When there was nothing left to scrub in the shop and she felt she had her anger under control, she climbed the stairs to the flat and knocked on Patrick’s bedroom door. He was sitting on his bed, reading. The bottoms of his white socks were a dirty gray and the room was littered with discarded underwear and hoodies. He sat up straighter when she walked in, locking eyes with her for moments but unable to hold her gaze.
“You could have come to me, quietly, taken me to one side.”
Patrick didn’t meet her eyes at all now. “You should have told me we were losing the house,” he countered.
“Yes. With hindsight, I should have told you, and I’m sorry that you had to find out in the way that you did. I was trying to protect you, but I went about it the wrong way.”
“You don’t need to protect me.”
“I will always try to protect you because I’m your mother and I’m hardwired that way. But your behavior today was unacceptable.”
He looked up quickly and away again but not quick enough to hide the guilt in his face. He knew what he’d done.
It was a fight to keep her voice level, but she wouldn’t raise it and give him an excuse to fight back. He wanted to rail against the unfairness of their eviction, he wanted someone to shout at because the situation made him feel helpless, but she wasn’t going to give him the chance.
“You made me look a fool, and the worst part is, you did it on purpose because you were angry that I’d kept something from you, and you wanted to hurt me. Well, mission accomplished.” She shook her head. “How dare you try to pull that macho, man-of-the-house, misogynistic bullshit on me. I thought I’d taught you better than that.”
He had the grace to look ashamed. “I was so angry, Mum.” Tears stood in his eyes. He was still her little boy even though he was grown now.
“That’s not going to cut it. You don’t get to behave like an arsehole just because you’re angry, that’s not how respect works. You made me feel small and stupid. I do not deserve that.”
He looked up at her then. “I know. I’m sorry.”
She drew her hand across her forehead. She felt wretched. She and Patrick didn’t fight, never had, even when he was in the middle of his sullen teenage years.
“Okay.” She nodded. “I’m going to bed.”
“Do you really think I’m a misogynist?”
She looked at her boy. She so wanted to make him feel better, but at the moment she was barely holding it together. The anger had acted as an Elastoplast over her heart, but now the rage had gone, the plaster was unsticking, and she was about to come apart at the seams.
“I don’t know what I think at this moment; my brain is mush. I know that I love you and I’m tired and heartbroken and I need to go to bed.”
“Heartbroken because of me? Because of my behavior?”
“No, my darling. You won’t want to hear this, but since it’s over I suppose it’s a moot issue anyway. I love Joe. And I thought he loved me too. I guess that makes me just another desperate middle-aged woman. So, that’s it. The whole story. We’re being evicted and I’m a fool.”
When he looked at her, his eyes were full of compassion and worry. “I didn’t know that you actually loved him. I thought it was a fling or something. If I’d known, I never would have . . . We’ll work it out, like we always do, it’ll be okay . . .”
She forced a smile into her trembling lips and tried to make herself sound like a mother and not someone whose life was falling down around her ears.
“Don’t you worry about me. Nothing that a good night’s sleep can’t fix,” she lied.
She left before Patrick had the time to scooch off his bed and give her a hug because a hug in that moment would break her.
Pulling his bedroom door closed behind her, she ran to her room as the tears began to fall. Her head pounded from the pressure of holding in her sorrow. She waited until her face was firmly pressed into her pillow before she gave way and let the torrent roll over her. It was all too much. It wasn’t simply about Joe, though his betrayal had been the final straw. Nor was it only the eviction, or losing her father, or arranging the whole funeral, or losing her business, or organizing a goddamned winter solstice festival, or trying to plan and pay for the Christmas her children deserved, or having to be so fucking upbeat all the time because if she wasn’t, the people around her became nervous, because so long as Maggie was all right, then everything must surely be okay in the end. It wasn’t only the thought of having to pack up her entire life. Or the thought of having to rebuild her business in an unknown location, or having to change careers entirely and start again, be the new girl at forty-four years old.
It was all of those things piling on and turning the screws like she was a flower in a press. And she had lost Joe. Just as she had known she would. All men leave in the end.
Amid it all, she wondered where Joe was now. What was he doing? Was he drowning his sorrows in the pub or had he gone for one of his runs? Was he feeling like she was? God, she hoped so. She didn’t know what to think. Could there have been an explanation like he had intimated? Should she have given him a chance, heard him out?
She turned over onto her back and stared at the ceiling. What did it matter? In the end, everything had played out just as she’d known it would. She’d made her heart vulnerable, and he’d stamped on it.
45
Just after half past eight on Friday morning, the door to North Novelties & Curios crashed open, slamming against the wall and causing multiple wind chimes to jangle.
“Blimey, Patrick!” Star exclaimed. “What did that door ever do to you?”
Betty was bent over Simone’s massive to-do list for the evening’s events, making appreciative noises at the spreadsheet. She’d left Doreen in charge of the café while she came over to check the running order for the day. The folk band had arrived in the early hours in two camper vans, had taken up residence in Betty’s café as soon as it opened, and looked set to stay for the foreseeable future. There was a general feeling of excitement and expectation in the village, despite the early hour.
“Is your mum okay? Something was off with her last night and she’s not returning our calls. Is she coming over?”
“I was just about to go over and check on her,” added Simone.
“I’ve messed up,” said Patrick. His eyes were wide. “I’ve really messed up. I don’t know what to do. You’ve got to help me.”
Simone and Evette immediately took control of the situation.
“Okay, first things first. Is anybody hurt?” asked Evette.
“Define ‘hurt.’?”
“Do we need the emergency services?” Simone snapped. “Is your mum in mortal danger?”
“No.”
“That’s a start, then. Come and sit down,” Star soothed, taking his arm and leading him to the chair that Evette had pulled out for him. Patrick allowed himself to be pushed down into it. “Now, what’s the problem?”
“It’s Joe. Well, it’s Mum but it’s Joe. I got it all wrong and I’ve messed it up royally and now Ma’s heartbroken. She’s trying to pretend she’s okay, but I know she isn’t and it’s all my fault.”