Conversations 10 - Cover

Conversations 10

by SleeperyJim

Copyright© 2020 by SleeperyJim

Drama Story: Most people have cheated, been cheated on, or both, at some stage in their lives. How they handle the aftermath often has a commonality to it, enough that we can usually recognise the actions and emotions. Sometimes having a conversation or reading a story can help...

Tags: Ma/Fa   Fiction   Cheating  

Everything we experience leaves tracks and traces, on your body or your soul, or both. Sometimes we need help coming to terms with that. Why not start right at home? A little fiction sometime helps...

“Why do you write this absolute shit?” he asked.

Sean McLaughlin was my best friend – always had been, ever since primary school days. We’d met when we found ourselves seated next to each other in our very first classroom; two very small, very apprehensive and quite scared boys, both missing our mothers, but also curious to find out what this big school thing was all about. We bonded in the sand pit, when we shared out a few toy cars and tried to build the Masters of the Universe parking garage, and were firm friends from then on.

In the years that followed, we were the Terrible Twins, both red-heads, always in trouble but always with each other’s back. The trouble was never really bad; usually the result of an impulsive idea that, astonishingly, somehow turned out to be no brainwave, but we were always there for each other.

So when he asked me that question when we were both in our forties, it never crossed my mind to take offence. Things had moved on a long way since those school days. He was a sales rep dealing in hardware items, travelling to building companies and architects to sell fittings for doors and windows, cupboards and drawers. All needed but rarely thought of. Not a sexy job, but he was good at it.

I was a writer. Shortly after I got married in my early twenties, I wrote a novel and – with absolutely no clue about how things worked, found an agent in the phone directory and blithely sent it off. Needless to say, my amateurish first attempt never got published, but the agent somehow liked my style, and found odd bits of work for me. It might surprise people, but companies that need something professionally written for them need to find writers from somewhere, and have little desire to go searching the internet for someone who might be able to write the right thing within the time needed at a reasonable expense. They contact a literary agent to do that for them.

While I was waiting on tenterhooks for a publisher to realise how brilliant my first novel was and rush to offer me millions for the rights to publish it before Hollywood beat them to it, my newly acquired agent offered me a couple of commissions. One was for a trade magazine that was directed at the motor trade, another for a magazine that was sent out free to every printing company. Trade magazines exist solely on advertising, and both publishers needed articles written on a specific aspect of their business that would cosy up to their advertisers; didn’t have the in-house manpower to do it; and so farmed it out. I had no clue about either business, but I did have the nous to go and research it, find out who was involved and give them a phone call for their view on the topic in question. It wasn’t particularly hard, and the idea that they might get their views into a magazine that went out to all their customers, made it very easy for me to pick their brains. Hell, they couldn’t help me enough.

The money was very fair, and very welcome. At the time, I was working in a store as assistant manager – while hating every moment of it; and the idea of making a little money on the side was more than attractive. I gave it my best shot.

Surprisingly, the magazines were very happy with my work. Soon, more and more commissions came in, some of the clients offering to work directly with me in order to cut out the agency fees. However, I couldn’t help but feel loyalty to the woman who had given me my first break, and simply routed any direct commissions through her. She paid back my loyalty by bringing me in on a commission from a television company who had all the footage and interviews all ready put together into a finished TV program, but needed a script for a voice-over artist to read to string it all together. That’s how most non-acted, non-live programs work in that world. Luckily it was on a subject that I’d always been interested in and could talk a little about it. The broadcast slot was already set in place and advertised, the sound studio was booked, and they were over a barrel to get it finished in time. So they gave me a try. In return I gave them a script they liked, and suddenly I was a scriptwriter as well.

That’s how the jobbing writer business works. You get lucky, you work hard, you give the clients what they want when they want it, and as thanks they give you money - and sometimes they refer you to others in the same business. And occasionally, the money’s enough that you can try and go out on your own and say thanks, but no thanks to the store that’s been draining your life-force for the past five years.

But absolutely none of that was what Sean was referring to.

“Absolute shit?” I asked with raised eyebrows.

I was no longer inordinately proud of every single thing I wrote. That passed years ago. But I never considered my writing to be shit either. Some pieces were better than others, but I didn’t really consider any of it shit.

Not really.

Hmm. Except that script I wrote for a company that was trying to get a television series for children going, in order to get a shed load of sponsorship money from a rather wealthy church group. That script was shit - but that was deliberate. I thought the whole concept of children teaching an angel about Christianity was so incredibly dumb and so obviously a come-on purely to get some of that good old church money, that I subtly sabotaged that one. I had no belief in the religion or the fairy tales they espoused, and thought that the church group were completely brainless to even consider that vapid pitch in the first place, but I didn’t like the idea of them being ripped off either. It would never be aired by any self-respecting broadcaster so what was the point? And a judicious word here and there in the wrong place in the script worked wonders. Words have power! It never even got into production. My conscience remained clear.

“What shit are you referring to?”

Sean was sitting on my sofa, drinking my beer and eating my snacks, and calling my work shit. Nice friend!

“I’m talking about that crap you write about husbands and wives cheating on each other. There’s no fun in that! Why don’t you write about something good – something with action and danger and sex in it? Maybe you could write a tale about a Special Forces group that do clandestine missions in the dead of night, and then fuck each other to celebrate. That would be good!”

I found myself laughing, despite my irritation. Hey, best friends are allowed to annoy you without worrying about fallout.

“You have no idea how many of this type of story have Special Forces guys in them.”

He grinned. “Seriously? Why don’t you put some in yours then?”

“Because it’s a cliché. C’mon, think about it. A guy gets cheated on, and then uses his super powers to get even? Deus ex Machina, dude. It’s too easy.”

“I don’t speak French, you know that,” Sean said pompously, pulling my chain.

“Yeah, you know what it means, you arsehole. The bad guy just happens to get hit by lightning or something equally unlikely – like the rain offing Stanley Tucci in the Lovely Bones after he kills Saoirse Ronan. Or more likely, the poor cheated husband or wife just turns out to be Special Forces – SAS or SEALs – but nobody knew. Or at least it wasn’t mentioned until very late in the story.”

“At least that would be cool!” enthused Sean. “Like, the bad guy is about to hump the wife and the husband shoots his dick off.”

“Been there. Read it. Snipers are very popular.”

“Yeah, shoot the tip of the guy’s dick off from five miles away. So he wouldn’t even know what happened. It’s just ... gone.”

“Exactly.”

He went and got himself another beer. What can I say? My fridge was his fridge.

“Okay, so no super army guys. But it’s still shit. So why do you write it? Especially after ... you know...”

Yeah, I knew – my wife being humped by another guy – got that tee-shirt as well.

Hell, so did Sean. Although he knew his wife was a slut right from the get-go. He loved his sluts, did Sean. Mine took me completely by surprise.

Well, that’s not absolutely true in every sense. She went off to a symposium, and as I watched the 747 take off with her onboard, I suddenly knew that she was going off to meet a lover. I had no idea how or why I knew – but I was certain.

“Okay, I admit that somehow I just knew what was going to happen,” I said. “Certain enough that it made me reach for my phone and hire a private investigator in the city she was flying to. They were on the job before she even landed.

“And I know that that sounds like Deus ex Machina in itself, but I researched that later and discovered that people take in information all the time - using every sense. And it turns out that those good old five senses are just a fraction of what we can do. There’s even the grudging acceptance of proprioception amongst the scientific community – the sense of knowing where you are, how you’re oriented and where things are around you.

“Without realising it, we pick up on micro-expressions lasting only 1/25th of a second. We understand the slightest tonal variations in people’s speech. And we read body language almost effortlessly. And we do all that so easily, that when people can’t do it as well as we can, we feel just a little uncomfortable around them.”

“What like being around spastics?”

“Jesus, Sean. I meant autism. Shut the fuck up! You go too far sometimes, and you do it just to piss me off. I hate that.”

“And I hate when you go into lecture mode,” Sean commented.

“Then fuck you and the horse you rode in on, Tonto,” was my witty and eloquent comeback.

Sean gave a bark of laughter. “Tonto goes up to the Lone Ranger: ‘Kimo Sabe, I’ve scouted the area and we’re completely surrounded by ten thousand red Indians, all ready and anxious to swoop in for the kill.’ Lone Ranger says, ‘Tonto, what are we going to do?’ Tonto says, “What do you mean, ‘we’, white man?’”

We both chuckled at the ancient classic.

“Okay, I’ll try not to lecture,” I said with a shrug. “But I didn’t just magically know she was heading off to cheat on me. Basically, she’d told me – loud and clear – exactly what she was going to do, although only to my subconscious. Her voice, actions, reactions, facial expressions, even her scent – they all gave it away. And my mind picked up all those clues that she was broadcasting and started to string them together. The plane taking off was just the final part of the puzzle – and ping ... there it was in my conscious mind. It was as if different departments of a police force had all sent their reports in to headquarters, and the cop in charge had read them and simply put them all together to reach a conclusion.”

“Hmm. Turns out that guy reached the right one,” said Sean. “Cheating bitch.”

I sighed deeply. “Yeah. I was getting reports phoned in from the investigators every evening even while she and the Asswipe were screwing in her room. Fuck, that was so depressing. They were walking around the city holding hands and hugging and kissing like they were on honeymoon without a care in the world, while I was at home working, looking after the kids and holding down the fort. Afterwards, I worked out from timings on my phone and in the written reports, that she’d actually called me to tell me how much she loved and missed me, while they were in bed together. Who does that? Fuck!”

That knowledge still upset me. Sean didn’t mind me having a rant. He was my go-to when rant-time happened.

“That’s why I phoned that escort agen-” I broke off. I hadn’t told him about that before.

“You fucking dog!” he said, admiration in his voice. He sat up and leaned forward. “You got yourself a hooker? How come I never heard about that before?”

I snorted. “Actually it was a pair of hookers. And I wasn’t proud of it, believe me. Which is why I haven’t told anyone.”

“Details!” he demanded.

I couldn’t help shaking my head and smiling at his avid interest. “I’d got my folks to take the kids for a few days while all that shit was going down. And while I was sitting drinking whisky on my own to try and dull the pain, the idea just popped into my head. I didn’t even think about it. I just grabbed the newspaper, found the number of an agency and made the call.

 
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