Jemma Forte

If You're Not The One


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TUNNEL NUMBER TWO

       WEDNESDAY

       THE PAST—MAX

       WEDNESDAY CONTINUED

       THE PAST—STEVE

       PRESENT DAY

       TUNNEL NUMBER ONE

       THURSDAY

       THE PAST—STEVE

       PRESENT DAY

       TUNNEL NUMBER TWO

       TUNNEL NUMBER TWO

       TUNNEL NUMBER TWO

       PRESENT DAY

       THE PAST—MAX

       FRIDAY MORNING—THE DAY OF THE ACCIDENT

       PRESENT DAY

       TUNNEL NUMBER THREE

       TUNNEL NUMBER THREE

       PRESENT DAY

       TUNNEL NUMBER THREE

       PRESENT DAY

       TUNNEL NUMBER THREE

       FRIDAY—THE DAY OF THE ACCIDENT

       PRESENT DAY

       EPILOGUE

       Author Q&A

       Extract

       Copyright

       PROLOGUE

       Friday May 18th

      Jennifer Wright slammed the door and ran down the road as fast as her ill-fitting footwear would allow her to, tears blurring her vision. She didn’t care who saw her. All she was conscious of was her need to get away from her husband and his ability to hurt her. Not that he was letting her get away that easily.

      ‘Jen,’ Max yelled down the road, clearly in no mood to consider what the neighbours might be thinking. ‘What the hell do you think you’re doing? Come back. For goodness sake, you’ve made your point.’

      Jennifer ignored him. If anything, she picked up the pace, wishing it was dark so her flit could go unnoticed. She’d always loved living in the suburbs of South West London partly because everybody looked out for everybody else. Today however, it would have suited her far better if she’d lived in a place where people didn’t give a damn about their neighbours. That way she could have wailed like a banshee and charged down the road without worrying she’d provided the man on the other side of the street (the dull husband of the quite nice woman at number forty-two) with a juicy bit of gossip.

      She’d caught his look of alarm as he’d taken in her tear-stained face and heavy coat, which was far too warm for this unusually clement May evening. Not that there was any way she was taking it off, for what Jennifer knew, but the man from number forty-two didn’t, was that all she had on underneath was a bra, a G-string, suspenders and stockings. The killer heels she’d originally teamed the whole ensemble with had been kicked off mid-argument, replaced by the footwear that happened to be nearest the front door, a revolting pair of lace-ups, usually reserved purely for gardening purposes. Without woolly socks, her stockinged feet were slopping about inside them.

      Panting with exertion, Jennifer finally came to the end of the street. Briefly she turned round to see what Max was doing. She could just about still make him out, hanging out of their front door, obviously in two minds about what to do given that their children were sleeping inside.

      Screw him.

      Karen.

      That’s who she needed.

      Fumbling in her pocket with shaky hands, Jennifer found her mobile which she’d had the sense to grab on her way out.

      Half walking, half running now, she rounded the corner onto the busy main road and scrolled through her phone looking for her best friend’s number. Wiping her face with the back of her hand she managed to rub away some tears but was surprised by how persistently they kept on coming. Briefly she acknowledged that there was a huge possibility she was having a nervous breakdown.

      As she headed for the zebra crossing she listened to Karen’s phone ringing and prayed she’d pick up. She did.

      ‘Oh Karen,’ Jennifer managed, speaking loudly against the traffic, choking on tears again.

      ‘Oh my god, what is it? What’s wrong?’

      The concern in her voice almost floored Jennifer for a second. Thank god Karen’s house was only ten minutes away. She couldn’t get there soon enough. If only she’d chosen a less hot coat.

      ‘Oh Karen, it’s all gone wrong and I just don’t think I can do this any more…’ Jennifer broke off, half stumbling over an uneven bit of pavement. Wretched shoes. Then a bus whizzed past just as Karen was answering. It completely drowned out her response which forced Jennifer to say, ‘Come again Karen, I couldn’t hear you.’

      ‘I said where are you? Do you want to come round?’

      ‘Yes please,’ Jennifer wailed, putting one foot out onto the road.

      ‘Good,’ said Karen ‘Well just come straight away and I’ll open a…’

      But Jennifer never got to hear what her friend was going to open (though forced to guess she would have gone with a textbook bottle of dry white wine), because at this point her phone was flying high up into the air and she was staring at it aghast, wondering why everything had suddenly gone into slow motion. At the same time, although she didn’t exactly feel it, she was also aware of the most enormous impact, of the most sickening crunching sound and of the metallic taste of fear, dread and regret coursing through her body which was now being flung skywards having been hit very hard by a car. For a brief moment, just as gravity was about to take command and begin Jennifer’s terrifying and brutal descent towards the hard ground and the bonnet of a Ford Fiesta, she was filled with an illogical, yet undeniable sense of embarrassment. For the thought entering her brain at that precise moment was that there was a strong chance that whoever was driving and/or an ambulance