Jenna didn’t wait
to see the train pull out of Ipswich station.
She had helped her mother take her bag out of the back of the car, and
had given her the most perfunctory farewell.
Then she had watched the small stiff figure tow the case into the
ticket hall. When Patricia was no longer
visible, she got back into the Peugeot and put her seat belt on. Then, overcome by feelings she could no
longer keep at bay, she leant her head on the steering wheel and wept.
They had lied to
her. Her mother and her beloved
grandmother had lied. They had told her
that her father was dead, and they had kept that secret throughout the rest of
her childhood, her adolescence, and on into her adult life. They had deprived her of her father, and they
had deprived her children of their grandfather.
And her mother’s sole justification for more than thirty years of deceit
was, “I thought it was best.”
“Best?” Jenna had
repeated, the previous evening. “You
thought it was best? Who for?
For you, or for me?”
“Best for you,”
Patricia had said, pale but adamant. “A
clean break.”
“I was twelve years
old, Mum, I had friends whose parents got divorced, it wouldn’t have been that
big a deal, why couldn’t you have told me the truth?” She stared down at her mother, filled with a
rage she hadn’t known she was capable of.
“Or was it just easier to pretend he was dead, rather than admit your
marriage was a failure?”
That had hit
home. Patricia had flushed red, and her
mouth was set in a thin line. “That’s
not how it was, not at all. How could he
have kept in touch with you from the other side of the world?”
“Phone. Letter.
Birthday cards. Christmas
presents. Even in the 80s, it wasn’t
that difficult.” A thought occurred to
Jenna. “Were you afraid I’d want to go
with him?”
“No, of course
not. We agreed that you would stay with
me.” Her mother’s expression was
suddenly tinged with disgust. “I didn’t
want you having anything more to do with them.”
“Them?
Did Dad have an affair?”
“He committed
adultery,” Patricia said primly. “I told
him to choose between us. He chose her.”
A myriad questions
jostled urgently in Jenna’s mind. She
asked the first one that came into her head.
“Who was she?”
“Anne Butterfield.”
The name was
familiar, and for a moment she couldn’t place it. Then she remembered. “Not – not Miss Butterfield? Not Buttercup?”
“Yes. Your teacher in your final year at primary
school. Now do you understand?”
Jenna had loved
being in Miss Butterfield’s class. She
was young, enthusiastic and inspirational.
They had studied Roman Britain and she remembered writing stories on
long scrolls, just as the Romans had.
They’d gone for nature walks in a nearby park, and there’d been a
thrilling visit to the Museum of London, on a coach, and Miss Butterfield had
said, at the beginning of the journey, that no-one had ever been sick on one of
her school trips, so she didn’t expect anyone to be sick today. And no-one had been. After thirty-five years, Jenna couldn’t
recall her face with any clarity, but she remembered that she’d been pretty,
with long fair hair in a pony tail, and a penchant for floaty skirts. Most of the boys had had a crush on her, and
Jenna had idolised her. Unlike many of
her other teachers, who had receded into a vague and nameless blur, she was
reminded of Miss Butterfield every time she watched The Princess Bride, which was one of her favourite films and often
shown on Saturday or Sunday afternoons.
She had a sudden, vivid memory of snuggling on the sofa at the St.
Albans house with Rosie, a year or so back.
Rick had been on a business trip and the twins away at university, so it
was just the two of them and they’d had a lovely girly weekend. And she’d said to Rosie, “I had a teacher
once called Buttercup.”
Rosie had
giggled. “That’s a funny name!”
“Oh, it wasn’t her
real one, her real name was Miss Butterfield, but we all called her Buttercup,
and she was lovely. All golden and
sunny.”
She remembered,
also, the rows that she had overheard between her parents that last summer, her
mother’s endless complaints, her father’s impatience.
No wonder, she thought
now. No
wonder you fell in love with Annie Butterfield, who was young and pretty and so
very different from your needy, demanding, obsessive wife. It didn’t excuse him – adultery was a shitty
thing to do, she knew that, none better – but she could understand why he’d
preferred her, why he’d abandoned his family and started a new life in
Australia with her.
“There would have
been such a scandal if it had all come out,” Patricia was saying. “She was nearly twenty years younger than he
was, and one of his staff. I told him I
would keep it quiet if he dropped all contact with you. It was the price he had to pay to make a new
start in Australia. They would never
have got good references if I’d told the governors what was going on.”
“You mean – you blackmailed them?” Suddenly things were becoming clearer. Jenna stared at Patricia in disbelief. Her prim and proper mother a
blackmailer? It was surely impossible.
“That is a very
crude and unpleasant word, Jennifer. I
fought to keep my husband and my marriage, and when it became clear that I
would lose the fight, I was determined to keep you out of his clutches. And the best way to do that was to ensure
that he went as far away from you as possible.
I used the weapons at my disposal, I am not ashamed to admit it.”
“Didn’t you think
I’d have been better off and happier with Dad still in my life, whatever he’d
done?”
“Of course not, he
was an adulterer.” Her mother spoke the
word as if it described the most filthy of perversions.
“I seem to remember
you were very keen for me to make up with Rick, despite his adultery – and he’d
had several women on the side, not just one.
I wasn’t going to do that, but I wasn’t going to stop the children
seeing him, either. At the moment they
don’t want to, but I think Tom and Rosie, at least, will come round
eventually.” Jenna glared at her mother,
still filled with anger. “You lied to
me. You told me he was dead. I never thought to question you, or Nanna
May. Why did Nanna May back you up?”
“She disapproved,”
said Patricia. “She thought I should
tell you the truth. But she knew that I
– that I was in a fragile condition. Any
more upset might have pushed me over the edge.”
Which, Jenna
thought in her anger, was entirely typical of her mother, the prime exponent of
emotional blackmail as well as the more direct variety. “Do as I ask or I’ll have a nervous
breakdown” had obviously been a very effective lever if it had persuaded the
notoriously stubborn Nanna May to acquiesce in Patricia’s plan.
“And Dad agreed to all of this?” She couldn’t keep the terrible hurt out of
her voice. Not only had her mother and
grandmother lied to her, but her father, it seemed, was happy to cut off all
contact with his only child.
Or his only child
then. It seemed he’d lost little time in
replacing her with the beaming Bill.
Nausea swept over her. She cried,
“How could you both do this to me?”
“Of course he agreed,”
said Patricia, ignoring her daughter’s anguish.
She tightened her lips. “He
didn’t have much choice. Though he went
back on it, later.”
“What do you mean,
‘went back on it’?”
“He promised not to
contact us again. He broke that
promise. He sent you cards, letters – “
So he hadn’t
totally abandoned her. She had that to
cling to, at least. Jenna said in bewilderment,
“But I never had any cards and letters. What happened to them?”
“I threw them away,
of course. He didn’t deserve to be your
father.”
Astounded, Jenna
gaped at her. “But what about me?
Didn’t I deserve to be his daughter?”
“You were better
off out of his influence. And That
Woman’s. You were always going on about
her, Miss Butterfield this, Miss Butterfield that. I could see her getting her claws into you,
winning you over, plotting to take you away from me, and then I’d have had nothing.” Her mother spat the words.
“But ...” Jenna fought to understand Patricia’s
viewpoint, and failed. “You didn’t have
to tell me he was dead! You didn’t have to force Nanna May to help
you! You didn’t have to lie and deceive
me all these years!”
But her mother
merely folded her hands in her lap, and said through a clenched jaw, “I did
what was best for you, what was right.”
“Dear God.” At last, she gave way to her anger. “And it never occurred to you that you were
wrong? It obviously occurred to Nanna
May. But you never really thought about
me, did you, Mum? Never about what I might feel, or what Dad might feel. No, it was all about you, wasn’t it? Your feelings, your hurt, what you
wanted. Just for once in your life,
couldn’t you have put me first? Like parents are supposed to do with their
children?”
“It’s done,” said
Patricia. A bright red patch of colour
had flared beneath the beige powder on her cheeks, and Jenna noticed that she
wouldn’t look at her. “You can’t change
it.”
“Oh, yes, I bloody
well can. I can get in touch with my
brother, for starters.” The strangeness words
struck her anew, and she could almost savour them. My
brother. I actually have a brother. Then a thought occurred to her. “How did you know about him? You must have kept in touch somehow, despite
what you said.”
“Your grandmother
was responsible for that.” Patricia’s
mouth was like a painted gash across her face.
“She went behind my back, she wrote to him. I didn’t find out until quite recently.”
“So is that how
Bill knew about the twins going to Australia?
From Nanna May?” She remembered,
suddenly, Tom telling her a year ago that his great-grandmother, learning of
their plans for a gap year, had suggested visiting his relations down
under. He’d thought, of course, that she
meant Rick’s brother David and his family.
But it seemed now that she must have been stirring the pot. Had she also written to Bill, or even Keith,
to tell them to make contact?
“Tell me,” she
said, staring at the mother who suddenly seemed like a malevolent
stranger. “Is my father still alive?”
There was no
answer. Patricia was staring fixedly
into the fire, and her hands were locked together so tightly that her knuckles
were bone white.
“For God’s sake, tell me!” Jenna cried. “Don’t you think you owe me that, at
least? I’m not twelve any longer, Mum, I
need to know!”
The silence
stretched out. A log shifted within the
stove, and a flame leapt up briefly, then died.
Jenna opened her mouth to shout, and was forestalled. “Yes,” Patricia said. “Yes, as far as I’m aware, he’s still alive.”
Jenna let her
breath out in a great gust. “Thank God
for that. You know, I’m not sure I will
ever forgive you for this, but at least it’s not too late for me to try and
make amends.” She surveyed her mother,
who was still not looking at her.
“Meanwhile, I think it’s best if you go back to Berkhamsted tomorrow
morning. I’ll take you to the station
first thing.”
It had been a very
uncomfortable evening. Patricia had
taken refuge in a stony, self-righteous silence, and Jenna had felt utterly
repelled by the thought of making even the most innocuous small talk. She wanted desperately to open up her laptop
and make contact with the brother she’d never known she had, to try and speak
to the father she’d thought had been dead for nearly forty years, but she
couldn’t do it while her mother remained in the house. They’d eaten supper without exchanging more
than the bare minimum of words that were necessary, and Patricia had gone up to
bed immediately afterwards. It didn’t
seem possible that only a few hours ago, they had been on almost friendly
terms, talking about the cruise and Stuart.
Stuart. He was going to be in for a shock, if he
learned the truth. She couldn’t imagine
that Patricia would tell him, though, and she certainly wasn’t going to. That was her mother’s business, and she
wasn’t going to interfere. Saskia would
probably say that if he turned out to be a con-man, it would serve Patricia
right. Earlier in the evening, Jenna
would probably have agreed with her, in vengeful fury, but now, sitting in the
quiet room with the stove dying down and the kittens, who had taken refuge
behind the sofa while voices had been raised, curled up comfortingly on her
lap, she just felt extraordinarily sad.
Sad for her mother, whose twisted and obsessive neediness had led to
this mess: sad for Nanna May – though she still wished that somehow her
grandmother had told her the truth, if not at the time then later: and sad for
all of them, for the wasted years when she’d thought her father was dead, for
him, missing her adolescence, missing her children’s childhood, and thinking,
perhaps, that she didn’t want to be in contact with him either.
In the car outside
the station, she took a deep breath, wiped her tears and blew her nose
thoroughly. All her sympathy now was for
Keith, and the need to somehow make up and atone for those lost years, even
though they hadn’t been her fault, grew strong within her. And also, the need to tell someone what had
happened. But that could wait until she
got home.
Aware that she was
deeply upset and probably not thinking straight, she drove back to Orford
slowly and carefully. At least the
weather was dry, though overcast and cold.
In the kitchen, the remains of their breakfast – cereal for her, toast
and marmalade for her mother – still lay on the draining board. She put a fresh filter and more coffee into
the machine, and set it going. Then she
picked up her mobile, and dialled Saskia’s number.
It went straight to
voicemail. Of course, it was still only
half past nine on a Sunday morning. Her
friend probably wasn’t even awake yet.
Jenna looked at the other numbers, wondering who she could call. She felt suddenly, keenly, the absence of
someone at her side, who would always have her back, who would understand what
this devastating yet incredible news would mean to her. Not so long ago, she’d thought Rick was that
person, but he’d betrayed her, proved himself unworthy of her love and her
trust. Saskia would always be her most
loyal and stalwart friend, but she was a hundred miles away, probably fast
asleep, and quite possibly not alone.
She needed to talk to someone now.
Slowly, her fingers
scrolled back up the screen until they came to Fran’s number. Would he be up yet? With Flora around, he probably was. But could she dump all this on him
again? When she had first confessed her
suspicions that her father was still alive, he had been calm, perceptive and
sympathetic. She wasn’t at all sure he’d
be so eager to hear all her woes a second time.
And she knew only too well, from long experience with her mother, just
how annoying, infuriating and soul-sapping dealing with someone who was needy
and demanding could be. A
generously-lent sympathetic ear could so easily be exploited, and Patricia was
an expert at manipulation. Oscar Wilde’s
unwelcome quip came back to her. Weren’t
all women supposed to turn into their mothers?
Not if I can bloody well help it, Jenna
thought grimly. But she wouldn’t talk to
Fran yet. She’d had to cancel her
session with Flora this afternoon, at short notice because of Patricia’s visit,
but she could ring him a little later and re-book. Meanwhile, she had something else to do. Last night, after her mother had gone off to
bed, she had replied to Joe’s text. It
had been hard not to pour out her pain and anger, but she wasn’t going to
burden her sons with it. They could draw
their own conclusions from the facts.
Instead, she had merely asked Joe to get back in touch with Bill Clarke
on Facebook, asking him to send her a friend request. Then she could contact her brother – her brother – directly, to find out what he
knew, and what he wanted.
She put her phone
down, and retrieved her laptop from the coffee table. Opening it brought the curious attention of
Artemis, who had already decided that she enjoyed the sport of keyboard
dancing. Fending off the kitten, she
logged on and looked at her status page.
And there it was, one friend request, from Bill Clarke, with the little
thumbnail photo beside it, showing the same man she’d looked at on Fran’s
laptop. And he’d sent her a
message. Her fingers suddenly clumsy,
she clicked on it.
‘Hi, Jenna!
I know this is out of the blue, but I couldn’t think of any other way to
reach you, not without your address or phone number. Seems you didn’t know about me and Jodi (my
sis), so I hope this doesn’t come as too much of a shock to you. I always knew Dad left a daughter in England,
and that you’d got kids, but not much more than that. Then he told me that your boys were in Oz,
and it seemed too good an opportunity to miss.
Plus Dad hasn’t been too well recently, and I think he’d like to set
things straight. I’m sorry if I’ve upset
you or caused any trouble, and I hope you’ll forgive me. I’d be so glad and happy if we could make
contact properly. Your brother, Bill
Clarke.’
It had caused
trouble, it had upset her, but that wasn’t his fault. She couldn’t be anything other than pleased
that he’d got in touch. The thought that
she had a brother and a sister was still too new, too vast, but she suddenly
longed to speak to him. That, however,
would have to wait. She clicked on
‘confirm’, and then opened up his page.
This time, she
didn’t feel so much of a voyeur. After
all, he was her brother, and they were friends, if only online at present. She studied his smiling, confident face,
looking again for any family resemblance.
Now, knowing the truth, she could see a likeness to Tom, though Tom’s
grin was more self-deprecating, and he was dark like Rick, whereas Bill’s hair
was light brown, sun-bleached at the tips.
She looked at Jodi, his sister – and her
sister – and thought she looked more like herself, though again with that
vibrant Antipodean confidence that could be bracing, encouraging or
intimidating, depending on your mood.
Was she prepared for a ready-made Australian family? All her life she’d been the only child, the
only one. She’d often wondered,
wistfully, what it would be like to have a brother or a sister, and now, astonishingly,
at a single stroke of the key, she had both: and a father, restored to her.
She looked again
through the photographs that Bill had posted, searching for one of his
parents. It took a while, because there
were lots, mostly of his friends. And
then suddenly, amidst the parade of tanned, fit, healthy young men and women,
she found a group round a barbecue.
There was Bill with his girlfriend Natasha, Jodi, standing very close to
a young Asian man, laughing, and beside her an elderly man with dark-rimmed
glasses and short grey hair, holding aloft a pair of tongs that gripped a very
large crustacean. The caption read, ‘Clan Clarke, Dad’s 75th, awesome shrimp!’
There was no sign of Annie Butterfield, now Annie
Clarke. Either she was no longer part of
the family, through death or divorce, or she was holding the camera. Jenna hoped very much that she’d taken the
picture. And when she carried on looking
through the photos, she soon found one of her father and her stepmother,
obviously photographed at the same occasion.
She’d have recognised her old teacher immediately, despite the fact that
only last night she’d been unable to recall her features with any clarity. That kind, warm smile hadn’t changed, though
her hair was now a rather windswept and improbably blonde bob, and her figure could better be
described as ‘comfortable’ rather than ‘slim’.
She looked like someone that
Jenna would be happy to have in her life.
What would my life have been like if Dad had
taken me with him? Jenna wondered. I’d never have gone to Norwich, never met
Rick, or Jules, or Fran, or Jon, or Saskia, never had had the twins and Rosie. It was unimaginable. Someone in her friendship circle at uni, she
couldn’t remember who, had once said in the course of a long, wine-fuelled
evening that your life was like a tree: you started off as a baby at the base
of the trunk, with no choices, and then gradually over the course of your
childhood and adolescence more alternatives appeared, more branches to follow,
or not, until you ended up at the end of one tiny twig at the top, with all the
other possibilities and opportunities not taken sprouting out below and around
you, ad infinitum. That film Sliding
Doors had explored the very different consequences resulting from one
pivotal moment, and she remembered feeling quite unsettled by it. That something so trivial could alter your
life so dramatically seemed impossible, but she knew it could be true. The road not taken, the door not opened, the
chance ignored ...
Her head whirling
with all the possibilities, she sat and stared at Bill’s Facebook page. Last night, raging at her mother, this
revelation had seemed like the end of her world, the ruin of all her assumptions
and certainties. Now, she was beginning
to feel excitement, hope and delight.
She was not on her own. She had a
father, a stepmother, a brother and a sister.
She had family, a family she hadn’t dreamt existed. She did have someone to support her and watch
her back, as her mother had never done, and as her children couldn’t be
expected to do, for they were her children and had their own lives to lead.
She began to type
below Bill’s message, not thinking too hard about what to say, but letting her
feelings speak for her.
‘Hi.
Thanks for getting in touch. Yes,
you’re right, this has been a bit of a shock, but a lovely one. I didn’t know you existed for sure until last
night, when my mother confirmed it, but I’d recently had some suspicions. I am just so glad that my Dad is alive,
because I’d always been told that he was dead, and I’d love to get to know you
all, though as we’re thousands of miles away, that might be difficult. But at least we know about each other now –
the rest will surely follow. I always thought I
was an only child, so it’s a bit overwhelming to learn suddenly that I’ve got
siblings. A surprise for sure, but a
truly wonderful one. You’ll have to meet
up with my sons, Joe and Tom, who are currently backpacking in Australia – they’re
in Queensland at the moment. Their uncle
on their father’s side lives in Sydney – where are you? And are your parents online, or on Facebook? I’m longing for the chance to talk to Dad, so
that we can start to make up for the missed years.
Please
give my best love to him, and to your mum, who used to be my teacher when I was
eleven – did she tell you that? I always
loved being in her class, she was great. And to my sister Jodi too. I can hardly believe it, after all this time,
but now I’m so much looking forward to meeting you all, online and perhaps soon
in reality.
With
love, Jenna.’
Then, before she
could chicken out, she pressed ‘send’, and watched the message change colour as
it was registered. It would be evening
in Australia. Perhaps he would read it
before going to bed, but it was more likely that he wouldn’t see it until the
morning. It didn’t matter. He would know that she welcomed his contact,
and wanted the two lost halves of their father’s family to reunite. It might take a long time to forgive her
mother for what she’d done, if she ever did, but suddenly that didn’t seem to
weigh very much in the balance, against the thrill of a father rediscovered.
Her phone rang,
making her jump. Hastily she picked it
up, wondering if by some remarkable feat of sleuthing it was Bill, and looked
at the screen. Then, with a smile, she
answered. “Hi, Sass.”
“Hello,
darling.” Her friend’s voice was
slightly husky, as if she’d had a late and exhilarating night. “You called me. To what do I owe this pleasure? Do you know
what time it is?”
“Five past ten, and
high time you were up and about.”
“It’s Sunday, darling, supposed to be a day of
rest. How are you, anyway? How’s the maternal visit going? Have you managed to refrain from murdering
her?”
“Just about.” Jenna took a deep breath. “She’s gone home. I took her to the station first thing this
morning.”
“Already? Have you had a falling out?”
“You could say
that.” Jenna paused. “You remember I told you that I’d wondered if
my father might not be dead after all?”
“Indeed I do. And?”
“He isn’t.”
“What?”
Saskia’s voice ended on a fit of coughing and spluttering, and Jenna
said, “Have you been on the fags again?”
“What? No, darling, I have not,” said Saskia, with
emphasis. “Hell’s biscuits, Jen, do you
mean to say that your father’s alive?”
With memories of
Brian Blessed expressing similar astonishment about Flash Gordon, Jenna found
herself struggling not to give way to rather hysterical laughter. She said, “Yes, he is. And that’s not all. I’ve got a stepmother, and a brother, and a
sister. Half-brother and sister,” she
added pedantically. “They’re in
Australia.”
“Christ on a bike,”
said Saskia. “What a shock! So that’s why your mother buggered off home?”
“Yes.” Jenna swallowed. Suddenly, more tears didn’t seem too far
away. “We were getting on fine. You know she was on that cruise? Well, she’s only managed to bag herself a
man.”
“Jesus, he must be
brave. Or a con-man who’s after her
money.”
“She hasn’t got
much, apart from her house and her pension.
Anyway, while we were talking about this bloke Stuart, and drinking tea,
and I was thinking the weekend might not be so bad after all, I got a text from
Joe. The Bill Clarke who’s been trying
to contact him has got in touch on Facebook and mentioned that he’s the boys’
uncle. And when I confronted my mother
with it, she admitted it was true. Dad
isn’t dead, he went to Australia and married my old primary school teacher and
had two kids, this guy Bill, who’s probably about fifteen years younger than me, and
a girl called Jodi.”
“Bloody hell, Jen,
have you considered booking your family a slot on the Jeremy Kyle Show?”
Jenna laughed
rather shakily. “No. Can you imagine my mother at her most
glacial? She’d make absolute mincemeat
of him.”
“I can, all too
clearly. But how did she react when you
showed her the text? What in Christ’s
name did she say? ‘Sorry, Jennifer dear,
for allowing you to think your father was dead for thirty-five years, but I
only had your best interests at heart’?”
“More or less,
yes. She kept saying it was for my own
good. Then she clammed up – didn’t
apologise, or explain much more than that.
She did say that Nanna May disapproved, but since neither of them
thought fit to tell me the truth, either then or later, that isn’t much of a
comfort.”
“So are you totally
conflicted? On the one hand, pleased
your father’s still alive, and that you have a family you knew nothing about,
and on the other, furious with them both for lying to you?”
“In a
nutshell. I’m finding it very hard to
forgive my mother at the moment. She
admitted that the reason they’d gone to Australia was that she’d threatened to
tell the governors of my dad’s school about the affair. It would probably have led to disciplinary
proceedings, or at the very least a bad reference. The other woman was a member of his staff,
you see, and much younger than he was.”
“Why should
it? She wasn’t a pupil. None of their business.”
“Yes, I know, but
this was 1980, and it was a church school.”
Jenna sighed. “He obviously
thought her threat was a real one, because they upped and left. My mother cooked up this tale about a car
crash, and I was sent to live with my grandmother for a year, presumably while
the divorce proceedings were going on. I
think Mum may well have had some sort of breakdown. Certainly she persuaded my grandmother to
back her up by emphasising her ‘fragile state’.
And the irony is that while all that was going on, not only was I
totally oblivious, but I was having the happiest year of my whole childhood.”
“Didn’t you miss
your father? Weren’t you grieving for
him?” Saskia sounded almost shocked.
“Oh, of course I
was, but he’d been quite a distant parent – he was a head-teacher, very bound up
in his work, and he and Mum had been arguing a lot, which I hated. I loved him, and I missed him, and I was sad because he was dead,
but living with Nanna May was so much better than living with my mother, in
every single way, that I was just enjoying the fun and the freedom. And poor Dad got pushed to the back of my
mind. New town, new school, the river
and the sea, Nanna May’s dog, not being criticised every five minutes for
things I couldn’t help, fun and laughter and a little bit of rebelliousness – I
cried buckets when I was told I had to go back to my mother. I even thought about running away, but Nanna May talked me out of it.”
“I’m not surprised you were gutted. Your grandmother was a one-off, though I have to
say, darling, that I might model myself on her in thirty years’ time. As the saying goes, it’s not the years in
your life that count, but the life in your years, and she had more life than a dozen ordinary old dears. So – what are you going to do? Hot-foot it out to Australia to meet them?”
Jenna laughed. “Hardly.
Not yet. I think we’ll get to
know each other online first. But I’m
longing to speak to Dad. I think it’ll
be a very emotional reunion.”
“I bet. And your dear mama?”
“At the moment, I’m
not speaking to her. That isn’t to say
that I might never be able to bring myself to speak to her in the future, but
right now as far as I’m concerned she can go hang.”
“That’s my girl!”
“Or, rather less
harshly, I’m giving her the space to reflect on the consequences of what she
did. Because not only did she deprive me
of any contact with my father – apparently he wrote to me, sent cards and
presents, and she destroyed them all – “
“God, that’s
despicable!”
“I know it is. And also, of course, my kids grew up without their grandfather. And
although she’s justifying it by saying it was in my best interests, actually I’m
sure it was all about her and what she felt and what she wanted. She didn’t want to admit to me that her
marriage had failed. And I suspect that
Dad took up with my stepmother because she was a lot nicer than my mother.”
“Not difficult,”
was Saskia’s comment. There was a pause,
and Jenna could hear some noises in the background, and then her friend’s
rather muffled voice. “It’s Jen.”
“OK,” she said,
with a grin. “I get it. Company?”
“You could say
that.” Saskia sounded unwontedly
coy.
“Then I’ll let you
have the rest of your Sunday in peace.”
“Are you sure
you’ll be OK?”
“Oh, yes, I’m
sure. I just wanted to get it off my
chest, and bring you up to date. Thank
you for listening. Do you want to come
up next weekend instead?”
“You know,” Saskia
said, “I might just do that. All right
if I bring a friend? He may have other
plans, but just in case ...”
“As long as you
don’t expect me to play gooseberry all weekend.”
Saskia gave her
throaty, raucous laugh. “As if,
darling! Though of course if you’ve got
anyone hidden away ... “
“Chance would be a
fine thing, and anyway you know it’s far too soon after Rick. Don’t you dare try and pair me off again, or
I’ll unfriend you as well as my mother.”
“OK, OK, I get the
message. Ta-ra, darling, and you keep
your feet dry on that moral high ground, because you own it. Don’t let that
selfish bitch of a mother get to you.”
“That’s a bit
harsh.”
“No, it isn’t, it’s
entirely fair. Take care, darling, and
I’ll see you Friday night.”
“See you then. And have fun for the rest of the day!”
“Don’t worry, darling,
I intend to.”
She sat for a while
after ending the call, smiling to herself. It had been good to tell Saskia, and her friend’s
bracing habit of cutting to the chase had clarified and confirmed her own thoughts. She checked her laptop. No response from Bill, and of course she wasn’t
expecting anything yet. It was hard to put
a lid on her sense of urgency, her yearning to contact her father, but she knew she had to contain herself for a little longer. Meanwhile, she needed something vigorous
to absorb her energies, and suddenly she knew the very thing.
Jenna turned the computer off, picked up her phone again,
and dialled. “Hi, Ruth. Listen, would it be OK if I borrowed Sammy for
a while? I really fancy a good long bracing walk.”
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