Authors: Julia Kelly
And he bent on one knee, yanked off his trainer and hurled it at us. It flew at the window like a strange white bird in the dark of night and thumped against the glass. We both jerked our heads backwards. It fell into the mud below the hydrangea bush. How our faces must have looked, silent and scared, frozen in that moment when he had absolute control over us.
âOh, I'm sorry, Irenka. I'll be a good boy now, I promise.' He said in a mocking tone. He rooted through the bushes to retrieve his shoe and made his way, hobbling, laughing, away from us, down the dark avenue that lead to the seafront and under the dank bridge of the train station where pigeons mate and breed and die under the wheels of jeeps and men from the pub take a piss or a snog or a quick fuck or feel.
Back upstairs, I closed the shutters and double-locked the front door. And in the next five minutes I undid everything that that very expensive sleep trainer had taught us and Addie about sleep. I not only took her out of bed â and she was at that stage of deep sleep where she wanted to stay there, wasn't fighting it any more â I carried her up to the sitting room and gave her some ice cream.
Unable to sleep that night, I got up and logged onto Rollercoaster. Pink Panther was getting her Spanx in a twist. A mother had had such a stressful afternoon with her three children in a supermarket that she had left them sitting on the wall of the car park, reversed out of her space and pretended to drive off without them. They had got
such a fright that they had run after her screaming. All the other mothers sympathised, said they had been there. Pink Panther said she would be reporting her to Social Services.
I logged out, got up, opened the shutters, looked out at the night. Its stillness and quiet was comforting. Then a small flicker of light caught my eye. And there Billy was, standing still in darkness, holding a lighter under his chin, his face lit up by the flame, his satanic, twisted smile broadening and just as soon fading again.
We woke to the sound of chainsaws and opened the sitting room shutters to see men cutting the hedges that lined the park, lunging and retreating as they worked, lifting their snarling guide bars in the air. There were sights and sounds of industry everywhere: teams in Tidy Town T-shirts had begun raking leaves, heaping piles in specified points around the park. Neighbours I'd never seen before, in checked shirts and baseball caps, were working with yard brushes and spades along the south side of the square. Children held bin bags open while others climbed into the bushes to retrieve things â umbrellas, beer cans, socks, crisp packets â that had blown up the avenue from the sea.
We got dressed and went across the road to help, me casual in grey sweatshirt and jeans, Addie with a toy rake and her bumble-bee rucksack containing one unicorn, two fairies, a box of princess plasters, in case she had an accident, and her little book of wild flowers. It was worrying that she was expecting misfortune but the book of wild flowers made me happy. She used to potter after Joe around the garden, trying to match things with its black-and-white photos and in the early days after he'd left she had it with her all the time. Soon she abandoned it for some new obsession â her musical jewellery box that she'd filled with âsapphires' or her plastic
Fisher Price laptop â but it had left her with a lasting interest in nature (when she wasn't playing Candy Crush Saga on my phone).
As soon as we'd reached the gates, Addie let go of my hand and ran across the grass to Dylan who bent and lifted her into his arms, swung her around a couple of times, then carried her back over to me, and got on with edging the borders, Juliette stuffing his hoodie with leaves while he worked. I tried to get the image of his naked backside out of my head.
Assiduous as ever, Irenka was on her knees by the flower bed, her slim, dexterous hands planting bulbs of daffodils and tulips. âFlowers uplift our spirit, well at least mine, anyway,' she was saying, though no one was listening. She didn't need a second person in order to have a conversation.
Donal was standing above her, handing out trays of bulbs to the other volunteers. No one whistles any more, Joe used to say, but Donal was whistling that day, and there was even singing: Mr Norman in his high, tenor voice as he cleaned graffiti from the slide with his special âgraffiti attack pack'.
The local kids were raking with such enthusiasm that they were ripping out grass, leaving patches of dirt where they worked. Around the playground mothers hovered over their offspring, trying to keep them out of trouble.
Joy had wheeled Arthur over from the Cherry Glade and had propped him beside the slide, the Yankees baseball cap on his head askew, the blue-white sheen of his shins exposed. Now she was up in the tree house attaching a homemade American flag above the wooden door. Billy was watching her from outside the park, a brown paper bag over his head, Ned Kelly-style, holes cut out at the eyes. Lars was there in his usual red-and-white striped top, settling on his
bench beneath the oak tree. âThere's Wally,' Addie always said when she saw him.
âCome on, ladies, Sumita, Eve, let's get to work!' Irenka said, striding over to us. We'd been looking for an excuse to escape; we'd got stuck in the middle of a conversation with Beige Nicola and the mother who was always in riding boots and was too tall for me to consider making friends with.
âI mean, at the end of the day, I personally feel there's absolutely no point in buying environmentally friendly nappies if you're going to dispose of them in a Tommy Tippee bin bag which takes about one hundred years to decompose,' Beige Nicola said.
âYou could always buy some recycled nappy sacks,' the horsey one said. Sumita listened, keeping her head down with a small repertoire of interjections which alternated between âOh my gosh!' and âreally?' with a roll in the âr', using both often. I had nothing to add.
Irenka grabbed Addie round the waist, watching as she escaped her and ran away. âLook, see. I still think she is walking a bit funny, on the inside of her feet. Her weight is not balanced, it's not good for her spine. She needs better shoes, like Charlotte's,' she said, pointing at her own child's feet. It sounded like she had done a lot of thinking about it. âThey're from Ecco. They have very good elasticity. Very good for their developing bones.'
I took this with a nod and a smile. She wasn't going to get to me that day. Also I'd asked her to mind Addie while I took my driving test that afternoon so I couldn't fall out with her before then.
âThis is a public park. Open up, you spaz!' It had been Mr Norman's decision to lock the gates while we worked. Billy had hoiked himself up onto the railings and crossed to the chestnut tree beside them, where Mr Norman had nailed a sign with the new opening and closing times. He tried to yank it free.
âIf you don't get out of that effing tree now, I'm going to come after you with my shoe,' Belinda said, reaching over her solid midriff towards her foot, to show she meant business.
âAnd you watch your language, young man. There are small children here,' Irenka said, striding towards him.
âThat woman's a pain in the arse.' Nathan had come up beside me. âShe deserves a slap. I saw her chase a kid round here the other day with a Twix wrapper in her hand. I mean, for fuck's sake. She needs to wise up.'
I was finding it hard to meet his eye, as if he really had had sex with me recently.
âYour house is coming on. You know we're so close, I can see right into your bedroom. Oh, sorry, that sounds a bit strange.'
âNo it doesn't. It sounds very exciting,' he said, leaning over and squeezing my arm.
âMama, can I make an apple tree with these? I know how to do it. Barney showed me,' Addie said, holding an apple core in her hand.
âWould you like me to help you with that, little lady?' Belinda asked, rocking back on her heels, her cheeks flushed from digging. Addie handed her the apple and watched, mesmerised, as she teased the seeds out of the core, then the two of them knelt together and planted the seeds.
I smiled at people whose names I didn't yet know but whose faces had become familiar and I met some more neighbours that morning: a Chinese couple whose little boy was the same age as my girl, a homesick South African woman who worked for the bank and was always getting abuse from customers, and the lady from number fourteen who told me about a cookery course up the road.
âWhy does your mummy never put clips in your hair?' Irenka
asked Addie, as she led her away and I went home to get ready for my driving test.
*
âWhat's the minimum tyre tread depth?' Nathan shouted over to where I was standing in the front drive. He was on the other side of the park railings, above a row of daffodil bulbs he'd just planted, leaning on his spade. I hadn't realised he'd been watching me. I hoped he hadn't seen me wave up at the sitting room window, as was my habit, to pretend we didn't live alone.
âErm ⦠one point six millimetres?'
âVery good. And name three people in authority for whom you should stop.'
âGarda, school warden, person in charge of animals.' I knew the answers to all these questions, Joe had asked me them a thousand times, it was like reeling off prayers at Mass. In theory I was great, in practice, a little less so. He'd tell me ten reasons I'd failed before I'd turned the engine on and the tensest of hours would follow, Joe jamming his foot on an imaginary brake every few seconds, gripping the handle above him, not daring to look away from the road ahead. We'd always finish early, swapping places in silence so he could do the tricky parallel parking bit. I'd slam the garden gate on him with my L plates in my sweaty hands and we'd both swear never again. I was going to pass this test all by myself.
âYou're all set, best of luck.'
âBye!' OK, I couldn't mess this up. I got into the car, began reversing out the gate. Concentrate. Concentrate. Not only was Nathan watching, but there was a car idling on the road waiting for me to exit. Back I reversed, but too far, forcing the other car to reverse a few yards as well. Then I stalled. And stalled again, pulled
myself together, ploughed on and grabbed for the indicator to thank him â that quick, confident flash of competent drivers â but turned on the windscreen wipers instead. I put my foot down hard on the accelerator not wanting to delay him further and also maybe to show off a little bit. On I went through sun bright streets, picking up speed, passing a sweet old man and his little grandson. The old man, though I didn't recognise him, held his hand up as I passed him. I waved back, it was like
Sesame Street
. This really was a wonderful neighbourhood.
As I approached the junction where our road and the main road out of Bray met, there was a sudden sound of sirens. I tried to recall what you're meant to do when an ambulance is behind you; it always made me emotional when I saw cars pulling over to let a sick person through. The siren was getting nearer and nearer. I looked in the overhead mirror but all I could see was myself: my arched eyebrows, my shower-wet hair. I readjusted it, and saw that it wasn't an ambulance after all, but the car that had been behind me, now with a rotating light on its roof, and it didn't seem to want to pass. It pulled up alongside me.
âDo you know what you just did?' He was a policeman. He wasn't smiling, he had soft brown eyes that were not looking softly at me. I had no idea what he was upset about. Oh God, please don't ask to see my licence.
âDo you have any idea how dangerous that was?'
âWhat was?'
âYou just went straight through a red light.'
âDid I? No I didn't. When? Where?'
âAt the pedestrian crossing behind you. And they hadn't just turned red either. You could have killed that old man and the child.'
âI had no idea. I'm sorry. Sorry. Sorry.'
The old man's outstretched hand â not a wave at all but a
warning â telling me to slow down. To stop. To take heed. His other arm had been held over the little boy on his tricycle with his helmet, having learnt all about the green man.
âJust show a little more consideration in future.'
He was letting me go. I was not just reckless. I was selfish. And I was breaking the law.
I drove on, still shaking, feeling like an admonished child. Everyone I passed on the high street, every single resident of Bray; Mrs Dicker always in soft focus in her bottle-thick glasses and beiges and creams and the folds of flesh of her fallen face, outside her bits and bobs shop; the school kids waiting below the graveyard for a bus, on the kerb, not out on the road, not about to kill anyone, not doing anything illegal, or reckless, seemed sane, more sensible, less selfish than me.
I pulled into the test centre and parked. Was my examiner standing at some unseen window, picking at his teeth, draining his coffee, pulling at the crotch of his slacks, waiting for his two-thirty? A time, not a name. One of ten to get through in the day.
OK, what did I need? I leant over, opened the glove compartment and fished around for my learner's permit, my hand shaky as anything. Not there. Cursing I pulled everything out: the boring old car manual that Joe was always trying to get me to read, two pairs of sunglasses, one with a broken arm, Joe's gym membership for the Riverview Club. I turned the laminated card over in my hand. He looked tired in the photo, his eye bags, a family trait, very pronounced. It had expired of course. I think he went about twice, then pulled a muscle in his chest when lifting a too-heavy weight after not warming up. He blamed his trainer and never went back after that. That was so like Joe. He gave up on everything as soon as it got hard, just like he gave up on us. My permit was stuck to the underside of the card, the
adhesive between them an ancient, fluff-covered Chupa Chups lollipop. I wiped the permit as best I could, stuffed it in my back pocket, took five deep breaths, checked my teeth for lipstick, got out and slammed the car door. I was going to get this, I was different from Joe, I was going to see this through.
I sat in the waiting room that brought to mind failed Irish exams, the bitten lips of disappointed teachers and parents, slammed doors, tears of not understanding, and then sought out the toilets, always the toilets before the terrifying thing.
I watched the swing doors to the interrogation room and when he appeared I could not believe my bad luck. The German. Not the damned German! The one who'd failed me the third time, when I'd been convinced that I'd driven beautifully. When I'd had to hold my fingers over the edges of my lips to suppress my smile as I'd followed him back into the test centre with warm thoughts of telling Joe, my mum, my sister. When I could just see myself emerging triumphant, punching my hands in the air, like that man on the
Rules of the Road
DVD.
He didn't seem to recognise me. This was probably a good thing. I resisted the temptation to remind him. We were the last of five cars to pull out. I followed the others, all terrified, all cautious, along the main road, feeling like a cartoon character of a perfect driver, looking in the mirror, indicating to change lanes, hands correctly positioned at ten to two. Observation, observation, observation. I wanted to talk to him, to get him on my side, but I knew that was against the rules. The air in the car was too sweet, too close.
At the end of the street, there was a roundabout, a peculiar one with a church in the middle of it, one that had confused me before. It was a busy Saturday afternoon. Qualified, mature, sensible people were driving into town to shop or picking up their children from
playdates. We all slowed, prepared to stop. A neat row of driving school cars, the drivers behind us, tutting at their misfortune.
There was a break in the traffic. The first car, five ahead of mine, nudged forward and out, but instead of driving clockwise around the roundabout they indicated to the right and moved on. The next car did the very same thing. As did the three cars behind them.