She shrugs. ‘Greg’s a bully, I’ve told you. You never saw because he made sure not to do it in front of people. He used to get mad at something I’d done — like leaving butter out instead of putting it in the fridge, you know, really bad stuff — then he’d rant and rave and tell me what a useless piece of shit I am.’
‘Jesus, Alex.’
‘And if he wasn’t bullying me he was ignoring me, and then my mum had to choose whether to talk to me and if she did she’d get the silent treatment as well.’
Fitz’s music stops. Somewhere outside a solitary bird sings, echoed by another, further away.
‘What about David?’
‘David can’t put a foot wrong. David’s his and I’m the cuckoo in the nest, aren’t I?’
I walk back over to the bed and flop down next to Alex. I take hold of one of her hands, gripping it tightly. ‘I feel so bad.’
She wrinkles her nose. ‘Why?’
‘That all that was going on and I didn’t know!’
‘How could you have known?’
‘You should have told me, Alex. I can’t believe you didn’t.’
‘Well…I nearly did, once or twice, but it was hard to know where to start.’ She stares at me, thinking. ‘If I’m really honest, I didn’t want you to know. I didn’t want you to see me any different from to anyone else.’
‘Alex,’ I say, ‘you’ve always been different from to everyone else.’
She grins. ‘Fuck off!’ But I can see she knows I mean in a good way. ‘Anyway, one day he hit me when Mum wasn’t around and after that I just had to get out.’
‘So how—?’
I was going to ask about Pete, and how she’d met him, but there’s a knock at the door and his voice outside.
‘Alex?’
She looks at me and I nod. ‘You can come in,’ she calls, slipping her hand out of mine.
He pushes the door open and stands leaning against the frame. He has on the same patched jeans, with a black T-shirt and paisley waistcoat. His hair is greasy, tied back in a ponytail with a rubber-band.
‘We have somewhere to go today. Remember?’
‘Yeah. It’s still early.’
‘We need to go.’
‘Right now?’
His answer is to push himself off the wall and disappear; we hear his footsteps on the stairs. There’s a heavy silence after he’s gone.
‘Sorry, Beth. I gotta go but we’ll be back in a couple of hours.’ She scrambles up from the bed. Her eyes are hidden from mine as she loads our used plates and mugs onto the tray. ‘See you soon. Fitz’ll take care of you.’
I’m left staring at the half-open door, startled by her rapid exit. Is this how it is here, how it will be? Will Alex jump every time Pete clicks his fingers, and will I always be left waiting for scraps of time with her?
I close my eyes and lean my head against the wall, trying not to feel second best but already aware that the balance of our friendship shifted weeks ago, when Alex ran away; some of the old certainties, the old familiarities have gone. For a moment I almost wish that I’ll get found out, that the parental hand of authority will reach out and whisk both of us back to Sheffield, where everything would get sorted out in a comforting, adult way.
But I know that isn’t going to happen.
Chapter Three
16th May 2013
Linda led the sessions today, and as usual I sat back and admired her talent for winning over even hardened cynics, the ones who said in smug tones, it’s all just re-inventing the wheel, this, as though you’d never heard anyone say that before. By lunchtime they were not exactly eating out of her hand, but prepared to have a sniff.
After lunch I had something to discuss and went to find her, on a fag break at the back of the building. She stood huddled in a corner with one or two others. Linda was a little younger than me but over the years we’d worked together she’d become a good friend. She was blonde and jolly, with a wide smile, a laugh that cracked out of her and a laid-back manner that was deceptive. She was quite tough in most matters, grew up on the kind of estate where it paid you to be.
Once the business was out of the way I found myself being updated on her complicated two-family life.
‘…. so we’ve got Jessica in the spare room, while she gets over him and finds herself a place of her own. Tom’s due back from his gap year and asked if he can bring two New Zealand girls for a week, just till they travel up to Scotland. I’ve told him he’ll have to give up his room and we’re not having any threesomes in our house. He said I’d got a dirty mind but I said I wasn’t born yesterday. And then I’ve got Liz calling me up every day, either sobbing down the phone or telling me what a bitch her mum is. I mean, I agree with her but I can’t say that, can I?’ Ash fell from her cigarette, scattered across the tarmac in the breeze. ‘When I’ll ever get a bit of peace and quiet God only knows. I haven’t had a proper conversation with Stuart in months. It’s all where’s this, where’s that, what are we having for tea tonight? God, I need a holiday.’ She went quiet for a moment. ‘Beth? Are you okay?’
I realised that I’d been staring fixedly at the ground for some time, thinking about Fitz, thinking about Alex, and Dan’s message, about what to do next if anything. I looked up. ‘Yes. No.’
Linda took my arm and hustled me out of the quad and along to the empty training room; I could see she was excited by the prospect of yet another drama but I hadn’t yet told her anything about the connection with Dan and was curiously resistant to the idea. I palmed her off with Phil. That was, in relation to Ireland. She already knew the rest: how we met at his school, when I was doing some training there; how he and his wife had agreed their marriage was over, but that they’d stay together until their girls were grown; how we met furtively so nothing would get back to them. Linda was sceptical about the whole thing; she said things like, ‘How do you know he’s telling the truth?’, ‘Isn’t that what they all say?’, and so on.
‘Phil wants me to go to Ireland.’ She looked puzzled. ‘I mean to live, not on holiday.’
‘Oh. But I thought—’
‘His old head of department has this graphic design business. He needs another pair of hands and sounded Phil out about joining him. Only problem is he lives somewhere near Waterford. Phil’s been thinking about it for ages, and I think he’s going to do it. He wants me to go with him.’
‘Golly. Well, I guess that demonstrates he’s not just stringing you along.’ She peered at me. ‘What about you?’
‘I don’t know. I’ve told him I don’t know.’
*
We’d gone to the common, to walk his dog. We did this as often as we thought we’d get away with, at weekends, Phil bundling Juno into the car and picking me up near to where I lived. Coming to my house was more risky, although we managed it sometimes, because as luck would have it two of my neighbours knew Sue and Phil; their children were friends with Lauren and Emma. ‘I don’t want to go to Ireland on my own,’ he’d said that day. He’d crouched down to take Juno off the lead and was looking up at me, his keen blue eyes fixed on mine. ‘I want you with me.’
I remember I flinched, a little, and I knew he saw that. Still, he waited for a more considered reaction.
I liked Phil: he was tall and fair and solid, with a face that, despite the lines and creases of age and experience, was somehow uncomplicated. When he smiled it was without reservation, and that was how he lived his life, open to anyone and anything.
‘I love you,’ he said.
‘I know,’ I said, frowning, ‘that’s—’
‘The problem?’ he finished for me. ‘You’re not sure, are you?’
I sighed. Things had suddenly grown serious. We were on the edge of the pitches where a few loosely teamed footballers limbered up in a cold November wind. A couple of runners passed, chatting easily, making their effort look effortless. Kids shouted and laughed in the fenced-off playground, while dads on duty stamped their feet, clutching newspapers with one
hand and pushing swings or holding balancing hands with the other. There was no one there we knew and we felt ourselves safe, private in the middle of this big open space. As Juno shot off across the muddy grass Phil drew me close.
‘We could make it work,’ he said. ‘Think about it.’
*
Linda said, ‘Well, I guess you know where you are now. But what do you want?’
‘I don’t know. I thought we were just going to bob along like this, and that one day he’d leave Sue and by then we’d be like an old couple ourselves. I don’t know about Ireland. Not now.’
‘No. I can see that.’
‘I suppose I like things as they are.’ I glanced at Linda. ‘Bit selfish really. I’ve got the best of both worlds, and it works. For me, anyway. I don’t want anything so absolute, but then I might lose everything.’
We heard people outside. Linda stood up. ‘They’ll be coming in soon. Let’s have a drink after work next time I’m down.’
‘You don’t need someone else crying on your shoulder,’ I said, but she told me not to be bloody stupid and went to greet the first arrivals.
*
The little blue circle spun round and round on my laptop, searching for the website that Dan had found. I kicked off my shoes and stretched out on the hotel bed, leaning back against the plump pillows. My feet ached and I needed to shower, but not before I’d followed up the link he’d texted. There’d been no time for even a peep during the day.
When the page finally loaded I found I was looking at the website of a complementary medicine service, Castle Therapy Centre. It was in Norwich. Curious, I clicked on the ‘find a therapist’ tab and there the name was. Alex Day, Psychotherapist and Counsellor.
My aim is to help my clients to discover their potential, to help them to realise it, and to move forward into living the lives they want to live.
There was an account of how she worked, and qualifications gained. And although there was no photo, there was a brief biography. It told me that Alex Day had been born in the north, but later had moved to London. She’d lived most of her life there, doing many and varied jobs — some were listed — but then retrained as a therapist. Ten years ago she’d moved to Norwich. There was other stuff, but those were the bones of it. Lastly there was an email address and mobile phone number.
My first reaction was this couldn’t be her, she wouldn’t do that, put herself on the web for anyone to find her. Or would she? What if after all these years underground she felt the need to surface? What if she wanted someone to find her? I looked again, and one part jumped out: I have a strong desire to help other people reach resolution and fulfilment.
I reached for my phone and texted Dan.
It’s possible. Good work! Did you tell Fitz?
Yes, he replied at once. And then, here’s his number.
I stared at it. I can ring this, I thought, and talk to Fitz, which seemed even stranger than having seen him: a direct line to his voice, to his thoughts, any time I wanted. My hand hovered over the keys, wavering, wondering if Fitz would know Dan had given me his number. Let me know if you do find Alex, he’d said, but he hadn’t offered his number himself. Maybe that had been just a throwaway line, a way of leaving without having to go through the pretence that we might meet again.
I texted, what do you think of Dan’s find? Then after that, he gave me your number, hope that’s ok
Half an hour later, when I was showered and dressed and just thinking that he wouldn’t reply, my phone buzzed, did a little dance on the silky bed cover: interesting. That was all. I threw my phone down and went back to the website, browsing the entries for other therapists, all of whom had photos that ranged from cheerful smiles to enigmatic stares. I was thinking, There has to be a reason why Alex Day hasn’t put her photo on. I looked again at the bio, trying to get a feel for this person. Waitressing and modelling were included as previous jobs, and I tried to picture my Alex serving hotel meals in a tight black skirt, or pouting sexily in mail-order lingerie. By closing my eyes briefly I could see her, petite and pretty, with an elfin face and hennaed hair, and coal-black eyes.
I reached for my phone once more and glared at Fitz’s text. Is that all you have to say? Aren’t you curious too? Or do you know things that I don’t? Then the phone vibrated in my hand and started to ring.
‘Hi, Fitz.’
‘Hi. How was your day?’
‘Mmm…it wasn’t the best. I was tired after last night, training a bunch of managers who didn’t want to be there. How about you?’
‘Well, I’ve been told to fuck off a few times and kicked in the shins, so not too dissimilar, I suppose.’
I laughed. ‘Just a bit more direct.’
‘Yeah, right. Where are you?’
‘Sitting in my hotel room, summoning the energy to go out and get some dinner.’
I heard the rattle of cutlery in a drawer and then a spoon in a pan, stirring. ‘I’ve been tired too,’ he said. ‘Late nights, mid-week, just can’t do them now.’ There was a slight pause, maybe while he peered into whatever he was cooking, lifting the spoon to his lips, tasting it. ‘It was good to see you. Who’d have thought?’
‘Unbelievable.’
‘Well,’ he said, after another silence, and this time I pictured him doing a small shake of the head, deciding not to say what had been in his mind, ‘I looked at the website. It’s hard to say if it’s Alex, obviously, without a photo. Like I said, it must be a common name.’
‘I suppose so. I could try to find out some more, maybe. Or I could just phone, say who I am and ask to speak to her? I don’t know. What do you think?’
‘Depends.’
‘On…?’
‘Well, if it is her, wouldn’t you want to give her some warning? To just phone out of the blue, it backs her into a corner. And then—’
‘Go on.’
‘Nothing.’
‘No, say it.’
‘I’m wondering how much you actually want to see Alex. Last night you didn’t seem so sure.’
‘No. I’m not. But it’s tempting too. If it is her. Straighten things out somehow.’ My face in the mirror reflected my doubts. ‘I’m not even sure why that’s important, now.’
‘Let sleeping dogs lie?’
‘You think I should?’
‘I don’t know. I’m just going with your thoughts.’ I remembered how good Fitz used to be at offering insight that made everything seem so clear. Not as Linda does, when I talk to her about Phil, not by listing pros and cons, but by going straight to the heart of the matter. ‘This is your call,’ he was saying now, when what I wanted was direction. ‘But you’d have to be prepared for anything. Anything. Like it or not.’
There was the sound of a spoon tapping the side of a pan. I wished I could see inside Fitz’s head. ‘What are you cooking?’
‘Chilli. A wicked hot one.’
‘You still make them like that? Once you made one so hot we had to stick our tongues in saucers of milk — do you remember?’
He laughed, said yes, he remembered.
‘Fitz, don’t ask me to rationalise this, but I just think it is Alex. I’ve got a feeling.’
‘Beth…’
‘Hmm?’
‘I can’t tell you what to do.’
‘Okay, I know that.’
It seemed like I’d been dismissed, and I soon made an excuse to finish the call.
‘I’ve got a table booked for dinner,’ I said. After we’d rung off I went down to the bar, where I ate a microwaved meal alongside two other solitary diners.
That night I dreamed of Alex and me, some jumbled stuff that involved dark rooms, blood on walls, and then running slowly down a long street, legs like lead and our panting pursuer catching us up. When I woke up, at three in the morning, I was hot, soaked in sweat. I got up to pee and drink some water, then lay wide awake until there was light creeping round the edge of the curtains, the dream lingering soupily in my skull, conjuring up a long-forgotten memo
ry.
*
It’s cold; the air is heavy and damp. A February Sunday. We had set off walking, itching to get out of the house, and found ourselves way up on Crookes, in a small park, just a patch of rough ground really, wandering around like two lost sheep. We’re at that age — twelve or thirteen — where the playground has lost its appeal but we’ve found nothing much as a replacement. Our breath rises up into the foggy air as we sit on the swings and scuff our feet on the ground, gossiping about friends and boys and pop stars. And clothes, which is our new obsession; today we are lookalikes, in bomber jackets and flared jeans, our hair fringed and bobbed. We’ve been there a while when Alex points to some terraced houses that run down the hill.
She says, ‘That’s where me and Lee saw the witch-house.’
‘Yeah, sure.’ I remember some odd story she came into school with one morning before Christmas. I didn’t properly listen, trying to ignore the fact that she had a sort-of boyfriend and had been going out without me. It came to nothing though, with Lee, and I was glad to have her back to myself. I forgot about the witch-house.
‘We did,’ she insists now, and when Alex insists it’s hard to get her off the subject. Lee showed her an empty house, she says, and they looked through the window at the back and saw strange symbols scrawled on the wall. ‘There are such things as witches, modern ones.’
‘Yes,’ I say, ‘I know. But they don’t live in a house in Crookes, do they?’
She laughs. ‘Where do you think they live? In the woods? Come on.’ She jumps off the swing, with a loud clank of chains. ‘I’ll show you.’
I follow her slowly, reluctant but curious too, as she takes me out of the opposite entrance to where we came in and down streets I’ve never before explored. I soon realise that Alex doesn’t exactly know where the house is. She keeps turning left and right, then back on herself, saying each time, oh, yeah, this way, or, I know now. I don’t say anything, not wanting to draw a prickly comment back, but I become more and more sure we won’t find it. At one point she stands and frowns at a house, a mid-terrace that looks like all the others.
Looking for Alex Page 6