Authors: Siân O'Gorman
Melissa walked home, buying a coffee and a muffin on the way. She stopped off in a chemist for some headache tablets and sat on one of the benches along the boardwalk of the canal.
Why had she allowed such a thing to happen? What was wrong with her? She used to feel amazing, invincible. But now? Now, she was making mistakes left right and centre. Terrible, awful mistakes. And work was now ruined as a result. How could she face Jimbo ever again? She was good at something, all right, she thought, as she downed her coffee, which did little to alleviate the sense of death and decay, she was very good at fucking things up.
Steph went upstairs to Rachel's room and gently pushed the door⦠no one there. She looked around at all of Rachel's things; posters on the wall, her books, and her dressing gown hung on the back of the door, make-up on her desk, boots and shoes in a heap, Pinky the rabbit (old and one-eared) lying pensively on the bed. And, on her bedside table, was what looked like a diary. She didn't know Rachel was keeping one.
âRachel Fitzpatrick' was written in careful teenage hand. She looked at the first page, not meaning to read it⦠but she couldn't stop.
Had a laugh with Aoife, Caz and Siobhan in the afternoon yesterday. Went to Fundaland and met up with Barry and his friends. He let me wear his hat and scarf because it was so freezing. He's so nice. Came home at four.
Mum was out and the house was empty. Everything was quiet except when Aoif and I went to my room, we heard a noise. We thought we were being burgled or something. We went onto the landing â Aoif holding my hockey stick in her hand.
And Dad came out of his bedroom. Trying to look normal and claiming to have had a sleep. It was obvious he was lying because he was smiling and looked weird.
He gave myself and Aoif some money to get a pizza. Basically, he was trying to get us out of the house.
So, we did, but we hid behind a car to see if we could solve the mystery.
No one came out. So, Dad was telling the truth and is just ACTUALLY weird. Or there's a dead body in there.
Aoif reckons dead body.
Jesus. What was going on? Was Rick actually sleeping with Miriam in the house?
Steph scanned a few pages, found a new entry. She recognised the date â Rick's birthday. They had had a few people over to dinner.
Rachel wrote:
I went downstairs to get some Coke out of the fridge and more crisps. When I passed the downstairs toilet, Miriam came out pulling down her skirt. She tried to pretend everything was normal but then a moment later Dad came out of the toilet too. I just know something was going on. Like they were having it off or something. And then I knew what had happened before, when Dad was being so weird. Miriam must have left by the back door. Dad, the twat, just pretended everything was normal. And then Mrs Head in the Sand herself came out and was all nice as pie. Anyone would think I was an eejit.
Steph scanned forward a few pages.
February 7th. Some of the girls know about my dad and Miriam and they've started saying things. I told them they were liars and they don't know anything. And then I got into a fightâ¦
âInteresting reading, mum?' Rachel was standing at the door of her bedroom, face incandescent.
Steph nearly fell off the bed.
âRach! I was just⦠tidying up and then I just glanced at the book. Your diary, is it? I didn't read it. I've only just come in here.'
Rachel just stood there, looking at her. Steph gabbled away. âI was just trying to find something. My scarf⦠remember you borrowed it?'
Rachel raised one of her eyebrows. âReally, Mother?' Her voice was icy. Steph had to give her daughter credit. âIs that the best you can do? Why don't you admit it? You were snooping, weren't you? You were spying on me. Find out anything?' She was like a Bond villain.
âWell, actuallyâ¦'
âYou are pathetic, Mum.' Rachel unleashed her anger. âA total and utter weakling, that's what you are. You have no idea what is going on in this fucking house, so you resort to reading your own daughter's diary to find out. Other mothers know what's going on. They know what their kids â and their husbands â are up to. But not you. No, no. You have your fingers in your ears, always trying to get people to like you. But they don't, you know. Your husband doesn't like you. Miriam doesn't like you. They are just laughing at you behind your back. And you are letting them.'
âRachelâ¦'
âYes, fucking Miriam. She and Dad are sleeping together, by the way. And everyone knows except you. Aoife knows, I know⦠the whole bloody street knows, everyone in school knows, and I am a laughing stock. It is so humiliating! You are too busy worrying whether I have eaten a fucking bowl of cereal for breakfast than the fact that your husband is sleeping with your friend. You⦠you⦠you moron!'
âI'm sorry Rach. I⦠um, I did know about it, but I hadn't quite worked out what to do and I was just buying some time.'
âWhile they have been
fucking
each other, Mother, you have been poncing about and being useless. A normal woman would have thrown their husband out, but not you â doormat!' Rachel had started crying. âAnd now you read my fucking diary. As if I have anything else. I don't have a fucking family. And now I don't have any fucking privacy.'
Steph felt pathetic and weak. I must be such a disappointment to Rachel, she thought. âI'm really sorry Rach,' she said. âI thought I was doing the best thing.'
âA proper mother would be strong, you know? Not like you.' She began to sob now. Steph went over to her. She put her arms around Rachel. âI'm so, so sorry, my darling girl. My darling girl.'
âI hate you Mum,' said Rachel. I really, really hate you.' But she let Steph smooth her hair and shush in her ear.
âBut I really, really love you, though, so maybe it cancels it out,' said Steph. She sat beside Rachel, waiting for the sobs to calm down. âYou're right,' she said, speaking gently. âI have been weak, but these things aren't easy to sort out. You can't â you don't just make decisions and then act on them⦠there's a lot to think about. There's you⦠the house, everything⦠We will get through this. I just don't know what the future looks like. I wish I did. But that's really scary and I wanted to be sure I was doing the right thing. For you. You love Dad and it's hard to make a decision to break up the family.'
âYeah, he's my dad and everything,' said Rachel, âbut I would prefer not to live in this chaos.'
It was chaos, their home, that's where she had failed the most, adding to the chaos. Why hadn't she protected Rachel better? How could she have let her be burdened by all this? Eventually, Rachel stopped crying.
âI'm sorry you had to go through this,' Steph said, gently, holding her hand. âAbout Dad and⦠Miriam.' And Angeline. And all the other lucky girls in Rick's sight. Ugh. He was truly disgusting.
âWhy didn't you do anything about it?' Rachel was looking furious again. âYou could have stopped it. You should have stopped it. You can't let Miriam do this to you. She's just a stupid cow. I hate her.'
âSometimes adults behave badly, do stupid things. You don't suddenly become wise and all-knowing when you get to eighteen.'
âI hate him too. And I hate you.'
âYou know, sweetheart, I don't blame you. I don't blame you one bit.' She looked at Rachel's lovely face, tear-stained and angry. âI'm sorry,' she said. âI'm so, so sorry. It's not easy, you know, it's not easy being grown-up,' Steph said. âI'm doing my best and I know I've let you down and I am so, so sorry. Listen, I wish I had all the answers, but there's no bloody manual for what to do when your husband starts having an affair with the neighbour.'
Rachel had stopped crying, she was listening. âThere should be,' she said.
âYeah, there should be. But unfortunately there isn't.'
And then Rachel suddenly stood up. âI don't want to hear any more,' she said. âYou know, Mum, it's crap being me. Do you realise that? It's crap being the girl whose father is sleeping with Aoife's mother. It's embarrassing having such pathetic parents.'
And she walked out of the house, slamming the door.
And finally Steph felt rage at Rick for doing this. For putting Rachel through this, for embarrassing her. He never thought of the consequences, the impact his actions had on others. She needed to get a few things together. Like what? Her passport, her driver's licence, bank details, all the things that would enable her to leave. She kept them in a box file, in Rick's study. He didn't lock it, but he knew she'd never poke around but now she went in to retrieve cheque books and medical cards from the box file. She needed to get them into her possession. She didn't know how relations were going to go.
Over by the window of the study, there was a large desk, laptop and a photograph of Rachel as a baby. There was also a picture of Rick and his father, the rather scary Richard Fitzpatrick, on Rick's graduation day. They were standing side by side, slightly awkwardly, Rick's strange mother on the other side. She'd always believed that they didn't think she was quite good enough for Rick. They would have loved Miriam, though. Right up their street. She grabbed the box file and went to leave but under the blotter was an envelope sticking out. Should she open it? Was this in the realm of acceptable snooping? Or was it a divorceable offence. Go ahead, punk. Divorce me.
It was from the head of chambers.
â¦Come to our attention⦠unprofessional behaviour⦠allegations of misconduct which contravenes office policy⦠relationship with colleague⦠Angeline Barrow's contract is terminated with immediate effect⦠you are on a warning. Any transgressions⦠such behaviour and your employment will ceaseâ¦
Good God.
So he and Angeline had been discovered. And she had been sacked. Surely it should have been Rick who should be sacked. But he had been a given a stay of execution. How utterly humiliating. For everyone.
And there was Rachel getting into fights because of this. She felt the hairs on the back of her neck prickle. No way could this go any further. It had to stop now.
Rick's life was a mess and for too long he had dragged her down. She had to start getting back on her feet and getting her and Rachel far, far away.
When she walked into the office on Monday morning, the first person Melissa spotted was Jimbo. Oh God, she groaned, willing herself or him to dissipate, Star Trek style.
He was talking to a young woman but something was decidedly different because, in all the years she had known him, Jimbo, normally bored-looking and slightly stoned, was practically animated. Even his beard looked perkier. Who even knew beards could do such a thing? What had Jimbo, a man so afraid of showing his emotions that he covered his face with a ridiculously large beard, so interested?
âJimbo,' she said, when she got to her desk, smiling as though everything was fine, pulling off her woolly gloves and unwinding her scarf. Inside she was dying.
âAh! Murphy,' he said, perfectly normally as though their last encounter wasn't of the naked kind. âMeet our latest inmate, ahem, I mean fresh-faced recruit.' The young woman laughed. Melissa tried to bat away images of Jimbo in the altogether, his white chest and sticky-out ribs, the inadequate loin cloth of a towel.
Jimbo continued. âShe arrives this morning full of hope and optimism; by the afternoon, her dreams will be thwarted, ideals twisted, desired mutilated and thrown back at her feet. Her wish to help others and to fight the evil forces of capitalism pushed screaming down the toilet bowl of life. In short, innocence transformed into foul, fetid faeces of disappointment and the slow, dawning realization that we are powerless, that we journalists can do nothing except what our small-brained and tiny-testicled editors tell us to do, who in turn are governed by managers who march to one tune only, that of the Great God, Commerce.'
Good old Jimbo. He was his usual smart-arse self. She almost loved him for it.
âIgnore this idiot and his melange of metaphor,' she said. âThanks for the effort, Jimbo. And so early in the morning. Congratulations. Your oration was wasted on me as I was too busy wondering how a person can carry so much hair on their chin. It's amazing you can actually lift your head. Fair play to you on that one. Neck. Of. Steel.' Melissa turned to the girl. âI'm Melissa. Welcome,' she smiled. âJimbo just hasn't been able to laugh since he believed Jacob's changed the recipe for fig rolls.'
âThey have! They're not the same!' Jimbo said. âI'll get to the bottom of it! I will!'
The girl was laughing. âI'm Louise McArthur, Lulu.' She grasped Melissa's hand with both of hers and shook it. âIt's an honour to meet you, Ms Murphyâ¦'
âCall me Melissaâ¦'
âThank you.' Lulu smiled. âUm, Melissa? I must tell you, but I did an entire dissertation on the art of the feature writer. I used your work as my case study, to illustrate the authorial voice, the role of the woman's voice in newspapers to filter world events, and specifically your distinct ability to create a sense of safety for readers.'
âJesus. Steady onâ¦' Jimbo began.
Lulu continued. âWhat you say about the world, and this is what I surmised, whether you are talking to a celebrity, or politician or writing about health issues for women, people trust you and believe you. Like Oprah, I suggested, or the pope.'
Melissa didn't know what to say. âThe pope, you say⦠that'sâ¦'
âI mean, you didn't win the O'Brien Prize five years in a row for nothingâ¦'
âSix.'
âWow!' exclaimed Lulu.
âWell, one year I shared it with Caitriona Brannigan from the
Times
⦠soâ¦'
âHer nemesis,' explained Jimbo.