Will You Remember Me? (4 page)

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Authors: Amanda Prowse

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Contemporary, #Contemporary Fiction, #Literary

BOOK: Will You Remember Me?
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With Peg content to roll up and down the hallway, oblivious to the irritating rattle of her wheels, and Max diligently counting all his new dinosaurs back into the box from which they had spilled, the three adults sat and sipped at strong tea. The remnants of fried egg sandwiches and sloshes of ketchup littered the plates on the coffee table in front of them.

‘When’s Danny back then, Jo?’ Martin missed his friend and football buddy.

‘Ten weeks tomorrow. I can’t wait.’ Jo beamed.

‘It’ll be good to see him.’ Martin nodded.

‘He’s had enough, Mart. To be honest, I don’t think he’s had the best tour and what with all these cuts, he knows he’ll be turned around quite quickly and back out again, somewhere. He’s seriously thinking of signing off.’

‘Sounds familiar.’ Poppy sipped at her mug.

Martin sat forward, resting his elbows on his knees. ‘It’s because it’s tough now, Poppy: houses falling apart, too few of us stretched, posts gapped. And the jobs that need doing don’t disappear; it just means that with fewer people we all work harder and longer, so you don’t even have time to think. Danny and I won’t be the only ones thinking of jacking it in. It’s a shame, they’re losing good men, trained men, but still spending money on recruiting and trying to think of the next big thing. If only they were more efficient and a bit smarter, there’d be fewer people leaving and we’d keep the skills we need.’

‘I think people must be having this same conversation on every patch in the country,’ Jo said. ‘I was talking to some of our old neighbours up in Catterick and everyone is saying the same. Trouble is, there aren’t that many jobs once you get out, not now. It’s a bloody shame. I don’t want to move – I love my house. Neighbours are a bit of a handful though.’ She smiled.

‘That’s funny.’ Poppy sat up straight. ‘I feel exactly the same!’

The women were quiet for a second.

‘God, if you moved, I’d really miss you, I’d miss the kids.’

Poppy reached over and patted her mate’s leg. ‘And they’d miss you.’ She felt the familiar pang of guilt that Jo had not fulfilled her wish to become a mum when it had come so easily to her. ‘Mind you, even if we moved, we’d still see you.’

‘Yeah, but it wouldn’t be the same.’ Jo took a gulp of tea.

‘No, I know. But let’s not worry about that – you’ve got Danny back in ten weeks! That’s so exciting.’

‘Yep, you’re right. I wonder how much weight I can lose in ten weeks?’

‘Lots, if you stop scoffing biscuits and fried egg sandwiches!’ trilled Peg as she whizzed past the back of the sofa on her roller boots.

Poppy felt her face colour and tried not to notice as Martin’s shoulders shook. ‘More tea, anyone?’

‘I’m getting a new pet, Aunty Jo,’ Peg shouted from the hallway.

‘Are you? I thought Mummy said no?’ Jo looked quizzically at Poppy.

‘She did, but Daddy said YES!’ Peg shouted.

‘She’ll give me heart failure, that child, or at the very least send me grey.’ Poppy smiled.

Martin pulled a face. ‘In fairness, I was put on the spot a bit.’

Jo laughed and addressed Peg’s back as she scooted past. ‘So, what pet are you getting?’

‘A guinea pig – called Katniss!’

‘Piss piss!’ Max shouted from the rug.

Martin felt a new wave of giggles about to erupt. ‘Maybe not Katniss, Peg,’ he suggested. ‘I thought you wanted to call it Toffee?’

‘I did, that’s the name that me and Jade came up with, but I prefer Katniss now.’

‘Piss piss!’ Max shouted again, this time looking at his dad to see if it would get the same reaction.

‘I think we’re going to go with Toffee.’ Martin made the decision; he couldn’t have Max shouting that out every five minutes.

‘Shall we go today, Dad, and pick him up?’

‘Let’s do it tomorrow, Peg.’

‘Okay!’ she shouted as she thundered past and hit the front door. ‘Ouch!’

The three adults held their cups still and waited to hear if Peg would pick herself up.

‘I’m okay!’ she wheezed and stood up ready for another run.

‘How much is a guinea pig and all its gubbins going to cost me?’ Martin asked as if only just considering the cost.

‘A bloody fortune and it serves you right!’ Poppy laughed.

At bedtime Martin read Peg and Max
The Gruffalo
, complete with growly Gruffalo voice and squeaky mouse impression. Poppy had tried to do their favourite story justice during his absence, but knew that she didn’t come close. Well, as long as they were occupied…

She let the shower run and placed her hand under the warm water. Smiling in the mirror, she felt very lucky. They had been together for over half their lives and still the spark of excitement at the prospect of physical contact hadn’t waned. ‘You are one lucky girl, Poppy Day. Very, very lucky.’

‘Love and luck…’ She heard her nan saying her favourite expression, pictured the day she had teased her about getting serious with Martin Cricket. They were sitting opposite each other at the little table in the kitchen, her nan with a roll-up perched between her fingers and a cup of stewed tea in its saucer.

‘So, do you love him, Poppy Day? Does he make your tummy go flippy and your face all smoochy?’

‘No, Nan, yuk!’ she had shouted, although that was exactly how he made her fourteen-year-old self feel.

‘I thought you was best mates, you and Mart? And that’s no basis for a boyfriend! You’re supposed to argue like cat and dog, not be best mates! What kind of a future will that lead to?’ Dorothea winked at her granddaughter. ‘I’m teasing you, darlin’. I wish you both all the love and luck in the world.’

Poppy smiled into the cascade of water. ‘It’s been a lovely future, Nan. But you knew it would be, didn’t you?’

The hot water ran over her head and body. They had a big day tomorrow, a new addition to the family. She decided to try and feel pleased about the arrival of Toffee the guinea pig; after all, Peg was beside herself with happiness. Maybe she
would
take care of it herself; maybe Poppy wouldn’t be lumbered with mucking out a bloody guinea pig as well as everything else that fell under her remit in this house. She laughed. Fat chance.

‘Working nine till five…’ Poppy sang loudly as she worked the soap into bubbles between her palms.

Three

‘Wake up, everybody!’ Peg shouted as she jumped up and down on the landing. ‘It’s today! And we are going to get our new pet!’

Poppy yawned, put her head under the pillow and groaned. ‘This is all your fault,’ she mumbled. ‘You are the worst husband in the whole wide world.’

Martin reached across under the duvet and smacked her bottom. ‘That’s as maybe, fat arse, but I’m the best dad in the world!’

Poppy smiled into the mattress despite his insult. He probably was the best dad in the world, at least according to the very excited little girl who was running amok on the landing.

Martin jumped out of bed and fastened his dressing gown around his waist. As he opened the door, Peg jumped on him, knocking the wind out of him.

‘Blimey, Peg, you nearly pushed me over!’

‘I can’t help it, Dad. I am so excited!’

‘So I gathered. Look at you, all up and dressed.’ Martin kissed her cheek.

‘I’ve been ready for ages. Can we leave in a minute and get there when the shop opens?’

‘Sure we can. I’ll just have a quick shower and grab a cup of coffee. What time is it now?’

‘It’s nearly five o’clock!’ Peg announced.

Poppy raised her head from under the pillow and squinted at the digital clock on Martin’s bedside cabinet. Peg was right. Poppy laughed and pulled the duvet over her head, leaving the early morning excitement to the best dad in the whole wide world.

After much coaxing and a few tears, everyone went back to bed for an hour or two. So it was at a much more respectable 8 a.m. that the Cricket family gathered round the dining table for breakfast, with Radio 2 providing the background noise.

Poppy poured juice for Max while Peg shovelled Cheerios into her mouth. She was in too much of a rush to bother swallowing before loading up her spoon for re-entry and her cheeks bulged.

‘Peg,
you
look like a guinea pig. Eat nicely please,’ Poppy instructed between coffee sips.

Peg gulped her breakfast. ‘Can it just be Daddy and me that goes to get Toffee?’ She concentrated on stirring her cereal. This lack of eye contact was enough to alert Poppy.

‘I think we’ll all go, Peg. It’ll be nice for Maxy to see the animals.’

‘Max told me he didn’t want to go because he thought it might be boring,’ Peg mumbled with her mouth full.

‘Max said all that?’ Poppy looked at her daughter quizzically.

Peg nodded repeatedly.

‘Well, after he told you that, he told
me
that he didn’t want his big sister making up things that he had said just to get her own way.’

‘Diggerduck! One… two… three…’ Max shouted as if in confirmation. His words were a little confused, but there was nothing amiss with his counting.

Poppy watched Peg’s lip curl in dislike at her suggestion. She knew her daughter well enough to guess that if she was left to her own devices and under the very pliable watch of her dad, they would end up with a guinea pig, cat, dog, fish, goat and any other beast that Peg could persuade Martin she couldn’t live without. One look at their little forlorn and hopeful faces and Martin would willingly load them into the car, turning their three-bed terrace into a stinky petting zoo. Poppy was not about to let that happen.

Martin stood by the table holding the mail. His fingers stilled and his eyebrows knitted as he pondered an envelope that looked unfamiliar. It caught his eye, standing out among the pizza flyers, taxi leaflets, bank statements and sales literature for a stair lift.

‘This one’s for you, from…’ Martin lifted the envelope to his face and squinted at the postmark that sat in wiggly lines over a beautiful, tropical bird. ‘Looks like St Lucia! Who the bloody hell is writing to you from St Lucia?’ he quizzed.

‘What am I, psychic? How do I know? Open it!’ Poppy nodded at the flat blue letter in his palm.

Martin used the stubby end of his index finger to prise open the envelope, then teased out the thin sheet.

‘Come on, the suspense is killing me!’ Poppy gripped her mug with both hands and stood facing him.

Martin’s expression was solemn. ‘Jesus.’ He pulled a chair from the dining room table and lowered himself onto it. ‘This is a weird one, Pop.’

‘What is it?’ Poppy watched as a crease appeared on the top of his nose.

‘It’s from some bloke, says he got your address from Cheryl.’

‘What bloke? Who’s she been giving my address to?’ Poppy laughed a little nervously and pulled a face at Peg. If her mum was involved, it probably wasn’t anything she wanted to be part of.

Martin read the letter slowly, lowered the sheet of paper and then raised it again for a second read. He looked up at his wife. ‘He says he’s your uncle.’

‘Well, it’s obviously a mistake. I haven’t got an uncle. My nan’s sister Dee was married, so I suppose her husband was my uncle, but he died a long time ago and I never met him. They lived in Canada; she still does.’

Martin took a deep breath. ‘He says he’s your uncle; Uncle…’ He was silent again as his eyes scanned the words and he digested the information. ‘I don’t know what to make of it. He says Dorothea was his mum.’

Poppy snorted her laughter through her nose. ‘That’s ridiculous! It’s obviously some kind of wind-up. Don’t you think my mum would have mentioned that she had a brother! It’s a joke, or one of them “Please send me your bank account details and pin number so I can randomly give you some of my inheritance and I promise not to rob you, honest!” Just bin it, Mart.’

He gathered up the letter again and reread it one more time. ‘It doesn’t sound like a wind-up. He says his name is Simon and he’s only a bloody vicar!’

Poppy placed her coffee cup on the table and gripped the back of the chair. Her nan’s words flooded her brain with clarity. It was like watching a replay on a screen. She pictured the residential home in which her nan had lived, could see the bright light coming from the neon strip in the hallway, could smell the disinfectant that coated the shiny floor. Poppy had been tired that day: Martin was in Afghanistan and she had been about to leave for home. She’d bent forward and kissed her nan’s forehead.

‘Goodnight, Nan. Sweet dreams.’

Her nan’s voice had boomed against her back, urgent and deliberate. ‘Simon. His name was Simon.’

Simon. Simon. That was what she had said and Poppy remembered it like it was yesterday.

‘You all right, Poppy? You’ve gone really pale.’ Martin’s words drew her into the present.

Poppy slid onto the chair and let her shoulders slump.

‘This is so weird, Mart. Years ago, when she was in the home, Nan told me she’d had a baby and she said his name was Simon. I thought it was just her dementia talking, you know what it was like. She told me so many things, including that she’d played the violin with the band on the
Titanic
.’ Poppy smiled at that memory. ‘But I remember this clearly and it struck me at the time that she was quite with it. She definitely said his name was Simon. I remember… Simon.’

‘Bloody hell, Poppy. So you think he’s kosher?’

She nodded. ‘Yes. And I seem to remember her talking about St Lucia as well, but I can’t quite recall what she said. It’ll come to me.’

Poppy took the sheet of paper that Martin slid over the tabletop and there it was. She read the information and reread it. He had apparently tracked down her mum and written to her, and Cheryl had given him Poppy’s address as the best contact.
Bloody typical.
Her stomach flipped; she felt confused with a frisson of excitement at the idea of this new man in their lives. No matter how unrelated, she couldn’t help but think that if this Uncle Simon could track her down, then maybe so could her dad…

‘What am I supposed to do now?’ Poppy asked.

Martin shrugged. ‘You don’t have to do anything at all, but if I were you, I’d call him. It’s exciting, having family you didn’t know about – and in St Lucia! Fancy that! It’s in the Caribbean, isn’t it?’

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