Authors: Rosie Fiore
The sound of the side gate opening woke her early the next morning. Still very tired, she got up and pulled on a dressing gown. When she got out into the garden, Mr Benton was busy taking tools out of the garden shed. She walked out towards him. âMr Benton â¦' she began.
âI know,' he said. âI felt her go, yesterday evening. And the vicar rang to let me know.' He nodded his head. He kept his eyes on the handle of the rake he was holding, and carefully brushed a loose petal off his lapel. âStill, these leaves aren't going to sweep themselves up, are they? And she likes a tidy lawn.' He clearly didn't want to talk any more, and he began to rake up the leaves with precision.
The funeral was a week later, and Holly was astonished and touched at how full the church was. Mr Benton did a reading from John, that he knew Judith had particularly liked. The choir sang her favourite hymns, and it was all as correct and old-school as Judith would have wished. David did the eulogy, which was in essence a well-written and accurate biography, but not terribly emotional.
Then Holly stood and walked to the front. Her knees were shaking under her skirt, and she could only stop the trembling in her hands by gripping the edge of the lectern.
âMy mum had beautiful hands,' she began. âVery soft, with long, slim fingers and beautiful nails. When she became ill, one of the things I was able to do for her was give her a manicure. A few days before she died, I did her nails, and she asked me to paint them pillar-box red. If you knew my mum, that might surprise you â you probably thought of her as a pale pink woman. I know I always did. But for me, the great privilege of these last few months has been learning that she was anything but. She was a woman of many, many colours. She raised three children I hope she had cause to be proud of, she was a cornerstone of this church, and she inspired great love. I am sad that I only caught a glimpse of who she was so close to the end of her life. But I'm so glad that I saw what I did.'
When she got back to her seat, Miranda squeezed her hand tightly. She looked across at David, but his jaw was clenched, and he was gripping the knees of his trousers. She knew not to touch him or talk to him â he was only just holding it together.
When Holly stood up with David and Miranda to follow the coffin out to go to the crematorium, she spotted a tall, distinguished looking Indian man of about seventy, sitting at the back. He was alone, and he looked out of place â somehow she knew he was not just another member of the congregation.
Everyone was milling around outside the church and chatting. Holly accepted condolences from a few people, but then worked her way through the crowds to the Indian man.
âDr Mistry,' she said.
âHolly. You look so like your mother,' he said. Holly was
astonished. She had never seen any similarity in their looks. âShe told me all about you in her letters,' he continued. âShe was so proud of your courage and your creativity.'
She didn't mean to cry. She'd held it together through the service, but she couldn't stop the tears that spilled down her cheeks at his words.
He touched her arm gently. âI'm so sorry, Holly dear.'
She looked up at him. âHolly dear â that's what my mum always called me.'
âI know. She called all three of you “dear”. It was deliberate. She wrote once that she thought it was the loveliest endearment, because it means both beloved and precious.'
âThis is hard,' Holly said. âNot just her dying. This â¦' And she gestured at him.
âI can't expect you to understand,' said Dr Mistry, âand I don't ask for your forgiveness. I loved Judith for more than forty years and I'm sad she's gone.'
âBut she was married. To my father.'
âShe was. And she loved him, and was always faithful to him. I love my wife too. We have a good marriage â it's an excellent partnership and we have wonderful children and grandchildren.'
âBut you and my mother â¦'
âIt was one letter a year. That's all. One letter where we could remember the very happy and brief time we had together, and where we could imagine a different life. A life we never had, and which would probably have been disappointing in reality.'
âI have the letters in Mum's ⦠in my car,' Holly said. âI had this mad idea I could put them in the coffin before she
was cremated. I don't know why I thought that would be possible. I didn't just want to throw them away. Would you like �'
âThank you,' said Dr Mistry. âIt would mean a lot to me to have them. I'll keep them with the ones that I have. The ones she sent me.' He walked with Holly to the car, and she handed him the shoebox tied closed with string.
âThank you,' he said. âAnd Holly, you spoke so beautifully in the church. I think she would have loved what you said. It was very brave of you.'
âI had to say it. She was more, so much more, than people knew. And if I hadn't said it today â here â it would never have been said. Because she's gone.'
He didn't answer, just nodded once and then walked away. She was glad he didn't say goodbye. She was sick and tired of saying goodbye to people.
Miranda came over to her. âWho was that?'
âNo one. Old friend of mum's,' said Holly. âLet's go. Let's get to the crematorium and get this over with. The wake is booked for three and we need to get to the hotel.'
âNew York?'
âI know!' said Jo. âIsn't it fantastic?'
âI ⦠I don't know what to say. Is this Richard again?'
âNo, it's me. I joined this online networking thing for women in business, and found this woman I was at school with â Verity Ellis. I'm sure I told you about it.'
Lee nodded. She might well have done. But as she talked about work stuff pretty much all the time, he tended to filter some of it out.
âAnyway, she moved to the States about ten years ago and she owns a bunch of clothing companies. She's terrifyingly successful.'
âSo â¦'
âSo she's been speaking to some of her investors, and they're looking for a children's clothing outlet to develop. She's showed them pictures of the East Finchley shop and the plans for the other stores we have in the pipeline, and they're keen to talk.'
âDevelop it where?'
âAmerica, I guess. New York to start with, then the West
Coast. We'd need to talk details. I know very little about it so far. That's why I need to go to New York. To meet with them.'
âWow,' said Lee, and sat back in his chair, folding his arms.
Jo had just got home from a late meeting. The children were already in bed, and they were sitting at the kitchen table, eating the lasagne Lee had been keeping warm in the oven. She took a sip of her glass of water.
âWhat kind of “wow” is that?'
âThe “wow” kind. Why?'
âWell, it didn't sound like the “Hey, Jo, I'm so proud of you, that's brilliant” kind of wow. Which was the kind I was hoping for.'
âIt was that kind of wow. Of course it was. It's just a lot to take in.'
He bent over his plate and concentrated on extracting a strip of pasta with his fork. He couldn't look at her. He knew she was looking at him with that hard-eyed, thin-lipped expression that meant she was about to pick a fight.
âWhat's to take in? Nothing is decided at all. We get to go on a jolly to New York, I have a few meetings and we see what we think.'
âWe? You and Richard?'
âNo. I thought it would be fun if we went as a family. I've never been to New York. I want to see it with you and the kids.'
âBut we wouldn't see it together. I'll be stuck in some overpriced, air-conditioned hotel room with two kids while you wheel and deal. The Americans are workaholics. You'd
be in dinner meetings and breakfast meetings ⦠Anyway, it would mean taking Zach out of school â and we can't afford it.' He knew he sounded petulant, and he didn't care.
âWe can afford it.'
âReally?' Lee hadn't meant the comment to come out quite so sarcastically, but he couldn't take it back. âI'm not earning right now, and I think it would be bloody irresponsible to blow money on a trip to the States just because you think you have the ready cash right now.'
He still couldn't meet Jo's eye, because he knew what she was thinking â that he wasn't earning because he hadn't done anything to get any freelance work. As it happened, he had been trying, but he'd had regretful âThanks, but no thanks'-type replies from everyone he'd approached, including his old company. He knew he needed to get a proper website up and start registering with agencies, but his work on the children's book was progressing, slowly but well, and he just hadn't had the time.
âOkay, well,' said Jo, and to his surprise, she sounded hurt rather than angry. âWhat do you suggest? Shall I tell Verity we're not coming because my husband doesn't want to?'
âNo. You should go on your own,' he said, feeling rotten for being so unsupportive.
âI can't!' He could hear the tears in her voice. âI've never been away from the kids for more than a night. I've barely ever spent a night away from you. How can I go to the other side of the world â¦?'
âIt's not the other side of the world. It's a six or seven-hour flight. And the kids will be fine â they're not tiny babies any more.'
âBut a week â¦'
âIt'll fly by,' Lee said, trying to be kinder. âIf you think this is what you want, you should go for it.'
âI â¦' said Jo, and stopped.
âYou what?'
âWell, I kind of wanted to know what we wanted. Not just me. I mean ⦠if this American thing took off â¦'
âWhat are you saying?'
âI'm not saying anything.'
âAre they talking about you moving there?'
âNot me ⦠us. And no, they're not. They haven't mentioned it. But it would be a possibility, I suppose.'
âFuck me!' said Lee. âNow you're moving us all over to the States? Our kids growing up American? And what about me? You might get a Green Card, but I'm damned sure I wouldn't ⦠So what do I do? Sit at home and paint my nails?'
âLee â¦'
âIt would have been good if you'd run some of this past me first.'
âThis
is
me running it past you! I finished the telephone conference with Verity an hour ago. I'm trying to discuss some of the things I thought about on the Tube on the way home! Jesus, Lee, you can't withdraw all your support and refuse to come with me or discuss it with me, and then yell at me because I haven't included you in my plans! You can't have it both ways!'
âWhereas it seems you get it any way you want it,' Lee said. He pushed his plate away. âI'm not hungry. I'm going to work.'
âAt what?' said Jo sarcastically.
Lee didn't answer. He went into his little study and slammed the door. He didn't draw or write, just sat fuming, playing endless games of Solitaire on his computer until well after midnight, when he knew Jo would be asleep.
They slept, or rather didn't sleep, on opposite edges of the bed, their backs turned to one another. In the morning, Lee felt wretched â hungover from lack of sleep and remorseful for his unkindness. He opened one eye and looked at the clock. Seven thirty. Jo was already up. He could hear her downstairs in the kitchen with the kids. He couldn't make out exactly what was being said, but from the pitch and tone of the voices, he could tell Zach was being a right little brat, either refusing to do something, or doing something he shouldn't. The mornings were often a nightmare. The kids, Zach in particular, would be downright awful to Jo. She understood it was because Zach knew she'd be leaving, going to work for the day, and that he would miss her, but it didn't make it any easier. On any other morning, Lee would have been in the kitchen to run interference and be the bad cop, so Jo didn't have to yell at Zach, but this morning, she was doing battle on her own. The selfish, ugly part of him wanted to stay in bed and leave her to deal with the tantrum. After all, he'd be handling the kids and all their nonsense for the next ten hours at least. But he knew he had been vile to her the night before, and also that he had been unfair. He jumped up and made the bed, trying to get the pillows straight and nicely plumped up, the way Jo liked, then headed downstairs.
It was ominously quiet in the kitchen. Imi was in her high chair, and Zach was sitting at the table. His expression
hovered somewhere between evil satisfaction and fear. Jo was on her hands and knees. There was a massive splodge of porridge on the floor, and the fragments of a broken bowl, and Jo was trying to clean it up with a wodge of dampened paper towels and a brush and dustpan.
âZach!' bellowed Lee. âWhat did you do? Did you throw your bowl? That's very, very bad. Go and sit on the step.'
âButâ' started Zach.
âNo buts. If you don't go right now, I'll take your Transformers away for a week.'
Zach burst into tears and ran from the room. Jo sat back on her heels and looked at him.
âWell done, Genghis Kahn. Why don't you beat the soles of his feet with a ruler too?'
âHe was naughty â¦'
âI threw the bowl. Not him, okay?'
âWhat?'
âI made cereal and he refused to eat it, so I poured that away and made porridge, and then he said he didn't want that, so I threw the bowl on the floor. But well done for screaming at a four-year-old before you find out what's actually going on.'
Jo finished cleaning up the mess in silence, then she went to sit beside Zach on the bottom step. Lee could hear the murmur of her voice as she spoke soothingly to him. Then she went upstairs and got ready for work, and left without saying goodbye to Lee.
He had a lot of time to think that day. For Jo to have hurled a bowl of porridge, especially in front of the kids, she had to be stretched to the limit. He'd let her down and
he needed to find a way to make it better. He spent the afternoon giving the house a good clean, prepared a roast-chicken dinner and walked down to the flower stall on the high street with the kids. Together, they assembled a giant arrangement. Lee chose white roses that reminded him of the flowers in Jo's wedding bouquet. Zach loved the bright orange gerberas, and Imi was drawn to the pink peonies. It was an unusual combination, but he thought it expressed their love. They took the bouquet home and Lee arranged the flowers in a vase and put it on the table, where Jo would see it as soon as she walked in.