Anne continued pacing the floor. ‘Mum isn’t used to staying with strangers. No offence to your aunt, but Mum’s a real home bird and, like a mother hen, she worries about us all.’ Looking up with a tear-stained face she went on, ‘Poor Mum. She doesn’t know what she’s coming home to, does she?’
‘No, she doesn’t, and it’s just as well. When she learns the bad news, she’ll be shaken to the roots.’
‘How long will it take for her to get here?’
‘It is not a short journey, as you know,’ Kathleen cautioned her. ‘I don’t suppose she’ll be here for a few hours yet.’
‘Is there a way we can contact her?’
‘What would be the point in upsetting her when she can’t change anything?’
Anne shook her head, ‘Kathleen, I really need my mum,’ she said tearfully. ‘I need to hold her.’
Kathleen hugged her. ‘I know you need her, but she’ll be here soon enough.’
Just then, the baby woke up in his buggy and started crying. ‘I’d best get home and feed him,’ Anne said.
‘Okay, but you’re always welcome to come back here to be with me. It’s fine, and I want to help.’
Anne thanked her. ‘I know you do, and I’m so thankful Mum has such a good friend in you. She’s going to need you, Kathleen.’
Kathleen smiled. ‘I know that, and I’ll be here for her … like she’s always been there for me.’
Anne said her goodbyes. ‘You will ring me if you hear anything, won’t you, Kathleen?’ she called back from the street.
‘Of course I will, but try not to worry. Now … you get off and feed that baby.’ Remembering something, she ran after Anne. ‘I forgot to tell you, the boss phoned when she heard the reason for your Mum’s absence. Anyway, she asked me to tell your mum that her job is waiting for her, when she’s ready.’
‘Aw, that’s good news.’ Anne knew her mum would be relieved. ‘I know Mum’s been worried about her job, what with having so much time off, and everything.’
Kathleen assured her, ‘Don’t think the old battleaxe wants your mum out of the goodness of her heart; it’s because she’s a damned good worker.’
Anne smiled. ‘Why does that not surprise me?’
Some hours later, Kathleen opened the door to see Lucy standing there.
‘Oh, Lucy … come in. Come in, love.’ She hugged her as though she would never let her go. ‘It’s so good to have you back, you little darlin’.’ She wondered if it was her place to tell Lucy the news, or should she call Anne, but then Lucy told her that she had been round to Anne’s but there was no one there.
‘Fancy a nice hot cuppa?’ Kathleen was trying hard to delay telling her the truth.
‘Yes, go on then.’ She followed Kathleen into the kitchen. ‘Martin wasn’t home either. I dare say he’s out working, but where’s Anne? She’s never out at this time of day.’
‘Shall I give her a ring … see if she’s back yet?’ Kathleen asked.
‘Yes, please, Kathleen. Maybe she was out the back. I never thought to look.’
There was a knock on the door, and when Kathleen opened it she was surprised to see Anne standing there.
‘Sorry, Kathleen, could I stay with you for a while? I’ve just been round to Mum’s and she’s still not home. I’m getting really worried.’
Lucy heard the conversation from the kitchen. ‘There’s no need to worry,’ she said cheekily, and Anne ran down the hallway to hug her.
‘Oh, Mum! I’m so glad you’re back. Something terrible has happened, and I don’t know what to do.’
‘Hey!’ Lucy took hold of her and walked her to the living room, while Kathleen kindly took care of the baby. ‘I think you had best tell me what’s happened that you find so terrible!’
Anne started crying – from relief that her mum was back, and also the realisation of how very much she had missed her. ‘Mum, I have to tell you … there was a terrible fight … between Dad and Paula’s husband. Paula tried to get between them and she was badly hurt. She wants to see you, Mum. She’s sorry … and so am I, because I never knew what was going on …’ Now all the pent-up emotions broke loose and she sobbed in her mother’s arms. ‘I didn’t know, Mum … I hate Dad for what he’s done to you … cheating on you with your sister … sleeping with her! Oh, Mum … how could he do that to you?’
Lucy gave no answer, because she did not have one. Instead she held on to her daughter, comforting her while she sobbed bitterly.
After a time, when Anne was calmer, Lucy asked her solemnly, ‘How bad is Paula? I must go and see her.’ Even after everything Paula had done, Lucy could find no hatred in her heart for her, or, indeed, for Martin. And besides, she herself had learned how easy it was to do something out of character.
‘She’s really poorly, Mum.’
‘Look, you two, I’ll mind the baby if you want to go and see Paula,’ Kathleen offered.
It was agreed, and with Kathleen insisting on paying for a taxi from the High Street, Lucy and Anne hurried away.
At the hospital Lucy was shocked to see her sister all trussed up, her arm and shoulder in plaster and her face black and blue, with a cluster of deep bruises and a multitude of bloodied stitches reaching from her eyebrow down to her chin, which was also encased in plaster.
‘Oh, my God, what’s happened to her?’ Lucy was in tears, anxious to see the doctor and impatient when told he was in surgery just now, but he would be along shortly to speak with her.
The ward sister came to explain Paula’s injuries to her. ‘She’s broken her nose, arm, shoulder and both legs, and three fingers. And her chin is fractured in two places. She is being kept sedated until we can see how she’s responding to treatment.’
Lucy grew anxious. ‘So, are you saying she’s not responding to treatment?’
‘No, I am not saying that, but she’s in a good deal of pain. Right now she’s sleeping, which is helpful for her recovery.’
Anne had an idea. ‘Mum, you look absolutely shattered. You need a hot drink and to get your thoughts together. The sister says Paula is being kept sedated, so why don’t we go down to the canteen – just for a minute or so – give you time to catch your breath?’ Her voice broke. ‘Please, Mum. I’m worried about Aunt Paula, but I’m worried about you as well.’
‘Aw, sweetheart …’ Lucy laid her hand over Anne’s. ‘I should have been here. I might have been able to stop what happened, though even now, I’m not altogether sure what that was. Yes, I’ll ask the doctor, and if he says it’s all right we’ll take ten minutes out, then I’ll come back and sit with Paula while you get off home and get some rest. Is that a deal?’
Anne told her that yes, it was a deal.
The doctor arrived just then. ‘It was touch and go when she was brought in, but I believe she is now settled and stable, although, of course, she’ll be with us for some time yet,’ he explained to Lucy. ‘There are several injuries that will take a time to heal.’
When he was called away, Lucy leaned over her sister. ‘Paula, it’s Lucy. I don’t know if you can hear me, but all I want to say is, I’m not angry about you and Martin. I realise you didn’t do it to hurt me. We can none of us help who we fall in love with. If you can hear me, Paula, don’t worry about a thing. You are my sister, and I love you. I always have, and I always will.’
Leaning forward, she tenderly whispered in Paula’s ear, ‘Please, Paula, be strong. You’re going to be just fine. Make sure you keep that at the front of your mind.’
Paula’s eyes flickered for a moment.
‘She heard you.’ Anne grew emotional. ‘Mum! Aunt Paula heard you.’
Lucy bent to kiss Paula on the forehead. ‘You’re going to be fine,’ she promised. ‘You’re a tough little thing … I know you would never give in, and besides, you have so much to live for.’
Later, in the canteen, Anne got them a cup of tea and a biscuit each, but neither of them felt like eating.
‘She heard you, Mum,’ Anne assured L
ucy. ‘I know she did.’
Lucy nodded. ‘It’s out of our hands now, sweetheart,’ she reminded her. ‘But I think she heard me, and I hope that what I said will make Paula realise, I bear her no malice.’ Her thoughts wandered back to Dave Benson. ‘These things happen, sweetheart,’ she said. ‘Life is short, and whether it’s right or wrong, we do what we do, and often we seem to forget about the consequences.
‘But what exactly happened? Who was it that hurt Paula like that?’ She could never believe that it was Martin, but then again, who knows what anyone would do, if in the wrong circumstances? Never in her wildest dreams would she have thought that she, Lucy Lovejoy, would willingly go to a stranger’s bedroom, dressed only in her nightgown, and offer herself to him, but she had done just that, and she was still shocked at her actions.
‘It was Paula’s husband,’ Anne replied. ‘From what I can get out of Dad, he went round there to see Paula, and her husband had come back. Apparently, he was in the bedroom with her when Dad arrived. There was a big fight, and Paula’s husband went for Dad with a crow bar, or some such thing. Apparently, Paula got between them, and she took the full force of the blows … or so Dad says.’
She shook her head. ‘I still can’t believe what they did to you, Mum – sleeping together and cheating on you. Dad told me everything. I hate him for what he did to you, Mum, I really do!’
‘Oh, no! Don’t be filled with hate,’ Lucy told her. ‘It won’t change anything. All it will do is make you bitter and miserable … and rob your son of his Granddad.’
‘Well, if that happens it won’t be my fault, will it?’
Lucy warned her, ‘You know as well as I do, that darling boy idolises his grandfather. So, think carefully before you let your son pay the price for any resentment you might be feeling. Apart from that, I hope you won’t let yourself be affected too harshly by what’s happened between your father and Paula, because if you do, it will eat you away inside.’
‘But what they’ve done to you is shocking!’ Anne had tried so hard not to show her deeper feelings, but she could not deny the disgust she felt at the manner in which those two had hurt her mother.
‘Shocking it may be,’ Lucy conceded, ‘but we all make mistakes, and we should not allow them to affect our children or grandchildren. Love is a wonderful thing, while hatred is dark and destructive.’ She gently stroked Anne’s face. ‘I know you’re disgusted and upset, sweetheart, and I don’t blame you, but it would mean a lot to me if you could promise that you will try to forgive them.’
Instead of answering, Anne had a question. ‘Can you ever forgive them?’
‘Like I say, the alternative is unacceptable, and besides, your father and I have had a fair run. He’s been a good father and a good husband. I think in life we are all entitled to make one mistake, don’t you?’
Anne looked at her mother’s face, at the shining light in her pretty brown eyes, and she saw a good and kind woman; a woman who took the bad with the good, and dealt with whatever life threw at her.
Then she had another question. ‘Mum?’
‘Yes, sweetheart?’
‘Would you ever take Dad back as your husband? You know what I’m saying, don’t you?’
Lucy understood and, after some soul-searching, she gave her answer. ‘I’ve already forgiven him and Paula for what they did. But as for taking your father back – as a husband in the full meaning of the word – the answer would have to be no. Our marriage is over now anyway. And if Paula and your father want each other, I would never stand in their way. It would serve no purpose for me to do such a selfish thing.’
Anne had got the answer she knew she would get, and, for some reason that she did not understand, she began to feel less angry about the whole thing.
‘I hope Paula gets well, Mum.’
‘So do I, sweetheart.’ Taking hold of her daughter’s hand, Lucy gave it a long squeeze. ‘And now I’d like to go back in and sit with Paula for a while.’
‘Mum, Les should be home by now. Do you mind if I call and ask him to pick me up? It’s been a long day. And anyway, Dad said he was coming back within the hour, so you’ll have him to talk to, I suppose.’
Lucy understood. ‘Look, you make your call, and by the time Les gets here, Dad should be here to sit with Paula, and I could cadge a lift with you. Like you say, it’s been a long day. But I intend to be back here first thing in the morning.’
With so many worrying matters on her mind, Lucy was not yet ready to talk with Martin. And anyway, there was time enough to sort out what needed sorting out.
It would not be easy, for there were so many factors to be taken into account, not least the practical matters such as finances and other unpleasant things that had to be dealt with, one way or another.
Whichever way it all turned out, Lucy hoped it might be for the best, to give herself and Martin every chance of moving on with their lives.
But in that moment, Lucy was certain of only one thing: nothing would ever again be the same.
So for now, and with so much still unsaid, she could not bring herself to think beyond the day.
PART FOUR
CHAPTER TWENTY
AFTER SPENDING A month in hospital, Paula was allowed to come home.
Lucy and Martin spent that evening discussing whether or not Paula would be able to manage on her own.
Lucy was emphatic. ‘That’s impossible! Her wounds may be well on the road to healing,’ she argued, ‘but she still has a long way to go, and emotionally she’s in a mess. We can’t let her go home on her own. She would never cope. She’s far too vulnerable. We can’t risk her having to go back to hospital.’
Martin knew Lucy was right but he could not see a solution. ‘So what are you suggesting, Lucy? Are you asking if you can bring her here … after what we did to you? No, I will not let you do that!’ Deeply agitated, he began walking the floor. ‘I don’t know any other woman who would even suggest that. Already you’ve taken all of this on the chin, and you’ve never once complained. I know you’ve been hurt by what me and Paula have done, but I’ll be honest with you, Lucy. It’s true I do love her. I think I always have, but I love you as well. To be honest I sometimes think I must be going out of my mind. I don’t know which way to turn. I need to be with her. I’m sorry … I really am.’ His voice broke with emotion. ‘Tell me, Lucy, what should I do?’
He went to sit in his chair, leaning forward, his head in his hands and sobbing like a child. ‘I’ve never felt so lost in all my life. I honestly never wanted to hurt you, Lucy. I’m so sorry … so very sorry.’
Lucy quietened him. ‘First of all, there is nothing to be gained from looking back at what’s happened. As we’re being honest, I can tell you there were times when I could have walked out the door and never come back, but that would have solved nothing. So now we need to look forward, to be thankful on three counts. First, Paula’s lawyer has managed to secure a quickie divorce from that madman of a husband. And secondly, he’s been charged and found guilty of GBH, and now he’s rotting in prison, where he belongs!’
When she seemed to have spoken her piece, Martin asked cautiously, ‘And what’s the third count?’
‘Well, it’s kind of a third and fourth count, I suppose,’ Lucy answered. ‘You and me,’ she looked him in the eye, ‘and you and Paula.’
‘Go on.’
‘Well, when you think about it, the solution is quite clear. I think we both agree that our marriage is well and truly over, which is just as well, because you want to be with Paula. You said that yourself, just now.’ When he went to speak, Lucy put her hand up to signal that she was not yet finished. ‘I’ve been giving the sorry situation a great deal of thought these past weeks, and I think – hope – that I’ve found the answer.’
‘What d’you mean exactly?’
‘Well, if you remember, Paula told us that her solicitor has got together an agreement that will allow Paula to buy the house from Ray at the market price. There’s no way
she ever wants to get back with Ray.’
‘But how can she buy the house? She has no money to speak of,’ Martin commented. ‘And she’s been told she cannot return to work for weeks … maybe months. So, if she can’t be working, how will she ever be able to pay a mortgage?’
‘Well, she won’t, will she?’
‘Lucy! You’re talking in riddles.’
‘No, I’m not. You see, I realise that Paula will not be able to pay the mortgage. But you can!’
‘What? I think you’d best explain yourself.’ He was lost as to where she might be going with this.
‘Like I said, it’s simple when you think about it. Paula needs help, and you want to be with her, so why don’t you just move in with her? Help her to buy the house.’
‘But how can I do that?’ Now, he was more confused than before. ‘Have you forgotten that I’m still paying the mortgage on this house … and at my last reckoning we’ve got another six years before it’s paid off.’
With a secret little smile on her face, Lucy looked him in the eye. ‘Sell it!’ she told him. ‘Sell it, and you’ll have money enough to start a new life with Paula.’
‘What!’ He could not believe his ears. ‘Lucy! Have you lost your mind? And what about you? I’m not having you lodging with anyone, not even with our daughter. And don’t forget, you’ve paid every bit as much into this house as I have, and I would never dream of taking away your home. So, you can forget that idea altogether!’
Lucy was insistent. ‘I would not be lodging with our daughter, and I’m well aware that I’ve paid into this house as well, and yes, I would need to have an amount back if it was sold.’
He was baffled. ‘Let me get this idea of yours straight in my mind.’ He gave it a moment’s thought, and then he reiterated her thinking. ‘OK. So Paula has got rid of her ex, and is shortly coming home. Ray wants the house, but he’s residing in prison at the moment and he’s willing to sell it to her. And you have an idea that I should sell our house, then move in with Paula and help her to buy the house from her ex. And in order for me to help Paula, you say I should sell our home. But if I do that you say you won’t have to lodge with our daughter. So, have I got it right so far?’
The Runaway Woman Page 29