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She shook her head. ‘Please don’t embarrass us both with more lies.’

‘I mean it. Isn’t there a way through this? In sickness and in health, for better, for worse and all that.’

She laughed again. The same harsh bark. Her cynicism pinched; he didn’t like it about her. He liked her being sweet, compliant, malleable. This sarcasm and distrust reminded him of his relationship with Becky. The sun dipped behind a cloud; the world seemed a little darker.

‘Look, I know what I did was wrong,’ he began. She raised her eyebrows, widened her eyes. ‘Dreadful. I admit it. But I was desperate. An idiot. And in the end, I chose you. I didn’t have to tell the police about the footage I found of Becky going into the garage. I could have let you go to prison, I could have got control of your money and lived happily ever after with her.’

‘Not if what I heard in the trial can be believed. The woman is damaged. The best you could have hoped for is unhappily ever after,’ Emma commented drily.

Matthew smiled at the humour and the truth of the observation. Emma didn’t. ‘I knew that it was unlikely you’d think well of me after everything I’d done, once it came out, but I had to risk it because I couldn’t let you suffer any more. I hoped, ultimately, that you’d forgive me. Please give me a second chance. Pretend we’ve just met.’

‘You do like to pretend.’

‘That’s not what I mean. We could start again, a clean slate.’

Emma looked confused as she studied him carefully. ‘You married me for my money.’

‘No, it was more than that. You don’t have to believe me, but—’

‘I don’t.’

‘It’s true.’

‘Do you know, one night I added up the lies you’d told me. I started with your marital status, your nationality, your family structure, your living arrangements, and then I moved on to the more emotional things – “I’m a straightforward sort of guy”, “What you see is what you get”. I got to a hundred and seven and then gave up.’

‘That doesn’t seem very constructive.’

‘That much we can agree on.’

He wanted her to fall into his arms. He wanted her to invite him back to Woodview. They could be OK. He was sure of it. They had been so happy. He wasn’t pretending when they’d shared those cosy evenings, good food, wine and conversation. He’d been very comfortable, very content. But the expression on her face suggested she wasn’t going to do what he wanted.

‘You’re one of those arseholes who believes there’s such a thing as “your truth”. There isn’t, Matthew. There are just facts. I don’t care that you “chose” me. I’m not interested in us having a second chance or a clean slate. I’m divorcing you.’ Her demeanour changed in front of him. No longer shrivelled, but far from blooming. Now she appeared like vigorous climbing ivy, reaching and robust. ‘I’m not going to let this ruin my life or shape anything going forward. Do you understand that? You will not have an impact on me. This past year and a half isn’t going to define me or ruin me. I’m just going to carry on being who I was, but without you. I’m not the first stupid woman to fall for a financial romantic scam and I won’t be the last. I’m not ashamed and nor should I be. You should be.’ He could see her chest rising and falling, and he imagined the adrenalin coursing through her body. She obviously felt strong and complete. He felt weak and frayed.

‘I am ashamed.’ He held his arms wide, trying to convey a sense of offering himself up to her judgement. ‘We were desperate. We were broke and living in such degradation—’

She cut across him. ‘Read this number.’ She handed him a piece of paper with a seven-figure number written on it.

‘What is this?’

‘I’m divorcing you, and this is the amount I’m going to settle on you.’

‘It’s … What? It’s more than—’

She didn’t let him finish, making the point, he had nothing to say that could be of interest to her. ‘This scam of yours turned me into some sort of sad case who had effectively paid for your company. I was ashamed of that at first. Then I thought about it and decided it wasn’t my problem that you decided to be someone who could be bought and sold. For you, our relationship was simply transactional. By definitively and explicitly paying you for your services, I’ll be able to view it in the same way. Take this settlement. I never want to see you again. Ever. I never want to hear from you. Don’t so much as like a post on my socials. Goodbye, Matthew.’

She turned away from him and walked down the street. Head held high, posture ramrod. He watched her flag down a cab. He watched the cab until it disappeared into the distance. A tiny dot.

He couldn’t believe his luck.



48

Eighteen months later

Becky

When I arrived, the other women said I’d get used to it; used to the total lack of everything worthwhile – space, privacy, choice, opportunity. News flash, I already was used to it. Being in prison is a lot like being in care. I was familiar with the overly controlled structure, the smells of too many careless bodies in one place and the dissatisfaction of mass catering. I was well acquainted with the lack of hope and the intermittent bouts of overpowering rage brought on by the debilitating unfairness that this was where I’d landed. This was where I’d been put.

I was already used to enduring too. Waiting things out. Sometimes I acknowledge to myself that prison is at least warmer and cleaner than the Old Schoolhouse. I am fed. It’s rent-free. Maybe it is the worst, maybe it’s not. I don’t know. I try not to let myself think about that because I haven’t got a choice anyway. I just have to do the time.

Prison is the very embodiment of time-wasting. That is the point of the punishment. The system absorbs life’s most precious commodity. I loathe time-wasting. I am being cheated. In this place nothing can make time go faster or create the illusion that it is being usefully spent. Not the poxy education classes that are an insult to my intelligence, not the lousy food, certainly not the incessant and mind-numbing imbecilic conversation. Not even the fear. I shouldn’t be here. This place is for murderers, paedophiles, terrorists. I should be on the outside doing community service, like he is. I did not physically hurt Emma Westly. I did not plan to kill her. All I did was plan for her to be institutionalised rather than me. I just wanted to even things up a bit. It was my turn to live in the posh house. When I tell my cellmate that I shouldn’t be here, that I didn’t do what they’d sent me down for, she laughed. ‘Right. There are five hundred and sixty-nine other innocent prisoners in this place. Not one of us did the crime, bitch.’

They divide up our days into neat parcels that are designed to give the impression we have a purpose, or if that is overstating it, then at least we have routine. At 7.30 a.m., the cells are unlocked. We’re given breakfast. Obviously no one asks how we’d like our eggs; we eat what we’re given. It’s cheap and tasteless, I doubt the nutritional value. We queue to shower, stretch, shit. It’s a communal shower. I feel eyes on me constantly. I’m very used to women envying my body, resenting it and adoring it at the same time. On the outside, I used to like to linger in admiring gazes, I used to feel shored up by other women’s umbrage or approval. In here I shower as quickly as possible, dress with my back to their prying looks. Being resented or admired can lead to trouble.

We start work at 9 a.m. A lot of the jobs are menial, by which I mean many of the women do whatever work they did before they landed here in prison: cook, clean, serve. The aim seems to be to keep hands busy, self-esteem low. Because I have nice hair, I was put to work in the beauty salon; this is considered a good gig. It’s OK except the shampoo is cheap and my hands are chapped as they are always in and out of water. Working is classed as a purposeful activity. Other purposeful activities include library time, exercise and lessons, which all happen after communal lunch. I’m learning French. Pourquoi pas, putain?

Everything anybody wants to do – from buying deodorant to sending an email to visiting the art class – must be requested, conferred, arranged. Filling out paperwork is essential, and waiting for a response is an exercise in extreme patience. It’s made very clear that everything that is granted can be retracted. But that’s not just true in prison, and you’re a fucking idiot if you believe it is. After dinner, but before 8.30 p.m. lights-out, there is a period they call association time. This was when the inmates get forced to socialise, like it’s good for us. It isn’t. During association, contraband alcohol, ciggies and drugs are passed from one prisoner to the next. So are rumours, insults and threats. No one sleeps well in here, despite the early lights-out situation.

Admittedly, it is not a taxing regime, but it is far from stimulating. The interesting inmates are dangerous, the nonthreatening ones are stupid. Oh my God, the constant inane drivel that I endure. Some of the women just never shut up. Never. Even in their sleep they mutter relentlessly. I think it’s to prove subconsciously that they are still a presence, a force; you know, still being, even if they are only proving this to themselves. Truly, they talk nothing but crap, and I say that as someone who has spent hours with models. Crap about TV (it’s too loud, too quiet, they’ve seen this show before so are bored, they’ve never seen it before so don’t understand it), their families (they miss them, they hate them, the families are visiting them or ignoring them), the guards (fucking pervs or easily persuaded), the food (too hot, too cold, tastes like shit, not enough), the clouds (they look like rabbits or it looks like rain), their crime (they didn’t do it, or they did worse and got away with it), their pimps (fuckers or salt of the earth) or their boyfriends (fuckers or fucking gods). It doesn’t matter what they talk about, they talk crap. I stay silent as much as I can. This has earned me a reputation for being a stuck-up bitch, but I don’t care. I don’t care what these people think of me. I think nothing of them. I’m not looking for friends or companionship. I’m not looking for allies or enemies. I’d rather everyone ignored me. I’d like to disappear. I’m just looking for the end.

Days tugged into weeks, hauled into months. I passed my first-year anniversary here, for want of a better word. No one baked a cake. More days, more weeks, more months. A guard assaulted me. I reported it and he was moved to another block. A win for me, not so much for the women in C block. A prisoner assaulted me. I didn’t report it. I held her head in the basin and scalded her next time she visited the salon. There was an inquiry. I maintained it was an accident, that I didn’t know how hot the tap was running. In fact, I had added sugar as the water flowed over her forehead; it increases heat capacity. I got to keep my job in the hairdresser’s, but the thermostat had to be adjusted; inmates have had to get used to cold washes when they come for a wash and blow-dry. People left me alone after that.

I knew he was coming in advance of his visit. There is no chance of a cheery surprise drop-in because the OK on visitors is like everything else in this place: an elaborate process that requires requests, permission granted or denied, admin and vetting. When he first wrote to me requesting a visit, I considered just ignoring him. What was the point? What did we have to say to one another? He was victorious. He was on the outside. I was on the inside. He’d outsmarted me. That stung, it really did, because he isn’t as clever as I am. Least, that’s what I’ve always thought. If he’s cleverer than I am, then I must be really bloody stupid.

I guess I’m really bloody stupid.

In the end, boredom won and I agreed to his visit as I literally had nothing better to do. I was curious about what he could possibly want to say to me. Whatever it was, it had to be more interesting than listening to endless discussions about tattoo designs or squabbling about whether trading a Kit Kat for three tea bags is fair or not. I wanted to know what had made him crawl out of the woodwork.

In preparation for his visit, I washed my hair and painted my nails. Not to make myself attractive for him. No, but to show him I am still standing. The moment before the guards let me into the visitors’ room, I nervously sniff under my arms and breathe into my hand.

Are sens

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