Authors: Cathy Kelly
up to Stephen after all these years. Just then, she heard a
noise and whirled around in time to see Sasha’s terrified
face peering around her door. One plump hand clutched
her new elephant to her face; her thumb was lodged firmly
in her mouth. She looked like one of those children you
saw in newspaper photos about domestic abuse: traumatised
and scared.
Olivia felt the final vestiges of fear chip off like the last
bits of bright varnish from a nail.
‘The final reason I want you to go is that you scare our
daughter. When I disagree with anything you say, or when I
don’t immediately do what you’ve ordered, you go berserk.
You change, fly into a rage. That rage terrifies her and me. I
grew up in a house where I was always afraid: afraid my
parents would get pissed and go crazy after me; afraid
there’d be no money for food or bills; afraid of what terrible
things my mother would say to me when she was in a rage.’
She could remember it all so vividly. The terror of sitting in
the kitchen when Sybil was in full flight - you never knew
who’d be blamed for what or why. Waiting for bombs to fall
in wartime must have been similar. You could hear it
coming: you just didn’t know where it would land.
‘I don’t want Sasha to go through all that,’ Olivia said.
‘I don’t drink.’ protested Stephen, looking strangely
vulnerable for the first time.
‘That only makes it worse,’ she said simply. ‘You have no
excuse except your own total lack of control and the fact
that anyone has dared to go against your wishes. We’re all
screwed up in some way, Stephen, we all have our demons
and insecurities. But you can’t see that about yourself You
think you’re perfect. You’re not and you need help.’
‘Help?’
‘Yes, help. To make you understand that you’ve got to
take responsibility for your own temper. What happens
when you hit Sasha or me?’
‘I’d never do that.’ The muscles in his jaw were corded
with tension. ‘You know that, Olivia.’
‘How do I know that? I never know when you’re going
to change from Dr Jekyll into Mr Hyde so how do I know
you’ll never get violent? You have so much rage in you,
Stephen. I don’t want to put up with it anymore. You
should leave. Perhaps when you face up to your problems,
we might have a marriage.’
She wasn’t being entirely truthful. She’d never been
afraid he’d hit her. He’d never even touched her. But
telling him she was afraid of it was the most shocking thing
she could think of and it had certainly worked. Stephen
looked shocked out of his mind.
‘I’m sorry,’ he said, ‘I never meant to … Please, Olivia,
don’t let it end this way. I love you, and I love Sasha.’
‘I love you too, but I don’t know if I can live with you
anymore. It would be better if you moved out, then we can
decide if we do want to be together.’
He looked like a broken man. ‘What about Sasha?’
She’s your daughter, I’m not stopping you seeing her.
But I don’t want her living with us when our relationship
is so appalling. I don’t want her to suffer that.’
Maybe we could get counselling,’ he said wildly.
‘We can. But you’ve got to move out first, Stephen. If
you won’t, I will and I’ll take Sasha with me. This is the
only chance we’ve got to see if we can sort out our
marriage. If you don’t agree, I’ll just file for divorce. End of story.’
In the end, he took only the suitcase he’d brought back
from Germany. ‘I’ll come by tomorrow and pick up the
rest,’ he said hollowly.
‘Fine.’
When he left, Olivia sat down on the chair in the ball
and wept silently. Giant, heaving sobs wracked her body.
She knew she had to do it but telling him to leave was the
hardest thing she’d ever done. She loved Stephen, God
help her, she still loved him.
CHAPTER TWELVE
Evie looked at the assembled bags and cases on the floor of
her bedroom and realised that none of them was fit for a
glamorous villa holiday in the south of Spain. None of
them was fit for a wet weekend in a caravan park, for that
matter, unless it was a seventies revival weekend where the
older and grungier things looked, the better.
The dilapidated old blue suitcase she and Tony had
bought on their honeymoon had been stuck in a cobwebby
corner of the attic for years and looked it. She used to store
Rosie’s old toys in the case and she’d had to jam a lot of
headless dollies and threadbare teddies into an old laundry
basket when she emptied it. But she couldn’t throw them
out, they were too precious for that. Every tattered but
much-loved cuddly thing had a history behind it: the
rabbit named Charlie that Rosie wouldn’t get into her cot
without; the little clown with the sad face she’d gone to
sleep sucking until she was four. Evie dragged her attention
back to the matter at hand - her lack of luggage.
The enormous barrel bag she and Rosie had taken to
Ballymoreen for years wasn’t in a much better condition
than her honeymooning case. Only the black and red
edged weekender Olivia had given her one birthday in an
attempt to get Evie to go away for a girls’ weekend was fit
to be seen. And that was so small it wouldn’t have
accommodated all the shoes she’d been considering taking.
The main problem, Evie knew, was all the advice she’d
been given about the holiday destination.
Puerto Banus was stylish, the travel agent had said.
Glamorous, one of Olivia’s friends had pointed out, adding
that everyone looked good with a tan.
‘You’ll feel like a bog woman beside those beautiful
Spanish women,’ said Lorraine’s aunt mournfully.
Out of the three options, Evie was putting her money on
Lorraine’s aunt’s forecast. She had nothing stylish and had
never had anything close to the peanut butter tan Olivia’s
friend seemed to sport permanently. Which meant she’d
almost definitely feel like Bog Woman on holiday.
‘You can take the woman out of the bog but you can’t
take the bog out of the woman,’ she muttered to herself
forlornly.
Consequently, with all this contrasting advice, she had
panicked over what to take and decided simply to take
everything even vaguely summery. Plenty of non-summery
things were also going on the basis that Ireland’s climate
meant Evie didn’t have a vast summer wardrobe and just
wore her winter clothes without the jumpers and opaque
tights.
It was a glorious Wednesday evening, three - well, two
and a half - days before she and Rosie were leaving for
Spain: three days in which to transform herself from an
ordinary office worker into a glamorous jet-setter who’d
look at home sipping cocktails poolside and asking for cafe con leche, por favor.
Evie stood in her bedroom, arranging and rearranging
the piles of clothes on the speckled duvet, valiantly trying
to make each pile smaller by rejecting things that were too
similar.
She’d never known she had so many pale pink Tshirts.
There were nine of them in varying degrees of washedoutness.
Somebody must have told her once that pale pink
suited her.
Holding one up to her face and looking critically in the
mirror, she decided they’d been wrong. Pale pink made
her look like a Beatrix Potter piglet. All she needed was a
frilled mob cap and she’d have looked at home beside
Mrs Tiggywinkle, which wasn’t exactly the look she was
going for.
‘Shit!’ cursed Evie with unaccustomed venom. She
rarely swore but today just couldn’t help herself.
The mellow July sun flooded in through the half-open
windows and the scent of next door’s freshly mown lawn
mingled with the perfume of her aromatherapy burner
which was overloaded with lavender in the hope of
relaxing Evie. Some hope. Only serious tranquillisers
could do that, she decided grimly. The holiday was a
mistake, that was the problem. It wasn’t simply her lack
of clothes or lack of suitcases: it was her complete lack of
self-control. She should never have agreed to go to Spain
with her father, Vida and Max. What had she been
thinking of? It was bad enough avoiding Max at home how
could she avoid him when they were staying in the
same house?
OK, so he was only going to be there for two days as he
was arriving at the villa on Thursday and she was leaving
the following Saturday. But she’d still have to see him, to
talk to him, to spend time with him.
How could she do that without making it terribly
obvious that she was crazy about him? That she longed to
talk to him; to sit with one hand on his thigh as they
watched the sunset? Even though he was a terrible rake
who went through women faster than a rock ‘n’ roll band
did groupies.
Evie examined the denim mini skirt she’d found at the
back of her wardrobe and had tried it on in desperation. It
looked awful: so did she.
Her dark hair was lank and badly in need of a haircut,
her skin was pale from too many hours spent in the office
and she had the beginnings of a PMT spot the size of Texas
on her forehead. It would be hard enough having to see
Max without having to look terrible into the bargain.
But she couldn’t suppress the excitement she felt at the
thought of seeing him again. Banishing him from her life
had been her only ammunition against him. She’d avoided
Vida’s birthday party with a fake case of ‘flu because Max
was going to be there, yet her sudden food poisoning had
cleared up miraculously in time for dinner in their new
house when she realised he wouldn’t be present.
It was better not to see him, she’d told herself endlessly.
That theory rang hollow on those hot, sweaty nights when
she spent more time staring at the alarm clock than asleep.
In her imagination, there was no escaping those flashing
deep blue eyes. Night was when she thought about Max,
giving him full rein in the hope that he’d remain one of her
midnight fantasy heroes and would stop tormenting her by
day as well. At night, she could remember every word he’d
ever said to her and in a half-slumber, imagine his arms
were around her, holding her, hugging her, making slow,
passionate love to her.
In the daytime, she was ruthless with herself. Max was a
rogue and she couldn’t give up all the things she’d fought
so long for simply because he’d waltzed into her life,
nonchalantly assuming she’d dump her fiance for a fling
with him. And a fling was all it would be, she thought
fiercely. After all she’d been through, Evie couldn’t take
that risk. Wouldn’t take it.
‘Does this top go with this skirt?’ Rosie appeared at the bedroom door, long bare legs clad in a pink pelmet of a skirt with her top half just about covered by a flimsy
tie-dyed T-shirt that revealed her entire midriff. ‘Of course,
I’ve got to fake tan my legs,’ she added, looking down at
her slim brown limbs critically.
Thanks to a post-exam gift of three hundred pounds
from her grandfather, Rosie had purchased an entire new
wardrobe for her week in Spain. A cheap wardrobe of
wondrously short and skimpy clothes that were youthfully
sexy. Her mother shuddered at the thought of what the
teenage male population of Puerto Banus would do when
they saw Rosie wearing them. Or not wearing them, as the
case may be. They were all so skimpy. One pair of shorts in
particular looked like nothing more than a tiny pair of
knickers and the thong bikini Rosie was so thrilled with
would undoubtedly give anyone with a heart complaint
severe palpitations.
‘It’s lovely,’ Evie said truthfully, forcing herself to be
honest about the skirt and not to say it was a pity they ran
out of material when they were making it. ‘But it’s a bit
short…’ she couldn’t help herself from saying.
‘Oh, Mum, come off it.’ Rosie threw herself on the bed,
bouncing all of her mother’s carefully folded piles of
clothes as she did so. Lounging on one elbow with her legs
swinging in time to the George Michael CD playing loudly
in her bedroom, Rosie began to extract things from the
piles and rearranged them in different combinations.
‘Jeez, Mum, we’re only going for a week. You’re bringing
tons. And this,’ she said, holding up a white baggy T-shirt as
if it was contaminated by Lassa fever, ‘is terrible. You can’t
wear it. I don’t know why you haven’t turned it into a
duster.’
Evie snatched it back. ‘It’s only three years old,’ she
retorted.
‘A hundred and three,’ Rosie replied. ‘It doesn’t matter
how old it is, it’s bloody awful on you.’
‘Don’t say bloody,’ Evie corrected automatically as she
pulled off her cardigan and dragged the white T-shirt over
her head. Rosie was right: it was terrible. Baggy and
shapeless. With her denim mini skirt on as well, she looked
a complete slapper. All she needed was a pair of white