The Apple Tart of Hope (18 page)

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Authors: Sarah Moore Fitzgerald

BOOK: The Apple Tart of Hope
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“I'm a different man. The man you met was in a terrible place. Thankfully, not anymore. I have your friend Oscar to thank for helping me turn things around, and you too, Meg.”

Barney said that the apple tart had been like a magic thing.

“People often ignore the misfortune of others, you see. The world is a heartless place but it's not always because they don't care. It's sometimes because they are embarrassed, or because they don't know what to say, or because they simply cannot bear to look into the eyes of someone who is suffering.

“Your Oscar had invented his own quite perfect response to people's troubles. As soon as he came across misfortune, he'd knuckle down to the only task that made sense to him at the time. He'd make one of those magnificent apple tarts.”

For a few nights in a row, it seemed as if Barney could always be relied on. In the dead of night, he'd sit patiently on the bollard, with everything around him silent and hard to see apart from the orange glow of his permanently burning cigarette.

“Hello again, my dear,” said Barney, and again it was as if we were meeting each other at a normal time in a normal place, not in the dead of night at the pier.

He told me he'd done a lot of things in his life but that recently
someone had said that he was a good listener, and he'd realized that this was the thing he was probably most proud of now. Listening, he said, may be the most important skill you'll ever learn.

And it was true. He was really good at letting me finish whatever I started to say. Never asking stupid questions, but always encouraging me to go to the end of each story. Half a story is no good to anyone. And I don't know why, but explaining things to him helped me to understand them myself.

I told him about The Ratio, which was something that Paloma had tried to explain to me.

“It's the reason why people like Andy Fewer always get the girl with the perfect skin and the chocolate brown eyes and the hair like golden silk.”

“Do you know what kind of a person she is?”

“Not really, I guess. I only know some things about her, but from what I do know, I think she's horrible. A horrible person with the face of an angel.”

A little bundle of sticks and a log were bunched beside the bollard tonight, and on the other side, a purply suitcase sat scarred and pocked with age, a metal clasp glinting at its seam. Otherwise everything was pretty much the same as usual.

He rubbed his hands together and leaned over.

“You look as if you could do with some warmth,” he said, opening the suitcase and unfolding a huge green blanket with one graceful gesture.

“Here, put this around you.”

He lit a match under the nest of sticks. They crackled and popped for a second and then a great whoosh of light billowed into being. A seagull shrieked above one of the fishing boats and the wind made soft puckers on the surface of the sea.

My face got warmer by the fire and the blanket that had looked so
light when he had tossed it across to me felt heavy around my body, pressing on my shoulders and my arms with its comforting weight, keeping me firmly planted on the spot.

“Meg, my dear” he said. “Is the loss of your dear friend weighing on you?”

“It's tormenting me,” I replied. “In fact, I think it may be driving me mad. I came back because I was determined to find him. I came home refusing to believe what everyone else seemed to take for granted from the start. I've been searching for him, Barney, even when I don't mean to. I've been looking for his face in crowds, in corners, in places where he might have gone. I started my searching with so much hope, so much confidence, so much certainty, but my hope is running out now and I've almost forgotten what Oscar's face even looks like.”

“That would be a tragedy indeed,” Barney replied.

“Do you think I am missing anything?” I asked him, then, because he seemed so wise and so clever.

“Hmm,” he said, “I'm not sure, but sometimes I sense things down here that could provide us with some kind of clue.”

“What do you mean?”

“I get hints wafting up from the sea.”

“Do you really?”

“Yes,” he said, “things like grief, great loss and worry. Humiliation and guilt. And friendship and love and disappointment.”

“Barney, do you have any idea what happened to him?”

“I can't answer that question but I will tell you a couple of things that I know.”

I thought he was going to give me some information, something to go on, some lead to follow, but what he said was this:

“Nothing is as you think it is. Lots of things are not what they appear to be. Sometimes things look a certain way, but perhaps they are not.
Sometimes people need you to keep searching for them, or at least asking questions on their behalf. And very often, people have been silenced and they need other people to speak for them. It's when you stop searching and asking and speaking that they really will be lost. Don't give up, Meg.”

“So you think he might be alive?”

“It's not what I think that matters,” he said. He was being annoyingly cryptic, but it was good to talk to him and all of a sudden I found myself telling Barney about the letter.

“I wrote him a letter, telling him I basically loved him, but I've found out that Paloma switched it for a horrible letter that she wrote herself.”

“Eh, Sorry? Excuse me? What did you say?”

I was in the middle of explaining it to Barney again—repeating how Paloma'd written a note and pretended it was from me. He was old and it seemed to me as if he might not have heard the first time.

“You loved him?” asked Barney. “You loved Oscar? Not just as a friend, but in the ancient way? The way that girls have loved boys for as long as there have been girls and boys?”

“Yes, what did you think?”

“And Paloma did
what
with your letter?”

I told him again.

“That venomous little vixen.”

I told him I couldn't have come up with a better insult than that. And then he was struggling to his feet, putting out the fire and wrapping up his blanket, and suddenly he seemed to be in a terrible hurry.

“Dear me, Meg, I've remembered something. I need to be going, thank you I mean, good-bye, I mean, I must get back home, straightaway, I do apologize.”

And before I could say another word, Barney was gone.

the last slice

Barney was restless. His nighttime wanderings were starting to worry me. It got so that he never seemed to be able to sleep at night without getting up and heading off on some mysterious ramble or other. He would sigh, looking into the fireplace, and he would say “deary me” under his breath and I would keep on baking, but I was beginning to think that a thousand apple tarts couldn't cure the thing that Barney had.

So this one night, I stayed awake patting Homer on the head and wishing Barney was back. I was glad when I heard the clank of the gate.

“OSCAR! OSCAR! OSCAR!” He shouted as if he had something quite urgent to tell me and I went to the door and I saw him struggling up the hill like a man on a serious mission. He was standing at the gate leaning over. I waited, and he kept on standing at the gate, and then he held on to the pillar. I decided to go in and put the kettle on because there were still two slices of my last tart waiting for us and what could be more agreeable in the middle of the night—as he would say himself.

But Barney didn't come to the door. I kept on making the tea and putting the last two slices of tart on Peggy's plates, which have little pictures of lighthouses and sunsets on them. And suddenly, then, I felt afraid. I sort of knew that Barney was not going to come in, and I knew that something had happened to him and I could not bear it. I could not bear to go out to him. I just wanted to keep on making the tea and setting everything up nicely, because maybe if I pretended that nothing had happened, maybe if I kept on going on as if everything was completely normal and as if Barney was fine, then everything would be.

But Barney didn't come.

By the time I got to him, he was lying on the grass and I said, “Barney, Barney, please get up,” but he couldn't. He could hardly even speak. He patted me on my head and I didn't know what to do. I asked him if he needed anything and he shook his head and all he'd say was, “My dear boy, it was a forgery!'

I'd no idea what he was talking about and thought he might be delirious or something so I said, “Don't try to talk, Barney, you're going to be fine.”

I knew that if he wasn't going to be fine then this would be my fault too and I began to be really sure that I was the kiss of death. I wished that I had power and I wished I was strong but I was useless and I was weak and I killed the people I loved with apple tarts and stupid actions and not being able to bear to look.

I ran out of Barney's house, down the lane and I stumbled and I fell and I hurt my arm and hand and face. When I got up again, I kept running, waving my arms and saying, “Help, help, please help me, it's Barney Brittle. I think he's dying. He needs a doctor. We need to get him to a hospital fast. Somebody. Please. Help.”

The ambulance men were really nice and they made Barney comfortable and they were patient, even though I asked them a lot of questions about what was wrong with Barney and whether he was going to be okay and whether or not it might have been bad for him to be eating quite as much apple tart as we'd been having recently. They said that they didn't quite know what was wrong, but that he was an old man and that even though he was impeccably dressed and obviously well-cared for, it was often hard to say how someone of his age might recover from an “episode” like the one he appeared to have had. They said poor Barney was a bit agitated and I wanted to sit beside him but they said that he needed specialist medical care.

“Dear boy!” he shouted again. “She never wrote that letter! She never wrote it. It was a forgery!” None of us knew what he was talking about and the more Barney tried to speak, the more urgently one of the nice ambulance people kept preparing something in a syringe, and then they plunged it into his arm and Barney's words melted into a low murmur and then he went to sleep altogether.

It was a relief to me on one hand, because I didn't want him to be distressed or disturbed or in pain, but the problem was that Barney breathing peacefully gave the two ambulance people a chance to focus on me.

“And who are you?” one of them asked me, to which I lied that I was Barney's grandson. They asked awkward questions then about the names of my parents and my siblings and whether I'd been staying with my grandfather alone and they were interested in lots of other things too. I wasn't going to get drawn into a discussion. I told them I was far too upset about Barney's health to be subjected to such an interrogation.

“Em, excuse me, but this is an ambulance. Can we please shift
the focus back to the sick person?” The two of them said, “Yes, of course,” but you could see they were looking at me suspiciously. I just stared very attentively at Barney, then, and inside my head, I begged him to be all right.

They allowed me to wait outside his room in the hospital and they promised they would let me in as soon as he was well enough to talk. I was totally delighted when I saw him next, because even though he was hooked up to monitors and tubes and stuff, he was cheerful and awake and he patted the bed and said I was to sit.

“Oscar,” he said, “things might be about to change for both of us.”

I said not to jump to any conclusions yet. This could be a small health hiccup and we could be back at the cottage before it got dark again.

He said possibly, but that we might have some explaining to do, and I knew he was right but I did my best not to think about it.

“I've been trying to tell you something—something you need to know. Your friend Meg—she wanted you to know that she was falling in
love
with you, and that's what she wrote in the letter, and that other . . . that so and so . . . that vixen of a girl, she ripped out those precious words from the envelope that Meg had put her letter in, and that, brat . . .” Barney began to cough and I had to give him some water even though I was starting to feel fairly numb, thinking about what he was telling me:

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