Memento, Part 2

Part 1Part 2

I woke up a couple of nights later with a dry mouth, a light head and a knot in the pit of my stomach. If I’d been having a bad dream, I couldn’t remember it now that I was awake and I really had no desire to try to recall it. With most bad dreams, that sense of unease tends to go away by itself as you rationalise that it was just that—a dream. That night, however, I couldn’t seem to shake the feeling.

It was only once the post-sleep fogginess had cleared that the box crept into my thoughts again; if my bed hadn’t been so warm, I might have gone to the closet and pulled it out to have another look at it, likely dooming myself to a sleepless night. Laziness and cosiness—and a general reluctance to make myself miserable—kept me curled up under the covers, but even in the scant light of the moon through the blinds my eyes were trained on the closet door. Knowing what was in there, hidden away in a corner behind my shoes, was somehow worse than biting the bullet.

The box didn’t call to me, exactly. It was more like it parked itself in my consciousness, silent but impossible to ignore, and the more I tried to distract myself by planning what I had to do during the day, the more pointless it seemed. I’d given myself an ultimatum by five-fifteen; if I hadn’t stopped thinking about it by six a.m., I’d get out of bed and open it.

I guess I drifted off at some point—I never did get around to opening the box, and when morning came I managed to maintain some semblance of normality. Work was similarly uneventful, although my thoughts drifted from time to time and it took some sheer force of will not to dwell. It was only once a colleague stopped and asked me if I was okay—apparently I’d been glaring at my computer screen for the better part of ten minutes—that I realised I had a problem.

Problems, in my world, are most easily solved with alcohol. It’s something Luke will attest to as well and between wardrobe malfunctions and boyfriend troubles, he seems to have no shortage of drama in his life. He’s the type of guy who’ll get ridiculously, deliriously drunk, sob bitterly for an hour and bounce back with some fully-fledged plan for how he’s going to make the best of things and show the world he’s nobody’s bitch. In spite of his best efforts he normally ends the night hunched over a toilet spilling the contents of his stomach into the bowl, but come morning he’s always in a better state than the night before, hangover-from-hell notwithstanding.

Luke wasn’t free that night—he had a date all lined up, and even though I knew he would have cancelled to keep me company I didn’t give him the chance. I didn’t much feel like dragging any of our other friends into my self-indulgent misery (nor did I feel particularly inclined to explain what was bothering me, when they inevitably asked), so the most sensible option seemed to be to spend the night in the company of a bottle of vodka with cranberry juice to wash it down.

I could feel the box there, always, just nagging at the corner of my mind. Three strong glasses of vodka-and-cranberry in and I was starting to think the damn thing really was pulling me towards it, like it had sunk its hook in me the way she had all those years earlier.

I’d like to say I was under a spell as I trudged from my draughty, fluorescent-lit kitchen through to the bedroom, but in reality I knew exactly what I was doing. The booze only made me more foolhardy and it seemed like a good idea at the time to obey the impulse that told me to do the one thing that would only put me in a worse mood than before.

Next beneath the cards, tinfoil heart and tortoise necklace was a strip of photographs. It wasn’t a sequence of us two together, making adoring eyes at each other the way you always see in the movies; it was her on her own, making goofy faces at the camera—at me. I’d dragged her to the train station one day to get a set of passport photos for a job interview and stepped into one of the photo-booths outside the café and emerged a little while later to find she’d made good use of the booth next to it. When I complained that my own photos had come out looking terrible—‘mug-shot’ was the phrase I used, I believe—she had swapped her photos for mine and told me to use them instead. I didn’t do as she suggested, of course, but I did keep the pictures.

The very first one was always my favourite; the booth took it before she was ready, before she could find a suitably ridiculous pose. She was frozen in an uncertain little half-frown while she tried to decide which pose to adopt and it felt to me like the first time I’d ever seen her without her guard up. She said she hated it because she had a double-chin in it but I knew that was bullshit. I knew she’d seen the same thing I’d seen, and it had scared her.

The next thing I found in the box was a little more mundane and even she probably couldn’t have told you the significance. A paper clip might not normally hold memories for most, but it did for me—just a normal, untarnished paper clip that could have been mistaken for any other. I knew it was unique, though, because I knew where it had come from.

You’ll think I’m a ridiculous sap for this, but here goes: right around the start of our relationship, once it went past the point of ‘Will they ever hook up?’ and turned into something real, we got into the habit of slipping each other notes. We’d each try to do it so the other wouldn’t notice, getting increasingly crafty each time; once I went to great pains to nick her purse from her handbag just to slip a scrap of paper into the clear plastic holder in the middle of it. The paper only had the word ‘Loser’ on it, but she’d squealed with delight when she found it later on as she pulled out her purse to pay for a coffee.

She was always better than me, though, if only because of her subtlety. She’d pick something so obvious that I should have been able to spot it in an instant, only I never did. That’s where the paper clip came in.

I work as a clerical assistant. I did back then, too, but at a different company and for a fair sight less than I earn now. Work never really stayed at the office, so I’d find myself taking home folders full of hastily-scribbled notes that needed to be typed up into something more coherent by the next morning. It was in one such folder that she’d hidden her note, clipping it to the very first page in the bunch. The front of it said ’Important’ and because it had been labelled as such, I’d done my best to avoid looking at it until the very end of the day because I expected it to be nothing but bad news—probably a manager giving me some extra task to add to my workload or pushing one of my deadlines forward yet again. Instead I’d opened it up to find her familiar sloping handwriting bearing the words ‘Take it easy once in a while, nerd’.

I stuck the note up in the corner of my mirror where I could see it every morning and where it stayed for months until it fell off one day and disappeared, likely sucked up into the vacuum cleaner on a rare occasion during which I felt compelled to clean. I found the paper clip she’d used buried in the pocket of my cardigan ages afterwards, though, and had known immediately where it came from. It’s weird how a piece of metal can hold so many memories.

I’d seen enough; the vodka was starting to make my head spin and I knew I’d either cry or vomit if I didn’t put the box away right there and then. Déjà vu struck my particularly strongly as I realised I had done the exact same thing days before; I had done it again in the vain hope that something might be different this time.

I never did finish the bottle that night, but I did Luke proud in drinking until it seemed like a good idea to tearfully warble along to my favourite sad songs. The next morning I woke up with a mouth like an ashtray and the mother of all headaches. Worst of all, the shoebox was still on my mind and now I couldn’t stop thinking about the damn paper clip.

So much for feeling better.

Memento, Part 1

Part 1Part 2

You never really reach a point where you realise you’re over someone. There’s no light bulb illumination, no eureka moment; they just cease to be a part of your everyday thoughts and that’s that. If you were to notice that you’d stopped thinking about them, technically you’d be thinking about them again—and it’s hard to get them out of your head after that, isn’t it?

The fact of the matter is I hadn’t thought of her for such a long time that she might as well have never existed, and things were better that way. I’d moved on. I’d healed. Maybe I would have lived my life without ever thinking of her again if it hadn’t been for Luke.

Luke’s one of those guys who rarely paused to think of anybody but himself, but when he does he goes out of his way to be selfless. It’s a bit of a weird paradox, really, that one day he could bring you breakfast-in-bed and the next he could let a door slam in your face simply because it didn’t occur to him to hold it open for you.

That morning, Luke needed a favour and when Luke needs a favour, there’s no way of getting out of it unless you want to unleash his sulking upon yourself. He worked nights at a gay club at the time, taking part in a drag act as one of the club’s more popular DJs, Missy. Luke used to call Missy his butterfly persona; on any given day he might fade into the background, but whenever Missy came out to play it was kind of hard not to take notice. He liked to think of Missy as his excuse to say everything he didn’t have the balls to say in his own clothes. I thought it a little ironic that it was only by taking on a drag persona and insisting everybody call him a ‘she’ that he managed to gain said proverbial balls, but I’ve never gotten around to saying as much to him out loud.

Anyway—Luke (and Missy) needed a favour, which was how I wound up in my closet digging through my clothes for something for him to wear for his show that night. He’d had some wardrobe malfunction involving zippers and back fat and apparently he didn’t have any cross-dressing friends to call upon for help, which was how I came into the picture. He’s pretty slender for a guy, so apparently his only option was to borrow something from me.

I had sorted through most of my dresses and deemed them too conservative when I found it. Luke was talking to me at the time, jabbering away about how removing his nail polish each morning before heading to his day job was wreaking havoc upon his cuticles; I guess I must not have replied with appropriate sympathy as he marched into my room a moment later and demanded to know whether or not I was listening to him. I was, but only partly. My attention was trained in large part upon the shoebox in my hands.

We all probably have one of these boxes, or we have had one at some point—and if it’s not a shoebox it’s a packing case or box from an iron, or maybe just a virtual folder hidden away in the darkest recesses of a computer. The contents of these boxes are seldom the same, either, but the feelings evoked are usually identical: nostalgia, along with more than a little remorse.
My shoebox was a black one, belonging to a pair of Converse that weren’t even mine. They had been hers, actually, which only made my discovery of the box that much worse. I didn’t have to open the lid to know what I’d find in there, but I did it anyway and regretted it immediately.

Ticket stubs from the cinema; novelty cards from birthdays and Hallmark holidays; the necklace that had broken at some point and never been fixed. There were other things, too, but those were the first to catch my eye. The necklace was an image that would stay burned in my mind for quite some time, a tortoise with fake little emeralds set into its shell. She was the only person who’d ever really understood my little obsession with tortoises.

‘Oh, doll.’

It was the pity in Luke’s tone, more than the sound of his voice, that broke me from my reverie. It’s always a bad thing when he pulls the old ‘Oh, doll’—we’ve known each other for so long that he knows my feelings before I do sometimes and this was one of those occasions.

‘I forgot I had this,’ I said, doing my best to ignore the look in his eyes that said he was getting ready to rush to my aid if I started to cry. He normally hates being around people when they’re crying and I’m the only person he’ll do it for, but I was determined not to give him the need this time. I held strong and, without another word, popped the lid on the box. It was back where I had found it a moment later and anybody walking into the room at that exact point would have found me riffling through my clothes once more as though nothing were amiss in the slightest.

*
I tried not to think of the shoebox that evening once Luke had gone, tried not to let my mind wander into the even darker territory of what the contents of the box represented. To my credit, I didn’t open the box again that night, but I did lie awake thinking about it. I couldn’t remember what I had dreamt about when I woke up yet I was sure I dreamt of her; from the moment I blearily opened my eyes, my stomach felt heavy and my heart ached like it was four years earlier and I was going through it all once again.

My willpower failed me with barely twenty minutes to go before I had to leave for work; the knowledge that it was sitting there, just begging to be opened, was too much for me.

The tortoise necklace came out first; I set it aside so I wouldn’t be tempted to look at it for too long and turned my attention to the novelty cards on top of the pile. Some of them still made me laugh as I looked through them. I remembered the startled titter I had given upon receiving the handmade one with the words ‘You’re Going to Die!’ emblazoned across the front until I had opened it to find the words ‘So you might as well enjoy yourself and down a few pints to speed along the process’ written inside. That had been her sense of humour down to a T and I guess it became mine after a while, the way couples who are together for too long start to dress and act and think like each other until their friends have to stage an intervention (and before you ask, yes Luke was the one to step in).

Next in the pile, beneath the stack of cards that was significantly larger than I had remembered it being, was the heart she’d made for me out of tinfoil. This was before we were even going out, back when my feelings for her could still be classified as a crush and her feelings for me were those of an oblivious best friend. She’d been eating a sandwich, cheese and jam—just one of her quirks—and fidgeting with the tinfoil wrapping while we chatted where we sat on a bench outside the university library. During a lull in the conversation she had proudly extended her hand to me with the heart-shaped chunk of aluminium foil in it and jokingly said that it would be something to remember me by when she ran away to Hollywood.

I couldn’t do it. I couldn’t look at any more of those trinkets, couldn’t pretend that it didn’t hurt to have those memories flood my thoughts once more. Tinfoil heart, cards and tortoise all went back into their rightful places, the lid went back on the box and the box went back on the top shelf of my closet never to be seen again.

At least, that was the vow I made at that precise moment. It wouldn’t be long before I caved in again, but that’s a story for another day.

Duo: Home

First NightSecond NightThird NightFourth NightFifth NightSixth NightHome

You stand on the balcony of your third-floor apartment, one hand holding a cigarette and the other bracing you against the railing. It’s twilight, so the sky above you is dense and heady, the clouds coloured a palate of purples and burnt oranges by the almost-set sun.

You came out here to be alone with your thoughts, away from the distractions your computer and your cell phone provide. You can hear people on the street below you and the noise of traffic is hard to blot out even at this hour, but the sounds are almost comforting; you’re alone, but you’re only just removed from everyone else’s reality. If you wanted to, you could shriek at the top of your lungs and they would all look up and see you, and for a moment you would exist in their world—until they all looked away again, of course. You refrain from distracting them from their business. The nicotine is all the company you need tonight.

It seemed like a good idea to go and see him at the time. You share the same friends, after all, and the coffee shop where he works when he’s not trying to take the music world by storm is something of an unofficial meeting place for the crowd you hang with. You went there with every intention of telling him you were there to meet up with the gang if he questioned you only to find that he wasn’t there. It wasn’t his shift; four months ago, you would have known that.
The nicotine’s kicking in now and your hands are starting to tremble from the hit. You think it’s the nicotine doing it, anyway. You hope it is.

Your friends tell you that you’re only making things harder for yourself and no matter how much your protest that you know what you’re doing, you agree with them secretly. It doesn’t make it easier to think about him all the time, and it most certainly doesn’t make it easier when you catch yourself fleetingly wondering what he’s doing and, rather than push the thought from your head, embrace it. You don’t know what he’s doing, can’t imagine what he does to fill his free time now that you’re apart, but even if you did know it wouldn’t matter; all that matters is that he doesn’t devote two-thirds of his day to wondering what you’re doing and probably hasn’t for a very long time.

For him, the ending was a long time coming. A week after getting back to LA he told you things hadn’t felt right for some time and when you nodded your head and coolly replied that you had thought the same thing, it had been a lie. For months you had worried that every night you spent together would be the last, yeah, but there had always been hope there—had always been the relief that came with discovering that each night wasn’t the last, that he still had it in him to say ‘I love you’ in the morning and sound like he meant it.

You know he’s single but you’ve heard he’s got his eye on somebody, and that kind of makes it worse than if he had left you for someone else in the first place. It’s the fact that he can get over things so quickly that hurts the most; you know that for every day you spend wondering where it all went wrong, he spends one carrying on with his life. He’s happier now that you’re separated and you’re not, and there’s not a damn thing you can do about it.

You toyed with the idea of leaving town after it happened. It seemed like your only option, really; if you stuck around you’d have to live the exact same life you lived before, just without him there to make the days seem a little less tedious. The prospect of running into him on the street by chance had almost made your mind up for you but the realisation that you had nowhere else to go kept you right where you were. You never left and you probably never will; the thought that you’ll most likely die in this godforsaken city is too depressing to handle.

It was a mistake to go to the coffee shop and as you stand there soaking in the glare of the dying sun, you tell yourself you won’t make that same mistake twice—you tell yourself this, but you know you’ll be back there next time you catch yourself thinking about him on some lonely afternoon.

Even as you watch the sun finally slip away beneath the horizon, you wonder if he’s out there watching it, too.

It’s hard to let go of something when you don’t know how to function without it.

Villaverde

The first thing to hit Cristina was the heat. The second was the dryness of the air, nothing like the sea tang back home. The third, once she set her feet down on the tarmac at Madrid-Barajas Airport, was the fact that she was really here.

Spain.

España.

The realisation that she had finally arrived, that this new chapter to her life was about to begin, was almost as sweet as the memory of the chocolate con churros her aunt had made for her years before. Sweeter, even, than the ice cream she and her boyfriend had shared in town before they drove to the airport.

She knew she had been here a dozen times before, when she was little. She imagined her mother had led her through this terminal with the indifference of someone who knows it’s just another journey, another uneventful holiday. What she couldn’t imagine, however, was her mother’s face on the day the pair had walked onto the tarmac and boarded the plane for Dublin one last time. She could scarcely remember her mother’s face, but the terror she felt over this was dulled somewhat by the knowledge that she would be reminded soon; the Metro beneath the airport would take Cristina through the heart of Madrid and southward, to where her family lived in a suburb of the bustling city.

‘Your mother and Aunt Pilar always looked alike,’ her father once said. ‘Your grandmother would tease me—“One day you’ll slip up and forget which one is yours!”’

Talking about Cristina’s mother pained her father, but from time to time he would say something like this in his low, nostalgic, and she would feel the memory of her mother flooding back to her. Lately, the few photos remaining of her mother were old and faded, and Cristina worried her mother’s memory would be forgotten altogether, with time. She hoped that being with Tía Pilar and Tío Miguel in the old family home would be enough to replenish what little she remembered

The Metro was hot, stuffy and filled to bursting with irritable passengers. Cristina, with a rucksack slung over her shoulder and a huge suitcase at her side, would’ve been relegated to standing at the back of the car if a kindly commuter hadn’t offered his seat. In the squeeze of the Metro, it was almost impossible for them to swap places, but with some careful manoeuvring and rapid Spanish between the man and the other passengers, Cristina was eventually seated.

She gave him a polite smile and, within minutes of propping her head against her rucksack in her lap, dozed off.

She dreamt of home, of lazy summer days and orange juice sipped in the shade of palm trees. She dreamt of Aunt Pilar and the boy next door, Javier who treated her like a sister.

She dreamt of her mother, that familiar mouth curving into a loving smile, her eyes glinting as she called out:—‘Venga, Cristina! You’ll get eaten alive by mosquitoes!’

She dreamt of hot, dusty flagstones beneath her feet as she ran to the house to be swept into her mother’s arms.

As the subway car hurtled beneath Madrid, Cristina dreamt of childhood lost.

Cristina turned six that June, and as the days grew shorter and the heat became less unbearable, there was a sense of change in the air. Cristina’s mother spent more and more time on the phone in the house next door and every time she returned, she had the same strange look in her eyes. One day, after spending an hour at the phone, Cristina’s mother returned looking resigned, and in spite of Cristina’s repeated questions, she wouldn’t explain what was wrong. Two weeks later the pair were on a plane to Dublin and Cristina could barely contain her excitement over getting to see her daddy again.

She didn’t know it then, but her mother had sat quietly staring out the window over the whole flight. It seemed she sensed she had left her homeland for good. That December, during a particularly icy spell, Cristina’s mother was killed in a car crash. Whether or not she had known it that day on the plane, she would never return home.

The subway was cool when Cristina awoke and the digital readout on her watch told her it was getting late. Rubbing the sleep from her eyes, she double-checked that she had time yet before she needed to make the changeover to the next line and sank into her seat to wonder what the dream had meant.

It hadn’t take much for her aunt to persuade her to come stay for the summer, although her dad hadn’t been as excited. With a little diplomacy and lots of promises of studying whilst she was away, she eventually convinced him and was soon booking her flight. Even at Dublin airport, she hadn’t stopped to look back for an instant. From the moment the letter of invitation arrived, Cristina had known that going to Spain was the perfect thing for her and nothing could have stopped her. It was only now that she paused to think about it, to question what she would find when she arrived at her old home and how things would be on the street where she had been born that she had second thoughts.

What if everything was different? What if she was too different? Worse, what if all the trinkets and mementos that remained of her mother had been boxed up and hidden away, to be forgotten? Some part of her knew she was being irrational, but that part was too small and quiet to shake the horrible feeling that coming to Spain had been a mistake.

And how would Tía Pilar have taken it if you told her no?

The voice was there in her head, but it seemed too logical, too soothing to be her own. She found herself—foolishly—opening her mouth to argue, but it spoke again.

Did you forget the things she said the last time you saw her? Did you forget how she held you in her arms like you were her daughter, like she couldn’t bear to leave you after the funeral?

When she thought about it, it made sense. Her dad always told her that her mother and Aunt Pilar looked so much alike, but hadn’t Aunt Pilar said Cristina had her mother’s eyes? She remembered now, all the way back to the day of the funeral, when Aunt Pilar had come to Ireland but Uncle Miguel couldn’t because he was sick—and he always seemed to be sick, as long as Cristina had been alive.

‘Your eyes remind me of your Mama’s,’ the woman said, and she had pulled Cristina to her chest and whispered in her ear, ‘You’ll be beautiful when you grow up, just like her.’

Cristina understood, finally. She hadn’t agreed to come to Spain to rekindle the memory of her mother—although she grew more scared as the days went by that her memory would simply blink out one day, like a candle. She had agreed for her aunt and her uncle, and for the sake of family. It had been hard on Cristina and her father, but Lord knew it must have been just as hard, if not worse, for the family that lost her to the quiet Irishman who came to town as a student one year and swept their favourite daughter off her feet.

Cristina was here for herself, yes, but more than anything she was here for her mother’s family, because that was what the woman would have wanted, what Imma la Fresca, the cheeky daughter, the fiery one, would have begged of her had she been alive—to show Tía Pilar that everything was okay, that her sister’s memory still lived on.

The intercom sounded overhead and snapped Cristina out of her daydream, informing her she had reached the end of the line: Villaverde Alto. A trip in the lift to street level and a few yards across the station would take her onto the streets of Villaverde, where she knew her family waited.

She let the other passengers file out ahead of her before climbing stiffly to her feet and dragging her things with her up the aisle until she stood in front of the doors leading onto the platform. A life-size poster adorned the wall across from her and she couldn’t help but laugh as she read the slogan: ¿Ha olvidado algo?—Have you forgotten anything?

She realised she hadn’t. She hadn’t forgotten her mother’s smile or voice or sneaky way of slipping an extra biscuit into Cristina’s lunchbox so her father wouldn’t see. She hadn’t forgotten, and she never would—not as long as she had her mother’s eyes.

Taking a deep breath, Cristina steeled herself, tucked her suitcase under one arm, slung her rucksack over the other and leapt onto the platform, leapt into what she knew what would be the best summer of her life.


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Closure

The day my father left, my mum toiled away for hours on end, washing all of our clothes, doing the dishes and scrubbing at the floors until they were so clean I would happily have eaten from them. When it seemed that night that she had lost steam and would finally go to bed, she put on a pot of coffee and stayed up darning the holes in my school uniform. I remember waking up some time around dawn, badly in need of the loo, and I could still hear her pottering around downstairs.

The next morning, she chucked out pretty much her whole wardrobe and disappeared for half of the day, returning with three bags full of new clothes and a box of bleach for her hair. Even though I had homework due on Monday, she begged me to help her with the bleach. I knew it was probably a bad idea given that my own experiments with hair products had once led to me dyeing my head ginger, but there was something so fervent, so desperate in her eyes that made it impossible for me to refuse. We ended up making a mess of it, so much so that there were big splotches of dark brown amidst the blonde where we’d missed with the bleach, but by the end of it that terrible look in my mother’s eyes had abated somewhat. As I watched her stand in the bathroom, inspecting her ruined hair in the mirror, I couldn’t help but rush to her side and wrap my arms around her.

That was the first time I ever saw her cry.

She never married again, and I never questioned it. Of course there were boyfriends and dates and moments with the bloke at the café, but whenever things looked as if they were starting to get serious, she always distanced herself. It was never long before my mum was left alone again, but she seemed to like it that way. I suppose I was glad back then that no one came to take my father’s place in the family. In retrospect, my mother was probably just afraid that the same thing would happen again. She got over him leaving, eventually—with a little help from me, I’ll admit—but it always seemed as if she were barely holding herself together. Another broken heart and I don’t think she could have bounced back.

I don’t really think I took it as hard as she did, to be honest. I know that around my birthday every year, without fail, I felt a sliver of dread worm its way into my stomach whenever I saw the envelopes addressed to me in his handwriting. I know that for the longest time I grew up thinking of him as some shadowy figure that had been cut out of my life, leaving a hole that felt like a strange prickling in my chest. In spite of this, though, life seemed to go on as normal without him and I never found myself wanting for a ‘father figure’. For a short while after he left, my friends always fell into an awkward silence when their own fathers—their own perfect families—came up in conversation, but I wasn’t bothered. My dad left, I know. Was it really such a bad thing to lose him from my life if he was so bloody quick to up and leave us?

Anyway. Being fatherless didn’t destroy me in the long run, but it did leave me hardened. With boyfriends, I was ruthless. I dropped them at the first sign of trouble, no ifs or buts, which led eventually to everyone at school calling me ‘cold’. There was some sort of bet going when we were all 16 about who could go with me the longest before I dropped them; if what I heard second-hand was to be believed, the victor was Davy Pembroke with a grand total of three weeks.

Eight years and two months (to the day) after my father left, I was working on my dissertation in the library at uni when I felt my phone buzz in my pocket. It was my mum. I needed a break from my work and it had been a good week since we had spoken, so I quickly packed away my things and hurried out into the stairwell to answer the call.

‘Rose,’ she said, her voice oddly strained. ‘Can you talk right now?’

I told her I was at the library. She cut me off before I could ask if it was important.

‘Do you want to come by the house this evening? I’ll cook dinner for you. Bubble and squeak. You used to love that, when you were little.’

‘Mum?’ I blurted, trying to interrupt, but she managed to give me a time to get there with strict instructions to bring a bottle of wine without even letting me get a word in edgeways.

I knew something was wrong when I walked up the drive of my childhood home that evening, that much was obvious. I almost shied away from marching up the steps to the front door, but before I could consider turning back the door was open and she was there, ushering me in.

Dinner was awkward. Mum asked questions about how uni was going in a bid to force a conversation and, try as I might, my best efforts to keep up my half of it always ended with us both sinking back into silence. An hour later my dinner was cold and I had only half touched it. The bottle I had brought was empty but the wine wasn’t making us any more talkative.

She opened her mouth after a while and drew in a deep breath, and I felt the worry nagging at me once again.

This is it, I thought. This is the bad news.

‘I’ll clear up,’ I blurted. Typical evasive action. She knew exactly what I was doing, though, and an instant later her hand shot across the table to grab my wrist.

‘No, Rosie. We can do that later. I… I want to talk to you first.’

Here it is.

I was overcome by the sudden urge to bolt—I knew whatever she wanted to say couldn’t be good—yet at once I found myself rooted to my seat.

‘Your father died last month,’ she said bluntly, and it was as if the life had drained right out of me. She watched me for a good few minutes before asking, her voice quiet, ‘Are you okay?’

Am I okay? Really? ‘Yeah, mum,’ I found myself saying. ‘I’m fine. It’s okay.’

She looked as if she were about to say something else, but instead she got to her feet and set about clearing up the dishes. While she was scraping the leftovers of our dinner into the bin, I stuck the kettle on and brewed us some tea. Not long after that we were both seated on the settee in the living room with the TV on, neither of us paying much attention as Have I Got News for You played on the Beeb.

To my surprise, I was the first to speak. ‘How?’ I asked, simple as that. I wasn’t even sure if I wanted to know but, whether I liked it or not, the question was out there.

‘I don’t know.’ She shrugged simply and took a sip of tea before continuing. ‘Your aunt Mary didn’t say.’

It took me a moment to realise that she meant my father’s sister Mary, whom she had never once referred to as ‘your aunt Mary’ in all the years after dad left us, but by the time it clicked, she was speaking again.

‘They’ve already had the funeral. Your grandmother didn’t think to tell us before because, well, because it’s been so long. But that’s not why your aunt Mary called.’ At this, my mother paused and shook her head, looking away. It took her a while to speak up again and when she did, her voice was shaky. She wouldn’t meet my eye. ‘They read the will,’ she said. ‘We’re both in it.’

‘We… What?’

I don’t know how long we sat there in silence, or when exactly my mum got up to refill our cups with tea, and when I realised she was sitting down next to me again it felt like it had been a lifetime since she had phoned me earlier that day.

I asked the next obvious question, since I knew I wasn’t about to get an answer to my last one.

‘Doesn’t— Didn’t he have a family?’

I could have sworn I caught her mouth twitching in a smirk. ‘Apparently not.’

Apparently not.

‘Do you know how much he left us?’

‘Not a clue,’ she said. She took another long pause and buried her face in the brim of her mug of tea, and when she looked up at me again I couldn’t be sure if her eyes were watering from the steam, or…

I had a million questions but I knew that she neither wanted to nor could answer them. She was probably just as confused by it all as I was, and I felt like it was my duty to be the rock for her. Just as I had helped her bleach her hair eight years before, just as I had hugged her tightly while she cried, I had to be the strong one again.

‘Do you want me to call them tomorrow and get it all straightened out?’ I asked, and she responded with a nod.
Once I had helped her into bed, I kissed her goodnight and made my way to my old bedroom down the hall. Even though it had been at least two years since I had last truly ‘lived’ in that room, whenever I came home for weekends or holidays, my mum always made an effort to have it exactly as it was when I was growing up. I used to hate the lavender walls and flowery curtains when I was a teenager. As an adult, at the grand old age of twenty-two, it was comforting to lie in my old, tiny bed and look at the faded posters on my walls, comforting to know that some things never change.

I never did make that phone call. I don’t think my mum really wanted me to, and if I’m honest I didn’t want to, either. It’s not as if she were poor, and my student loans would certainly cover me until such time as I got a job. The only reason I would ever have considered calling my grandmother to sort out the will would be to get some sense of closure, and I knew my mother and I didn’t need that. We got all the closure we needed when my father left eight years before.

No, all that mattered to me was making sure that my mother was okay, that I didn’t ever see her break down like I did that day in the bathroom with bleach spilled all over the sink. All that mattered was my mum, and that was how it had always been.


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