Jessica Hepburn

21 Miles


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happy ending. I know I didn’t manage it by the end of the book but I was at least hoping that by the time it came out I’d be able to announce I was pregnant. It would have made a perfect real-life epilogue.’

      A month earlier, just before my forty-third birthday, we had undergone another round of IVF. As usual, everything seemed to go well. Three high-quality embryos that had been fertilised ‘in vitro’ were put back into my womb, and we were due to find out whether I had got pregnant just before my birthday. Talk about timing: my book about our long struggle to conceive is due to come out in the new year, and it ends with me saying that I am going to continue trying for a baby until I reach the age of forty-three. This is based on the philosophy of a good friend of mine from university who’d once said to me: ‘It’s all about the number forty-three. If you haven’t had a baby by then, you can get on with the rest of your life.’ It had become my mantra, and on the eve of said birthday it felt like we had been cast in our very own version of The Truman Show and someone somewhere had decided to give us the most climactic happy ending. I was convinced it would be twins. I could do twins. I could even do triplets. But the cycle was negative. All we added to our family was another fifteen grand of debt and disappointment.

      I pick up my glass and take another sip of Negroni.

      ‘Let’s face it,’ I say, ‘there’s basically no chance of Julia Roberts playing me now. Who would adapt a book into a film about a woman who desperately wants a baby, does everything possible to get one, and fails?’

      ‘Isn’t she a bit old?’

      ‘Who?’

      ‘Julia Roberts.’

      ‘No. Celebrities are the only people who are never too old to have babies.’

      Our crab on toast arrives. Peter does his usual, picking off the meat and leaving the bread. It’s such a waste, but with lamb for three (plus potatoes) on the way, eating his toast would be, well, greedy.

      ‘So while we’re working out what to do next, why don’t you focus on all the incredible women who didn’t have children?’ Peter says. ‘You know, like Virginia Woolf, Frida Kahlo …’

      He’s doing that optimist thing again.

      ‘Virginia Woolf killed herself, remember,’ I say.

      ‘A minor detail. The important thing to remember is that history is full of women who didn’t have children and no one thinks about whether they were mothers or not. We think about what else they did in their lives.’

      ‘I’m not sure about that,’ I reply, ‘but it is true that if I can’t be a mother I’m going to have to do something big instead. Something really impressive.’

      Peter sighs. ‘That’s not what I meant. You don’t need to try and become the next Virginia Woolf or Frida Kahlo if you don’t have a baby. Why don’t you just start by planning the other things you want to do in your life – like that trip you’ve always wanted to take on the Trans-Siberian Railway, something like that.’ He pushes his plate away, toast untouched. ‘God, I wish I’d never mentioned them now.’

      ‘Trans-Mongolian,’ I say pointedly.

      ‘Pardon?’

      ‘Trans-Mongolian Railway I want to go from Moscow to Beijing, not Vladivostok.’

      ‘Well, Trans-whatever-it-is. What I mean is you don’t need to change the world just because you can’t have a baby.’

      ‘So what’s the point of being here then? If you don’t have children and your only purpose is to serve the economy and maybe have a bit of fun from time to time, is it really worth it? Unless you do something Big.’

      He gives me a weary look as the waiter comes over to take our plates.

      ‘I’ve always fancied becoming prime minister,’ I say, pouring us each a glass of wine. ‘PM Hepburn, that would be pretty cool.’

      ‘But you don’t know anything about politics. You didn’t even vote in the last election.’

      ‘Yeah, well, that’s because I don’t know whose side I’m on any more. Maybe I could be an independent. There are definitely a few things I’d like to campaign for: three-day weekends, free public transport, the death of Starbucks …’

      Peter laughs.

      ‘I hate that word. I wish you wouldn’t use it.’

      ‘What word?’

      ‘Infertile. You’re not infertile, you’ve been pregnant lots of times.’

      ‘I’m not sure it counts if you don’t end up with a baby.’

      ‘Well, I’m sure you’ll think of something.’

      I’m thinking as our main course arrives.

      ‘Maybe I could write another book?’

      ‘What about?’ Peter says as he starts to dish out the lamb onto our plates, well practised in putting more on mine than his own.

      ‘About what happens next. A bit like the “Katy” series?’ I say. ‘You know, What Katy Did; What Katy Did Next – the books by Susan Coolidge? Didn’t you read them?’

      ‘I’m a boy. Boys don’t read books about Katy.’

      ‘Oh yeah, they prefer pictures of Katie Price.’

      He gives me a look of disdain. I take two potatoes and push the bowl towards him but he ignores it.

      ‘So, that’s it,’ he says. ‘Write a book about What Jessica Did Next. Maybe she can even go to Beijing …’ he says. ‘But here’s the deal: this book. I’m not in.’

      ‘What do you mean?’ I say, picking up my fork.

      ‘I mean what I just said, I don’t want to be in it.’

      ‘You’ve got to be in it. Otherwise people will wonder what’s happened to you. You can’t just disappear.’

      ‘Yes, I can.’

      ‘But everyone that’s read a proof of my book says you come across as a really nice guy. That’s the beauty of fiction.’

      ‘I am a nice guy. Your book isn’t fiction. It’s non-fiction. It’s about our life.’

      ‘Yeah, well you can’t say that and then say that scene I wrote where we had a row is embellished.’

      ‘Well, it was.’

      ‘Well, maybe that’s the thing about reality. It’s subjective. You think that row is embellished. I don’t. I chose to write you as a nice guy. It doesn’t necessarily mean you are one.’

      Peter looks at me. ‘Either way, I still don’t want to be in it. I agreed to be in your first book because you needed to write it. But that’s it. In book terms, we’re getting a divorce.’

      I’m quiet for a few moments.

      ‘OK, I get you. How about a dessert instead, then? They’ve got Christmas pudding ice cream on the menu. If we’re going to get a divorce, surely you can’t deny me a scoop of ice cream?’

      Notes