My Very Best Friend (53 page)

Read My Very Best Friend Online

Authors: Cathy Lamb

Tags: #Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Family Life, #Sagas, #General

BOOK: My Very Best Friend
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I couldn’t even imagine. Someone comes and rips your newborn baby out of your arms and you never see that baby again. Never. How do you live with that?

“Tell Legend I planned it with her in my mind the whole time.”

“I will. I promise I will.”

“Let’s go sit in the park before my memories kill me. They come back like that, they always have. That one awful time won’t leave my head. It’s an ongoing nightmare.”

I helped her out. We walked twenty feet, me carrying most of her weight, and sat on a bench by the rose garden in our pajamas. It was cold, and I ran back to the truck for the blankets and wrapped them around her. She was bones and skin now, bones and skin.

The park was almost finished. It would be one of the best parks in all of Scotland for children and families, at least that’s what we believed.

Bridget was shriveled and exhausted beneath her robe, her cheeks sunken, but she was smiling, and I felt her joy.

“It’s a beautiful park, Charlotte.” Her voice broke. “It has everything for children. They can be happy here. They can play and run and laugh. They can escape if they’re from homes that aren’t happy, like Toran and me. I would have loved a park exactly like this when I was a kid.”

I was an emotional wreck, trembling. “I will miss you. Bridget, I can’t tell you how much. I will miss everything about you. I can’t imagine my life without you. All these years. Since we were babies.”

“I’ll be here in the rose beds with you, my friend,” she whispered.

I burst into tears, and she hugged me.

“I’ll be walking with you down this path right here.”

My shoulders shook uncontrollably.

“I’ll be sitting by you, here, on this bench, listening to Toran and Pherson playing their bagpipes in the gazebo.”

I gasped for breath, my forehead to hers.

“I’ll be with you when you lie down on the grass and write your books.”

I kept crying . . . and crying . . .

“I’ll be with you when you watch the fountain with Toran.”

I tilted my head back to the black sky and moaned, my tears drowning me.

“I’ll watch your and Toran’s children play.”

Our children. Here. Without their aunt Bridget. She held me under the night sky, the stars a sprinkle of kisses, the moon a circle of white fire. Bridget comforting Charlotte when it should have been me comforting her.

My tears were a river sliding down my cheeks and onto Bridget’s, where they mixed together, two broken, sad rivers.

“And when you’re an old Scottish lady, Char, I’ll look out for you, and smile, as you watch your grandchildren playing in the castle.”

“I’ll miss you.” It was all I could manage, all I could do. Losing her was killing me. “I will miss you, Bridget.”

“I will miss you, too. Thank you for being my friend. Thank you for building this park. Thank you for helping me leave something behind, something beautiful. For Legend, for everyone. I love you, Charlotte.”

“I love you, too.”

I could hear the whistle of the train. It was on the tracks and headed straight for us.

 

I held Toran close to me that night after we made love.

“I feel like I’m dying of grief, Charlotte.”

“I feel the same. I can hardly breathe through it.”

We kissed, and held the kiss until we fell asleep, devastated.

Utterly devastated.

 

Pherson and Bridget sat on a bench in Toran’s backyard, hand in hand, their heads bent toward each other, black and white-blond, Bridget wrapped in blankets. Silver Cat sat right beside her.

I looked away when I saw Pherson swipe a hand across his eyes. I knew he was crying. Tough and rough Pherson, Toran’s best friend, another tough and rough man.

They were gentle on their women.

And Pherson was losing the woman who had been in his heart from the time we were kids.

Day by day, that’s all we had with Bridget.

Soon she would be gone.

Pherson would never be the same. He had told me he had not married because he had not found any woman he loved as much as he loved Bridget.

Bridget had been his soul mate, and they should have been together. It was there in their script. But the script never made it to completion. Someone shredded the script. Someone burned it. Someone decided his evil should wipe it away.

I felt another rush of rage for Angus Cruickshank.

Whoever killed him, if he was killed, had done everyone a favor.

Bridget kissed Pherson’s cheek, soft, so soft. She whispered something to him.

He would remember it forever.

I cried that night for Pherson.

For his total, forever loss.

Bridget wanted me to drive her to the top of the cliffs, so I bundled her up in blankets and took her up. I knew exactly where she wanted me to go.

Before we left, she dug in the brown box for letters that I hadn’t read yet and brought them with us.

I read them when we arrived, the ocean whipped up in the distance, wind blowing the trees like rubber bands.

 

April in 1975. I don’t know the date. Maybe the 25th?
 
Dear Charlotte,
My father and mum came to see me in London in my flat when I was done waitressing at a bar. Waitress. I waitress and I draw my pictures.
It is not a nice flat. I am having troubles with bad drugs. Arms hurt. And bad alcohol. Too much of everything, but the memories don’t go away. He’s forcing me, hurting me, wearing black and white, a choker on his neck, a choker on my neck, a choker . . .
Where is she now? How is she? How is my baby? Do you know?
It has been months since I talked to my mum and father. Toran is at Cambridge. Smart Toran. So smart. He doesn’t know it all.
My father said to me Sister Margaret told us what happened to you but he did not believe what she said. She had dementia Father Cruickshank told him later and tried to cook a live chicken in the oven and she danced naked outside and she lies but he said Bridget was Sister Margaret telling the truth?
Bridget was Father Cruickshank the father of the baby did he hurt you and I said yes and he started to cry and cry but I did not comfort him because he put me in that home said I was a slut and a whore like his mum and he took my baby away from me then he sent me to live with people who scream at voices and knock their heads into walls and rock back and forth for that long and I also had straps on me and shots there too.
And he said why didn’t you tell me and I said you would never have believed me you didn’t even believe Sister Margaret you would have believed Father Cruickshank because you love the church more than you love your family and Father Cruickshank said he would kill Toran if I told and my father he put his head in his hands and cried and cried again.
Legend she would be two years old. Two. My girl. I will never see my girl again because of this crying father this stupid man who shrieks Bible verses.
My mum cried, too. Bridget she kept saying I am sorry sorry sorry and I said it’s too late for you to be sorry why didn’t you help me Mum why didn’t you come get me why didn’t you save the baby why didn’t you get me out of the asylum and she said she couldn’t Dad wouldn’t let her and I said why do you only do what Dad says why didn’t you help me your daughter?
And she cried and rocked herself hands on her head. But I said to her now you cry Mum but where were you for me for your daughter? What happened to your granddaughter? I was not a whore or a slut and you believe the priest and your husband who is mean to you.
And I say go home crying father. You took my baby from me and you believe Father Cruickshank that I had sex with other boys and it was him who forced me to for a long time. Blood on me. Choked me. You get out now and take your cross with you and your Bible and don’t you quote scripture here where was God in my life? Where was he?
So my father he says he’s sorry he has never said he’s sorry and I say it’s too late because it is and then gets up and tries to hug me but I pick up a pan and I hit him on his shoulder and then his shoulders sag like they have the weight of potatoes on him. I hit him again and again. Then I’m sad I hit my father.
I might love my mother a little because she tried when she wasn’t drunk but why was she drunk? Drunk mum means she couldn’t be a mum. I told her that she said sorry sorry sorry, I love you. She tried to hug me and I said get out and never come back never talk to me again never come here and outside the flat I heard them fighting and my mum said I knew it she was not a whore look what you did to her Carney and I want a divorce and my dad said I didn’t know and there will be no divorce and they are crying both of them.
They should have helped their crying daughter.
Bridget
 
May 12, 1975
 
Charlotte,
I told Toran everything, finally. He cried. I’ve never seen him so furious in my entire life. If Father Angus Cruickshank had been here, he would have killed him with his bare hands, I know he would. He hugged me and told me he loved me and said that Father Cruickshank would never hurt me again.
Love you.
Bridget
June 5, 1975
 
Charlotte,
Father Angus Cruickshank has disappeared. Gone. My mother wrote me a letter and told me and said come home Bridget we want you to live with us everything will be different and even my father wrote me a letter and said come home I’m sorry I made a mistake I love you, daughter.
I wonder if that priest is dead. I hope someone killed him. I would have if I could have.
I wonder if my father did it or my mum or both of them. I cannot imagine them killing a priest. The Catholic Church is what my father lived for. He would believe he was going to hell.
But he knew the truth about Father Cruickshank when he left my flat. He knew.
My mother called me. I told her not to call me again. When my father called I said don’t call me again ever I hate you both. I hung up.
Bridget
 
June 18, 1975
 
Charlotte,
My parents are dead. Toran came and told me.
They died when their car flew off the cliff outside of St. Ambrose. You know the cliff, the one on the very top. The part where it is completely straight. No curves, not a one. It was sunny. Dry. Not cold.
They are gone.
I hate them, I love them, I hate them, I love them.
I caused their accident. They were upset about me, about what Father Cruickshank did to me. I know it.
I think my father drove the car over the cliff on purpose. His favorite priest raped his daughter and he believed the priest’s lies. He took his daughter’s baby away from her. He put his daughter in an insane asylum and called her a whore and a slut. Even Sister Margaret had told him but he hadn’t believed her. He had dinner with the priest, the rapist of his daughter.
He had loved the church and the church had failed him.
Everything was gone for him, then. His church, his priest, his faith, his daughter. My mother was threatening to divorce him and his son hated him.
All gone.
Off the cliff.
Love,
Bridget

 

When I was done we sat in silence in my truck, the ocean stretching out below. This was where Carney had lost control of his car. He and Bonnie had gone over the cliff and died.

“This was not your fault, Bridget.”

“I think it was.”

“How so?”

“I could have forgiven my father that day. Forgiven my mother. I didn’t.”

“I don’t think they deserved forgiveness, Bridget. Your father was a lousy, punitive, fanatical father even before you were raped. Your mother was a drunk. They didn’t protect you. They shuttled you off to a pregnant girls’ home, believed the lies a priest told them, condoned having the baby taken away, then allowed Cruickshank to stick you in an insane asylum when you wouldn’t stop screaming.”

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