Authors: Janet Tanner
She hadn't known how to raise the subject with Sally again but now Sally had brought it up all by herself. It was as if Hugo's brush with death had unlocked the flood gates on twenty years of silence and now there was no way to stop it all pouring out. But still it made no sense, these tortured, disjointed fragments.
âSally â are you saying what I think you are saying?' Harriet asked. âThat Mum didn't die, any more than Greg Martin did?'
Sally's face contorted slightly. Then she gave an almost imperceptible nod. Harriet's heart was pounding so hard she could scarcely breathe.
âYou mean â she is alive?'
âNo â no. She's dead now.'
âBut she didn't die in the explosion?'
âNo.'
âAnd you knew it â you've known all these years? My God, did Dad know too?'
âNo.' Sally shook her head vehemently; she appeared close to tears. âHe doesn't know, Harriet, and he mustn't. That's what I've been so afraid he'd find out, ever since Greg Martin turned up and the investigators started probing. It's all going to come out now isn't it? Oh God, he is going to hate me so much â¦'
âWhy, Sally?' Harriet pressed her, though the pieces of the jigsaw were beginning to fit together to form a picture she was not at all sure she wanted to see. âWhy will he hate you?'
âBecause I knew she was alive and I didn't tell him. I let him think she was dead ⦠I kept it from him, Harriet. I kept it all to myself. Oh, I kidded myself it was for the best. That I was saving him â and you â a lot of pain. But it was pure selfishness really. I always thought Paula was the selfish one but in the end I was just as bad â worse. She was at least up front, honest, selfish, while I ⦠I was sneaky and underhanded. I cheated you all, Harriet, may God forgive me!'
She raised her glass to drink, found it empty, and tossed her head back with a small strangled sob. Harriet crossed to the drinks cabinet, fetched the bottle and refilled both Sally's glass and her own. She needed it â and would need more yet by the time this was over, if she was not much mistaken.
Sally was sitting on the very edge of one of the antique Sheraton chairs; Harriet fetched a pouffe and brought it over. She felt shaky yet oddly calm, like the eye of a storm.
âI think you had better tell me the truth, Sally, don't you?'
Sally's face was almost in repose now as if she had faced the worst and survived. After all these years the ice was broken â from here on in all she could do was explain and hope Harriet would understand. But whether she did or not, it was almost a relief to share the secret she had borne alone for so long. No more lies, no more deception â Harriet, at least, would know her for what she was.
âWhere do you want me to begin?' she asked.
Harriet sipped her drink, eyeing her steadily.
âAt the beginning.'
âVery well,' Sally acquiesced.
It was going to be a long night.
âI came over to New York as soon as the news broke,' Sally began. âHugo â your father â telephoned me. He was in a dreadful state. At first he simply said that Paula had been on holiday with Greg when the accident happened but I could tell he was beside himself. I threw a few things for Mark and myself in a suitcase and booked us on the first available flight. I was in a state of shock myself as you can imagine and all I could think of was getting to Hugo â and to you. Family solidarity was the most important thing â we needed to be together, giving one another support. Then when I arrived Hugo told me the whole story. Paula had been having an affaire with Greg â she told him about it the night before she left. Naturally, he went crazy. He threw her out there and then and told her he never wanted to see her again. She flew to Italy with Greg and the very next day they sailed from the marina in his yacht. Other people with boats there saw them go â alone. I already knew that much, of course. It had been in all the newspapers, along with reports of the explosion and as far as I was concerned at the time that was the whole story. Hugo was dreadfully upset, blaming himself, though that was quite ridiculous, and I agreed to stay in New York for a while at least to comfort him and to look after you.' She paused, looking at Harriet. âAt first that was honestly all it was. But then things began to get complicated. Because I fell in love.'
âWith Dad', Harriet said softly.
Sally nodded. âYes. I'd always thought him attractive, of course, and Paula a fool not to appreciate him. But in the aftermath of our grief we grew very close. He is a wonderful man, Harriet â but then I don't need to tell you that â and he was grief-stricken. Whether he turned to me because I reminded him a little of Paula, whether it was simply because I was there, or whether even then it was something more, I don't know. Things developed between us â too quickly, perhaps, but develop they did, and suddenly for the first time in my life I was not only deliriously happy with a man, but comfortable too.'
She paused, remembering the wonder she had felt when she had first realised Hugo returned her love. All her life she had felt inadequate, unworthy of love. Now, suddenly, here was a wonderful man who needed her. How long had it taken to reach this watershed? She did not know. But when the realisation came it had come suddenly, bowling her over with its intensity.
It had been late one night, she remembered. Hugo and she had been sitting in the garden together after the children were in bed when Hugo had suddenly buried his face in his hands, overcome by despair.
âWhere did I go wrong?' he had asked, and she had gone to him, putting her arms around him.
âYou didn't, Hugo. Believe me, it wasn't your fault,' she had comforted him. âPaula couldn't help herself. She was always the same â it was just the way she was.'
âBut she was a sick woman, Sally. I knew it and I should have got help for her.'
âHugo, don't torture yourself. I'm sure you did all you could.'
âI did what I thought was best.' She could feel his agony; it was almost tangible, running in waves through his body. âI thought I could make her love me but I couldn't. That was my greatest failure.'
âPaula wasn't capable of loving anyone,' Sally had said, stroking his hair. âShe was beautiful and vivacious, but she couldn't love.'
âShe loved Greg.'
âI don't think so.' Sally had felt she was drawing on some deep truth. â She was obsessed with him because she couldn't have him. Paula always wanted what she couldn't have.'
He had been silent for a moment, then he had turned his head into her breast like a child.
âOh, why couldn't she have been more like you, Sally?' It was a cry from the heart.
Sally had felt something sharp and sweet twist within her. For a long time they had remained motionless, she the comforter, he the soul in torment. Then, almost imperceptibly, the tiny shudders of awareness had begun. At first she had tried to suppress them, telling herself it was wrong to lust after her bereaved brother-in-law. But then as his head moved against her breast and his hand moved tentatively across her back she realised with something like wonder that she was not alone in these new stirrings. She pressed closer, all else forgotten in the sudden exultant joy in his nearness. He lifted his head from her breast and she slid down so that they were looking at one another, looking, just looking, their very souls naked in their eyes.
Even now, across the years, she remembered that moment so clearly â the scent of the roses hanging in the still-hot air, the muted sounds of the city, and Hugo, looking at her as no one had ever looked at her before.
âOh Sally.' He sighed, a deep shuddering sigh and then his arms were around her, his lips on hers. â Oh Sally, Sally, Sally â¦'
Their need was born of deep unsatisfied longings, they drew together like children of the storm and found a completeness neither had known existed. There in the garden, isolated on their island of grief and despair, a new love was born, and the heights and depths were all there at once so that it was potent and totally overwhelming. Without a word spoken they staggered into the house and up the stairs.
There was nothing of Paula in the bedroom. How could there have been? It had been Hugo's alone for so long. But even if there had been Sally did not believe it would have made any difference. She loved him too desperately. Since Stuart there had been no one â she had not wanted anyone. Now there was Hugo and it was so wonderful that momentarily it blotted out all else from her mind.
Later, when she lay in his arms, she had begun to be afraid. Would he despise her? Had she provided him with simple release? But no. She was amazed and delighted to find that instead he treated her in the same courtly way he had treated Paula and which she had so envied. The total adoration was missing, of course. It was too early yet for that and perhaps that had been a blind, once-in-a-lifetime thing. There were still the times when she saw him staring into space with pain in his eyes but now there was no despair â that seemed to have gone â and she took pride and joy in feeling that it was she who had exorcised it.
As the weeks passed they had grown ever closer. Across the years the glow she had felt then warmed her and she wrapped her hands around her knees, remembering. Oh, it had been so wonderful â love and happiness and security all rolled into one. And she had basked in the security of love that transcended anything she had ever known before â the love of a man who would never let her down.
âSally?' Harriet's voice broke into her reverie and she looked up, a little bemused, as if coming back from a long way off.
âYes?'
âYou haven't told me what happened. I'm sorry, but I must know.'
âYes. Yes, I suppose you must. Well, as I say, I fell in love with your father and I thought he had fallen in love with me. We had to be discreet, of course, people would have said it was too soon, indecent, but it really wasn't like that. He didn't love Paula any the less, I knew that, nothing we shared detracted from his love for her. But she was dead and I was alive â and he needed me. The summer came to an end and it was time for me to come back to England â Mark had to start a new term at infant school. I was dreading it! But Hugo asked me to stay. ââI lost Paula, I couldn't bear to lose you too,'' he said. So of course I stayed. Well, why shouldn't I? Hugo wanted me to, and you wanted me to. You were very unsettled by Paula's disappearance though she had never paid that much attention to you; perhaps it was everyone else's distress that communicated itself to you. Anyway, I could calm you when no-one else could and I didn't want to leave you in the care of a succession of nannies, especially if your father sank into the depths of depression again. And Mark â well, it was good for Mark too. It hadn't been easy bringing him up all alone with precious little money â there had been baby minders and day nurseries and later on he would either become a latch-key kid or have to go without all the little luxuries my wages could buy â and heaven knows, they were few enough! Here in the States he could enjoy all the benefits of an affluent home. And me? Well, as I already said, I was happier than I'd ever been in my life. Everything in the garden was rosy, you might say. And then came the bombshell.'
âWhat?' Harriet asked. Her chest felt tight, she could scarcely breathe.
âA letter came â from Italy. It was addressed to your father but he was away, doing a trunk show, so I opened it. To this day I don't know why I did it â I'm not in the habit of opening other people's mail. But some sixth sense told me it was important. Do you know I felt physically sick as I opened that letter â as if I knew the bottom was about to drop out of my world.'
âWas it from Mum?' Harriet asked.
âNo â oh no. I'd have known her writing. No, it was from a Sister Maria Theresa. Strange, isn't it? That name is imprinted on my heart. I'll never forget it. Sister Maria Theresa.'
âWho was Sister Maria Theresa?'
âA nun. She belonged to an order who ran a small hospital on a tiny island off Sicily. A very special sort of hospital, as a matter of fact.'
âAnd â¦?'
âThe letter said that Paula was there. Not dead at all. Alive.' She broke off. Her eyes had gone far away again, as if she were seeing it again for the very first time, that letter that had spelled the end of her new-found happiness.
It hadn't been that simple, of course. There had been the first flood of joy that her sister was alive, together with something close to disbelief. But then realisation had dawned and with it a sinking feeling inside that she was ashamed of but could not stifle. If Paula was alive then Hugo was not free at all. Not legally and not emotionally either. Sally knew with a sick heart that whatever they had become to each other she could never compete with Paula. All the experiences of her youth had taught her she had never been anything but second best. No one had ever favoured her. Hugo, adoring Paula as he did, most certainly would not. She shivered now as she had shivered then, seeing her dreams crumbling to ashes, hating herself for the selfishness of her emotions and not being able to do a thing about it.
âSally?' Harriet's voice recalled her again. âWhat are you saying? That Mum had been injured in the explosion and was being cared for by nuns?'
âNot injured, no. There was no mention of anything like that.'
âThen what was she doing in hospital? And why didn't anyone know she was there? This was â how long after the accident? A couple of months? Surely these nuns would have reported it to the authorities?'
âIt seems not. They didn't know who she was.'
âBut the reports of the explosion must have been in all the newspapers.'
âThey didn't have newspapers. It's a very tiny island, remote and primitive, and they lived a totally isolated life.' Harriet shook her head in disbelief.