The Times Magazine - UK (2022-05-28)

(Antfer) #1
TOM JACKSON

Nicola and I snatched a few days in France
not long ago. The phrase “holiday home” is
increasingly becoming a misnomer in the case
of our place in the Lot, the trip consisting of the
now customary dawn to dusk hard horticultural
labour. Weeding. Sweeping. Pruning. Raking.
Digging out ditches after minor mudslides.
And so forth. Although I did compensate with
steak and chips four nights in a row.
We did find time to visit some new friends


  • Bob and Scotty the firemen, plus Rob the
    copper. Top blokes all of them. Bob has a house
    not far from ours; Scotty and Rob were visiting
    for a boys’ weekend. We played table tennis

  • somehow I wasn’t surprised that firefighters
    and police officers can boast a pretty high
    standard of ping-pong. I held my own.
    We used to do the extra luggage, priority
    boarding, allocated seats, “We’re middle class,
    let’s pretend we’re not on Ryanair” malarkey.
    This time we – that is to say, Nicola – decided
    the extra cost and bureaucracy weren’t worth
    it so we packed light and sat separately. We
    parted on the tarmac at Stansted, Nicola
    joining the queue for the rear seats, me
    staying in the one for those up front.
    “Don’t talk to any strange men,” I said.
    Then I found my seat, buckled up and
    straight away fell asleep, very much in need of
    a post-breakfast nap. We’d had an hour in the
    Escape Lounge before the gate was called and
    those freebie sausage and bacon rolls won’t eat
    themselves, you know.
    Next thing I know we’re in the line for
    customs at Bergerac and Nicola is telling
    me all about this nice fireman, Scotty, she’d
    sat next to on the plane. How he was really
    friendly and they’d swapped numbers and,
    oh look, there he is a few places back. Smiles
    and waves are exchanged.
    “So you made friends with a fireman?”
    I asked. “Yes.” “A fireman?” “Yes.” “Great. I
    suppose he’s coming over to shoot a topless
    calendar or something, right? Hunk of the
    month? Take a look at my massive hose, that
    kind of thing?” “Hah hah.”
    On the drive to our house, Nicola told me
    that she – and Scotty – had lucked out with
    their seats, positioned in that row of just two
    next to the emergency exit with extra legroom.
    Extra legroom Nicola does not, frankly, at
    5ft 1in, require. This is the woman who used
    to love visiting Japan when she worked in the
    City, partly because when she sat on a train for
    once her feet would actually touch the floor.
    Usually they’re dangling about in mid-air.


It also emerged that nice Scotty, on
discovering his neighbour’s husband was
elsewhere on the plane (and, what’s more, that
he, ie me, was at that very moment squashed


  • albeit in a comatose state – in a middle seat)
    had kindly offered to swap so Nicola and
    I could sit together. With extra legroom.
    “But I told him you’d be fine,” said Nicola
    airily. Harumph, I said. Or something similar.
    The next day, after a series of Scotty-
    Nicola-Scotty texts, we drove over to meet the
    guys. “So where exactly do Pugh Pugh Barney
    Mcf***ing Grew live?” I asked grumpily on the
    way. Not very grown-up, eh?
    Then again, a little old-fashioned jealousy is
    probably a sign of good health in a long-term
    relationship. Although to be accurate, the
    jealousy in our particular long-term relationship
    is entirely one-way. I get jealous; Nicola doesn’t.
    She has never been in the slightest bit
    possessive. This worries me on occasion, her
    sweet reasonableness about past girlfriends,
    office crushes and celebrity lust objects
    often striking me as perilously close to total
    indifference. When I once asked her if my
    sleeping with the relevant local government
    clerk could result in our climbing the list for a
    beach hut in Kent, would she mind, she said if
    I could get a name, she’d fluff up the pillows
    and turn down the bed.
    I’m the opposite. At various times over our
    32 years together, and before that (not always
    without good reason) when I was pursuing
    her from the cold wastelands of what is now
    called the friend zone, I have fretted about:
    handsome lairy lads in the year above us
    at school; chisel-jawed public schoolboys;
    silver-tongued Irish charmers and plausibly
    soulful Latins parading around the
    Mediterranean basin in the early to mid-
    Eighties. The usual suspects, in other words.
    In more recent years, as Nicola’s priorities
    have matured, the focus of my romantic
    anxieties has shifted towards capable, reliable
    blokes, specifically those with the practical
    skills I lack. Obviously, it’s worse when
    they’re good-looking – a twinkly-eyed
    plasterer called Lee gave me cause for concern
    for a while – but nowadays in my darker
    moments I worry Nicola will trade me in for
    any halfway presentable chap with a decent
    set of City & Guilds.
    Not that she would. But if she did, I’m not
    entirely sure I’d blame her. n


[email protected]

‘I used to get jealous


of handsome lairy


lads; now I worry my


wife will trade me in


for the plasterer’


Beta male


Robert Crampton


© Times Newspapers Ltd, 2022. Published and licensed by Times Newspapers Ltd, 1 London Bridge Street, London SE1 9GF (020 7782 5000). Printed by Prinovis UK Ltd, Liverpool. Not to be sold separately.*
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