7
A tap on the bedroom door and a whispered ‘Miriam? Are you asleep?’
Her mother was hovering on the landing, holding a cup of tea. She had swapped
her beige dress for something identical in bottle green, the marcasite brooch
at the neck the only thing that indicated she was going out.
‘Lovely. Thanks, Mum.’
‘Dad wants us to leave at eight,’ her mother said.
Miriam didn’t want to go. Really didn’t want to go. She didn’t want to strip off her cosy sweater, her cords, her woolly socks. She didn’t want to struggle into tights, dress, party shoes. She didn’t want to accompany her parents over the road to see in the New Year with a
crowd of geriatric strangers.
‘Oh,’ her mother said, ‘you haven’t changed yet.’
‘Plenty of time.’ Miriam held up a bottle of bath bubbles. ‘First I’m going to have a soak. Rosa gave me these for Christmas.’
‘Oh dear.’ The response was potent with reproach and anxiety.
Her mother never failed to give the impression that she was incapable of working
anything out for herself. It made Miriam cross and sad, and she wanted to shake
her. But shaking old ladies wasn’t allowed and instead she stirred things a little. ‘Then I have to ring a few people. If I wait until midnight, they’ll be too drunk to make sense. But you two go ahead. It’s you and Dad they want to see, not me. I’ll pop over later.’
Her mother fiddled with her brooch. ‘I don’t know…’
She caught a whiff of the floral scent her mother dabbed on her wrists on
special occasions and, repenting, kissed her cheek, the skin beneath her lips
soft and pliable like putty-coloured chamois leather.
She lay back in the bath, breasts, belly and knees breaking the surface of the
water in a glistening archipelago. Her father’s voice was rumbling on in the kitchen below. Occasionally her mother murmured
something. She couldn’t make out what they were saying but she knew they were conducting a post-mortem
on her reluctance to conform to their schedule.
After the first few modelling sessions, nudity had become shockingly easy.
Either she’d lost every ounce of self-esteem or she’d gained an astounding new confidence. Whichever it was, she looked forward to
her mornings at the college. On the practical side, things were running
smoothly. Naomi wasn’t the least interested in how she spent her days as long as she was at the
school gates in time to meet the children. Taking a sponge, she trickled water
across her neck and shoulders. Forty years ago her future had rested in this
body. Love. Marriage. Motherhood. Now her body was a business asset. Her means
of income. Compared with her teaching salary, the pay was a pittance but she’d opened an account with the Halifax and was insanely proud of her blue passbook
and its mounting balance.
Something flashed in the darkness beyond the window, followed by a barrage of
muted pops and crackles. New Year’s Eve. The first of the fireworks. This time last year, she and Sam had been
getting ready to go to a party. Full of hope, they’d kissed and raised their glasses to ‘the future’. This evening, the best she could hope was that nothing too awful would happen
in the coming year. The odds were stacked against it. This morning she’d spotted her father fiddling with a pill-dispenser. When he saw her he’d shoved it into his sock drawer and when she sneaked back to check, it had
disappeared. Her mother had, several times during the course of her week-long
visit, stopped mid-sentence and looked around as if someone else had been
speaking. If illness or old age didn’t get them, there was always a wonky paving slab or a runaway bin lorry. A wave
of non-specific anxiety swept over her.
Most of the houses she could see from the bedroom window were still festooned
with Christmas lights. No inflatable Santas or flying Rudolphs in this staid
street. God forbid. Yet there were elements of one-upmanship in the tasteful
displays. And so many lights. All those the meters whirring round. Npower must
love Christmas.
The children had persuaded David to decorate the trees in their front garden.
Watching him gather up tools, duct tape and such like, Miriam had been filled
with sadness. When he’d finished, Rosa had pressed him to stay for lunch. ‘I don’t want to impose,’ he’d said, his eyes fixed on Naomi who had seemed happy – well, not unhappy – to go along with it. The children had hopped around the kitchen, screeching
with delight. In that instant she had become an outsider in their little family
unit and, leaving them together, she’d gone out for the afternoon.
Earlier on, she’d lied to her mother. She wasn’t planned on calling anyone this evening – mainly because she had no one to call. She’d already spoken to Naomi. Finding a babysitter for tonight had proved
impossible and her daughter was hosting a party for similarly stymied friends
and their offspring. Naomi promised to keep the door to the ‘granny annexe’ closed but with a house full of sugar-high children it was hard to see how her
domain would escape invasion.
There must be someone who’d appreciate a New Year greeting. She scrolled through her contacts. Who would
she choose from the ‘old days’, Stephanie? Louise? Their old neighbours? Too weird, too needy-seeming after
her long silence. And from the ‘new days’? Callum was her only recent contact and, although he saw her naked twice a
week, phoning him didn’t seem quite the thing.
She crawled under the duvet and pulled it over her head. She missed Sam but she
hated him, too. Deceiving her was one thing, but killing himself – that was indefensible.
It was well past ten-thirty by the time she got there. A wisp of a woman opened
the front door. ‘Come in, dear. Here, let me take that.’
She took off her coat and handed it to her hostess. ‘I’m Miriam. Lionel and Freda’s daughter.’
‘I’m afraid I can’t introduce you to everyone. I don’t remember who half of them are.’ The old lady seemed proud of her deficiency.
Her parents were in the far corner of the living room, talking to an elderly
woman who appeared to be dressed for the opera, right down to velvet choker and
fur wrap. When her father spotted her he tapped his wristwatch but she waved,
pretending not to understand, and went in search of a drink.
She spent the next hour doing the rounds, explaining who she was and how she
came to be at the party. The guests were diminutive and insubstantial, clones
of her parents, and amongst them she felt like a giant. They all seemed to know
Lionel and Freda Edlin which she found surprising. Whenever she pictured her
parents, they were in their house, alone.
‘Shall I tell you a little secret, dear,’ her hostess said when Miriam returned to the kitchen for a refill. ‘My husband and I spent the whole afternoon in bed.’ She tittered and held arthritic hands to her cheeks.
Whether the memory was hours or decades old, it still delighted the old lady and
Miriam smiled. ‘Good for you.’
She watched her parents and their friends, doggedly partying on whilst all she
wanted was to sleep. In the course of her many conversations with Doctor Tate,
he’d spoken of a study showing that if you made it beyond seventy-two there was no
reason why you couldn’t live to be a hundred. He’d probably imagined this would be a comfort to her.
The kitchen door led into the garden and, lured by the sound of fireworks, she
ventured outside. Rockets burst across the sky, shooting fiery tadpoles in all
directions. Bangers carumphed like artillery shells.
She checked her phone for the umpteenth time. David had texted – H N Y Dx. A sign that matters were improving between him and Naomi? More likely he felt
sorry for her on this, the trickiest of nights.
The door opened and a woman came out. ‘Mind if I join you?’
‘I’m watching the fireworks.’
‘Terrible waste of money,’ the woman said. ‘You’d think we’d have had our fill of explosions, wouldn’t you? Iraq. Afghanistan.’
‘True. But they are lovely, aren’t they? And the smell. It takes me right back.’
They stood without talking. Watching and listening.
‘What’s the time?’ the woman said after a few minutes.
Miriam glanced at her phone. ‘Four minutes to midnight. I suppose we should join the party.’
In the bright kitchen, she had a chance to study her companion. The woman was
roughly her age. Dressed in jeans and a sweater, she looked as if she should be
gardening or walking the dog.
‘You don’t have a glass,’ Miriam said.
‘I’m driving. Who’d have thought the day would come when I’d be collecting my mother from a party?’ The woman peered at her. ‘Don’t I know you?’
Before she had time to answer, a chorus of voices began the countdown. In the
living room, a ragged circle had formed and Miriam was in time to link hands
with her parents as they broke into Auld Lang Syne. After the first round, the tempo increased and they started careering in and
out, welcoming in the coming year, recklessly challenging it to finish them
off. The circle finally disintegrated and Miriam hugged her parents.
‘You cut it fine,’ her father said.
‘And a happy New Year, to you too, Dad,’ she murmured.
As if someone had blown the end-of-play whistle, the guests set about rummaging
for coats.
‘I do know you,’ the woman said as they were making their way out. ‘You’re Miriam Edlin.’
‘I used to be. Sorry but—’
‘You wouldn’t. I was two years below you at school.’ She held out her hand. ‘Angela Terry. Used to be Fielding.’
Miriam shook her hand, trying and failing to picture her as she might have
looked forty-odd years ago.
‘I hated you,’ Angela said, smiling.
‘Really?’
‘Yes. In fact I wished you dead.’
‘Gosh. Any particular reason?’
‘I had a massive crush on Paul Crosby. I couldn’t bear that he was going out with you instead of me. Of course he was unaware of
my existence, but we’re not rational when we’re fifteen are we? And he was incredibly handsome, wasn’t he?’
Paul Crosby. Paul. Her Paul.
‘I suppose he was.’
‘Have you kept in touch?’
‘No,’ Miriam said. ‘Paul went to med school in London and… it sort of petered out. I’ve no idea what happened to him after that.’
Angela raised her eyebrows. ‘So you haven’t heard?’
‘Heard what?’
‘He’s joined a GP practice. Here. In the city centre. I know because a friend of a
friend is the practice nurse. I gather he’s recently divorced.’
Her parents were heading for the door, signalling her to get a move on.
‘I’m sorry but I have to go,’ she said.
‘That’s a shame,’ Angela said. ‘Why don’t we meet for coffee? Are you around tomorrow?’
‘I’m afraid I’m off home. But maybe next time I’m here.’
She scrawled her number on a scrap of paper and gave it to her new acquaintance.
‘Who’s that woman you were talking to?’ her father asked when they got back to the house.
‘Angela Terry,’ she said. ‘We were at school together.’
‘That’s nice,’ her mother said, unpinning her brooch.
‘Are you alright, Miriam?’ her father said. ‘You look drawn.’
‘I’m tired, that’s all. I’m off to bed.’
Her mother patted her arm. ‘Sleep well. No need to rush off in the morning. Have a lie in.’
She hurried up to her room and, without undressing, got into bed.
Paul. Here. In this city.