Authors: Rosanna Ley
Tags: #Contemporary Fiction, #Contemporary, #Literature & Fiction
‘Great.’ Laura gave her a cheery wave. ‘Thanks, Vivien.’
*
The following day, the van was already parked outside Vivien and Tom’s when Vivien got back from work. She hadn’t told Tom about this afternoon – she knew he wouldn’t like it, and she knew the reasons too.
‘We won’t be so late tonight,’ Laura said as she handed over the basket. The love beads she was wearing swung from her neck.
Vivien looked down at Ruby. ‘That’s all right.’ She’d popped to the chemist’s earlier. She had formula, a spare bottle, some nappies, a changing mat and even a little pink sleep suit – though she wouldn’t tell Tom about that either. She
was only helping out, wasn’t she? Laura was Pearl’s daughter. No harm done.
There was no pushchair or pram so Vivien couldn’t take her out for a walk to the park as she’d like to. Instead, she set up a garden chair outside and laid Ruby on that, surrounded by cushions so that she couldn’t possibly roll over or fall off. It was good for babies to get some fresh air. And while Ruby was sleeping, Vivien did the gardening, looking over at her every now and then, pausing in her weeding or digging to smile at her, or check she was all right. She thought about doing some painting but decided not. She didn’t want too much of her attention to be taken away from the baby.
When she woke up for her next feed, although Vivien had the bottle ready to be warmed up for her, little Ruby didn’t start her screaming like she had before. Instead, she cooed and chuckled and waved her tiny fists around. She was enjoying the garden, Vivien realised. She could see the leaves moving in the breeze, hear the rustle and the sounds of the birds. The fact that she loved it made Vivien feel good too.
‘What, again?’ Tom said when he came back from work to find Vivien talking to Ruby as she did the ironing.
‘I don’t mind,’ Vivien said. ‘It’s nothing.’ Though it wasn’t nothing. Of course it wasn’t nothing.
Tom shot her a warning glance. ‘Don’t get too used to it, love,’ he said. ‘Don’t get too fond of her.’
‘Stop worrying. Look.’ And Vivien made Tom tickle Ruby’s palm with his little finger, until she grabbed and squeezed.
He laughed. Couldn’t believe how strong she was, he said.
This was how it would be, Vivien thought again. This was how it would be.
Tom looked at her. ‘Someone needs to worry though, love,’ he said. ‘I’m telling you. I know you want to. But don’t offer to look after her too often.’
‘I won’t.’ She was such a sweet baby – but quite a character, bless her, with that gummy smile and those lovely blue eyes. And it was so nice to just hold her and even for a moment to pretend …
She’d take Ruby to the post office if she had to. She’d help Laura out – whenever she needed it. Because of Pearl, because she felt sorry for her. And because …
Tom didn’t mind having the baby, Vivien knew that. He liked having her. But she knew why he was worrying. She’d come to terms with their childlessness – or at least he imagined she had. But Ruby was bringing it all back. How would Vivien feel when Laura left – as she would do one day in the not too distant future? How would she feel when Ruby was no longer around? And he was right to worry. She looked down at the sleeping baby. Because already, Vivien could hardly bear to think about it.
*
A few weeks later, Vivien woke up in the middle of the night to hear a hammering on the back door. ‘Oh, my Lord.’ She sat up. It was a noise loud enough to wake the dead.
But not Tom. ‘Tom.’ Gently, she shook his shoulder and tried to rouse him. But he was out for the count. He’d been working so hard.
Vivien checked the clock. It was actually only just past midnight. But the rain was lashing down like nobody’s business and the wind was blowing a gale. A summer storm, it must be. Had she imagined the knocking on the door?
No. It came again. Who on earth … ? Vivien glanced again at Tom. Still snoring like a wild boar. She got up and grabbed her dressing gown. Peered out of the window into the rain and the darkness to see who it might be. But she couldn’t make out a thing. And all she could hear was the pounding of the rain on the lean-to, the dripping from the roof and that wind howling. Was she in the middle of some kind of horror film?
Then a flash of lightning lit the sky and that’s when she saw it parked outside. The VW camper van.
Ruby.
Oh, my heavens.
She ran downstairs in her nightie. Ghastly scenarios fast-forwarded through her brain. She pushed them away again, dashed into the kitchen, switched on the light, unbolted the door and pulled it open. The breath was heaving inside her chest. Ruby …
Laura stood there like a ghost. She had on a long dress the colour of indigo, which was wet through and clinging to her slender frame. Over this she had flung a black crocheted shawl – which gave her about as much protection as a headscarf on a building site, Vivien reckoned. Her long hair was bedraggled, rain dripped down her face like teardrops. Her blue eyes were wide. ‘Vivien,’ she said. She just stood there in the rain. She sounded scared.
‘What is it, Laura? What’s happened?’ There was a growl
of thunder. ‘Is it Ruby?’ But Vivien had seen already that Laura was holding the basket, cradled in her arms this time, not like the way she had held it before. And she was holding something else tucked under one elbow – what looked like a shoebox.
Vivien pulled her inside out of the rain, helping to support the basket as she did so. She felt a jolt of fear and glanced down. ‘Is she all right?’ Even to her own ears, her voice sounded harsh.
Laura took just a step inside. She thrust the basket at Vivien. ‘Take her,’ she said. ‘Here. Just take her.’
Automatically, Vivien took the basket. She glanced down again, reassured by the sight of the baby’s sleeping face. Though how she could sleep through this racket … ‘What’s happened?’ she asked again. ‘Is it Julio? Is it—’
But already Laura was stumbling back through the door, crying now. ‘Look after her for me,’ she cried.
‘But, how long … ?’
She had gone. She was running in the pouring rain – down the path at the side of the house, splashing through the puddles. She pulled open the passenger door and jumped into the van.
‘Laura?’ Vivien stared after her. ‘Laura?’
The second she was inside, the van’s engine roared into life. And just as another spear of lightning illuminated the night, the psychedelic VW camper van pulled away and was gone. Just like that.
Well. Vivien glanced at Ruby. She seemed perfectly fine,
fast asleep still, blissfully unaware of the drama. Vivien rebolted the door and tiptoed back up the stairs, holding the basket carefully in front of her. In their room she took the wide drawer from the chest and emptied all their clothes out of it. She took a single sheet from the airing cupboard and methodically made up a little bed in the drawer. And all the time she was thinking. What had happened? What did Laura mean – look after her for me? When, exactly, was she intending to come back?
She lay awake for what seemed like hours listening to the baby’s breathing. And just as soon as she fell asleep – or so it seemed – she woke to the sound of Ruby’s whimpering. She got up, scooped her out of the drawer and took her downstairs to feed her. She didn’t want to wake Tom – not yet. Time enough for that.
It was too late though. Ten minutes later, as she sat in the rocking chair giving Ruby her milk, he was downstairs, standing in the doorway rubbing his eyes. He took in the sight of her and the baby. ‘What’s going on?’ he asked.
Vivien told him what had happened. ‘There was nothing I could do, Tom,’ she said. ‘She just disappeared into the night.’
‘And what’s this?’ Tom had picked up the shoebox from the kitchen table where Laura must have left it. What with everything else happening, Vivien hadn’t even noticed.
‘I don’t know,’ she said.
Slowly, Tom lifted the lid. ‘Photos,’ he said. He held them up to show her. ‘A little hat.’
Ruby’s bonnet. Vivien nodded. ‘Just some of her stuff then,’ she said.
‘And this.’ He held up a small piece of plastic. Vivien had seen them, didn’t know what they were called. You used them to play a guitar though, she knew that much. She thought of the guitar she’d seen in the camper van. Did Laura play? She guessed so.
‘And … ’ Tom held up a string of tiny beads. Love beads. Vivien had seen Laura wearing them more than once. ‘So why would she have left this stuff, for Christ’s sake?’ Tom sounded angry now.
‘Sssh.’ Ruby looked so peaceful; Vivien didn’t want her to be disturbed.
‘It looks like she’s not reckoning on coming back this time,’ Tom said. And with a dark look at her – as if it were her fault – he left the room and she heard him stomping back upstairs.
Not reckoning on coming back this time.
Vivien let the words sink in. What did that mean for her? What did that mean for her – and Ruby?
‘It was fortunate,’ Frances said, ‘that your mother – Vivien, that is – was around when Laura came back to Pride Bay. If not for her … ’ She let the words hang.
It certainly sounded that way. ‘Do you think Julio put Laura under pressure?’ Ruby asked. ‘Maybe he gave her an ultimatum. I want you but I’m not prepared to look after some other man’s baby – that sort of thing.’ Perhaps she was conveniently shifting the blame, but Ruby hated the idea of Laura just dumping her on Vivien whenever she felt she couldn’t cope. What sort of a mother did that? Even when she’d been through what Laura had been through.
What sort of a mother
… What would have happened – if Laura hadn’t come back to England? If Ruby had been brought up in Spain as her daughter? She simply couldn’t imagine. How different would she be?
‘Very probably.’ Frances shrugged. ‘You know what young men are like. A baby can cramp your style somewhat.’
Ruby thought of James. Would Frances class him as a young man? Probably not – he was in his late thirties. And yet he had never shown the slightest intention of settling down, wanting a wife, a baby, any of that. A baby would certainly
have cramped his style. He was far too busy with his London life and with his clients. As for Julio – he was probably only in his mid-twenties at the time. He was young and into freedom and a lifestyle that didn’t include responsibility. He probably just couldn’t wait to get the VW van back to sunnier climes. To roll his next spliff and have his next swim. And who could blame him?
‘At least Vivien wanted me,’ Ruby said. It sounded a bit pathetic but it was the most important thing, wasn’t it? To be wanted, to be loved.
‘Oh, she wanted you.’ Frances smiled. ‘She wanted you more than you’ll ever know. You were a gift to Vivien from some maternal goddess on high.’ She laughed. ‘You should have seen her. She was like a cat with the cream when she was looking after you.’
‘But why didn’t they tell me who I was and where I’d come from?’ Ruby asked again. That was what she still couldn’t get. ‘How come it was all such a big secret?’
‘They were protecting you,’ Frances said. ‘At least that’s what they thought.’
Because her birth mother hadn’t? That seemed to be the subtext. But things were never black and white. She’d learnt that through her work when she was investigating a subject for a feature. There were always shades of grey. You had to ask around – get other points of view. Not just hear one side of the story.
Ruby leaned forwards across the table. ‘Doesn’t everyone have the right to the truth, Frances?’
‘Perhaps.’ Frances had finished her meal and now laid her knife and fork on the plate in front of her. ‘Although it also depends on how many people get hurt along the way, doesn’t it, my dear?’
Did it? Ruby wasn’t so sure. Deceit usually led to distrust. Honesty might hurt but at least you could move forward and make your decisions in life with a clear sense of the facts.
After a while, Frances ordered coffee for them both.
‘I appreciate you coming here tonight and telling me the story.’ Ruby stirred her coffee and tasted it. It was strong and bitter.
‘Vivien talked to me a few months before the accident,’ Frances said thoughtfully. ‘It was on her mind. I’d come down for the weekend and we met up for coffee.’
‘What did she say?’ Ruby asked.
‘We talked about you. She said that if anything happened to her and that if you were ever to ask, I should tell you everything you needed to know.’ Frances sighed. ‘“What makes you think I’ll still be around when you’re not?” I asked her. “You might be, Fran,” she said. “Who knows what’s round the corner for any of us?”’
Ruby nodded. That was true enough.
‘But to be honest, Ruby,’ Frances continued, ‘I always believed she’d tell you herself one day. Whether Tom wanted her to or not.’
Perhaps she didn’t have the chance. Perhaps she had left it until it was just too late.
Ruby’s eyes filled. ‘I still have some more questions,’ she whispered.
‘Ask away. I’ll help if I can.’
‘What happened next?’ Vivien had looked after her friend’s daughter’s baby and then suddenly found herself wholly responsible for the child’s welfare. How had she felt? How had she justified bringing up that child as her own? There was so much more that Ruby still needed to understand.
Dorset, May 1978
After two weeks, Vivien and Ruby had got into a routine. Truth be told, with a complicit look, they slipped into it from the first. But now it felt established and real.
To start with, Vivien didn’t take time off work. She took Ruby in with her to the post office and spent her breaks feeding and changing her. Fortunately, Penny had been longing for a grandchild for the past few years and was delighted to have a little one around. Vivien told her Ruby was the daughter of a close friend; that the mother wasn’t at all well and that they were looking after her for a bit. ‘You’re meant to be a mother, love,’ Penny had said, giving her a sympathetic glance. ‘And she’s no trouble at all, bless her.’
Frances was the only one who knew the truth – Vivien had told her one afternoon when she popped by unexpectedly and found Vivien bathing the baby – the same baby she’d been feeding in the old chapel. ‘Oh, Viv,’ she’d said. ‘Take care.’ It was almost as if she’d known how it would be.