She’s watching me. Maybe she’s spoken to Fynn – she’s been known to call him if she’s worried about me. Maybe he’s told her what he thinks. I’m not sure he’d do that, though. He’s too good a friend. Smothering my gag reflex with my respect and love for Imogen, I raise the fork and slip the chicken, swimming in white sauce, into my mouth. The cloying globules of fat coat my tongue, the sharp excess of salt claws at my tastebuds. Too much salt, not enough herbs, the wrong type of cream. I hate myself for knowing this stuff. I hate myself for not being able to enjoy food at times like this; that I immediately seek out a problem so I don’t have to eat it, so I don’t have to be seen to stuff myself in front of other people.

  ‘Please don’t do that again. Promise me you won’t do that again,’ Joel says in my head. ‘Look, we’ll get you whatever type of help you need. Whatever it costs … But please, don’t do that to yourself again.’

  A good friend – a true friend – would have confronted you by now about your eating disorder,’ Fynn says.

  Nonchalantly to the outside world, but determined to prove to myself, to Joel and to Fynn that I have no real, discernible problem, just a bit of a quirk, I force more chicken pie into my mouth, taking in the crumbly, fat-based crust this time. I slice the butter-coated carrots in half and then put them in my mouth. Chew, chew. I force myself to chew, ignoring the saline flooding my mouth, the bile that stirs itself in my stomach, and swallow. The new potatoes go the same way. Chewed, chewed, swallowed, stuffed down. I can do this. I can do this. I don’t have a problem with food, I don’t need confronting, I don’t require help. I do not have an eating disorder.

  ‘See, that’s where my problem is,’ Ray is saying while I am eating, ingesting food like a normal person. ‘I pay my taxes, I send my child to school like the law tells me I should and I don’t get first class service. But some little scrote who lives on a council estate, whose mum got knocked up as a teen to get a free flat, hasn’t got a dad on the scene and wouldn’t know the meaning of the word work if it bit him, gets loads of attention. How is that fair?’

  ‘Let’s change the subject,’ I say, lowering my cutlery. I stare at my plate, the horror of what I have done slinking outwards through me from my stomach. I need to have not done this thing. I move my line of sight up to Ray as he sits on his indignant, know-it-all perch. ‘I don’t like you describing other human beings in such a way, Ray, I’m sorry, it’s not on. You have no idea about other people’s lives, you might think you do, but until you’ve lived it and lived it for years under different conditions, you have no real idea. There are some people like that and there are lots of people who aren’t. I don’t like you describing people so nastily. So please, let’s change the subject and not fall out over this.’

  ‘Yes, I agree,’ Lewis says, obviously relieved that I’ve said something before he’s had to. ‘Let’s change the subject.’

  ‘Yes, Ray, let’s change the subject,’ Imogen adds through gritted teeth. He is going to be in so much trouble later tonight.

  I glance down at my plate. I am in so much trouble right now. I stand, placing my napkin over my half-eaten meal. ‘If you’ll excuse me,’ I say. ‘I just need to nip to the bathroom.’

  I am 29

  ‘I thought you’d stopped doing this, Ffrony. You said you didn’t need any help and you promised me you would stop.’

  ‘I didn’t promise. I said I’d try.’

  ‘Why can’t you just eat and stop this?’

  ‘I don’t know.’

  ‘This is killing me, Ffrony. It’s killing me that I can’t help you, that I can’t get you to stop this. Don’t I make you happy enough? Is it me preventing you from being happy enough to stop this? It’ll destroy me to split up, but we can do that if it means you’ll be able to stop this.’

  ‘No, no, no. That’s not what I want. I don’t want to split up. Never. I am so happy with you and Phoebe, I don’t know why I can’t stop, I just can’t.’

  ‘If it’s because you want to become thin, believe me, you’re thin enough. You’re perfect. I don’t love you for what size you are. I don’t care what size you are or what you weigh.’

  ‘I know. But everyone out there does.’

  ‘No they don’t. And if they do, so what? Why does it matter what people out there think?’

  ‘It doesn’t. But, if I lose a little bit more weight I know that no one will ever be able to say anything about the way I look. They won’t be able to think I’m a fat cow. They won’t be able to see there’s anything wrong with me. I only need to lose a little bit more.’

  ‘You don’t need to lose any more weight. You’ve never needed to lose weight.’

  ‘You didn’t know me when I was younger. That’s why I’ve kept all the photos away from you. I was huge.’

  ‘Even if you were huge, so what? What’s wrong with being large?’

  ‘What’s wrong with being large? Are you mad? There’s everything wrong with it. People look down on you, they think you’re lazy and greedy and unattractive. You can’t fit into clothes and everyone’s always got some statistic about how you’re going to die young because you’re so greedy and lazy.’

  ‘Thin people die, too. Everyone dies, no matter what their size. And I’ve read just a small amount about what you do and the permanent damage it causes: crumbling teeth, swollen salivary ducts, osteoporosis, irregular heartbe—’

  ‘Everything is so much easier and better if you’re thin. Life is easier and people treat you better. If you’re large you’re worthless.’

  ‘And do you feel any less worthless now you’ve lost all that weight?’

  ‘No.’

  I manage to keep my pace normal, I do not tear up the stairs like I want to. I climb each one as though I do not have a volcano desperate to erupt inside me. I walk along the corridor towards the bathroom.

  Exiting the toilet, the sound of a cistern refilling itself behind him, is Damien, Imogen’s eldest son from her first marriage. He is tall, athletic without being too broad, and wears his hair long and floppy, so – I’d imagine – he can spend a lot of time sweeping it back off his face or hiding behind it.

  He freezes, then falters in his step when he sees me coming towards him. The colour quickly drains away from his face as he tries to decide what to do with his expression: smile, grimace or do what he is currently doing – look terrified. A lot of people look like that – scared of me because they don’t know what to say. They aren’t sure what will make me cry or will make me scream at them, so they tap dance their way through conversations, the discomfiture of not understanding a bereaved person rolling off them in waves.

  I have seen him many times since that day, though. He came to the funeral, he sometimes drops Zane off with Imogen. Last summer he finished and graduated from Lincoln University so moved back here. Around the time Phoebe began to spend hours on her phone, in fact.

  ‘Hi, Damien,’ I say.

  ‘Erm … Hi … Mrs Mackleroy,’ he says.

  Maybe I am reading too much into this. Maybe he was always like this, maybe like everyone else he’s always felt uncomfortable. How would I have noticed since it’s only in the past few months I’ve started to notice much of anything?

  ‘How’s the job-hunting going?’ I ask.

  ‘Erm …’ He steps around me, heading for his bedroom. ‘Fine.’

  ‘Not found anything yet?’

  ‘Erm … No.’

  ‘So that means you’re around during the day a lot,’ I say. ‘Doesn’t that get boring?’

  ‘Erm … No. Erm … I hang out.’

  ‘Who with?’

  ‘Erm … friends.’

  ‘Girlfriend, by any chance?’

  More colour bleaches out of his skin.

  ‘Erm … sort of.’

  ‘What do you mea—’

  ‘Erm … got to go. Sorry. Bye.’ He moves so fast, dashes so quickly out of my sight to the staircase to the loft I can’t say anything else to keep him talking.

&
nbsp; If he’s the one, God help him.

  I shut the bathroom door, then quietly prepare myself to do what I came up here for. I can’t take too long, I can’t make anyone else suspicious about me and what I do.

  XXIX

  ‘I won’t walk you to the door,’ Lewis says as he pulls up outside my house. He’s kept the engine running. ‘You know, just in case.’

  I want to kiss him. I would so love to kiss him and see what happened next, I feel incredibly still inside right now, so serene that I could take that step. I can’t, of course, because my mouth was full of sick. I rinsed it out with water, but I’m sure if anyone came too close they’d be assaulted with the putrid stench of who I really am.

  ‘It’s nothing personal,’ I say to him. ‘It really isn’t. I actually … I actually quite like you.’

  The lines of his face, tense with being so restrained and neutral, relax as he allows himself a little smile. ‘That’s not the impression I get.’

  ‘You’re a widower, you must understand how hard it is when you meet someone and it opens up all these possibilities but to even contemplate the possibilities you have to let go a little of the person you lost. The thought of letting even a little of Joel go … It’s impossible to my mind. What was your wife’s name?’

  ‘Hallie,’ he says, his demeanour sombre and reserved.

  ‘You did tell me, but when did she … ?’

  ‘Four years ago.’

  ‘Was she ill before she died?’

  He nods contemplatively. ‘Yeah, she was.’

  ‘Have you been out with people, dating and stuff like that?’

  ‘I have.’

  ‘When did you feel all right about seeing other women and not extremely guilty at the very idea of being attracted to other people?’

  ‘I’ll let you know when it happens.’

  ‘Well, if it’s like that for you, can you understand where I’m coming from?’

  His black-brown eyes run carefully over my features until they settle on my lips. ‘Can I kiss you?’ he asks.

  A wave of embarrassment and humiliation crashes over me. ‘I’d love it if you did, but I, erm, the food tonight didn’t really agree with me and when I went to the loo earlier, I kind of … Kissing would not be a pleasant experience.’

  ‘OK,’ he says. Amusement dances around his lips. He doesn’t believe me.

  ‘It’s true.’ I have simply left out the part where I did it because I’d been forced to eat to prove I don’t have an eating disorder.

  ‘I see,’ he replies, the mirth has moved to his eyes and is now a huge smile. At least he thinks it’s funny, not hurtful, that I might lie about throwing up to avoid kissing him.

  ‘And anyway,’ I say after a glance up at my house, ‘if I’m not mistaken, my daughter is in my bedroom, sitting at the window watching to see if we are just two people who went to the same place at the same time or if we’re dating. The last thing either Phoebe or I need right now is another thing to fall out over.’ Plus she is out there somewhere, watching. Noting this down to write into a letter.

  With remarkable restraint, Mr Bromsgrove doesn’t look around. ‘Well, yes, there is that. Next time?’

  ‘Next time,’ I agree. I say it but it doesn’t mean anything. It doesn’t mean I have to do anything. ‘Maybe.’

  He creases up with another amused smile.

  At least he thinks it’s funny.

  XXX

  My early start, the chance to get the shopping out of the way before the others wake up this Saturday morning, has been thwarted.

  From my place on the pavement, my reusable bags tucked under one arm, my handbag slung across my body, I stand and I stare at my car. All four of the tyres have been let down – the little rubber covers have been left neatly beside each tyre. I’m not sure if it’s before or after the air was let out that the large slash mark has been made at the centre of each tyre. The cuts are long and wide, made with an obvious stab, a twist then a drag downwards. It looks like they’ve been made with a hunting knife to get through the thick rubber.

  Under the left windscreen wiper, the one nearest the pavement, placed to be the first thing you spot after the tyres, is a folded-over rectangle of paper. No envelope for this, her anger was too urgent, too immense for her to bother with such formalities.

  Whore

  I thought no one, not even Phoebe, could resent me more than I did for wanting to spend time with Lewis Bromsgrove, but I was wrong. This person does. This person has shown me, with four reenactments of what the kitchen knife did to Joel’s abdomen, how furious she is with me.

  Is there something wrong with me? Should I be reacting differently to this? Should I be on the phone to the police already, begging them for help? Or should I be refolding the paper, slipping it into my bag and working out how much it’s likely to cost to get all the tyres changed today because I need the car?

  I am in this halfway house between fear and anger. I am teetering between these emotions and not sure which one will help me to get through this without anyone else getting hurt.

  Back in the house, I check the clock – 7:49 – before heading for the kitchen and my laptop, ready to search for someone who will fix my car. No doubt they’ll have questions, no doubt I’ll play dumb and pretend I’m going to call the police. The house phone bursts into the silence of a still-asleep household and I dive for it, forgetting it might be Joel’s mum.

  ‘Did you snog him?’ Imogen. My heart sinks.

  ‘Morning, Imogen,’ I say.

  The brightness of her smile is too much even down the phone.

  ‘Did you?’ she replies, unable to hide or contain her absolute glee. ‘He’s a bit yummy, did you do us all a favour and snog the face off him?’

  ‘No, I didn’t.’

  ‘Oh,’ she says. ‘I thought I felt a vibe between you!’

  ‘You probably did,’ I admit reluctantly. I wander into the living room.

  ‘Oh my God, but that’s brilliant!’ she squeals. I hear her settle her cup of tea – white, two sugars – on the table so she can clap her hands. ‘I mean, it’s obviously so difficult to think about all that stuff after what you’ve been through, but this is great. Really. It’s not too soon at all, so don’t you even think that! I can totally see you two together!’

  ‘It’s not that simple.’ I think I need to tell her. I need to see if she has any clue about Damien and Phoebe. If she has, then the news of the pregnancy would give me a reaction that would tell me I was on the right track with thinking it might be Damien. It’s not my secret to share, but I also need someone to talk to who isn’t a man I’ve slept with, a man who I’m attracted to, or an older woman who is hiding something even though she is living in my house.

  If Damien is the father though … It could complicate things. If Phoebe hasn’t told him the truth – which I don’t think she has – then that would mean putting her at risk of unreasonable pressures and demands.

  ‘Oh? Why not?’

  ‘I can’t tell you,’ I say to her. I rub my eyes. ‘I wish I could, but it’s not my news to tell and I can’t talk about it. My head is well and truly wrecked.’

  My poor blue car seems so defeated, looking at it from the living room window. So damaged and hurt. Why did she do that? What was she thinking? Or wasn’t she thinking? Is it easier to stick a knife in and twist it as a solution to your problems if you’ve done it before and were never punished for it? It’s not that much easier for me to wake up every morning and know I face another day without Joel, but maybe that’s because it was forced upon me. Maybe if I’d actively decided to be without Joel I wouldn’t mind doing it again and again and again. Maybe it’s the same for her. Maybe by the second tyre it was as easy as breathing.

  ‘Oh, Sweetheart,’ Imogen coos on the phone, her voice a welcome balm, ‘maybe it’s good that you and Lewis are getting closer. Phoebe might have a thing or two to say about it but you can’t live your life according to the whims of a hormonal teenager. It’
d be so good for Zane, too. He needs a father figure. He’s got Fynn, I know, but it’s not the same. When you are in a relationship with someone it’ll make everything so much better.’

  I spin away from staring at my car and return to the conversation in full. ‘Better?’ I query.

  ‘You’ve done an amazing job with those children since … but I really think that you need to move on and being part of a couple will help them to feel more secure.’

  ‘I don’t believe I’m hearing this,’ I say. ‘Are you basically saying my being a lone parent is destabilising for my children, more than, say, their father being killed?’

  ‘Please don’t take it the wrong way. It’s just that children need two parents, they need a mother and a father. It’s not your fault that you’re a single mum. I mean, look at last week and you being called up to the school about Phoebe. She used to be such a sweet girl, wouldn’t say boo to a goose, but now she’s getting in trouble. The way she spoke to me the other day when I was just asking how she—’ She stops talking and the sound of her mouth dropping open fills the line. ‘Oh my God, she’s not pregnant is she? Is that why Lewis is taking an interest in her?’ My heart stops in my chest. ‘Or is it drugs? Underage drinking?’

  ‘Nice to know what you think of me and my family, Imogen.’ Maybe Aunty Betty had a point after all.

  ‘Sweetheart, no. I didn’t mean it like that. It’s just … If you do get together with Lewis, properly, a man with a decent job and who obviously has a positive influence on wayward kids, it’ll do wonders for all of you.’

  ‘How’s Damien getting on?’ I ask to change the subject, to follow up what I was thinking about last night not long before my car tyres were brutalised.