No Way to Say Goodbye (32 page)

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Authors: Anna McPartlin

BOOK: No Way to Say Goodbye
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“No, you didn’t. Is it damaged?” Sam said.

“Any casualties?” Mary chimed in.

“A red deer,” Garda Sheehan said, “and, yes, the car is a write-off.”

“Right,” Sam said.

“Well,” Garda Sheehan pocketed his notebook, “it looks like we’re all done here.”

“OK, then,” Mary said, smiling.

Garda Sheehan made his way to the front door. “One last thing.”

“Yes?” Mary said.

“It would appear that Penny didn’t make it to Dublin last night,” he said, reminding her of Columbo just before he revealed a poisonous plot.

“No?” she said, her heart racing.

“No. It appears she only got as far as the Regional Hospital in Cork.”

“Right,” Mary said, nodding in a way that suggested she knew the game was up.

“She could have killed someone.”

“I know.”

“She was drunk?”

Mary nodded again.

“I should arrest you for aiding and abetting. Not to mention attempting to take me for a fool.”

“Sorry.”

“Is she going to get help?”

“Yes.”

“You see that she does,” he said.

“I will,” she said. “Thanks.”

“Don’t thank me, Mary. I don’t know what I’m going to do about this yet,” he warned her.

“OK.” She opened the front door.

“And, Mary?”

“Yes?”

“You really are a pathetic liar.”

“I know that too.”

He left.

She sat on the sofa, where Sam joined her. “I’m not sure what happened there,” he said. “Did we get away with it or not?”

“Yes and no.”

“It’s been a hell of a week.”

Sam was tired. He hadn’t slept well in the hotel and he was weary of drama. He made his way to the door.

“Sam!”

“Yeah?” he replied.

“Will you come with me tomorrow?”

“I doubt Penny would be happy about that.”

“I know what she did to you but she didn’t mean it. She’s not like that when she’s well.”

“I’m sure you’re right but I don’t belong there.”

“It’s an intervention. Isn’t that the correct term?”

“Yeah.”

“Well, who better to intervene than someone who knows what they’re talking about?”

He was silent for a moment or two. His head hurt. He really needed to sleep. “I’ll do it.”

He was gone before she could thank him.

24. Clean up, clean out

Sam, Mary and Ivan were waiting in Adam’s hotel room when Adam opened the door to usher in a bandaged Penny. She surveyed those in front of her and knew there could be only one reason for the meeting. Feeling weak, she sat on a chair against the wall, facing the jury of her peers.

Adam gave her two painkillers and a glass of water.

“D Day,” she said. Her friends remained silent.

“We’re going to get you some help,” Adam said, but she chose to ignore him in favour of concentrating on Sam.

“Is this how rehab happened for you, Sam? Oh, no, I forgot. You were brought in on a stretcher.”

“Penny,” Mary growled.

“It’s OK,” he said to Mary. “You’re right. I went in on my back and, if memory serves, I was also strapped down. You want to go in like that, I’m sure it can be arranged.”

“Fuck you!” she spat. Her hands had been trembling all morning. She felt sick and badly needed a drink.

“Do you know why you don’t like me, Penny?” he asked.

“Enlighten me.”

“You look at me and see yourself.”

“Bullshit!” she said, touching the bandage on her forehead.

“I’m an addict and you are too.” He leaned towards her so that she was forced to look at him. “I know how hard it is. I know the agony of saying no. I know that if you don’t you’ll die.” He pitied her with every ounce of him.

Tears rolled down her face, which she tried to hide with trembling hands. “I don’t think I can do it,” she whispered.

“I know you can,” he said.

“I don’t want to be like this any more.”

“You don’t have to be.”

Penny and Adam found themselves on the ten thirty a.m. train to Dublin. They sat in the dining section, Adam tucking into a full Irish breakfast and Penny playing with the foil wrapping of her painkillers. She had been silent since she had said her goodbyes at the hotel. Mary had cried and Penny had felt like an arsehole, remembering the stupid document in which she had spurted venom at the very people who were helping her.

When her tremor became so severe that Adam feared she might seize, he made the executive decision to allow her a shot of vodka. While she attempted to sip it he called the clinic to ask if he was doing the right thing.

Eventually the tremor subsided. “What have you told Alina?” Penny asked.

“I lied,” he lied.

“It’s still that easy?” she said.

“It was never easy.”

They looked out of the window at the fields and grazing animals, the towns and houses, all passing them at speed.

“I want another drink,” she said.

“I know.”

“Thanks for being here.”

“It was the very least I could do.”

*

The taxi pulled up outside the clinic and Penny sat pinned to the back seat, looking much like the deer she had destroyed.

Adam paid the driver, then reached for her hand. “Time to go,” he said.

“I can’t.”

“You can.”

Fresh tears spilled. “I don’t want to.”

“Yes, you do.”

“I’m really scared.”

“It’s OK to be scared.”

He helped her out of the car and the taxi drove away. He guided her towards the door. A nurse emerged with a clipboard and stood there, waiting. Penny stalled. Adam put his hand on her waist and she snuggled into him. He spun her around and suddenly they were dancing as they had on the night he’d said goodbye. In her head she could hear Sinéad singing about sacrifice. He kissed her cheek and held her close to him, and all the while the nurse watched and waited.

“You’re always leaving me.”

“I never want to.”

He wasn’t allowed past the front door. The nurse took her new patient by the hand and Penny smiled through her tears and waved goodbye to the love of her life, who waited for her to disappear behind the white doors.

I’ll always love you, Penny Walsh
.

Mary sat on the sofa alone that night, Mr Monkels having fallen asleep on the window-seat. She was drinking tea and listening to Snow Patrol. For some reason she felt like crying. The boy in her dream was haunting her. She didn’t have to sleep for him to find her now. At any given moment he would appear, staring at her with the most terrible expression on his face. She had seen things before, but they had all been so vague and about people she knew in the here and now. Nothing had ever manifested itself as this had – and what was it telling her? What part of the story was missing? And why, suddenly, did the boy seem familiar? Who the hell was he?

Emotion welled inside her, like untapped oil ready to burst through solid rock, and she wondered if she was having her tenth breakdown in that month. But then, of course, it had been so long since she had felt anything. When her child had died a part of her had stopped, like a broken clock, stuck for ever in the past. She had become Miss Havisham minus the wedding dress and the cruel streak. Until a stranger had appeared and something inside her had begun to tick…

Sam sat in his kitchen sipping a glass of Jack Daniel’s from the bottle Caleb had left behind. He hadn’t slept properly in a week and earlier had succumbed to the shakes, like he used to when he was without control. Penny’s intervention had hit him harder than he’d expected. For some reason it had projected his mind to another place. A place in the past when he had been a shit-scared teenager, running with all his might.
Oh, God, no!

And then he was somewhere else, in another time, a time when he was older and successful and an addict. He was in a communal bathroom in a bad area, kicking the shit out of another junkie much larger than himself. He was beating him with all his strength, both mental and physical, even though he was coming down and needed a fix so badly.

The junkie was crying and begging, “Don’t, man! I’m sorry. You don’t know!”

But Sam did know. He knew he wanted the fucker dead. “I’ve paid for it – I’ve paid for it a hundred times!” the junkie cried.

“Not enough.” Sam kicked him so hard in the nuts that the guy vomited.

“I’m a dealer! I can sort you out – I can keep you going, man,” the junkie shrieked, and Sam stopped kicking him.

Just like that.

Ivan was sitting on the sofa with his daughter asleep on his lap. Chris was on the chair and they were watching a show about football. Norma was in the kitchen, making the kids’ favourite biscuit cake. The doorbell rang and Chris got up.

Seconds later Sienna was in front of Ivan. He stood up, forgetting that his daughter’s head was resting on his lap. “Dad!” she cried, rubbing her eyes.

“Sorry, Button.”

He hugged Sienna, who seemed a little stiff. Later, when the kids were in bed and Norma had made herself scarce, they sat in the kitchen together.

“I haven’t heard from you,” she said.

“We keep missing one another.”

“We never used to.”

“It’s been chaotic. I’m trying to find Norma a place with the kids, there’s been madness with Penny and it’s just –” He stopped.

“Maybe we should cool things for a while,” she said.

“I don’t want to.”

“You’ve got your family back, Ivan,” she said sadly.

“But I want you,” he said, and she rested her head on his chest.

“I know, but I think this is a case of bad timing. Maybe when things settle down…” Then she added, “You’re a good father, Ivan, and a good man.”

“I’ll work it all out,” he promised.

“I know.”

“I love you.”

“I hope so,” she said.

He walked her to the door and watched her leave.

You can’t have it all.

25. To know you is to love you

The funeral was lovely. Dick Dogs had been one of Kenmare’s best-loved. His greyhounds had won many a race and those who’d backed them had profited time and time again. In his early years he’d been a fixture in many a local pub. He had always enjoyed a pint but, unlike some, he’d known when it was time to go home. He was kind too, always having time for those less fortunate than himself. He’d never married, which was a pity because most would say he’d have made a good husband. Everyone agreed that it was his time, though. He was the last of his generation to go. His friends had led the way and he had said openly that he was looking forward to seeing them again. He had died early in the morning just before the sun rose. He hadn’t suffered, just stopped. Paula Dubury had found him, cold but with a smile on his face.

“What were you dreaming, sweet man?” she’d asked. If his corpse had had the power of speech he would have told her that, just before he left this world, he had relived a time when he was a young man and he and his best friend David Breslin were standing at the back of a dancehall watching the girls line up in their Sunday best, their hair fresh out of curlers.

Dick had winked at Lena, who shook her head and wagged a finger.

David had laughed at his high ambition. “She’ll never be yours,” he said.

“But she could be,” Dick had responded.

“She’s leaving,” David whispered.

“And where would she be going?” Dick had queried.

“We’re sending her away.”

“Away?” Dick repeated.

“My mother’s got it in her head that she’ll marry Joseph Dunne.”

“But what about me?” Dick asked.

“What about you?” David responded. “She wants something else and what Lena wants Lena gets. She doesn’t know it yet but she’s leaving tomorrow.”

“You’re killing me,” Dick said, and his friend had laughed.

“Take your dance. It’ll be your last,” David said, not knowing how prophetic his words were. Halfway through it, the old man reliving the memory breathed his last.

The funeral was held two weeks after Norma’s home-coming. She had kept a low profile and Dick Dogs’s funeral would be her reintroduction into Kenmare society. She didn’t feel ready, still bruised and broken, yet she had always been fond of the old man. She wanted to pay her respects and her ex-husband encouraged her to do so. She was worried about how she would be viewed, yet her fondness for the man who had dedicated his life to caring for animals ensured that she was there.

The church was packed, which was odd for a man of Dick’s age, especially as he’d had no family of his own. Ivan stood beside Norma, and the rest of the congregation didn’t seem to notice her presence. All heads were bowed in remembrance of an old friend.

When the time came during the service for them to shake hands as a sign of peace, people went out of their way to shake her good one. It was only when she saw men and women, with a perfect right to judge her, walk towards her smiling with hands outstretched… It was only when she heard… “Glad to have you home.”

“Everything will work out.”

“You don’t have to worry any more.”

“God bless you.”

It was only when she stood in front of those she’d been convinced would hate her that she discovered what it meant to be forgiven.

Thank God I’m home.

Mary had spotted Sam standing at the back of the church. She had been with Ivan and Norma during the service. She had had a particularly bad migraine over the previous five days and he had called every day to make sure she was OK, seeing her at her worst and seeming not to care. The injections Dr Macken gave her meant that the week was full of holes but she did remember Sam holding her hand, wiping her brow and whispering to her. If only she could remember what he’d said. She’d continued to have the nightmare, always the same, always unfinished. The lack of progress was frustrating but she knew that sooner rather than later the curtain would rise.

She noticed that Sam had attempted to leave the church unseen but Paula Dubury had nabbed him in the churchyard. She wanted him to know how much Dick had enjoyed his visit, reliving his affection for Sam’s grandmother. He had talked of it often in the past few weeks. She wanted him to know, too, how glad Dick had been that he’d taken the time to call in and that the old man had thoroughly enjoyed his gift of ice-cream. Sam thanked her, but she wasn’t finished. She wondered if he was seeing anyone. He told her he wasn’t. She giggled girlishly, and asked if he wanted to see someone. Despite her curves, her shining black hair and her pretty face, he told her his heart lay elsewhere.

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