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Home No More (part 3) - final version

by Iain MacLeod 

Posted: 16 March 2006
Word Count: 2535
Summary: Well, it's finally complete and this is the revised, edited and streamlined(ish) version. I hope you all find something in there to like.
Related Works: Battle • Find Me • Highland • Home No More (Part 1) - final version • Home No More (part 2) - final version • Home No More (part 4) - final version • Home No More (part 5) - final version • Home No More (Part 6) - final version • Lighthouse • No More Sad Refrains • Stillness Becomes Me • The Agoraphobe`s Fear of the Hallway • 

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Rugby


“Shetland, eh? Why there?”

Iain groaned at the memory of his back-breaking visit north. “Oh, it’ best not to go into that, to be honest. I think of it as a necessary evil, just to make a few pennies. Though when I was away, I still wondered if she had replied.”

“Had she?”

Iain smiled to himself in the darkness, pulling the itchy blanket around his neck. “She had. I only arrived back into Aberdeen early on a Monday morning. There was a message for me, hoping that I’d got back alright and had enjoyed myself, though written in that same slightly distant tone. I replied, of course, then went to buy some food before I had another chance to sit down.”

“I take it there was another message?”

“There was indeed, saying that she was around if I wanted to catch up again. I didn’t need telling twice!”

Adam could hear the quivering excitement in his companion’s voice now. He expected to hear how these two strangers had been reunited despite the distance and the age difference between them, so all this talk of ‘complications’ baffled him slightly. Before his brain could continue to think about this, Iain began to speak again.

“It was as though we’d started where we left off from that night in July, as if we’d never been away. It was that natural. I don’t know what I was expecting at that point, other than to enjoy chatting to such a wonderful, kind and funny person as Frida. We kept in touch, chatting long hours, for a whole week. Each time we said goodbye at the end of each day I ended up sitting quietly for a while, looking out over Aberdeen.

“It’s not much of a view, is it?”

Both men laughed, when there was a knock on the door. Since he was on the bottom bunk, Adam flicked the catch on the door and allowing the guard to poke his head inside.

“Tea or coffee when we arrive, lads?”

Iain asked for tea, and Adam told the guard that he was getting off at Carlisle. The guard nodded, scribbled something onto a mangy notebook and moved onto the next cabin.

“Have you ever used the sleeper before, Iain?”

“First time, I’m afraid. There have been a lot of firsts recently…”

Adam chuckled. “You’re in for a rare treat in the morning, then – a free cup of scalding tea, a muffin, a croissant and some kind of muesli yoghurt thing, not to mention your free dental kit to tidy yourself up with. Don’t go wasting that inch-long piece of floss! You don’t get that kind of service on a plane, do you?”

“I can hardly wait! At least it’ll be some kind of souvenir.”

The train was slowing to a halt, somewhere near Birmingham Airport, waiting for the connecting service to bring a new set of passengers for the long journey to Scotland. Iain wondered for a moment who they might be – businessmen heading for Edinburgh, football fans returning from seeing their team’s now usual continental drubbing and needing a cheap way to get back to Glasgow, or lovers heading for a break in the Highlands. Iain sighed and when he spoke next he was quieter, as if making a confession. Adam had to strain to hear.

“There was a mutual attraction, we both just had fun talking for hours like that, and it was like someone had opened a door to somewhere I never knew existed. I remember, so clearly, trying to work away in the library one Wednesday and having an argument with myself. Part of me was doing what I always do, shying away from contact, wondering why I would want to get involved, but a little voice was screaming at me, asking me if I could throw away a chance to get to know someone very special indeed. I didn’t get much work done that day. None in fact.”

“And which side won the argument?”

Iain hauled that memory out of the recesses of this mind. “Well, it was only towards the end of our conversation one evening that I asked Frida out, for real. I nearly hadn’t said anything, but somehow I worked up the courage to ask Frida if she would like to go away somewhere for a weekend. I don’t know where it came from, because I’ve never asked anyone else that in my life.”

Adam tried to be as gentle as possible. “How did she reply?”

“After having built myself up for it like that I can’t deny I was disappointed with her answer. She told me that she liked me only as a friend although I shouldn’t take that as a rejection.”

“But you did?”

“Oh, of course I did. I cursed myself. I thought I’d made myself look like a fool, and perhaps had ruined what was becoming a good friendship.” Adam could hear Iain’s fingers drumming on the wall. “You should know that there were a few things that she said that didn’t make sense at the time. I suppose my pessimistic side thought that she was going to gradually disappear, but she didn’t. Later in the evening she wrote again to say that if things were different she would have gone away with me. I was a bit confused at the time, but I understand now.”

“Now?”

Iain sighed heavily. “That evening Frida sent me a long email. It read like a confession and I think for her it was. I have no idea how hard it must have been for her to write.”

“I take it this is where it gets complicated?”

“Aye, it doesn’t get much easier from here on in. It was such a beautiful, heartfelt letter – and upset me for those reasons more than anything else. I don’t know how she could have thought I wouldn’t want to speak to her again, though I suppose I had no right to be upset, really. I was no one special.” Iain closed his eyes tightly, recalling that Saturday night when he read Frida’s message over and over again. “She told me that she was married, and had been for three years. Why was I upset? I wasn’t angry at her, that’s for sure. How could I be? I couldn’t hate her – I couldn’t hate anyone, least of all as someone as special as Frida. Strange to say, that was only the beginning when by rights it really should have been the end – we had quite an intense chat that night, and I wrote her a letter back. Emails began to be exchanged and soon afterwards we had our first phone conversation.”

Adam raised his eyebrows in the darkness as Iain’s voice tailed off. He could sense that Iain was anxiously awaiting some kind of reaction. “Married, then. I had begun to wonder when you were explaining things … which means that she is cheating. With you.” The emphasis was immediate and stung Iain. Both men remained quiet for a while, with only the predictable rattling of the tracks preventing an uncomfortable silence from settling.

“When you put it as bluntly as that, it sounds awful. And believe me, I have moments when I wonder what I’m doing, how I could even think about it and how I would feel if it happened to me. I don’t want to hurt anybody. Then I think about how I make her smile – not just a simple lusty smile, but genuine, giddy happiness – and things make a little more sense. I curse myself everyday for having met her.”

It suddenly occurred to Iain that Fate was up there somewhere, having a good laugh at his expense while giving and taking away all at once. I’ve been shown this wonderful woman, a taste and a glimpse of something I’ve never had before, but that’s it, isn’t it? Just a look, then Fate snatches it out from under me, taunting me. I can’t think of anything more cruel.

Adam could hear the tremors in his companion’s voice, thinking of how many people had attended his sessions. Nothing surprised him any more, not after the stories he had heard. Especially that one involving the plumber…. He shuddered, and erased that memory very quickly and tried to offer Iain some advice.

“Try not to judge yourself too harshly. I’ve heard far worse, but this is one fine mess you’ve got yourself into. Aside from the rights and wrongs, what would you do if she told you tomorrow that she is leaving her husband to be with you?”

Iain smiled grimly. Adam had hit him there, and he closed his hands together tightly, and contemplated the question that had tormented him for weeks.



Woking

“So you broke the deal with yourself and chatted with him again?” Becky’s eagerness was obvious; she seemed desperate to find out how such an apparently strong-willed woman as Frida had succumbed to temptation. For a moment Becky felt glad that Frida had given in, and felt a brief vicarious thrill shoot through her.

“I’m afraid I did.”

“Was the relationship with your husband deteriorating?”

“No, not at all,” Frida replied. She ran a hand through her hair, ignoring the insistent ache at the back of her skull. “I honestly don’t know the reason why this, or anything else, is happening. But I can tell you that I got in touch with Iain again because I was alone.”

“As in lonely?”

“Not like that, although England can be a bit of a strange place sometimes. My husband had to go to France for a week in September, and that same day I got Iain’s email to tell me that he was back home. My juvenile mind kept telling me that this was no coincidence. I knew it was naughty and that I shouldn’t have given in, but I missed him. I missed Iain terribly. I had thought of that night in July so fondly and so often, that when the opportunity to get in touch with him came along I just couldn’t … I couldn’t say no.”

Becky gazed sympathetically at the young Spanish woman opposite her. “You don’t have to justify yourself to me, sweetheart. But why did you tell him about your marriage? Couldn’t you have kept that as a secret?”

Frida sighed deeply and found herself staring at her hands while she explained. “That’s a good question. I’d thought about it a lot during the course of the week, and while I hated myself for lying to Iain, in my mind it was still a bit of a game. Like it was my alter-ego ‘Sarah’, and not really me, who was getting to know him and flirting with him. And since Sarah was single, no one was being hurt. But finally the moment came when I realised that it wasn’t a game any more, and real feelings were beginning to emerge. For both of us.”

Frida sat back in her seat, thankful for the support of the arm-rest while she recalled that week. I felt peaceful, didn’t I? Serene. It was a true comfort having Iain around that week; he was the one who greeted me in the morning and asked how I was, and the one who wished me goodnight. It felt good, so good! I always thought I could let poor Iain go at the end of the week, and let things return to normal. But Thursday came, and then I knew … when I realised that I couldn’t stop thinking about him. And I wasn’t just Sarah who was yearning to be with him; it was me.

Frida returned her gaze to Becky. “If I didn’t tell him the truth then I could keep this image of the sexy Spaniard alive, let him go gently, and he would never find out how mean I had been. But he kept being so nice, so insistently lovely every single time we spoke, that I found it so hard to keep lying to him. And then the inevitable happened.”

“What?”

“It took him a while to get to the point, but he asked me to meet him.”

Becky took a sharp, whistling intake of breath.

“I suppose I saw it coming, but it was still a shock.”

“Was it then when you told him?”

“Almost. It was only on Saturday that I realised the game was over and I had to tell him the truth. I knew that unburdening myself could have big consequences, because I had no idea how he would react.” A faint whistling noise from Frida’s ‘phone made her jump a little, and it took her a couple of seconds to realise it was a message from the man she thought she had hurt so much. She read it, biting her trembling lip. She almost dropped it, and resumed her story only after it was safely in her pocket.

“When Iain read my letter, he didn’t get angry, didn’t hate me and didn’t call me all the names under the sun for having played with him. He didn’t even seem to get angry whereas I still don’t understand why he’s still speaking to me.”

“You must have been confused!”

“Confused? It was more surprise than anything else. I’m sure most men would have been upset and damned me to hell, but Iain didn’t. He just accepted me the way I am.”

“And that only made you want him more, right?”

“Right.”

Iain’s message made Frida stop talking at once. Thank you for everything, it had read and had brought memories of earlier that day back to her head. She tried to think of something else but failed. She thought of how vulnerable Iain had seemed that afternoon when he was lying down beside her and how she pretended that she couldn’t see one of his tears glistening in the candlelight. All the little details – the smells, the touch, the warmth – were all still so fresh. She remembered the tears and the sadness; the lament of the homeless poet they had shared; the rain thumping off the window; the sense of peace and lightness associated with that hotel room, and she couldn’t seem to understand why that feeling had to stop.

Why is this happening to me?

Becky’s warm, sweet voice stirred her again. “Judging by the fact you’re on this train, I assume that you decided to meet him after all.” Frida could only nod at first, ignoring the ache in her chest. She could imagine Iain touching her cheek, kissing her softly and making it go away. When she opened her eyes and looked back to Becky, Frida noticed that she seemed moved. They stared in silence for a few moments until Becky reached over and placed her hands around Frida’s.

“I met Iain in person for the first time last night.” She laughed quietly.

Becky grinned, clearly excited at getting to the most exciting bit of Frida’s tale. She tensed the muscles on her neck and looked at Frida with open wide eyes. She hoped with all her heart that Frida would continue with her story. She had to know everything now.






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Comments by other Members



Katerina at 15:11 on 16 March 2006  Report this post
Hi Iain,

I like the dual aspect to this, the story being told by each side makes it interesting.

I'm not sure quite where the story is going though. Once each person has told their train companion of their night together, is that going to be it? I feel that maybe there should be a bit more intrigue - maybe I need to be patient because it's all on the way?

Noticed this -
Iain hauled that memory out of the recesses of this mind.
Think you mean Rufus

I'm also a bit confused -
“I met Rufus for the first time last night.” She laughed quietly
I thought they had met before this, a while ago -
I had thought of that night in July so fondly and so often, that when the opportunity to have another experience with him came along I just couldn’t … I couldn’t say no.”
Wasn't this a meeting? Or was this the night they spoke to each other for ages?

Kat

Iain MacLeod at 15:26 on 16 March 2006  Report this post
Hello Kat,

Once more, thanks again for reading and your kind words.

I was a little worried about this part because it's more of a bridge more than anything else, and I was aware that I didn't want to lose anyone's attention over this bit, because the real intrigue is in the next few (and final pars)

Thanks for picking up on the typo, and I've addressed your final point - the night in July was when they had spoken for so long, and their first meeting is coming in the next part.

Thanks again, it's very much appreciated!

Iain

Becca at 19:15 on 18 March 2006  Report this post
Hi Iain,
I've read the three sections tonight. Getting to the nitty gritty, the sequence of events gets lost in the story, - the dialogue. It's complicated as it is written. They met online while she was in Boston. Dave goes to Shetland and they haven't yet met in person, - Frida is in Portsmouth by this time? So, there's a technical problem here with the time and place sequencing. Because the bulk of the story is about them falling in love virtually, you might be able to change the shape of the story and make things clearer by keeping their physical meeting until the end, - after all that's what Becky is interested in, and maybe Adam. Some deft editing could make it snappier and help as well with the sequencing.

I like the way both Dave and Frida find 'friends' to talk to on their separate train journeys away from each other, and the way Dave remembers inconsequential things in the first part of the story he is telling, [although, thinking about it now, I'm not sure if he had met her in reality then, or they were still online. The distinction needs to be clear, which you could do by making the technical process of being in a chatline thingy part of the story].

I found a few typos along the way:
'...far away look in her eyes suggested gave her away.'
'...any of the conversations' needs a comma.
'...seems obvious know...' --> now.
'...ad I think for her it was.'--> and.

A thought for a possible sentence structure change:
'...what the reason why this is,...--> what the reason why this, or anything else, is happening. --> lose the 'is' after 'this.'

I don't know what you feel yourself about cliche, but I think they are never helpful, like these three:
'driving the cobwebs away'
'grabbed me by the throat'
'brown eyes a man could lose himself in.' I know you could find more dramatic and original ways to express these things!

Is 'shit!' in character for Becky?

I do think the main problem here is keeping the reader right on track with exactly what happened when and where it happened. The story has the potential to keep the readers' interest, [although its length mitigates against that a little], but events have to be very clearly set out to achieve the best effect. There's dramatic tension in here, but it's not brought out to its best effect, because of the confusion about time and space sequencing.
I hope this is useful.
Becca.



Iain MacLeod at 20:48 on 19 March 2006  Report this post
Dear Becca,

Thanks again for having a look at the story and taking the time to comment, and your encouragement.

Firstly - thanks for picking out the typos and cliches - a couple always slip through the net, the swines!

I think I see what you mean about how some folk could have trouble of following track of things. The basic idea of the story is that: Rufus and Frida meet online (when they really shouldn't have done), fall for each other, and then meet in person (though I'll try not to give any more away than that). I suspect I might have over-complicated things a little, but that is deliberate, because it's not supposed to be simple :-) Trying to signpost things a bit more clearly always helps, though.

I think 'shit!' is in character for Becky; she's not as proper as she seems (at least that's the plan)

Thanks for your help, it's much appreciated, as always.

Iain


Corona at 10:45 on 23 March 2006  Report this post
Ian,

You paint it well; the love and tension between Rufus and Frida and from the two POV's. I also like the supporting cast of Adam and Becky which I feel you portray in a believable way.
It highlights a question we all ask (at some stage in life...don't we?), which is; can we love more than one person at the same time?
You also manage to feed us with snippets of information regarding the characters as the story unfolds, instead of blurting it all out in the first part of the story, which isn't easy. Very well done!
I myself, met my wife under similar circumstances, so the story hits home for me - so to speak!

A few typos and suggestions perhaps?

Adam flicked the catch on the door and allowing the guard to poke his
- which allowed?

I think I had done that first night, and chatting to her again
- I think I had already, that first night...

Rufus hauled that memory out of the recesses of this mind.
- his mind?

Adam raised his eyebrows in the darkness as Rufus’ voice tailed off.
- trailed
off?


“I honestly don’t know what the reason why this is, or anything else, is happening.
- I honestly don't know why this - or anything else, is happening?

My text suggestions are only that - suggestions...
All the best

E-

Iain MacLeod at 15:34 on 24 March 2006  Report this post
Hello Corona,

Thanks a lot for reading the story and for taking the time to send me your suggestions. I will have a look, thanks.

You know, I'm quite glad you wrote that message since you touched exactly on the intended underlying message of the story. It's not so much an 'action' story, rather the point was to capture a conflict in someone's life. I was interested in writing about what happens when you reach your 30s, finally achieving the desired stability everyone supposedly craves (partner, job, house, etc), and you suddenly realise that you have met all the expectations and targets you had set yourself in your 20s. What happens then? Are you really happy? Is it then when you can sit back, relax and enjoy life? That's what is happening to Frida - she has achieved her goals, living what she thinks is a happy life, but could be willing to sacrifice it all for something that could easily get out of hand. And then there is Rufus - equally torn (though obviously not to the same extent), wondering where this is going to take him, ready and willing to get involved, despite knowing that it's probably not going to end happily.

I realised that by making the idea of unfaithfulness the centre of the story that the characters were always going to suffer, but we'll see where it takes us.

I hope to have the next part up in the a day or two - apologies for not having replied sooner, I've been away for a couple of days and have been a bit under the weather. I'll be particularly interested to see what you think now, having read your message.

All the best, and thanks again,

Iain


GaiusCoffey at 11:31 on 05 April 2006  Report this post
Hi Iain,
Still very much enjoying the story, and based on your comments to Corona above, I am questioning what Kat said about action in part 2. I guess it depends on whether this is a short-story or a novel; as a short-story that describes a conflict and a moment in time while offering no resolution, I think it is very strong. If it were to try to develop into something more, I would err towards agreeing with Kat.
Either way, it's captivating.
Moving onto some slightly anal stuff, unlike the previous parts, this one had some lines that jarred a little:
I was falling hopelessly for her. I think I had done that first night

Had he or hadn't he?
And I wasn’t just Sarah who was yearning to be with him; it was me.

Needs rewording a wee bit, and I agree with me even while pretending to be Graham.
Becky took a sharp, whistling intake of breath. “Shit!”

I agree with Becky about the character (from what you portray), but more importantly, why is it such a surprise? It seemed like the whole conversation had been about the relationship, so even if I have misread it so that she didn't know they had met, it seems about as surprising as Douglas Adams' headlines on dolphin.
and it took her a couple of seconds

You get kudos for sharing one of my own weaknesses. I use this phrase way too much and my writing almost always benefits from just cutting it and finding a better descriptive word.
Off to part 4...
G



Iain MacLeod at 17:15 on 05 April 2006  Report this post
Hi Gaius,

Hello again! Don't worry about being anal, that always helps too. I'll have a look at tightening up those bits and getting them to make a lot more sense.

Looking back, the Becky thing does seem a bit out of place (not the swearing, but the surprise). She is sharp enough to have realised what was going on by that point, I think, so that will need to be revisited too.

"A couple of seconds"... it got through the net! I'll have to check the next two parts to make sure it doesn't turn up again... thanks for pointing it out.

And by the way, this made me laugh so hard I spat tea across my monitor screen:
Needs rewording a wee bit, and I agree with me even while pretending to be Graham.


thanks again!

Iain

<Added>

Almost forgot to add that yes, this would just be a short-story rather than a novel. You're right, it wouldn't work at greater length.

GaiusCoffey at 08:28 on 06 April 2006  Report this post
I spat tea across my monitor screen

You wanna watch that. I think it might be one of the exclusions in the Dell warranty.

Iain MacLeod at 08:38 on 06 April 2006  Report this post
I'd have a tough time explaining it away to the engineer, that's for sure.

Account Closed at 10:58 on 10 April 2006  Report this post
Hi Iain,

Again, I like the two-sides-of-the-story style, which is a fine way to unravel their relationship.

I share with some other readers doubts about where the story is heading. You obviously know but it is important that some subliminal signposts are put up for your audience, which would allow us to get into the characters more.

Personally, I still find some of the dialogue a little ponderous.

Adam chuckled. “You’re in for a rare treat in the morning, then – a free cup of scalding tea, a muffin, a croissant and some kind of muesli yoghurt thing, not to mention your free dental kit to tidy yourself up with. Don’t go wasting that inch-long piece of floss! You don’t get that kind of service on a plane, do you?”


Passages like this seem a bit drawn out to me.

But while I felt slowed down occasionally, I'm still eager to see what happens.

Best, Robin



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