Together Forever
Page 20
‘A woman like you,’ Brian went on, looking at Sister Kennedy, ‘who has known such goodness in your life, has shown such charitable spirit, would recognise a kindred spirit and Freddie Boyle is such a man. You two would have so much to talk about.’
‘Our Good Samaritan,’ she said, wide-eyed at the thought of such goodness come to life.
‘Indeed,’ he nodded. ‘Like the story in the Bible when Jesus does that thing. And the thing happens. And the Good Samaritan saves the day.’
‘He does,’ said Sister Kennedy. ‘He saves the day. That’s a lovely way of putting it. It’s my favourite parable.’
He smiled. ‘Let’s make this happen, Sister Kennedy. Let’s make this happen.’
‘Well,’ she said. ‘I vote yes to this Freddie Byrne.’
‘Boyle,’ he corrected.
‘Aye too,’ said Noleen.
‘And me,’ said Brendan, who was on another liqueur.
Brian looked delighted. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘that seems as though we’re…’
‘Wait a minute,’ I said. ‘We have to discuss this. We need to talk about it properly…’
Sister Kennedy looked at the clock. ‘Oh my goodness, it’s time to go. I told you I couldn’t stay long tonight… it’s my book group. The Thorn Birds. My goodness. So much to say. I just don’t know where we’ll start.’
Brian stood up and pulled out her chair and helped Sister Kennedy to her feet.
‘I’m so glad you approve of the plan,’ he was murmuring. ‘It’s practically holy. For us to give the land to Freddie Boyle, I think it’s a holy thing to do. God would be pleased with the plan, if I may be so bold.’
‘You may,’ she said, ‘for He moves in mysterious ways.’
‘Indeed he does,’ said Brian. He glanced at me and there was triumph in his eyes. ‘Looks like there’s just the i’s to cross and the t’s to dot. Sharpen your fountain pen, Tabitha.’
For a moment, I felt rather alone. Mary was perhaps a world away, Clodagh was fighting her own battles and my mother was pitched against me. I needed a friend. Well, I needed Red. And once I was in the car, I found the scrap of paper he’d written his number on, and dialled it.
Chapter Twenty-One
The choices we make, the million decisions we take every day, are often unfelt, unnoticed. But sometimes, the after-shocks are felt for years and years. If I hadn’t gone swimming, maybe I wouldn’t have lost the baby. If I had told Red about the baby in the first place, I would have had to tell him about the miscarriage. If I’d just been honest, then maybe our lives would have been so different.
‘Red… it’s…’
‘Tab?’ He interrupted. ‘Are you all right?’
‘Yes… fine.’ Where to start? What to say? Just, I wanted to hear your voice. I really want to see you. ‘Have you heard about Mary? She’s had to go away. I don’t know if she told you.’
‘Yeah…’ He hesitated and I knew immediately that he knew her reason. ‘Yeah, she cancelled our film club so… so, I was aware.’ He wasn’t going to betray any confidences that was for sure. There was silence for a moment.
‘And you, Tab?’ he said. ‘How are you? And Rosie?’
‘She’s not… she’s not so good.’ I could feel my whole body unfold as I began to confide. ‘Red, she hasn’t been doing any work. None at all. She’s just been sitting there in her room, writing over and over again that she hates her life.’ He was silent as I spoke and all the worry I had been feeling for the last months bubbled up and I started to cry. ‘It must have been so awful for her. I feel that it’s my fault. I didn’t ask any questions. I just assumed she was okay and she was upstairs in her room and I didn’t bother to check on her. I should have done. And now Michael thinks milk is the answer. And so…’
‘I’ll come round,’ he said, firmly. ‘We could go for a walk.’
That was exactly what I needed. I breathed out in relief. ‘Thank you Red. I’ll just check on Rosie and see if she’s okay with me popping out.’
If I could turn back time, I would never have gone swimming. And I would have told Red from the moment I found out I was pregnant. But then I became someone else, the girl who lost a grandmother and an unborn child within a week. And if I could turn back time, I would have noticed what was going on with Rosie. I would have seen it, she wouldn’t have been so alone.
Red wasn’t my answer, my knight in shining armour. And I could never tell him about what had happened. I should have told him years ago, when it happened, but it was too late now.
But we could still try and be friends. Not friends friends but acquaintances who shared a special history. That counted for something, didn’t it? And I wanted to see him. In fact, I wanted to see him more than anything, however awkward and strange and weird it all was.
Rosie was sitting downstairs, watching television when I got home.
‘Hello,’ I said. ‘You’re looking… better.’
‘Am I?’
‘Yes. How are you feeling?’
‘A bit better.’ She gave a smile.
‘Well, then, that must be why.’
‘Would you be all right, if I went for a walk. With Red?’
She nodded. ‘Yeah, I think I’ll survive.’
‘Sure?’
‘Sure.’
Doorbell. I ran to open it.
*
‘We could go down to the harbour? It wouldn’t take long,’ he said.
‘Yeah, that would be nice.’
We began to walk, side by side, the closest, physically, we’d been in years. I was so aware of his body, one that I used to know every inch of. His arm brushed mine for a moment and the warmth, the intimacy of that movement was all too fleeting.
‘So, Rosie…’ he began.
I remembered how this felt, talking and walking. One of us listening, while the other unburdened or entertained or explained or whatever we used to do. He was a good listener, was Red. All those years away had not dimmed his ability to listen as though there was only one thing in the world he was interested in, and that was what you were saying. And with everyone else, you were just imparting information, bringing them up to speed on certain life events. With Red, it always had been, an unburdening, an opening up. And he was there, listening with his whole body.
We sat down on a bench, just inches from each other, overlooking the sea where the trawlers and the small fishing boats were tied up for the night. Him, as he always sat, right ankle resting on left knee.
‘I should have known how bad it had got, Red,’ I said. ‘I mean, all the signs were there.’
‘It’s not your fault,’ he said kindly. ‘People need to ask for help. All too often, we just try and cope on our own, thinking that that is the best way. But it’s really the worst.’ He smiled at me. ‘It’s the least effective way of getting better.’
If you only knew, I thought. ‘Yes, yes… but sometimes we can’t. Sometimes we don’t know what to do. And it’s easy for me – for us – to sit here and say you should talk, when we’re rational and not in the middle of some crisis. When you are… well, it’s hard to do all the right things.’
He nodded. ‘I know. But you shouldn’t blame yourself.’
‘She’s always been a perfectionist, always wanted everything to be nice and good, always had the best marks in school, just so easy. But when Jake finished with her… that was a bit of a point of no return… a kind of loss of innocence that life can be really awful.’
‘I suppose it builds resilience,’ he said thoughtfully.
‘The school have told me that she doesn’t have to sit the exams this year but that we should have a total rethink about next year. Reapply to different colleges, make sure she’s on a course that she really wants to do.’
‘You’re a really good mother, Tab,’ he said. ‘I always wondered what…’ He trailed off.
‘What?’
‘Nothing…’
I let it go. I was loving talking to him, as though nothing bad had ever happ
ened, that we were still Red and Tab, that there was no painful elision in our lives. And that in a moment, I could lean over and he’d put his arm about me and we’d sit there and watch the boats and the sea, together forever, as we’d always meant to be and there was no way I was going to spoil this moment by talking about the past.
‘She’s sort of lost her footing… you know?’ I carried on.
‘I’m still losing mine, all the time,’ he said. ‘Literally and metaphorically. We were rehearsing the songs from Annie and I ran down the steps from the stage and misjudged them.’
‘Not in front of the girls?’ Red always made everything better. I should have remembered that.
‘Oh yes… how they laughed,’ he said, grimacing. ‘And I had to pretend that I wasn’t embarrassed and that I hadn’t bruised my arse.’
I laughed. ‘And metaphorically?’
‘Oh you know, in the way that we all do, us humans, doing the wrong thing, saying the wrong thing, wondering if the life you are living is the life you are meant to live, that kind of thing.’ There was a look in his eye that I couldn’t quite read.
‘Why? What makes you think you’re not?’
‘I don’t know,’ he said, looking at me. ‘Just a typical ongoing existential crisis. I just wonder sometimes. But you have Rosie. You have her.’
We looked at each other, unable to break eye contact, a huge swell of feeling washed over us, so much unspoken, so much unresolved emotion. The detonating of our relationship had been brutal for both of us.
‘Red…’
He looked away. ‘It’s been tough, you know,’ he said. ‘I mean, I’m a grown-up now. And I’ve learned to live with it.’
‘With what?’ I said gently.
‘The disappointment,’ he said. ‘It never went away, the disappointment.’ It was clear he meant only one thing.
‘Red… I’m so sorry.’
He shrugged it off. ‘Part of me was frozen, numb,’ he went on, looking out to sea, as though I wasn’t there. ‘When you didn’t come to San Francisco, when you didn’t answer any of my calls. When there was no explanation. You should have just told me. If you had met someone else, or if you’d just gone off me. Or whatever.’ He said sadly, as though resigned. ‘That would have hurt, sure, but it would have been better than nothing.’
‘I know… I’m sorry.’
‘What’s done is done. I don’t blame you. I’m not angry. I’ve never been angry. I was just so bloody sad about it. It was like it took root, this sadness. I mean I went out, I was sociable, good to be with, made jokes, the usual Red, like I am now but I was never able to shake the sadness’ He shrugged again. ‘It doesn’t matter now. But I’ve always wanted to tell you how I felt. I mean, I know you were grieving for your grandmother… that must have been hard. But not to tell me. To just disappear like that.’
I sat there, not knowing what to say, certain though that any explanation may be redundant and I didn’t want to try and excuse or to explain away what I’d done. I needed to feel his pain, his sadness.
‘Tab,’ he said, quietly. ‘There is one thing, though. Why did you marry Michael? I’m sorry. That sounds rude, I know it does and it’s none of my business. But I knew you once and, going by that, I just don’t get it. I mean, you’re the daughter of Nora. And you marry a Progressive Conservative.’ He stopped. ‘I know I shouldn’t ask, but it never made sense. None of it did and then you marry someone like Michael Fogarty. When Dad wrote and told me… it made me think that I didn’t know you. And that was really difficult. But maybe I didn’t. And maybe you’re happy now and you made all the right decisions and then that’s good. But reassure me, tell me that you’re happy.’
He was looking at me intently, puzzled, curious. When I didn’t answer immediately, he broke away and stared out to sea.
‘Tab, it’s none of my business. But I’ve never come up with an answer. Not…’ he gave an awkward smile, ‘that I’m so amazing. But I thought we were amazing. And so…’
‘I know. I thought we were too.’ I let his words and his feelings soak into me, hearing every word, every nuance. His loneliness and pain. His disappointment. I’d felt it too but mine was a different story. I needed to hear his.
‘And as soon as I saw you again, I involved myself in your life. Like I used to. It was just instinct, wanting to be there, taking care of you. The protest, me tackling you about it when I’d been in the school for less than twenty-four hours and you being so gracious by my intrusion. And then calling round to give that book to Rosie because I felt so worried about you. Both of you. It’s crazy.’
‘Red…’
‘Being back here is a mistake. I know that now,’ he went on. ‘I thought we could be friends because there was so much I still liked, the way you try and make people laugh. The way you play with your hair. Your beautiful face…’ He looked at me again. ‘I thought I could do it. I would take anything, any crumbs you would give me. You were all I thought about for all those years and from that first moment I felt that same pull towards you, stronger than ever, and I didn’t know what to do, to ignore it, to ignore you or try to find a way of being close to you. As a friend. I wanted to. I wanted to so much… And here I am now, still lonely, still on my own and I get nothing. Again.’
‘Red, please…’ I was trying to process everything. He still cared about me? He felt the same way? But I couldn’t say how I felt because what would he say when I told him about my miscarriage. How angry would he be then?
‘Forget it Tab,’ he said. ‘My fault. All of this. My messiah complex, think I can sort everyone else out and not look after me. You’d have thought I might have learned something in the intervening years. But it seems not.’
‘Red…’
‘I missed you, Tab. More than anything. More than tea. More than Irish chocolate.’ He didn’t smile. He meant it. ‘More than watching the Irish soccer team play an international. More than Dad. I missed you. But I can’t do it. I’m not coming back next term, I don’t even know if I’ll stay in Ireland.’
‘Me?’ The full force of my action hit me. His words didn’t just permeate, they fused themselves to my cortex. He had loved me?
‘And I still do,’ he said. ‘All the time. You know at Clodagh’s party? I was standing there, chatting to you, acting as if we could do this, be friends. I was enjoying myself. I like being with you Tab. Always have done. But then it hit me. Again. That love, full force, full on love. I mean, I can’t do this… I can’t. I don’t want to be friends with you. I want everything.’
‘Red, I’m sorry…’ I feel the same, I wanted to say. I feel exactly the same. I love you too. But how could I say it when I was married. I couldn’t say it. My throat dried up and I sat there, slightly stunned.
He turned to me. ‘How can I begin anything new with all of yesterday within me? Leonard Cohen wrote that and it was all I could think about for years… I couldn’t move on because I was still consumed by you.’ Angry and furious now, he went on speaking, ‘I didn’t want to become bitter,’ he said. ‘It took all my strength, is taking all my strength, not to be angry and bitter. But I think I am losing that particular battle.’ He stood up, hands pushed into his jeans pockets. ‘I tried. I thought that I was over it enough. But… it’s hard, you know?’
And he stood up and walked off, leaving me sitting on the bench as seagulls circled overhead. I didn’t call him or run after him. I didn’t know what to do, I didn’t know where to begin, so I just watched him walk away.
Before
‘I’ll see you in three months,’ Red had said. We couldn’t stop kissing each other at the departures gate. ‘Will you be all right?’
‘Yes, fine,’ I said. ‘I told you. I’ve got so many things to do and then I’ll come and join you.’
‘I don’t know how I’m going to survive without you.’
‘Me too.’ Our foreheads were pressed together, our lips nearly touching. ‘I love you Tab,’ he said.
‘And I love you,�
� I said. And I did love him. And I never stopped.
Chapter Twenty-Two
I deserved that. Being abandoned on a bench. It was the least he could do, the least I deserved and, after taking a moment to gather my emotions, I walked home. But as soon as I’d said hello to Rosie, there was a knock on the door belonging, I was sure, to Red. I was ready now to talk, really and truly about everything, to open up to him… to try to explain. I felt a sublime gratitude to whoever or whatever was owed it that he hadn’t given up on me. But it was Clodagh, crying, her mascara and make-up was running down her face.
‘I’ve been dumped. Sacked. Booted out. Removed from office. My contract was not renewed. It’s been renewed every three years for the past fifteen and now…!’
‘What do you mean? Who’s done this?’
‘Max. The tiny, miniature bastard. Personally. And. Professionally. Personally, I can deal with. Professionally, I am livid. Bridget is taking over the reading of the news.’
‘What? But she’s not a journalist…’
‘No. But she’s popular. People want to see her. More than they want the news. My services are not required.’
‘What happened?’
‘So, I’m standing in his office, ready for our standard contract renewal chat but Max tells me I am no longer needed or wanted on the six o’clock news and that Bridget is going to be reading it because, and I quote, a monkey could read the bloody autocue and someone else can write the copy, and then he says that this won’t affect our personal relationship and, at that point, I laughed and said it bloody well did.’
‘Clodagh, slow down and start at the beginning.’
She breathed in. ‘First of all,’ she said. ‘Do you have any cake?’
‘What kind? I have coffee and walnut, mini rolls and baklava. Which would you like?’
‘All of them.’
This was serious, I thought, as I watched Clodagh systematically demolish the sugar smorgasbord.