The last first date, p.1

The Last First Date, page 1

 

The Last First Date
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The Last First Date


  About the Author

  HAYLEY QUINN is an international dating expert who empowers people to learn to love dating.

  The Last First Date

  HAYLEY QUINN

  HQ

  An imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd

  1 London Bridge Street

  London SE1 9GF

  www.harpercollins.co.uk

  HarperCollinsPublishers

  1st Floor, Watermarque Building, Ringsend Road

  Dublin 4, Ireland

  First published in Great Britain by HQ in 2022

  Copyright © Hayley Quinn 2022

  Hayley Quinn asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.

  A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

  This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins.

  E-book Edition © May 2022 ISBN: 9780008511036

  Version: 2022-04-08

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  About the Author

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgements

  Dear Reader …

  Keep Reading …

  About the Publisher

  For Nanny B & Nanny M

  Chapter 1

  ‘I can’t believe I’m the one before The One.’

  Helen Pines stared at the picture: it had Jonathan’s familiar face scrunched up next to a pretty blonde woman, her arms tied around his neck, with a noticeable diamond ring on one finger.

  Proposal in Kenya – classy.

  She closed her laptop a little more forcefully than usual, and stared around her childhood bedroom: it felt slightly dustier and smaller every time she visited. Earlier, she had even discovered a fossilised glitter lip balm that had come free with Shout magazine stuffed down the side of her bed. There were stacks of NOW! CDs (that really should have gone to a charity shop years ago) were scattered on her dressing table and her sixth form prom dress still hung in the wardrobe. Her mum, insisted on not throwing it away. She had a bad feeling that the only time she could convince her mum to chuck out her prom dress would be when it was replaced with a meringue-shaped dress of a different kind. Walt Disney had a lot to answer for.

  The dress was a fussy, puffy, midnight blue creation that sat side by side with a fussy, puffy, lilac dress she’d worn aged six for her local Carnival Queen competition. A bad, niggling memory of trying out for Carnival Queen occasionally resurfaced and still made her feel embarrassed for her six-year-old self. Her mum, in the audience, wildly gesturing for her to curtsy, an underwhelmed group of local parishioners feebly clapping, and Nanny G reassuring her that she’d look good in a bin bag, as someone crowned the pretty blonde girl, Charlotte, Carnival Queen instead. Really, someone should have realised there was something a little irresponsible about traipsing young girls around beauty pageants full stop. But that was parenting in the nineties for you.

  Helen sighed and leaned back on her bed, her socked feet dangling off the edge. Today, she had learned that there were few things in life that made you feel more inadequate than witnessing your ex-boyfriend getting engaged to someone else on social media. With added gut wrench for it being in some glamorous (and surely really expensive) destination. Any holidays they had taken together seemed to revolve around his friends. Her strong hints to romantic mini-break destinations had gone ignored, as had crying into his shoulder one night asking why he didn’t want to do anything romantic with her.

  His answer at the time was that he just ‘didn’t believe in that kind of thing’, and ‘he wasn’t that kind of guy’; except he was, just not with her.

  It had all started so well: it was New Year’s Eve when she was invited by a friend of a friend to Jonathan’s house party. He lived in a fancy apartment with a terrace overlooking the Thames, and had employed actual waiters to serve champagne to his guests. There were so many glamorous people there, all doing glamorous things: so when she felt his hand touch the small of her back as the fireworks went off, she couldn’t believe he was choosing her. It was all too perfect. He said they could meet any night that week for dinner. Then he didn’t message. She messaged him instead, and rather than whisking her off into his life, she spent the next two years trying to convince him to like her as much as he had the first moment they’d met, when he didn’t have eyes for anyone else. She must have messed it up badly. And now he was with a woman who probably did all the right things, and never said anything neurotic, and was prettier than her. Helen just wasn’t good enough to keep him: plain and simple.

  So here she was, back at her parent’s house in Cornwall, whilst Jonathan and his wife to be were undoubtedly clinking their Malbec glasses to the sight of a bull elephant, gazing up at the stars, and … urgh, it really wasn’t worth thinking about.

  At her bachelorette pad in London (read: studio apartment in Hackney), Helen had decided that with a total personal wealth of £1,568 (if you didn’t deduct her overdue student loan), there was no way she could justify a holiday this year.

  So, for Easter break she had decided to ‘staycation’ with her parents in Cornwall. At the time, she had told herself that it would be great to reconnect with her family, that she would love the walks and fresh air, that she wanted to meet her brother Henry’s girlfriend. That would be nice! Wouldn’t it? Instead, from the moment she stepped onto the so-crowded-you-can’t-move-in-the-aisles Great Western service to Penzance, she was hit with a wave of dread.

  She was living in some kind of Groundhog Day of singleness.

  The train journey down was a little too much like the trip down over Christmas, which was a little too much like the trip down over Christmas the year before, just after she and Jonathan had split up. She was so heartbroken that year that she had survived the entire six-hour journey on nothing more than a packet of Maltesers. She had intended to be blasé about the split to her parents, and make up some ‘cover story’ that he was moving away for work, that things had just run their course, yet the second she had stepped off the platform and seen Nanny G, tears had already started to pour down her face. Her mum had just sighed in resignation that Helen had messed it up again.

  The following week had been a bad combination of parental sympathy and sickeningly romantic Christmas movies. Her mum had made all her favourite food in an effort to lift her spirits, and she slid from self-imposed starvation to eating an entire tray of leftover cauliflower cheese from the fridge at 2am when she couldn’t sleep. Her dad had nobly ignored his daughter’s anguish, but when he spotted Helen in the corner of his eye, holding a cushion up to her face to mask her tears during the opening scenes of Up!, he wordlessly lifted the remote and changed the channel. Henry had placed his arm around her and pulled her onto his barrel chest for a hug.

  That Christmas, she felt like a loser. No matter how many, I’m not searching for my other half because I’m not a half memes her two best friends, Elle and Sophie, sent to her in their group chat, Helen couldn’t shake the feeling that being dumped shortly before your thirtieth birthday was a bad thing. She didn’t feel like slinging on stilettos, marching out to a bar, and starting all over again, so she spent an unhealthy amount of time fantasising about possible ways she and Jonathan could get back together. He was a polyglot, whilst Helen still mumbled through the pronunciation of ‘croissant’: maybe she would take a language class and then in a year’s time bump into him on the Eurostar (she would be on the way to an important meeting in Pari s) and impress him with her effortless French? Maybe he would wake up next to his fiancée Katy one morning, and realise that he’d made a huge mistake? He’d knock on her door … take her on a romantic holiday to make it all up to her … slay a dragon to prove his love …

  Of course, now that the engagement picture was staring at her out of her phone, she knew definitively that wasn’t ever going to happen. A small, embarrassed part of her that was still holding out hope he’d come back, whimpered, and scuttled away into the recesses of her mind. The Carnival Queen dress glinted in her wardrobe. She clearly wasn’t good enough.

  Helen didn’t generally see herself as ‘not enough’. Most days, her self-esteem was okay, and she made a concerted effort not to feel down when her followers shrunk on social media, or a vlog that she produced limped up to ninety-six likes. However, as the months ticked by, and she met no one that she actually liked, she felt forgotten about – like her thirties were destined to be spent mouldering away in the shade. A feeling probably not helped by her unshaven legs (regrettably down to sheer laziness, and not a feminist statement) and descent into 24/7 loungewear.

  She was really starting to worry that there was something wrong with her. Because if there wasn’t, why was she still single? Her mum would say it was because she ‘scared them off’, Nanny G would wink and say she needed to forget finding a boyfriend and learn how to have fun instead.

  That’s not to say she wasn’t liked; Helen had always had friends, just never ‘real’ boyfriends. Her love life was heavy on ‘situationships’ and low on Valentine’s Day cards. She considered herself essentially a nice person: she worked hard, she had good friends, and a blogging business with real (if unrealised) potential. But as much as it rankled every bone in her body to admit it, there was something about turning thirty that had changed things, at least for her. A heavy feeling of pressure dwelled around her dates, going out with a totally-not-right guy didn’t feel so funny anymore, and she started to notice the month’s ticking down to her next birthday.

  No matter what her friends said about it being totally normal to be single in your thirties, Helen felt herself oscillating between feeling flat and sheer panic. Rather than being an ‘up and coming’ baking influencer, she now felt unquestionable pressure that she should have ‘up and come’ by now. Her best friend Sophie had coupled up with Frank, and they seemed alarmingly happy. Elle was still single but seemed to revel in the role of always being the dumper, rather than the dumpee. There was probably a picture of her under the entry ‘fiery Latina’ on Wikipedia that predictably drove men wild. ‘Treat them mean …’ she would say, tapping her false nails on her phone. In fact, Helen got the feeling that Elle thought her desire for a cosy relationship was a little lame. Maybe even weak.

  Then there were her parents. Since joining them for Easter, Helen had been dodging questions about her single status like a downhill slalom. Even her younger brother was coupled up; an unfortunate injustice that was always destined to happen. Now, next time they pried about whether she and Jonathan might ever get back together, she would have to spit it out that he was actually engaged to someone else, like some monumental hairball that conceded her defeat.

  To be clear, things hadn’t ever been bad with Jonathan: in fact, they were really nice. At least most of the time. She had adored him. The only snag was he seemed eternally on the fence about her. He had told her she was the most amazing woman he had ever met, but he wasn’t sure they were right together, all in the same day. Helen couldn’t quite fathom why, if he thought she was that incredible, he could never fully commit. He kept saying statements that, when placed together in a sentence, seemed to conflict with one another. Towards the end of their relationship, Helen had felt so confused by it all that she hadn’t realised just how badly her confidence had been eroded by his lack of certainty.

  Her days had turned into a fug of worrying whether he loved her, or not; was he seeing someone else, or not, and who was that woman who had just followed him on Instagram? Etc. She became so on edge that he would walk away and pull the plug definitively on their two-year romance, that she had started to walk on eggshells around him. She tried to be the perfect girlfriend, tried to pretend that she was totally cool with him taking his time, and it had mercifully, eventually, ended when she had given him space to think about what he really wanted, and he had met Katy. Looking back, she had spent years of her life trying to recreate the first moment they met, when all the promise of the romance stretched out before her. When she thought she was The One for him.

  As soon as Jonathan had ditched her and found Katy instead, his commitment issues seemed to evaporate overnight, and social media had reliably informed her that her boyfriend, in everything but name, was definitely not hers anymore. Her friends had told her that it would be the same story with his new girlfriend, and that he would never settle. But he just had. Apparently, his total inability to commit was in fact a reflection on her all along. It was because she wasn’t enough for him.

  She sent a screenshot of the engagement picture to her WhatsApp chat ‘Queens xoxo’ with Elle and Sophie.

  Elle: That man is

  I’m so glad you’re not with him anymore babe. He never treated you right!!

  And his new fiancee Don’t know what he’s thinking …

  Sophie: Sorry babe :-( as @Elle says, it just wasn’t the right guy.

  Remember that Instagram isn’t real life, and we don’t know what’s really going on there.

  Most important thing is that you’ve both moved on and now that the door is closed, you will meet someone better. I promise! I can feel it

  Let me know if you want to voice chat later? Xx

  Helen: Thanks guys

  I just don’t know what went wrong there – or how he suddenly changed overnight??*

  *Okay it’s been a year but still!

  Hard not to take it personally :-(

  How’s things with Frank @Sophie?

  Mum’s calling (yes, I might as well be 13 again not 31!) brb! Xx

  Helen sat down at the dining table and was grateful that her parents weren’t the kind of people to mention that she’d been wearing the same yoga pants and hoodie for three days now. She instinctively sat next to Nanny G – her favourite grandparent, and officially the last woman left standing of her older relatives. She was wearing her trademark lavender-coloured blouse with diamante butterfly brooch, and was nursing a small glass of port and brandy she’d been warming on the radiator.

  ‘How are you my dear?’ Nanny G’s voice had the timbre of an old-fashioned wireless set.

  There was something about how close Helen felt to Nanny G that stripped her of all her resolve to not make a fuss, and she felt her face growing warm. If she’d fallen over when she was a child, her mum would have said, ‘stand up’ and Nanny G would have got her a plaster. She inhaled sharply, ‘Well, Jonathan has just got engaged. To Katy. I think during a hot air balloon ride over Lake Nakuru.’

  ‘Oh my! Well, he always did like to be the centre of attention – I suppose he let the world know his happy news in a suitably discreet and mature way?’

  ‘He posted a huge picture on Instagram captioned #thisisit.’ Helen paused to translate what she had just said into elderly relative speak. ‘Instagram’s a bit like a photo gallery for showing off how perfect your life is …’

  ‘I know! I opened an account last month, mostly so I could spy on you though!’ smiled Nanny G, discreetly prodding Helen’s hands with her fork. ‘I don’t suppose many people are interested in a nonagenarian’s life in Cornwall, and I still have to get the hang of hashed tags.’

  ‘Hashtags, Nan … I’ll think of some good ones for you later …’

  ‘Did I hear you mention Jonathan?’ Helen’s mum sat down at the table, and leaned in conspiratorially. ‘Don’t leave me out! Have you heard from him?’

  Helen’s brother Henry started rapidly serving the potatoes, and shot her an apologetic look across the table.

  ‘He just got engaged …’

  ‘Oh …’

  ‘I knew it was coming …’

  ‘Well, there will be plenty of other opportunities darling, especially for someone as lovely as you! What about Dean?’

  ‘You mean Dean from uni?’

  ‘Yes! The tall one, nice smile, always very polite!’

 

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