Authors: Cathy Kelly
anyone. I don’t know where it all started to go wrong, but
it did and it has.’ Her eyes filled with tears. ‘I love him,
Evie, but he doesn’t love me, not really.’ The words came
out in a rush. ‘He loves having a wife who looks like me
and knows how to say the right things but he doesn’t
care anymore about me as a person. It’s as if I don’t exist,
I’m just another thing in his life. Like the car or the
apartment or his state-of-the-art laptop. I hate it all.’ She
broke off, tears running down her face now. ‘I don’t say
anything to him now,’ she continued. ‘I let him go on
believing that it’s all OK when inside I hate him sometimes.
That’s why I did this, the television audition.
Because I thought it’d show him I could do something,
that I wasn’t stupid.’
‘You’re not stupid!’ Evie said, putting her arms around
Olivia.
‘I feel stupid,’ she howled. ‘Stupid and useless. I can’t
even teach my classes without screwing up, I can’t do anything. Why do I think I can do this?’
While she cried on to her friend’s shoulder, Evie held
her tightly, wishing there was more she could do or say.
But there was nothing, apart from ‘I told you so’, which
wouldn’t have been true, anyhow.
Evie had never really liked Stephen, wary of his brusque
self-assurance and suspicious of the way he’d treated
Olivia. He was domineering and almost obsessive about
her from the very start. The way he watched her across a
room made some people smile fondly but it had made Evie
wrinkle up her nose in distrust. A man who trusted and
loved a woman didn’t stare at her like a gaoler guarding a
prisoner on day release, which was the way Stephen looked
at Olivia.
But Evie had never said any of this. She’d never said,
‘Have you really thought about this?’ The type of plain
speaking she was renowned for. Olivia had been so very in
love with him. Anyway, still reeling from Tony’s death,
Evie hadn’t exactly considered herself an expert in male/
female relations at the time, so she’d kept her misgivings to
herself. And watched her closest friend carefully for signs
that the fairy-tale wedding hadn’t worked out.
As the years went by, Evie convinced herself that
Stephen and Olivia were happy together, which just went
to show that you never knew what really went on behind
closed doors.
‘Do you want to talk about it?’ she asked now. ‘Stay for
dinner and we’ll talk, you can’t go home now. You need to
get this off your chest.’
Olivia sat up, wiping her tear-streaked face. ‘No, I can’t,
Evie. Thank you for the offer, but I’ve got to get home.’
She was visibly pulling herself together, dragging on the
‘happy’ face she presented to the world.
‘Olivia,’ said Evie sharply, ‘stop it. That’s what you’ve
been doing for years and you never told me. Now stop and
talk,’ she commanded. ‘You’ve got to or you’ll go mad!’
Olivia dropped her facade and her lovely face looked
instantly ravaged, the mask gone and hollows of misery left
in its place. Haunted eyes stared out at her friend.
‘Oh, Livvy,’ Evie cried softly. ‘You can’t go on like this.’
‘What else can I do?’ she asked. ‘Leave him? Be realistic,
Evie. I can barely cope with the world with him - what
would I be like without him?’
‘You could be your old self again, the person you were
before Stephen.’
With a tissue, Olivia dabbed away the tears from her
eyes. ‘I don’t know who that person was,’ she said dully. ‘I
don’t know what sort of person I am now. At the wedding I told Max that Stephen didn’t see me as a person anymore.’ She gave a little laugh. ‘That’s not exactly true. I
don’t know who I am any more, so I can hardly blame my
husband for not knowing, can I?’
‘I want to help,’ Evie said anxiously.
Olivia shrugged. ‘You can’t help me, not really. I have to
do it myself…”
‘Please, Livvy, don’t shut me out. Let me help,’ interrupted
Evie.
‘I won’t shut you out, I promise. Who knows? You may
have to put me up on your sofa for a few nights.’ Olivia got
up from the table, letting her words sink in. “I really have to go now. I know I have to tell Stephen about all this
sometime.’ She gestured to the heavy television makeup.
‘But not tonight. He’s got some people over from Germany
and they’re coming to dinner, so I’m going home to play the
good hostess with something exotic for dinner and a perennial
smile on my Stepford Wife face.’
Her voice was bitter. There was nothing Evie could say.
They hugged goodbye and Olivia got into her car. With
sunglasses hiding her eyes and her perfect profile outlined
in the low March sun, she looked the picture of an elegant
working woman as she drove away from Evie’s front gate.
Looking into her pocket handkerchief-sized front garden,
Evie watched a fat pigeon waddling around digging for
worms in the soft clay. Unease sat in her belly like a rich
meal, curdling ominously. She thought about Olivia and
Stephen, on the surface the perfect couple. Underneath it
was all a sham.
Was she mad to want to get married? Evie wondered.
She’d been happy enough with her life so far.
Being half of a couple had seemed so important for such
a long time. Or maybe it was just that not being half of a
couple made it seem to matter. Was that why she and
Simon had clicked - because they’d both desperately
wanted someone else and didn’t really care who? In any
case Simon was practically married to his mother, which
was why he’d taken so bloody long to decide actually to do
the desperate deed and ask someone to marry him.
He’d been burned once before, he’d told her. A long
relationship that hadn’t worked out. Perhaps whoever she
was hadn’t been able to compete with his maternal devotion. Evie watched the pigeon mournfully. Perhaps they were both making a huge mistake.
She shook her head as if driving the thought from her
mind. Daft, that’s what she was. Plain daft. She was
marrying Simon in September and that was that.
CHAPTER TEN
It was five to three. Still. Evie wondered if she was in the
Twilight Zone because no matter how often she looked at
the alarm clock, the time seemed to change with brain
numbing slowness. Not looking at it was obviously the
answer. She sat up in bed, shook her pillow around a bit
and sank back down on to the cool side of the bed,
determined not to look at the time. Four minutes to three
winked the luminous numbers on the clock.
Evie felt like crying. She was exhausted and yet she
couldn’t sleep. The memory of Olivia’s weary face earlier
that day kept running through her mind; Olivia and
Stephen, Evie and Simon, an ill-fated foursome and their
problems. And Max. No matter how she tried to wrench
him from her mind, he was still there. Smiling wolfishly at
her, eyes caressing her in a way Simon’s never did.
Shit! She sat up again, feverish and furious. She had to
stop thinking about bloody Max Stewart. It was positively
sickening. His presence loomed over her even when she
was in bed, never mind what it did to her when she was up. Since she’d met him a week ago, he was everywhere: grinning at her, taunting her, eyebrows raised in amusement
as if he could see the effect he was having upon her.
It was no use trying to sleep. She might as well get some
hot milk and read.
Trying not to think of how shattered she’d be after a
sleepless night, Evie warmed some milk and brought it up
to bed. Propped up with pillows, she picked her book
up and tried to read. Even that didn’t work.
The dashing South American polo player in Venetia’s
Victory reminded her of Max; he had the same glinting
eyes, the same devil-may-care attitude. Every time the polo
player crushed Venetia to his chest with his powerful
mallet-wielding arm, Evie could see herself being crushed
against Max. She threw the book down in disgust and
rummaged through her bedside locker for a replacement.
Jammed at the back was one of Cara’s forensic pathologist
thrillers. Cara adored blood, gore and serial killers and had
been trying to get her sister to read one for years. Evie had
resisted until now because she hated the thought of
reading about murderers preying on vulnerable women
before she went to sleep. Strangely enough, the idea
seemed very appealing now. Surely an axe murderer would
be able to get Max out of the picture?
By five-thirty, she was a serial thriller convert - and very,
very tired. How come you can only sleep when morning is
lurking around the corner? she thought exhaustedly, sinking
her head on to the pillow as the birds began to sing
energetically outside the window.
They appeared to be singing the same song when the
alarm clock erupted with the breakfast show and Tom
Jones purring ‘Kiss’ at seven-fifteen. Evie dragged herself
out of bed, yelled at Rosie to get up, and yawned her way
down the stairs, only just avoiding tripping over her
dressing-gown belt. Strong coffee and some breakfast
didn’t help her as much as she’d hoped.
‘You look wrecked, Mum,’ Rosie remarked, the picture
of health as she bounced into the kitchen in her school
uniform.
‘Couldn’t sleep,’ Evie mumbled, head bent over her
plate, ‘and I’ve a terrible day ahead. The auditors are in.
God, I could sleep for a week.’
‘Caffeine tablets,’ pronounced Rosie, ‘that’s what you
need, Mum. They’re ace at waking you up. All the girls use
them for exams.’
Normally, Evie would have said something about how
she hoped Rosie would never use any sort of chemical
stimulant. This morning, however, she only just managed
to stop herself from asking where she could get her hands
on some caffeine tablets and how many could you take for
maximum effect.
Rosie switched on the radio, which immediately foretold
horrible delays on Evie’s route to the office.
‘I don’t believe it,’ she mumbled miserably, ignoring her
usual rule about only having one cup of coffee in the
morning and pouring herself another. Her cellulite would
just have to like it or lump it.
‘Poor Mum.’ Rosie gave her an affectionate hug. ‘Now if
you’d teach me how to drive your car, I could drop you
into work and you wouldn’t have to face the traffic,’ she
added with a mischievous grin.
Her mother groaned. ‘Have you ever thought of going
into the legal profession, Rosie? You’re an expert at arguing
at the right time and the right place.’
Grinning, she shoved a couple of slices of bread into the
toaster. ‘Is that a yes?’
‘I’d be the wrong person to teach you to drive,’ Evie
pointed out. ‘Maybe Simon could teach you.’
Rosie grimaced. ‘Not Simon. Maybe Grandpops would.
Or perhaps Vida! She brightened up at the thought of
driving Vida’s stately Lexus and impressing all the young
fellas in Ballymoreen who hung around the monument.
She could picture them with their mouths open in
astonishment and admiration, particularly that guy who
lived above the post office. It was a pleasing picture.
‘What’s wrong with Simon teaching you?’ her mother
asked irritably.
‘Oh, Mum, come on,’ said Rosie. ‘You know …’ She
broke off without finishing the sentence.
‘No, I don’t know.’ Evie was cross and very tired.
Rosie sighed. ‘Let’s not have a fight.’
‘This isn’t a fight,’ Evie said grumpily. ‘I simply wish you
didn’t have such an attitude about Simon.’
‘I don’t have an attitude about Simon,’ her daughter
retorted.
‘You do,’ Evie snapped back.
‘It’s not an attitude,’ Rosie said, taking her coffee cup off
the table. ‘I just don’t like him, that’s all.’ She slammed the kitchen door and a millisecond later her toast sprang up
from the toaster with a twang.
What have you done? Evie groaned to herself. Just
because you’re in a bad mood, you don’t have to take it
out on poor Rosie.
She quickly buttered and marmaladed Rosie’s toast and
took it up to her daughter’s room. The door, usually open
in the morning because the two of them chattered nineteen
to the dozen as they showered and dressed, was
ominously shut.
‘Rosie love, I’m sorry. I’m grumpy this morning because
I couldn’t sleep,’ Evie said from the landing.
The door opened. Slightly mollified, Rosie took the toast
from her mother.
‘I am sorry,’ Evie said again.
‘It’s OK,’ Rosie said. ‘I’m sorry about what I said too.
About Simon. I don’t dislike him,’ she lied. ‘I just don’t
want him to teach me how to drive. I’d love you to do it.’
Evie smiled for the first time that morning. ‘I don’t know why, love, when I’m such a bad-tempered old cow of a mother. But I’ll teach you, I promise. When you’ve finished
your exams, I’ll put your name on the insurance. It’ll be my
post-exam present to you.’
‘Ace!’ said Rosie joyfully.