Home > Books > One Small Mistake(21)

One Small Mistake(21)

Author:Dandy Smith

‘Your dad?’

‘Yeah. There was something really special about him reading what I’d written. He’d taken out his dusty work pen and jotted down praise and musings, and that was it, I’d found something for us to bond over, to connect – something that was just ours. Every week after that, I’d write a story, leave it on the dining table and, as if by magic, the next morning Dad had written all over it.’

I see a flash of something in his eyes, but he looks away quickly and I worry I’ve upset him. Fathers are a touchy subject. Despite Kathryn trying to nurture a good relationship between Jack and Jeffrey, organising for the two of them to spend quality time together at Wisteria every Easter, their relationship remained hostile right up until the day he killed himself. Jeffrey often hit Jack, and Jack acted out in return. All for his father’s attention. Hoping it wouldn’t lead to the violent end it always did, but to a conversation, a connection. Jack was eighteen when we found Jeffrey’s body, and although it was an awful time, Jack pulled himself together, turned over a new leaf. It’s not easy to admit, but with his dad gone, Jack was a better person.

Every summer since I was six, our families spent two weeks in Cornwall at Wisteria Cottage, a five-bedroom sandstone home with a wraparound porch and a view of the sea on two sides, plumes of lilac wisteria weaving up its walls. We usually piled into two cars and drove across in convoy. That year though, Kathryn and Jack’s older brother, Charlie, went across early, stopping in Taunton for a couple of nights to visit Kathryn’s sister. Jeffrey and Jack were going to travel up with us but, the day before we were due to leave, my parents received an email from Jeffrey explaining he couldn’t make it to Wisteria due to work commitments, and could we please take Jack with us. We didn’t know then it was a part of Jeffrey’s plan, that he kept a gun in his study, that he was preparing to take his own life as soon as we drove away.

Two weeks later, it was Jack and I who found him. Sometimes I swear I can still smell Jeffrey Westwood; like that thick, hot stench of rotting flesh that clung to the back of my throat for months after we buried him has never really left. It was the height of summer and thanks to the heat, he decomposed quickly. So quickly, it was almost impossible for forensics to determine how long he’d been dead. The cause of death wasn’t a mystery though; there was a letter on his computer and a gun in his hand. It didn’t take a genius. I’m shocked by the way he chose to do it. It seems so loud, so violent. All blood and brains and blistering heat. I don’t know what exactly was in his suicide note, but Jack hinted that his father had a history of mental illness. That the sudden heart attack which killed Jeffrey’s older brother just months before Jeffrey’s suicide may have played a part in it.

‘You can’t stop writing, Elodie. I won’t let you,’ says Jack. ‘Look, I need to send some emails. I’m going to go downstairs and work. You stay up here and write some new pitches.’

‘I’m supposed to be at Mugs in an hour …’ I trail off, picturing an afternoon spent in a hot, sweaty café, and I cannot breathe for the claustrophobia of it.

‘Call in sick.’

I hesitate because I’ve never pulled a sick day.

‘You need to write,’ he tells me, then gestures to the pastry. ‘Eat that.’ He hands me the water. ‘Drink this.’ He scoops the pills from the bedside table and folds them into my palm. ‘And swallow these.’

I pop the pills into my mouth and salute him. ‘Yes, sir.’

He turns to go, but pauses at the door and says, ‘We’ll get you published. I promise.’

‘Even if it kills you?’

He smiles. ‘Even if it kills us both.’

My trainers slap against the pavement as I jog across the road towards the park. I’m running to distract myself because one hour and twenty-eight minutes ago, I sent three grittier pitches to Lara for approval from Harriers. Instead of repeatedly refreshing and deliriously hoping, I decided to run.

I’ve come to the park opposite my house. My preferred route. It’s flatter than other areas of town, prettier too. There are benches nestled among wildflowers, a blur of red and purple and buttercup yellow as I pass. On the inside is an expanse of grass where people throw balls for bounding dogs, and couples share picnics on sunny afternoons.

Then I see us, Noah and I sitting on a duck egg blue blanket after dark, dozens of flickering tealights all around. We were visiting my parents for the weekend. In the middle of the night, he woke and led me from my childhood bedroom and out into the night. I felt giddy, like a teenager high on rebellion as we snuck into the park.

 21/140   Home Previous 19 20 21 22 23 24 Next End