Authors: Cathy Kelly
to the bed, have Evie stroke her hair the way she had years
ago, and tell her everything. About Owen and what he’d
said, about how he’d made her feel: trapped, scared and
totally vulnerable. About how terrifying it had been when
he’d started to drag her clothes off and how he hadn’t
listened to her crying ‘no’.
But Cara couldn’t say the words. Lost in shock and the
terrifying newness of the situation, she was silent.
It was like swimming out of her depth, desperately
treading water and trying to grab a foothold but the
bottom was so far away she couldn’t roach it. Even talking about what had happened was beyond her.
‘I hope you don’t think you’re going to wander in here
every night smelling like a brewery,’ said Evie crossly, tired
after an evening that had included helping a fractious
eleven-year-old Rosie with her sums and trying to fit in
some envelope-stuffing overtime in between finishing off
the ironing. ‘It’s not on, you know, Cara. I expect you to
behave like an adult not some wild student type. Dad
expects me to look after you but I’m not going to if you’re
going to start drinking heavily.’
Cara stood silently, like a deer startled by a lorry’s
headlights, every nerve in her body poised to throw herself
into Evie’s arms and be comforted. She wanted to say that
she’d hated the taste of the Scotch, had hated the way it
burned her throat, and had hated the way it had tasted on
Owen’s breath when he’d forced his mouth against hers,
stubble grinding into her skin like a cheese grater. But she
couldn’t think about that now.
‘I’m going to bed, Evie,’ was all she said. ‘Sorry I’m late.’
She’d never told her sister about Owen Theal. She’d
wanted to but the guilt had stopped her. It was all her own
fault, she knew. Her fault for not knowing better. Zoe had
known better, but Cara had stupidly been so convinced she
was this clever, mature woman that she’d blundered into a
scary part of the grownup world and there was nobody
else to blame for it but herself
She couldn’t bear to have her sister blame her; she
wanted Evie to comfort her. She wanted Evie to know
instinctively that something had happened. Which was
madness. Evie never knew and, irrationally, Cara had not
been able to forgive her sister, her surrogate mother, for
not knowing. She’d never quite got over it and she never
forgot. Owen Theal haunted her as if he slept in her bed
every night as she went over it endlessly in her mind.
She wondered what would have happened if she’d
handled it differently. If she’d thrown his Scotch all over
him and told him he could shove his ‘you’re so talented’
speech where the sun didn’t shine. It way a bit like wanting
to turn back time after witnessing some awful accident.
Standing numbly by the road and thinking if only the van
driver had been looking properly, he’d have seen the cyclist
coming towards him. And if only the cyclist hadn’t
swerved to avoid that pothole, he wouldn’t be lying on the
road in a crumpled heap, limbs at odd angles …
If only. She thought that all the time. A mixture of if
only and why the bloody hell was she such a moron as to
fall for his patter, why hadn’t she given in to her instinct
and run, why had she let him get away with it? Zoe had
faced exactly the same scenario and she’d come through it
with flying colours. Caustic as ever, she’d told Theal what
she’d do to him if he ever laid a hand on her again.
And she’d even told him he’d better not think about
messing around with her grades as punishment. ‘I’ve
always got straight As in History of Art before,’ she’d
hissed. ‘I don’t want to find myself getting Ds because you
want your revenge, understand?’
A week afterwards, Zoe had asked Cara what was
wrong.
‘You’re totally different, you never wear your red lipstick
anymore. What’s the beef?’ she demanded.
Eventually, she’d wangled the story out of her and it was
only because Cara had begged her not to that she didn’t
run to the college head’s office immediately.
That bastard deserves to lose his job and end up in the
nick,’ she’d howled. ‘Please let me tell, Cara? He’ll only do
it to some other poor kid if you don’t.’
Terrified of having to explain what happened, she
refused.
The upshot was that they’d become best friends. They’d
laughed together, shopped together, got drunk together
and gone on holiday together, although they’d never shared
a flat because they both knew that Cara’s messy style of
living would have driven the precise and very tidy Zoe
stone mad. She was the only person who knew why Cara
was a disaster area when it came to men. Phoebe knew
something had happened in her flatmate’s dark past but
she didn’t know exactly what. Which was why she never
nagged her to get a date, and why Zoe did.
Her teeth brushed, Cara flicked off the bathroom light
and went back into her room. She pulled off her clothes,
slipped on a fresh T-shirt and climbed into bed. Zoe was
probably right - she ought to stop ending up in bed with
people like Eric and concentrate on having a real relationship.
It wasn’t that easy, though.
To have a relationship, you had to let the other person
into your heart and Cara was wary of such closeness.
Closeness meant you got hurt; closeness meant letting
down your defences and letting people see the tender skin
under the carapace. After years of building up the sort of
defences that a tank would be proud of) Cara was nervous
of letting them down.
CHAPTER SEVEN
‘Bugger! I’ve lost my glasses again. I must have left them in
that monstrosity of a shop without the lift. You’ll have to
find them for me,’ said the imperious voice. Then, ‘No,
wait, maybe they’re in here.’
Sybil de Were hauled her ancient brown leather handbag
up by the strap from the floor of Bewley’s Oriental
Tearooms and started rummaging inside it with nicotine
stained fingers.
Olivia and Evie exchanged weary glances over the coffee
pot before Olivia reached over to stop the higgledypiggledy
detritus of her mother’s handbag spilling off the
table as Sybil lost patience and emptied the whole thing on
top of a half-eaten cream bun.
Squashed up cigarette packets with flakes of tobacco
clinging to them fell on to the plate, joined by bits of
paper, pen tops, lipsticked tissues, what looked suspiciously
like cat worming tablets and a baby bottle of
Power’s.
‘In case I needed heating up,’ she said, whisking the
bottle away from her daughter and pouring it into her
coffee. The scent of whiskey rose into the air beguilingly
and Evie and Olivia exchanged yet another glance. Without
speaking, they both knew what the other was thinking:
‘I could do with a drink myself!’
After three hours dragging Olivia’s crotchety mother
around the streets of Dublin, looking for a suitable outfit
for Evie’s father’s wedding, both women could have done
with a quadruple vodka and tonic, if only to ward off the
memory of Sybil dropping a very nice crepe suit to the
floor in the changing room of Marks and Spencer’s and
rudely demanding to know what had happened to
Switzer’s.
‘It’s gone, Mother,’ hissed Olivia as she tried to smile
apologetically at the changing room assistant, a difficult
task when your face was set in a rictus of embarrassment. ‘It’s my favourite shop. Whaddya mean “gone”?’
demanded Sybil crossly, attempting to kick the suit out of
her way as she reached for a lavender polo-neck jumper
that had seen better days.
‘Gone, closed down, no more,’ snapped Evie, whose own
teeth were clenched with temper. ‘Let’s get out of here, I
need a tea break.’
While Olivia, puce with mortification over her mother’s
behaviour, apologised over and over again to the assistant,
Evie swung into action. She gathered up Sybil’s belongings
and helped her on with her mothball-scented fur coat.
Rosie had grinned that morning when she’d seen Sybil
arrive at their house in all her three-quarter-length mink
glory.
‘You’re brave wearing that, Auntie Sybil,’ she’d said.
‘Some animal liberation rights person might spill red paint
all over you.’
‘Then I’ll spill it right back over them,’ declared Sybil.
‘She would, too,’ Evie muttered.
Luckily, the shoppers on (Grafton Street were all too
busy wielding brollies and trying to avoid the lashing
early-February downpour to bother with a white-haired,
gin-mottled sexagenarian in a coat that looked more rat than mink after forty years of hard wear. So the threesome made it safely to Bewley’s where they sat with their coffee
and Evie wondered yet again why she’d agreed to accompany
Olivia and her mother on this shopping expedition.
Well, she knew really. Olivia’s begging had done it.
‘Please, please, come, Evie! ! can’t cope with her on my
own, you know.’
Realising that Olivia was more than a little depressed,
not up to hours of listening to her mother’s bitching, and
certainly not up to Sybil’s imperiously demanding lunch
plus copious amounts of wine at five past twelve, Evie had
said yes. Which meant she was spending the last Saturday
before the wedding looking for something for Sybil de
bloody Were to wear when she still hadn’t found anything
for herself.
She’d toyed with the idea of going in her best outfit, a
red and black suit she’d bought in the sales two years
previously. But everyone had seen her wearing it and she
didn’t want her father to think she hadn’t bothered. Now
that she was actually going to the wedding, she’d decided
to give it her best shot.
Evie didn’t approve but nobody was going to call her a
spoilt, selfish creature who couldn’t bear to see anyone
take her place. Well, nobody was ever going to call her that again. It had been painful enough the first time Cara had flung the accusation at her. She wasn’t going to give her
sister the opportunity a second time.
So Evie would dance at her father’s wedding, sip champagne
and smile for the photos, no matter what her
misgivings were. And if she bought something new, it
could double for her own going away outfit at her wedding
in September.
‘I hate that colour on you,’ Sybil was saying, glaring at
Olivia, immaculate and beautiful in a saffron satin shirt
that matched the pale gold strands of her hair and made
her look like a mermaid on a day out at the hairdresser’s.
‘You look washed out.’
Olivia, used to a lifetime of such catty comments, sipped
her coffee silently.
And no matter how had Vida was, Evie told herself, she
was nothing like poor Olivia’s nightmare of a mother.
Imagine growing up with that!
‘Stephen doesn’t like it either. He told me so, said you
looked nicer in grey,’ Sybil added triumphantly. ‘Yellow is
so tarty.’
God, she was such a bitch, Evie thought.
‘I think you look lovely,’ she told Olivia firmly.
Her friend smiled gratefully.
The conversation died after that and they sat in silence
for another few minutes while Evie wondered if they
should shop a bit more or just abandon the whole enterprise
and send Sybil to the wedding in one of her trademark
cat-pee-andmoth-ball-scented rig outs.
Sybil’s sense of smell was shot after years of smoking like
a trooper and she never appeared to realise she ponged
more of Eau de Moggy than Eau de Cologne.
‘Don’t know why we can’t go to a bar for a snifter,’ she
grumbled once she’d finished her whiskey-laced coffee.
‘Shopping’s easier with a couple of tots inside you.’
‘It’d be easier if we could stop at a couple of tots,’ Evie
said, steel in her voice. ‘But then ten or twelve is a couple for some people.’ She eyeballed Sybil icily until the older woman finally looked away.
Sybil recognised a foe worthy of her steel in Evie.
Olivia gave her friend another grateful grin. Nobody
could put her mother in her box like Evie. Nobody else dared.
For a few brief seconds, Evie considered their options.
She and Olivia could stuff Sybil in a taxi, give the poor
driver a tenner and a couple of aspirin for the headache
he’d inevitably have after three minutes, and send her to
the train station. Then they could meander along gratefully
to The Duke, have a revitalising drink and head back to the
shops to buy something for themselves.
Idyllic. But, sadly, not realistic. Evie sighed, got up from
her chair and marshalled the troops.
‘Right, we’ve got another hour to find you something,
Sybil, and I’ve just thought of the place we should go. It’s a
little shop that specialises in event clothes and they’ve got
beautiful wedding stuff. I saw an advert for it in Style magazine with photos of a couple of very flattering suits.’
‘Nothing insipid,’ Sibyl said with a bitchy glance