"So?" Tonya prompted. "You need to get laid, and there's a fantasy right there on offer. You're over Trent, yes? Talk about kicking off your new lease of life in style. Back in the game with a boom!"
Was I over Trent? Yes. Yes, I was. Definitely.
"I'm going now," I said. "Before you talk me into something I shouldn't even be thinking about."
"So you are thinking about it?" Her laugh was infectious. "Go. Get the bodywand out, weigh it up a little."
I did just that.
The weather was a piece of shit, so I took the girls back to mine. Mia was on usual form, disappearing off into their room to catch up with Daisy on Skype. She was never off the thing. There was only one thing Ruby was rooting for, I could read her a mile off. She sat herself on the sofa and stared at the blank TV with a grin on her face.
"Top Gear?" I said, and she punched the air.
I fired up the re-runs and put the kettle on, delivered Mia a cup of tea to her room before I settled down on the sofa with Ruby. She sat like I did, a foot casually tossed over her knee, her mug in one hand, fingers splayed just like mine. It made me smile.
We made the same scoffing sounds in the same places, ridiculed the driving in the same places, and nodded in appreciation in the exact same places. Genetics, or learned, I didn't know and didn't care. I ruffled her hair and she smiled her toothy grin up at me and it gave me that warm feeling inside.
"I'll be nipping to the yard later, thought maybe I'd let you and Mia have a practice in the truck."
Ruby's eyes were like saucers. "Driving?! Really?!"
"Half driving, nothing crazy. Don't want your mum freaking out, do we?"
She shook her head, smiling from ear to ear.
I gestured to the rain outside the window. "Just wait until this crap passes, it's supposed to brighten up later."
We turned our attention back to the TV, and Clarkson took a flash Audi convertible for a spin through some mountain tracks. I watched Ruby's face as he took the winding roads at speed, the starkness of the landscape looking really fucking awesome. She was absolutely transfixed.
"What do you make of that?" I asked.
"Cool," she said. "Epic cool."
They did the round-up of the car, bigging up its awesome handling, the flashiness of the optional extras. Then they called it a chick magnet. A sure-fire way to land the ladies.
Ruby pulled a face, stared up at me with eyes full of questions.
"What?" I said.
She paused, just stared. "Is that what your truck is?" she said. "A chick magnet? Is that why all the ladies want to … "
I raised an eyebrow. "Want to what?" She shook her head, but I called her on it. "Come on, Rubes. Spit it out."
She shrugged. "Mia told me not to say anything."
"And I'm telling you to spit it out."
"It's the kids at school," she began. "They say you like … they say you're a gigolo. What's a gigolo, Dad? Are you really one?"
Shit. My stomach dropped.
"What do you think a gigolo is, Rubes?"
She shrugged again. "I think it means kissing, like kissing lots of people … " She stared at her mug. "And the other stuff … the icky stuff … more than kissing … "
I didn't know whether to laugh or cry.
She sipped her tea. "They say you're doing the icky stuff with all the ladies in the village." Finally, she looked at me. "Are you doing that, Dad? Are you doing the icky stuff with all the ladies in the village?"
I opted for honesty. I find it's usually the best way. Well, honesty within reason – she's eight-years old.
"No," I said. "I'm not doing the icky stuff with all the ladies in the village. I made a mistake and may have done some icky stuff with one of them, because I'm a stupid prick sometimes. I'm sorry about that, Rubes."
She pulled a face. "Mandy Taylor."
Shit. Playground gossip knew no fucking bounds.
"I'm not doing any icky stuff with ladies in the village, Rubes, especially not Mandy Taylor. Not even any kissing."
"Pinky promise?" she asked, and held up her little finger. "I don't like Mandy Taylor. She smiles funny and I don't like the way she laughs. I don't want her to be my step-mum."
Jesus! I hooked her finger with mine. "Pinky promise, Ruby. No women in the village, and Mandy Taylor will never ever be your step-mum."
I thought that might be the end of it, but blue eyes stared into mine, her smile dulling just a little. "If you want to kiss people and all that other stuff, why don't you kiss Mum? She looks really pretty now with her new hair and everything, and she has nice clothes! She looks like a princess!"
Awkward question of the year award goes to Ruby Trent.
"Your mum is very beautiful, Rubes, whether she's got new hair and nice clothes or not. She always looks like a princess. But we're just friends."
Her face dropped and I felt it, it fucking hurt.
"But just-friends could kiss each other couldn't they? If they both wanted to? If she looks like a princess then why don't you want to kiss her?"
I sighed. "Oh, Rubes, it's not that simple. Adult stuff isn't ever that simple."
She looked away from me, back at the TV.
I tried to make light of it. "Your mum wouldn't even want to kiss me, Rubes. Princesses only kiss frogs in fairy tales, not in real life."
She laughed at that. "You're not a frog!"
"I am so a frog," I said, and did a slurpy face, made a frog croak. "Anyway, what's your issue with frogs, hey? Are you some kind of bloody froggist? You know what happens to froggists around here?" I took her mug from her and put it on the floor, and then I grabbed her, tickled her until she squealed and giggled and squirmed in my arms. I let her go, gave her a few seconds head start before I chased her, and Mia appeared in the hallway, grumpy-faced at the noise interruption until she dropped her cool front enough to laugh. She looked so old these days, all grown up at high school. Too old for this kind of shit, and that was sad, I missed it.
"Dad's a frog!" Ruby squealed. "And he's coming to get us! Run! Run, Mia!"
And to my surprise Mia did run, squealing and laughing and pulling her sister along with her as I ribbited down the hallway after them.
I'd stashed all my new undies safely at the back of the drawer long before Darren dropped the kids back on Sunday. They arrived after teatime, and as usual they looked bloody exhausted, Ruby's hair all fluffed up like she'd been dragged through a hedge backwards. Still, as long as they were happy.
They gave me a quick kiss before they went to dump their things upstairs, leaving me standing in the doorway with Darren, feeling more than slightly uncomfortable given the amount of the weekend I'd spent imagining getting down and dirty with him and four of his filthy friends.
He didn't seem to pick up on it, and if he did, he certainly didn't say anything.
Part of me wanted to just to blurt it out and get it over with, drop in a casual how do I book in? before the girls were even back down the stairs. But I didn't. Of course I didn't.
Darren leaned in and looked beyond me. My skin prickled while he made sure the coast was clear. I wondered what he was about to say, my heart soaring with ridiculous notions.
It was none of them, of course.
"There's been gossip, at school," he told me, his voice low. I'd feared it would crop up at some point, and let out a sigh. "It's alright," he said. "I've talked through things with the girls."
"What did they know?"
He took his cigarettes from his pocket, stepped back on the porch to light one up. I stepped out after him, pulled the door closed behind.
"Ruby asked me what a gigolo was, then asked me how come I was doing the icky stuff with everyone in the village."
"Oh my God, Darren," I groaned. "What did you say?"
He shrugged. "I told her the truth, that I'd done the icky stuff with Mandy Taylor but it was a mistake. Told her I wasn't going to be kissing anyone else in the village."
"But you … " I pulled a face, completely unsure where this kind of stuff landed amongst best parenting practice. "I mean, I know you can't tell the truth, but to lie … "
His eyes narrowed. "Who's fucking lying?"
"Well, aren't you..?" I shook my head. "Never mind, sorry. I don't know. It's none of my business. Just as long as the girls are ok."
He took a drag. "Ruby didn't know about the money, neither of the girls did. That's a saving grace, at least."