I love the weather here. It isn't a backdrop to what's really happening, it's the main event. Sometimes it runs through all four seasons in a day as if auditioning for a part in God's play. Confused tourists climb in and then out of their macs, take sweaters off, remark at the heat from the sun, then twenty minutes later rummage in rucksacks to find layers to cover up their goose bumps.
The water never grows warm here. It just doesn't. That makes wetsuits a great invention. We never had them when we were young and as children we would run into the sea, pull our arms into ourselves, shriek, dance in the waves, hopping from one frozen foot to the other. But what we always have is wind and already some windsurfers are about a hundred yards from the shore; their sails point upward, slashes of primary colours run across the white cloth like the brushstrokes on a child's painting.
It's an optimistic sky and I feel like an optimistic me. Thoughts chase around my head â Orla, Ella, Ed, a triumvirate of worries â but I don't hang on to them. Instead I enjoy the walk, one foot in front of the other, Murphy at my heels and the sea breeze buffing my cheeks.
As I turn the last corner I see Monica placing her briefcase and jacket into the boot of her car. I slow my steps to a dawdle. It's cowardly, I know, but I hope she might be in the driving seat and away before I am close enough for conversation.
Monica is one of those women who illuminates my own inadequacies. She is a successful and popular GP. She dresses beautifully: silk blouses and well-tailored suits. She does Pilates, she runs marathons, she plays tennis and golf. She is clear, crystal clear, about what she has and what she wants. She is organised. Her children never forget their lunch boxes or PE kit and homework is always completed on time. And she isn't confused about how to bring them up. She knows exactly what they need: love, guidance and opportunities. She doesn't drink more than one glass of wine in an evening, she limits coffee to two cups a day and she always chooses the low-fat muffin.
We have a long history together, beginning in primary school when I stood, brand new and alone, in my new red pinafore, pulling at the white, starched collar around my neck. It was noisy. Boys jostled and pushed into the queue. My tummy hurt and I didn't like the look of the school dinners â lumpy mashed potatoes, cabbage that made me shiver inside my skin and an enormous metal container of oily sardines.
I wanted to cry. Monica made room beside her on the bench. She patted the space and gestured for me to sit next to her. I felt gratitude swell up through my chest and empty on to my face in a grateful smile. Then she told me that my shoes needed cleaning and I should make sure I did it that evening. Perhaps I even needed new ones?
That's Monica. What she gives with one hand she takes away with the other.
I see that she isn't in any hurry this morning. In fact she's waiting for me. As I draw close she turns to me, smiling into the sun. âHi, Grace. Congratulations are in order, I hear.'
I shake my head. âHow come?'
âEuan tells me you have another commission?'
âOh, that.' I nod like I'm just remembering. âMargie Campbell.'
âYes, Margie.' She runs a hand over the lavender hedge. Murphy thinks she's about to pat him and moves in, his tail wagging. She pushes him aside and dead-heads the lavender with quick, deft strokes. âShe's a great one, Margie. Has a real sense of community. She likes to support local artists.' She looks up at me. âFor better or worse.'
âMmm. She does.' I smile straight back at her.
âTom's off school today. He was sick last night so he's upstairs in bed.' She opens her car door. âDon't let Euan forget about him.'
âI won't.'
âAnd if he perks up have Euan remind him that he hasn't done his piano practice.'
âOkay.' I open the gate and walk through it.
âAnd the window cleaner will be here around eleven. His money is on the kitchen counter.'
I wave back over my shoulder and walk around the side of their house. It's built of huge, solid bricks of grey granite that have silver- and gold-coloured seams running through. It's the type of stone that weathers well and the climbing roses complete the picture of an ideal country house.
I follow the winding path of stepping-stones to the bottom of the garden. Euan is an architect and he and I share a workspace. He designed it himself, soon after they moved back from London. The cabin is modern, built from Scandinavian pine, and is all soft angles. The roof is made from layers of cedar shingles that blend in with the surrounding trees and it's pitched at an angle allowing five huge Velux windows to draw light from the sky into the rooms. There are two rooms: one we work in and the other is a guest bedroom with double bed and en suite bathroom.
I can see Euan through the side window as I walk towards the door. He is working on a barn conversion for one of the local solicitors and is standing in front of his drawing board. He's wearing a T-shirt with
Not now I'm busy
written across the front of it, jeans and a pair of trainers.
I push open the door. Murphy barks and runs over to Euan, launching himself up on to his chest. Euan wrestles him back to the ground, rubbing his ears from side to side until Murphy barks again. Meanwhile Euan's dog Muffin has come over to me. She is also a Labrador, a gentler, calmer version of Murphy and she pushes a ragged slipper into my hand. I take it from her and throw it across the room. She runs for it and Murphy joins her, then they settle down into their dog bed in the corner, resting their heads on each other's back.
Euan is swinging his arms in circles like an athlete warming up. âGood walk over?'
I nod. âIt's the best sort of day out there. So Tom's not well?' I take off my jacket.
âTemperature, headache, up all night vomiting. What can I say?' He rubs both hands over his face. âHe's thirteen. I thought we were past all that.'
âWhat time did you start work?' I ask him.
âAbout six.' He sits down. âAny more calls from Orla?'
I shake my head. âI've been thinking on the walk over here. What's the worry?' I hang my jacket on the stand and look to him for confirmation. His face is noncommittal. âWhy would she want to rock any boats? What could she possibly have to gain?' I check the water level in the kettle then press the switch to on. âWhat motive could she have for digging up the past? I mean really?' I let out a breath. âCoffee?'
âPlease.'
âI don't think she'll ring again.' I look at him and he raises his eyebrows, waits. âBut if she does, I'm going to make it clear that I don't want to hear from her. We're grown-up women for God's sake. What's she going to do? Harass me? Stalk me? Shout our secret from the rooftops?' I stop ranting, sit down and look straight ahead. âYou know what? I think I overreacted.'
âWell . . .' Euan looks doubtful.
âNo, really, I do. She's probably embarrassed by the whole thing andâ'
He cuts in. âShe was never that easily embarrassed.'
âShe might have changed.'
âHave you? Have I?'
âChanged?' I think about it. âYes . . . and no.'
âDon't be fooled by her. You know what she's capable of.'
I think back to some of the lies she told and the people she hurt and I give an involuntary shiver. âDo you think she's intending to come back to the village?' I swallow the lump in my throat. âDo you think she's going to say something about Rose?'
âI don't know.' His face is concerned. âBut unless she's had a personality transplant, I think that anything is possible.'
It's not what I want to hear and I slump back in my seat. âSo what should I do?'
âAct friendly. Find out what she wants.'
âKeep your friends close and your enemies closer?'
âExactly.'
âYou really think she might be my enemy?'
âThink about it. Think about how she used to behave.'
I think about it. âShe wasn't all bad.'
âShe had you dancing to her tune.'
âNot always,' I say slowly. âSometimes it felt like a tug of war between the two ofâ'
The boards in the hall creak and we both look towards them. Somehow Tom has managed to come down the garden and through the door without either of us noticing. His feet are bare and he's scratching his crotch.
âGrace, I'm not well.'
âPoor you.' I give him a sympathetic look. âFeeling rotten still?'
âI'm a bit better.' He squints at me. âIt's too sunny outside.'
âSpoken like a true Scotsman! Do you want to sleep down here?'
âIs that okay, Dad? It's lonely in the house.'
âSure.' Euan claps him on the back and I walk him through to the bedroom. The bed is already made up and I pull back the covers.
âClimb in, laddie,' I say, adopting a nurse's jollity. âSleep is the best medicine.'
âIt's a shame this bed never gets used.' He throws himself on to it, grabs a pillow to hug. âWhenever we have guests they always sleep up at the house. I'm hoping Dad's going to let me have the cabin as a bachelor pad when I'm eighteen. There's enough light for him to work in the two rooms at the top of the house.' He opens one eye. âAnd you too, Grace. You see, I'll be needing my own space by then because I'll be coming in late and stuff like that.'
âYou might find Sarah trying to beat you to it, Tom. She has two years on you.'
âShe's not going to hang around at home. She'll be straight off to uni.' He gives a yawn. âMum gets on her nerves.'
âWell, being a mother isn't easy,' I say, tucking the covers around him. I think of Ella and an extra weight is added to my chest as I breathe in. âSometimes you can't do right for doing wrong.'
âI feel really hungry.'
âIt's a bit soon for food. I'll make you some lunch when you wake, I promise.'
âThanks, Grace. You're wicked.'
I stroke the top of his hair flat. His lashes are long and rest on the crest of his cheeks, freckles scatter across his nose and his mouth is wide and tilts upward in a permanent smile. He looks so much like Euan did at thirteen that it makes my heart ache.
I arrive home after the girls. They are in the living room. Ella is lying on her front on the sofa, her eyes closed, her face resting sideways on a textbook. One hand hangs down near the floor and reaches for Murphy as he pushes into the room ahead of me; the other is twisting her hair around her index finger. Daisy sits sideways in one of the easy chairs, her legs dangling over the end of the armrest, a science book on her lap, and when I come into the room she looks up at me.
âMum, did you know that a chemist called Antoine Lavoisier was guillotined during the French revolution and he told friends that he would keep blinking for as long as possible after being killed?' She looks back at the book. âHis last blink was fifteen seconds after decapitation.'
âAstonishing!' I smile. âPainful too, I should imagine.' I rub my hands together. âChanging the subject, girls! I thought this might be a good time for the three of us to have a chat.'
âSure.' Daisy closes her book.
âElla, can we have a chat?'
She lifts herself up on to one elbow and frowns up at me. âI'm doing some revision.'
âI see that.' I nod encouragement. âBut perhaps you could just leave it for five minutes or so. Could you?'
She gives a laboured sigh and hauls herself up into a sitting position. âIf this is about the state of my room then I'll tidy it up at the weekend. I don't need a whole lecture about it.'
âNo, it wasn't about that,' I say, sitting on the arm of the chair. âIt was more about boyfriends. You know, like you and Jamie and what your intentions might be.'
âOh, Jesus! You have to be kidding.' She stands up and folds her arms across her chest. She is wearing jeans that are frayed around her feet. Murphy puts out a paw to try to catch the threads dragging on the floor. âI'm not about to listen to you giving me advice on boys.'
âPlease, Ella.' I hold out my hands, palms upward. âPlease just hear me out.'
She laughs. It's a derisory snigger that sets my teeth on edge. âI bet you were a sweet little virgin until you were eighteen. What could you possibly have to tell us about boys?'
âI may have been a little backward at coming forward where boys were concerned but I'll have youâ' I bite my tongue and take a breath, remind myself that this isn't about me and I need to get past Ella's antipathy and reason with her. âThe point is, Ella, that you're growing up fast and . . .' I pause, try to find the right words.
âAnd?'
âAnd it isn't always a good idea to rush the process,' I say. âSometimes we want to be grown up before our time and that's when we might get into trouble.'
âWe? Who's we?' she snaps back.
âYou, Ella. You.' I stand up alongside her. It doesn't particularly help â she is after all taller than me â but it gives me the opportunity to pace. âI know that you don't want to be spoken to like this but the fact is that you are only fifteen.'
âSixteen on Saturday,' she points out. âWe're having a party, remember?'
âThe fact
is
,' I continue, my voice sharpening, âyou are
my
daughter living in
my
house and I would like you to behave like any decent girl should.'
Daisy shifts on her seat and starts to click her tongue on the roof of her mouth.