Read Other People's Children Online
Authors: Joanna Trollope
âI'm going to ask him,' she said. âAsk him to stand up for me.'
The Huntleys' farmhouse rose redly out of the red Herefordshire earth as if it had, over the centuries, just slowly emerged from it. It was built on a slope, with carelessly arranged barns here and there beside it, and a stream between it and the lane over which Tim had laid a crude bridge made of old railway sleepers. As Becky crossed the bridge, two sheepdogs tethered with long, clattering lengths of chain just inside the entrance to the nearest barn raced forward, barking and leaping. They couldn't reach her by yards, but all the same, Becky kept to the far side of the bridge and made at speed for the gate into the little farm garden. She didn't like dogs.
The door to the house opened before she reached it. Mrs Huntley, whom she had never met, stood in the doorway and regarded her without smiling.
âWe wondered when you'd be coming.'
Becky swallowed. She put a hand, with its chipped blue-painted nails, up to her hair and pushed it off her face.
âI've been looking after Mum.'
Mrs Huntley surveyed her. She looked at her un-brushed hair and her jeans jacket and her long, grubby skirt and her unpolished boots. She said, as if making a concession, âYou'd better come in.' Becky followed her. The kitchen was low and small and shabby and clean. On a plastic-covered table by the window were several egg boxes holding weirdly sprouting seed potatoes, and, to one side of them, sat Tim Huntley, in his stockinged feet, eating something from a steaming plate. He gave Becky the merest glance and indicated the chair opposite him.
âSit down.'
Becky sat. She folded her blue nails out of sight and put her fists in her lap. Mrs Huntley poured a cup of tea from a pot on the range and put it on the table within Becky's reach. Becky didn't drink tea, hadn't ever, really, had recently made a point of not drinking it, out of defiance.
âThanks,' she said.
âWell,' Tim said. âWhat have you got to tell us?'
Becky looked at her tea. She would have liked something to hold, but she wasn't sure her hand was steady enough to expose to the Huntleys' gaze, lifting a cup. She said, âI â I don't know what happened.'
Mrs Huntley said, âWhat did your mother say?'
Becky hesitated. Nadine had been unable to tell her exactly but had done a good deal of hinting. She'd been wildly upset, she said, at hearing of Becky's running away and then outraged at Matthew's refusal to let her come â¦
âHe didn't,' Becky said wearily.
âHe did, he did, he forbade me!'
⦠and then Tim had brought her a lamb and she thought she could cope and then she heard about Becky and panicked and rang Tim and he came and she was hysterical and then he slapped her and lugged her upstairs to bed and then â¦
âWhat?' Becky said.
âI can't tell you.'
âDid he try anything? Did he start mucking you about?'
âI don't know,' Nadine said, âI can't remember, I just know he scared me, he was rough, I didn't know what was going to happen.'
Becky looked away now from both Tim's and Mrs Huntley's gaze.
âShe â she's not very clear.'
Tim snorted.
âWe don't want any nonsense,' Mrs Huntley said. âWe don't mind looking after her, a bit of food and that, but we don't want any trouble.'
âI came,' Becky said, loudly before her courage went, âto thank you for that, to thank you for getting the doctor.'
Tim shrugged.
âShe was hysterical.'
Becky said nothing.
He put a mouthful in, chewed a while and then said, âShe was on the floor when I got there and when I tried to get her up, she went for me. So I slapped her. Slapped
her to shut her up.' He took a swallow of tea. âThen I took her upstairs. She was screaming all the way.' He gave Becky a level look. âI put her on the bed. Then I went down and rang the doctor.'
Becky looked at her cup of tea. It was thick, milky brown. She said, âShe's better now.'
âGlad to hear it.'
Mrs Huntley said, âDid she ring you?'
âYesâ'
âWho brought you? We saw a car, a red carâ'
Becky hesitated.
âMy â stepmother.'
âThat was good of her,' Mrs Huntley said.
Becky nodded. It had been good of her. It had also been deeply disconcerting, not so much the journey itself with the disquieting forced intimacy of being alone in a car together, but more when they got there and Josie had offered to come into the cottage with her.
âNo,' she'd said. âNo, it's OK.'
âButâ'
âI'll come out,' Becky said. âI'll come out if there's anythingâ'
Josie had looked up at her, out of the car window.
âI'll wait here.'
Becky had nodded. She'd put her hand on the cottage's lopsided, rickety garden gate, and for a moment, had felt she could go no further. She stood there, head bent, looking at her hand on the gate and fighting, with every ounce of strength she possessed, the urge to turn round and say to Josie, âCome with me, please come.'
She'd won. It had taken her some time, but she'd won. She'd gone up the path to the cottage's back door and in through the kitchen and up the stairs, step after step, to find Nadine lying in bed with her eyes closed. It was only then that she'd screamed, it was only then that she'd allowed herself to admit that she'd found what she dreaded to find, Nadine dead in bed because Becky hadn't got to her quickly enough, because Becky was living somewhere else instead of here in the cottage, because Nadine now knew that somewhere deep in Becky a weary disbelief was beginning to stir about all the things Nadine said had happened, all the things Nadine accused other people of doing and saying, in order to hurt and undermine her.
After that, it was awful. Nadine opened her eyes and said something but Becky couldn't stop screaming and her screaming brought Josie running in from the car and at the sight of Josie, Nadine just went ballistic and there was a horrible brawling scuffle that made Becky so sickened, so ashamed that she'd gone from screaming to utter silence in a second. Josie had managed, at last, to free herself, and Becky had followed her, despite Nadine's demands and pleadings to her not to. They'd stood, shaking, by the car.
âYou'd better come back with me,' Josie said.
Becky shook her head. She mumbled something.
âWhat?'
âI can't.'
âLook,' Josie said. She was leaning against the car as if she couldn't quite stand up without its help. âI know
any remark I make will sound to you like a criticism of your mother, but will you be safe?'
âOh yes,' Becky said. She turned her face away. âShe's â she's never done anything like that before.' She put a hand up and tugged at a strand of hair.
âI can't leave you here like this, alone with her. I must get a doctor or something.'
âOK,' Becky said. Her shoulders slumped a little.
âIt's Saturday tomorrow. Maybe Dad could comeâ' She stopped.
âI'll ring,' Becky said. âI'll ring and tell you.'
âI'll go and get you some foodâ'
âNo.'
âWhy not.'
âShe wouldn't eat it,' Becky said. âNot ifâ' She paused and then she said, âWe've got good neighbours.'
Josie stood upright, slowly.
âBut you'll let me get a doctor?'
âYes,' Becky said.
She'd stood in the road, watching Josie drive away. She drove very slowly as if shock and anxiety made it almost impossible for her to let the car go forward. When she was at last out of sight, round a bend in the lane, Becky turned and went back into the cottage. Nadine was standing by the kitchen table, her hands folded in front of her.
She said, very clearly, as if she'd been planning it, âI'm very sorry.'
Becky said nothing. She went past Nadine to the sink and leaned over it to open the window.
âAbout everything,' Nadine said.
Becky breathed in the air coming in from outside.
âThere's a doctor coming.'
âI don't need one,' Nadine said. âI've seen the doctor. Tim got her for me. I've got anti-depressants and some sleeping pills. I'd taken some of them before you came.'
âTypicalâ'
âWhat is?'
Becky turned round. âTo ring me and then take sleeping pills which are meant for the night anyway.'
Nadine stared at her.
âI said I was sorry. I am. I'm very sorry.'
âI don't care,' Becky said.
She moved over to the refrigerator and opened the door. Inside were a few things in brown paper bags, a cracked egg on a saucer and a carton of long-life apple juice.
âWhat are you going to do?' Nadine said.
Becky slammed the refrigerator door shut again.
âI haven't decided.'
âWill you stay?' Nadine said. Her voice had an edge of real anxiety. âWill you stay and keep me company?'
Becky glanced at her. She touched the breast pocket of her denim jacket and let her hand linger there for a moment. On the journey, Josie had stopped for petrol, and when she got back into the car, after paying, she'd handed Becky a packet of Marlboro Lights. She hadn't said anything. Nor had Becky.
âI'm going out,' Becky said.
âWhere?'
âI don't know. A walk maybe.'
âWill you be long?'
âNo,' Becky said.
âI need to talk to you,' Nadine said. âWe need to talk all this through.'
âSorry,' Becky said. She went across the kitchen to the door to the outside. âI'll stay till you're better. I said I would. But I didn't say I'd talk.'
âYou've been here a week,' Mrs Huntley said now.
âI know.'
âWhat about your schooling?'
âIt was the end of term today. Anyway, I'd been off schoolâ'
Tim Huntley dropped a wedge of bread on to his cleared plate and began to push it round with the fork.
âWhat about your dad lending a hand with all this?'
âHe can't.'
âWhy not?'
Becky looked straight at him. âShe wouldn't let him.'
He put the wedge of bread in his mouth. âSo it's down to you?'
Becky shrugged. She stood up, holding the edge of the table.
âThat's not right,' Mrs Huntley said. She looked at Becky. âYou've got your schooling to think of.'
âI'd better be getting back,' Becky said.
Tim Huntley stood, too.
âGive us a call. Any time.'
âThanks,' Becky said.
She went out of the farmhouse, while they watched her, and then, at a safe distance, past the barking dogs and over the sleeper bridge to the road. The stream was full â late-winter rains coming off the mountains, the postman had said â and was really running, and the hawthorn hedge was frosted with bright-green leaves, each one neatly cut out, as if with embroidery scissors. Becky took her cigarettes out of her pocket and put one in her mouth. It was the last but one in the pack that Josie had given her a week ago. She paused, in her tramp down the lane, to light up, and then walked on, heavily in her boots, blowing blue smoke into the clear air above the stream and the hawthorn hedge.
Nadine was sitting on the grass in the cottage garden, under a three-quarters-dead apple tree. She had her glasses on, and, in her lap, a pile of âTeach Yourself Greek' books she'd found in the local junk shop. She looked up as Becky came in through the gate.
âHow was that?'
âOK,' Becky said.
âAre you going to tell me about it?'
âThere's nothing to tell,' Becky said. She leaned against the apple tree. âTim was eating and they asked how you were.'
Nadine took her glasses off.
âI'm fine.'
âFor now,' Becky said. She put her hand on her jacket pocket. One left. Save it for later. She slid down the tree and sat with her back against it, holding her knees.
âNo, I really will be fine now. I will. I promise. Summer's comingâ'
âYou shouldn't live alone,' Becky said.
âWhat?'
âYou heard me. You shouldn't live alone. You can't cope.'
Nadine turned on her a gaze full of distress. âOh Beckyâ'
âYou can't,' Becky said. She looked up at the sky, through the apple tree's black, gnarled branches. âAndâ' She stopped.
âAnd what?' Nadine said, her voice sharp with apprehension.
âAnd,' Becky said, her gaze still on the sky, âI can't live with you any more. Not permanently. I can't cope with you either.'
âI haven't got it,' Matthew said.
Josie turned. He leaned in the kitchen doorway, still in his jacket and tie from work, but the tie was crooked and loosened.
âThey made me a long speech,' Matthew said. âOne of those speeches where you know they hope you won't spot that the truth is the last thing they're going to tell you.'
He came slowly forward into the room, pulled a chair out from the table and sat down. Josie pushed another chair next to him and slipped into it. She took his nearest hand.
âOh Matt.'
âThey said that, although I had all the required experience and qualifications, they felt that because of my family circumstances this wasn't a good moment in my life for me to take on extra responsibility. They said that kind of thing several times over in various ways until I felt so dysfunctional by implication I could hardly sit up. The injustice of itâ'
âI know.'
âI don't mean the injustice of not giving me the job, I mean the other injustice, the weaselly insinuation that my family circumstances are too much for me now when they used to be far,
far
worse. And the cowardice of not being able to tell me I'm just not good enough.'