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The Liar’s Daughter (ARC)

Page 7

by Claire Allan


  him. I know you girls are young and have enough going on

  in your lives, but in the great grand scheme of things it really

  doesn’t amount to an awful lot of time. Then he’ll be gone and

  you’ll never have to think of him again.’ Her voice cracks as

  she looks at us all.

  Auntie Kathleen induces guilt well, raised as she was in the

  thrall of Irish Catholicism. But for the same reasons she will

  be crippled by her own guilt, too. She hasn’t been a frequent

  visitor over the years, leaving for England some sixteen or

  seventeen years ago and rarely making the journey back, even

  when a flight could be bought for less than a bus fare.

  ‘We should probably help him get his affairs in order,’ a quiet

  voice from the other side of the room speaks up. ‘I’m sure there

  are lots of things he needs to tie up. Financial matters. His

  belongings. If he has a will . . .’

  I stiffen, looking at Heidi, who stares right back at me.

  ‘I don’t know if we have to worry about that just yet,’ I say,

  even though a part of me is impressed that little mouse Heidi

  can squeak, after all.

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  ‘Well, I think we do. We can dance around it all we want,’

  Heidi says, ‘but we know there will be upset when he’s gone.

  I’d rather we’re all prepared for it. I’ll be hoping to get this

  house on the market as soon as possible.’

  I hear Kathleen gasp. Even Alex can’t hide his shock at the

  manner in which his wife has spoken. I’m shocked myself.

  Simpering Heidi who has been at his beck and call all these

  years. It strikes me for a second that this is actually how she

  has been since I first visited. Restrained. Cold. No hint of

  personal grief.

  ‘I don’t think that this is the time or the place for this discus-

  sion, sweetheart,’ Alex says, looking at her, a confused expression on his face.

  ‘This is the exactly the time and place for it,’ she says, her

  voice growing in confidence. ‘I want everyone to be very clear

  about what will happen after. This is my house, as outlined in

  my mother’s will, and when Joe is dead, I will be selling it. As

  soon as possible. I’ll do my bit by him while he is alive, but

  that’s it.’

  I feel Stella reach out and take my hand, but my fist is

  clenched tight.

  ‘I’m sorry if anyone finds that upsetting, but that is the way

  of it. And it’s better to be honest and prepared than to deal

  with more upset after his death. The lines are very clearly drawn.’

  ‘Heidi.’ Alex puts his hand on her knee as if to quiet her.

  She pushes it away.

  ‘No, Alex, I’m not being insensitive. I’m being honest.

  Someone has to be honest about this all. We’re all dancing

  around afraid to say what needs to be said. Joe is not a nice

  man. He’s not a good man. He has been a cuckoo in this nest

  for too long.’

  Kathleen looks as if she has been slapped squarely around

  the face. I watch as she stands up and walks out of the room.

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  I can hear the sound of her crying just as I hear her climb the stairs.

  I can hear Stella asking if I’m okay, but it’s almost as if I can’t quite understand what I’m feeling any more.

  Heidi gets up and storms out of the room, Alex following

  her. I hear the back door open and I just sit and try to process

  everything that has just been said.

  But I can’t escape the truth. I might be shocked at Heidi’s

  outburst, but she is only speaking the truth. My father is not,

  and never could be, a good man.

  The only person I’m truly angry at is him.

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  Chapter Sixteen

  Heidi

  Now

  I have stopped, dead in my tracks, at the edge of the lawn in the

  back garden. I swallow a lungful of the damp night air, shuddering as I exhale. I’ve not realised until now that I am shaking. The

  sound of heavy footsteps on the gravel behind me makes me

  jump. I brace for impact. For a clip to the back of the head. For

  admonishment that I had run away and good girls don’t run away.

  Good girls show gratitude.

  Good girls behave.

  ‘Your mother would have wanted you to behave, that’s what

  would have made her happy.’

  My breathing changes, becomes shallow, short gasps at the

  air that feels moist and heavy and cold. It’s as if I am consuming coldness and it is filling my veins until my shaking becomes

  more violent.

  Maybe Alex is right. Maybe this isn’t the right time or place,

  but I’m struggling to hold this all in now. I’m struggling with

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  the weight of keeping quiet, of talking about bucket lists and making him happy.

  Joe McKee does not deserve to be happy.

  He does not deserve to leave this world peacefully, thinking

  he is absolved of all of his sins.

  The steps grow closer. Heavy breathing. I sense anger. I feel

  it grip at me.

  ‘Heidi.’ Alex’s voice is hard and cold.

  I turn to look at him – see disappointment and anger in his

  eyes.

  ‘Was there really a need for that?’ he asks.

  I blink back at him. My usual reaction is to say no. To apol-

  ogise. To push down at the feelings and all the memories that

  weigh heavy on my chest every single day. But it feels different

  now and I want to tell him. I want to tell him everything –

  even though it will change everything. I want to be brave.

  ‘Yes,’ I tell him. ‘There was a need for it. All this, what we’re

  doing, Alex. It’s all bullshit. While he lies up there, being waited on hand and foot. The people he hurt are running themselves

  into the ground trying to make his last few months bearable.’

  ‘You keep saying that,’ Alex says. ‘That he hurt people. That

  he is a bad man. But why, Heidi? He’s a bore, for sure. He takes

  advantage of your good nature. He holds political and religious

  beliefs that I don’t agree with it. But a bad man? He raised you

  for years. He didn’t have to.’

  I open my mouth to tell him. Know it would shut him up.

  But then what if it changed how he thinks of me? Would he

  be angry that I’ve kept it from him? And all those people,

  Kathleen included, who thought I was mad, that I was a naughty

  little girl who told lies for attention, would they tell him all

  about the girl I was? The trouble I caused?

  The fire I started. If I close my eyes I can still taste the acrid smoke as it started to choke me. Still remember heavy hands,

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  pulling me away. Still remember kicking out at them. I just wanted it all, myself included, to burn.

  How could he look at me the same
if he knew it all? At

  best, he’d see me as a victim. At worst, he would see someone

  who had been driven to madness. Would he ever be able trust

  me to be alone with Lily? I know I had struggled while preg-

  nant with those same fears – fears that were allayed for me the

  moment she was placed on my chest and I knew I’d do

  everything to protect her. To protect my family.

  I feel a bubble of shame and grief and anxiety rise up. I see

  Alex search my face for an answer, but it’s not one I can give

  right now. Not without ruining everything.

  ‘You’re right,’ I say, and I know my voice sounds funny. Angry.

  Frustrated. ‘You’re always right.’

  And still he searches my face for signs of the truth and I just

  look at him, not daring myself to talk, until he gives up. He throws his hands in the air then plunges them deep into his pockets as

  he turns away. ‘I think I hear Lily,’ he says. ‘I’ll go check on her.’

  I know as well as Alex does that Lily isn’t making a noise,

  he just needs an excuse to leave. I stay in the garden, even

  though it is starting to rain. Fat drops of ice-cold rain land on

  my face, stinging me where my skin is rough and sore from

  the tears I didn’t even realise I had been crying.

  They start, as these things do, slowly at first. Little drops.

  Warning signs leaving me enough time to get inside if I want

  to. It’s like they’re telling me to go. To run. Take shelter. Now

  they come in greater numbers, but still I know I can get into

  the house relatively untouched if I just move. But I can’t move.

  I’m frozen in the middle of all this and the rain rushes at me,

  soaking me through to the bone until I am so wet, so icy cold

  that the hailstones that have started to fall don’t hurt. I am

  untouchable. I don’t care about the storm. I have always been

  right in the middle of one.

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  Chapter Seventeen

  Heidi

  Now

  I offer to make Alex a cup of tea when we get home. He

  refuses, says he is tired and takes Lily from me and goes upstairs.

  We barely spoke on the drive home and I can’t shake the feeling

  that everything is slipping out of my control.

  I’m tense and even though my body aches with tiredness, I

  know I’ve gone past any notion of sleep, so I make myself a

  cup of very milky tea and curl up in front of our gas fire

  watching the faux flames flicker and dance. Ironic, really, that

  I can find flames comforting.

  Well, ironic or worrying. One of those.

  I think of the chain of events that led to that point – when I

  ended up in hospital, missing the second semester of my first year at university and having to start all over again come the spring.

  Did it all start that day in Fiorentinis? Or the day my mother

  died? Or was it the first time he came into my room to ‘comfort’

  me?

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  So much is blurry now, you see. After all these years. But some details are crisp and clear in my head and they’d never

  leave. The senses of things. Smells. Touch. Pain.

  I shake my head, trying to shake all those memories from it.

  If only it were that easy.

  But it’s not, of course. And it’s only going to get harder over

  the next week and months. I have to find a way to cope,

  otherwise I’ll not only push Ciara and Kathleen further away,

  but I’ll also push Alex away. That is truly unthinkable.

  I have to stop taking my anger out on other people. Even

  people such as Ciara and Kathleen. People I’d tried to make

  like me all those years ago. People I’d wanted to love back then,

  but who never loved me back. I owe them no loyalty, but they

  aren’t responsible for what Joe did any more than I am.

  Eventually I drift off into something approximating a sleep,

  only to be woken at 4 a.m. by a hungry baby in need of a

  feed. When I’ve satisfied her needs, I climb into bed beside my

  husband and whisper to his sleeping form that I love him, and

  our daughter, more than he could ever understand.

  When morning comes, I apologise to him for being insen-

  sitive. I tell him I’m stressed but I love him. He pulls me into

  a hug, kisses the top of my head and whispers that he loves me

  and just wants me to be happy. I stop myself from crying. I just

  plaster on a smile, tell him I am happy and send him on his

  way to work.

  I have the same fake smile plastered on my face when I arrive

  at Joe’s house and offer an apology to Ciara and Kathleen,

  which I’m making to try to smooth the waters.

  ‘I’m sorry if I came across as clinical and cold last night,’ I

  say, trying my best to maintain eye contact even though it is

  almost physically painful to do so. ‘This is difficult. For us all.

  I was feeling stressed and I didn’t mean to upset anyone.’

  They nod and we sit in uncomfortable silence until we hear

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  the tinkle of the bell Kathleen gave Joe to summon us when he needs anything.

  Ciara is first to her feet. I take the break in the awkwardness

  as a chance to move myself.

  ‘I’ll peel some potatoes for dinner. There’s chicken and veg

  there, too,’ I say, getting up and going to the kitchen, where I

  pull the bag of spuds from the vegetable rack and look for the

  peeler.

  Kathleen is behind me before I’ve had the chance to shed

  even one slice of skin from the mud-covered potato in my

  hand.

  ‘Can I ask you something, Heidi?’ she says, and I turn to

  watch her sit down, wincing as she does so, on one of the

  kitchen chairs. ‘My knees,’ she says, rolling her eyes. ‘Seems all that road running has left them in a bad way.’

  I mumble something sympathetically and wait for the big

  ‘something’ she wants to talk to me about.

  ‘Why do you hate him?’ she says, eventually, her eyes sad.

  ‘You always did. All those years when he just tried to look

  after you. You made it so hard for him, you know, but he

  never gave up on you. You never give him credit for that. I

  know he’s not perfect. Believe me. But does he really deserve

  to be hated?’

  I blink at her. I don’t know what to say. Can she really not

  know?

  I shrug, feeling a tingle of nervousness start at the top of my

  spine, enough to send little shockwaves through my head.

  ‘That’s it?’ she says with a strange laugh. ‘A shrug to explain

  it all.’

  I shrug again, scraping at the potato with the peeler, not

  realising that my finger has moved perilously close to the blade.

  One strike and I take a layer of skin with it, yelping as I do

  so.

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  The sight of blood, which comes before the sting of the cut,
makes me feel woozy.

  Kathleen, sore knees and all, jumps to her feet, forces my

  bleeding finger under the running tap, and I watch the water

  turn pink, mingling with the soil from the potatoes as it hits

  the steel surface of the sink. I watch it. I feel the pain bite. I’m reminded of a release. Of a coping mechanism. Kathleen pulls

  my hand from the water, wraps a clean piece of kitchen towel

  around it, squeezing tight. So tight it’s painful.

  ‘Hold that for a bit,’ she says. ‘We’ll get a proper look at it

  in a minute. Does Joe have plasters?’

  I nod to the thin cupboard beside the cooker, where Joe

  stores an old tin first-aid box.

  ‘I . . . I’m sure it’s just a scratch,’ I stutter. ‘I was . . . I was distracted.’ I can see the crisp white kitchen towel start to colour with my blood. I need to sit down.

  ‘You certainly were,’ Kathleen says, pausing for a moment,

  looking at me intently.

  She hands me some more kitchen paper, then sets about

  fishing in the first-aid tin for a suitable dressing.

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  Chapter Eighteen

  Joe

  Now

  They’ve all been to see me today. My ‘family’, for what they

  are. The daughters who don’t seem to care too much. The sister

  who hovers around me. Fidgets as she talks. Babbles. Annoys

  me. The drippy husband. Talks about going for a pint. And that

  woman – the deviant my daughter is with. I can barely look

  at her, never mind tolerate her faux sympathy.

  All these conversations take place that mean nothing but

  seem to teeter close to the edge of something else.

  The day has been painfully long. Bookmarked with the times

  when I’m allowed to take medication to make everything go

  fuzzy again for a while.

  I’ve tried to read a little, but my eyes won’t focus for long

  enough – and I’m finding myself having to read and reread the

  same passage over and over again. None of it making sense.

  Every now and again I hear raised voices. The cry of that

  baby. A phone ringing. Doors closing and opening. A whole

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  world carrying on within earshot but excluding me all the same.

  The rain is getting heavier outside. I can hear it batter against

  the windowpanes. It’s a noise I used to find comforting. But

 

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