Read The Day Of Second Chances Online
Authors: Julie Cohen
She squirmed. âWhat's yours?'
âPolar explorer. Not going to happen: I'm not rich enough and too attached to my toes. I have to make do with a fortnight on a glacier every year. You can forget that humanity ever existed. I think that's why I like it so much. What's your secret ambition? Stop avoiding the question and tell me.'
âI used to want to go to university and train as a teacher.'
âYou'd be good at it. You could do that, in a year or two, once the children are both at nursery. You could do it now, part-time in the evenings, and then you'd be ready to work when Oscar and Iris were in school.'
âNo, it's been too long since I studied. I probably wouldn't be any good at it. Anyway, I'm always exhausted as soon as the children go to bed.'
âYou don't seem exhausted to me.'
âWell, I'm sleeping these days,' she said, and was immediately surprised that she'd said it.
He propped himself on his elbow. âWhat do you mean,
these
days?'
âI ⦠I often get a bit of insomnia this time of year.'
âWhy this time of year?'
âIt's the â¦' She swallowed. âIt's the anniversary of Stephen's death, at the beginning of June. I wake up in the night and I think â Oh, this is going to sound really morbid.'
âYou think of what, Jo?' he asked her quietly.
âI think of what his last moments were like. Whether he was frightened. I wasn't there, but I hear him screaming sometimes.'
His arm tightened around her.
âIt wasn't perfect, our marriage,' she said. âWe had some difficult times. Honor idealizes him, and so does Lydia, and that's fine. It's wonderful actually, that they can do that. But sometimes I feel as if I'm the only one who knows the truth, and I have to keep it together for other people. And for Stephen, because he wouldn't want us to be sad. Those are ⦠the kinds of things I think about late at night when I can't sleep.'
âBut you said you were sleeping these days.'
âYes.' She smiled at him. âI'm sleeping much better. You're to thank for that.'
âI'm glad.' He sat up. âAre you hungry? I'm starving. I was on lunch duty and I never manage to eat anything.'
âI have to get home and make the children's tea.'
âI've learned something about you by now, Jo. You've done their tea already, it's just waiting to be warmed up.'
âYes, but Honorâ'
He tilted up her chin. âRing her. Say you've been delayed. Come out with me for dinner.'
âDinner?'
âYes. You and me with our clothes on, talking to each other. Maybe a glass of wine. Like grown-ups. Fancy it?'
She fancied it so much she could taste it. âWe can't do that.'
âWhy not?'
âLydia? Your teaching position?'
âDammit, you remembered.' A kiss. âWe could go out of town. A little country pub.'
âI don't have time.'
âI could make you dinner here? I make a mean spag bol.'
âI have to get back.' But her hand, seemingly by itself, slid down his belly, through the hair at his groin.
âBut you have a little bit of time.'
âA little bit.' Her hand went lower, but she glanced at his photographs on the wall. All these places he'd been, this life he had lived, that she could never be part of. He was a stranger, still, aside from these stolen hours together.
âDo you still love her?' she couldn't help asking. âThe serious one, in Tasmania?'
âI ⦠care about her. She changed me. It still hurts sometimes. I don't know. Is that love?'
âI think it is.'
âYou still love Stephen. Despite the difficult times.'
âYes,' she said. âBut I don't think about him all the time. Not ⦠when we're doing this.'
His eyes closed briefly as she grasped him, but then they were looking into hers again. âWhat
is
this, that we're doing?' he asked.
âI'd have thought it was self-evident.'
He caught her wrist and stopped her hand. âI don't think it is entirely self-evident. I think you need to say.'
This, from a man ten years younger than she was, with a body and a recovery time that would put most men to shame. A man who didn't seem to realize his own power and beauty, who was nursing a bit of a broken heart, who was a good listener, who travelled to glaciers so that he could be alone with their vastness.
And that smile, far too easy to like.
âI'm using you for your body,' she said. âHaven't you noticed?'
She squeezed, and he groaned, so she did it again.
âThen go ahead and use me,' he whispered, tilting his head back and closing his eyes again.
HANDWRITING WAS NEARLY
impossible, so she had borrowed Lydia's laptop to touch-type. But the phrases that she had composed in her head felt wrong in her fingers. How could you tell a man that the son he had never known was dead? How could you explain the years of silence, the years of yearning?
She had been at it for hours and made no progress. Honor rose and went into the kitchen in search of a cup of tea. She was moving more easily, now; the pain was nearly gone, no more than a dull ache in the evenings, and she had dispensed with the cane, though she walked with an habitual shuffle in Jo's house, so as to avoid tripping over any toys. She had mapped out this house nearly as well as her own â knew how many steps to the kitchen table, how many steps to the kettle, the reaching distance to the mug cupboard. But the clutter shifted day by day.
Iris pattered over to her and hugged her leg. Honor let her hand rest on her silky curls. The kitchen was warm from the oven, and smelled of vanilla and butter.
âGanny H, you can lick the spoon,' said Oscar, putting something wooden in her hand.
âThat's all right, Oscar, you can lick it,' she said. âMy spoon-licking days are past.'
âI'm Ganny H's helper,' announced Oscar. âBecause I have good eyes.'
âAre you helping Mummy bake a cake?' Honor asked quickly.
âTwo cakes!'
âTea, Honor?' Jo's voice had a studied lightness to it. Honor nodded and sat at her seat at the kitchen table, letting the family move around her. They were glimpses of colour and shape, noises and scents, vanilla and sugar and jam, the hot mug of tea placed near her hands.
Someone knocked on the front door and it opened straight away. âIt's me!' called Jo's friend, Sara. âKids are in the car, can't stop, come on Oscar and Iris, we're on our way to the farm park to see the deer!'
A bustle at the door. Honor liked Sara, from what she had noticed so far. She had spirit and dark skin, which made her different from almost everyone else in this neighbourhood. âBye, Ganny H!' cried Oscar, running over and planting a kiss on her cheek, and then they were gone and it was quiet again.
âI'm going out as soon as the cakes are done,' said Jo, coming back to the kitchen and taking up her mixing bowl. âAnd Lydia's gone to the library to revise today. So you'll have the house to yourself.'
âAre you going anywhere nice?' Honor didn't expect Jo to tell her about her lover, but she couldn't resist a little probe.
âIt's ⦠a friend's birthday.'
âIt must be a very good friend, if you're making them two cakes.'
âOne is for us. You can't make cake in this household without giving some to Oscar.'
Honor hesitated, knowing she had no right to ask, then said, âYou were awake last night.'
âOh! You heard me? I hope I didn't disturb you.'
âI was awake. You are often up in the middle of the night.'
âI'm sorry. I try to be as quiet as I can.' Jo scraped batter into the tins. âI ⦠actually I thought it was getting better. I think I must be worried about today.'
Honor said nothing. She did not, as a habit, invite confidences from her daughter-in-law. But Jo seemed agitated as she put the cakes into the oven and washed up the bowl and spoons. Honor wondered if she was going to hear the story of Jo's affair, and she rather hoped it would not be tedious. Though it probably lacked illicit thrill, if Jo was making him a cake for his birthday.
Jo pulled out a chair and joined Honor at the table. âActually,' she said, sounding uncertain, âyou could come with me, if you like.'
âCome with you?'
âI'm ⦠you may be angry about this.'
Honor said nothing, remembering her fury, cleaning the kitchen.
âI'm visiting Adam Akerele,' Jo said.
âAdam?' asked Honor, but as soon as she said it, the name clicked into place. âYou're not talking about Adam â¦' She had not said the name for ten years. She wasn't sure she'd even said it then. But she could see it in print, behind her eyelids, next to Stephen's. âYou visit
him
?'
âOnly on his birthday. He's often lonely. I like to bring him a cake.'
The cake was not for her lover. It was for Adam Akerele. Honor clenched her teeth. âYou don't owe that man anything.'
âNo, I don't, but I like to do it. I think Stephen would have liked me to. He's quite a vulnerable young man.'
âHe killed Stephen.'
âStephen died because of him. But it wasn't Adam's fault. He didn't mean to.'
âOutcomes matter. Not intentions.'
âWell, I think intentions matter as well. And it was difficult to see him at first. But then I saw how desperate he was, and how sad. And I thought: What did Stephen die for, if this young man's life is also miserable?'
âSo you go to see him every year to cheer him up? Is that your mission?'
âI go to see him because it's his birthday and I think it's good to celebrate life while you've still got it.'
âYou'll forgive me if I don't think that Adam Akerele's life was worth the life of my son.'
âThat's not really the way it works, Honor.'
âIs this a role that comes easily to you? The saint?'
Jo stood. âIt isn't any kind of a role. My husband is dead, and it helps me feel more peaceful about it.'
âHow does Lydia feel about you visiting this man?'
âI mentioned it to her once, and she became very angry. The same as you.'
âWith good reason, I think.'
âFair enough. I can't argue with you. It's been ten years, though. It's a long time to hate someone who doesn't deserve it.'
Jo left the room and Honor stayed at the table with her cold cup of tea, fuming.
Our son died
, Honor typed.
You never knew him, I never allowed you to know him, and he died to save a stranger. His wife was dry-eyed at his funeral and she bakes this stranger a cake every year, and I am so angry, so angry that he did this instead of choosing to live.
Honor deleted what she had written. She had pictured Stephen's death to herself, in dreams and in waking, many times. Sometimes it was a torture and sometimes a comfort. In her mind, Adam Akerele was hazy. A distorted blank, like the centre of her waking vision. He was a cause, a reason, a mechanism, a curse.
In the kitchen, Jo was placing an iced cake into a tin.
âAll right,' Honor said to her. âAll right, I will come with you. But don't expect me to say anything to him. I don't like him. But I'm curious. I want to see what my son lost his life to save.'
Jo put on Radio 4 as they drove, which obviated the need for talking, but Honor was too preoccupied to say much anyway. She did not want to find an explanation for her son's death, because that would mean that she had accepted it. And she could not accept, would never accept, that her beautiful, brilliant boy, so full of potential and intelligence and love, could be gone.
Ten years. He was not the sort of person whom time erased. Honor's feelings did not tarnish and fade. She loved rarely, but she loved fully and for ever.
âSo you should know about Adam,' said Jo, as they drove through the centre of Brickham and out the other side. âI only see him once a year â he doesn't want to see me any more than that â but sometimes he's better than others. He has some mental health issues. I'm not sure what, exactly, because he's not comfortable talking about it, but I do know that things can get bad if he's not taking his medication.'
This is the life that Stephen sacrificed his for?
âLast year, he'd found a job, so I'm hoping that everything's gone well for him. He's not very good at keeping in touch.'
âWhat do you get out of this visit?' Honor couldn't help asking.
âIt isn't for sainthood. The first time I saw him, I wanted some answers. I wanted to know what had happened. And he was able to give me some details, though not quite enough.' She was silent for a moment. âI keep going because I feel connected to Adam. In Stephen's last moments, they shared something. He's alive because my husband was a good man. And I like knowing that.'
Honor frowned. âI'm not sure I need reminding.'
âAnd also, I like him.' Jo signalled left, and parked the car outside a block of flats made of yellow brick. âAnd he enjoys my cake, which is always gratifying.'
They made slow progress around the tower block to the entrance. There was a wheelchair ramp, and they walked up that. Graffiti spattered the side of the building, the desperate, incoherent communication of those with too much time on their hands. Jo buzzed at the door and held it open for Honor to come through.
The corridor was cramped and had a definite whiff of mildew and urine. On the fourth door along, someone had sellotaped a single green balloon. Honor's fingers brushed it.
âLooks like he's having a party,' said Jo cheerfully, and she knocked. The door was opened by a woman. Honor took in hooped earrings and part of an elaborate hairstyle. âHi, I'm Jo, and this is my mother-in-law, Honor Levinson. We've come to wish Adam a Happy Birthday.'