by KL Slater
She blew a kiss across the room but Evie didn’t respond.
‘Mum, please, I didn’t mean to—’
She stalked by me and slammed the door on her way out.
My neck ached and I felt queasy and hot.
I looked longingly at my handbag a few times, imagining the relief that awaited me, tucked away in the zipped inside pocket.
It was the weekend. I’d had one hell of a week, in all the wrong ways, but I didn’t have to drive tonight and I didn’t have to keep my wits about me at work. Now, I could finally relax.
I was so pent up, I could do with a little help. What was the harm?
Something about it being still the afternoon felt prohibitive, like having a drink mid-morning. Only alcoholics did that. Maureen, the ex-manager at the estate agency where I used to work, would disappear into the back office like clockwork every morning.
The mints didn’t cover the smell of alcohol on her breath when she came back out, but she was so much more chilled out after her first few swigs of the day. It was a secret standing joke amongst the rest of us and I hadn’t really understood back then why Maureen did it.
But I understood well enough now.
When Maureen retired, I had been successful in applying for her job. I wondered where Maureen was now and if she still had her mid-morning tipple.
Sometimes it felt like I might be turning into her.
At the same time, I also knew I was a million miles away from having a serious problem, like Maureen obviously did. The odd pill was neither here nor there. It wasn’t as if I was addicted or anything. In the end, they’d had Andrew dosed up with so much medication he didn’t even know what day it was most of the time. A blessing, as it turned out, for the short, painful time he had left.
The pharmacists had always shelled out his tablets like sweeties, no questions asked. There was no reason to believe it would be any different here in Nottingham, if I wanted to continue to submit his prescriptions.
I often wondered if the government wanted people like Andrew to just disappear from public view and quietly fade away in their own private, medicated bubble. At the time, I’d almost envied Andrew his invisible chemical shield. That buffer from the pain and trauma of the real world.
I could really do with a pill now.
I looked down at my fingers and saw that I’d bitten my nails so low that a couple of them were actually bleeding. This level of anxiety was no good. If I didn’t do something, it would get a hold of me and I’d find it difficult to function.
I unzipped the small compartment in my handbag and took a tablet to calm my frayed nerves. Just the one.
It was no shame to admit I needed help coping at the moment. Even the most sorted person needed a helping hand now and again. But I didn’t want it documented at the GP surgery, have gossipy clerical staff knowing all my business. I didn’t want anti-depressants. I’d heard all the horror stories about how easy it was to get hooked and become a zombie.
On the face of it, society seemed to be getting more open and tolerant towards mental illness, but privately, words like ‘nutter’ and ‘freak’ were still whispered behind the backs of those who suffered.
I knew for sure the stigma was still alive and well in the workplace. Anxiety or depression on a medical certificate was still widely regarded by some employers as skiving, and it was this hidden loathing that would always stop me seeking legitimate help.
I watched Evie, now half-heartedly slotting her bricks together. The savagery had gone from her play since Mum had left, but there was no denying she was far quieter than usual.
The pain of Evie’s suffering felt sharp, like fine needles sticking in my skin. I couldn’t bear to acknowledge she was so desperately unhappy. That hadn’t been the plan in moving here.
On a whim, I picked up my phone and fished out Tara’s letter from my handbag. I tapped in the number and waited. She picked up on the third ring.
‘I’m so happy you called me, I could cry,’ she gasped, and we laughed at her being so corny. Within five minutes, the years had melted away and we were just us again.
I told her about my bad day.
‘You know, Toni, we’ve been through enough that things like disagreements at work really don’t mean anything. Just ignore your bitch boss.’
It was good advice . . . when I was feeling this brave.
I tried to discuss her illness, the multiple sclerosis.
‘Don’t want to talk about it,’ she said firmly. ‘This call is about you and Evie, I want to know all about your fresh start.’
So I told her all about our crappy house and how Mum was driving me up the wall and how I was just making such a mess of everything and we laughed some more. Twenty minutes later, I finished the call and felt like I’d been on a spa break after all the stuff I’d offloaded to Tara. My heart rate had steadied somewhat, I felt lighter inside and I was beginning to think a little more logically.
Evie was happy in her own little world for the time being, so I climbed the stairs and headed for my bedroom. If I could begin to make inroads into getting the house organised, it would give me a sense of achievement instead of the sense of foreboding I got every time I put the key in the door.
I opened the bedroom door and stared at the piles of bin bags in there. Immediately, I felt like turning round and going back downstairs, but I didn’t. That would get me precisely nowhere. I took a few steps forward, trying to cultivate a non-existent feeling of determination from somewhere. I stopped dead and looked all around me, my eyes scanning every inch of the floor space.
Something felt different about my bedroom.
It had looked just the same at first glance but . . . I don’t know, the air just felt different in here, somehow.
When I’d packed up our stuff, I’d tied the tops of the bin bags in loose knots. A few of them were untied now. The hairs on my arms prickled.
I walked over and peered inside. As far as I could tell, everything seemed to be there. It was difficult to determine amongst such chaos. All manner of stuff had spilled out when the bags were transported upstairs from the living room.
I shook my head, smiling ruefully at my imagination. Maybe this was how the descent into madness began. When you became utterly convinced of a certain reality and the people around you nodded and smiled indulgently but threw concerned glances at each other the second you turned away.
I closed the door and walked back downstairs, holding on to the handrail as the bottom step looked a bit fuzzy from up here.
I felt nothing but relief that Evie’s first week at school was finished. Hopefully, over the weekend, we’d be able to spend some time together, and once Evie felt more relaxed, I would gently broach the subject of school again. I felt sure I could coax her to reveal what was troubling her. The first few weeks in any new situation were bound to be difficult, everyone knew that. Evie was no exception and I was probably worrying too much.
That was my trouble: I worried too much about everything.
Just as I picked up my barely touched crime novel to read while Evie played, the phone began to ring.
I snatched up the cordless handset. ‘Hello?’
‘Mrs Cotter? Harriet Watson here, from St Saviour’s. I’m just calling to discuss how Evie’s first week went at school.’
‘Oh, hello there.’ I stood up and walked into the kitchen, pushing the door closed behind me. Although a part of me wondered why Evie’s teacher was calling, the tablet was already working its magic. I felt relaxed and able to deal with the conversation. ‘I hope everything is OK, Miss Watson?’
A few moments silence, as if Harriet was waiting for me to say something else.
‘Evie has had a quiet first week,’ Miss Watson said. ‘She seems cautious when it comes to getting fully involved in lessons and mixing with her classmates. But I’m sure she’ll get into the swing of things before long.’
‘I don’t think she’s made any friends yet.’ Without warning, my eyes prickled. ‘She
got upset again today, said she didn’t want to come to school on Monday. But she won’t talk to me about it.’
‘Evie doesn’t seem to be adjusting quite as readily as we’d hoped,’ Harriet agreed. ‘One of the reasons I’ve called is to tell you that I’ve included her in my small group work, to give her a little more personal attention. I hope that’s acceptable.’
‘That’s really good of you, Miss Watson,’ I said gratefully. ‘Thank you.’
‘I do hope you don’t feel I’m interfering, but in my experience it’s very important we do as much as we can in school to help children to integrate effectively right from the start, particularly when there have been . . . rather difficult personal circumstances,’ Harriet said. ‘I’m going to be running some after-school workshops two or three days a week. They’ll be one-to-one sessions, designed to build confidence and social skills and to prepare children for the challenges that may lie ahead. I can only take one or two pupils, but I have selected Evie because I believe she’ll benefit tremendously from attending. If you’ll agree to it, that is?’
There were a few seconds of silence as I processed what she’d said.
‘Absolutely,’ I said at last. ‘Thank you, that sounds ideal.’
I felt the weight on my shoulders lift. At last, someone was trying to help me instead of placing yet another obstacle in my path.
I listened as she gave me details of the forthcoming sessions.
‘It’s best if you don’t keep asking Evie about school,’ Harriet continued. ‘We can tell her she’s been specially chosen for the after-school club, which indeed she has, and hopefully we’ll see better results next week.’
This woman seemed to really understand my daughter. In just a week, she had noticed Evie’s reluctance in class and had already acted upon it. I felt quite overcome with gratitude.
‘Thanks so much for your help. Things are a little difficult at home at the moment and I really appreciate . . .’ My voice faltered.
‘Say no more. I do understand, Mrs Cotter,’ Harriet soothed. ‘I’ll be in touch with the days you’ll need to pick Evie up a little later from school.’
‘I’ll tell my mother,’ I said.
‘Sorry?’
I fell silent. For a second, I couldn’t remember what it was we were talking about.
‘Mrs Cotter?’
It came back to me.
‘Yes, I bring Evie to school each morning but her nanny picks her up at the end of the day,’ I explained. ‘I work until five o’clock, you see.’
‘I see,’ Harriet replied, a little tightly. ‘Perhaps you could change your hours? It’s very important we work together to help Evie settle in.’
‘Yes, of course,’ I said quickly, shamed by a flash of guilt. ‘I’ll ask at work but I’ve only just started, so it might have to be my mum for a little while yet.’
When Harriet ended the call I felt flushed and fidgety. She’d made me feel like Mum did, like I was making purely selfish decisions about working that would impact negatively on my daughter. I should have told her to mind her own business.
I shook my head to disperse the feeling of being got at. I had to remember that at least Harriet Watson was trying to help me. Although we were nothing alike, part of me felt she somehow understood me. Knew where I was coming from.
36
Three Years Earlier
The Teacher
Harriet replaced the phone in its charging cradle and turned to see her mother standing in the doorway.
‘When?’ the old woman croaked, hobbling over to the table where Harriet sat. ‘When are you going to get everything sorted out?’
‘Soon,’ Harriet said. ‘I keep telling you, Mother, everything will be sorted very soon.’
‘It had better be. I’ve waited too long, listening to you and your pathetic promises. She needs us.’
Harriet watched her mother as she stalked from the room. It wasn’t lost on her that it would be Halloween in a matter of weeks, and from the back, the old woman resembled a sort of living ghoul, her hair scraped over her scalp in a transparent bun, her voile nightdress floating above the floor as she moved.
Soon Harriet would creep upstairs herself and make some final preparations to the room on the top floor. She knew it wasn’t the right thing to do, but Mother had set her mind on what must happen and, as Harriet knew only too well, there would be no changing it now.
Harriet listened, waiting until the noise of the stair lift had abated and her mother’s feet hobbled across the landing above her. The bedroom door opened and then closed.
Silence.
Then the slap of a wheelie bin lid in next door’s yard, a group of young female students striding by the window, laughing and bursting with a confidence Harriet had never managed to conjure within herself.
Sometimes, in her quieter moments, she wondered what the future would bring. When her mother was gone and she was still here, in this big, old, crumbling house, alone. What then?
She yearned for a new start, a family of her own. Specifically a child, to give the love and affection she’d never experienced herself but that she’d seen other people give their offspring.
It just didn’t seem fair that there were people out there who had everything but failed to value it. They fully deserved to have their precious things taken away, given to someone who would care and cherish them.
Someone like Harriet.
37
Three Years Earlier
Evie
Evie lay awake in her bed, staring up into the darkness. The new starry nightlight that Nanny had bought for her birthday was supposed to make night-time friendlier. At least that’s what it had said on the box. But it didn’t seem to be making any difference at all here.
Even though Mummy was an adult, she had gone to bed at the exact same time as Evie because she had said she was very, very tired. Evie had seen that her eyes were doing the staring thing again.
Mummy was already asleep. Evie could tell just by listening to her breathing, which she could clearly hear because both their bedroom doors had been left a bit open. Sometimes Mummy woke her up, shouting in the night, but when Evie went into her bedroom, she was still asleep. When Evie sat on the edge of the bed, she’d wake up and say, ‘Have you had a bad dream, poppet?’ and Evie would reply, ‘No, it was you,’ and Mummy would say, ‘Ahh, you’ve had a bad dream about Mummy?’
Evie just didn’t know exactly how to explain it and she always felt so dreadfully tired in the middle of the night, so mostly she just went back to her own bed.
Deep and slow breaths like now meant Mummy was properly sleeping.
She wouldn’t know if Evie slipped out of bed and tiptoed downstairs for a biscuit or another glass of juice like she sometimes did, even though she wasn’t allowed more than one drink before bed because Mummy said she’d be up weeing all night.
Now the darkness was thick and heavy, like when she covered her eyes up with her comfort blanket. There were no streetlights shining in from outside, like there had been in her old bedroom.
She tried to focus on the tiny nightlight stars scattered on her ceiling but they seemed dull here, not bright and glittering like they used to be in her old bedroom. Evie sometimes wondered if Daddy was looking down on her while she slept, amongst the real stars in the real night sky. Nanny said he definitely would be.
‘But how do you know?’ Evie had asked her more than once.
‘There is no doubt in my mind that your Daddy is always looking out for you, sweetheart, day and night,’ was all Nanny ever said.
Sometimes it worried Evie that Daddy might be watching her. Like when she’d stolen a biscuit before dinner or the time she gave Nanny’s cat, Igor, two treats instead of one, even though Nanny said it might give Igor the runs. The last thing Evie wanted to do was to let her Daddy down.
She didn’t like this stuffy new house, the way it was so silent at night, like everything in it was dead.
Their old house had creaky pipes
and comforting traffic noises from the main road nearby. She had never felt alone there. Sometimes, when she was playing with her Lego, Evie used to imagine Daddy was still there behind her, sitting in his armchair and watching Sky Sports or reading his cycling magazine.
She wouldn’t cry. She wouldn’t.
Crying was for babies, that’s what the other children at school said all the time.
Evie had vague memories of Mummy and Daddy taking her to a pizza restaurant as a treat. Sometimes, Daddy used to take her swimming while Mummy had a bit of peace to read her book.
All that had stopped, of course, after the accident. And now Daddy wasn’t coming home ever again.
At first, Nanny had promised her that Daddy would get better in the Afghanistan hospital and would be ‘good as new’, but that hadn’t happened.
Then Nanny stopped saying it, and later . . . well, that’s when Mummy told her that Daddy had gone to be with the angels. It had all happened very fast.
Nanny and Mummy had always told her that she could go and talk again to the nice lady at the hospital about Daddy’s accident. If she wanted to, they said, Evie could talk to them about how she felt and about how everything had changed. But she didn’t want to.
Evie didn’t like talking to people about things that made her feel sad. She hadn’t made friends yet with anyone in class and she didn’t like Miss Watson questioning her about stuff in that horrid small group.
Miss Watson told Evie she wanted everyone to get to know her because she was new to the area. She also said Evie had to be a good girl at home for Mummy. But her questions made her feel all funny inside, like Evie’s nice round pink heart had been ironed flat. So it felt like a grey pancake hanging inside her chest.
It was really hard to make the adults understand it all, so Evie decided it was better to just stay quiet. Today, when they’d got home from school and Evie had been upset, Mummy had looked at her as if she was disappointed, somehow.