by Freya North
‘Are you all right?’ Fen asked her, eyes still closed.
‘Yes,’ Pip said, with some busy blinking, ‘I’m just tired. Yesterday is seeming more and more bizarre. I’m fine. Fuck it.’ But then she squatted down and took her hands to her face, her shoulders heaving with her tears long before she made a sound.
‘Pip!’ Fen dropped down beside her and put an arm around her back.
‘Pip don’t cry,’ Cat implored, crouching to the other side of Pip.
It was horrible to see Pip cry because she so seldom did. She was, after all, the great Mopper of Tears; a role neither of her sisters felt they could fulfil anywhere near as well. Pip had goose bumps on her forearms. It had been T-shirt weather on the lower part of the hike but the breeze at the top was insistent in its chill. Fen rubbed her sister’s arms.
‘Don’t cry,’ Cat continued to plead, as much for her sake as for her sister’s. ‘What’s wrong?’
Pip gave one vigorous sniff, then took the sensible deep breaths she always advocated to others. In through the nose, out through the mouth, in through the nose, out through the mouth. She cleared her throat, stood up with her hands in the small of her back and had a good stretch. ‘Fuck it,’ she said, her voice now strong and surprisingly indignant, ‘fucking hell.’
Cat and Fen looked at each other, a little bewildered. Something was coming and they couldn’t anticipate what.
‘I think she truly believes we’ve come all this way to offer our condolences on the death of her husband,’ Pip laughed caustically. ‘Don’t you remember, Fen? When she thanked us for coming and said how nice it was for her to talk all about Bob to folk who’d never met him? Do you realize, she never once asked us a single thing about ourselves?’ She put her hands on her hips and glared at her sisters. ‘She’s a self-centred old bag!’ Pip rarely spoke ill of anyone, let alone with such a crude insult, and the sound of it was so out of character that Fen burst out laughing. ‘It’s not fucking funny,’ Pip seethed, ‘it’s fucking sad. The whole thing. Our whole history. The fact that we’ve spent a small fortune coming out here. What’s the prize?’ She looked from Cat to Fen. ‘Do you feel better? Either of you? Do you think it was a good idea? You were right yesterday, Cat. I should have followed you out instead of sitting politely and being Miss Maturity, Mrs Stupid Fucking Level Head, Mrs Pathetic Giver of the Benefit of the Doubt.’ And with that she marched off.
‘For fuck’s sake, Fen,’ Cat said under her breath, ‘what are we going to do?’
‘Come on,’ murmured Fen, automatically stepping into the role as next-eldest and leading the way after Pip.
Pip stomped down from the Falls. ‘I’m starving,’ her only comment, called over her shoulder. Fen and Cat shot each other worried glances as they tried to keep up. She headed directly for the diner, which had provided their hearty breakfast for hiking a few hours earlier, and slumped down at the table they’d appropriated as their own these past three days. DeeDee, embroidered as Betty again, was delighted to see them so soon, charmed by the flush of their reddened faces.
‘Joe – the hikers are back!’ she called through. ‘My, you girls must have made quick work of our Falls,’ she marvelled while cleaning their table unnecessarily, straightening cutlery and presenting the menu though it already stood to attention before them, laminated and clasped between two steel blocks. ‘No specials today, on account of it being Sunday, but if you need refuelling, you’ll be wanting the burgers. We make them ourselves and the beef is from the Holstein herd just up at Brook Farm.’
‘Sounds super,’ said Fen, with an anxious look at Pip.
‘Super duper,’ Cat added, for Betty’s pleasure.
‘We’ll have three, then,’ said Fen, ‘and a pot of strong tea too, please.’
Cat and Fen sat next to each other. Then leant across the table and took Pip’s hands in theirs.
‘It’s OK,’ Fen said to her.
‘Pip,’ Cat all but pleaded again.
‘Fucking hell,’ Pip growled under her breath. ‘The point is – I didn’t cross the frigging Atlantic in search of an apology and it may have been a bit hopeful to even expect an explanation. But Christ, to be asked nothing?’
Fen wondered what to say. Should she try and calm Pip or bolster her? ‘I know,’ she said, ‘I know. I can see exactly what you mean. I now know all about tubing – but she hasn’t a clue I have a sodding MA from the Courtauld Institute.’
‘I told her I lived in Denver for three years,’ Cat said, ‘but she didn’t ask me a thing about that.’
Pip buried her head in her hands and tugged hard at her hair. ‘It’s amazing we’re as normal as we are,’ she said hoarsely, with a burst of hollow laughter. The burgers arrived and she took great snatching bites. ‘Christ, this is fucking delicious,’ she said. ‘Sorry about my language.’
‘You swear as much as you fucking like,’ Fen encouraged her, anything to restore her sister.
With blood sugar levels raised, stomachs full and nerves settled, they took stock of the situation once more.
‘You say we didn’t come here for an apology,’ Fen said to Pip, ‘but you know what, I think we are entitled to an explanation.’
‘I sort of wish we’d never come,’ Cat said quietly, ‘but I suppose I’m pleased we are actually here. Thing is, I don’t know what I came for – and I’m not really sure what it is I’ll be taking home with me.’
She looked at Pip intently, willing her to respond. ‘I mean, I’m sorry for her loss,’ Pip said in her more usual voice, ‘it must be ghastly – but for God’s sake I don’t even know if she was interested in telling us apart. I tell you something – we’re not going home until we’ve had our say.’
‘Are we going back?’ Cat whispered. ‘To the house on Emerson?’
‘Yes,’ Pip declared. ‘God, don’t look so scared, Cat – you’re coming too this time, all the way. She’s only human. We should use this trip to bury the mystique of her, once and for all.’
From the outside, the house on Emerson Street looked as empty as it had on their first visit. But to the sisters, they sensed it was brimming with information. They rang and they knocked and Penny seemed quite pleased to see them on her doorstep.
‘Hi! How were the Falls?’ she greeted them. ‘Did you take Bob’s route?’
All the confrontational power, the burning right to feel cross and cheated which Pip had amassed, simpered away in an instant in the presence of this woman. For the first time in her life she stood on a precarious threshold, wishing her younger sisters were in front of her, and not behind.
‘Won’t you come in,’ Penny asked.
But Pip eyed the open door with suspicion. Bob was in there. This amazing man who looked so nice and who had loved their mother with all of his great big heart. Instinctively, she knew if they went in and sat in the kitchen and said yes to tea or coffee or cranberry and apple, they’d be back in Bob’s space where the hurt and the anger that were justifiably theirs would be banned from the home of this widow. Pip reminded herself of her manners, her sense of decorum; both fastidiously instilled by Django.
‘Are you OK?’ Penny asked her, looking to Fen and Cat who both avoided her gaze. ‘Are you OK, all of you?’
Pip was distraught at her emptied mind, her stupid silence. But suddenly Fen was alongside her. ‘I have a daughter,’ Fen proclaimed with slicing calm. ‘Cosima is eleven months old.’ Fen locked eyes with Penny. ‘I have chosen to leave her for four days and five nights. You chose to leave us full stop.’
Fen observed Penny bristle and though she remained motionless, Fen could detect her pull back. ‘It must seem that way,’ Penny said, a guarded hostility edging into her voice.
‘How did you do it?’ Fen asked, genuinely flummoxed, slightly incredulous. ‘I just don’t know how it is possible, what with all the hormones and the love. Christ – the love! I’ve never known such love! It’s so exquisite it’s almost painful. The emotion I feel for my partner is strong and stuff, but th
e emotion I feel for my child is. Is. God. It’s primal.’
‘You must be a very good mother,’ said Penny, an unidentifiable tone to her voice.
‘She is,’ Cat parried in her sister’s defence, ‘she’s amazing.’
Fen shrugged. ‘I’m all right,’ she reasoned, ‘but I’m nothing special and that’s the point. I’m just a normal mum – slightly neurotic, a bit dippy, mostly tired. But you see, I actually don’t really care about why you left – it’s irrelevant. You ran off with some cowboy from Denver, or the tube man from Vermont – the rest is history. But I’ve come here – I’ve left my baby thousands of miles away – because I would like to know how. How did you do it?’
Penny did not look discomfited and it irked Fen. In fact, it seemed her mother was thinking about these questions for the first time herself.
‘How did I do it? I guess I felt I had no option,’ Penny said at length. ‘This man was my destiny. Being a mother – glaringly – was not. A man in my situation might have doubted himself to be the real father, on account of not feeling paternal. A man in my situation might have questioned DNA, might have said Are you sure I’m the father. But I couldn’t exactly say, Are you sure I’m the mother – though actually, that’s how I felt. My body conspired against me. Babies born to the wrong person.’
The sisters were too hurt to respond.
‘Did you ever think of us?’ Pip finally spoke. ‘Did you never miss us? Did you never waiver? Or wonder?’
‘No one ever challenged me,’ Penny told them. ‘You three were never a challenge – you were, all of you, good as gold. You ate, you slept, you were never ill or fretful. You weren’t demanding, you didn’t need me. It was easy. Nicholas never tried to stop me. Derek never tried to stop me. No one begged me to stay. It didn’t seem to matter to any of you if I stayed or if I went; I wasn’t needed. I never felt I made much impact on your lives. But I changed Bob’s from the moment he set eyes on me. And that changed me. I found my calling. Does that make sense?’
‘So if we’d been colicky nocturnal babies who didn’t eat, things might have been different?’ Fen posed, thinking of her little daughter’s peculiar appetite for all things orange. She remembered how Cosima loved to lie, stomach down, over the boughs made by her mother’s arms, like a little leopard in a tree. She recalled her own pure panic when Cosima’s temperature rocketed to 104. She thought how, right at this very minute, on the other side of the ocean and the other side of the day, Cosima would be fluffy and fragrant and snuggly in her babygro, ready for bed. ‘I don’t need to feel needed,’ Fen qualified. ‘I’m a mother and by definition, that’s a sometimes thankless task.’ She paused. ‘But I don’t need to think about the level of love I have for my child. It overrides all else.’
‘The primal love you speak of – I felt too,’ Penny continued, gently insistent, ‘but I felt it for Bob. That was birth in its truest sense for me – I was born anew when he touched my soul.’
‘Oh shut up with all the Hollywood bullshit waffle,’ Pip snapped. ‘Can’t you see we haven’t come all this way to hear about Bob. We’ve come for plain, honest answers.’
Penny, visibly affronted by Pip’s vitriol, motioned to the house. ‘Won’t you come inside? Please?’
‘No!’ Pip said.
Penny sighed. It appeared her daughters had not liked her initial and most honest explanation. In fact, they hadn’t believed her. ‘It was the sixties,’ she tried. ‘I was eighteen and I popped you out, 1, 2, 3. It happened so fast, so easily. I don’t know. I don’t know. Would they call it post-natal depression these days? I don’t know.’
‘Were any of us conceived out of love?’ Cat asked. ‘Did you create any of us intentionally – or were we just the inconvenient consequences of some 1960s recklessness?’
‘Well—’
But Cat needed to continue. ‘Jesus,’ she said, ‘most of my friends’ parents got through the 1960s just fine, with little more than photographic evidence of a dodgy dress sense for proof.’
‘I hadn’t time,’ Penny said slowly, ‘or maybe I blocked it out. Who knows. It was such a long time ago. I was so young. So caught up in the shock of the new. I’d never been out of England, let alone on an aeroplane. I filled my every waking hour with Bob.’
‘Did you not miss us? Did you ever miss us?’ Fen challenged her but Penny’s face wore no emotion. ‘Christ – did you even think about us?’ she pressed.
Penny thought about it. ‘Occasionally,’ she said quietly, nodding.
‘And?’
‘I just occasionally thought about you.’ Her voice was quiet.
‘You do know our father died of a heart attack quite soon after you left?’ Pip declared.
‘A heart attack?’ Penny looked confused.
‘Did you ever regret it?’ Cat asked. ‘Do you have any regrets?’ She wanted to ask her if she regretted her fling with Django. But what if she quickly nodded to that too? It would be such a searing indictment of Django. And wouldn’t it mean she regretted Cat’s birth too? And wouldn’t Cat then have to live with the notion that she was never meant to be? So she said nothing. She stared at her mother, hoping to compel the woman to look straight into eyes that were just like Django’s.
Penny looked from Cat to Fen to Pip. She looked to the middle distance and her face crumpled a little as she shook her head apologetically. ‘No regrets – not as such. Though I am sorry – but I guess that doesn’t help.’ The sisters stood, staunchly unmoved. ‘How can I explain it?’ Penny flailed. ‘I don’t see it as a sacrifice because it never felt like I had a choice to make. The kids round here have an expression they use when something is glaringly obvious. And for me, back then, it was a no-brainer. Bob came along and everything made sense. Sure, on paper, my actions appear inexcusably wicked but, I don’t know, it made perfect sense to me back then. Even now. I can’t explain. I don’t expect you to understand.’
Penny took a step back. ‘If I was evil,’ she said hoarsely, ‘if I’d done wrong then surely the natural balance of the world would ensure I wasn’t entitled to a smudge of the bliss I was blessed with?’ She felt so tired. She wanted to shut the door and sit down and be on her own. ‘Perhaps not all women are cut out to be mothers. Maybe I’m just not maternal,’ Penny said, starting to close the door. ‘Perhaps there’s a flaw in my genes; something missing. But anyway, it appears you three have not inherited it. So there you go. You’re the lucky ones. Go ahead and hate me if it helps you bury your past and reclaim your lives. I guess we’re strangers, you and me. We always were.’
The three sisters stand side by side. Their mother’s door has been shut in their faces. Though their limbs are touching, they stand distinct and alone; each constricted by hermetic self-sorrow.
My mummy never loved me.
My mummy never loved me.
My mummy never loved me.
FREEDOM TRAIL
To be homeward bound the next morning seemed all that mattered. It mattered more than delaying their departure from Vermont with a last breakfast at their little diner. Instead they boarded the first bus to Boston hungry but desperate to be on their way, to turn their backs on Lester Falls and Emerson Street. To head home. But they arrived in Boston with a day to get through and even for Cat, shopping held no allure. In the end, Pip suggested they walk the Freedom Trail, not because she was particularly interested in Paul Revere and John Hancock, but because it gave them a red line to follow and she didn’t have to think. They meandered and mooched and didn’t really take in the culture or the sights. They were wasting a day but they felt there was little else they could do with it. They idled at Rowes Wharf before taking the water shuttle across to Logan airport, still managing to arrive at the airport with three hours to spare.
Penny, however, had arrived a whole two hours before that. The girls didn’t see her but she watched them, waiting until they turned away from the check-in desk, before she approached. She could hear Pip suggesting to the other two that they might as well g
o through passport control immediately. Penny thought to herself how easy it would be to turn away; they’d be none the wiser. Perhaps it would be for the best to go now because all of a sudden she wasn’t entirely sure what had possessed her to make the trip anyway. It wasn’t as if she had anything new to say. If she went now, she could catch the bus that would go to Lester direct. And she’d be home at just past her usual supper-time. It made sense. She didn’t like cities and she disliked airports more. She’d come on a whim anyway, and perhaps it was common sense to turn on her heels and just go. She observed Cat, Fen and Pip from behind, thought how nicely cut their hairstyles were. Pip’s neatly French-braided, Fen’s light and loose, Cat’s softly cropped. And then it struck her that, regardless of their colour being natural or not, she actually couldn’t recall the hues of their childhood locks. Cat had been practically bald when she left anyway. But had Pip always had such beautiful glints of caramel? Had Fen’s hair been spun with threads of gold from the start?
Something is catching in Penny’s throat. And whatever it is has now transferred to her eyes and charged her tear ducts. Passport control is just yards away. And if she doesn’t go now she’ll have to say something. But if she goes now, she’ll never see them again. Maybe that is for the best. They’re fumbling with their tickets and passports. If they drop something, they’ll see her. If they don’t, they’ll be gone from view in the next moment or two.
Pip is moving.
‘Wait!’ Penny cries.
The sisters turn. They turn and they stare. They weren’t expecting to see Penny Ericsson again. Not at the airport. Certainly not with tears running down her face.
‘Hi,’ she offers them, ‘hi.’ She dips her head and sobs, buries her face in her hands and half hopes that when she next looks up, these three girls will have gone.
But they’re standing here still.
‘I,’ Penny falters, ‘I took the bus.’ It doesn’t really mean much at all, but it is a short enough sentence for everyone to cope with. ‘I didn’t know which flight you were on.’ This was true. ‘British Airways!’ she marvels, as if the airline is indicative of the girls’ affluence. ‘Very nice.’