Read After Ever After Online

Authors: Rowan Coleman

After Ever After (33 page)

BOOK: After Ever After
8.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Dad pats the back of my hand.

‘I’m not explaining myself very well. Joy says that the only way I’m going to rebuild our relationship is to clear it all up once and for all.’

I shake my head, not understanding him.

‘Dad, nothing happened between us. I mean, obviously something did happen, but nothing specifically between us,’ I say again, hoping that Fergus or someone, anyone, will interrupt us.

‘Yes it did, something did happen,’ Dad says insistently. ‘It’s just that you didn’t know about it.’

I look at him. In the ever-decreasing half-light, his face looks grey and ashen. A shiver runs up and down my spine.

‘I tried to put it out of my head, forget about it. I’d look at you and see how hard you were trying, just a little dot, you were trying so hard to be all grown-up. I tried, Kitty, not to feel the way I did, but I couldn’t make it go away. I loved your mum. I loved her so much, and God forgive me I wished it hadn’t been her …’ He trails off, staring at me as if seeing me for the first time.

‘What do you mean?’ I say uneasily.

‘The ambulance men, they said that if she’d been found sooner, even just a few minutes sooner, they might have saved her.’ He is clasping my fingers in his dry hands and I pull my hand from his, feeling instinctively ill at ease.

‘Yes, I know that. Of course I do,’ I say, even though I’m not actually sure if I have ever known that on a conscious level. ‘But what’s this got to do with me?’

‘I blamed you,’ Dad says simply. Shockingly. ‘I blamed you for not finding her sooner. In a funny sort of way I blamed you more than I blamed him.’

I shrink back from him as if I were only seven again.

‘You blamed me?’ I repeat.

‘I know. I know it was wrong, you were only a child. How could you know she was there waiting to be found, waiting for you to save her? How could you? But all I could think about was how much pain she must have been in and how she must have been hoping, waiting for help, waiting for someone to find her, and that when you did find her it was too late.’ His face is cold, angry and hard. For the first time ever it is as if his mask has slipped and for a second I can see that he’s hated me,
hated
me, for all of these years.

I only know that I’m crying when I taste the tears on my lips.

‘I can’t believe you came here today to tell me this, to blame me for my mother’s murder?’ I pull myself off the sofa. ‘Don’t you think I know that it’s my fault? Don’t you think I blame myself, have done every day since it happened?’ I stumble to the door and punch on the light switch, filling every corner of the room with artificial yellow light. Dad stands, clasping his hands together.

‘I’m not trying to hurt you, sweetheart, I’m trying to help you. I do know, yes I do know that. After it happened I tried to love you, no I
did
love you, but I just couldn’t show it. I didn’t treat you like a daughter. I left you to it until the grief and the anger became so much part of me I couldn’t remember what it was like to live without it. I was weak, I wasn’t the man you needed me to be.’

He reaches out his hand to me.

‘Kitty, I’m trying to tell you I was wrong. I’ve been wrong all these years, and so have you. I know it wasn’t your fault, I know that. I’ve hurt you maybe more than you’ll ever get over, and I’m sorry. I’ve hurt your mother and I’m sorry. I feel like I’ve been asleep for a hundred years, asleep trapped in a nightmare, and only now am I beginning to wake up. I wake up and see you shining so brightly, with your own home and your own family, everything you’ve created and achieved on your own despite me, and I’m proud of you, so proud of you, Kitty.’

He touches his hand softly to my cheek.

‘I’m so proud of you, Kitty. I’ve never told you before. That’s all I wanted to say.’

I back away from him as far as I can.

‘You’re lying,’ I say angrily, furious. ‘You’re lying because you want that back, all that pretence of the father and daughter team. I saw what you really thought of me, Dad, I saw it just now in your face and I’ve always known, even back then, even as a child; it’s only now that I realise what it was. I thought you were, I don’t know … isolated by grief or something.’ I struggle to express myself, my words rushing out in a jumble. ‘That you were still mourning, that you were too sad to love me. But you didn’t want me because you hated me, you hated me, your little girl!’ My voice rises sharply and I’m aware of a lull in the hum of conversation from next door.

‘Kitty.’ Dad comes towards me and I find myself raising my hands over my face. ‘Please, Kitty, that’s not true. It was true once, yes, and if you saw that, I’m sorry. It’s not true now, Kitty. All I want is for us to begin again. It’s late, I know, terribly late to begin to make it up to you, but not too late, I hope … Kitty?’ His words wash over me and all I can see is that look on his face, that terrible angry look.

‘Everything all right?’ Fergus’s voice dilutes the atmosphere in an instant as his head appears around the door, and I rush into his arms.

‘I want Dad to go,’ I say quietly. ‘I want him to go now.’

Fergus looks at me in puzzlement. ‘What’s happened, Kitty, what’s he said?’

My dad’s face seems to crumple and age before me. ‘Fergus, I think I’ve upset her. I didn’t mean to … I was trying to explain things … make things right … and …’

I shake myself loose of Fergus’s grip.

‘And you said that it was my fault that Mum had died, and you said that you hated me, that you’d always hated me.’ Even now I can’t remember if that was what he said, but it is all that I can hear. I feel Fergus’s presence behind me and his hand on my shoulder.

‘You can’t come into my home and speak to my wife that way,’ he says, his voice dangerously low. ‘For years the only thing you’ve ever done is drag her down, and I’ve watched her drag herself out of the life you gave her and become a wonderful woman and a perfect parent, despite having no support from you at all. I won’t have you try and drag her back down again. I won’t let anyone do that to her ever again, do you understand? You’d better go.’

Suddenly I see him for the old man he is, his shoulders bent, his skin papery and dry, and I wish with all my heart that our lives could have been different, that we could have just been a father and daughter having lunch every weekend like we always did.

‘Fergus, please. Don’t make me leave like this,’ my dad pleads, but my shoulders stiffen stubbornly under Fergus’s hands and he reads my resolve.

‘Just go. Just go. You can wait in the hall. I’ll get Joy’s and your coats and drive you to the station myself.’

My fingers find Fergus’s and I squeeze them hard before leaving the room and hurrying up the stairs to the cool quiet of the bathroom to splash myself with water. I want to cry. I want to cry until I am dry as a desert, but I can’t. Maybe it’s the shock, or the brandy, or Gareth, but now that Dad’s gone I can’t seem to feel it any more, at the moment at least. Dora pushes the door open.

‘What happened?’ she asks me blankly.

‘My dad, as usual, fucking me up.’ I glance up at her sweat-sheened face. ‘Look, let’s not get into this now, I need time to … I just don’t want to think about it now. It’s too hard.’

Dora shrugs, experienced after years of understanding how I cope with difficult feelings, and sits on the edge of the bath.

‘I quite like your kid,’ she says, languishing against the door she has shut behind her, still nursing her one can of lager. ‘I think it’s because she’s more human and less like the thing out of
Eraserhead
.’

I muster a smile and sit down on the loo.

‘Hasn’t that gone disgustingly flat?’ I say, nodding at the lager, hoping not to be interrogated about my red-and-white-streaked face, but Dora doesn’t seem to notice it, or if she does she says nothing.

‘Oh yeah, I finished it ages ago.’ She fishes a half-vodka bottle out of her bag and pours a good measure into the can. ‘But the good thing about vodka is it never goes flat. And before you ask why the can, it’s because Camille kept going on at me on the way up here and she’s bound to think I’m using again just because I like a little drink every now and then. Jesus.’

I open my mouth to reproach her, and find that I just don’t have the energy.

‘By the way, your dad was wrong, really wrong back then, but from what I overheard I think maybe when you’ve had a chance to think you’ll see he’s trying to do the right thing. Either that or I’m so bollocked I’m hallucinating.’ She burps fragrantly into her hand.

I decide on the latter and change the subject, knowing how capable Dora is of hurting people without knowing the reason why. Especially when she’s drunk.

‘Camille will know, you know. She’ll just be more pissed at you for trying to hide it from her.’

Dora shrugs and slides down the side of the bath to repose on Fergus’s New England-style white floorboards.

‘So, how long have you been doing the dirty on the Prince, Cinders?’ she sniggers.

‘Dora!’ Please, Universe, God even, give me a break, just one. ‘Don’t be ridiculous!’ And even though I’m telling the truth, my voice carries a high false note.

‘I saw you canoodling with him. Don’t blame you, he’s fucking dishy. I’d shag him.’ Her voice bounces loud and clear off the tiles.

‘Dora!’ I hiss, crouching down to her level. ‘I am
not
shagging Gareth. If you must know, he sort of made a pass at me, and he didn’t even do that really, and anyway I told him to get lost. I sacked him, for fuck’s sake!’ Dora’s eyes regard me, empty of expression.

‘Oh, okay. Why did you look like such a quivering wreck, then, when I caught you at it?’

I turn my head away abruptly and stand up.

‘Dora, you might think you’re funny, but you’re not. You’re fucking with my marriage, okay? What if Fergus heard you saying all this bullshit? Just shut the fuck up.’

‘Ohhhhhhh.’ Dora pretends to shake. ‘That’s me told, then.’ She struggles to her feet. ‘I might go to bed, where is it? In there?’ She wobbles out of the bathroom and into the guest room. ‘Night!’ she says before closing the door on me.

It’s just six o’clock. Now is the time when everyone is supposed to be leaving, not inviting themselves to stay the night. I look at the closed door feeling utterly exhausted, and wondering what everyone down there must think of me.

‘Darling!’ Fergus calls up the stairs. He must not have gone to the station after all. ‘Come and look at Ella!’

I shake Dad and Dora out of my hair, put my happy face on and hurry down the stairs, hoping it’s nothing that will require a trip to casualty. As I rush into the room, I see that my baby has pulled herself up on the sofa and is standing there clinging on to the edge, wobbling back and forth.

‘My baby!’ I say, and her proud smile eclipses every other moment of the day.

‘She’ll be walking soon, you mark my words,’ Daniel says softly.

‘And then you’ll be more tired than you are now!’ Mr Crawley laughs gently, taking my arm and squeezing it softly, and in an instant I know that he’s telling me he’s there if I need him.

‘And you can buy her shoes!’ Camille claps her hands with glee.

‘Might as well leave her there,’ I say to Camille as she puts her coat and hat on.

‘She was drunk on vodka!’ she repeats in disbelief. ‘I don’t know about this. What do you think?’

I shake my head and shrug. ‘I don’t know either, but look, I’m pretty sure she’ll be there until the morning so I’ll catch her when she’s sober and try to talk it over with her properly. I’ll call you, okay?’

Camille pulls her hat on. ‘Are you okay, or are you at the not-talking-about-it stage? I mean, I don’t want to butt in, but, well, we all pretty much heard everything.’

I smile at her levelly.

‘I’m at the not-talking-about-it stage. I just need to adjust again, I’ll be okay. He’s not really been my dad for years, so it makes no difference really. Nothing to talk about right now.’

Camille nods and kisses me on the cheek.

‘Okay, we’ll save it for the next girly drunken night,’ she says. ‘I’m on the end of a phone if you need me.’

I nod and hug her tightly.

Mr Crawley has agreed to take Camille down to the station and to drop Clare back home. Georgina and Daniel have loaded the dishwasher and thrown all the packaging away and are leaving too.

‘That was a lovely day,’ Georgina says, kissing me on the cheek. ‘I’m sorry that things didn’t go so well with your father,’ she understates with fully reinstated Englishness, but I know that even by mentioning it she is offering me her support.

‘Thanks,’ I say, and I surprise her with a kiss on the cheek.

‘Ah yes, really great food. Compliments to the chef,’ Daniel says, winking at me.

‘I’ll let M&S know,’ I say, wondering if I have the energy to speak even one more word. I close the door on them and sink back against its solid surface.

‘Bloody Mary,’ I say, managing two.

‘Yeah, I know. I’m knackered too,’ Fergus says, pulling my limp body towards him.

‘No, I mean I want a Bloody Mary. Have we got any Tabasco?’

He laughs and leads me up the stairs.

‘No, we don’t have any Tabasco or tomato juice or vodka, but your daughter is in bed and your best friend is out for the count and we do have a little bit of time to ourselves.’

As we enter the bedroom I flop on to the bed and Fergus leans over me scrutinising my face.

‘Are we having our chat now?’ I say, sleepily abstracted.

Fergus takes my fingers in his.

‘To be honest, Kitty, we all heard most of what your dad said to you … I mean, now that he’s gone, considering what he said and how you feel about it you seem weird, a bit too okay. Don’t you want to talk about it, cry or something?’

I manage a smile and wind my arm around his neck.

‘No. No. I never talk much about anything, Fergus, except to you and sometimes to Dora. I’m not a talker, I don’t want to talk about what happened. I’m angry and I’m hurt, but I want it to go away now. I don’t want to think about it or him ever again. Especially not tonight, especially not now. If I ever change my mind I’ll let you know.’

Fergus lies flat on the bed and looks at the ceiling.

BOOK: After Ever After
8.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Berlin 1961 by Frederick Kempe
Dead Languages by David Shields
All the World by Vaughan, Rachel L.
God's War by Kameron Hurley
Savage by Kat Austen
The Inheritance by Joan Johnston
Into the Light by Ellen O'Connell