by Laura Elliot
‘I’m a pragmatist, Nadine. Essential in politics. I’ve changed my mind about Sea Aster. A number of planning difficulties have made it difficult to proceed with the renovations. First Affiliation can wait a while longer for its new headquarters. In the meantime – ’
‘I can see where this discussion is going, Eleanor,’ Jake interrupted her before Nadine could do so. ‘You can stop right – ’
‘You want your freedom, don’t you? Well, freedom comes at a price. I’m willing to give you Sea Aster. No rent in lieu of maintaining the house and grounds for me. Two apartments, two entrances. Do what you like within its confines but, outwardly, to the world, you remain a married couple.’
‘That’s a preposterous suggestion.’ Nadine laid her cutlery beside her plate and abandoned all pretence at eating. ‘We’ve no intention of accepting it.’
Eleanor dabbed her lips then placed the serviette back on her knees. ‘Consider my suggestion, that’s all I’m asking.’
‘Why would you do this, Eleanor?’ Nadine asked. ‘Why does our marriage matter so much to you?’
‘It matters because I love you both. I don’t want to see you making a dreadful mistake.’
Jake laughed, an abrupt bark that hid his anger. If only he could leave the table and retreat to his music room. But those days were gone. He no longer had the urge to write down a catchy line, or record a riff with potential. He was sleepless, stressed, helpless. And his mother believed maternal love was the answer to his problems.
‘When did this flowering of love occur?’ he asked ‘Was it sudden or was it your best kept secret?’
‘Don’t be cruel, Jake,’ she said. ‘Repetition diminishes meaning which is why I don’t often express my feelings for you and Nadine. And my grandchildren, let’s not forget them in this scenario. I want them to have a base when they come home, some place where we can all be together. Sea Aster will be there when you need it.’
Undaunted by their refusal to consider her offer, she left shortly afterwards.
‘We’ll pretend this conversation never happened.’ Nadine rose from the table and gathered the plates and serving dishes, unwilling or unable to discuss the crisis they were facing.
They were living on borrowed time. Soon it would run out of control. Jake opened his laptop and clicked into the Kingfisher website. Karin Moylan stared back at him from the homepage. The longing to contact her was constant but nothing had changed since he emailed her. He was stuck in the same rut. Soon he would have to meet his bank manager and plead with him once again for an extension of his loan. The domino effect of recession. Jake felt a chill ring of perspiration around his neck, a noose tightening.
Gerard Lyons tapped on his computer screen and repeated words like ‘insolvency’ and ‘repossession.’ Jake hoped desperately that he misunderstood what they were being told but one look at Nadine’s stricken face told him otherwise. Their house now belonged to the bank. They had offered it as collateral when they borrowed to expend Tõnality. There would be no extension on their loan. They should go quietly, their bank manager advised. No sense making a scene in front of their neighbours. Missed VAT repayments had been uncovered. An examiner was being appointed to run Tõnality and they were not allowed to set foot inside the premises.
The air seemed different when Jake emerged from the bank, stultifying and thick as soup. The ground tilted beneath him, at least that was how it seemed, and he was forced to hold onto the wall for support. Vertigo, it had happened to him on a few occasions and always at times of intense stress. As he staggered towards his car the trees lining the centre of the road appeared to move, the branches to embark on a mad can-can dance. He swallowed bile, forced himself to focus on the car parked in front of him. If he concentrated hard enough on that one spot the nausea would pass. Slowly the branches stopped swooping and his surroundings came into balance again.
‘Be careful what you wish for — you might just get it.’ His lips felt chapped, his mouth dry. ‘You have it now, Nadine.’ His voice was so hoarse that she had to lean towards him to hear. ‘No house. No company. No marriage. Everything we’ve achieved… all gone in a puff of smoke.’
Like a butterfly flapping its wings in a distant jungle, the reverberations of her decision had caused chaos. He knew he was being illogical but logical thought was impossible as he came face-to-face with his failure. She sat stiffly beside him, glassy tears sliding down her cheeks, and made no reply. A house of cards doesn’t fall slowly, Eleanor had said. Jake wondered why there was no sound, no crash or clatter as their lives collapsed around them.
CHAPTER 18
NADINE
Sea Aster is my salvation and my jail. No bars to keep me here but they exist, tough as steel and as unyielding. Having lost everything, we’re still in the palm of Eleanor’s hand, crushed tight by her determination, her will. But I can’t blame her for our recklessness, our over-borrowing, our pursuit of freedom. We did that all by ourselves.
The debts we built up were an amorphous blob until Gerard Lyons pulled the rug from under us. I’m horrified by the scale of what we owed – and how little we actually owned. Our cars have been repossessed and the only income we have is the inheritance Rosanna left us. It’s a small off-shore account but it will keep us going until we find our feet again.
We would be homeless except for Eleanor’s largess. I should be grateful. On my knees thanking her. She had the grace not to say, ‘I told you so’ but that doesn’t make any difference to how I feel.
We tossed a coin when we moved into Sea Aster to see who would occupy Apartment 2 on the ground floor. We both wanted it, particularly the breakfast room with its curving bay window overlooking the garden.
I lost the toss and climbed the stairs to Apartment 1 where the previous tenant wore black lace tights and kept cats with bowel problems. I’m convinced I can still smell them. Jake insists it’s my imagination. The apartment has been scoured, bleached and buffed, painted, redecorated, and a new bed installed. All traces of cats have been expunged and he shows no inclination to switch with me. Eleanor, having handed over the keys, has left us to our own devices. She has First Affiliation to run and it’s up to us to pick up the pieces of our shattered lives.
I awaken every morning with good intentions. Today I’ll sort out the attic where, on our arrival, we dumped the possessions we still actually owned. I’ll cut the grass, weed the flowerbeds, stamp some of my personality on my apartment. Instead, I sit at the window and stare for hours at the shifting moods of the estuary. When the spring tide overflows the shore, the swans swim with regal indifference along Mallard Cove. I envy their unconcern, their indifference to their sudden change of address. If only I could adjust so easily. I’ve come to believe I’m suffering from chronic fatigue.
‘You’re still in shock,’ Jenny reassures me every time we speak. ‘So much has happened so fast. You need time to absorb the changes. Find a job. It’ll keep you sane until you can move from Sea Aster and buy your cottage. Or is it a town house you want?’
‘What does it matter?’ I fight back the urge to weep. ‘I can’t afford a shoebox, let alone a cottage.’
‘Then rent,’ she advises me. ‘It’s no big deal. Do anything except stare at swans. Scrub floors, toss burgers. Otherwise, you’re going to sink into depression.’
‘I’ve sunk into it already.’
‘No, you haven’t. You’ve sunk into self-pity because things haven’t worked out the way you planned. Big difference. You and Jake are young enough to begin over. You have to get back on your feet and gain control over your life again.’
I blink back tears, wretched tears that make no difference no matter how many I shed. ‘All I can think about is how we’re still together but not… and all we’ve lost. Jenny, you’ve no idea what it’s like to lose everything.’
‘But you haven’t lost everything. You’ve lost possessions. You still have your family, your friends. Everything else can be regained in time or, maybe, you never needed all tho
se possession in the first place.’
‘It’s the failure — ’
‘Failure, my foot. That’s an Irish concept. Over here we look upon failure as a learning curve. Onwards and upwards to the next stage.’
‘Tossing burgers?’
‘If it gives you a leg up, yes.’ For the first time my friend sounds impatient. I suspect a slight lack of sympathy when I told her the reason for ending our marriage. Jenny can understand adultery, violence, mental cruelty, alcohol and substance abuse. Even boredom, she admits, is grounds for such a sundering but she can’t get her head around the notion of ‘freedom.’ She makes it sound like a bauble with too much sparkle and I know she’s remembering her ex-partner Christopher, who stuck a farewell note about regaining his freedom to their fridge door with an I Love Vancouver magnet on the day before her thirty-eighth birthday. Timing was never Christopher’s strongest point.
‘How’s Jake?’ she asks.
‘Coping much better than I am. He’s clearing out the old barn and reforming Shard. They had some idea about playing a reunion gig but that bit the dust, along with everything else. Now he’s talking about a come-back launch for the band.’
‘Has Daryl still got the dreadlocks?’
‘A distant dream, Jenny. His baby daughter has more hair than he has.’
She fancied Daryl in those early Shard days. For a while I thought, maybe, but after Jake and I married she moved to Vancouver to study film.
‘And Hart?’ she asks.
‘He teaches yoga.’
‘Hart… you’ve got to be kidding.’ She laughs away her astonishment and says, ‘I thought he’d be pixilated in alcohol by now.’
‘He lives on alfalfa sprouts and bottled water.’
‘What about Bad Boy Barry?’
‘Bricklaying in Saskatchewan.’
‘I’m nearly afraid to ask about Reedy.’
‘He’s still the same.’
I asked him how his New York gig went when he came to Sea Aster to inspect the barn.
‘It was Boston,’ he replied. ‘Haven’t been to New York in years, more’s the pity. It’s a brilliant place to gig.’
I consider telling Jenny about that conversation. The fact that Jake lied about New York. But, maybe, he didn’t. Reedy gigs all over the place. Hard to keep tabs. Downstairs, Jake is hammering something. I never realised how much noise he makes. When we lived together his music was contained in a soundproofed room and the noises he made outside it were indistinguishable from the hubbub of our family. After they left, there was so much space in the house that our individual sounds lost their way back to us. Now, all I hear is him. Doors banging, his stereo blasting, footsteps stamping, chairs scraping, phone ringing. If I listen hard enough I’ll hear him turning in his sleep. His energy invades my space and is a constant affront to my lethargy. I’ve bought a cheap second-hand car but he spends most of his time working on a clapped-out band van he picked up on DoneDeal. It looks as if its next journey should be to the scrap yard but he’s intent on restoring it.
* * *
Susanna Cox from HiNotes rings one afternoon and shakes me back to life. I’m surprised to hear from her. None of our ex-business acquaintances have been in contact in the month since we lost Tõnality. I guess they’re afraid our bad luck will rub off on them.
‘I wanted to ring after I heard what happened but I wasn’t sure you’d appreciate a call,’ Susanna sounds uncertain. ‘How are you?’
‘Keeping busy.’ Just as well we’re not on Skype. At three in the afternoon I’m still in my dressing gown and the panda slippers Ali bought me for Christmas. ‘How are things in HiNotes?’
‘Just holding our heads above water,’ she admits. ‘Wanker bankers… but I don’t have to tell you that. Thankfully, parents still want their darlings to become music virtuosos so that keeps our doors open. Are you working again?’
‘Not yet. My CV is with a recruitment agency. I’m expecting to hear from them soon.’
Why tell the truth when a little white lie makes conversation that bit easier? The young woman in the recruitment agency looked appalled when she checked the educational qualifications on my CV. No degrees, not even a teeny weeny certificate? Years of experience with Tõnality were dismissed with a shrug of her shoulder pads. My earlier confidence drained away as she explained why a degree, and preferably, a masters or PhD, were de rigueur these days in her high-powered business world.
‘I thought about you last night when I was having dinner with a friend of mine,’ Susanna says. ‘Jessica Walls. You may have heard of her?’
Who hasn’t heard of Jessica Walls? Those living in caves, perhaps, but, even there, word would filter down through the limestone cracks.
‘She’s looking for an advertising manager,’ Susanna continues. ‘I mentioned your name.’
I feel my chin lifting, my mind growing still.
‘Are you interested?’ she asks when I don’t reply.
I clear my throat and try to keep my voice from wobbling. ‘Does it matter that I don’t have a business degree?’
‘Jessica had zilch degrees to her name when she launched her first magazine,’ Susanna replies. ‘School of life, just like you. Go and meet her. I’ve filled her in on your background. She trusts my judgement.’
‘Does she know about Tõnality?’
‘She knows and understands how it can happen. She’s folded twice and picked herself up again. Each time she grew bigger. Now she has Lustrous as her flagship magazine. Selling advertising will be your main responsibility, although you’ll probably be involved in other aspects of the magazine. Jessica works her staff hard but you won’t be bored. What do you think?’
‘Sounds like Tõnality. I was Jill of all trades there.’ I force myself to sound confident. As Eleanor would say, perception is everything. ‘Thanks, Susanna. I appreciate your help.’
‘One other thing,’ she says. ‘Tell Jake to ring me if he’s interested in some part-time teaching. One of my guitar teachers is heading for Australia next month. Sign of the times, I’m afraid.’
His jeans, ripped at the knees, are covered in oil, his khaki t-shirt damp with sweat when he emerges from under the chassis of his band van.
He agrees to ring Susanna about the guitar classes.
‘Things are looking up, then,’ I say.
‘I guess.’ He slaps his hand off the van and the side window slides down.
There’s a streak of dust on his cheek. I instinctively lean forward to wipe it away then pull back. He bends and picks up a wrench.
‘Good luck at the interview,’ he says. ‘I know you can do it.’
CHAPTER 19
JAKE
Pale walls, a light wooden floor, a table set for two, glass doors opening onto the balcony. Dublin city lay below him, spires, rooftops, bridges, luminous glass pyramids, and Liberty Hall jutting like an amputated thumb into the skyline.
‘What do you think of my view?’ Karin joined him on the balcony.
They leaned over the rail to stare down at the ant-sized pedestrians and the stream of traffic flowing along the quays. Life pulsed here, unlike Sea Aster with its secluded entrance and quietly lapping estuary.
‘Beautiful.’ Jake gazed into her eyes. ‘Quite perfect and as beautiful as I remembered.’
Her lips opened. The hot, hard dart of her tongue aroused him instantly. She moaned softly in response but was the first to draw away.
‘I’ve spent all afternoon preparing a meal for you,’ she said. ‘Let’s sit down and eat before it’s cold.’
She had cooked medallions of lamb with a port jus, gratin potatoes and asparagus with roasted peppers. They steered away from dangerous topics throughout the meal. Nadine’s name was never mentioned. He heard about the design commissions she had received since returning home. He told her about Shard and clearing out the barn, and how he was restoring the band van. Reedy had organised occasional session work for him in the Raison D’être studios, which paid well, if irr
egularly, and Reedy also intended to find a new drummer.
Was he speaking too fast, laying breathless facts before her? These days he found it impossible to slow down. Being busy was the answer, the only way to cope. And it worked. Mind over matter. Rise in the morning instead of lying in bed and letting his thoughts scurry like ants deprived of their sheltering stone.
Dessert was simple and delicious, fresh raspberries and homemade ice cream, served in blue-rimmed bowls. When it was finished she poured brandy into goblets and carried them to the sofa. Her dress, a buttery shade of yellow, settled in folds around her knees when she sat beside him.
‘Tell me what happened?’ she said. ‘From your email I got the impression you and Nadine had gone through a bereavement, rather than a separation.’
‘A bereavement?’ He pondered the word. It seemed appropriate, if inaccurate. Music played softly in the background. Clair de Lune, Jake recognised the expressive sway and sweep of Dubussy, the rhythmic notes challenging yet soothing. ‘I wanted to contact you,’ he said. ‘I lost count of the times I stopped myself from ringing. Nothing was working out as planned and I didn’t want to burden you with my problems.’
‘Would you have got in touch if I hadn’t made the first move?’ she asked.
He hesitated. Since the collapse of Tõnality she had become a wishful thought, an almost forgotten allurement, and that’s where she would have stayed if she had not emailed him to ask when he intended keeping his promise.
‘I promised to contact you when I’d sorted out my life,’ he said. ‘But how could I come back to you and tell you I was still living with Nadine, even though we’d separated.’
She listened without interruption while he described the tumbling apart that had left him and Nadine still together.
‘Upstairs… downstairs,’ she said. ‘That’s close.’
‘It may seem that way but I assure you – ’
She touched his lip with her fingers and silenced him. ‘Space doesn’t matter, Jake. It’s your emotions that will determine the distance between the two of you. How close are you to Nadine… here?’ He saw a flash of blue below her cleavage as she leaned towards him. She lifted his hand and pressed it to her chest. He felt the steady thud of her heart against his palm and when she moved, almost imperceptibly, his hand curved on the swell of her breasts. ‘And here,’ she whispered. ‘How close… how close… Jake?’