whos this?

Im Martha ThompsonAndrew Thompsons wife. The man you call love. The man youre waiting for tonight with champagne.

The silence on the other end was so thick it could drown a person.

I Holly began.

Dont, Martha interrupted. I dont need anything from you. I just wanted to know Id read it right.

She hung up.

The phone was heavy in her hand. She set it back where shed found it. Approached the stove, lifted the lid from the potatoes. The dry scent of rosemary hit her.

Andrew, she called.

Her voice came out steady. That surprised her.

Yes? he answered from the living room.

Come and eat.

He appeared a minute later, looked at the table, sat, picked up his fork. She set down the dish, sat across from him, watching.

Arent you eating? he asked, not looking up.

Andrew.

The tone made him look at her. Something subtle shifted in his expressionalmost imperceptible unless you knew what to look for. Martha knew. Twenty-three years. Mornings, evenings. She knew his face better than her own.

Whats happened? he said.

Whos Holly?

A second. Two. He didnt break eye contact, but something there changedsomething hard to name. Not guilt. Something else.

How did you?

You left your phone in the kitchen, she said. A message popped up.

He put down his fork. Was silent for a few seconds. Then:

You had no right to read my messages.

Martha stared at him. Something inside her, something that a few minutes ago was warm and alive, began to coollike potatoes that had sat too long, untouched.

I had no right, Martha agreed. Fine. Tell me about tyre-fitter Dan.

A flush crossed his face. Not shameannoyance, more like.

Its a work contact, I

Andrew. She said it quietly, no pressure. I rang the number. A girl answered. Holly. Shes waiting for you tonight. With champagne.

The kitchen was cloaked in silence, falling as quietly as snow.

He didnt reply straight away. He stared at the table, the window, then back again. Martha waited. She wasnt in a hurry. She suddenly had all the time in the world.

Its… its not what you think, he said finally.

What is it, then?

It wasnt serious. Its just

What is it, Andrew?

He met her eye. Something flickerednothing like regret. Something less pleasant.

Weve been seeing each other since October, he admitted. She works for us. Shes in sales. Young, yes. I didnt plan it. It just… happened.

It just happened, Martha repeated.

Mar, you have to understand

How old is she?

A pause.

Twenty-eight.

Martha nodded. Twenty-eight. Twenty years younger than him. Roughly the same age as their daughter Kate, who was living in Sheffield with her husband and two kids, ringing every Sunday. Martha nodded again, putting the figure away on a shelf in her mind.

Why? she asked.

Why what?

Why. Just tell me.

He looked away. The snow outside kept fallingthick, patient, indifferent.

You wouldnt understand, he said.

Try me.

He was quiet for a long moment.

With you, its everythinghouse, duties, car trouble, repairs, bills, Kates kids. Everything I have to do. With her, I just live. Its light. Theres no weight.

Martha listened. Closely, as you listen to something that must be remembered exactly.

So, Im the home and the problems.

Thats not

Its exactly what you just said, Martha said, calm.

He stood up, paced the kitchen, stared out the window, snow streaking down the glass.

Mar, cant we just talk, please? Properly. Without

Without what?

This. The trial.

Its not a trial, she said. Its a conversation. You were sitting here eating the meal I cooked while waiting to go to her. Is that true?

He didnt answer. The answer sat in his silence.

Take your phone, said Martha. Get your coat. Go find yourself a hotel.

Mar

Im not raising my voice. Im not making a scene. I just want you to leave. Today. Now.

He stared at her, his face clouded with a blend of guilt and resentmenta strange mix of sorry and you brought this on yourself. Martha had never seen that look from him before. Not in twenty-three years.

Where am I supposed to go at this hour?

Andrew, she said, soft, we both know where youre going.

He lowered his gaze, then raised it, defeated.

Fine, he said, fine. Ill go. But we should talk.

One day, she agreed. But not tonight.

He left the kitchen. Martha heard him moving through the hallway, getting his coat. Then a pause. Then the door closing.

She sat at the table for several more minutes. The potatoes had gone cold. The rosemary had lost its scent. The television muttered on, and Martha suddenly thought she ought to switch it off, no sense wasting the electricity. Then she thought how odd it was to worry about that, when her marriage had just collapsed.

She got up. Put the supper in the fridge. Turned off the light over the hob. Returned to the kitchen table, picked up Andrews phonehed forgotten it again.

She held it for a few seconds.

Opened the thread with Holly.

Martha didnt hesitate. Shed always been someone who could think quicklytwenty years in accountancy. Numbers, paperwork, systems. She saw patterns where others saw chaos.

She knew about the tender. Knew more than Andrew thought. Shed done his accounts for the first decade before he hired someone else. But the dinner-table conversations never stopped. And her memory was sharp. Very sharp.

She typed, in his brusque work voice:

Holly, urgent. In the blue folder on my desktop, youll find the documents for the South Road tender. Move them now. Hide them somewhere. Tonight. All the stuff that shouldnt be found.

Sent. Waited. After two minutes, a reply: Okay, love. Doing it now. Are you coming over?

Martha put the phone in her coat pocket. Put on her overcoat. Walked out into the night.

The snow fell against her face softly, almost gently. The car started first try. Satnav knew the address. Martha had found Hollys address easily, sitting at the table with cold potatoes. Andrew had never thought to clear his phones browser history. He thought he had nothing to hide. He thought he used no passwords because he was a good man.

The streets were nearly empty. February, late evening, snow. Martha drove calmly, hands at ten and two. No radio. Shed realised a long time ago that she could think best in the quiet.

Holly lived in Bromley, in a new estate of matching glass and brick flats. Martha parked a hundred yards from the door, put on the hazards, and watched.

Andrews grey SUV was parked at the kerb, scratch on the rear bumper where hed backed into a gate two years ago. Shed been there. Hed sworn. Shed laughed. Theyd gotten pizza and forgot about it.

She didnt get out of the car, didnt go to the building, didnt ring the entry phone for explanations.

She took out her own mobile. Found the number she needed.

HMRC, good evening, said a weary female voice.

Good evening, said Martha. Id like to report irregularities regarding a limited company. Thompson Holdings Limited, I can give you the registration number. Its about a tender for construction along the South Road. I believe there are several points that may interest you.

She spoke evenlynames, dates, sums, methods. Everything shed absorbed in two decades of bookkeeping. The womans voice sharpened.

Could you leave a contact?

I can. First, how quickly will this be looked into?

If the documentation holds up, an enquiry could be opened within days.

Youll have documents, Martha said. I know exactly where they are right now.

She passed on her details. Put her phone away. Stared at Andrews SUV.

Inside, she felt somethingnot anger or triumph. Something colder, clearer, like the air after a snowfall, when everything stops and turns to glass.

She waited. She didnt have to wait long.

An hour and a half later, two unmarked cars pulled up. Plainclothes officers entered the building. Martha saw a light blink in a third-storey flat, then die. Minutes passed, then they came out, carrying things.

Martha got out. Walked slowly towards the entrance in her grey coat, boots muffled in the new snow. Someone held the door open for her. She rode up in the lift, pressed three.

The flat door stood open. Two men in the hallway, Andrew by the window beyond. He wore the same clothes as when hed left. Martha almost noted it in passing, with no particular feeling. On the sofa nearby, a young woman in a bathrobe, blonde, streaks of mascara under her eyes. Very young.

Andrew saw Martha and froze. Several expressions passed in a secondshe caught them all.

Martha he began.

Not now, she said. Let them finish.

One officer turned to her, flashed ID. Something about securing documents for an audit. Martha nodded. Handed him Andrews phone.

There are messages youll want in here, she said. Including one from this evening about hiding documents.

Andrew looked at her, face suddenly still.

Martha, do you know what youre doing? he asked.

I know exactly, she said.

Holly watched her, wide-eyed. Martha ignored her. Not why shed come.

Andrew, Martha said flatly, Ive filed for divorce tonight. Online. Saw to it all myself on the way here. She pulled a small key on white cord from her bag, set it by the door. Thats to the safe in your office. Financial papers. Youll want a decent solicitor. For a couple of matters at once.

He said nothing.

And by the way, she added, the potatoes are in the fridge. If you come for your things tomorrow, you can heat some up. Theres plenty.

She left.

In the lift, she stared at her reflection in the steel doora blurred, older woman in a grey coat. Fifty in March. Twenty-three years married. Accountant, homemaker, mother, grandmother. Thats what she knew about herself. Thats what she was, from the outside.

The lift pinged.

She stepped into the night.

By now the snow had stopped. The sky above Bromley was low and orange from city lights. A single lamppost by the building blinked lazily, counting its own time. Martha inhaled the cold airdeeply. Felt it settle inside her, sharp and clean.

And there, by the blinking lamppost, with snow melting under her boots, her tears began to fall.

She didnt stop them. No point. There was no one aroundjust the snow, the lamplight, the far-off hum of traffic. She cried quietly, no sobs, just warm tears on cold cheeks.

Not the tears that come from helplessnessno hysteria, no breaking apart. Something else. Like old skin being shed, painful but necessary, raw and new underneath, but alive.

She remembered Andrewhow hed been twenty-three years ago, when theyd met at a company do, so loud and full of laughter, head flung back. Or had she imagined that? Couldnt she tell the difference now?

She thought of the cottage theyd built together, the rows over bathroom tiles, the laughter afterwards. Of Kate, a toddler, climbing between them at night. The feeling then that it was all unshakeable and endless.

Nothing iseveryone knows that, but still thinks it wont happen to them.

Her tears finally dried. Martha wiped her cheeks, pulled out her phone, scrolled to Andrews contact. Stared for a long moment.

Deleted it.

Then opened her browser and searched: flights to Cornwall. Looked at dates and prices. Aprilalready warm by then, but still quiet, before the tourists arrived. Softer, gentler light.

Shed wanted to go years agobefore Andrew, even. Then came Andrew, then the house, then Kate, grandchildren, tenders. Life made it easy to delay, hard to reclaim what youd set aside.

She picked a date. April eighth. Two months time. Single room at a small sea-view guesthouseshed seen the pictures. White walls, wooden shutters, geraniums in the window.

Booked it.

Confirmation arrived in her inbox.

Martha slipped her phone into her pocket. Returned to the car.

The snow sounded different underfoot, somehow lighter. Or perhaps it just seemed so.

She drove home along the empty dual carriageway, mind untroubled by the usual whir of thoughts. Just quiet. That hush after snowfall.

At home, she went straight to the kitchen window and opened it, let the cold air flow in, stood a moment, watching the snow settle on the rooftops. Then to the office, opening the safe, checking the folder. Everything as shed left itthe records shed methodically gathered in recent months, ever since shed started to sensenot know, just sensesomething was off, like an almost inaudible noise behind the wall.

She was an accountant. Numbers dont lie. His ledgers had told her plenty in the last year.

She shut the safe. The key was in Bromley now, on someone elses shelf. Let it stay.

She put the kettle on. While it boiled, she went to the box room, what she and Andrew had called the dream cupboard. Her old things lived thereboxes of books, a battered vase, and, in the furthest corner, a wooden case wrapped in cracked leather.

She opened it.

Paintbrushes. Paint tubesdry now. A small sketchbook, fifteen years old at least. She leafed through: seascapes, boats, skies dashed on in a handful of strokes. Shed once been able to paint. Before there was no time.

She lifted a sketch. Looked at it for a long while.

Then put the kettle on for tea.

She barely slept that night. Lay in the dark, watching the ceiling, listening as the snow fell again, skittering softly over the roof. Her thoughts floated, unanchored. Usually, her mind ran in tidy columns and rows. Now, everything drifted.

How could you live beside someone so long and not know them? Twenty-three yearsshared table, shared bed, holidays by the sea, joint video calls with Kates kids. And yet. And yet.

Then againhad she ever really known him? Or only the version shed pieced together, from laughter at that company party, from bathroom tiles, cottage runs, sleepy coffeeshad she mistaken all that for the man, when all along Andrew had been just next to her, behind glass?

The thought sat heavy through the night.

Close to dawn, she slept. Dreamless, or dreaming only in shapesblue and white, water and sky.

In the morning, she rang Kate.

Kate picked up immediately, still sleepy: Mum? Why so early?

Not that early, its nine, Martha replied. Kate, I need to tell you something.

A pause. Kate, sharper now: Whats up?

Your dad and I are separating.

A long silence.

Mum

Im all right, said Martha. I want you to know. And please dont call your dad yet. Give me a few days.

But how why?

Ill explain it all, I promisejust not yet. For now, just know Im okay. I dont need you to come. I just need a little space.

Kates voice quivered. Mum, how

Honey, said Martha gently, I really am all right. Honestly. Im going to Cornwall in April.

What?

Cornwall. To paint. By the sea.

Another pause.

You really are okay? Kate asked.

For the first time in a long while, said Martha. And it was true. Not the whole truth. But true.

She hung up. Drank her coffee by the open window. Village children trudged to school, stamping new tracks in fresh snow. Sparrows erupted noisily in the birch by the fence. The sky was white and calm.

Three days later, she met with a solicitora young businesslike woman with a neat bob, who listened without interruption, jotting notes.

So youve filed already? the solicitor confirmed.

Yes.

Joint assetshouse, accounts, business share. Itll be tricky, especially with the HMRC investigation running.

I understand, Martha said. I dont want it all. Just my fair share. And Id like it done quietly and as fast as possible.

The solicitor eyed her:

Youre remarkably calm for someone in your shoes.

I was an accountant, Martha replied. You get used to looking at numbers, not feelings.

It helps, the solicitor agreed.

Sometimes, said Martha.

Andrew rang the following week. Private number. She answered.

Its me, he said.

The voice was different. Not as she remembered. Something missingcertainty, perhaps.

I hear you, she replied.

Martha, we need to talk. Just us. Not the lawyers.

We are talking.

Do you realise what happened after your call? Investigators, documents Its serious.

Yes, she said. I know.

You meant it.

Andrew, she said quietly, you lived a double life for half a year. Lied to me every day in this house. Whats happening now is the result of your choices. Not mine.

Silence.

I thought we couldmaybe

No, she said. We cant.

You wont let me finish

Were you going to suggest starting over?

Pause.

I dont know, he admitted. Im at sea.

I know, Martha said. You didnt expect consequences. You thought everything would go onhouse, wife, supper, and her. All together. Because men do, and get away with it.

Youre not being fair.

Maybe not. I am being honest.

More silence.

How are you? he said at last, quietlyalmost sincerely.

Martha gazed out at a March morning: the snow beginning to recede, yellowing leaves, old grass showing through.

Im all right, she told him. Better than you, I expect.

I believe that, he murmured. Again, something in his voice she didnt want to examine.

Andrew, sort things out with the solicitor. We need the settlement to be above-board. For both our sakes.

All right, he agreed.

And one more thing She paused. Kate knows. I told her. She wants to speak to youcall her.

Martha

Thats not a request, she said. Thats just how it is. Shes your daughter. She deserves the truth.

She hung up.

She sat in the silence a while. Outside, someone was scraping snow with a shovelsteady, reassuring. Martha thought she ought to clear the path herself, buy some milk, call the plumber for the leaky tap at last.

All thoughts of someone still living.

She tackled the changes methodically, as always. First, the house. Packed his things into boxes, set them in the store-room. Didnt burn or discard a single photojust put them away. Rearranged the bedroomit felt different, just enough. Bought new pillows.

Then the kitchen. Threw out the old frying panthe one that still smelled of rosemarynot because it was bad, but because she simply didnt want it there. Bought a new one, with a bright red handle, garish and cheerful. She half-laughed as she chose it, then stopped, because the red handle made her smile, and that felt fine.

In March, she signed up for an art class in the neighbouring towna small studio, the teacher middle-aged, calm, free of small talk. The first lesson Martha stood before the canvas for twenty minutes, afraid to begin. Then she did.

Her hands remembered. That surprised her. Fifteen years, and still they knew the pressure, the way paint spread differently at each angle. She painted a shoreline. Not a real placeimaginary. Blue and white, water and sky, thin strip of land.

Good, said the instructor, passing by. Youve had experience.

Years ago, said Martha.

Doesnt matter. Hands remember.

In the evenings, Martha started reading againnot cookbooks or crime, but books shed always meant to read. They sat on the shelves, patient. She read slowly, letting the words settle.

Kate visited at the end of February. They drank tea in the kitchen, Kate regarding her with a look that held several meanings.

Mum, youre different.

How do you mean?

Not older just calmer. Not detachedjust different.

Maybe, Martha agreed.

Do you hate Dad?

She thought.

I suppose part of me does. Somewhere. But thats not the dominant feeling.

What is?

She looked at her daughterso familiar, with something of Andrew, something of herself, but ultimately just Kate, belonging to no one.

Curiosity, Martha said.

Curiosity?

At what happens next. Ive not expected anything new in years. House, supper, tenderalways predictable. Now, I havent a clue. Its strangeand a bit scarybut theres something alive in that.

Kate considered this.

You dont want him back?

No, Martha said plainly. Even if he wanted to. No.

Why not?

Martha cupped her mug. Hot, smooth, comforting.

Because I read that conversation, Kate. He wrote to her like he never wrote to me. Maybe because with her, it was effortless, and with me it was duties. I now know what I was to him. Not a persona function. Stability. I wont be a function.

Kate turned to the window, went quiet for a bit.

He called, she said finally.

I know.

He said hes sorry.

Perhaps, Martha said. But sorry isnt the same as changed. And thats his journey, not mine.

Mum, dont you thinkcouldnt you have I dont know, handled it differently? Not gone to the taxman?

Martha thought.

Of course I could have. Couldve had a row. Forgiven him. Pretended it didnt happen, like many do. I chose the way I didnot to hurt him, but because I had to.

Youve always been precise, said Kate.

Is that bad?

No. Its just intimidating sometimes.

They sat quietly for a while. Then Kate got up, hugged her from behind, cheek pressed to Marthas hair.

Youll be all right?

I will.

Cornwall is real?

The eighth of April.

Alone?

Alone. Just me.

Kate stayed hugging her a moment longer, then sat and poured another tea. They sat in silencea gentle, homely quiet, something that belonged.

The solicitor was rightit was messy. Andrew got a solicitor. The negotiations dragged on. The tax investigation gave everything a new weight. Martha sat through meetings, read documents, signed what needed signing, and, each time, came home and did something ordinarycooked soup, read, painted.

Her neighbour, Mrs Evanswhod been saying good morning over the fence for eight yearscame one day with a jar of jam.

Martha, I hear youve had trouble?

Thats right, Mrs Evans.

Andrews gone?

He has.

For good?

Yes.

Mrs Evans was quiet a moment, then handed over the jam.

Cherry. Made it myself. Take it.

Thank you, Martha said.

Chin up, said Mrs Evans, and there was no pity or nosinessjust one person giving comfort to another. You think everythings falling apart, but it turns outno. Its just different.

You speak from experience?

Mrs Evans gave a lopsided smile.

I do. My first husband was a wanderer. Long ago now. I lived alone twenty years after, and never once regretted it.

She left, Martha stood with the jam, realising that every street, every house, had stories of life after betrayalstories women carry quietly, sometimes forever.

She didnt want to carry this quietly forever. She didnt know exactly what she wanted. But it was a new kind of not knowinga not knowing that meant options still ahead.

In early April, clearing the cupboard, she found an old tin of family snaps. She sifted through themher and Andrew, young, Kate small, all three by the seaperhaps in Devon, Kate looking away. She remembered that dayit was hot, Kate didnt want photos, Andrew made a silly noise to make her laugh. Real laughter. Real happiness.

She closed the tin. Didnt throw it away. Put it back.

The past shouldnt be erased. It was realenough true moments to keep. The restthe new layerjust sits on top. Thats how life works. Never one colour.

On the sixth of April, she packed her suitcasea little wheeled one, bought years ago. Light clothes, a book, sketch pad, new watercolours, sunglasses, a sunhat shed never dared wear.

On the seventh, the afternoon before leaving, she went out into the garden. Stood beneath the birch treethe ground thawing, smelling of last years leaves and something fresh and sharp. Birds noisy in the branches, the day gentle, still chilly, but spring edged in.

Andrew rang. Another new number.

Youre off tomorrow? he asked.

Yes.

Kate told me.

Yes.

Safe travels.

She paused, then: Thank you.

Youre really going to paint?

I am.

I never knew you could paint, he said, quietly, without complaint.

Theres plenty you never knew, Martha replied.

Pause.

Martha, I want to say he began.

No need, she said, firmly but not unkindly. Really. Everythings been said.

I just

Andrew. She looked at the birch, at the small, swelling budsalive, urgent. Her nose prickled, but she didnt cry. Just stood a while.

I wish you well, she said, truly. I dont want your misery. I want my life.

A long silence.

Thats fair, he said at last.

It is, she agreed. Goodbye.

She tucked the phone away. Stood a little longer under the tree, watching spring press on through new buds.

Then went inside.

On the eighth of April at six in the morning, she locked the door to the cottage. Checked the latch. Looked aboutthe village street quiet, a lone cleaner sweeping last years leaves down the path. Martha brought her suitcase to the car.

By the garage, her car waited. She opened the boot, loaded the case, then paused.

Looked at the tyressummer tyres. Shed swapped them in last week, booked it with the local garage, not the one from Andrews phone. Summer tyres nowfine, supple, hugging the roads.

She looked at them a second.

Then smiled. A half-smilelike someone whos just understood something simple.

Summer tyres. The time had come.

She started the car, rolled down the window a crack to let in the crisp April aircold still, edged with the scent of new leaves and wet tarmac. Satnav set for the airport. Two hours, barring delays.

She pulled away.

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Summer Tyres
Prövning tillsammans med familjen