Yes, yes, Jonas, I know you worked it out all those years ago. I’m sorry that I ever made you feel guilty for not getting in touch with her. And I am so, so sorry for what she did to Meredith. I’m guessing because you haven’t told me otherwise that after the miscarriage Meredith still can’t get pregnant again? I feel so awful for being a part of Gran’s world. I really hope you can forgive me.
I’m sorry, you probably don’t want me dredging all this up. It’s like the floodgates have opened and I can’t believe how under her spell I was. I hope I don’t end up with only negative memories of her, that would be bad for me more than anything.
Will you talk to me now, Jonas? Now I can see everything so much more clearly, will you talk to me?
I love you.
Abi
xxxx
Someone killed my grandmother. And they want me to be convicted for her murder.
These are the thoughts that accompany my every waking moment, every step I take, every time I leave the house to go and meet someone who wants their jewellery reloved or something special made. Someone killed my grandmother and they hate me enough to let me be accused.
They’d have to know me and they’d have to know her. They’d have to have access to her house or my key, and knowledge of when it was safe to get into the house to do it. There aren’t that many people with all that information, all that access. If I didn’t know me, I’d think it was me, too. But it wasn’t.
The only person who I know who could hate me enough is the person who would call Social Services before I was even born to make sure I never set foot in her house. I’m still smarting at the idea of that. She sat there and pretended that she had wanted to see me, that she regretted it, when all along she never had any intention of seeing me. And then she manipulated what she told her doctor and nurses to make it sound like I had been the driving force behind her decision to die. The only person who would hate me enough and would want her dead was
her
. My grandmother. Even if she did, though, there was no doubting that she couldn’t do it herself, which means someone had to help her. Which means they must know I am being investigated for their crime.
Somebody killed my grandmother, and they’re going to let me go to prison for it.
I let myself into the flat, kick off my shoes, stop by the bathroom to wash my hands and then head straight for the kitchen. I had a message from Melissa earlier, asking how it was going, whether I’d got any closer to applying for my adoption papers and saying she’d come with me or be with me while I read them. I remember the first time we met, her saying that it was important to have them even having met her birth mother. I need to call her back, I felt such a connection with her, like she had lived so many of the things I did in a similar way. But I am barely functioning at the moment. All that keeps going though my head is that someone killed my grandmother and they’re going to let me be convicted for it. I can’t engage with anybody about anything else beyond that.
I can hear the others in the living room; I caught a glimpse of them on my way to get a drink. Mum and Nancy are on the sofa, the TV is on, Seth and Sienna are by the window watching the world go by and shouting ‘Bingo!’ every time they see a dog.
On the worktop nearest the kitchen door, the foil, wire top and cork of a bottle of champagne sit discarded, as if someone had hurriedly opened them. Champagne at 4 p.m. Mum and Nancy are becoming ladies who lunch clichés. Nancy was gutted (Mum probably was, too) when I stopped taking Sienna out with me every day.
In the fridge I reach for the orange juice, which is too large a bottle to fit in the fridge door. Next to the orange juice is a champagne bottle-shaped space, from the bottle I’ve stored since I arrived here. I leave the fridge door open and return to the foil, wire and cork on the worktop by the door. Snatch it up. The metal cap that sits between the wire and the cork is the same brand, same vintage, as the one I had in my fridge in Leeds for more than a year and then brought here. It was very expensive and the same brand and year as the one Dad had given Seth and me after we’d cancelled our engagement party. He’d scrawled a note saying how sorry he and Mum were about the party but how pleased they were that we were together and happy. The bottle and note were from him because he’d known what had really happened, he wasn’t as blind to Nancy as Mum was. When I told Dad I’d almost saved up enough to open my own shop, he’d bought me another bottle of the same champagne to keep for that day. The bottle lived in that part of the fridge. I go back, check it hasn’t been moved, shunted along to make room for something else. It’s not there. It’s not there … but they wouldn’t, they just wouldn’t.
Slamming the fridge door shut, I dash out into the corridor then across into the living room.
‘Clem, go back into the kitchen and grab yourself a glass, we’re celebrating my good news,’ Nancy says. On the low coffee table in front of them, a coffee table Mum and Nancy ordered and had delivered without consulting me after one of their shopping trips, sits the condensation-soaked bottle of champagne. I snatch it up, look at the bottom right-hand corner of the label where Dad had written
Love, Mum & Dad, 2014
. Nancy and Mum would, they did.
‘This is the bottle that my dad bought me,’ I say, the first time I’ve spoken directly to Nancy without her having asked a question first.
‘Seth did mention that, but Auntie Heather didn’t think you’d mind much since I’ve had such brilliant news,’ Nancy says. Her brow is a little creased, she probably wonders if she has said it properly or if I have a hearing problem. Even after everything, she still thinks I care about anything good or bad that happens to her. ‘My blog has been shortlisted for an award. The inside word is that I’m a shoe-in to win. Isn’t that wonderful?’
My attention moves from the bottle to Nancy. That’s it; done. She has at last succeeded in taking everything from me. Even in our most desperate-for-a-drink moments, Seth and I wouldn’t open that bottle, not even when we got married, because it was special, it was for when I opened the shop. It was a promise between Dad and me. Since Dad died it’s become more than that promise, it’s also the last thing he ever gave me to complete the important task I needed to fulfil.
‘You need to pack up and leave,’ I say to Nancy. She’s done it all, she’s taken everything from me. She can go now.
Her glass pauses on its journey to her mouth, her smile becomes a rictus mask of what happiness should look like on her face.
‘Sienna.’ Seth is on his feet. ‘Would you like to come for a walk on the beach with me? We can play dog bingo and maybe get an ice cream in Marrocco’s.’
‘OK, Uncle Smitty.’ My niece, who is really my second cousin, gets to her feet as well. ‘Is Auntie Smitty going to tell off Mum?’ The emotion in the room is heavy, potent enough to be real, touchable. Sienna can sense it and isn’t about to pretend that she can’t.
‘I’m not sure,’ Seth replies, as honest an answer as Dad would have given, ‘but I think it’s best that neither of us is here right now.’
‘OK.’ She shrugs. Makes no difference to her whether she’s here or not, plus she gets ice cream.
Minutes later, when Seth has gathered his keys and wallet from the shelf in the corridor, when they have debated and decided on which shoes to wear, whether to take coats or not, a click – quiet and discreet – tells us we are alone.
‘You need to pack up your stuff and leave,’ I say to Nancy again.
‘Clemency, love,’ Mum says, ‘I know that bottle meant something to you, but I didn’t think you’d mind sharing it with Nancy when she’d had such good fortune.’ Mum is now by my side and she rubs carefully at my shoulder. ‘You’re just going through a run of bad luck. Things will pick up for you soon, I know for certain they will.’ This is how my mother has reworked the last couple of weeks – a run of bad luck. Not another of my family members dying, not me being investigated for a serious crime, not me being cut off from my other family members on
her
say-so. Just a run of bad luck.
Nancy, meanwhile, hitches her eyebrow briefly, warns me that she knows too much about me for me to simply throw her out, to even complain when she has robbed me of something so precious.
My gaze rakes over Nancy with her perfect hazelnut hair that tumbles down towards her shoulders, the ‘kooky’ blonde patch at the front she had done when we were fourteen, the unsymmetrical lay of her features that have always denied her the chance to be a model. Her plan from an early age (when she was constantly told by her parents that she was beautiful and her cousin – me – wasn’t) was to be a model. She was going to take the catwalks of the world by storm, and earn buckets of money. That’s why there are so many photos of her on her blog/Twitter/Facebook/Instagram – she wants the world to see what the talent spotters and model agency folk missed: she was a natural model. She is hoping still that someone will ‘spot’ her. She knew she would have been perfect for the catwalks and the magazine covers and shoots. She might not be tall enough, or – to them – have a beguiling enough face, but they were wrong to deny her. She has the body – neat torso, slender limbs, always stylishly, quirkily clothed. She has, too, her most important asset of all – her unwavering sense of being entitled to whatever it is that she wants, whenever she wants it. Life may have dealt her merely a comfortable (instead of rich) upbringing and denied her the career she dreamt of, but she hadn’t let that hold her back. And one of the many ways she gets what she wants is to have things over people, to manipulate them into doing her bidding.
I stare at her as I ask my mother: ‘Do you want to know why I hate Nancy?’
‘You don’t hate her, love. Of course you don’t. You’re like sisters.’
‘We are not like sisters. It’s only ever been you who has thought that. She has been hideous to me most of our lives.’
A shake of the head from my cousin Nancy – I was obviously suffering from false memory syndrome – she had been nothing but delightful to me during our childhood. Nancy’s lip twisted ever so slightly at the corner, reminding me that if I dared to say anything different, she would be doing her own remembering and what she recalled would be things I would not want my mother knowing. No matter how old, independent and adult I am now, there are things no one wants their mother to know.
‘When I was nine Nancy knocked over your mother’s ashes from the mantelpiece at her house and you and Uncle Colin blamed me, remember?’ I say to Mum. ‘I said to her that when I was older my real parents would come for me and make everything OK. I was nine. I didn’t even have a concept of what a “real” parent was except Nancy and her parents had been telling me all my life that I wasn’t real. So, I said it and Nancy held that over me for years – saying she was going to tell you and Dad what I said.’
There you go, Nancy, that’s one thing you’ve got on me gone.
‘When we were ten and those boys kept calling me names at school, she joined in. She said it was all true, and I couldn’t tell you because she’d tell you what I said when I was nine. When we were twelve, she blackmailed me into smoking cannabis and then used
that
to blackmail me into having no friends and doing whatever she wanted all through our teens because I knew how much it would hurt you that I’d done drugs and had said that thing when I was nine.’
Another one gone, Nancy
.
‘When I was fifteen I had sex for the first time with a lad I was seeing at school. Nancy tried it on with him a few days later. When he wasn’t interested she spread rumours at school that I was a slut, that I’d slept with loads of people, and that I’d given him an STD. I got bullied and called names that whole year. But I couldn’t say anything because I didn’t want you to know I was having sex.
‘When I was seventeen I had a pregnancy scare due to a split condom. I don’t know how she found out but I suspect she’d cosied up to my boyfriend and he was just as panicked as me so he told her. She tried to get him to dump me before we could get enough money together to buy a test. When he wouldn’t she said she’d tell Dad, who would beat him up. My boyfriend dumped me, just as she wanted, and I had to go through the stress of the test on my own.’ (I have never told anyone the real result of the test nor what happened two days later when I had a miscarriage, and I wasn’t about to tell these two.)
Mum’s face has grown paler and paler with every word, her features frigid with shock. ‘Oh, I forgot, every time we met someone new, she would tell them that I’d been found in a cardboard box on the steps of an orphanage.’
Mum looks at Nancy then because that’s shocking to her, it seems.
‘And do you know what, Mum? I don’t even hate her for all of that, and I don’t hate her for ruining every single significant event that’s ever happened to me.’
‘That’s not true!’ Nancy states. She has to find her voice now that her three biggest pieces of leverage over me have gone and Mum is starting to look at her with new, un-rose-tinted eyes.
‘Clemency—’
I thought Mum was listening but she isn’t. She is desperately trying to rearrange every word that filters into her brain so that they don’t tell the story of my experiences with Nancy, but instead hold the key to how I have got all of this wrong. ‘Mum,’ I almost scream, ‘just listen to me. Please! For once, just listen. She has ruined almost every single significant event in my life. I wasn’t allowed to celebrate getting ten high-grade GCSEs because Nancy only got five low-grade ones.’
‘Her father was awful to her about that, she felt so terrible,’ Mum says, patently not listening. But I don’t care and plough on. It’s liberating getting all of this out there, off my chest.
‘The same thing with my A levels – she does badly because she didn’t bother to work hard, I’m not allowed to celebrate. And my graduation – you almost didn’t come because she turned up the night before having broken up with her boyfriend and you were suddenly the only person in the whole world she could turn to. You do realise, don’t you, Mum, that the only reason you came was because Dad put his foot down and said he’d never speak to you again if you missed it?’