The newscaster moved on to say that the situation in Bosnia remained desperate, and that
the UN was threatening dire consequences if Radovan Karadzic and the Serbs didnt come to
an agreement with the other warring parties. Diana’s mind began to drift—such a threat was
hardly news any longer. She suspected that if she turned on the radio in a years time they
would probably be repeating it word for word.
As her car crawled round Russell Square, she began to think about the weekend ahead.
It had been over a year since John had told her that he had met another woman and wanted
a divorce. She still wondered why, after seven years of marriage, she hadn’t been more
shocked—or at least angry—at his betrayal. Since her appointment as a director, she had to
admit they had spent less and less time together. And perhaps she had become anesthetized
by the fact that a third of the married couples in Britain were now divorced or separated. Her
parents had been unable to hide their disappointment, but then they had been married for
forty-two years.
The divorce had been amicable enough, as John, who earned less than she did—one of
their problems, perhaps—had given in to most of her demands. She had kept the apartment
in Putney, the Audi suburban, and the children, to whom John was allowed access one week-
end in four. He would have picked them up from school earlier that afternoon, and, as usual,
he’d return them to the apartment in Putney around seven on Sunday evening.
Diana would go to almost any lengths to avoid being left on her own in Putney when they
weren’t around, and although she regularly grumbled about being saddled with the respon-
sibility of bringing up two children without a father, she missed them desperately the
moment they were out of sight.
She hadn’t taken a lover, and she didn’t sleep around. None of the senior staff at the
office had ever gone further than asking her out to lunch. Perhaps because only three of them
were unmarried—and not without reason. The one person she might have considered having
a relationship with had made it abundantly clear that he only wanted to spend the night with
her, not the days.
In any case, Diana had decided long ago that if she was to be taken seriously as the com-
pany’s first woman director, an office affair, however casual or short-lived, could only end
in tears. Men are so vain, she thought. A woman had to make only one mistake and she was
immediately labeled as promiscuous. Then every other man on the premises either smirks
behind your back, or treats your thigh as an extension of the arm on his chair.
Diana groaned as she came to a halt at yet another red light. In twenty minutes she had-
n’t covered more than a couple of miles. She opened the glove compartment on the passen-
ger side and fumbled in the dark for a cassette. She found one and pressed it into the slot,
hoping it would be Pavarotti, only to be greeted by the strident tones of Gloria Gaynor assur-
ing her, “I will survive.” She smiled and thought about Daniel as the light changed to green.
She and Daniel had majored in economics at Bristol University in the early 1980s, friends
but never lovers. Then Daniel met Rachael, who had arrived a year after them, and from that
moment he had never looked at another woman. They married the day he graduated, and after
they returned from their honeymoon Daniel took over the management of his father’s farm in
Bedfordshire. Three children had followed in quick succession, and Diana had been proud
when she was asked to be godmother to Sophie, the eldest. Daniel and Rachael had now been
married for twelve years, and Diana felt confident that they wouldnt be disappointing their
parents with any suggestion of a divorce. Although they were convinced that she led an excit-
ing and fulfilling life, Diana often envied their gentle and uncomplicated existence.
2 Jeffrey Archer
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