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Seven Lies (ARC)

Page 30

by Elizabeth Kay

it for the rest of the afternoon. I knew that Emma didn’t want to visit,

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  that she was dreading it, and I was expecting her to grasp at excuses, to 08

  find a way to exempt herself from the trip. I called her and listened to

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  the phone ringing and I wondered if she might ignore it, if she might

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  ignore me to avoid my mother.

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  “What’s the plan, then?” I asked when Emma finally answered.

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  “Shall we meet at the station? Walk over from there?”

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  “Is she better, do you know? Have they said?” replied Emma.

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  “They say she’s still flu- ey, but I reckon an hour or so’ll be fine.”

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  “Oh, but if she’ s— ”

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  “Emma,” I replied. “Come on.”

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  “I don’t know, Jane,” she said, her voice exaggerated in an overstated

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  performance of concern. “If she’s not well . . . and then we turn up,

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  bringing in all these bugs . . . Should we hold off? Go next week, maybe, 20

  instead?”

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  “Em, she’s our mother. And it’s Christmas.”

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  “I think I’m going to give it a miss, if it’s okay with you,” Emma said.

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  “Shall I meet you at Marnie’s? Around twoish, threeish? Will you text

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  me the address?”

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  “ Em— ”

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  “Thanks, Jane. Love you. Merry Christmas.”

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  And then she hung up.

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  I looked at the phone. I was angry but this conversation had hap-

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  pened in many different guises over very many years and so I wasn’t

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  surprised.

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  Emma was— rightly, I felt— angry with my mother, who had pro-

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  vided very little support in the very worst years of her life. But I was

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  angry, too. And I was just as entitled to that anger, if not more so. I had 01

  not only been briefly disowned, entirely abandoned, but also ignored for

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  the majority of my childhood. Emma had always been the favorite. But

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  she never thought about that; she never even tried to see it from my per-

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  spective. Emma was always anxious, always on edge, always distracted

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  by her own issues and fixated on her own feelings and that made her self-

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  ish. She could refuse to visit because she knew that I wouldn’t do that. I 07

  couldn’t do it and I never did. Because that would have been cruel.

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  But what if I had opened that conversation by saying that I couldn’t

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  find the courage to go, couldn’t silence my anger for an hour, and that

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  this time it was all on her? What if I had done as she always did? What

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  if I had stopped being her strength and asked her instead to be mine?

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  I still don’t know the answers to these questions. Can someone who

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  has spent her whole life leaning on others ever support someone else?

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  I’m not convinced that they can. I think that when you willingly take

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  on that role in someone else’s life, you have to accept that they will al-16

  ways put themselves first and that the structure of that relationship

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  cannot be reversed. They will let you fall before they sacrifice them-

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  selves to support you.

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  I arrived early, because the taxi driver— who was charging triple for a 22

  bank holiday journey— had exceeded the speed limit at every opportu-

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  nity. I had hated it: the momentum, the vibrations, that feeling of being 24

  completely contained, so completely surrendered to somebody else.

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  I walked into my mother’s room and she was sitting up in bed wearing

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  an orange T- shirt and a bright blue cardigan that was slipping from her

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  left shoulder. It had a frilly collar and pinned to one of the scallops was 28

  a festive badge, a tree decorated with multicolored baubles, flashing

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  small pinks and yellows.

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  “Morning,” I said, and I grinned as I stepped through her doorway

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  and underneath the mistletoe pinned to its frame. “How are things?”

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  E L I Z A B E T H K AY

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  “Good,” she said. “I’m good.”

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  I pulled the armchair from the corner toward her bed and sat down

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  beside her. When she first moved into this facility, I hired a man with a 04

  van— I found his card pinned up in the post office window— to trans-

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  port some of her things from the house. The armchair was the most

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  substantial addition. And although there were a few raised eyebrows

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  from the nurses, I insisted that it was absolutely essential. I also included 08

  four of the cushions that had decorated her king- size bed at home, some 09

  framed prints, a tasseled lampshade, a pile of books, and her jewelry

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  box. I eventually introduced some other small improvements: a nonslip

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  coaster stamped with a childhood photograph for her water beaker, for

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  example. A speckled gray vase for flowers— I had bought a festive bunch

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  from the florist at the train station the day before— and a tablet so that 14

  she could watch films and scroll through old home videos and some-

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  times, when she was feeling able, send me an email. I was receiving

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  them less and less by then.

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  I look back now at the version of me that spent so much time caring

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  for and— maybe this isn’t the right word but— mothering her. And I’m

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  surprised by my own dedication. I fought as a child to be recognized: I

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  did incredibly well academically, winning prizes and accolades from my

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  teachers; I was helpful, almost obsequiously, around the house— laying

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  the table and emptying the dishwasher and changing the bedding; I

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  tried to be lively and entertaining, a positive influence within our home.

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  Those things— the ornaments and the weekly visits— were simply more

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  recent examples of the many ways in which I’d danced for her attention.

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  I lifted her cardigan back over her shoulder and she glared at me, her

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  pupils wide. I could tell that she’d been given
something— perhaps for

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  her cold, perhaps simply to keep her calm— and thankfully the drugs

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  seemed to be obscuring Emma’s absence. It slipped past entirely un-

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  noticed. And yet, despite the medication, she was astute in many ways

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  that day, grilling me for details of my journey and demanding to know

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  my plans for the afternoon.

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  “You’ll be with Marnie and Charles?” she asked.

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  “Just Marnie,” I replied.

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  “Not Charles?” she asked, and her brows furrowed at the center of

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  her forehead.

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  “No,” I said, and I dropped my head to one side and her face shifted

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  from confusion to concern because that movement has only ever pre-

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  ceded bad news. “I’ve told you this before. Do you remember?” I sighed.

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  “Charles is dead.”

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  “He died?” She was horrified, her voice high and her face ugly with

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  disbelief, as she was every time she received this news. “When?”

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  “A few months ago.”

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  “How?”

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  “He fell down the stairs. You know this already. You just don’t want

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  to remember it.”

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  “Well, no,” she said. “I wouldn’t. It’s awful.”

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  “I know,” I said. “I was there.” And I don’t know why I did this be-

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  cause I hadn’t shared any of these details with her before, but I think I 17

  wanted her to acknowledge that this grief wasn’t hers to appropriate.

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  “Marnie and I found him sprawled at the foot of the stairs. We saw him.”

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  “Dead?” she said.

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  “Yes,” I said.

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  “He died alone.” She looked sad as she said it, as though this in par-

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  ticular was something unbearable. I realized then that we had never

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  discussed death, not in any depth, never further than its simple fact, a

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  simple loss. “What a thing,” she said.

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  “I’m afraid,” I said, “that I might have been outside their apartment

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  when it happened. I was waiting for Marnie to come home. She was at

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  the library. And I was there for an hour, just sitting there, reading and 28

  waiting.”

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  “Afraid that you might have been able to do something,” she said,

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  and it was part question, part statement.

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  “Perhaps,” I said. “If I’d heard something. If I’d had a key.”

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  E L I Z A B E T H K AY

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  I don’t know why I did this. Except, at the same time, I think I do. I

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  wanted her to protect me, to look inside me and see that something was

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  broken, and I wanted her to mend it. Isn’t that what a mother does?

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  And, if she couldn’t do that, if she couldn’t see or fix the fractures, then 05

  I wanted her to think that I was the sort of person who could save a life 06

  and not the sort of person who could take one. I wanted her to think

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  that if I could have done something, I would have, that if I could be a

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  better version of myself, then I would be.

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  “A key,” she said.

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  “I used to have one,” I said. “I watered their plants when they went

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  on holiday. But I don’t have it now, not anymore. I returned it.”

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  She nodded.

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  “Do you remember David?” I asked “He lived next door. He used to

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  water yours when we went away.”

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  I arrived at Marnie’s just after two o’clock. Her flat was full of far too 18

  many people and it exuded an unlikely medley of cheer and sorrow and

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  pretense. There was a tree in the hallway adorned with silver orna-

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  ments, a glittering angel sitting at the top. There were decorations scat-21

  tered artfully up the stairs and a plate piled high with tiny mince pies.

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  Merry jingles were filtering through the speakers and Marnie was wear-

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  ing a ribbon of tinsel around her neck.

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  I sort of wanted to strangle her with it.

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  “Jane!” Marnie called when she saw me hovering by the open front

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  door. “You’re earlier than I expected. How was your mother? Come in.

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  Come in. What can I get you? A drink? Wine? A sherry, perhaps?”

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  I handed over a small gift bag. I’d struggled to find a present that

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  was both sentimental and yet understated, too; respectful, I suppose.

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  I’d opted eventually for a set of cookie cutters— they seemed ridicu-

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  lously expensive to me— that she’d pointed out years earlier in a shop

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  said. They were shaped into pairs of breasts, all shapes and sizes, with

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  separate cutters for all manner of nipples. I hadn’t quite understood the 02

  appeal.

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  “Thank you,” she said, leaving it wrapped on the floor by the radia-

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  tor beside a few other gift and bottle bags. “Come on through. Emma’s

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  here already. I think she’s in the kitchen. She’s a bit . . . When did you 06

  last see her? Wine, did you say?”

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  “Who are all these people?” I asked. I didn’t recognize anyone and

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  yet there were at least twenty— maybe thirty— others crammed into

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  the flat.

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  “It’s lovely, isn’t it?” Marnie replied. “They’re a fascinating bunch.

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  That’s Derek.” She pointed at a middle- aged man wearing a checked

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  shirt and a reindeer tie. “He lives three doors down. Wife died earlier

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  this year. Cancer. So we’ve a lot in common. And that’s Mary and Ian.”

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  She pointed at a couple who were both at least ninety. He was trying to

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  eat a mince pie but most of the pastry was crumbled down his jacket.

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  And she had the most exquisite gray hair pinned beautifully so that it

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&n
bsp; fell down one side of her neck. “They live on the ground floor. I met

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  them in the lobby yesterday and invited them along. Over there is

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  Jenna. She does my nails. And that’s Isobel. She cleans the flat. You’ve

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  probably met her before. She’s separated from her husband and she was

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  going to spend the day alone and I just thought, no, that’s not right at

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  all, and so I told her to pop in. Isn’t it lovely?”

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  “It is, Marnie. Absolutely. But are you sure . . . How are you feeling?

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  What can I do?”

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  “Everything’s under control. I have two turkeys in the oven. Can

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  you smell them? It’s good, right? And lots of nibbles out already. Have

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  you got your phone? Maybe take some photos? I’m going to do a big

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  post on how to host an ‘everyone welcome’ Christmas.”

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  “And the baby? Are you resting enough?”

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  “I’m really starting to show now, can you see”— she turned to one

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  side— “can you believe it?”

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  E L I Z A B E T H K AY

  01

  “Jane!” Emma grabbed hold of my arm and then enveloped me in a

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  hug. “Merry Christmas! How are you?”

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  She pulled back and I held on a moment longer, just to be sure that

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  I really could reach both arms around her waist and touch my palms to

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  my opposite elbow. She was so much worse than she’d been in years. I

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  stepped back and glanced at her face. Her cheeks were hollow, so

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  sunken that I could almost see the shape of her teeth through her skin.

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  Her spindly wrists poked from an oversized jumper and her tight jeans

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  were loose around her thighs.

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  “That man,” she continued. “Do you see? In the salmon pink shirt?

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  He’s been talking to me for about twenty minutes and I’ve only just

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  managed to escape. No offense, Marn, I’m sure he’s a great friend or

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  whatever, but— ”

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  “In the red cords?” Marnie asked.

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  Emma nodded. “And the paper cracker hat.”

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  “I’ve no idea who he is. Did he say anything about— Give me a min-

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  ute,” she said, and she waded across the kitchen to introduce herself.

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  “Mince pie?” I held out the plate.

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