‘Oh, Bella.’ Both she and Ruby lumbered to the open doorway and held her close, as the three stood in the doorway with the rain at their backs.
‘I need a dry-off with a towel, a cup of tea and a chat with my girls. In that order.’
In spite of the circumstances, Merrin smiled at her best friend, whose mood was, as always, infectious; just the sight of the girl enough to lodge a sliver of happy into the dark crevices of her grief.
Jarvis had lost weight. Merrin stared at him now as he pulled on his boots and prepared to meet up with Robin and the others in the pub.
‘You all right, Jarv?’ She hated to see him so low when he was about to become a dad and this was supposed to be the happiest time.
‘Truth is, I don’t know really, Merry. It hasn’t sunk in yet, but I guess that’s what funerals are for.’
‘They are that, Jarv.’ Bella smiled at him. ‘Things will look a lot different this time tomorrow night.’
‘I’m dreading it,’ Ruby announced.
‘We all are,’ she agreed.
‘Is Miguel coming back down? I was looking forward to seeing him.’
‘No, Jarv. He has to work.’ She thought again of his incredible selfless act of kindness: delivering her home when she had needed him to, remembering for the first time the trouble he had gone to for Valentine’s and certain now that he had been about to propose. It was a funny thing, she was adamant she would have said no, letting him down as gently and as honestly as possible, but the way he had behaved in light of this tragedy, how he had given Digby short shrift . . . it made her think. Not that she had much spare capacity for these thoughts right now.
‘Shame. I like him. He’s a good bloke.’ He walked over and kissed Ruby on the forehead. ‘See you later, love. If you need me, just text and I’ll be straight back.’
‘I will.’ Ruby gripped his hand and kissed the back of his fingers. He loped slowly from the parlour and closed the door behind him. ‘I’m glad he’s gone out.’ Ruby swallowed. ‘It’s desperate with him sitting in the house all day, just staring out of the window.’
‘He loved Dad.’
‘Yes, he did. Talk about state the bloody obvious, thank you for that, Merrin,’ Ruby snapped.
She stared at her sister, who stared back. Bella subtly shook her head and closed her eyes briefly; code for ignore her. It was like this sometimes, as if she inadvertently pushed Ruby’s buttons that took her from calm to furious in seconds. She took Bella’s advice and the atmosphere settled a little.
With baby Glynn sleeping soundly in his pram in the corner, Merrin, Bella and Ruby settled back into their seats around the hearth with large mugs of tea, warming their toes in front of the fire. It was just like old times, except they were solemn and thoughtful. Merrin knew without doubt that they, like her, took solace from the proximity of the others.
‘Shall I take Heather up some toast or something?’ Bella looked towards the ceiling.
‘She won’t eat it, Bells,’ Ruby sighed. ‘We’ve tried, ain’t we, Merry?’
She nodded. This, too, was her sister’s MO – to throw a verbal olive branch after snapping at her.
‘Jarvis is right, Miguel is a good bloke.’ She pictured the effort he had gone to, the petals on the bed, the smell of lavender oil, the candles . . .
‘Yes, I thought he was lovely,’ Bella added.
‘He is lovely.’ She smiled at her friend. ‘I think he might propose . . .’ She let this trail.
‘God!’ Bella sat forward in her seat. ‘That’s big news. And what would you say?’
‘I don’t know.’ She rubbed her sore eyes. ‘I’m thinking that he’s got a lot of qualities that make for a good life partner.’
‘But is that enough, Merry? Don’t you want that glow of real love?’ Bella, she knew, had reservations about the two of them.
‘I don’t think that happens for most people, if it exists at all, and so why would I hold out for it?’ she surmised. ‘Besides, I’m honestly too muddle-headed right now to think about anything. I don’t know if he’s what I’m looking for.’
‘What are you looking for exactly?’ Ruby sipped her tea.
‘I don’t know,’ she mused. ‘And I guess that’s half the problem. But I do know what it felt like to believe in love – so much so that the thought of a marriage proposal filled me with joy, not dread, but I won’t feel that again because I know it’s not real. I think there are some exceptions: what Mum and Dad had was real, rare and special.’ This admission was a big deal, hinting at a recovery of her heart, but was lost among the next wave of sadness that hit hard.
‘Dad really liked him after spending time with him at my wedding,’ her sister added. These words were enough to make all three girls cry harder, with thoughts of Ben on that proud, proud day. They foraged for tissues and wiped their faces.
‘I can’t believe that was the last time I saw him. Why didn’t I come home again? I feel as if I’ve let him down,’ Merrin cried.
‘Oh, don’t worry, that wasn’t why you let Dad down, Merry.’
She and Bella looked towards Ruby, whose words had been cutting, and Merrin felt her pulse quicken.
‘What d’you mean by that?’ She sat up straight and turned towards her sister. This barb was too deep and painful to ignore.
‘Nothing.’ Ruby twisted in the chair to get comfortable.
‘Ruby! You can’t say something like that and just expect me to drop it!’ She was aware of Ruby and Bella sharing a knowing look, and this only added fuel to the twin flames of intrigue and unease. ‘How did I let Dad down?’ she pushed. Even asking the question was enough to make her throat close with distress and for tears to form and slip down the back of her nose.
‘By up and leaving, by not being here.’
‘Stop, Ruby! Just bloody stop!’ Merrin’s voice was strong. ‘You told me once before what a rubbish daughter I was in going away, and it hurt me more than you know. But Mum and Dad seemed to understand a lot more than you do that it was about my survival! I did what I had to do to grow, to get over what Digby did to me! And so don’t you dare, just don’t!’ She raised her voice a little, wary of waking Glynn. ‘In fact, it’s not about Mum and Dad, Ruby, is it? It’s about you and some stupid jealousy that has always hung around you like a bad smell. It needs to stop, it just needs to stop! I’ve had enough.’
‘You’ve had enough? And don’t even start me on Jarvis. My Jarvis!’ she enunciated. ‘My Jarvis? That’s what you said!’
‘That was a fucking lifetime ago!’ Merrin felt her heart hammer in exasperation, as she punched her thighs. ‘I didn’t mean to say it, I didn’t mean it! And I’ve already apologised. I can’t keep apologising!’ She shook her head and rubbed her face, wanting silence, wanting Ruby to shut up.
‘Not for me; it wasn’t a lifetime ago for me! And how dare you say that? Even on my bloody wedding day, half the talk was about how you were coping with the day and how strange it must all be for Merrin, the poor lamb. My wedding day! People were coming up to me all day and I thought they were going to congratulate me but instead they looked me in the eye and said, “Oh, this must be so tough for little Merrin . . .”’