by Freya North
‘He has yellow runny poo,’ Tom marvels.
‘How’s your mum?’
‘She says she has udders,’ Tom reveals, ‘and there’s a milking machine she’s borrowed from the hospital. No one is allowed in the room when it’s on.’
‘It’s so exciting for you all,’ Pip says, glancing in the rear-view mirror at Tom who is gazing proudly out of the window with a great big grin on his face.
‘My baby doesn’t half burp,’ Tom says.
The first thing Pip thought was that June looked as tired, as disoriented, as she felt. The second thing Pip thought was that baby Nathan Oliver was more tiny, more perfect than she could possibly have imagined. Just then he appeared to be the most beautiful newborn baby in the world.
‘Do you want a cuddle?’ June asked her.
Pip smiled and put her arms around her.
‘Not with me, you daft cow, with the baby!’ June laughed.
Pip cradled Nathan. She remembered this feel from Cosima – that the bundle could be so tiny and yet feel so heavy, so full of life, so enormously and wondrously and terrifyingly precious. She brushed her lips along the crown of the baby’s head, the feel of peach fuzz hair mingling with the incomparable fragrance of a newborn accosting all five of her senses at once. She looked at June, her smile spreading. ‘He’s absolutely gorgeous,’ she said.
‘Hug him some more,’ June said. ‘I’m sure I told you there’s some tribe somewhere that hug each other’s babies the whole time – apparently it increases fertility like you wouldn’t believe.’
Pip thought about ovulation kits; about surreptitious enhancement of fertility. But this wasn’t the same. Zac would expect her to be cuddling the baby. After all, he’d probably already cuddled Nathan too.
June nudged her. ‘Seen Zac yet?’
Pip shook her head.
‘Here,’ said June, ‘have another cuddle with Nathan before you go.’
There were two messages on the home phone when Cat arrived back. One was from Ben, saying he’d left a message on her mobile too, to say he’d forgotten about a talk he was to give to a local hockey team and he’d be back late. The other was from her assistant manager at Dovidels, apologizing profusely, knowing she’d be jet lagged, but they were short staffed and Lorna Craven was visiting the store and was there any chance Cat could come in. She phoned both back and told them not to worry, she’d see them later.
Lorna Craven was high up in head office but subscribed to a hands-on approach across all the stores and was popular with the staff because of it.
‘They tell me you’re just back from the US?’ she said to Cat, having praised her for the commendable figures last month.
‘That’s right,’ Cat said, ‘family business. I took it as holiday, though. And I don’t have any other plans for time off for the foreseeable future.’
‘Everyone needs a break,’ Lorna reassured her, ‘though family business can seldom be classified as a holiday.’
Cat raised her eyebrow in agreement.
‘I thought your family were in the North somewhere?’ Lorna commented.
‘They are,’ Cat said. She paused. ‘They are.’ It was on the tip of her tongue. She could bite it back, or she could let it tumble. ‘My mother lives in Vermont now,’ she said, surprising herself how easy that had been.
‘I see,’ said Lorna. She tipped her head and regarded Cat. ‘You’re doing a great job here, well done.’
‘Thanks!’ beamed Cat.
‘We’re opening a store in Sheffield – at Meadowhall – do you know it?’
‘Of course I know Meadowhall,’ Cat laughed. ‘I grew up in Chesterfield – Meadowhall was the closest thing to paradise and teenage bankruptcy for me and my sisters.’
Lorna laughed. ‘Do you still have family in Chesterfield?’
‘Yes,’ Cat said, ‘I do.’ And for the first time she wondered how to refer to Django. Everyone who’d ever known her knew him simply as Django; he’d needed no further clarification. But Lorna didn’t know anything about Cat, really. ‘Our father lives there,’ Cat told her because it felt right and sounded good and, in essence if not on paper, Django would always be as much Fen and Pip’s father as her own.
‘You wouldn’t have plans to move back to the area, would you?’ Lorna asked and before Cat could say, God no, my sights are set on Tufnell Park, Lorna added, ‘Because I would give serious consideration to you running the Meadowhall store. It’s going to be our flagship. Coffee shop, events hot spot – the lot.’
Cat stood and stared. She wondered if she’d heard right or whether jet lag was now playing tricks on her. She wondered, for one ghastly moment, whether the foam ear plugs were still protruding like fluorescent slugs, from her ears.
‘Think about it!’ Lorna said cheerily. ‘Now let’s go through the next month’s forecast. Then you ought to go home – you must be exhausted.’
‘My mother gave us some Melatonin,’ Cat said, clicking the computer into action.
FEN MCCABE AND MATT HOLDEN
If only Matt and Fen could have known each was as apprehensive about their reunion as the other. If only they could have been privy to the information that they both had tampered with the parameters of fidelity but regretted it deeply. And then have such information magically erased from their memories. It is easy to forgive, not so easy to forget. But in some ways, to live with the guilt, to stomach it and suffer it, to learn from it, guards against further transgression. They’d had five days and five nights apart, they’d been separated by a seven-hour flight and several time zones, but in their souls it now felt that they’d made it across a sea far darker and more inclement to be back home together again.
‘Welcome back, cowgirl.’
‘Howdy, partner.’
What on earth possessed me? each thought as they kissed hullo and hugged that it was good to see you. What on earth possessed me to turn away from the love of my life?
In their eyes, each other was staggeringly incomparable to the dalliances of their momentarily misplaced desire. What on earth possessed me? I won’t be doing that again. Christ, I almost lost my mate.
‘You need to keep her awake,’ Susan said. ‘She needs to stay up until her proper bedtime or her sleep pattern will be disrupted for days.’
‘It is her proper bedtime,’ Fen said. ‘I was just boiling the kettle to warm her bottle.’
‘I wasn’t talking about Cosima,’ Susan said, ‘I was talking about you. And I was talking, actually, to Matt.’ She turned to her son. ‘Take Fen out for a nice spicy curry. I’ll babysit.’ Both Fen and Matt sensed that his mother was choreographing the situation, that she had some innate sense that they needed a little time and space to slot back in together, that she sensed their separation had lasted longer than five days and five nights. To be a mother is to be granted a sixth sense. To be a good mother is to use that gift wisely. To use that gift wisely is to have the child’s best interests at heart, however old the child. As Fen gave Cosima her bedtime bottle, she thought that perhaps her mother hadn’t been granted that sixth sense. As she said goodnight to her dozy baby, she wondered whether her own mother had simply been not a very good one. As she put on a little make-up to mask the jet lag, she wondered if, in fact, her own mother did have a sixth sense and had somehow known intuitively that her daughters’ best interests did not feature her. Maybe she had been a good mother in that respect. But spiralling theories could not produce definitive answers and, actually, it didn’t really matter. It didn’t matter at all, really, any more. Because Fen knew that her own little family was in the safest of hands.
Fen slips her hand into Matt’s as they meander back home. Usually, a curry means heads down and eat. Tonight, though, they ate only at opportune pauses in the conversation.
‘Can you believe our little girl is going to be one year old?’ Matt marvels.
‘I hope we have Django’s results by then,’ Fen says. ‘Then it can be a double celebration.’
‘Hear, hear,’ Matt says. ‘I wo
nder if he’ll want to know all about your trip. All in all, was it a good trip, Fen?’
‘It was,’ she says. ‘I feel I have answers now, whether or not they were given directly.’
‘Do you think you’ll see her again?’ he asks. ‘Keep in touch even?’
‘I don’t know,’ Fen thinks about it, ‘I don’t know. At the moment, I can’t answer that. I’m still not quite sure what I feel or what I want. We all reacted so differently. I think Cat, ultimately, probably accepted her more. Pip, though, still feels pretty raw. And me? I don’t know, Matt. I feel a bit indifferent.’
Matt nods thoughtfully.
She takes her hand from his and puts it around his waist, slowing her pace. ‘I think what the trip did for me was finely tune my desire to provide the best for my own little family. For Cosima,’ she stops. ‘For you, Matt.’
He kisses her forehead. ‘That’s nice to hear,’ he said.
She hangs her head. ‘I haven’t been very nice, have I? For a while.’ Her voice quiet but audible.
Matt is about to protest, but he decides not to. ‘I don’t think I have either,’ he says instead. ‘I didn’t know it was going to be so tough – so baffling.’
‘And I didn’t know it was going to be so all-consuming, so exhausting,’ Fen says.
Matt gives her pony-tail a gentle tug. ‘We’d be pretty daft if we were to let the best thing that’s happened to us – as individuals – cause discord for us as a couple. It’s not about choosing the one we love, it’s about then loving the one we’ve chosen.’
Fen nods. ‘You’re so right.’
‘We’re publishing an article to tie in with the Picasso/Braque exhibition,’ Matt says. ‘It’s a good piece. One thing struck me so deeply – Braque said it about Picasso.’
‘He said, “We were like two mountaineers, roped together” – that’s what you’re going to say!’ Fen interrupts.
Matt looks at her, impressed. Then his expression softens and he regards her more quizzically. ‘That’s us, Fen,’ he says, ‘you and me. We’re in this together. There’s nothing we can’t surmount. As for the view from the top – I only ever want to share it with you.’
‘I was starting to fall,’ Fen’s voice wavers, ‘I was dragging you down with me.’ She turns to Matt and folds her arms around him. ‘I’m so sorry. But it was never my heart that grew cold – just my feet. For an unfathomable moment.’
‘Me too,’ he says to the top of her head, ‘me too.’
There they stand, locked in an embrace in the middle of the pavement blocking the way like a couple of teenagers. Passers-by must drop down from the kerb to pass them, but they can’t help but smile as they do so. Fen and Matt make a lovely sight.
They walk on, holding hands and swinging their arms, feeling so much lighter for love flowing between them. Fen stops. Matt turns to face her. She looks upset. ‘How do you feel about me perhaps going back to work?’ she asks.
Matt regards the lines and the squares of the pavement and the furrows of Fen’s brow. ‘I think it might be a really good idea,’ he says measuredly. ‘Not because of the money,’ he hastens, ‘but for you. Cosima will be fine, you know.’
‘I know that now,’ Fen tells him, ‘but more importantly, I now know I’ll be fine too.’
‘Course you will,’ Matt encourages her. ‘You’ll be more than fine.’
‘I suppose until quite recently – well, until right now – I still felt that we’re umbilically attached. My little girl and I. You could say it’s actually been me with the separation anxieties, not the baby.’
‘Yes, that’s a very valid point,’ says Matt sweetly, ‘but don’t misinterpret your maternal qualities, Fen. Don’t do yourself a disservice.’
‘I would like to go back to work,’ Fen says, ‘for me. I suppose I romanticized the image of me as a full-time mum. But actually, I think I need to work.’
‘I think you’d be a happier bunny for it,’ says Matt, ‘and anyway, you couldn’t be a better mummy. Do it for you.’
Fen’s eyes are downcast. ‘Have I been awful?’ she asks him.
‘Not awful,’ he says, ‘not really.’
‘Not really?’ Fen pursues. ‘Or not really awful?’
Matt laughs and pokes her. ‘Not really awful,’ he clarifies and kisses her on the forehead.
‘Becoming a mother has been so monumental. I’m different now from the woman who didn’t have a child.’ She pauses. She looks at Matt intently. The father of her child – beautiful man. ‘I’m worried. Am I as nice as that carefree girl you fell in love with?’
He tips his head and regards her quizzically. ‘I see only the girl I am in love with,’ he says. ‘I have eyes only for you.’ He kisses her tenderly and Fen’s eyes close in gratitude and relief and happiness. ‘Come on,’ he says, slipping his hand into the back pocket of her jeans, giving her bottom a friendly and affectionate squeeze, ‘let’s go home.’
‘I was thinking of asking Pip if she’d look after Cosima on the days I go to work,’ Fen says.
Matt thinks about it. ‘I don’t know,’ he says. ‘The occasional day now and then is one thing – but she has her life too.’
‘But she loves babies.’
‘So she might then have her own, soon enough.’
Fen glances at him, wonders whether to confide but decides she should honour her sister and moves away from the topic.
‘Perhaps you could ask around the other mums,’ Matt says, ‘nanny-shares and the like?’
Fen considers this. ‘I will,’ she says. ‘Good idea.’
Fen is wide awake at three in the morning. She lies in bed, aware of Matt sleeping peacefully beside her. She spoons up against him. The smell of him, the feel of him, so familiar.
I suppose, for a while, stupidly, I saw monogamy – and domesticity – as suffocating my ability to fly and be colourful and carefree. I feared it would sap me of my individuality. But the truth is I’m not carefree, I have huge responsibilities and commitments and whereas momentarily I wanted to shirk them, actually I want to embrace them, venerate them – and never abuse them again. Life is too short, families are too fragile. You are my One. Crappy pop songs and bad poetry hail love to mean two become one. But look at what you and I did, look what our love did – we two became three.
‘Matt?’ He doesn’t wake. He smells so nice. He feels so good. Fen’s arm is around him, it’s as if he’s sitting on her lap and it’s nice to have him there. ‘I’m sorry.’ She thinks about why she is so sorry. ‘I probably gave you leave to doubt my love for you,’ she says. She nustles against his hair. She kisses the back of his neck. ‘Madness,’ she says. ‘I love you.’
Matt continues to pretend to be asleep.
PIP AND ZAC HOLMES
Pip was apprehensive about seeing Zac. It had taken her sisters to make her see that she’d need to broach the subject because her husband didn’t realize the enormity of it for her. However, he was running late and she was starting to feel very tired and rather emotional. She had been taken aback by how hard she found it to take her leave of Tom at his mother’s house. It had been a lonely drive back up Fitzjohn’s Avenue and once she was home how she craved the happy distraction of Tom rambling on about the personal hygiene of his teachers, the vomtasticness of school dinners and the outrage of so much homework. There was nothing to do. No one to talk to. Just an awful lot to think about. Pip was immensely fond of June and she’d loved cradling baby Nathan but just now she deeply resented June the apparently effortless perfection of her family and she loathed herself for feeling this. She was appalled that she should think June had more than her fair share.
Zac’s dilemma was whether to wake his wife or let her sleep. He stood and looked at her, curled up on the sofa, the remote control tucked under her chin, her lips parted and slightly squashed by the conked-out angle in which she’d fallen asleep. She looked young, childlike almost; peaceful. Perhaps he should leave her be. But he knew her theory on jet-lag management and, t
hough she might be temporarily grumpy with him in her grogginess, he reckoned she’d ultimately thank him for waking her. He tried as gently as he could, by tucking her hair behind her ear, by laying his hand on her shoulder and giving it a little shake. Then he whispered her name and gave her buttock a friendly tap. But still she slept. He decided to start cooking but not even wafts of garlic or the clatter of pans roused her. He watched a little television, laying her bare feet in his lap and lightly fiddling with her toes, but she didn’t stir. So, with the supper simmering and the wife slumbering, he cranked up his laptop and did a little work.
‘Something’s burning!’ are Pip’s first words to him.
‘Fuck!’ is his back to her.
The pan is such a mess and Zac looks such a hungry, sorry sight, that Pip can’t help but laugh a little.
‘I’m starving!’ he protests. ‘I can’t believe I find spreadsheets so fascinating to the exclusion of everything else including my house burning down. I’m a sad fuck,’ he rues. He peers in the pan. ‘A hungry sad fuck.’
‘No, you’re not,’ says Pip, about to surprise herself, ‘you’re lovely.’
Zac is quite startled by this; he’s become quite used to Pip guarding the affectionate, demonstrative side of her nature. ‘Thank you,’ he says, coming back through to the sitting area. ‘You’re not too bad yourself.’
They look at each other, waiting to see who will smile first, who will talk next.
Pip does both. ‘We had a mad trip,’ she says, ‘but it was a good thing to do – though it didn’t feel as such when we were in the thick of it.’
‘What’s she like?’ Zac asks. ‘And would you like me to refer to her as your mother or by her name?’
‘Let’s call her Penny,’ Pip says.
‘What’s Penny like?’ Zac asks.
‘She’s all right,’ Pip says. ‘I sort of wanted her to be evil incarnate, but she’s not. She’s not actually a bad person. I can now allow her that fact.’
‘That’s good,’ Zac says, ‘that’s closure, I suppose.’
‘Actually, it feels like the opposite,’ Pip says, ‘which is why I still feel so unnerved, I suppose. There’s an opening now. I don’t know how much contact we’ll have. But she really is at the end of the phone or just a plane journey away. I can put a face to her. I will see her again – I don’t know when. But there will be a time. And I don’t think I mind.’