‘Olive,’ he says suddenly, the weariness gone from his voice and a lightness in its place. ‘That’s her name.’
I look at him, trying to hide my smile.
Olive looks at the house, then she starts up the engine.
‘She’s leaving,’ Monday says.
‘No she’s not,’ you say after a few seconds when she hasn’t moved.
‘She’s just sitting there,’ I say.
‘Looks like she’s getting cold feet. If we leave her for a moment, she’ll probably get scared and drive away,’ you say. ‘That will sort it for you.’
Dr Jameson watches her for a moment, then without a word he leaves us. We watch him walk down his garden path and approach the car.
‘He’s going to tell her to fuck off,’ you say. ‘Watch.’
I sigh. Your humour is deliberately inappropriate and though I am used to you and your nuances, I still find you tiring.
Dr Jameson goes round to Olive’s window and raps on it lightly. He gives her a sweet welcoming, encouraging smile, a soft look I’ve never seen him give anyone before. She looks at him, her hands wrapped around the steering wheel so tightly that her knuckles are white. I watch her grip loosen as she studies him, then the engine is killed.
‘I think we should leave these two alone,’ I say, and you and Monday look at me, confused. ‘Come on.’ As I drag the pair of you down the driveway, Dr Jameson offers no objection to us leaving. He waves us off cheerfully as he guides her into the house. It makes me smile to see that you’re a little hurt by this.
Later that day I slide into a chair beside my dad in our local community hall to watch Heather receive her orange belt in Taekwondo. The orange belt signifies that the sun is beginning to rise and, as with the morning’s dawn, only the beauty of the sunrise is seen rather than the immense power. This means the beginner student sees the beauty of the art of Taekwondo but has not yet experienced the power of the technique. I feel like I deserve a belt too.
Zara is sitting on Leilah’s knee on the other side of Dad, so for once we don’t have her acting as the bridge between us.
Heather sees me, lights up with excitement and waves. She never seems nervous about life’s challenges, she sees them as an adventure, most of the time she creates them herself, which couldn’t be more inspiring.
‘Dad,’ I say. ‘About the job …’
‘It’s fine.’
‘Well, I wanted to thank you.’
‘I didn’t do anything. It’s gone. Someone else got it.’
‘I heard. But thanks. For thinking that I’d be able to do it.’
He looks at me like I’m daft. ‘Of course you’d be able to do it. And you’d probably do a better job than the fella they hired. But you didn’t bloody bother going to the interview. Sound familiar?’
I smile to myself. That’s the biggest compliment he’s ever given me.
Heather starts her display.
‘Come to think of it, I found this—’ he reaches into his back pocket and pulls out a photo, slightly creased at the corners from where it’s been shoved into his pocket and moulded into shape by his arse. ‘I was looking at some old photos of Zara and came across this. Thought you’d like it.’
It’s a photograph of me and Granddad Adalbert Mary. I’m planting seeds, concentrating hard, neither of us looking at the camera, in his back garden. I must be four years old. On the back in my mum’s handwriting it says, Dad and Jasmine, planting sunflowers 4 June 1984.
‘Thank you,’ I whisper, a lump in my throat, and Dad looks away, uncomfortable with my sudden emotion. Leilah tosses a tissue across to me, looking pleased, and I watch as Heather begins her display.
When I go home I frame the photo and add it to my kitchen wall of memories. A captured time when Mum was alive, when Granddad Adalbert Mary hadn’t been planted in the ground and when I hadn’t known I was going to die.
28
My garden in November is not necessarily dull. There isn’t an abundance of flowers but I have a variety of herbaceous shrubs with colourful bark to make it more interesting. My winter jasmine, winter-flowering heather, evergreen shrubs and an elegant feathery grass that billows in the slightest breeze adds movement, bright-red berries bring colour and Mr Malone’s honeysuckle is fragrant and colourful. The autumn gales have started to blow and there is high rainfall, so I spend most days raking up fallen leaves which I then use to make leaf mould. I clean my garden equipment and I store it all away for the winter, feeling my chest tighten as I do so, and I tie in my climbers to protect them from the winds. My November project is to plant bare-rooted roses and my research into how to go about this has amused Monday no end. It is a serious subject.
‘They’re only roses,’ Monday said, but they’re not only anything. And I told him exactly why this was so, and he listened, because he always listens, and when I was finished he kissed me and told me, for the first time, that is exactly why he is in love with me. And now roses remind me of his love for me.
But roses, like you and I, have their issues. Roses planted in soil that has grown roses for a number of years are prone to a disease known as rose sickness. If you plant new roses in this situation you must take out as much of the old soil as possible and replace it with fresh soil from another part of the garden which hasn’t grown roses before. This makes me think of Mr Malone, trying to grow in exactly the same place as his wife has died. It makes me think of anyone who is trying to grow where something, even a part of themselves, has died. We all experience that sickness. It is better to move, uproot ourselves and start afresh; then we will flourish.
I awake one November morning to the sound of dragging coming from outside – a familiar sound, like a screeching of nails on blackboard – and I leap out of bed. It brings me back, magically transports me to another time in my life. I move away from Monday’s arm, which earlier in the night was protective but now feels heavy and dead across my chest, and I slip out of bed. I look out of the window and I see you, pulling the garden table across the drive.
My heart skips a beat, my stomach does an unusual flip, not of excitement but of sorrow and loss, unable and unprepared to move on, to accept change or say goodbye. Instant grief. I can’t watch you do this. I throw on a tracksuit and hurry outside. I must help you do this. I grab one end of the table and you look up at me. You smile.
Corporate Man speeds by. We both take a hand off the table to wave. He doesn’t register us. We laugh and continue. We don’t speak, yet we work together well, manoeuvring the heavy table around the side of the house and into the back garden. It almost feels like a removal, as though we’re carrying the coffin of a dear friend. We do it together and I feel a lump in my throat.
We place the table down in the back garden, on the patio area outside the kitchen and we replace the chairs that you have already carried around.
‘Amy’s coming back,’ you say.
‘That’s terrific news,’ I finally say, surprised I’ve managed to push sound past the lump in my throat.
‘Yeah, it is,’ you say, but you don’t look so happy. ‘I can’t mess this up.’
‘You won’t.’
‘Don’t let me.’
‘I won’t,’ I say, touched by the responsibility you have entrusted me with.
You nod and we make our way around to the front garden. Fionn is sitting inside the car messing with the stereo, changing stations to find a song he wants.
‘You fixed it.’
‘It wasn’t broken,’ you say, confused.
‘But you said … Never mind.’
The penny drops as you realise your earlier lie has been caught out. ‘The Guns N’ Roses song.’ You sigh. ‘My dad used to hit my mum and me. The day we finally got rid of him, the day I finally faced up to him, me and Mum turned “Paradise City” as high as it could go and we danced around the kitchen together. I’ve never seen her so happy.’
Your freedom song. I knew it meant something, I wanted it to mean something on those cold dark
nights when you came catapulting down the road like you’d been away the longest time and couldn’t wait to get home to your family, but then always felt locked out even when you weren’t. ‘Thanks for telling me.’
‘Well, it beats “Love is a Battlefield”,’ you say. My mouth falls open. ‘What? You don’t think I can’t hear you blaring that thing every day. When your windows are open I can hear you, you know, and sometimes even see you with your hairbrush.’ You imitate me, doing a woeful eighties dance.
‘I do not sing into a hairbrush,’ I protest.
You’re smiling at me nervously and I realise this is just your attempt to move on from what you revealed to me, in the only way you know how.
‘It’s a deodorant bottle, I’ll have you know, and I’m an excellent lip-syncher.’
‘I’m sure you are,’ you laugh.
I look across at my house and I see Monday watching us from my bedroom window. He moves away when we catch him.
‘That’s going well,’ you say.
I nod. ‘Today’s the day,’ I say, and on his confused expression I explain: ‘My year’s up.’
You look taken aback, surprised. ‘Well. Fancy that.’
‘I thought maybe you knew, with the table.’
‘No. Just felt right.’ We both stare at the place the table used to be. The grass is flattened where the table legs used to stand. The soil shows through. You will have to re-seed.
‘Have you found anything yet?’ you ask.
‘No.’
‘You will.’
‘Yeah.’
‘You’ve lost your confidence, but you’ll get it back,’ you say, reassuringly. And I know they’re not empty words because, of all people, you know.
‘Thanks.’
‘Well. It’s been an interesting year.’ You hold out your hand. I stare at it, take it, shake it once, then step closer for a hug.
We embrace, on the grass in the front garden, where the table used to be.
‘You never did tell me what I did wrong,’ you say gently, into my neck. ‘To make you so unhappy. But I think I know.’
I freeze, uncertain how to reply. It has been a long time since I’ve thought of you being that man, that man that I hated for so long. Neither of us move from the embrace, I think it’s easier for both of us not to have to look at each other. You speak into my neck, I can feel your hot breath on my skin.
‘It was your sister, wasn’t it?’
My heart pounds and I’m sure you can feel it. It gives me away.
‘I’m sorry.’
The apology shocks me at first, and then nothing. And I realise that’s not really what I needed. You spent the year showing me you are sorry, that you never meant it in the first place. It doesn’t matter any more. You’re forgiven. I pull away from the embrace, kiss you on the forehead, then cross the road back to my house.
Madra is digging furiously in the garden, he and I clash on issues such as this. Monday is dressed and is standing at the open door. He waves at you, you wave back.
‘Madra!’ I shout. ‘No! Honey, how could you let him …? Oh, my flowers!’
He’s digging at the foot of the sign you bought for me, the one which says, Miracles only grow where you plant them and I fall to my knees to fix the mess, but as I do, my eye falls upon a box in the soil. A metal box, like a rusted treasure box.
‘What the …? Monday, look!’
I look up at Monday, expecting surprise, but he knows already. He’s smiling at me. He lowers himself to his knees and I think he’s going to help me tidy my flowers but instead he says, ‘Open it.’
And I do. And oh, do I do.
This year has been the metamorphosis of me. Not on the outside. On the outside I look the same, a little older perhaps. On the inside I have changed. I feel it. And it is like magic. My garden is the mirror of me. My garden that once looked barren and sterile is now full and blooming and ripe. It thrives and it prospers. Perhaps you could say the same of me. I lost something that I thought defined me and I felt like a shell of a person. Instead of trying to get it back, I had to figure out why I couldn’t be whole all by myself.
The world is fascinated by instant transformations, human makeovers or a magician’s sleight of hand hidden with a flourish. Quick as a snap, from there to here, blink and we’ve missed it. My shift wasn’t instant, and often the slow pace of change can be painful, lonely and confusing, but without us realising it happening, it happens. We look back and think ‘Who was that person?’ when during it all we think, ‘Who am I becoming?’ And at what exact point was it that we crossed over that line, when one version of us became the next? But it is thanks to the slowness that we remember the journey, we reserve the sense of where we were, where we are going and why. Destination completely unknown, we can value the crossing.
This wasn’t just my journey, this wasn’t just about me falling down and a man rescuing me, though I did trip and you fell and love did happen for me and was mended and repaired for you. This is about you and me, our fall and rise with the seasons, and about what happened when one door closed for both of us. I don’t know if I would be this woman now if it weren’t for you, and you may not even think you did anything. Most people in life don’t have to actively do anything to change us, they simply need to be. I reacted to you. You affected me. You helped me. You were the oddest friendship, the kindest loaned ear. You told me once during one of those long, dark, cold winter nights at the garden table, though you were embarrassed to say it and probably too drunk to remember it now, that you were locked out in the cold and I let you in time and time again. I had a simple reply at the time, but didn’t realise the true meaning of my words – you gave me your key.
I think you did the same for me.
I helped you help me, you helped me to help you, that’s the way it must be or the very idea of help would be obsolete. I always thought that being helped was a loss of control, but you must allow someone to help you, you must want someone to help you, and only then can the act begin.
The transformation from chrysalis can take weeks, months or even years – mine took one year. And although I have become this person, I’m still in the midst of a larger transformation, one that I won’t recognise until I look back at me now and say ‘Who was that girl?’ We are constantly evolving; I suppose I have always known that, but because I always knew that, I feared stopping, and it is ironic that it was only when I finally stopped that I moved the most. I know now that we never truly stop, our journey is never complete, because we will continue to flourish – just as when the caterpillar thought the world was over, it became a butterfly.
If you adored the film of Cecelia’s first novel, P.S. I Love You, starring Hilary Swank and Gerard Butler, look out for the new adaptation of Where Rainbows End, released as Love, Rosie.
Starring Lily Collins (The Mortal Instruments, Mirror Mirror, The Blind Side) and Sam Claflin (Pirates of the Caribbean, Snow White and the Huntsman, The Hunger Games: Catching Fire), Love, Rosie is a story of true love, friendship and luck – and where fate can lead you.
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Christine Rose is crossing the Ha’penny Bridge in Dublin late one night when she sees a stranger, Adam, poised to jump. Desperate to help, she talks him into a reckless deal: if he gives her two weeks – till his 35th birthday – she’ll prove that life is worth living.
But as the clock ticks and the two of them embark on late-night escapades and romantic adventures, what Christine has really promised seems impossible …
A novel to make you laugh, cry and appreciate life, this is Cecelia Ahern at her thoughtful and surprising best.
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Acknowledgements
Enormous thanks to the following whose support I value and honour:
Marianne Gunn O’Connor, Vicki Satlow and Pat Lynch. The clever HarperCollins team especially Lynne Drew, Louise Swannell, Liz Dawson, Martha Ashby and Kate Elton. Thank you to the very shor
t Charlie Redmayne, without you I would be nothing. Good enough? I wish a fond farewell to Moira Reilly who has been with me since the beginning of this crazy journey, but it’s not goodbye forever – see you at the bar… Booksellers all around the world and the readers, I cannot thank you enough for the life you have given me, allowing me to immerse myself in my passion every single day of my life. My gorgeous family who I adore, my friends who answer ‘The Beacon’ at the shortest notice, and most important of all, David, Robin and Sonny, you mad, crazy, beautiful things – I love you all.
Right, now I’m off to write the next one. X
About the Author
Cecelia Ahern is an international bestseller. She was catapulted into the spotlight with her hit debut novel, P.S. I Love You, which was adapted into a major movie. The movie of her second novel, Love, Rosie (published as Where Rainbows End) was released worldwide in 2014, staring Lily Collins and Sam Claflin.
Her subsequent novels have captured the hearts of readers in 46 countries – her themes strike a chord with people in every continent, with over 22 million copies of her books sold.
As well as writing novels, Cecelia has also created several TV series including the hit comedy, Samantha Who?, in the US. She lives in Dublin with her family.
For more information on Cecelia, her writing, books and events, follow her on Twitter @Cecelia_Ahern, join her on Facebook.com/CeceliaAhernofficial and visit her website www.cecelia-ahern.com.
Also by Author
P.S. I Love You
Where Rainbows End (also known as Love, Rosie)
If You Could See Me Now
A Place Called Here
Thanks for the Memories
The Gift
The Book of Tomorrow
The Time of My Life
One Hundred Names
How to Fall in Love
Short stories