Read The Years That Followed Online
Authors: Catherine Dunne
“You came back; I know you did. Papa told me. But you only saw Imogen. You never came to see me.”
Calista nodded. “You were too small, Omiros. You would not have been able to understand. I'm sorry if that hurt you.” She stopped. There was no point. Those earlier visits back to Cyprus should have remained secret, always. Calista would never forgive Alexandros for turning her son against her.
“Why don't you just leave me alone,” Omiros said. His voice cracked on the last word, and Calista held her breath.
“I can't leave you alone because I love you. You are my son. I want to get to know you properly, little by little. That's all I want.”
“Take me to Papa,” he said. “That's all I want.”
*Â *Â *
Too many of her visits ended like that. Calista regrets, bitterly, that she cannot change the past. But there it is: a past that leaches continually into the present, a past that is even now playing out its final act.
Calista glances at her watch. It would not be good, if things were ever to come to light, to be seen out and about after a telephone call such as the one she has just had. She must be careful to do what appears to be the correct, the appropriate thing. People who have just received news about their murdered spouses do not dress up and go out for lunch. Calista will stay at home and shut herself away. She will call Rosa and make some excuse.
*Â *Â *
Afterwards, Calista climbs the stairs to the living room, waiting for the hollowness inside her to fill. Waiting for the elation to flood her veins and arteries with satisfied righteousness.
Instead, she sees her children's faces. She sees Alexandros's face when he loved her, once. She sees herself, her empty home.
But above all, she sees Imogen. Her daughter: beautiful, precious, talented. Then the anger begins to seep.
I hope you suffered, Alexandros, Calista thinks. I hope you were in agony and that your death was painful and savage. I hope you died long after your slut of a wife, so that you knew what was coming to
you. Above all, I hope it was lonely. And in your final moments, I hope you thought of me, of how I must have done this.
Calista sits and looks out at the Extremaduran countryside, watches people go about their daily tasks, imagines what might have been.
She pulls her packet of cigarettes towards her and lights one. She inhales, sits back, and waits for whatever comes next.
pilar
Madrid, 1970
Pilar goes walking. That is what Pilar does these days. She is reminded of her earliest days in the capital. Back then, she mapped the city streets in her head as she walked. Making her way around in the early hush of Sunday mornings, Pilar's sense of being overwhelmed had slowly ebbed away. She came to enjoy the wide, tree-lined avenues, the imposing buildings, the elegant elderly ladies walking their dogs after Mass before stopping off at one of the many pavement cafes for an aperitif. Pilar loved the buzz of conversation, the drifting cigar smoke of the loud, suited men, the sense of all that peacock-display that went hand in hand with the weekly
paseo
.
She had enjoyed above all her place as an outsider: Pilar could own these streets in the same way as everyone else and stop for a coffee wherever she chose. She could observe and make judgments and watch the comings and goings of the affluent citizens of Madrid. She could even get happily lost among the meandering side streets and nobody would stop her; nobody would exclaim at her presence, or ask what right she had to be there. Back then, the freedom of it all had been heady, exhilarating.
These days the walking has become a reflex, a way to fill the emptiness, a way to still the steady seep of disappointment at what her life has become. Ever since the loss of Francisco-José, Pilar's days have become filled with meaningless hours. With whole weekends of Maribel and Alicia. And so Pilar walks.
She has tried many times over the past three years to change the
contours of her life. She has tried to mold its shape into something that might fit her better, might chafe less against the tender flesh of her grief. But it is as though she has been handed some fixed pattern, some immutable law that hems her in, that stitches and sews the fabric of her existence in a way she is powerless to change. Everything she does has the familiar force of old habit. Once, she threw out all the furnishings of her
porterÃa
, believing that new surroundings would help her meet the world in a new way. But even the newest of objects seemed to adapt themselves to the shape of whatever had been there before. Within weeks, her new
porterÃa
felt just the same as her old one.
Pilar traveled then, secretly and compulsively. She went to Cuba, to New York, to London. Once she almost went to Cyprus, but her courage failed her at the last minute. Each time, she bought new clothes, had her hair styled in a different way, stayed in new and apparently exciting places.
But always, each optimistic setting out, each longing for adventure became nothing more than a package holiday of sameness: routine, tired, predictable, sometimes even squalid. And after each journey, Pilar returned home to the inevitability of her life. To the inevitability of her remorse.
And so Pilar walks once more.
*Â *Â *
This morning, she has made her way towards the Church of San Andrés. She discovered it by chance some years ago. Once inside, she had been soothed by its hushed and ancient tranquillity. Its flickering, candle-lit silence and its peace have drawn her back many times since. As she approaches the main door, Pilar stops. To her right, a few hundred meters away, a line of children makes its way towards the church. The children seem to shimmer as they walk. Their small hands are joined together in prayer, their faces luminous, their white suits and dresses brilliant in the May sunshine. At the head of the line, and at the end, a nun walks. Their black habits are dark punctuation marks to the sentence that is the children. Pilar looks and waits, unable to move. All of her strength has deserted her.
First Holy Communicants. She will never see her son become one of these seven- or eight-year-olds, walking in solemn procession to
wards the main door of the church. Pilar waits until the last child has stepped over the threshold, finally forcing herself to move. She follows them inside and slips into one of the pews at the back. The church is almost empty apart from the children and the two nuns, one young, one elderly, who are speaking now, but Pilar cannot catch what they say. And then, at the older nun's signal, the children begin to sing.
An elderly woman pushes her way into the pew beside Pilar. She nudges her after a moment, one bony elbow digging into Pilar's side. She looks like one of the market women that Pilar sees every day, her gray hair scraped back into a bun, her dress black and dusty. Her fingers are dirty, the knuckles swollen and twisted into the strange roots of arthritis. Pilar sees that rosary beads are wrapped around both hands, the small crucifix swinging free as the woman lifts it to her mouth to kiss the figure of a tiny Christ. “
Angelitos
,” she whispers as she nudges Pilar for the second time. Her eyes glitter.
Little angels.
Pilar feels a lump in her throat. The children rehearse their hymns, their voices high and sweet in the incense-filled air. Her eyes cannot help themselves; they seek out all the small boys with hair so black it sheens blue.
“Those angels are the same little bastards that thieve from my stall every week,” the old woman hisses now, nodding her angry head in the direction of the altar. A thin thread of drool clings to one corner of her downturning mouth.
Pilar looks at her. She has no answer. She glances once more towards the children and sees only questions. And she cannot bear it any longer. She stands up and flees, pushing her way past the hissing woman, not caring if she topples her, not caring any longer if she hurts her.
Old women like that terrify Pilar. They bring with them the bitter air of Torre de Santa Juanita everywhere they go.
calista
Extremadura, 1989
The afternoon is cooling now. The light in the living room is green and wavery, a tranquil underwater world. Calista leaves the blinds down as she sits, replaying the lawyer's phone call in her head over and over again. Apostolou's call is one of the final steps in the complicated dance that Calista has choreographed from afar.
First the anonymous messenger. Then the transaction that was Alexandros and Cassandra. Now Omiros, on his way to Madrid with his uncles; perhaps they are there even now.
Calista doesn't much care what happens next, to her or to anyone else. Earlier, she had gone downstairs and swept up the remaining glassy splinters of her perfume bottle. They had lain in wait, glittering on the hall floor, hiding in corners and crevices. But she'd managed to winkle them all out, and the sense of one last cleanup had satisfied her.
*Â *Â *
Calista remembers, all these years later, the power of the hook of hope.
She remembers how Alexandros reeled her in, time after time: a willing fish. He would lure her with his bright promises that he would never hurt her again; dazzle her with his words that he loved her; soothe her with his earnestness that he would change. Their new house, he said, where everything would be different. His green eyes were brilliant with future that day, the day he told her. They would turn everything around, she'd see. A new beginning.
Their own place, their own space, away from all the pressures of living with others. A place where they could each be themselves.
A proper home. Their own family home.
*Â *Â *
Calista looks around her. It is summer 1972.
She is unable to conceal her delight. She can feel tears begin to well for the first time in months, and she half sobs, half laughs: a strange sound that echoes around the empty room. Her five-year-old daughter looks up at her at once. Such a serious face, always: concerned, curious, watchful.
“Mummy,” Imogen says, frowning now. “What's wrong?”
Calista clutches the child's hand tightly. “Nothing, sweetheart. I'm just so happy to be here, happy that we have our very own new house. Imagine! A house just for usâyou and me and Papa and the new baby. You'll have a big room all to yourself. What do you think of that?”
Imogen smiles, and her small face lights up. “Can it be pink?”
Calista laughs. “It can be any color you like!” She bends down, kissing her daughter on both cheeks. “You can choose the paint and the bed and the furniture and the rugs . . . all of it! Now, let's look around downstairs first, and I'll tell you where everything is going to be. Careful, nowâmind the wet paint.”
Alexandros has warned her that the painters aren't finished yet, and Calista has promised to make sure their little girl's curious fingers will be kept in check.
“Stay close to me, Imogen,” she says now. “I want to take some photographs.”
“Can I be in them?” The child hops from one foot to the other, her eyes bright, her expression pleading. “Please, Mummy?”
“Of course you can,” Calista says, pulling Alexandros's Nikon out of her bag. The villa is beautiful. Even with its renovations unfinished, light floods the three huge, interconnecting rooms. One flows into the other, drawing the eye onwards and outwards towards the wide paved space that will eventually be the terrace. There are plans for a swimming pool, too, and a large play area for the children.
Children: this new baby will be here in less than three weeks, and when he arrivesâCalista is convinced that it is a boy this time,
although she hasn't told Alexandros thisâthey will all move together into this villa, several blocks away from Petros and Maroulla. Calista doesn't know which gives her greater pleasure: the move into their new home, or the move away from Petros and Maroulla.
Our house, she thinks; our home. Our own family home. She can hardly believe it. She takes several photographs quickly; she can feel her small daughter's growing impatience.
This villa is the long-awaited seal of approval on Alexandros's career, on Alexandros's family, maybe even on Alexandros's wife. Calista has worked hard to be accepted over the past five years, throwing herself into the roles of wife and mother and daughter-in-law. She has had some success, she thinks, although it can be a difficult thing to measure. Sometimes, she wonders whether people's disapproval has simply acquired a mask of acceptance, whether their true feeling is still there underneath the polished surface of the things they say. Other times, she doesn't care.
Imogen tugs at her hand, pulling her towards the staircase. “Let's go now, Mummy. You promised to show me my bedroom,” she's saying.
Calista smiles at her. “We'll go up straightaway,” she says, “but you must keep to the middle of each step. Otherwise we'll ruin the paint, and then the painters will be cross.”
Imogen nods, her serious face absorbing this. “I know, Mummy,” she says. “You told me already.”
Calista smiles gravely. “You're right. Let's go. I'll be right behind you.”
She feels happy this day. Mainly thanks to Yiannisâalthough Calista will never let her husband know thisâAlexandros has recently gotten his promotion, a bigger office, his name on the door. He seems to have expanded to fit his new role: he has grown larger, more imposing, his now bald head making him look uncannily like Petros. Calista hopes Alexandros will soon begin to find Âcontentmentâthat he will feel, finally, that he has emerged from his brothers' shadow, particularly the larger-than-life shadow cast by Yiannis.
*Â *Â *
Yiannis takes his role of godfather seriously and never fails to visit Imogen at least once a week. Calista looks forward to his arrival;
Imogen adores him. Over the past year, he has used these occasions to take Calista into his confidence.
“I think my father is ready to give Alexandros more responsibility,” Yiannis told her several months back. “There's a couple of things he could do, though, a few initiatives he could take himself that would really help his case.”
They were sitting by the swimming pool in his parents' garden, keeping an eye on Imogen as she splashed up and down.
“A real water-baby, this one, isn't she?” Yiannis said, amused.
“Yes.” Calista smiled. “She has no fear.” After a moment, she said: “What sort of initiatives, Yiannis?”
“Look, Uncle Yiannis! Watch me swimming!”
Yiannis waved at Imogen, laughing. “You're brilliant! You'll be able to catch me soon!” He turned to Calista. “There are some accounts that need to be managed more carefully than others. An English firm that we're courting at the moment. Personal attention from Alexandros would go a long way in securing their buy-in.” Yiannis paused. “If I suggest it, Alexandros will just bristle.”
Calista nodded. “I can do that,” she said. “He's so keen to get this promotion; work is all he talks about.”
Yiannis looked away from her. “Are you OK?”
“Yes,” she said. She kept her voice bright, optimistic. “A little tired, but that's to be expected.”
He looked at her quickly.
She smiled. “I'm pregnant. Imogen will have a baby brother or sister in about six months.”
“That's wonderful! Congratulations,” Yiannis said. He touched her hand lightly. “I'm very happy for you both.”
“Thank you.” Calista glanced towards the house, but there was still no sign of Maroulla. She often joined them when her son visited, her broad face lighting up at the sight of Yiannis. Now, in her absence, Calista decided to seize her opportunity. “Yiannis, I need to say something to you.” The words sounded more urgent than she had intended.
He looked at her, surprised.
“I really want to have my own home. Alexandros and I need a place for ourselves and the children. I'm struggling here.”
Yiannis nodded, still looking at her. His eyes were kind. “I understand.”
“I'm not criticizing your parents. Please, I just . . .”
“I didn't think that you were,” he said quietly. “I will do all in my power to help you. Don't worry; we'll make it happen.”
Each week, Yiannis updated her, quietly, sometimes in just a few snatched sentences. Calista knew that Alexandros was steadily becoming more confident, more authoritative.
And now, with their new home finally a reality, Calista is sure she and Alexandros are on the threshold of a new life, that they can finally put the last few difficult years behind them.
*Â *Â *
When Calista meets Mirofora, she thinks immediately of Maggie. She hires her as her housekeeper, and they have an animated conversation on that first day. Calista's Greek is fluent at last: she's been taking lessons for the past four years from Alexia, a young woman, a university student. Learning to speak Greek was a challenge; Calista had no landmarks, no known territories. Greek did not behave in the same ways as Spanish or schoolgirl French. Calista had felt adrift, unanchored among the oceans of its words. At times it had felt like drowning.
But now Calista is afloat, and she moves about her new kitchen, putting away everything she's bought at the market. Imogen is playing in the garden under Mirofora's watchful eye. Omiros is asleep upstairs. Calista has noticed how her son's eyes follow his father as soon as Alexandros enters the room. She points this out to Alexandros, over and over again. It pleases him the way the baby's face creases into a delighted, gummy smile every time his father approaches.
*Â *Â *
MarÃa-Luisa and Timothy had traveled to Cyprus to meet their new grandson.
“Felipe will be here on Friday,” MarÃa-Luisa said at the end of their first week. “Your brother is really looking forward to seeing you, and to meeting Omiros. He has good news.”
Calista looked at her mother quickly. “What sort of good news?”
MarÃa-Luisa smiled. “I will let him tell you himself. I just wanted to prepare you.”
“Just tell me thisâis there a woman?”
Her mother's smile faded. “No,” she said, “not that sort of good news. Just be ready.”
“Of course. I can't wait to see him.” Calista wished she hadn't asked. Her mother's disappointed face had been eloquent.
She looked over at Imogen, forever making sand castles. Omiros was nestled contentedly in her arms. Calista bent and kissed his forehead, glad all over again that she had produced a son.
And then she felt ashamed for having allowed herself to place the value of one of her children above that of the other. She remembered, guiltily, MarÃa-Luisa's casual certainties about Philip's greater valueâin the family, in school, in the world. Boys' education was what mattered, boys' friendships, even boys' hobbies; but above all, boys' futures. She'd looked surprised on the few occasions Calista had challenged her. “But, my dear girl,” MarÃa-Luisa would say, her expression more puzzled than irritated, “you will one day marry, have children of your own, be there as a support for your husband; that is your job in life. It is the natural order of things.”
She glanced over at her mother now. She saw MarÃa-Luisa's hesitation, could read it in the way she placed her hands in her lap.
“What is it, Mamá?” Calista asked gently.
“Is all well with you? I worry, you know.”
Calista smiled. “There is no need, Mamá, really. Alexandros and I are fine. The first few years were difficult, and you already know that. But with his promotion, this house, Omiros's arrivalâwe've come through. Don't worry. Things have never been better.”
MarÃa-Luisa nodded. “I am glad,” she said. “I am so very glad.”