“Please don’t.”
My tone took him aback. “Don’t do this, Helen. Please don’t buy into that shit from your dad. He can hound me out if he wants, and I’ll go gladly, but I won’t have you dragged into his pathetic reasoning over a guilty conscience.”
I pulled my shoulders back. “You need to stay.”
“I do not!”
“You need to stay,” I repeated, “and you need to help me. Because I need to know this is ok, and I need to know I didn’t ruin everything for you, and I need to do my exams, and I can’t…” I fought back the tears. “And I can’t do that without you… because I’m not that strong…”
“I don’t need to work here to help you finish your exams, Helen!”
“I know, but you will be working here, and I want you to help me finish them anyway.”
He put his hands in his hair. “This is insane. This is totally, absolutely insane.”
“It’s not… it’s the right thing…”
“No, it isn’t.”
“YES IT IS!” I took a breath and lowered my voice. “You’ve grown into this place and it’s grown into you! That’s what you said! The soul of the place, the soul of the land here. And Anna! You said you could never leave! You said you wouldn’t ever want to!”
“Things change, Helen. And I’ve changed my mind.”
I folded my arms and shook my head. “You haven’t changed your mind, your hand has been forced, that’s all.”
“It doesn’t matter why. The fact is I’ve changed my mind, circumstances don’t really matter.”
“You’re a teacher. A brilliant one. So, please, I’m asking you, please help me finish my exams… because I can’t… I can’t do this otherwise…” The tears came back and I hated it. I had to swat them away with my cuff. “I’m not going to take everything from you, so you may as well not hand in your resignation, because I won’t be coming, and I won’t be there watching Dad ruin everything for you. I just can’t do that.”
“Don’t be ridiculous!”
“I’m not. It would happen. I know it would happen.”
“And maybe it wouldn’t be that bad!”
But it would be. It would be that bad.
“Please, Mark,” I said, and I didn’t even swat the tears away this time. “Please don’t hand in your resignation. Please don’t.”
“Helen…”
“Don’t,” I said. “I’m asking you, please, don’t do it. Maybe we can wait… maybe one day… maybe Dad will see…”
“I’ve had enough of listening to this, Helen. I’m going to Kenneth’s office and I’m going to tell him I quit, and that’s the end of it.”
“Then I’ll fail my exams, because I won’t be able to come with you, not without Dad going ballistic and setting the whole town on some crazy fucking witch hunt, and if I can’t come with you, then I’ll be here on my own… and I don’t want to be here on my own…”
“Fucking hell,” he hissed. “Don’t make things like this. It doesn’t have to be like this.”
“It does!” I played my final card, and I hated myself for it. “I’m not a baby, don’t treat me like one!”
He raised his eyebrows. “I would never treat you like that.”
“Then let me make my own decision. If you resign, then I’ll be forced to come with you and watch Dad ruin everything, or stay here and die inside and face my exams alone.”
“Or we live happily ever fucking after, Helen.”
But nobody ever lives happily ever after. Not with a twenty-year age gap and a dad like mine.
“Tell me you won’t resign.”
“I don’t think I can do that…” He was hurt and angry and I hated it, I hated everything.
“Please, Mark, tell me you won’t. Promise me you won’t!”
“I can’t fucking promise that, Helen!”
“PLEASE! Mark, please!” And I covered my face and I cried, and I cried and I cried until I heard him swear under his breath.
“That’s really what you want?”
No, it’s not what I want. It’s not even close to what I want.
I made myself nod. “Yes, that’s what I want.”
It took him a long while to speak again, and when he did it was full of frustration, and pain, and rage.
“Ok, Helen. If that’s what you want. I won’t hand in my resignation.” His eyes ate mine up. “But I’m going to keep a letter in my pocket, and the minute you change your mind, the second you change your mind, and I really do fucking hope you do, I’m going to hand it in, and we can put all this silliness behind us.”
But I wouldn’t.
I’d never ask him to walk away from his life like that.
Not for me.
Not ever.
***
Helen
My soul was broken. I could feel every broken piece, and they were rough and jagged like shards of glass. They hurt every time I moved, every time I thought. Every morning that I woke in my bed and realised all over again that he wasn’t with me.
But I didn’t break.