by Julie Corbin
Daisy watches her go. ‘With acting like that, is it any wonder she gets the parts.’
‘Daisy!’ Paul says with a sigh. ‘Surely that was unnecessary.’
Daisy’s face colours. I pass her some pudding.
‘Be careful of sour grapes,’ Paul continues, digging his spoon around in his crumble. ‘It’s not worthy of you.’
Daisy stops her spoon midway to her mouth. ‘Why would I be jealous of her? We’re identical twins. Capable of exactly the same achievements.’
‘And that’s why winding each other up makes no sense. I appreciate that you might have wanted the part—’
‘I didn’t audition,’ Daisy tells him, enunciating each syllable. ‘I don’t like acting.’
‘Is that any reason not to support Ella?’
‘I do support Ella. More than you know.’
‘Well, it doesn’t look that way to me.’
His tone is mild but Daisy is bristling. I wait for her to raise the stakes but she doesn’t, she calmly finishes her pudding and gives me the bowl. Her hands are steadier than her eyes and as she leaves the room she murmurs, ‘What’s the point?’
‘Daisy!’ Paul calls after her but she ignores him and he offers me an apologetic smile. ‘Sorry, love. You’ve cooked a lovely meal and now they’re both upset. I don’t know what gets into Daisy sometimes. It was Ella’s moment to shine and she spoiled it for her.’
‘They’re sisters.’ I shrug. ‘That’s what sisters do. They bicker and they fight. Ella’s just as bad when the mood takes her.’
‘You’re right.’ He looks regretful as he passes me his bowl. ‘I’ll make it up to Daisy later. Whoever said being a parent was easy?’
‘Not me.’ I think of my own parents and the trouble I put them through. ‘But at least you’re managing to be liked by them both.’
‘Not this evening. Or not by Daisy, at any rate.’
‘Most of the time,’ I acknowledge. ‘And they respect you. Sometimes I think Ella would rather I wasn’t around.’
‘She’ll change sides soon and then it’ll be my turn to take the flak.’ He leans over and kisses my cheek. ‘We’ll get there. We have each other. That’s the most important thing.’ His eyes meet mine. Soft, the grey of dove’s wings, they are both wise and calming and it makes me want to tell him about the phone call. And more. But I can’t. Not now, not ever.
He looks to the end of the table. ‘How about a game of Scrabble then, Dad, eh?’
Ed, quietly finishing his crumble, brightens immediately and they both go through to the living room, leaving me to stack the dishwasher. While my hands do the work, my mind is elsewhere. Orla. Until this evening, I hadn’t heard from her for over twenty years. So successfully have I locked away her memory that I have barely even thought of her. As young teenagers we were best friends. We went everywhere together, shared dreams and ambitions, triumphs and failures. And then, the year we both turned sixteen, everything changed. Rose died. And though we had our chance to be truthful, we didn’t take it. We lied; each lie feeding the next until we had created a huge, irreconcilable secret.
The doorbell rings and I jump, drop a plate and watch it skid across the floor before coming to rest against the dog’s water dish. I pick it up and put it in the rack then make my way to the front of the house. I have a horrible feeling that Orla will be standing there, her body materialising less than two hours after her voice. But when I open the door, I’m relieved to see that it isn’t her, it’s Jamie, Ella’s latest boyfriend. He’s standing on the doorstep looking sheepish. His hair is gelled up in spikes across the top of his head and he smells strongly of deodorant.
Ella clatters down the stairs and elbows me out of the way. She’s wearing a tight, short denim skirt and a top that shows off her midriff.
‘Ella, this is Scotland,’ I tell her.
She’s straightened her hair and it falls like a sheet, down from her forehead and over one eye. The other eye stares at me, belligerence glazing her expression. ‘Your point being?’
‘You’ll freeze. Please wear something more substantial.’
‘I’ll keep her warm,’ Jamie volunteers and Ella giggles. His gaze is frank, lustful. He licks his lips and I think of my beautiful daughter lying in a sand dune under his sweaty, adolescent body. I want to push him back through the door and ban him from the house.
‘Is it just the two of you?’ I say.
‘No.’ She shakes her head. ‘Sarah, Mat, Lucy, Rob. The usual.’
‘Where are you meeting?’
‘Di Rollo’s.’
‘And then you’re all going down to the beach?’
She gives me an insincere smile. ‘Duh.’
I watch them walk away, their hips touching. His hands slide down her back and they kiss up against a lamppost. I turn away. Daisy is beside me putting on her boots. ‘You know your dad didn’t mean to get at you,’ I tell her, stroking the top of her head.
‘I know, Mum.’ She shrugs and texts a quick message on her mobile. ‘I’m going out for a bit. I’ll be home before dark. And don’t worry about Ella,’ she shouts back over her shoulder. ‘She’s going to be careful.’
She’s going to be careful? Unease creeps along my nerve endings and comes to rest uncomfortably in my stomach. I want to call after Daisy but she’s already along the end of the street. I shut the door and rest my back against it then climb the stairs and go into Ella’s room. Her dressing table is strewn with make-up, clogged tissues, cotton buds, small change, used bus tickets, empty cans of Diet Coke, spent candles. The floor is a muddle of clothes, clean and dirty mixed up. Schoolbooks are dumped in the corner. I open the drawer of her bedside cabinet and see a half-empty foil strip sitting on top of her hairbrush. I pick it up and read the name. The pills are called microgynon and each one is labelled a different day of the week.
I try to line up straight, coherent thoughts. I can’t. All I keep thinking is that she’s too young for the stuff of adult life: sex, responsibility, choices and consequences. A minefield. Rationally, I accept that she is hardly a child. She is in fact the same age as I was when Orla and I last saw each other: in the police station, both of us bedraggled, wrapped in blankets, complicit.
I put the pills back into the drawer. I’ll talk to Paul. He is more level-headed than I am; his parenting skills are more assured. For me, mothering is instinctive and my instinct tells me that I should protect my girls from making mistakes. But short of locking them indoors, I don’t know the best way to do that.
The mobile in my pocket starts to chirrup like a budgie. I look at the name flashing on the screen: Euan.
‘Hi, Grace. Is Sarah there?’
‘No. They’re all down at di Rollo’s.’
He sighs. ‘Great. She hasn’t come back from school yet and she needs to revise for her history tomorrow.’
‘You could always go down and collect her but—’
‘Might be more than my life’s worth. What happened to only going out on Friday and Saturday nights?’
‘Like when we were young?’
‘Aye.’ He starts to laugh. We have this conversation often. It goes along the lines of: when we were their age we wouldn’t have dared . . .
‘So how are things?’ he asks.
‘How are things?’ I repeat with a laugh. It sounds like I’m being strangled.
‘I missed you at work today.’
‘I took some samples over to Margie Campbell in Perth,’ I say, closing my eyes against thoughts of Orla and what she knows about me. ‘She’s commissioning me to paint the view from her family home in Iona.’
‘Great stuff.’ I feel him nodding. ‘You’re becoming quite the local celebrity.’
‘Maybe. But, Euan—’ I stop, balance the phone on my shoulder and fold my arms over my chest. ‘Remember Orla?’ I say in a rush.
‘Yeah?’
Tears collect behind my eyes and I press my fingers against them until I see stars. ‘She called me earlier.’
&nbs
p; ‘Shit.’ He whistles. ‘What did she want?’
‘I don’t know. I cut her off before she had a chance to tell me.’ I try to rub out a pen mark on the wall with my fingertip. ‘The sound of her voice, it freaked me out. I thought I’d never hear from her again. I hoped I’d never hear from her again.’
‘Do you think she’ll call back?’
‘I don’t know.’
He turns from the mouthpiece and I hear him talking to Monica, his wife. ‘She’s down at the beach. Okay, you go. Yup.’ He speaks back into the receiver. ‘I wonder why she would call you after all this time.’
‘Twenty-four years bar six days,’ I say. ‘I counted.’
‘Grace. Don’t,’ he says. ‘Don’t go over old ground.’
‘Do you remember when we were kids?’ I’m whispering now. ‘Do you remember how Orla always managed to get her own way, no matter what?’
‘Yes, I remember.’ He’s silent for several seconds and I wonder whether he’s thinking what I’m thinking. ‘Are you coming into work tomorrow?’
‘Yeah.’
‘See you then . . . and Grace?’
‘Yeah?’
‘Don’t worry.’
I don’t answer. How can I not worry?
‘Grace?’
‘What?’
‘We can sort this. Chances are she was feeling a bit nostalgic, spur-of-the-moment call and she won’t repeat it.’
I wish I could believe that. ‘How did she get my number? Do you think she’s been talking to Monica?’
‘Monica hasn’t mentioned it and I think she would have. She never liked Orla. She would have asked you before giving out your number.’
I’m sure he’s right. As children they were out-and-out enemies. It is unlikely that Monica would be willing to say hello to Orla never mind help her out by giving her my number. I finish speaking to Euan and stand by the door watching Ed and Paul play Scrabble. They don’t notice me. They are locked into the game, father and son, enjoying time together. Paul is playing to win but, as ever, he is free of vanity and he laughs along with Ed, entering into the spirit of their supposed rivalry. He is a good man, an excellent husband and father and I love him more than I am able to express. The thought of living life without him is unthinkable. I wonder how much he could take before he was unwilling to stand by me. I wonder just exactly how far and wide his love for me stretches. I wonder but I don’t want to find out.
15 June 1984
Rose shoves her way to the front, digging pointy fingers into the other girls’ ribs. They don’t grumble. They move out of her way because Rose’s mother recently died and Miss Parkin has ordered us all to be extra kind to her. ‘Rose is in your patrol, Grace, because I know I can rely on you,’ she tells me.
I’m bored but trying not to show it. Almost sixteen and desperate to leave the Guides, I promised to go on one last camping trip. There are five girls in my patrol, all of them under twelve and Rose, the youngest, has just had her ninth birthday. That makes her a year too young for the Guides but Miss Parkin is her primary school teacher and has allowed her to join early.
The girls are all staring up at me, mouths agape, waiting for their instructions. ‘Go and find some sticks,’ I tell them. ‘And make sure they’re dry. Hang on, Rose.’ I catch her arm before she scuttles off with the rest and point to her laces trailing on the ground. ‘You need to tie those up before you trip over them.’
Her eyes look anxiously towards the other girls who are disappearing into the trees.
‘Don’t worry, you can catch them up in a minute.’ I bend down to help her.
‘Thank you, Grace.’ She smiles, gap-toothed and tentative. ‘I can’t do double knots.’
‘You’ll learn.’ I stroke her hair and give her a gentle nudge. ‘Off you go then.’
‘Have you got rid of your shadow at last?’ Orla comes over to join me. Her hands are in the pockets of her shorts and she is chewing gum, her mouth slightly open.
‘She’s not so bad. Just desperate to get everything right. We were like that once.’
‘You maybe! I never was.’ She pulls cigarettes and a lighter out of her pocket. ‘Her dad’s a bit of all right though, isn’t he?’
‘I hadn’t really noticed.’
‘Liar!’
‘For God’s sake!’ I hiss, looking around to make sure no one is listening. ‘His wife’s not long dead.’
‘So?’ She gives a careless shrug. ‘That doesn’t stop him being attractive. You coming?’ She waves the cigarettes at me.
I shake my head.
‘Suit yourself.’ She throws me a dirty look. ‘Some friend you are.’
She stomps off, her boots kicking up the dirt and I hesitate, almost go after her but decide not to. For the last few weeks she’s been acting weird. I don’t know what’s wrong with her and she won’t tell me. I suspect it might be to do with her parents. They are having marriage problems and Orla, as an only child, ends up in the middle of it. I wish I could do something to help, but whenever I try I get a mouthful of bitchy mind-your-own-business comments.
I walk through the trees towards the campfire. Acorns and pine cones litter the ground and as I step, they spring back under my boots. The air smells sweeter than newly baked bread or Euan’s baby nephew when he’s been bathed and talcumed, and a cool breeze is blowing through the branches. The other patrol leaders are gathered in the clearing and we stand chatting for ten minutes before Miss Parkin comes to give us our orders. She looks harassed. Her hair is sticking up all over her head and her blouse is crushed like she’s spent weeks sleeping in it.
Orla is back looking cheerful again. She sidles up to me and speaks into my ear: ‘Give her another day or so and she’ll be completely demented.’
‘Always talking, Orla!’ Miss Parkin barks, her glance including me. ‘Both of you, see to the sausages.’
The sausages are wrapped in greaseproof paper, more than a hundred of them, tight and shiny in their skins. I tip the bundle out on to the tray. They are linked to each other and I swing them around my head like a cowboy with a lasso. Orla catches my eye and we start to giggle. Miss Parkin’s antennae snap back in our direction. She shouts our names and we straighten up, rigid as telegraph poles. I hold the sausages steady and Orla cuts them into singles with the knife.
‘What does this remind you of?’ Orla asks me. She positions one of them in front of her shorts, points it upwards and waves it around.
‘Callum when Miss Fraser bends over at the blackboard,’ I say at once and we dissolve into hysterics, a sloppy tangle of weak legs and arms.
Miss Parkin slaps the backs of our bare legs as we fall. ‘You should be setting an example to the younger ones,’ she tells us. ‘Now get on with it or there will be no marks for either of your patrols.’
We pull ourselves upright again and I squash bubbles of laughter with thoughts of starving children in Biafra and people who lose their toes to frostbite or dogs that are beaten and cowed.
The fire is lit and we place the sausages over the makeshift grill. My job is to turn them and I do so carefully, shaking off burning sparks that fly up on to my arms. Orla works around me, organising plates and cutlery. Every so often, when Miss Parkin’s eyes are elsewhere, she lunges towards me and pokes me hard in the kidneys. The fourth time she does this, I push her backwards and she crashes to the ground, scattering a pile of sticks. She lies perfectly still, limbs twisted in a parody of death. I pay no attention. I’ve recently won my first-aid badge and I know pretend when I see it.
The sausages are almost done and I move some of them off to the side. The smell draws saliva into my mouth faster than I can swallow and I want to spit like a boy but Miss Parkin is watching, her eyes fixing on each of us in turn.
Monica and Faye, heads together, are deep in concentrated effort. One splits oblong rolls with a bread knife, the other pours wavy lines of ketchup along the spines. As usual, Monica looks perfectly groomed as if she’s just stepped out of the hairdresser�
�s. I wonder how she does it.
Orla is back on her feet. ‘I could have been dead,’ she says with a huffy pout.
‘I should be so lucky,’ I mouth back at her.
She takes one of the sausages and bites the end off it. ‘How about we sneak off and join the boys tonight?’
I don’t answer. The youth club is camping about three hundred yards away, through the trees and beyond the pond. Several boys from our school are there, including Euan whom I’ve been going out with for five weeks and six days. He’s my next-door neighbour and we’ve known each other for ever but that hasn’t stopped me falling for him. The thought of joining him in his tent sends my heart racing but I don’t want Orla there as an audience. Euan is mine and I’m not about to share time with him.
At last we sit down to eat and for the first time that day we are all quiet. The sausages, wrapped in white bread rolls, taste like a small piece of heaven. Bread melts on to my tongue, hot sausage breaks open and slides salty, succulent pork to the back of my throat. We each have three fat helpings and lounge back against rocks softened by sweaters and compare the size of our stomachs.
Dusk is creeping through the trees, casting shadows behind us and blowing a cold wind over our tired bodies. When Miss Parkin’s back is turned, Orla reaches for the ketchup bottle, tips it up and makes words on the tray, slowly and deliberately, letter by letter as if she is icing a cake. I sit up to read what she’s written: Rose! Mummy wants to talk to you.
I meet her stare. She is bold and brazen as a wolf on the hunt. Without shifting her eyes from mine, she nudges Rose with her feet. Rose, already half asleep, is curled up like a kitten at my side. She rouses into a sitting position, one eye still closed.
‘What?’ she says, rubbing at her cheek.
‘There’s a message for you, Rose!’ Orla shakes her fully awake. ‘Look! It’s from the spirit world.’
I grab an overcooked, blackened sausage and before Rose reads the words, I swirl it through the ketchup until all that’s left is a mix of half shapes and splodges.
‘Aw!’ Rose wails and I pull her towards me.