Authors: Jane Corry
Time to think about him later. Right now, this is our moment.
Thanks for everything
. That's what you might expect Joe to say. That's what a normal person would say. But Daniel hadn't done âthank yous' either.
âWhat next for you then?' asks Tony now, draining his glass and glancing at his watch. I can tell from the way he speaks that he's hacked off at not being thanked, and also â tellingly â that he doesn't really care for our client, who technically isn't our client any more.
Joe Thomas shrugs. âI'll use the money to start again somewhere else.'
He's referring, of course, to the supportive donations that came in during the case when Joe declared he didn't want any compensation â only his name to be cleared. As one well-wisher wrote to
The Times
: âIt is a vindication of society today that there are decent people still
around â even though their actions have been misinterpreted in the past.'
âI rather fancy a different kind of job too,' he adds.
My mind flicks back to the client profile I read on the train all those months ago. It seems like another life away.
Joe Thomas, 30, insurance salesman. Convicted in 1998 of murdering Sarah Evans, 26, fashion sales assistant and girlfriend of the accused â¦
âDo you know where you'll go next?' As I speak, Tony sends me a warning look. Don't get too personal. We've done our job.
âTo a hotel, I suppose. Or a bed and breakfast. It's not as though I've got a home to go to tonight.'
Once more, I am struck by the literal way in which he perceives my question.
âWhat about the future, in general?' I ask gently.
âI'm still thinking about it.' Joe's eyes are steady, looking into mine. âAny suggestions?'
My throat is tight. âIf it was me, I would probably go and live abroad. Italy maybe.' Goodness knows why my honeymoon location comes into my head.
Joe wipes his mouth clear of the froth with his sleeve. âWouldn't that look as if I was running away?'
Tony rises to his feet. âI don't want you to think I'm doing the same, but I've got to be somewhere.' He shakes my hand. âIt's been good working with you, Lily. You'll go far.' Then he looks at Joe and seems to hesitate. I hold my breath.
At times, I wonder if Tony actually believes Joe is innocent. Or whether it matters to him.
It's the kudos he wants. The winning of an important case which hits the headlines. I saw the pleasure on his face in front of those cameras when we left the court. And I am sharing it. We've made history. It feels wonderful.
âGood luck for the future.'
Inwardly, I breathe out a sigh of relief as Tony finally shakes Joe's hand then walks away. But our client has noticed the delay.
âHe doesn't like me.' Joe states it as a fact rather than in expectation of denial.
I stay silent.
âBut
you
understand me.' Joe looks at me again before glancing down at the bag of possessions he's been given â his belongings from prison. I wonder if they contain Daniel's sticker albums. I don't want them back. Too many memories.
Maybe it's the double gin and tonic Tony bought me, despite my asking for a single. Maybe it's the relief that we've won. Maybe it's because Joe reminds me so much of Daniel. Whatever it is, I find myself talking. âI had a brother once.' My eyes wander out over the street â did I mention we are sitting outside? Even though it's late afternoon, the weather is remarkably mild. Besides, by unspoken agreement we all needed some air after the courtroom. A couple walk past, arm in arm, and I can smell the woman's expensive perfume. But then it turns to a different smell in my head. The smell of straw. And death.
I discovered Daniel was doing drugs when my mother sent me into his room to get him down for dinner, the week before his seventeenth birthday. He was chopping up white stuff with a kitchen knife.
âThat's dangerous!' I'd seen some of the sixth-form girls do something similar in the loos at school, though I'd never done drugs myself.
âSo what?'
âWhat's dangerous?' Dad was behind us.
Swiftly Daniel shoved the evidence into his jeans pocket.
Don't say
, his eyes pleaded.
Don't say.
âDoing fifty miles per hour when you should be doing forty.' I picked up the
Learner Driver Handbook
from the desk.
âOf course you can't, son. If you don't understand that, you'll never pass your driving test. Although frankly, I don't think you should be taking it at all.'
âWhy not?' Daniel's dark eyes were glaring.
âBecause, as your instructor says, you drive too fast.'
âAt least I'm not doing what you are.'
A beat of silence. âWhat do you mean?'
Daniel's eyes narrowed. âYou know what I mean. I've heard you on the extension. More than once, in fact. And I'm going to tell Mum.'
Dad went very still. âI don't know what you're talking about.'
Nor did I.
âIt's nothing,' said my brother when I questioned him.
One of Daniel's lies, I told myself, to cover his own behaviour and move the spotlight on to someone else. It had happened enough before.
That night, Daniel refused to come down to dinner.
Instead, he stayed in his room, playing loud music that reverberated through the ceiling and made our heads ring.
âTurn that down!' yelled Dad, hammering at the door.
Daniel didn't bother to reply. As usual, he'd put the bed against the door so no one could get in.
Later, as I passed my parents' closed bedroom door, I heard them having an almighty row. There'd been others of course. All about Daniel.
What is wrong with that boy? How can we cope any more?
That sort of thing.
But this one was different. This one sent a chill down my bones.
âI heard Daniel. Who were you on the phone to? Who is she?'
This was my mother.
âNo one.'
âYou swear? On the children's lives?'
There was a silence. Then a low voice, which meant I had to press my head against the door to hear the rest. â⦠your fault. Don't you realize? ⦠lavished all your attention on Daniel ⦠looked elsewhere.'
Mum's distressed voice was all too clear. âSo it's the truth? How could you? Do you love her? Are you going to leave us?'
I couldn't hear the reply. Only the desperate sound of weeping. On the other side of the door, I was bent double. Almost sick. Dad had been having an affair?
Then I saw him. Daniel walking up the stairs. Daniel grinning as though there was nothing wrong. Daniel with huge black pupils.
I rushed up after him to the bedroom. âMum and Dad are splitting up. And it's all your fault.'
He shrugged. âShe needed to know.'
His lack of concern made me boil. âIf you weren't so horrible, Mum and Dad would be all right.'
Daniel looked shocked, as well he might. Hadn't I always protected him? Loved him. Looked after him, just as I'd been instructed from the day he entered our lives. Even though he tested us to the limits.
But the shock of my father's affair had made me see red. And that's when I said something else.
âWe should never have adopted you. Then you couldn't have hurt me too. I hate you.'
Daniel's face crumpled. Instantly I knew I'd hurt him. No. I'd destroyed him.
I put out my hand to try to make up with him. He threw it off. Then he seemed to change his mind. He took my hand and squeezed it, crunching my knuckles with his fingers. The pain made me cry out. Then he pulled me towards him so that his eyes â mad with blackness â looked down on me.
I could smell his breath.
My heart pulsed in my throat. Words lay on the edge of my tongue, ready to be spoken. Words that would change our lives for ever.
âYou're a bad person, Daniel. Everyone else says it, and they're right. Really bad.'
Then he laughed. And I knew what that laugh meant.
I slapped him. Hard. First one cheek. Then the other.
âYou know what? I wish you had never been born.'
âWhat happened then?'
Joe's hand is on mine. Our heads are bowed together.
Mine with grief. His with empathy. I can feel the same electric shock that passed through me in the prison when I gave him the sticker albums.
I'm certain he can feel it too.
That's the thing about people like Joe and, up to a point, Daniel. They might not seem to show the âright' kind of emotion at the appropriate time. But if you push them far enough, they bleed. Even cry. Just like the rest of us.
âI went out,' I mumble.
âWhere?'
âI ⦠don't want to say.'
He nods. âOK.'
âWhen I got back, Mum was frantic. Daniel had left a note just saying “Gone”. We searched everywhere. But it's ⦠well, it's a big house. We have a few acres. And ⦠and we have stables. That's where I found him. He often went there.
We
often went there ⦠But this time he was ⦠hanging. From a rope wound round a beam.'
Joe's hand tightens on mine.
My words are blurting out now along with the tears. âI tipped him over. He wasn't well â¦'
Joe's voice is gentle. âWhat exactly was wrong with him?'
I shake my head. âWhat they used to call “wilful disobedience”, possibly brought on by a difficult childhood. That's what the so-called experts said.' I laugh hoarsely. âHe was never officially diagnosed, but sometimes I do wonder if â¦'
I stop, not wanting to cause offence.
âIf he was on the autistic spectrum too?'
âPossibly.' I twist my hands awkwardly. âBut there were other things he did that didn't fit.'
Joe is looking thoughtful. âSo that's why you understand me.' It's not a question.
I nod. Embarrassed. And yet also grateful that this man understands me too.
âI'm so sorry about your horse.' Joe's voice has a softness I've never heard before.
I look up at him. His eyes are brown now. How can he do that? Go from brown to black and back to brown again?
âActually,' I add, searching in my bag for a tissue, âhe was Daniel's. That's what made it so difficult.'
âLet's go for a walk,' says Joe. And as we stand up, it seems quite natural for him to take my hand in his.
A few days after Carla's visit, Maria had put up her hand at register and asked if she could be moved to another desk in the classroom.
âWhy?' whispered Carla, even though her sinking heart told her the answer.
Maria ignored her. It was as if she hadn't spoken.
âWho would like to sit next to Carla?' said the nun with the gappy teeth.
No one volunteered. Instead, everyone shuffled away. One of the girls â the one with pigtails who usually invited her to play hopscotch â cupped her hand around her neighbour's ear to say something quietly. The other one let out a little gasp.
It was like being at the old school all over again. Carla was so upset that she could not complete her maths exercise: a subject she now shone at. The figures hung in the air with giant question marks. What was going on?
âThey have sent you to Coventry,' said another girl â the most unpopular one in the class, whom the nun had sent to fill Maria's place next to Carla. She had greasy hair which her mother would only allow her to wash once a month because, so she had told Carla, it was better for the ânatural oils'. This girl was always last to be chosen for
teams: to be placed next to her was one of the gravest insults.
âCoventry?' Carla did not understand. âWhere is that?'
The girl with the greasy hair shrugged. âIt's where they don't speak to you.' Then she held out her arm. âIt will be much nicer now there are two of us.'
But Carla didn't want to be friends with the girl with the greasy hair whom everyone else despised. She wanted to be friends with Maria, whose mother had invited her back for tea in their lovely big house on the road with the wide pavement, where no one kicked beer cans in the street.
At milk-time, Carla sought out Maria in the playground. âTell me what I have done wrong,' she pleaded.
For the first time that day, Maria raised her face and looked at her. Those beautiful blue eyes were cold. Disdainful. âPapa has an uncle who lives at the foot of the mountains, not far from Florence.' Maria was talking as if Carla smelled of something nasty. âHe knows your grandparents. They all do. And they say your mother is a bad woman.'
Mamma? A bad woman? Mamma with her kind warm smile who smelled of Apple Blossom and all the other lovely scents that she sold every day at an expensive shop for other men's wives? That could not be true.
âMaria! Maria!' It was the gappy-toothed nun, striding towards them with her crucifix necklace swinging and her lips tightening. âI am under instructions from your mother not to let you talk to that girl.'
Carla's eyes welled with tears. âWhy?'
The nun crossed herself swiftly across her large breasts:
breasts that she and Maria had giggled about together only last week. âYou will find out soon enough. Be sure to collect an envelope addressed to your mother from the school office before you go home this afternoon.'
Mamma wept and wailed when she read the letter. âThe Mother Superior wants to see your birth certificate,' she sobbed, head in hands on the wobbly kitchen table. âShe wants proof that you had a papa. This is my fault for sending you to a Catholic school. The old one wouldn't have cared.'
Carla put an arm around Mamma. âPerhaps it is under your bed where you keep your special things?'
Mamma's lip curled. For a moment, she reminded Carla of the wicked witch in one of her favourite books from the library. âHow dare you go looking there?'
Carla thought of the handsome man with the funny hat whom she looked at every now and then when Mamma wasn't home. He always smiled at her so kindly!
âThey are only pictures, Mamma. I was curious.'
Mamma let out a groan. âPerhaps you deserve to know. That man is your papa.'
Her father! So that is what he had looked like. âMaybe,' said Carla, trying to be helpful, âhe has taken these papers with him to heaven.'
âNo. He has not!' Mamma rose to her full height, tossing back her glorious black hair. She was angry now instead of sad. âIf you had not opened your mouth to Maria's mother, none of this would have happened.'
The sob burst out of Carla's mouth like a giant hiccup. âBut I didn't know I was doing anything wrong.'
It was no good. Mamma took herself to her bedroom and â for the first time that Carla could remember â locked her door.
âPlease, please open it,' she begged from outside.
But all she could hear was Mamma sobbing.
Maybe, Carla told herself, Mamma's mood would pass, like it had after Christmas. Perhaps on Monday the girls would start to be nice to her again.
But she was wrong. It got worse over the weeks. Then Mamma received a letter from the Mother Superior. She had until March to produce the birth certificate. Otherwise, Carla would have to leave. It should have been âpresented', apparently, when she had started school. But there had been an âoversight'.
No one wanted to play with her at break-time. Snow had started to fall last week: all the others pressed their noses against the window and talked excitedly about building snowmen when they got home. Maria had already got a new best friend: a pretty girl whose uncle had given her a silver cross which she showed off to everyone. Even the greasy-haired girl moved away from Carla when they had to crowd into the gym because it was too wet to play outside.
âI heard someone say you were a
bastard
,' she said quietly.
Carla ran the word around her mouth all afternoon and until she got home. How strange. It wasn't in the
Children's Dictionary
. âWhat does “bastard” mean?' she asked when Mamma returned from work in her smart white uniform.
âIs that what they are calling you now?' Then her mother placed her head on the kitchen table and beat her
fists so that one of the legs cracked and had to be propped up with the telephone directory.
Another day passed. And another.
âThe certificate has not come from Italy yet?'
âNo,
cara mia
.'
Even when Mamma eventually admitted there was no such certificate, they still both waited for the postman. âThen we can honestly say that we are waiting for it to arrive,' explained Mamma, brushing Carla's hair as she did every night. âIf only I could tell Larry. He could help.'
That was another thing. Larry was working very hard. So hard that he didn't have time to visit them. âHe is an important man,' Mamma often said. âHe helps the Queen decide what is right and what is wrong.'
Then, one evening, when Carla was already in bed, she heard his voice at the front door. Usually he came in through the back. Besides, it was a Wednesday! Larry only came here on a Tuesday and Thursday and sometimes on Sundays (although recently his visits on the Lord's Day had become more frequent). Something had happened. She could tell. Creeping out of bed, in her pyjamas, she saw Larry twirling Mamma in his arms right out there in the corridor for everyone to see. Ugh!
âLove you ⦠We won the case ⦠Wanted to tell you before I went home.'
Words drifted out. Words she didn't understand. Then there was another voice.
âTony?'
It was Lily!
âThat's not Tony.' Carla came running up, keen to make
it all right. âThis is Larry. He is my mother's friend. The one who sees her on Sundays while you have me â¦'
Then she clasped her hand to her mouth because, of course, Lily thought Mamma had been working. Not lying in bed with Larry.
Now Mamma would be cross with her again. But instead, she seemed confused. âWhat do you mean?'
âTony, what are you doing?' Lily was staring at Larry with a strange look on her face.
Mamma started to sound scared. âThis is no Tony. You have made a mistake. Larry! Tell her.'
But Larry pushed her hand away and was moving towards Lily. His neck was very red. âI need to talk to you,' he said.
It was difficult to hear exactly what he was saying in the corner, although she caught words like âappreciate' and âconfidential', both of which she could spell perfectly because they had been at the beginning of the dictionary.
âYou want me to keep quiet about your sordid affair?' Lily was shouting now. Then she turned to Mamma. Carla had never seen her friend's eyes flash like that. âHow could you go off with someone else's husband? Don't you have any shame? As for you, Tony, if I see you again with this woman, I will tell your wife.'
Carla had a sudden picture of the curtains closing in the house they had walked past at Christmas.
âIt's none of your business.'
âThere's a child involved here, Tony. I'm warning you. I meant what I said just now.'
Then Lily stormed back into her own flat, slamming the door behind her.
âWhy is she angry?' asked Carla as Larry pushed them into their own flat.
âHow do you know Lily?' frowned Mamma, pulling at Larry's sleeve.
Larry wasn't red any more. He was white. â
She
,' he said, pointing, âneeds to go to her room.'
âNo.' Mamma stamped her foot. It reminded Carla of the dancing noise through the wall at night, but her mother wasn't dancing now. âMy daughter hears too. You tell lies to me? Then you tell lies to her too. We deserve to know the truth.'
We?
A lovely warm feeling ran through Carla. For the first time since Larry had come into their lives, it felt as though she and Mamma were a team again.
Larry's face had its angry look on. âAs you wish. You know I have another family. I made that clear at the beginning.'
Mamma hung her head as if hearing something she didn't want to.
âI work with Lily. She doesn't know about ⦠about my life at home. She doesn't know about us. Nor does anyone else. I told you my name was Larry to keep some kind of anonymity.' There was a deep sigh. âBut my name is really Tony.'
âTony Smith like Larry Smith?' whispered her mother.
The angry look had gone. Instead there was a sigh. A big, tired one. âNo. Tony Gordon.'
Mamma's lips were moving as if she was repeating all this to herself. Or maybe she was saying her Ave Marias.
âI understand,' she said at last. âWe will have to be more careful.'
Tony took her in his arms. âFrancesca, listen to me. We will have to have a break until this blows over. I can't risk Lily telling my wife â¦'
As he held her, he looked at Carla. She knew what he was saying. Knew it as clearly as if he was speaking.
Go away. You are not wanted right now
. This was her chance.
âWhat about the woman in your car?' she burst out. âThe woman you were kissing before my birthday. Do you love her too?'
There was a terrible silence. Her mother took a step backwards, falling against the kitchen table as she did so and knocking the telephone directory out of place. Larry opened his mouth and roared, âYou conniving little â'
âGet out!'
At first Carla thought Mamma was screaming at her. But no. It was at Larry. âGet out, get out!' she yelled again. Horrified, Carla watched as Mamma hurled a tin at him. A tin of baked beans. It missed. Just. Then another. This time it was a tin of tomatoes. Italian tomatoes.
Larry's face was so angry that Carla thought the tomatoes had broken out of the tin and painted his cheeks. âYou've made a big mistake, young lady,' he said, bending down to her level. âYou will see.'
Then he stormed out, leaving Mamma to weep, kneeling on the floor with her body folded over, rather like a snail's shell.
âI am sorry, Mamma,' Carla whispered. âI should not have mentioned the lady in the car. I promised Larry I would say nothing. That was why he gave me the caterpillar â¦'
Mamma lifted her face. It was red and blotchy. Just like Larry's had been. âHe bribed you?'
Then Mamma cried even more. She cried so loudly that Carla's stomach began to hurt. The pain grew worse and worse so that it became a knot that throbbed inside her.
When the phone rang, they both ignored it.
âI've got a tummy ache,' said Carla quietly.
Mamma was still lying on the floor. âDo not expect me to believe you,' she sobbed. âI will believe no one. Ever again. Not even myself.'
That night, Carla's pain grew worse. In her dreams, it became a red-hot stick, beating her inside. Someone was holding it. Maria. Lash, lash, against her body.
âMaria!' she called out. âPlease stop. Let me play!'
âIt's all right, little one.' Mamma's voice floated over her. âThe doctor is coming.'