The House of Memories

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The House of Memories Page 23

by Monica McInerney


  ‘What about Pony Girl? Did you get the full horseriding DVD extravaganza?’ Mark asked.

  ‘She’s getting worse each week,’ Darin said. ‘I keep expecting her to hop on my back and make me gallop around the room.’

  ‘In your dreams,’ Harry said.

  After dinner, the gathering broke up. I started doing the dishes, once again turning down any offers of help. I’d just finished when Mark came in, sifting through the large collection of mail that had been left piled on the hall table. In my first days here I’d sorted the post each day, leaving the tutors’ letters, magazines or circulars under their door. I’d eventually stopped. The house seemed to operate best in a certain degree of chaos.

  ‘One for you, Ella,’ he said. ‘Nice stamp. George Washington. Can I have it when you’re done? My nephew’s a philatelist.’

  Even before he passed it over, I knew who it was from.

  Aidan.

  Chapter Twenty-six

  From: Charlie Baum

  To: undisclosed recipients

  Subject: It’s Been a Noisy Week in Boston

  The weekly report from the Baum trenches is as follows:

  Sophie (11): Sophie has two soccer coaches, Jenny and Rick. She sent Rick a card for his birthday, on which she wrote: ‘You are my favourite coach.’ I explained that it was nice to have a favourite coach, but that Jenny, her other coach, might be hurt if she was to see the card. Sophie nodded wisely, picked up her pencil and wrote on the bottom, ‘Don’t show Jenny.’

  Ed (8): Lucy and I were talking about our next-door neighbour’s new daughter being adopted. Ed overheard. ‘That little girl’s a doctor? Wow! She’s only six years old!’

  Reilly (6): Doing sums. ‘Dad, twelve is a dozen.’

  ‘Yes, it is,’ I said.

  Pause while he finishes another sum.

  ‘Dad, you know how twelve is a dozen?’

  ‘Yes?’

  ‘Well, what is nine?’

  Good point.

  Tim (4): In the car with me. He puts his fingers and thumbs together to make a triangle.

  ‘Look, Dad,’ he says. ‘A triangle.’

  ‘Mmm,’ I say.

  ‘An isosceles triangle,’ he adds.

  I nearly crash the car.

  Lucy (36): Long days on the road may be coming to an end. Interesting office-based job has come up in her company. She’s applying. I’m wishing and hoping and thinking and praying, channelling my inner Dusty Springfield.

  Charlie (36): A glorious moment at this week’s weigh-in. I’d lost four kilos! In one week! Very cruel of Lucy to remind me that Tim had dropped the scales into the bath.

  Snip the cat (kitten age): Days of cuteness short-lived. Life of a small bird in our garden nearly short-lived. Snip now wearing a bell around her neck that wouldn’t look out of place on an alpine cow. (I’ve told her it’s her German heritage.)

  Until next week, everyone please stay sane.

  Charlie xx

  From: Charlie Baum

  To: Lucy Baum

  Subject: re: New Job????

  Yes, of course you should apply for it.

  Yes, of course you will get it.

  Yes, it would change everything – yes, for the better.

  Not that I want to change anything.

  I am the luckiest man in the world as it is.

  C xx

  From: Charlie Baum

  To: Lucas Fox

  Subject: re: Jess

  No, I don’t think so. Haven’t heard from her for a few days but I looked her up on Facebook. She seems to be busy sightseeing and using exclamation marks. Dad told me he’s loaded up her credit card so I’d say she’s also going to see every musical London has to offer. Don’t worry. Chances are slim she and Ella will run into each other.

  C

  From: Charlie Baum

  To: Aidan O’Hanlon

  Subject: (no subject)

  Hope all is okay. Have left a couple of messages for you at home and work. Would be good to talk.

  C

  From: Charlie Baum

  To: Walter Baum

  Subject: Meredith

  Is Meredith okay? Watched the latest video link of her on that chat show and barely recognised her.

  From: Charlie Baum

  To: Ella O’Hanlon

  Subject: You

  You’ve gone quiet on me. All okay over there?

  Chapter Twenty-seven

  Dear Diary,

  Hi, it’s Jess!

  I’m not going to talk about what is happening here in London because it’s too awful. Instead, I am going to work on the chapters about my childhood.

  I have to just say one thing first. I hope I haven’t made a big mistake, but the more I thought about what Zach said, about me not really being independent while Mum and Dad are paying for me here, the more I realised he was right. Once I thought that, I couldn’t stop thinking about the other comments those people in my dance classes had made. That I was only here because my parents were rich and paying my way. And then I couldn’t stop thinking about what Mum and Dad had done – not told me about the TV show, basically shipping me off to London, out of the way – and I got so mad, it was like a storm in my head, and I did a stupid thing. I cut up the credit card Dad gave me. The one I could use as a credit card and a cash card. And I did it before I looked in my purse and I only have one hundred pounds left in there. I should have taken some money out before I cut up the card. It was so stupid of me. What on earth can I do now??? It’s not as if I can ring Dad up and say, ‘I’m going to stand on my own two feet but before I do, can you give me another few hundred pounds?’

  I’ve just rung downstairs and the receptionist said she’s very sorry but she can’t extend my room booking without authorisation from the credit-card holder who originally made the reservation. Which is Dad. Who I am not talking to. Which means that in one day’s time I won’t have anywhere to live and I haven’t got any money. I am really scared.

  I’ll write about my childhood instead.

  I was born on 5 April 1990, to a mother called Meredith Baum and a father called Walter Baum. Dad is German by birth but has lived in Australia for nearly forty years. I have a half-sister called Ella, from my mother’s first marriage, and a half-brother called Charlie, from my father’s first marriage. Ella is eleven years older than me, Charlie is thirteen years older than me.

  I am going to write this next bit honestly. When the time comes to publish my autobiography I will probably have to edit out a lot of this so that no one’s feelings get hurt, but I have resolved to make the first draft as honest as I can. So here goes …

  I had a very happy childhood. I knew from the moment I was born (well, as much as I can remember of it) that I was very loved and also very wanted. To this day, my mum and dad are the most in-love couple I have ever met. They are very affectionate with each other, and while I don’t know all the details of their first marriages, it’s pretty clear from what they have both hinted that things weren’t good for either of them, which makes sense, of course, otherwise why would they have got divorced? Mum and Dad met in very romantic circumstances, in a garden centre of all places (and baum is German for tree, how cool is that!!), fell in love instantly and were married within a year. I came along soon after – I was always an impatient child, Mum said!!!

  We lived in Melbourne in a very nice house in Richmond, which is a cosmopolitan inner-eastern suburb. Mum looked after me while Dad worked full-time but I can honestly say that I never felt he was an absent father. He was always there for me and to this day is very generous and loving.

  My half-sister Ella and my half-brother Charlie were always very nice to me.

  My half-sister Ella and my half-brother Charlie were very welcoming and were the best big brother and sister any little girl could have.

  Charlie tried his best but I know my half-sister Ella always hated me.

  I will have to edit this out at the end but for now I am going to write down the truth
. For as long as I can remember, it was always the two of them against me. There was a big age difference, but I can remember so clearly wanting to do things with them and them always saying, ‘No, Jess, leave us alone. No, Jess, you’re too young.’ It was just as well I liked to spend time in my own company, practising my dancing and singing, or I would have been a very lonely and sad little girl. The two of them were always giggling and whispering to each other, and if Mum and Dad asked them to include me, they would say no at first, or if they did eventually say yes, they would make such a fuss that it wasn’t fun any more. Mum noticed. It was hard not to, but even if she pleaded with them to be kind to me, often they still wouldn’t be and I would feel very left out.

  ‘They’re just a bit jealous of you,’ Mum would say to me sometimes, and I didn’t understand when I was young but now that I have met a lot of other kids who have divorced parents and step-siblings or half-siblings, I understand that it can be tricky to feel like you only half belong to a family, whereas for me I was always with my mum and my dad and I knew they loved each other and me, so that was a very secure environment to grow up in.

  Ella’s biological dad is dead. (He died in a plane accident in Canada when I was just a baby so I never met him.) Mum said he was nice at first but very argumentative in the latter years of their marriage. Charlie’s mum, Dad’s first wife, was mentally unstable and went back to Germany after their divorce and there was hardly any contact, and then she died the year Charlie turned sixteen. I never met her either. He and Dad went back for the funeral, which must have been very difficult, I suppose, even though Charlie didn’t really ever know his mother and in a way he was abandoned by her. I have to try to be understanding of Charlie and Ella, only having one parent each, even if sometimes I think they are the ones who should be more understanding of me, as the youngest in the family.

  It’s like when I started in a new school after we moved from Richmond to a bigger house in Malvern. By the time I started in the middle of the first term, all the kids had already made friends and it took me ages, nearly a week, to make some really good friends. It was the same for me in my family, if you look at it. By the time I was born, Ella and Charlie had been brother and sister for more than a year and had all sorts of in-jokes and so I had to try to break into that, which was tricky when I was only just born and couldn’t even speak yet!

  I can’t write about them any more. I can’t stop thinking about what I should do next here in London. I should just say sorry to Mum and Dad, and ask Dad to send me a new credit card and book me in for another week here. But I’m too angry at them. I really am. I’m angry and hurt.

  I’ll ask Ben for help. He might let me sleep at his flat even for a few nights, until I get a job somewhere. I might have been a bit optimistic that I would get a part in a musical so soon.

  I can’t sleep now. I have to be so careful not to start worrying too much because when I do, everything I’ve been taught by my counsellor seems to fall away and all I do is go over that terrible day again and again, and all I seem to be able to feel is Felix, the weight of him in my arms, and how it felt to have his hand in mine and then that horrible moment when he started to slip and I saw it. It was as if I knew something really bad was going to happen and I couldn’t stop it and I screamed and I screamed and I heard it. I heard the noise when his head hit the rock. I never told Ella or Aidan that – how could I? – but I heard it that day and I’ve remembered it so many times since, and if I could give him my life, if I could swap it, I would. I would do whatever I could to fix that day. He was such a beautiful baby. He wasn’t a baby, he was a little boy. He called me Ess. He didn’t seem to be able to say the letter J yet, even though he was a really good talker for his age. It used to make me laugh so much. When he’d see me he’d hold up his arms and shout, ‘Ess! Ess!’ So I called him Elix. His favourite game was peek-a-boo. He could play it for hours and he would get this sort of gurgling laugh when I played it with him and it was impossible not to laugh too.

  I still can’t understand it. How can God let something like that happen? I’m not sure I even believe in God anyway. No proper god would let a little boy die.

  I wish I hadn’t started remembering it all. Not when I’m here on my own like this. Once I begin thinking about it, it’s really hard to stop, and all the bad thoughts come rushing at me again. Mum always helps me when it happens at home. She holds me tight until I feel better, and she says the same things. ‘It was a terrible accident, Jessie, an accident,’ and I know that, but even knowing it doesn’t ever help, not really. I just keep thinking about the day it happened, and the days afterwards. It all becomes a big horrible blur in my head. I just remember crying so much and wanting to see Ella but she wouldn’t see me. Of course I can’t blame her, but she still won’t see me or talk to me. She never will and I just have to come to terms with that, my counsellor said. I did see Aidan. He came to the hotel the next day. I was in shock, I know I was, and he came into our room and he hugged me and he said, ‘It was an accident, Jess. I know it was an accident,’ and I cried and he cried so much, both of us, and I asked him if Ella was coming too and he said no. I saw her at the funeral but she wouldn’t look at me. I don’t know if she saw anyone that day. I watched her. I was watching her in the hope that she would turn around even for a second and see me and I could say sorry to her, but she didn’t turn. She just stared straight ahead the whole time. I could hear her crying. I’ve never heard anything like it. Dad took me outside, before they carried Felix’s coffin out of the church, but I still saw Ella stand up and really start to cry and then she —

  I’m sorry. I have to stop now.

  Chapter Twenty-eight

  I hadn’t read Aidan’s letter.

  I’d had it for twenty-four hours. The envelope was still unopened.

  Aidan hadn’t written to me or emailed me in months. I’d wanted it that way. I’d needed it to be that way. But now he had written again, out of the blue. Why? I’d been awake most of last night thinking about it. I’d thought about it all day today. I knew I couldn’t open it without preparing myself as much as possible. His letter could only be about one of two things, I’d finally decided.

  It would be about Felix. About the anniversary that was now just days away. I tried to picture what Aidan might have written.

  Ella, I know that next week is Felix’s twenty-month anniversary —

  The idea of it being an important date had come from Mum. Someone in the early days had tried to give her some solace by saying the pain became more bearable once you passed the anniversary of the age the child was when he or she died. It had seemed impossible to me at the time. It still was. How could the pain ever be bearable? But for Mum especially, it had become a summit we needed to reach. Mum had told Charlie about it, too. He’d mentioned it to me himself. Had she talked about it with Aidan as well? Was that why he was writing? To say that he too was thinking of that date?

  Or was he writing about something else?

  Something quite different?

  Ella, I’ve met someone else. I want a divorce.

  All day, my mind had flicked from one possibility to the other. I wasn’t ready to read either of them. Not yet. I’d open his letter tomorrow. Yes. Tomorrow. For now, not knowing what it said was easier to deal with than knowing.

  Distract.

  Observe.

  It was ten o’clock at night. I was in my bedroom. There was nothing in here for me to do. It was already spotlessly tidy. It was too late to go downstairs and start cooking or cleaning. I turned on my laptop instead. I hadn’t checked my emails for a few days. There were two new ones from Charlie, one of his weekly reports and one asking how I was, saying that I’d gone quiet.

  I’d email him now. Night-time in London was the afternoon in Boston. It was coming up to what he called Hell Hour, feeding time at the family zoo. There was no way he’d be online at the moment, but I had an urge to talk to him.

  I quickly wrote an email. I didn’t mention Aidan�
�s letter.

  Sorry for silence. News in brief: Henrietta wants me to get Lucas to sell house. She and her husband are divorcing. She wants to move to France with Lucas. Needs house money to fund new set-up.

  I sent it.

  A moment later, there was a reply from him.

  WTF??

  I typed back quickly. How can you be online now? Isn’t it Hell Hour?

  Forget Hell Hour. Am in Hell on Earth aka neighbour’s child’s birthday party. Am barricaded in laundry with my iPhone. Sound of sausage rolls being devoured frightening to the human ear. Of course Lucas won’t sell. He loves the house. Anyway, it’s your inheritance. Tell her to keep her dirty mitts off it.

  Before I had a chance to write back, another one arrived from him.

  Did you say Horrid Henrietta said she needs the money? Maybe she’s the thief??

  Very funny, I wrote.

  I’m not joking.

  Stop it, Charlie.

  I’m NOT joking. Back soon. Wailing child banging on door.

  It wasn’t Henrietta I wanted to talk to Charlie about. Now was a good time to ask him. He was online. He could write straight back. I wrote the email.

  Charlie, I know that Aidan is in Washington. Have you seen him?

  I deleted it. I tried again.

  Charlie, have you had any contact with Aidan recently? Lucas told me —

  I deleted that too. Just say it, I told myself. Just ask him.

  Charlie, do you know if Aidan is seeing anyone? If he is, is it serious?

  I deleted that as well.

  Another email came in from him before I had a chance to write a fourth version.

  COULD it be Henrietta?? She’s often in the houses too, isn’t she? Maybe she’s like those movie stars who shoplift for kicks. Not sure how you’ll break that news to Lucas though …

  I wrote straight back. I still didn’t mention Aidan.

 

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