by Jenny Colgan
‘Hmm,’ he said suddenly.
Rosie popped her head round the door.
‘Hmm,’ he said again, and Mr Dog scampered over in case ‘hmm’ meant ‘I appear to be holding some unwanted treats.’
Stephen was staring at the computer screen.
‘Do you want to tell me, or is it just going to be a mystery?’ said Rosie. ‘Have some aliens landed? Prince William is a woman? A sheep is a bit poorly over in Carningford? They’re introducing a new baby tax and the government is going to want forty per cent of our income?’
‘Sssh,’ said Stephen, not taking his eyes off the computer. ‘My French is rusty.’
‘Ooh, my French is rusty,’ mimicked Rosie. She often teased him about it, but she envied his wonderful education really, even if his own mother thought it had been wasted. He spoke excellent French, had good Latin – though it wasn’t much use – and even though (against his father’s wishes) he’d studied English at university, he had a knowledge of geography, physics and history that Rosie couldn’t remember them even touching on at her school. ‘Dear me. Perhaps I shall first translate it into Mandarin and then work it out from there. Also, don’t shush a pregnant lady! I am not to be shushed! I am extremely special!’
‘Hush,’ he said. Then he looked up. The expression on his face was completely unreadable. ‘Um,’ he said. ‘Would you like to …’
‘I can’t read French,’ said Rosie.
‘I’ll translate.’
‘What IS it?’ she said, completely confused. She didn’t like his face at all; the colour had drained out of it and his eyes had taken on a fixed, distant look. ‘What is it? Is something wrong?’
Stephen didn’t answer, merely blinked, which made her even more curious and worried. She nudged a protesting Mr Dog out of the way, then crawled up next to Stephen on the sofa and peered over his shoulder at an official-looking email. All she could make out was the Médecins Sans Frontières logo.
Before Rosie had fallen in love with Stephen, she had nursed him back to health after his accident in Africa. Her greatest fear was that he would want to go back there again when he was well, but he had sworn that he didn’t; that he had never been happier than he was here in Lipton with her, teaching at the little local school, the pair of them lunching in the Red Lion, taking long, chilly walks across the moors at the weekends, which Rosie normally would have hated, but because she was walking next to him as he brandished his stick and told her old stories about the hills, with Mr Dog running about like mad, and because it always ended up in the nice tea room two villages over that did great cream teas and Eccles cakes, she actually loved.
But he was still having treatment for his PTSD; still on occasion had nightmares, the terrible sweating dreams that left him pinned to the bed, staring wildly, the sheets screwed up in his fingers, Rosie by him, holding him close, bringing him back home, back to normality.
She was not thrilled when he got emails from Africa.
‘What is it?’
‘Someone else is pregnant,’ said Stephen heavily. He shook his head. ‘Wow. Weird.’
‘Who? What? Stop being cryptic.’
‘Jabo … and Akibo …’ He still found it very difficult to say the boys’ names, even after all this time, though Rosie knew it was good for him to do so. ‘Jabo and Akibo. They had a big sister.’ He frowned. ‘Not that big. She didn’t go to school.’
He glanced warningly at Rosie, in case she had something to say about this, but she kept silent.
‘She’s having a baby too. The family wanted me to know. In fact I think …’ He half smiled, then his voice went rather wobbly. ‘I think they want me to be godfather.’ His hand went to his mouth.
Rosie was by his side immediately.
‘Sssh,’ she said. ‘Ssh. I think this is amazing. They’re showing you … they’re showing you they don’t blame you. That it wasn’t your fault. Which it wasn’t.’
Stephen nodded slowly.
‘She can’t be more than fourteen. Oh goodness. I think we’d better send them some money.’
‘I think so too,’ said Rosie, full of relief. She had been absolutely terrified for a moment that he was going to say ‘I think I have to go out there.’
Stephen shook his head.
‘When’s she due?’ said Rosie. ‘Is there a pic?’
But there wasn’t, just the bare facts relayed by someone called Faustine.
‘What a terrifying name,’ said Rosie.
‘She is terrifying,’ said Stephen. ‘But in the best possible way.’
He noticed Rosie getting up and picking up her coat.
‘Where are you going? Don’t go out in this. Stay home, please.’
‘I have to,’ said Rosie. ‘I have to go to the home before Lilian finds out and has me flayed.’
Stephen nodded and got carefully to his feet, glancing briefly back at his laptop.
‘I’ll drive you,’ he said. ‘My most precious cargo.’
‘Bit less of the cargo,’ said Rosie. ‘Though I’ll be the size of a tugboat by the time this thing’s finished.’
She was surprised, truly, at how happy the news made Lilian. She was expecting sarcastic remarks and jibes, the normal way her great-aunt showed her affection without ever really letting down her guard; a carapace against a harsh world she had worn her entire life. But her face was wreathed in smiles, and for once she was short of a snappy answer and simply said, ‘A baby.’
‘Looks like it,’ said Rosie, enjoying the huge fire, even if it was gas, in the residents’ posh lounge, football free as insisted on, even though the men of the institution had protested furiously, pointing out that they were hopelessly outnumbered as it was, whereupon the old women had pointed out that that meant they were spoiled all the time and the nurses gave them extra cake and they always had someone to dance with at the tea dances and it really wasn’t fair, and the whole thing had turned into a gigantic standoff until Cathryn, who ran the home kindly but with absolute authority, told them all to behave themselves or no blackjack, which calmed things down quickly enough. Lilian had had the temerity to add, ‘So it’s settled, then. No football on the big TV,’ and Cathryn had sighed and said fine, and the men had all kicked off again until Lilian and Ida Delia had quelled them by turning round and – in unison – announcing that they were recent widows.
Now, Lilian was unusually speechless.
‘A baby,’ she said, and her clear, very pale china-blue eyes watered, very slightly. Then she glanced down. ‘Well. Well it will be nice to have a baby.’
‘If I’d known you’d enjoy it this much, I’d have had one before,’ said Rosie, delighted.
‘Yes, who with?’ said Lilian. ‘Could have been anyone really.’
‘Yeah, all right.’
But Lilian smiled again.
‘Well. It is wonderful to have a baby around the place.’
Rosie nodded. She was beaming, glowing with happiness and excitement. She looked into the fire and dreamed of showing Lilian the little bundle, with Stephen’s blue eyes and her black hair, pink of cheek and round and warm as a loaf of new bread; she dreamed of watching her grow, going to the little village school with her father in the morning, him pointing out the animals and the trees and …
The two women sat companionably together, both lost in reveries.
It was the last peaceful moment Rosie was to know for a long time, for the tinsel was gone, the joyful lights had been put away and the Christmas bells had ceased to chime. A dark door had somewhere slammed open, and a cold, desolate wind was beginning to blow.
Chapter Three
For the days they are gone and the night soon must fall
No longer will oxen stand warm in the stall
But surrounded by darkness his power glows bright
His love heals and guides us through cold endless night
The prince of compassion concealed in a byre
Watches the rafters above him resplendent with fire
‘The Nurses’ carol’
Moray’s kindness and gentleness oddly enough made it worse.
Rosie and Moray were best friends really. She was used to them sharing a bottle of wine, slagging each other off, making stupid jokes. As he was the local GP and she an ex-nurse, she often helped him out with certain patients here and there when they were short-handed – it was very hard to get full community coverage out in the wilds of Derbyshire, where farmers lived few and far between, and disliked being treated by outsiders. So she and Moray were good muckers, ever since her arrival in Lipton two years before, all alone and a complete stranger to country life.
So it was hard to see the sadness in his shrewd blue eyes, and to hear the tenderness with which he’d said, ‘Oh Rosie, I am so sorry’ when she came back after the awful trip to the hospital in Carningford, after the awful, awful ultrasound, Stephen standing there gripping her hand tightly as they both looked at the little screen, Rosie with blue gel on her tummy, both of them staring quietly, endlessly at the grey, fuzzy, indefinable space where they’d expected to see a baby.
Rosie had swallowed hard.
‘It’s just our first shot,’ she had said, bravely echoing words she’d heard other people use over the years. ‘We weren’t even trying for a baby, were we? It’s just one of those things.’
The radiographer had politely retreated from the room to find a doctor.
‘Stop it, love,’ said Stephen, his throat tight, holding her close.
‘What?’
‘Stop doing that Rosie thing and trying to make everything all right. Okay?’
Rosie swallowed.
‘I … I don’t know how. I mean, we have to just pick ourselves up and … It happens all the time and …’
‘Ssssh,’ said Stephen, gathering her fully up in his arms. There was blue gel all over his jumper, but he didn’t notice. ‘Ssssh.’
‘But we can try again … Some things just aren’t meant to …’
‘Ssssh,’ he said, again, burying her dark curly head in his shoulder.
‘It was so little,’ she said, her voice choking up. ‘Just a—’
‘It was our baby,’ said Stephen fiercely. ‘And don’t you dare say it happens all the time. I don’t give a toss about how often it happens. It happened to us. To us, Rosie. And you can’t pretend otherwise.’
‘I don’t want to …’
Rosie tried to speak through the lump in her throat, but found she couldn’t get it out, not at all. Stephen stroked her hair, gently.
‘Oh Lord,’ she said. Then it poured out in a flood, and she cried and cried and cried all down his back.
The hospital staff led them kindly to another room. Walking out, barely able to stand, covered in tears and red of nose, both of them limping, Rosie barely noticed the horrified looks of the women with their bumps proudly displayed in the waiting room. Stephen did, but ignored them.
They were counselled up and sent home and told simply to wait for the worst. And when it came, it was just as bad as they had been promised.
Rosie couldn’t look at another woman’s bump for a long time.
Rosie’s mother Angie was sensible and pragmatic; she mentioned how many more times they could try, what a good chap Stephen was, how many pregnancies ended this way just because something wasn’t right (and never, ever mentioned – and Rosie would have been astonished to learn of them – her own nights of sobbing for the pain of her only daughter, who was far too far away). Lilian simply nodded as if, as ever, she expected life’s disappointments to fall into her lap, and merely stroked her niece’s hand and came up with the most meaningless platitudes she could manage, in case she accidentally burst into floods of tears. And Rosie knew: she KNEW. One in four, Moray said. One in four. One in four tiny little specks of life weren’t meant to be, couldn’t hang on. One in four women had been through this; laughed, lived, carried on, made other babies, lots of babies.
But as Stephen pointed out, it wasn’t one in four for them, it was one in one.
Later, as she had quietened down, and Stephen was in the process of dozing off, they managed to make it up the narrow staircase to bed, holding each other up.
‘At least we don’t need to move to Peak House yet,’ said Stephen, as Mr Dog snuffled down in front of the dying embers of the downstairs fire, after making his usual unsuccessful assault on the upstairs bedroom.
Rosie gave her best shot at a smile.
‘And we don’t have to buy all that plastic crap,’ she said.
‘There we go,’ said Stephen, climbing into bed.
They paused and looked at one another.
‘But one day we will,’ he promised. ‘One day we will.’
Another month passed, and Rosie was back in that damned Carningford Hospital trying not to glance at the ugly shopping centre, visible through the window, where she’d done that test so many weeks before. It had been such a long spring, she thought. The weather felt like it was going to stay with her mood for ever; that she was a new, low Rosie who would never unfurl again. She was keeping her head down, working hard, but she couldn’t help feeling that something was wrong. She couldn’t explain it any better than that, but she knew as a nurse that these feelings should get checked out sooner rather than later.
So here she was, visiting the specialist. Meeting with Moray to fix it up (Hye would have been unsympathetic and quite possibly unhelpful) had been unbearable. Moray had been kind, telling her it hadn’t been long, and not to worry, whilst, she knew, sharing her pain.
‘Don’t get all panicky,’ he’d warned. ‘Nothing worse for getting pregnant. You’re only thirty-four.’
‘I know,’ said Rosie. ‘I know, I know. But I don’t think it is that. When I …’
She didn’t want to talk about what had happened after the scan, that awful time she wanted scoured from her memory for ever. She tried again.
‘There was definitely … I definitely have pain … more on one side than the other, it’s definitely …’
‘Ssh,’ said Moray. ‘Not to worry. I’ll send you to get checked out, okay?’
There was a pause.
‘Or I could do it.’
He winked at her, and despite herself she found herself smiling.
‘Oh Moray, you hate fannies.’
‘I’m not crazy about old men’s ears either, but I seem to spend enough time peering into those.’
‘Oh GOD, and you’d have to get Maeve in to supervise. No no no no no no.’
‘It’s a waste of resources,’ said Moray.
‘No it’s not,’ said Rosie. ‘I count as a family member, practically. You’re not allowed to look up my fanny.’
‘But I so want to,’ said Moray.
‘Shut up.’
It was exactly the right way to cheer her up, and she stood up gratefully.
‘Any time.’
‘I’m going to report you to the GMC.’
Moray rolled his eyes and handed over the referral letter he’d printed out.
‘That’s right – I want to complain about that doctor who, instead of assaulting me, sent me off to some woman to check out my bits.’
He reflected.
‘They might be pleased to get something to balance up all my fan mail.’
It was true, Moray was beloved for miles around for his good looks, good doctoring, and being just about the last doctor on earth to actually do house calls.
Rosie smiled and kissed him. He winced to see the worry in her eyes.
‘Don’t,’ he said. ‘You’re young, fit and healthy. It’ll work out. It’s why you’d want Stephen’s grumpy babies that’s the real mystery here.’
She smiled.
‘Thanks.’
She turned round before she left, hoping to catch him in a moment of weakness.
‘So, are you and Moshe coming to dinner, then?’ Moshe was Moray’s boyfriend.
‘Are you trying to catch me in a moment of weakness?’
Rosie nodded.
&nbs
p; ‘Yes.’
Moray’s reluctance to come out to the village had surprised the more metropolitan Rosie for a long time, and nothing seemed to be changing any time soon. Rosie thought he was worrying unnecessarily. Moray thought people who weren’t him seemed to have all sorts of very clear ideas of what it was like to be him that he didn’t necessarily share. But they didn’t let it stand in the way of their friendship.
‘Have we or have we not just had a long conversation about keeping our relationship professional?’
‘Yes,’ said Rosie. ‘And we decided not to, remember?’
She shook the envelope at him, and for a moment both their faces became pensive once more.
‘Soon,’ said Moray, kissing her gently and waving her off with a worried look. ‘Soon. And call me …’
Rosie nodded and swallowed hard.
‘I will,’ she said. ‘I will.’
And now here she was in the clinic. It was full of bored, unhappy-looking women, many, she noticed, a great deal older than herself. The clinic dealt with a mix of private and NHS clients, but Rosie was simply there to see a gynaecologist. On the walls were arty black and white pictures of babies. Bit tasteless, she thought. Or maybe it was focusing the mind. Either way, she tried not to look at them, and listlessly leafed through an old magazine.
‘Miss Hopkins?’
Rosie couldn’t believe what a throwback she felt, but she did slightly wish they were married already. She flashed the vintage ring perhaps more obviously than she might have done otherwise.
Dr Chang was incredibly glamorous, the type of very slender thirty-something woman Rosie had once upon a time emulated. She had a put-together look, together with matching shoes and a bag, and properly blow-dried hair. Rosie felt an odd urge to impress her, but wasn’t sure how. It certainly wasn’t with this X-ray of her Fallopian tubes, which Dr Chang was examining now on the light box on the wall.