We are reading Rebecca.
“Thoughts?” I am jealous that Rebecca is dead. I find that I have said this aloud
and now people are looking at me. I shrug, leaving the curiosity hanging in the
air. A tug at my elbow turns into an invitation for coffee. We are fellow Second
Mrs de Winter’s. I leave with handy hints on how to deal with the haunting by
someone who isn’t dead.
It
is one triumph to every three hauntings, by someone who isn’t dead. I mention
getting a dog, he says “not this again.” We have never talked of it; he is haunted
by a conversation with someone who isn’t dead. I clock up the time that we have
been together with greed. It will be another seven years until our relationship
out lasts there’s. She lived in this house, and I do not know which room they
shared. When I tell my fellow Second Mrs de Winters this, they suggest burning
it down.
My
husband is in the garden when his phone starts ringing. I see her name, still
carrying our surname. What to do? I edge my hand towards the lock button and
click, ending the call. The action is intoxicating. She rings again. What to
do? I click again, again and again. What to do? I push his phone under a pile of
papers and walk away, setting in motion a row so spectacular that I suspect you
could hear it from space.
That
night I suggest we watch the film version of Rebecca. He tells me that he is
jealous of Maxim. I savour every juicy morsel of my triumph to tell my fellow
Second Mrs de Winters. I suggest that our next book is Frenchman’s Creek. I have
a fancy for freedom, and a pirate.
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