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The Rumour

Page 2

by Lesley Kara


  Before Alfie came along, I hadn’t been in a relationship for years and I wasn’t in the least bit broody. I’d worked my way up to becoming a lettings manager for a large estate agency in South London, overseeing their entire rental-property portfolio. I drove a silver Audi A3, lived in a small but smart first-floor apartment which was all sharp lines and minimalism, and my cooking skills didn’t extend to much more than popping a Waitrose ready-meal into the microwave.

  Then I hooked up with Michael Lewis, an old friend of mine from university. It was only ever going to be a casual fling. Michael’s an investigative journalist, which isn’t exactly a career that lends itself to a stable family life and, to be honest, I was enjoying my independence too. We became – what’s the expression? – ‘friends with benefits’. What we didn’t realize was that one of those ‘benefits’ would turn out to be Alfie.

  I’ll never forget Mum’s face when I told her. I don’t know what was the bigger shock: me being pregnant or Michael being black.

  Michael was brilliant. Still is. He didn’t freak out or immediately offer to pay for a termination. He sat me down and told me he’d support me in whatever it was I decided to do. He said that if I went ahead with the pregnancy, he’d play as big or as little a role as I wanted him to. He even offered to marry me.

  I can’t pretend I wasn’t tempted, but I knew he was only offering because of Alfie. Besides, if we’d married and it hadn’t worked out – and let’s face it, how many relationships do these days – we might have ended up hating each other’s guts like my parents did, and that wouldn’t have been good for Alfie.

  This way, we’re still the best of friends and Alfie gets a proper relationship with his dad, which is more than I ever had.

  Alfie waves at someone on the other side of the street. It’s the woman from the bungalow opposite the school. She straightens up from where she’s been bending over her rose bushes and waves back at him, secateurs in hand. A few weeks ago, when Alfie started school, he fell over and grazed his knee on the pavement and she was kind enough to come out with a plaster. Made a real fuss of him.

  An unwelcome thought pops into my mind. What if she’s Sally McGowan, with an unencumbered view into the school playground? I’m being daft, I know I am. There’s no reason it should be her any more than this woman walking towards us now with her shopping bag on wheels.

  The demographic in Flinstead is older than the national average. People retire here. From London, mostly, drawn to the sea and the gentler pace of life. Apart from the beach and one street of shops, that’s it. For anything more exciting, you have to drive for half an hour, or jump on a bus if you don’t mind waiting for ever. It’s why I was so desperate to get away and live in London the minute I turned eighteen, but it’s different now. I’ve got Alfie to think about.

  Back home, in my little galley kitchen that will be utterly transformed when I get round to painting the cupboards, I make Alfie his after-school snack and listen to the familiar strains of the Star Wars soundtrack blaring out of the living room. I can’t imagine life without Alfie. Nothing could have prepared me for the joy of having a child. Or the fear. I take his sandwich in and try not to dwell on the nightmare that poor Robbie Harris’s mother had to endure, all those years ago. But try as I might, I can’t stop the images spooling out in my mind, imagining that it’s Alfie’s limp, bloodstained body I’m cradling in my arms.

  I always do this. Conjure up the worst possible thing that could happen to him. Maybe every parent does. Maybe this morbid imagination is what we need to keep our children safe.

  I snuggle up to him on the sofa and kiss the top of his head. What kind of child could stab a five-year-old boy through the heart?

  3

  ‘I’ll be back by ten,’ I tell Mum. ‘Don’t let him have any more cupcakes.’

  Mum ruffles Alfie’s freshly washed hair and laughs. ‘It’s a good job you’re always running around, young man, or you’d look like one of those sumo wrestlers.’

  Alfie throws back his head and roars with exaggerated laughter.

  Outside, I pull my jacket on and set off towards Liz Blackthorne’s house for book club, head bowed against the sudden gust of wind. The nights are getting colder and darker now. The smell of damp earth and wet leaves hangs in the air. I push my hands into my pockets and press on.

  Liz lives right on the seafront. The wind is even stronger here, barrelling in off the North Sea. As usual, I evaluate each house I pass. Michael often jokes that, like journalists, estate agents are never off duty. While he’s always on the lookout for newsworthy stories, I’m sizing up properties. Writing sales copy in my head. Guessing the market value.

  When I pass the empty house with the boarded-up windows and the overgrown garden, I can’t help wondering who it belongs to and why they’ve never done anything with it. It could be stunning if it was renovated. Maybe the owner died without a will or didn’t have any heirs. Or maybe they just don’t want it any more. Imagine that. Imagine letting an investment rot away. Although you’d have to spend a packet to bring it up to spec. It’s like a lot of old houses round here – they might look grand on the outside but, inside, they’re falling apart.

  Liz’s house is one of those Dutch-style affairs with a gambrel roof. It reminds me of a face – the sharply pitched roof slopes like straightened hair and the two semicircular upstairs windows like hooded eyes, peeping out across the sea. I love it.

  ‘Come in,’ Liz says, and we give each other the customary peck on each cheek.

  With her three-quarter-length harlequin jacket and her long white hair, which this evening she’s wearing in a thick plait coiled round her neck and over the front of her shoulder, she looks even more stylish than usual. If I look half as good as Liz Blackthorne when I’m her age, I’ll be happy.

  I follow her into her dining room, where the other four are already sitting round the polished mahogany table, tucking into olives and Kettle crisps and drinking wine. This is just the kind of room I’d like. Floor-to-ceiling bookshelves in the alcoves either side of the chimney breast, original artwork on the walls – most of it painted by Liz – and, under the window, a Turkish ottoman draped in vintage fabric and heaped with cushions. Liz has a knack of dressing a room that makes it look like a bohemian salon. A hotchpotch of patterns and colours that miraculously complement each other. It must be the artist in her. If I tried something similar, it’d look a complete mess. Maybe I should ask her to advise me on what to do with my place.

  ‘You’ve just missed a very interesting conversation about flashers,’ Liz says.

  She gives me a pointed look and I smile. I feel a real connection with Liz. I’ve always been drawn to friendships with older women. Women comfortable in their own skin. Women who aren’t afraid to be unapologetically themselves.

  One thing’s for sure: Mum was right about me joining a book club. It’s just what I need. Most of my old schoolfriends have long since left the area and, though I occasionally see one or two familiar faces, we’ve little in common now. I still meet up with Tash, of course, and one or two of the others from London, but not as often as I’d like. It might only be four months since I washed back up in Pleasantville, as Tash somewhat disparagingly calls it, but in many respects it feels like a lifetime.

  Laughter ripples round the table and glasses are refilled. Liz slides an empty glass towards me and nods at the array of bottles on the sideboard.

  ‘I started it, I’m afraid,’ Barbara says, her deep, plummy voice loud in my ear. If she drinks any more, she’ll start lapsing into her native Brummie accent.

  Barbara is a local councillor. A large woman with an even larger personality whose wardrobe seems to consist chiefly of smart black trousers and sensible shirts. She reminds me of one of my old colleagues: loud and opinionated, but funny with it.

  ‘Now why does that not surprise me?’ I say. More guffaws. I’ve definitely got some catching up to do in the wine department. Even Maddie, who usually sticks to tea, is knoc
king it back tonight.

  ‘Right then.’ Liz’s voice is only fractionally louder than everyone else’s, but something in its tone brings us all to attention. ‘I suppose we’d better make a start,’ she says.

  This month’s read – Alain de Botton’s Consolations of Philosophy – was entirely Liz’s choice and is a departure from our normal fare of contemporary fiction with the odd classic thrown in. It’s Barbara’s turn next month and, judging by what I’ve just spotted poking out of her handbag, she’s chosen Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. I was hoping for something a little lighter, to be honest. Something feel-good for a change.

  As usual, Barbara isn’t backward in coming forward. This is my fourth meeting and I don’t think she’s liked a single book yet. She tells us she doesn’t care for this populist reading of great minds and, as someone who’s virtually given up all hope of meeting a suitable partner, she isn’t comforted by Schopenhauer’s views on love being merely a vehicle for the propagation of genes.

  ‘I mean, what does that say about me? That my genes aren’t worthy of being passed on? Not that I could pass them on now,’ she mutters into her wine glass. ‘Not without divine intervention.’

  We all chuckle.

  ‘Well, if you won’t be consoled by Schopenhauer, what about Nietzsche?’ Liz says, fixing Barbara with her large, serious eyes. ‘I love his idea that we’re nourished by all the shitty things that happen to us in life, that we become better people as a result.’

  Barbara snorts. ‘I’ve had so much shit thrown at me over the years, I’m surprised I’m not a paragon of virtue by now.’

  I tell them how much I enjoy following de Botton’s School of Life posts on Twitter and Facebook. Barbara pulls a face. ‘Thank God I’ve never got involved with social media,’ she says, as if I’ve just admitted to a shameful vice.

  Inevitably, as the evening wears on, the focus of our conversation moves away from Socrates and Seneca and the rest, and turns to each other and our respective news. Tonight, it’s poor Jenny under the spotlight. Jenny is our youngest member. A newly qualified nurse, slim, shy and intelligent, with dark blonde hair in a ponytail and a liking for short dresses and opaque black tights. Karen is quizzing her on her love life and Jenny looks distinctly uncomfortable.

  I know what it’s like to be on the receiving end of one of Karen’s inquisitions. She tried it on me once, and I hated it. I wasn’t in the mood to explain my unusual relationship with Alfie’s dad. I didn’t see why I should and I don’t like being put on the spot like that. Neither does Jenny, by the looks of things.

  I’m not sure I could tolerate Karen’s company more than once a month, which is a shame because, on the face of it, we’re quite similar. Both in our mid-thirties with a school-age child. Both avid readers. And, like me, she moved here from London, although she’s been here a few years now. She and her husband run a computer-graphics company and she’s heavily involved with the PTA at Alfie’s school. At my first book-club meeting, she started giving me the lowdown on life in Flinstead as if she were the old hand and I the newcomer. When I told her I went to school here and that there isn’t a square inch of Flinstead I don’t know about, she looked almost put out, as if I were trying to show off. Maybe I was.

  I help myself to more wine. ‘Can I top up anyone’s glass?’ I say, hoping to divert the attention away from Jenny. But only Barbara takes me up on my offer.

  ‘So how long have you been seeing him?’ Karen says. She leans in towards Jenny, eyes wide behind her geeky glasses, the blunt ends of her straight, dark hair swinging out over the table. ‘Is it serious?’

  Jenny blushes. The poor woman’s neck has gone all red and patchy and I feel a sudden need to protect her from Karen’s persistent questioning. Aren’t people allowed to have a love life without the whole town knowing about it?

  ‘Just out of interest,’ I say, ‘has anyone heard of Sally McGowan?’ It’s the first thing that pops into my head.

  Karen looks at me, astonished. Oh dear, why on earth did I say that? Typical me, engaging my mouth before my brain. Liz shoots me a quizzical frown. At least I think it’s quizzical. I get the impression she’d rather steer the conversation back to books. Which is exactly what I should have done.

  Karen stares at me from behind her glasses and blinks like an owl. ‘The only Sally McGowan I know of is that child killer from the sixties. I remember my mum telling me about it.’

  ‘God, yeah,’ Maddie says. ‘You’re not thinking of getting us to read a book about her, are you, Jo? Because I honestly don’t think I’d want to read anything like that.’ She shudders. ‘I’d find it too distressing.’

  I don’t know what to make of Maddie yet. She reminds me of a little bird. Bright, beady eyes always darting from one face to another. High-pitched voice that warbles when she gets excited. Her daughter works in finance. Something high-powered in the City. I get the feeling she takes advantage of Maddie. It must be a lot cheaper and more convenient than a nanny. I know Mum helps me out a lot with Alfie, but I’d never expect her to do it full-time.

  ‘No, nothing like that. I heard her mentioned earlier today, that’s all.’

  ‘So what was it?’ Liz asks, casually reaching for an olive. ‘Something on the news?’

  ‘No. Just something I overheard when I was dropping Alfie off at school. A silly piece of gossip. You know what Perrydale Primary’s like. It’s a hotbed of salacious titbits.’

  Maddie laughs. ‘You’re not wrong there. Every time I pick my granddaughter up I hear something I wish I hadn’t.’

  ‘Come on then, Jo,’ Liz says. Her eyes are wide. Inquisitive. ‘Don’t keep us on tenterhooks.’

  I clear my throat. It’s too late to wriggle out of it now. Everyone’s waiting for my answer.

  ‘I’m sure it’s a load of old nonsense, but someone reckoned they’d heard something about her living in Flinstead, under a new identity.’

  ‘Bloody hell,’ Jenny says.

  Barbara puts her glass down on the table and stares at me, open-mouthed. Her cheeks are flushed from the wine. ‘My parents used to say you could tell she was evil just from looking at her eyes.’

  Liz snorts with derision.

  ‘Actually, it wouldn’t surprise me at all,’ Karen says. ‘Flinstead would be the perfect place to hide someone like that. I mean, who’d ever think to look for her here?’

  The question hangs in the air, unanswered. Is it my imagination or has the rumour distorted the ambience of our gentle, bookish gathering?

  4

  Michael arrives at ten past eight on Saturday morning, straight from the airport. I open the front door and, for a few seconds, I can’t speak. Whenever I see him after a period of absence, I’m struck by his physical presence. The way he occupies space. The way he owns it. He’s not body-builder big, but there’s an aura of strength about him. Strength and gentleness – a very sexy combination – and this morning, combined as it is with a couple of days’ stubble and the fact that his crumpled white shirt looks so good against his black trousers and black skin, he looks even sexier than usual, which is infuriating, when I know how jet-lagged he must be.

  He’s been visiting his cousin in Las Vegas and ended up reporting on the concert shooting and staying on to follow it up. It must have been horrendous, although I know there’ll be a small part of him that’s glad he was there when it happened.

  He crouches on the doorstep and opens his arms wide. Alfie hurls himself at his dad’s chest and flings his arms around his neck.

  ‘I’ve missed you, little man,’ Michael says, rubbing his stubbly cheek against Alfie’s face.

  Alfie shrieks in delight.

  ‘Thanks, son, that’s doing my headache a whole lot of good.’ He looks up at me and grins. ‘Any chance of a coffee? I feel like shit.’

  Alfie gasps. ‘You said a rude word, Daddy.’

  ‘Yes, he did. I don’t want you saying that word, Alfie.’

  Michael gives me a sheepish look from under his ey
ebrows and smacks his own hand. Now it’s my turn to be hugged. ‘Sorry, Mummy,’ he whispers in my ear. He looks down at Alfie. ‘Seeing him makes it all worth it, though. I didn’t want to let him down.’

  I nod, gratefully. Normally, he takes Alfie to his sister’s place in Woodbridge or back to his flat in Camberwell. Now, I don’t know whether it’s because I feel sorry for him having to get back in the car again when he’s so obviously shattered, or whether I’m worried that he’ll fall asleep at the wheel with Alfie in the back – it’s probably that, to be honest – but all of a sudden I find myself suggesting he chill out here instead, stay over maybe. I’ve got to go to work this morning, but I’ll be back about two.

  The relief on his face is instant. It’s as if I’ve waved a magic wand and his tiredness has evaporated. He holds my cheeks in his hands and presses his forehead on mine. I close my eyes. Who am I kidding? I know exactly why I’ve made the offer.

  While Michael’s drinking a coffee and trying to rebuild Luke Skywalker’s Lego Landspeeder, I watch the two of them, father and son, absorbed in their task, and guilt settles over me. Michael didn’t want me to leave London. It was so much easier for him to see Alfie when we lived nearby.

  But he wasn’t always free when I needed him – always dashing off somewhere for work or writing through the night, meeting deadlines – and it wasn’t Michael who had to witness Alfie’s meltdowns every time I got him up for school in the morning. Having Mum just a few streets away has been wonderful. I never have to worry about babysitters, and it’s lovely for her too, having us so close. Although I must be careful not to rely on her too much. I don’t want to be like Maddie’s daughter and start taking her for granted.

  Luke’s Landspeeder is taking shape before my eyes. I tried to have a go at it yesterday, but I’ve never been very good with my hands. My dad was a carpenter and he was always making things, but I never got to learn from him because he ran off with another woman when I was only four and started a new family.

 

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