Home > Books > Apples Never Fall(125)

Apples Never Fall(125)

Author:Liane Moriarty

‘I just hated this house so much,’ said Savannah. ‘I hated all of you so much.’

Joy gasped in surprised pain at that, as if she’d burned herself.

‘We don’t need to hear this,’ said Stan.

‘Be quiet, Stan, we do so need to hear it,’ said Joy fiercely.

She was so tiny but she could instantly quell that giant man with her quick, snippy remarks. Savannah found her inspirational. She already knew that she would keep some of her speech patterns for future use: What the heck? Oh my word! Heavens to Betsy!

‘Explain it to me,’ Joy said to her. ‘Start from the beginning.’

Savannah took a breath. Was it even possible to untangle the multitude of memories that had led to this particular moment in this bedroom?

‘I was the one who bought the raffle ticket,’ she said. That was the very beginning, if she threaded her way back to the start.

‘Raffle ticket?’ Joy frowned. ‘You mean the ticket for the free private lesson? The one Harry’s father, your father, won?’

‘I gave it to him for Father’s Day,’ said Savannah. ‘I bought it at a shopping centre with my own money. My brother said, “That’s a stupid present.” You would think when the ticket won my father might have given me the private tennis lesson, not my brother. Imagine that. Harry might never have picked up a racquet if I hadn’t bought that ticket.’

‘Do you blame your parents’ divorce on us?’ asked Joy. ‘Is that what you’re trying to say?’

‘We’ve heard enough. You need to leave,’ said Stan. ‘You lied to Troy. About me.’

People made accusations of lying with such triumph: as if pointing out a lie won the game, as if you’d just shatter with the shame of it, as if they’d never lied themselves, as if people didn’t lie all the time, to themselves, to everyone.

‘Did I?’ said Savannah archly. It was always possible to plant doubt. Most men carried the guilt of their gender. You just had to apply a tiny flame to the kindling. She’d seen the terror fly across his face when she walked around the house in nothing but her towel. He felt compromised the moment he looked at her.

‘Stop this!’ shouted Stan. A woman’s lie could terrify but so could a man’s shout. It made her want to hunker down and put her hands over her ears.

She pressed on. ‘You remember what you said to me?’

He’d never said a single inappropriate word, he’d been unfailingly kind, he’d been nearly as fatherly as Joy had been motherly, but Stan’s fatherliness was a flimsy fa?ade Savannah could smash with ease, not with a brick but with a lie, which was why she had to do exactly that, to prove it wasn’t real. Look how easily she’d flipped him from affection to hatred. Love was never real no matter how authentic it seemed.

She said, ‘You remember what you asked me to do?’

(Not him, but another man, not her, but another girl. There was another girl’s awful truth at the heart of her awful lie.)

He loomed over her, savage with rage. ‘Stop this, stop this, stop this!’

chapter forty-two

Now

‘Stop this, stop this, stop this!’

Stop what? Caro Azinovic was one hundred per cent positive those were the words a man – it had sounded like Stan Delaney – shouted over and over on a coolish night last spring. Caro had been dragging her yellow ‘glass and plastics’ bin to the kerb, and she’d heard the shouting over the rattle and scrape of her bin and stopped in her tracks, a little shocked.

She didn’t know what had suddenly made her think of that night now, all these months later, as she carried a vase of dead tulips from her dining room into her kitchen.

Should she tell the police about that night? When the police interviewed her she’d told them that her neighbours were a nice ordinary happily married couple. This was absolutely true and absolutely not true. There was no such thing as a nice ordinary happily married couple. But obviously the fresh-faced police detectives were far too young to get their heads around that.

It was unusual to hear any noise at all from the Delaneys’ house. Of course, years ago, when all those giant children still lived at home, the Delaneys’ had been the noisiest house on the street. Once, Caro had phoned Joy because she’d heard a kind of maniacal screaming as if people were being murdered, but it turned out they were just playing a board game that got out of hand. They were very competitive people. When the Delaney children came over to swim in their pool, Caro’s own children ended up coming inside and watching television. ‘They’re scary,’ her daughter had said to her.