Authors: Marita Conlon-McKenna
Hot tears slid down her face, her throat aching with the hurt inside.
âAre you all right, Romy love?'
Maeve Dillon took in the tearstained face and the utter misery of her youngest daughter, who looked like every bit of wildness had been crushed out of her, as she lowered herself onto the corner of the bed.
âDo you want to talk, Romy? You know there is nothing you can't tell me. No bad thing, no trouble you're in, nothing awful you've done that I won't try and help you. I promise.'
A shudder went through the long thin frame.
Maeve tried to brace herself. Maybe it was drugs or she'd been expelled from the college, or was having some kind of a breakdown. She ran her hand along Romy's shoulder.
âYou can tell me, pet. No matter what it is, you can tell me,' she urged.
The silence filled the small bedroom, stretching between them as Romy turned to the wall, hiding.
âI'm pregnant.'
Maeve stopped. Had she heard right?
âPregnant?'
Romy sat upright in the bed, almost screaming it out.
âI'm pregnant.'
âAre you sure?'
âI've been to the doctor.'
âTo Myles.'
âNo, not to Dr Deegan, I went to the doctor in college. The baby's due in May.'
Maeve Dillon could feel her heart pounding, her breathing almost stop, a panicky tightening in her chest.
âMay, when you have your exams?'
âMam, I don't give a feck about those exams. They are the least of my problems!'
Maeve pulled Romy into her arms like she used to when she was small and sick and scared.
âYou poor old pet.'
âMam, it's so awful. I don't know what to do.'
âWhat about the father? Have you told him yet?'
She shook her head.
âWho is it?'
She was tempted to tell the truth but instead just shrugged âI'm not sure.'
Maeve Dillon felt dizzy. How had she let Romy's behaviour get so out of hand and crazed that she couldn't even be sure who was the father of her unborn child?
âJust some guy.'
Maeve was sick with disappointment. Her beautiful live wire of a daughter, intelligent and full of high spirits, caught in the trap of an unwanted pregnancy.
âWhat are you going to do?'
âI don't know. The doctor has booked me into Holles Street.'
Maeve breathed a sigh of relief. It was much better Romy have her baby in one of the big maternity hospitals in Dublin than in the small local hospital where everyone would know her business.
âThat's if I have the baby.'
âNot have the baby?'
âI don't have to have it, Mam, not if I don't want to. I can go to England. And then get on with my life.'
Maeve could scarcely believe what she was hearing. She firmly believed in the right to life and here was her daughter telling her she planned to get rid of her baby.
âJesus, Mary and Joseph, Romy, you can't do that! Destroy your own child?'
âIt's my decision.'
âOh I know that, love. It's just you need time to think, to get used to the idea of having a baby.'
âI don't want a baby, can't you understand that!'
âBut for the love of God, Romy, you don't know what it is like to lose a child. You might never recover from it, never.'
The tenor of the raised voices attracted her father, who had been shaving in the bathroom and was still in his dressing gown.
âWhat are you two fighting about?' he interrupted.
Romy clenched her lips. She wasn't saying a word.
âTell him!' urged her mother.
âTell me what?'
âI'm pregnant.'
Frank Dillon stumbled for a second in the bedroom doorway.
âBut you're only a child. Are you sure?'
âI am, Daddy.'
He banged his fist on top of her desk, sending the photos flying onto the bedroom floor.
âWell who's the bright bucko got you in this position?' he demanded. âI have a few things I want to say to him.'
Romy said nothing. She could have put a bet on about her father's over-the-top predictable reaction.
âTell me who he is and I'll knock some bloody sense into him! Is he going to marry you?'
âNo.'
âNo!' He roared so loud that the house seemed to shake.
âMaeve, do you know who he is?'
âHe's just some guy from college, Daddy, it was a one-night stand, an accident.'
âA one-night stand? By Christ, are you some kind of easy lay, the college slut?'
âLeave her alone, Frank.'
âShe's obviously some kind of tramp, with the morals of an alley cat,' he blustered, his face red and still flecked with remnants of shaving cream.
âShe's your daughter,' her mother reminded him. âDon't you dare speak about her like that!'
âShe's your daughter too, Maeve. What's that they say â like mother like daughter!'
Romy watched, incredulous. For one second she thought her mother was actually going to slap him across the face, as they turned on each other and began fighting. What had her dad said about her mother? She didn't understand it.
âHow dare you, Frank!' screamed Maeve, jumping up off the bed. âHow dare you?'
âShe's not bringing some good-for-nothing's bastard into this house.'
âDon't you dare talk about Romy's baby like that!'
âThis is my home and I won't stand for it,' he ranted furiously. âPeople have respect for the Dillons, look up
to me. In this town I stand for something. The child won't be raised in this house.'
âMight I remind you that this is my home too. I inherited this house from my father so I have some say in what happens under this roof. Some say.'
âWe'll be disgraced,' he threatened. âWe'll be the talk of the place.'
âWe've survived worse scandals and rumours,' Maeve Dillon said coldly.
Her father fell silent momentarily but blustering, began again. âShe's got to go away, stay in Dublin.'
âGoing to Dublin was what caused all this,' said her mother. âDon't you think she'd be better off home here with us? We could look after her till the child is born, help out afterwards.'
Romy turned to the wall. She didn't want there to be an afterwards.
âI don't want it! I don't want a baby!'
âStop that talk immediately!' ordered her mother. âI won't have it in this house.'
âListen, Maeve, maybe she's right. She's young and has made a stupid bloody mistake. Maybe she should put it behind her. Make a fresh start, not ruin her life with a child no-one wants!'
Appalled, Maeve Dillon shook her head.
âAnd I suppose you'd write the cheque, pay for it, you self-centred bastard. You're not thinking of Romy or the unborn child. All you're thinking about is yourself. What will people think of the great Frank Dillon with a pregnant daughter! Frank Dillon's stupid young one got herself into trouble. You're pathetic.'
âShut up, woman!'
âThis is my decision,' interrupted Romy. âI have to decide what to do, it's my fecking life, not yours!'
âDon't mind whatever your father says. You'll get through this,' promised her mother. âI'll help you, help with the baby, do whatever you want. Just don't rush into a decision you might regret.'
She could see the rage on her father's face. He was used to getting his own way in deciding what happened within the circle of the family, he wasn't used to being challenged, having his leadership questioned.
âPlease just leave me alone, the two of you. I feel shite!' she said and rolled over, pulling the blanket around her shoulder.
âI mean it, Romy,' insisted her mother.
She only relaxed when they'd left her room. Her mind was in turmoil. This was splitting the family apart. Her mother like some kind of holy flipping Joe, spouting on about the precious unborn's right to life â she was sick of it! And as for her father, all he wanted was for her to disappear into some hole in the ground lest she embarrass him. She'd made a mistake coming home, thinking that her parents could solve her problems just like they did when she was a kid. That day was gone. For now she was on her own. She turned on the stereo, Bono's voice filling the pressing silence of her room.
CRAZY AND DEMENTED,
Romy was determined to have an abortion. It didn't matter what her mother said. She didn't want the baby! She'd go to London and get rid of it. It was a nothing at the moment, a blob of jelly growing inside her. Bye-bye, blob! She'd scrounge and scrape the money together before it got any bigger. No-one would know about it. She should never have told her parents, got them involved. Somehow she'd get the money to get to London.
Kate had money. Pretending she was so behind in her work from skipping lectures, she'd arranged to meet her for soup and a sandwich at O'Sullivan's on Dawson Street.
âI just need to get a grind for the rest of term, that's all. I know it's expensive but this guy is meant to be great. One of the girls who went to him last year ended up getting a first in her exams.'
Kate reacted generously, offering to pay the full cost of the extra tutoring needed.
âI can't take it!' Romy made a pretence at protesting. âYou work so hard.'
âMaybe I think you are a good investment,' smiled Kate as she took her chequebook out of her black leather bag. âWho will I make it payable to?' she quizzed.
âOh just cash,' beamed Romy, hugging her. âI can't remember exactly how to spell his name, it's French. Thank you, thank you!'
âI suppose that's what big sisters are for,' Kate reassured her, wondering how it was that Romy always seemed to get herself in a mess.
âPromise you won't say anything to Mum and Dad about this, you know what Dad's like, Kate, he'll say I'm squandering my time here at UCD.'
Kate had already decided this was another of Romy's problems her parents didn't need to know about.
Moya was different. Wearing her mankiest old sweatshirt and baggy trousers and a ribbed knitted grey cardigan, Romy had taken the bus out to her new house. She admired the carpets and the modern furniture and the pale yellow walls of the kitchen, before confiding that she had nothing nice or good to wear for an important date with one of the young medical students she knew.
âIf only we were the same size, Moya, I could borrow something from you,' she murmured wistfully, knowing full well she was a good four inches taller than her sister and a dress size or two up.
âI'll help you to pick out something nice,' her sister said, offering to come shopping with her on Saturday.
âBut I can't make it on Saturday. I'm helping out with something in college.'
Moya insisted on giving her the money to treat herself to something nice.
âI can't take your money.'
âOf course you can, that's what family are for.'
She would raid the savings she had in her post office account and hold back on her gas and electricity money from her flatmates. Another few weeks and she would have enough. Then the post had come and with it what she supposed was her monthly rent cheque. Romy had stared incredulous, looking at her father's large looped writing and distinctive signature. The amount filled in was for one thousand pounds. A simple handwritten note asked her to make no mention of it ever to her mother.
She had stared unbelieving, unsure whether to laugh or cry. Her father was ensuring she had enough money to pay her air fare and her expenses for the abortion at the clinic she'd chosen.
Brian had finally phoned her. Awkward, he told her that his girlfriend had travelled over unexpectedly from England to spend six weeks in Germany with him.
âI have to go to London for a few days,' Romy pleaded. âCouldn't we meet up? I need to see you.'
âI'm sorry,' he said. âI couldn't get the time off work, and besides, I told you Gina's here with me in Frankfurt.'
âDon't bloody bother,' she said, banging the phone down on him. She was stupid to be so upset and hurt about his involvement with someone else. She didn't own him! She didn't need to consult him about something that had been an accident, totally unplanned. She convinced herself that it would be better if Brian didn't ever know about her pregnancy.
The college doctor refused to help her with regard to the arrangements for a termination but none the less provided a medical letter outlining the state she was in. She was sorely tempted to beg Moya or Kate to come to England with her, but knew her sisters would do everything in their power to make her change her mind.
She'd opted to fly over on the early-morning flight to Heathrow and get the tube from there to Fulham where the Thames Clinic was situated. She stood on the steps outside the tall red-brick building with its discreet signage and opaque windows, nervous about going in.
Trying to get her courage up she watched other women, escorted by their boyfriends or woman friends, enter the clinic, then finally forced herself to join them. The receptionist, a pretty woman with a soft Northern Ireland accent, produced a pile of forms for her to fill in. At the other end of the room a television was on with no-one paying it any attention.
She hadn't a clue what to write. She was definitely not putting down her home address or her own GP's name, determined to maintain some sort of privacy even during this awful procedure.
A lady doctor, Dr Bennett, had called her in, questioning her about the reasons for the termination and deciding if she was fit to have the procedure. Romy was almost out of her mind with the thought of what lay ahead, and her stomach was grumbling with hunger from fasting since the night before.
âAre you sure this is what you want?' the doctor asked one last time before signing off on the pale green form
and telling her that she would not be going to theatre until almost four o'clock in the afternoon.