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Authors: Debbie Howells

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BOOK: The Bones of You
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10
S
omething’s niggling in a corner of my mind. I don’t remember what it is until the next time I’m sitting in Jo’s kitchen, looking out at her garden.
“You know, that little apple tree, Jo . . . I’ve been thinking about it. That’s probably not the best place for it. I think I’d move it before it gets too established.”
She looks surprised. “Why? I like it there.”
“Well, from a gardener’s point of view, as it grows bigger, all the plants underneath will be in shade. And you won’t be able to reach the apples without treading on the underplanting.”
“To be honest, I’m not that bothered about the apples,” Jo says. “I’m happy with it where it is. If the plants need replacing, I’ll get someone to come and do it. You’re probably right, but just now, I have so much to think about.”
It’s against my gardening ethics, but I shrug. It’s her garden.
But in this post-normal world, something else doesn’t add up. After her heartbreaking declaration of guilt the other night, when she spent the evening sobbing her heart out, telling me how if she’d been a better mother, known where her own daughter was, Rosie might still be alive, Jo’s acting as though it never happened.
“Jo . . . since the other night, I’ve been really worried about you. Are things okay with you and Neal?”
I see from the way her shoulders tense, from the breath she takes in and holds, I’ve struck a nerve.
“Oh . . . yes.” When she turns round, her face is calm. “We talked. He was angry. We all say things in anger, don’t we? We were both upset. I’m so wrapped up in myself, I forget sometimes that he misses Rosanna just as much as I do. How can I do that?” For a moment, she looks stricken. “I understand why he said it. He feels as guilty as I do. We should have been able to stop it from happening. He didn’t mean to upset me. He’s a remarkable man, Kate.”
It’s what she always says about him. And yes, he is, and he does many good things. And they’re going through about the worst that can happen to any parent. But I can’t help thinking,
What kind of man lets his wife walk out, distressed and tearful, the wife whose heart is broken and who’s just lost their child?
And just this once, I push her on the subject.
“I’m glad, Jo, because you were so upset. I know all this is a nightmare, but even so—”
She doesn’t let me finish. “You know? You can’t know,” she flashes. “Grace’s at school, and she’ll come back. She’ll always come back. Rosanna’s gone
. Gone . . .
Do you really know how that feels?”
She stands there, her body trembling, her cheeks flushed pink, little knowing how agonizingly, painfully aware I am of this every time I see her.
Then the words rip out of her, a long, unbroken string of them.
“It’s hell, Kate. You have no idea.... One minute I think I’m coping, and then the next it’s like I’m falling into the deepest, darkest pit, and there’s no way out. It’s like part of me’s been cut off. . . . It hurts. So much. She’s my daughter. . . .”
I go toward her to offer comforting arms, a shoulder, but she pulls herself upright, and when she speaks again, it’s the flat, cold voice of a total stranger.
“I know you mean well. But I know why you’re here. You think by taking on
my
pain, you’re safeguarding your own family.”
I feel my cheeks cool as the blood drains from my face. Even though I know that this is her grief talking, that it’s targeted at me only because I’m here . . . Is she right? Is what I perceive as supporting, bolstering, caring for her ultimately just selfish?
“I’ll go,” I mumble, leaving the tea, picking up my bag. I know she’s hurting, but I’m out of my depth. I can’t reach her.
At the front door, I pause to look at her. “I’m so sorry if I’ve upset you, Jo. I only ever wanted to be a friend.”
As I speak, her face seems to change, taking on a desperate, tormented look, as she clutches at her hands.

I’m sorry
. . .
,
” she whispers. “I just wish they’d find the person who did this. Please, Kate. I should never have said that to you. You’ve been . . . such a good friend.... Oh God, what have I done?”
I’ve never witnessed such an extreme swing of emotion. There are tears in her eyes as she begs, “Please, don’t go. I need you.”
Her onslaught leaves me battered, but I see it for what it is. She’s lashing out at me because the strain is taking its toll, because her agony’s unbearable, because I’m here. What’s happened to Rosie could have happened to any teenager. Even Grace.
Still could happen. The murderer’s still out there.
 
“You’ve got too sucked in, Kate. Give her some space,” says Angus that evening, when I tell him.
“How can you say that?” Still raw after Jo’s outburst, I can’t bear another stab at me. How can he, when he knows how hard I’ve taken this? And isn’t it a measure of our friendship that Jo can say what she likes, be so honest? The truth can hurt; we all know that. And Jo’s hurting more than anyone can imagine.
“Hey. Don’t be mad. You’ve been a really good friend to her, Kate, but you can’t change anything. It sounds like she’s all over the place—not surprisingly, after what she’s been through. And what she said is true. None of us can really understand how she feels—thank God.”
I sigh. “I just feel so sorry for her.”
I know he’s right, but it’s not that simple. Has Jo’s grief become my grief? Have I somewhere along the way made myself responsible for her?
“Come here.”
I let him pull me close, my head against his shoulder. Maybe I have got too sucked in. Too involved. Maybe, for my sanity, I should step back.
 
A week later, a week during which I avoid any contact with the Andersons, I visit the wholesale nursery where I buy my plants. They’re holding one of their rare open days, displaying fabulous autumnal plants in rich earthy shades, with pots of bulbs and winter flowering shrubs stacked up behind, waiting to follow.
It’s what I need, like visiting an exhibition or going to a musical, only instead of flooding your senses with art or music, it’s about plants, their scents, colors, textures. Yes, I buy, but I enrich my soul and fire my imagination, taking away far more inside my head: images of sumptuousness, planting combinations, the endless possibilities of what time and the seasons can create.
“Morning, Dan.” I wave at the familiar figure coming toward me. I’ve known Dan for about ten years, soaking up the snippets of knowledge he imparts when the mood takes him. “You’ve outdone yourselves again! I love all of it!”
“Cheers, Kate.” He looks pleased. He and his team work tirelessly to put this on, but it’s good for business, and over the years, word has spread, drawing designers from miles around. “I’ve got some new bulbs you might like. You got time to take a look?”
“Definitely.” Excitement flickers inside me. In past seasons, Dan’s new varieties have set trends. He keeps a close eye on changing fashions. They also sell out extremely quickly.
“They’re in here.”
I follow him into a poly tunnel marked
STAFF ONLY,
honored to be one of his chosen few allowed behind the scenes on hallowed soil. Just then, his mobile rings.
“Sorry, Kate. Won’t be a minute.”
Breathing in the familiar earthy smell, I wander over and examine the large board where a picture of each flower is displayed. There are tulips, narcissi, amaryllis, hyacinths—in shades I’ve never seen before. My thrilled gardener’s heart skips a beat.
“Sorry, love.” Dan joins me. “I’m needed elsewhere. Take your time and have a look. If you want to order anything, talk to Alex over there.”
He’s looking at the young man at the far end of the tunnel, his back to us, methodically pricking out seedlings.
Then he turns to me and nods his head toward the door, gesturing me outside. Mystified, I follow him.
“Just so you know, he worked at that house where the young girl went missing. I’m only mentioning it because I know they’re just up the road from you. Don’t say anything, though. Hit him rather hard, I think.” He says it quietly, clearly not wanting to be overheard.
Dan knows where I live. In the past, he’s delivered to me. With every word, my curiosity builds, because I know, with certainty, I’ve found Jo’s mysterious gardener, and no way can I leave without talking to him.
But I’ve work to do first. I’m taking my time, studying the plants, mentally constructing what I want to create and noting down quantities. It’s not long before I hear footsteps coming toward me.
“Do you need any help?”
Looking up, I get my first close look at Alex. He’s taller than me and, I’d guess, in his early twenties, dark haired, with a gardener’s tan from days spent working outside. Striking looking, but with wary eyes and an aloofness in his manner, which means I don’t warm to him.
“I think I’m done,” I tell him. “Here.”
I pass him my list, and he reads through it, then nods slowly. “They’re good together,” he says. “I sketched something earlier based on the same varieties. If you hang on, I’ll try and find it.”
I watch him rummage on the tabletop, from which he produces an A4 sheet, and I’m surprised to see that as well as designing gardens, he can draw, far better than I can. He’s sketched a winter flower bed to die for, in a drawing that would look great in a frame, hung on a wall.
“White narcissi, with gaultheria in the foreground,” he points out. “Then by the time the narcissi go over, you’ve got burnt-orange tulips and green viburnum taking center stage. I’ve put in other colors, too, just here and there. A bit of hot pink and that black one. Thought it looked better kept simple.”
“It’s stunning,” I tell him.
Alex shrugs. “It’s not groundbreaking. People think they like the unusual, but when it comes to their own garden, mostly they like things a bit traditional.”
It’s exactly what I find. There will always be the odd client with a taste for the avant-garde, but mostly people like English-garden flowers that they know the names of, the same ones that have been around for years.
“That’s exactly it. But if you’re a designer, what are you doing working for Dan?” Trying not to appear overly interested, but I can’t help wondering if those dark, impassive eyes that tell me nothing might be hiding something.
Alex frowns, and I feel his eyes boring into me.
I’m suddenly uncomfortable. “Dan mentioned you used to work for the Andersons. But only because he knows I live nearby.”
He just shrugs.
“Actually, I’m glad I’ve met you. I’m really impressed with their garden. I love the borders.” Trying to defuse his obvious hostility and strike a more friendly tone, watching the expression on his face remain unchanged.
“It’s always easy when your client throws money at it.” He sounds bitter, as though he resents them. “They didn’t mind what I spent as long as it looked ‘impressive,’ I think the brief was. ‘Expensive’ may have been in there, too.”
I nod.
Impressive
and
expensive
describe everything about the Andersons’ house, but then why not? They can clearly afford it.
“I think they miss you. Or the garden does. . . .” It’s meant harmlessly. Humorously, even. I’m not expecting the look like thunder that crosses his face.
ROSIE
A barreling surfer’s wave drops me into a summer without my parents. The summer I discover what happiness means. A summer of uninhibited noisiness, with camping in homemade tents hung over washing lines and long nights under starlit skies, with toasted marshmallows and English beaches and freedom.
It’s running wild with my cousins through cornfields speckled with poppies until we reach the beach, shrieking as we dive into the waves. It’s the timeless shift of tides and blazing sunsets, lying on cool, damp grass and staring long enough until one by one you see the stars. It’s homemade cakes and ice cream, Auntie Carol playing with Della’s hair, her head full of invisible thoughts of her daughter, Isabel, who died.
Everyone says how sad it is that Isabel “went” so young. It’s the wrong word. Isabel didn’t “go” anywhere. She crossed an invisible line, just as I have. She’s here now, her head on Carol’s shoulder, her arms encircling Carol and Della, grinning over their shoulders at me.
It’s a summer I wish I could live my entire life, while my own life floats like the fair-weather clouds above my head, until my mother arrives, holding out arms, chasing freedom away with her perfume.
“Darling! Come and give Mummy a hug! She’s missed you so much.”
While the last sweet, mouthwatering taste of happiness melts away like the strawberry ice creams on the seafront, I walk toward her, holding out my arms, because I love her.
And then I feel guilt covering me from head to toe, because until now, I haven’t missed her. Guilt because I love her, but I don’t want her here. In her perfect, pale, uncreased clothes she belongs at home, not here in Auntie Carol’s world. Because I want this summer to last forever.
I look at her. Have I really forgotten how she looks? Her face a flawlessly painted mask stretched over her bones? Where are the lines that hold love and laughter, like Auntie Carol has? But then, Mummy doesn’t need them. She doesn’t laugh.
11
November
A
nother week goes by, the tenth since Rosie went missing, a week in which autumn eventually takes a hold and, after the summer we’ve had, brings a year’s worth of leaves down almost overnight. It’s another week in which I don’t see Jo, nor do I hear from her. It’s only by chance, when I’m driving home after work one afternoon, that I see Delphine.
It’s her hair that catches my eye. Rosie’s hair, only longer and clipped back off her face. She’s walking along the pavement in small, precise steps, looking straight ahead, until I slow down and pull over.
“Delphine? It’s me. Kate. Your mum’s friend. Would you like a lift?”
Alarm, then a flicker of recognition cross her face. Does she wonder at every passerby? If
that man
who looks like someone’s father, or
that woman
with the fair hair, who looks completely innocent but might not be, could they have killed her sister?
She climbs into the passenger seat. “Thank you,” is all she says.
I wait for the click of her seat belt, then drive on.
“How is school?”
“Fine, thank you.” Her voice is girlish, but then she’s twelve. So young—far too young to know this kind of grief.
“I haven’t seen your mum for a while,” I say. “How is she?”
“She’s okay.”
“Is she at home, do you know?” It’s the perfect excuse to just pop in and say hello to her.
Delphine hesitates. “She might be. I don’t know.”
When I pull up outside their house, she doesn’t meet my eyes, just gets out and picks up her bag.
“Thank you for giving me a lift.”
“You’re welcome.” I frown. Both Neal and Jo’s cars are parked in the drive. “You know, I haven’t seen her for a while,” I repeat. “I might just go in and say hello.”
But Delphine says nothing as she walks toward the door, then pushes it open, leaving it ajar for me to follow.
I stop just inside. “Hello? Jo? It’s me. Kate . . .”
I hesitate, thinking perhaps she’s still mad at me, but as I turn to go, I hear a man’s voice.
“Kate? Thank you for dropping Delphine back. It’s good of you.”
Neal’s coming toward me, in jeans and an open-necked shirt.
“It was no problem. I was driving right by. I hoped I might see Jo.”
“Ah.” He glances away, slightly guarded. “When did you last see her?”
“A couple of weeks ago.” I shrug, making light of it. “I just wondered how she was, that’s all.”
He nods. “It’s good of you. Look, she has one or two things going on at the moment. She’s gone away. Just for a while.”
“Is she all right?”
“She’ll be fine.” Then he studies me. “Actually, do you have a minute?”
When I come away half an hour later, I’ve learned that Neal cares deeply for his wife and that, not surprisingly, Jo is struggling more than she lets on, as he told me.
“She’s gone away . . . to rest, mostly. She’s been working too hard—for me, I’m afraid—as well as everything else. I’m hoping it’ll do her good, just getting away from here.”
We’re sitting across the kitchen table from each other, Neal leaning on his elbows, hands clasped, his eyes trained on them.
“Poor Jo. I had no idea things were still so difficult.” Realizing too late the crassness of my words, because how could they not be? Thinking,
If I’d lost Grace
. . .
He pauses, frowning at the table, considering something. Then he looks up. “Has she told you she’s been ill?”
It’s the first I’ve heard about an illness. I shake my head. “No. She hasn’t.”
“Joanna . . .” He hesitates. “Her life hasn’t always been easy. She had a breakdown, Kate. A lot of stuff caught up with her. From the past. Stuff she’d buried for a long time. But that’s what happens. And it’s always just when you think life’s going your way. . . .” He breaks off. “She’s very good at hiding things. You must have noticed. Particularly since Rosanna
died
. . .”
His voice cracks, and then I get it, that every second of every day, for Neal and Jo, in this house, surrounded by their memories, there will never be any escape from what’s happened.
“I didn’t know, but she’s surprised me,” I say honestly. “Just the way she’s kept going. If it was me, I don’t think I’d be capable of anything.”
“The thing is . . .” He trails off. “It’s hard to put into words, but you keep going because you have to, but it’s always there. Guilt. You can’t stop thinking about it.... And as soon as you forget, even for a few seconds, you feel guilty, Kate.
So guilty
. . . Guilty that it happened and we couldn’t do something. Guilty that we’re here and she isn’t.” He slumps, defeated. “That’s where we are, I guess. Both of us.”
Wishing in some small way I could help them all, my heart reaches out to him, because he’s clearly hurting just as much as Jo is, and to add to it, he has to prop her up, too. I feel an overwhelming sadness at how unfair it is that one person must bear so much alone.
I come away knowing that in spite of the blowup, his outburst at Jo, Neal’s a good man.
It occurs to me only much later that I’ve forgotten to tell him I met Alex.
ROSIE
It’s the year I come top in my class, with As in every subject except math. You don’t see how hard I’ve worked or how proud I feel, or the small part of me deep inside that glows. My teachers are happy, and so is Mummy. Only, because of the math, that evening, when my father gets home, he makes me fetch the little pink TV set from my bedroom, the one I’ve always had, then takes it outside.
As he places it on the low wall, I hear birds and faint strains of laughter from next door. It’s a beautiful evening, the pale blue sky crisscrossed with vapor trails, sunlight flickering through the leaves, but my stomach is churning as he gets a chair for me to sit on. Then, not speaking, he picks up a brick.
“About your grades . . . ,” he says. His voice is too loud as he stands in front of me, passing the brick to and fro between his hands, and I wonder what he’s doing. Then he raises it and brings it down. I hear the splintering of the pretty pink plastic first, then my own gasp of shock as the screen shatters into a million pieces. I’m thinking,
Why?
even as I lean forward and I’m sick.
He tells me to wash down the deck with the hose. Then says how stupid I am to be sick over a little girl’s TV set. A TV set, for Christ’s sake! That my math grade isn’t good enough. I need to knuckle down and work harder. Then he hurls the brick into a bush.
I get the hose and wash down the deck, wanting to vomit the ugliest words I can think of in his face, tell him that it wasn’t the TV set that made me sick. I’m not that stupid.
It’s him.
 
I’m fifteen by then. I have a new friend called Emma Carnegie, who you know is happy just by looking at how her hair swings when she walks, how her eyes are lit from inside, and how she laughs at nearly everything. She has three older brothers and thinks it’s cool that I’ve lived in so many places. She’s lived in Winchester her whole life and says it’s boring.
Winchester. I could like it here, but I already know I won’t let myself. This is where our home is—for now. Another house in another town, where Delphine wants to stay forever. She doesn’t understand yet that we won’t.
When it’s Emma’s birthday, she has a party. Her house is messy but full of music and chatter and life, coming and going. Her parents and their friends. Her brothers and their friends. Others—always welcomed, like I am.
Before her party, Emma asks me to sleep over. My heart sinks because I know I have to tell her that my parents won’t let me, which she says is really stupid.
“For F’s sake, we’re fifteen, Rosie. I said ‘F’!” Then laughs at her own joke.
“You’re so right!” I laugh with her, a hollow pretend laugh. “I’ll ask them again!”
And I’m frightened then, feeling that worried look like my mother’s that makes my head hurt, that if I don’t go, Emma won’t want me as a friend. Then I’m angry that my parents won’t let me decide, when it’s my life and Emma’s friendship is important to me.
Now I see a dilemma that’s my parents’ doing. But I don’t know that at the time. As I work out how to keep Emma’s friendship, how to keep my parents happy, I have no choice. And so it starts.
The lie begins with two lies. To my mother, that I’m going to Emma’s to watch a movie; to Emma, that it’ll be great! I’m sleeping over!
I wear jeans and a T-shirt so my mother doesn’t question me, just drives me over there and doesn’t come in. Emma isn’t a perfect friend, but because her father’s in a famous orchestra, she’s good enough. Already there’s music. Food on foil-covered plates prepared by Emma’s mum, generously and happily, and with love.
I get ready with Emma, curling our hair, putting on makeup—sweeping eyeliner and long layers of mascara, then soft pink lipstick—laughing with her, pretending I do this all the time.
I lie that I’ve forgotten my clothes—that was the third lie. How could she believe I’d forget my clothes? The thrill I feel when Emma says I look gorgeous in the short dress and pretty shoes she lends me. I look at myself, eyes sparkling. Alight, like Emma. I remember the reason for it, too.
His name is Adam, Emma’s youngest brother, not quite two years older than us, kind of shy and sweet, the first boy who holds my hand, dances with me as the sun goes down, then later, much later, when it’s dark, under the oak tree at the end of the garden, when no one’s watching us, the first boy whose soft, gentle lips touch mine.
I remember him being just the right amount taller than me, so that when he leaned down and I turned my face up toward his, our lips met. The denim shirt he was wearing with the sleeves rolled up, his hair kind of messy and needing cutting. How when he kissed me, everyone else faded into the background, and how I floated, so high I nearly forgot the lie. How I remembered just in time, clasping a hand to my head, closing my eyes. Crashing down to earth.
“I’m sorry, Adam. I really don’t feel well.”
And I so don’t want to do this, so want to stay here, with him and everyone else. It’s the lie that kills me inside.
His look of concern. “Come and sit down. I’ll get you a glass of water.”
But I don’t want him to leave me, even for the minutes it will take for him to walk to the kitchen and back. “It’s okay. Really, I’ll be fine. It’s a migraine. I get them sometimes. It’s probably best I go home.”
Telling Emma, watching the disappointment spread over her face, followed by sympathy I don’t deserve. I don’t see the tear she sheds as she goes to get me a glass of water, how sad she is because I’m her friend and I’ve let her down. Or how she stands up to Leah Williams, who says I’m a weirdo and she doesn’t understand why Emma even asked me here.
Adam’s eyes, following me down the drive as I get into my father’s car, which arrives dead on ten o’clock and waits, just as we agreed.
I don’t see that when we drive away, the party mood goes quiet, then dies. I just sit as my father drives, hands clenched on the steering wheel, waiting.
And he knows I’m waiting.
After ten minutes like ten hours, when we’re nearly home, as we turn into our drive, when he’s spun it out as long as he possibly can, at the very last minute, when I’m holding my breath, he spits it out with contempt.
“Who was the boy?”
The boy.
“Emma’s brother.”
It isn’t a lie, but if it was, I wouldn’t care. One lie, fifty lies. What’s the difference?
He hesitates, while I get out of the car and calmly walk inside, because whatever else he can do, however he looks at me, whatever questions he asks, he can’t make me say things I don’t want to say. The secret is hugged inside, where no one can get to it, no one except me, where I can say his name over and over and no one can hear it.
His name is Adam,
I say silently, looking at my father’s back.
Adam. Adam. Adam.
 
Lies are like dough or malignant tumors. They get bigger. I meet Adam at lunchtimes. On Tuesday evenings, when I walk to the library with books that don’t need changing, or Thursday evenings, at running club, only neither of us puts on the trainers we’re carrying. We just walk.
It takes a few weeks, the shortest, sweetest time, to learn what it is to trust. To know he won’t hurt me for no reason. That he’ll be where he says he’ll be. That nothing will change out of the blue, without warning.
Until it does.
One day, when I get to school, Emma is cool with me, then sits with Leah Williams, their backs to me. Adam isn’t in school. Then on Thursday, he doesn’t meet me at running club.
Next time I see him, it’s between classes. He’s walking along a corridor toward me; then about ten feet away, he looks up and sees me. Freezes. My heart does that flutter, but then I see his eyes. Cold, hurt, staring at mine, full of hostility and broken promises. Then he turns and walks away, and my friendship with Emma follows, like his shadow.
I never find out why. I just remind myself that no one’s different. People are all the same. You can’t trust any of them. You can’t have faith in them, because eventually, they will always let you down.
Only now, as I watch myself, my head staring at the floor, filled with those black words, Adam’s back disappearing down the corridor, I see how wrong I was. There are such good people. People worth taking a risk for. If I’d run after Adam, questioned Emma, made them tell me the truth: Adam walking back from the library that night. The car slowing, drawing up alongside, the window winding down. Adam stopping. His lovely, warm face friendly. Opening his mouth with a greeting that isn’t uttered, instead forced to listen as foul threats and abusive words are hurled in his face. The car driving away.
My father’s car.
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