PACK UP THE MOON
ANNA MCPARTLIN
‘Insightful and moving … defiantly irreverent’
Sunday Independent
It was a night of laughter and celebration. But when
John dies in a dreadful accident, his girlfriend Emma is plunged into despair. She loved John more than life itself - and now death has taken him from her.
She feels nothing, she has lost everything, her world spins out of control.
Or so she thinks. For Emma has friends - good friends who rally round. But the memory of that night returns to haunt each of them in different and trying ways. And Emma knows that if she is ever to laugh at life again, or find the love she once had, she will have to let go of the man she thought she couldn’t live without. She must let go and trust her heart.
‘Captures the pain of loss and longing … but her background in stand-up comedy spills on to every page, making this touching novel so funny’ Irish Independent
PACK UP THE MOON
ANNA MCPARTLIN’S experience of losing her parents
at a young age has given her a profound understanding of
loss, surviving it, and making the very best of life. Before
becoming a full-time writer Anna was, amongst other things,
a stand-up comedian and a claims adjuster. As well as writing
novels, she also writes TV comedy drama. She is in her mid
thirties and lives just outside Dublin with her husband.
*
*
*
Pack Up the Moon
ANNA McPARTLIN
PENGUIN BOOKS
Published by the Penguin Group
Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R orl, England
Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, USA
Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700,Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4P 2Y3
(a division ofPearson Penguin Canada Inc.)
Penguin Ireland, 25 St Stephen’s Green, Dublin 2, Ireland (a division of Penguin Books Ltd)
Penguin Group (Australia), 250 Camberwell Road, Camberwell.Victoria 3124, Australia
(a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty Ltd)
Penguin Books India Pvt Ltd, 11 Community Centre, Panchsheel Park, New Delhi —no 017, India
Penguin Group (NZ), 67 Apollo Drive, Rosedale, North Shore 0632, New Zealand
(a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd)
Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd, 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank, Johannesburg 2196, South Africa
Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R orl, England
www.penguin.com
First published by Poolbeg Press 2005
Published in Penguin Books 2009
Copyright Š Anna McPartlin, 2005
All rights reserved
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
The moral right of the author has been asserted
Printed in England by Clays Ltd, St Ives pic
Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject
to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent,
re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s
prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in
which it is published and without a similar condition including this
condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser
isbn: 978-1-844-88170-3
www.greenpenguin.co.uk
Penguin Books is committed to a sustainable future
for our business, our readers and our planet.
The book in your hands is made from paper
certified by the Forest Stewardship Council.
To my mom
who taught me how to find the smallest glint of light
even in the darkest of places.
To Mary and Tony O’Shea
For being my parents.
To Hallie
just ‘cos …
The Thin Blue Line
It was early March and raining. The clouds were relieving
themselves with a ferocity akin to a drunk urinating after
fourteen pints. I looked through the frosted glass, imagining
the impact the downpour would have on my whites
blowing wildly in the accompanying gale. Then back to
the floor, immediately noticing the slight yellowing in the
grouting around the toilet.
Men, I thought. How hard is it to aim for the loo? I briefly
contemplated how it was that my boyfriend could manage
to clear a pool table with pinpoint accuracy, park a car in a
space the size of a stamp and yet when it came to pointing
his mickey in the direction of a large bowl, he had the
judgement of a drunken schoolboy. The edge of the bath
felt cold under my skirt.
Three minutes.
Three minutes can be a long time. I wondered would
it feel so long if I were defusing a bomb. I started to count
the seconds but quickly lost interest. The mirror needed
cleaning. I’d do it tomorrow. I absentmindedly played
with the stick in my hand until I remembered that I’d just
peed on it. I put it down. I brushed invisible fluff from
my skirt, this being a habit I had picked up from my father
although obviously he was not a skirt-wearer. It was our
response to nerves. Some people wring their hands; my
dad and I cleaned our clothes.
The first time I really noticed our shared trait was when
my brother, aged seventeen, announced that, instead of
becoming the doctor my parents had dreamt of, he was
going to become a priest. My mother, mortified by the
thought that she would lose her son to an absent God,
spent an entire evening screaming shrilly before breaking
down and taking to her bed for four days. My dad sat
silently cleaning his suit. He didn’t say anything but his
disappointment was profound. I remember that I wasn’t
too pushed at the time. As a self-obsessed teenage girl, I
didn’t share the same concerns about Noel’s sacrifice as
my parents, although I admit that the thought of having a
priest in the family was slightly embarrassing to me.
We weren’t very close then. He was your typical nerd,
bookish, intense and politically aware. He studied hard,
brought out the bins without being asked and was an
ardent Doctor Who fan. He never smoked, never indulged
in underage drinking or for that matter in girls. For a
while I thought he was gay, but that theory passed when
I realised that to be gay you had to be interesting. Still, we
were adults now and, although I could never understand
his utter devotion to The Almighty, times had changed and
all the traits that made for a nerdish teenager guaranteed a
fascinating adult. I now counted Father Noel as one of
my best friends.
Two minutes.
I was twenty-six years old. I was in love and living
with John my childhood sweetheart. I had the pleasure of
watching my lover grow from a fair-haired, blue-eyed,
idealistic boy to a fair-haired, blue-eyed, self-assured man.
We’d been together nearly twelve years and for me he was
definitely The One. We’d been living together happily since
college. We were renting a nice place - two bedrooms, two
bathrooms, a kitchen and a cute sitting-room - just off
Stephen’s Green and although it was small and sometimes
smelled of sweet old lady, it wasn’t that expensive which was
amazing considering the location. I had a good job.
Teaching was never my life’s dream, but then I considered
myself lucky to have been unburdened by ambition.
Teaching seemed as good a job as any. Some days I liked
the kids and some days I didn’t, but it was steady. I was
home most days by four thirty and I had three months off
in the summer. John was still in college doing a PhD in
psychology, but he also managed to hold down four shifts
a week as a bartender. Some weeks he’d bring home more
money than I would and he maintained that he learned
more from drunks than he would in college.
We were happy. We were a well-adjusted happy couple.
We had a good life, good prospects and good friends. There
are a lot of people who would like to hawe the kind of
security we had with one another.
One minute.
My mother had often pondered aloud as to when John
and I would think about marriage. I’d tell her to mind
her own business. She’d note that I was her business. We’d
fight about the issue of privacy versus a mother’s love. At
twenty-six I felt too young to marry and this feeling
remained, despite my mother constantly reminding me that
she had two young children by the age of twenty-four.
“It was a different time,” I used to say and that was
true. Most of my mother’s friends were married with kids
by the time they reached their mid-twenties. I was from
a completely different generation. The Show Band versus
the MTV generation. While she grew up on Dickie Rock,
I gyrated to Madonna. Before meeting my dad, her idea
of a fun night out was lining up against the wall at the
local dance hoping one of the lads would pick her for a
waltz. I, on the other hand, was from the disco generation.
Besides, none of my friends were married.
Thirty seconds.
OK, that’s a lie. Anne and Richard met in college. She
was the middle child of a middle-class family from Swords.
He was the son of one of the richest landowners in Kildare.
They met in a queue to sign up for an amateur drama
group during orientation week. They got talking,
abandoned the queue to get coffee. After that, they were
inseparable. They married a year after college. Big deal,
they were the only ones.
Clodagh, my best friend since age four, hadn’t managed
to hold down a relationship over four months. She had
emerged from college a tenacious, intelligent, hardworking
career woman, managing to work her way up to Senior
Account Manager of a large advertising firm within three
years. She succeeded in all she did, with the small exception
of her romantic life, and that perceived failure hurt her.
Then there was John’s best friend Sean, dark, brooding,
dry and beautiful. Clo called him “the living David”. He
had not only made his way through eighty per cent of the
girls in the Trinity Arts block, he’d also managed to nail
a few lecturers along the way. His longest relationship to
date had been with an American girl called Candyapple
(her real name, I kid you not) during a summer we all spent
working in New Jersey. She was your typical coffee-skinned,
brown-eyed, big-breasted, small-waisted nightmare. She had
long curly brown hair that somehow reminded Anne of the
Queen guitarist Brian May. Sean called her “Delicious”; the
rest of us called her “Brian”. They lasted six weeks. He left
college and after a few false starts he fell on his feet, landing
a job as editor of a men’s magazine. His quick wit, sincere
worship of football and encyclopaedic female carnal
knowledge ensured his continuing success. Relationships
didn’t matter and marriage and family certainly was not a
priority.
Ten seconds.
John loved our life. You know those smug couples
you meet and instantly hate. He could be smug like that.
He never seemed to care that Sean had his pick of women
through college. He didn’t even mind that he had only
ever had sex with one person. He was content, loved up,
happy. He was rare. We were rare.
The first time we had sex we were both sixteen. We
were in a tent on the side of a hill in Wicklow. It was a
warm summer night, not a cloud in sight. The moon was
full, round and bright, the sky was navy and thick like
velvet, the trees were towering, leafy and smelt of sun.
No wind, no breeze, the world seemed still. We had our
little campfire, a picnic basket, a packet of condoms and a
bottle of wine, which we both merely sipped, our
underdeveloped taste buds mistaking its fruity freshness
for the taste of rancid crap. Kissing turned to cuddling,
which turned to snuggling, which led to nuzzling,
graduating to feverish genital rubbing and one hymen later