Guarded Passions (23 page)

Read Guarded Passions Online

Authors: Rosie Harris

BOOK: Guarded Passions
13.66Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Trembling, Ruth leant on her mother's arm as they hurried over the bridge. The incident had upset her so much her legs felt like jelly.

‘You need a brandy or something,' Helen said, concerned. ‘Is it safe to go into one of the pubs now we're back in Waterside?'

Ruth shook her head. ‘Let's just get through the check-point on the other side of the bridge and I'll be OK,' she said.

As they reached it, she felt waves of nausea sweeping over her. ‘I feel sick,' she gasped, leaning against the barricade for support. ‘You'd better let me through before I throw up.'

The middle-aged policeman eyed her distrustfully but let her pass without searching her. She stumbled as far as the nearest building then leaned up against the wall, closing her eyes because she felt so faint.

‘Would you be wanting a drink of water?' a man standing in the doorway asked. He was unshaven and in shirt-sleeves and she hesitated before answering.

He disappeared inside the building and returned with a tin mug. ‘Are you English then?' he asked as she took the cup from him.

She nodded.

‘From the Army barracks?'

‘Visiting,' she said cautiously.

He stared at the three of them with narrowed eyes, then rubbed a gnarled hand over his bristling chin as he took the mug back and turned away.

‘Come on,' Helen grabbed Ruth's arm. ‘Let's get out of here; let's get home.'

Behind them, across the water in Derry city, they could still hear spasmodic gunfire.

From then on, they stayed on their own side of the river. There was plenty to do: all Ruth's neighbours were delighted to meet visitors from England, so there was no lack of callers or invitations and even Lucy enjoyed herself, playing with all the children.

The only discordant note was when Gary came to the house during Helen's visit. It was so marked that even Gary noticed it.

‘I don't think your mother approves of me,' he remarked ruefully to Ruth.

‘Nonsense!' Ruth tried to laugh it off, but she knew the tell-tale colour in her cheeks gave her away.

‘Oh, I've seen the way her mouth tightens whenever I'm around and the hostile look in her eyes.' He shook his head in bewilderment. ‘As far as I know, I've never said or done anything to upset her, so what's it all about?'

‘You've just got a complex,' Ruth teased.

‘No. When she stepped off the plane, and Hugh introduced us, she looked at me as if she was seeing a ghost. Then her face tightened and she kept staring at me as if I'd got three eyes or something!'

‘You're imagining it!' Ruth told him, but deep inside her she knew it was true. Her mother didn't like Gary. She bristled whenever he came near her; even her voice became sharper.

The situation came to a head the night of the party. They had invited most of the people in Robin Road as well as Gary, and one or two of Hugh's other unmarried friends. Towards the end of the evening, someone asked Helen if she and Lucy would be on the Army bus next day, or whether Gary was taking them to the airport in his car.

‘We're going on the bus,' Helen said quickly.

Ruth and Hugh exchanged looks but before either of them could speak Gary said, ‘No need, I'll take you.'

Helen gave him a long, level look, then said coldly, ‘Hugh's on duty and Ruth isn't up to the journey.'

‘Well, I'll take you on my own.' Gary smiled.

‘No, thank you!'

Her frosty reply was like a slap in the face.

There was a stunned silence, then everyone began talking at once, but the happy atmosphere was gone. Everyone was curious as to why she had refused so adamantly and Gary looked as bemused as the rest of them.

Ruth could barely keep back her tears. She had noticed all evening that her mother had seemed to be watching Gary intently, her face growing more and more taut, her lips tightening into a thin, hard line, and she felt completely bewildered by her mother's attitude.

Gary was the last to leave. Rather hesitantly he held out his hand to Helen. When she completely ignored him he stuffed his hand back into his pocket and Ruth could see him clenching and unclenching it as he struggled to control his feelings.

‘I'm sorry you won't let me give you a lift in the morning, Mrs Woodley. I hope you have a pleasant journey. I expect we'll meet again.'

To Ruth's amazement and embarrassment her mother didn't answer, or manage even a glimmer of a smile.

‘What on
earth
got into you, tonight, Mum?' she asked furiously, after he had gone. ‘You didn't have to make it quite so obvious that you don't like Gary.'

Helen stared at Ruth for a long time, then she said wearily, ‘I can't explain … not now, anyway. And if I did you wouldn't believe me.' Without another word she turned on her heel and went upstairs to bed.

Their leave-taking next morning was rather subdued. Ruth kissed and hugged Lucy and, because it would be her birthday a few days later, gave her a present of a baby doll.

‘Now I've got a new baby just like you'll have!' Lucy exclaimed delightedly. ‘Are you going to have a little girl, Ruth? Then I can give my doll the same name as your baby.'

‘We'll have to wait and see.' Ruth smiled gently at her golden-haired little sister. ‘I hope she'll be as pretty as you are,' she said, pulling Lucy close and kissing her again.

‘Are you going to call her Lucy?'

‘No. I think one Lucy in the family is enough!' Ruth laughed. ‘No, we've decided that if it's a girl then we shall call her Sally. If it's a boy …' she paused and looked straight at her mother, ‘… if it's a boy then we're going to call him Gary.'

‘Not after
that
Gary,' her mother exclaimed in shocked tones.

‘No,' Ruth told her coolly, ‘after Dad's brother … the one who was killed in the war.'

Helen looked at her speechlessly.

‘Dad once told Mark and me all about him – how much he loved him and how close they'd been as boys. I always felt he would have liked Mark to have been named after him,' Ruth explained defiantly.

Helen didn't answer; her face had gone an ashen grey. She bent down and picked up her suitcase. ‘Come on Lucy,' she said, refusing to meet Ruth's eyes. ‘It's time we were going home.'

Chapter 22

Helen found the journey back to England extremely tedious. It took twice as long to reach Belfast airport by bus as it would have done in Gary's car and, when she and Lucy arrived there, they found there was no plane for almost two hours.

After they had had something to eat and drink, Helen found a quiet corner and made Lucy as comfortable as possible, rolling her anorak up as a cushion under her head, so that she could sleep. Then Helen tried to read, but her thoughts kept going back to Ruth and her friends, and to Gary Collins in particular.

She knew she had behaved badly, but she had felt powerless to change her attitude towards Gary. She had never felt so overwhelmingly hostile towards another person in her life. From the moment when she had first seen him with Hugh she had felt threatened.

There had been something about his face, with its strong square jawline, vivid blue eyes under straight, dark brows, his wide mouth and finely-chiselled lips, that had stirred deep memories. Her breath caught in her throat as in a flash she realised that it was his uncanny likeness to Adam!

The only thing that was different was the colour of his hair. She had never known anyone with hair that bright, rich coppery shade before … except in a photograph. A faded, much-handled photograph that Adam had always carried in his wallet. It had been a picture of his younger brother who had been killed before she had ever had a chance to meet him … and his name had been Gary.

The revelation stunned her. Her emotions in chaos, she tried to recall every detail Adam had ever told her about his brother. She was almost certain that Gary had never married, never even had a serious girlfriend. He had only been twenty when he had been killed. Still, it had been wartime and he could have fathered a child. If he had then surely Adam would have known about it, since they were so close.

She went over in her mind what she knew about Gary Collins. He was about six months younger than Hugh, which meant he must have been born around September 1944. Adam's brother had been killed just a few days before Christmas 1943. It was possible!

She held her breath as she counted up the months, then remembered he had been in France for quite some time before he'd been killed.

Her relief at knowing that Adam's brother couldn't possibly be Gary Collins' father was short-lived, as she began having crazy thoughts. She tried to put them from her mind, as a cold sweat sent trickles of perspiration down her body. She wondered whether it was her imagination playing tricks, or if she was going mad. Being on her own so much, with only Mark and Lucy for company, was making her fanciful. Yet, as she went over the facts again and again, the same answer faced her.

She recalled the events in her own life around that time. Her miscarriage just a few days before Christmas, that had prevented her meeting Adam in London. And it was while he'd been there that he had heard his young brother Gary had been killed. And that was around the time Gary Collins was conceived! Try as she might to put the idea aside, she felt an overpowering conviction that it wasn't just coincidence that they bore such a striking resemblance to each other.

While she had been lying in hospital after her miscarriage, not even aware that his brother had been killed, had Adam found comfort in someone else's arms to try to ease the pain that must have been burning inside him?

The thought sent chill shivers through her, but the more she thought about it the more possible it seemed to be. The dates fitted so perfectly. Adam had been in London at that time … and on his own. When he had come to see her in hospital he had stayed only a very short time, and she had been too sedated to talk rationally. It was the last time they had seen each other before he had gone overseas.

After the war was over, Adam had never talked about Gary. It was one of the reasons she had been so surprised to hear he had told Ruth and Mark about him. And Ruth's remark that she thought he would have liked Mark to be named for his dead brother, had been like a knife turning. She had never even thought of it. Had Adam suggested it, she would gladly have consented.

Again, disturbing thoughts filled her mind. Had he not mentioned it to her because there was already a child named Gary, a love-child that she knew nothing about?

The thought tormented her so much that she was unable to sit still. Gently releasing Lucy's hand she stood up and began pacing restlessly up and down, feverishly going over every aspect of the facts as she knew them.

When she sat down again she was clear in her own mind that the pieces fitted as smoothly as any jigsaw. She saw it all now. The night Adam had stayed over in London he had found solace in Dora's arms. It all fitted: the dates, the place, Gary's intensely blue eyes, the shape of his mouth, the way he laughed, even his mannerisms. She couldn't possibly be mistaken. Every detail was there. Meeting him was like seeing Adam reincarnated. She was surprised she hadn't realised it before and that Ruth hadn't been aware of it.

She had felt uneasy about the closeness of Ruth's friendship with Gary. She'd even suspected they might be having a mild flirtation. Now she understood the empathy between them. The bond that existed was closer than any friendship.

The announcement that their plane was ready to depart distracted Helen's thoughts. For the next few hours the journey home – the noise and confusion at Heathrow airport, the rush for the train at Waterloo Station, and coping with their luggage – took all her attention.

When she went to bed that night, however, Helen found that, even though she felt exhausted, sleep eluded her. She lay there in the darkness, going over what she knew and trying to work out what she ought to do.

After tossing and turning for hours, she finally went downstairs to make herself a drink. Sitting at the kitchen-table, she planned how she would go about getting proof to substantiate her conviction that Gary was Adam's son. Until then she would keep the knowledge to herself, she decided. Sooner or later, though, she would face Ruth and Mark, as well as Gary, with the truth. It was only right that they should be told. It might sully Adam's memory, but Gary Collins was entitled to know the identity of his father. And he would learn that the Guardsman he had held in such high esteem all his life had feet of clay after all, she thought savagely.

Bitterly, she realised that she was out for revenge. She felt deeply hurt, not so much because Adam had cheated on her, but that he had been able to put it so completely out of his mind. Never once when recounting all the things that had happened to him while he was waiting to be sent to Europe, or during his service in the Army of Occupation, had Adam ever hinted that there had been another woman in his life.

Perhaps Dora Collins was only one of many, she told herself resentfully. While she had been patiently waiting for him to come home again he'd probably been consoling himself with girls in France, Belgium and even in Germany, she thought with annoyance.

If he'd strayed once and as far as he knew got away with it so successfully, why not twice, a dozen times, hundreds of times even? She even began to wonder whether he had been unfaithful to her after the war was over, when he was away on exercises or overseas.

Angrily, she pushed her empty cup away. Her life had suddenly turned sour. She had always held Adam in such high esteem, placed him on a pedestal, in fact, and now it had come crashing down. And to think she had refused Donald's offer of marriage in order to stay true to Adam's memory, because she believed that it was what he would have done if she had been the one to die first!

Hate and bitterness overwhelmed her. She wanted to scream, to shout the truth. Tears blinded her. How could she have been so gullible all these years? She recalled Ruth's plain speaking just before she had gone out to Ireland. Perhaps Ruth had more sense than she did, after all. At the time she had treated her remarks with scorn but now she didn't feel nearly so sure of herself.

Other books

Free Falling by Susan Kiernan-Lewis
Retribution by Hoffman, Jilliane
Lawless by John Jakes
Darwin Among the Machines by George B. Dyson
Chains of Mist by T. C. Metivier