Elouise tilted her head to one side and smiled, popping the last chunk of shortbread into her mouth. ‘Really? Because I can’t help but feel it might be too soon . . .’ she said dubiously, her thick, blonde hair sweeping over her right shoulder. A look of concern spread across her pretty face.
‘Yes, really. I promise,’ I responded.
‘Well if you start feeling horrible, just call me. I’ll be round like a shot. Do you promise you’ll ring if you’re struggling?’ she asked, almost begging.
‘Of course I will. But you know what, I think I’ll be fine,’ I said, really hoping I would be. I’d had this exact same conversation with Nick a couple of hours before. It had been almost impossible to get him out of the flat. I’d eventually had to push him out of the door, tickling his sides because he can’t defend himself when I do that.
‘Look, El. I promise everything will be OK. I’m feeling so much better now.’ I really meant that, I thought, as I looked around me at the place we used to share. My dad and I. I had to learn to be alone. I was going to have to spend evenings in solitude without talking to myself, or racking up huge phone bills by calling horoscope hotlines. Cats weren’t an option either. I was far too young to have a flat full of them, weeing all over the place. I felt just about ready to take on my new life now. Acceptance had come rushing in, and it was doing me the world of good.
‘I’ll have my phone on loud. All night,’ Elouise told me, leaning up on her tiptoes and kissing my forehead. It made me grin. She and Nick had seen me through this whole thing. It would be hard to truly feel alone ever again.
As she walked past me, she left a trail of her perfume in the air and I breathed it in deeply, holding the memory of it close for the dead of night when I might need her. I wasn’t going to call her, or Nick, or anyone. Not even Mystic Margaret from south Ealing with her premium-rate phone line.
‘Love you, Si,’ she said, turning towards me as she stood by the door, her small frame almost swallowed whole by a trendy T-shirt.
‘You too, pretty one,’ I said, standing by the counter.
The door closed slowly and quietly. I looked around me and took a few deep breaths.
That night I was hungry for the first time in ages, so I made my favourite dinner, medium rare sirloin steak with mashed potato and Mediterranean vegetables. Nick had brought all the ingredients round for me. I think he was worried I was going to end up looking like a bag of bones if I didn’t put some weight on soon. He had a point, I thought, looking down at my trousers, which were gaping at the waist.
I spent at least an hour preparing it all as the last dregs of the day slipped behind dark clouds. I put the radio on and sang along to every song. Great songs. Shit songs. It didn’t matter what it was because it was a way of expelling all the tension, even if it did involve screaming Aerosmith at the top of my voice and using a courgette as a microphone. I could sing as loud as I wanted and I knew no one would disturb me. This night was all mine.
I chopped up onions, sliced mushrooms in half and divided juicy tomatoes into quadrants. I put a steak in the pan and listened as it sizzled satisfyingly, the smell wafting up my nose and making me even more hungry. I had a bottle of wine and a small chocolate pudding in the fridge. I was going to treat myself. Relax, and bathe in the happy memories. Because they were happy, and they would never be stolen from me like my father had been.
After dinner I curled up on the sofa, put on Breakfast at Tiffany’s and sipped a huge glass of cold wine. I was content for once. I didn’t feel scared, I felt safe and happy. Wasn’t I supposed to be crying like a lunatic still? Was I in denial? I looked over at the chair opposite me and wished my father was sitting in it. I wished so hard that I imagined it before my very eyes, his lovely, kind face and his thin frame, draped in a jumper and a pair of chequered trousers. The thought of it made me smile so wide I forgot for a moment that the film was on. I just stared at the emptiness where he used to be. When I turned back to the screen, I was reminded of all my favourite scenes. Audrey Hepburn’s passion for parties, diamonds and sleeping until midday. It was a magical world I could lose myself in. I just wished I could live like that, wandering around with a cigarette and a sexy smile, needing nothing else in life but the date and whereabouts of my next social gathering.
And then I remembered my dad’s notebooks. Reams and reams of writing I had never looked at because I hadn’t wanted to intrude. They were scattered all over our flat and I hadn’t touched them. It had felt wrong to move them, and when Elouise, Nick and I sorted through his possessions, I’d begged them to leave them where they were.
I could see them now, all around me. Big books with thick, black covers, white labels with dates on. They were stacked in neat piles, some on the shelves, a few on top of the TV and a whole load more in boxes under his bed. I sat for a moment and wondered what it would be like to read them. Would it be too soon? Would it rekindle all the fear and agony, or would it be like he was with me all over again?
I paused the film and sat for a while, taking a few more sips of my wine and wondering what to do. I picked up the book that was closest to me and ran my hands over the smooth, cool surface. A flash of lightning shot across the skyline and I pulled a light blanket over my body. A storm must be coming, I realised, thinking back to how hot and stuffy it had been today. I wasn’t scared of it. Not at all.
I held the book, slipping my fingers between the pages, feeling the thickness of them, which seemed even denser now they were covered in scribblings, the words pushed into the paper where he wrote so hard. Would he mind? I wondered. I opened it at the middle, greeted with his familiar handwriting, which had so often been scrawled on a Post-it note on the fridge, little reminders to me of the things we needed. Peanut butter. Cooking oil. Soap.
My eyes glazed over the letters, too frightened to read but too curious to look away. More flashes of lightning bolted across the summer sky like strobe lights. They illuminated the room in brilliant white for a split second before plunging me back into the warm light of the candles in the middle of the table. Rain started to patter on the windows. What would I find? Would I discover that he’d been deeply unhappy, but kept it from me? Did he ever think I’d neglected him? Let him down? My heart started to thump as I began to read.
It is mile twenty-three and hurting is an underestimation. The streets of London are lined with crowds, screaming and shouting. There are lots of names, none of them mine, but I can hear my daughter cheering me on in my head. It’s the only thing that will get me through the last three miles to the finish line. I can see her face, too, ahead of me all the time. My beautiful daughter. I know she is waiting for me at the end. She would never let me down, I just know it.
My legs feel like raw meat and some of my muscles are starting to spasm now, twitching and jerking under my sweaty skin. It’s just a pounding sensation reverberating up my calves and thighs. Thousands of steps melting into one huge effort. To be honest, it just feels like a funny dream. I panic for a few moments as I’m unsure whether I will make it to the end or not. I can’t let her down.
A water gun is squirted from the sidelines over the runners, and some of the droplets land on my face. It’s so cooling I want to hobble to the water station and tip a glass of it all over me, feeling it run into my mouth and down my throat. But no amount of water would quench my thirst now – it’s as if I’ve been wrung out like a flannel. I’m sweating so much it’s getting into my eyes. Stinging. Hurting. Everything hurts. I need the loo, but stopping would be the end of me. It feels like my muscles would seize up and dry, fast and thick like concrete. Got to keep going.
People around me are really struggling now, breathing is laboured, groans and sighs like a crowd of zombies in expensive sportswear. Got to keep going.
People are dropping like flies, collapsing on the pavements and falling onto grass verges. I don’t want to look at them because it scares me. Somehow I’m still going. I don’t know how, and the more I think about this, the more terrif
ying it is.
The soles of my trainers feel like squashed steaks when they started off like clouds. Each movement is painful, each breath is sharp. I know it isn’t far to go. I’ve run miles and miles in training, but my mind is playing tricks on me. Suddenly it feels like three miles is an awfully long way. But Sienna is on my mind, because I know she will be there, waiting for me.
My vision is blurred, my brow furrowed with concentration. People in brightly coloured fancy dress are confusing to me. The shapes and the colours seem to morph in front of my eyes. I’m angry, scared, yet euphoric, because I know the end is coming. I know that I’ll have run a marathon, and I’ll have achieved it after all this time. All the hoping and wishing and dreaming. I could start to walk now, but I won’t.
Thud. Thud. Thud.
There is pain in my shoulders, acid in my stomach and my guts are ruined. I have to make it. This is my mantra. There is a balloon up ahead, a big pink one suspended by a string. I keep my eyes on that and follow it as we navigate the streets of London. Familiar tourist attractions are now mere inconveniences on the way. Roads are just something I have to defeat before I can truly taste achievement.
As I turn one corner a woman is holding out a tray of energy cubes. I grab one like a monster, groaning my thanks and shoving it into my mouth, which is so dry it makes my taste buds twitch. I feel the jelly melt into my tongue as the flavour of blackberries explodes on my taste buds. It’s so intense and I need all the energy I can get.
I turn more corners, winding roads, small ups, small downs. Nearly there now. After what seems like an age the finish line is ahead, covered in yet more balloons. Sound is going now. It’s all muffled and the only thing I can hear is my breathing, rattling through my brain. My long, positive strides have turned into drags, one leg after the other, like wading through treacle. Closer. Closer still.
It is then that I see her, near the end of the race. My beautiful daughter, standing against the railings and cheering me on. Her lovely smile is all I need. There are so many people around, but I can spot her immediately. She is distinctive, one of a kind. Strikingly beautiful and every day I wake up and wonder how I created something so special. How I didn’t screw it up like so many other things in my life.
That was all I could read. The emotion was tearing at my chest again. It was too hard. I slammed the book shut. His imagination astounded me, and I’d had no idea he felt so proud of me until then. I knew he would ‘finish’ the marathon. It was my dad, of course he would. I believed in him, but I had to close it, just for a short while, otherwise I would trip up and fall down that hole of grief I knew was so difficult to climb out of.
I wiped a single tear from the corner of my eye, wondering what secrets the rest of the books would hold. The film was flickering in the background now. Curiosity got the better of me. I poured another glass of wine and went into his room, pulling from under his bed a large box, which was full of notebooks. It shocked me how many there were. I wanted answers. I wanted a sign. Something. I wanted to know my father better. So I closed my eyes and picked a book. Any book. One of at least fifty, I think.
I clutched it between my fingers and carried it back into the living room, sitting on the sofa and drawing the blanket around my body once more. The rain was beating so hard against the glass now that the noise took my breath away. It was one of my favourite sounds: nature battering the world around me, leaving me safe in my little man-made box, sipping wine and reading.
I looked at the label on the front of the book. 1 JULY 2006. Wow, this was ages ago, I thought. I’d only been in my job for a couple of months then. Things had been very different. Again, I braced myself before opening the pages. I could handle this . . . and if it was too much, I would put it away and come back in a few months’ time. No one is forcing me to read this, I thought, peeling it open with trembling hands. I flicked through the pages, my eyes scanning over words. In a flash I saw Nick’s name pop up. How strange . . . I’d only have known him a short time by then. I leafed back to the place where I found it, and started reading.
It’s hard having kids. How much do you show them the way and give them the answers? I’ve always been the kind of dad who let Sienna make her own mistakes, find things out for herself and solve her own problems. I won’t just give her all the clues. I want her to be able to stand on her own two feet one day because to be truthful, I’m not sure how much longer I’ll be here. Anything could happen. Well, anything could happen to anyone, that’s certain, but with me there’s so much more risk when I could collapse at any given moment.
I promised myself, before I got ill, that I wouldn’t just buy her the things she wanted. No, I wanted her to work for them so she truly knew their worth. I don’t tell her all the wonderful things people say about her, because I want her to realise her talents and value on her own. I want her to truly see them for herself as she grows up.
I hope this makes sense and doesn’t make me sound like an exceptionally selfish human being. I mean, if she was in trouble then of course I would jump in and save her. But if it’s not urgent, and if it makes her stronger, I would rather she went about it all her own way. I watch from the sidelines, like a hawk, and swoop in to get her if she needs me. And don’t get me wrong. I am watching (when I’m not asleep – then I’m just listening), but now I’m in a bit of a situation. One that I’m in two minds about.
She has this friend called Nick, a man she met at work. He’s an artist at the publishing house she writes for. She adores him. In fact, she loves him. She’s only young, but I think I can safely say this is pretty big for her. Although she won’t admit it . . . I had never met the bloke before until yesterday, when he just turned up at my house to ‘drop a CD round’ on his way into town.
Now I’m a man, and there’s no way he was just casually on his way to the shops. I could tell that he loves her by his dopey eyes and his bashful demeanour the minute I opened the door. It was the look of a man in love – and he seemed like a great bloke.
Sienna wasn’t in and I think it’s safe to say we had something of an incident. I collapsed. Now it seems that Sienna never told Nick about my condition, because the poor man thought I’d had a heart attack or something. He was wailing like a banshee. Panic wasn’t the word. He was making me worse because the more I wanted to scream out to him that I was all right, the deeper I was pushed into sleep. There I was, lying in my body, which I couldn’t move, but able to hear everything. Everything.
And he said something. He told me that he loves her. I’m sure I didn’t mishear him. He was pleading with me, and I think he said, ‘I love Sienna, she loves you, and she needs you. Don’t go anywhere . . .’
So how do I handle that? He might have just said it in the heat of the moment, or he might have meant he loves her as a friend. And however he meant it, is it my place to tell her the things he said when he thought I was knocked out for good?
But if it is love, real love, then I want them to find each other. Because I believe that love is an overwhelming, all-consuming force, and when it’s genuine you can’t really ignore it. No matter how long it takes. It knocks down your door by force. It keeps you awake at night. It plagues your thoughts and burns your soul. If it is love, they won’t need me at all. By telling my daughter that the man of her dreams loves her too, would I not be getting in the way? Meddling with fate?
Anyway, I tried to tell her, but I couldn’t. Something inside was pushing me to keep it quiet. And if he loves her, I hope to God he sorts it out soon, because she’s one of a kind, my daughter. Really quite special.
Nick
Sienna has gone home and now I’m left like a lonely, sad zoo monkey. A miserable creature whose considerably more attractive monkey wife has been exported to a zoo for better-looking animals on the other side of the world. That’s how bad it feels to be without Sienna. How will I sleep without knowing she’s just across the hall? What is there to come home for if I know she won’t be here?
No. I had to be cool a
bout this. It’s important she spends her first night alone. I must give her some space. I have my phone on loud, though. And vibrate. And in a glass dish so it rattles really hard if she calls me while I’m sleeping.
I lay down in my bed and decided I would try to read a book. Yes. Maybe I could find something to distract me in Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations. As far as I’m aware it has nothing to do with stunning, blue-eyed girls from west London. You know the type – the ones who steal your heart and leave you floundering helplessly without it for half a decade, shoving other things into the gap where it used to be, but finding that they don’t bloody fit.
A book is probably the best option because everything else reminds me of her. TV shows. Music. Films. Radio. Even cereal boxes (she cut a couple of holes in one a few months ago, put it on her head and crept up on me while I was washing up. I actually screamed). So as raindrops hurled themselves against my window, I climbed into bed and started to read. Chapter one. Here goes.
But my thoughts were intruding. Maybe I should call Sienna . . . You know, just check that she’s OK. No. Give the girl some space, for fuck’s sake. Now let’s try again.
Chapter one . . .
This is a Love Story Page 36