The Stepmother

I call her.

‘So are you coming to stay? I’ve got a lovely spare room with its own bathroom and all.’ I stretch luxuriously, but I don’t feel very luxurious actually. I’m starting to hate this house; the whispering walls feel less than benign now. I don’t belong. I am an impostor – as that word might have said.

Might.

Yesterday I was sure I heard voices on the stairs again – a sort of muttering in the ether. I tore open the small door and shone the light up there – but the staircase was empty. Of course it was. But I didn’t relax for the rest of the day.

‘And everything’s okay, is it?’ Marlena asks suspiciously.

‘Yeah of course, it’s great.’ Why do I feel like I’m lying?

‘I mean – you’ve told him?’

I don’t speak.

‘Jean! For Christ’s sake – what are you on?’

‘Okay, okay! Look – if you come up one of next few weekends, I swear it’ll all be sorted by then.’

‘Okay – deal. I could do with twenty-four hours in the country. It’s mental in London right now,’ Marlena says, followed by a snappy: ‘Watch out mate!’ I hear the frantic beeping of traffic around her. ‘Gotta go. Gotta see a man about a dog. Get on with it, Jeanie. I’ll text you a date.’

Matt comes in as I hang up. He’s been working out downstairs, and looking at his tousled hair and his muscular arms in his white V-neck, I feel the familiar, addictive wash of emotion – a surge of what Marlena would no doubt call lust.

Last night’s demons disintegrate in the weak morning light.

‘Is it okay if my sister comes to stay?’ I ask as he goes to take a shower – now all fixed. He frowns.

‘You don’t need to ask. This is your home too.’

I don’t say I’ve already semi-arranged it, because frankly Marlena is less than reliable with social arrangements. I’m so pleased she’s finally agreed to come: I want Matthew to meet her properly, to get to know her like I do.

They’ve only met a few times, briefly; she took us out for lunch in London the week after the wedding she missed. She drank quite a lot and was funny and bitchy about celebrities. I wasn’t sure what Matthew made of her, but he laughed at all her jokes.

I’m sure they’ll get on famously when she comes to stay.





Fourteen





Marlena





No comment.





Fifteen





Jeanie





1 February 2015





10 a.m.





* * *



I listen to the shower as I drink my tea, watching the finches in the bare branches of the apple tree as they pick at the pale lichen.

I have nothing to feel guilty about, I must remember that; I just have to be honest with Matthew. I have to trust he knows me well enough by now, loves me deeply enough, to understand.

And he hasn’t told me everything either, I remind myself, thinking of last night’s uncomfortable conversation.

I feel both relief and terror about what I must do, still chastising myself for not having told him before. It’s so stupid, I see that clearly now – but it wasn’t so clear before.

Matthew emerges, wrapped in a towel. His physique is good for a man of nearly fifty: toned and fit. Again I feel a wave of…

‘What are these, Jeanie?’ He’s holding something in his hand that I can’t make out.

‘What?’

‘These pills?’ He extends the packet. ‘Xanax?’

‘Xanax? They’re not mine,’ I say quickly, seeing his face. ‘Where did you find them?’

‘They must be yours. They were in our bathroom cabinet, and they are most definitely not mine.’

I get out of bed and pluck them out his hand, turning the packet over.

‘See, they don’t even have my name on.’ I study the label. Then I lay my hand on his bare chest. ‘Why don’t you come back to bed for a bit? I wanted to talk to you…’

‘I can’t. It’s already late.’ He frowns again, pulling away to get dressed. ‘I need to check my emails.’

‘Just for five minutes?’ I plead. It’ll only take five.

‘I’m waiting to hear from Tokyo.’ He has that bullish look that I’m starting to recognise as stress. ‘It’s important.’

‘Sorry,’ I say, as he pulls on his jeans. ‘Sorry, I didn’t mean to annoy you.’

His face is inscrutable.

‘I’ll be down soon.’ I try to smile, but I feel oddly like crying. When he leaves the room, I sit on the edge of the bed, pills in hand. I look out at the bare apple tree. There was a pair of blackbirds, but they’ve gone. All the birds have flown off, scared by something nearby. A cat? A fox.

The foxes are always prowling here.

I stare out. I can’t shake my feeling of unease.



* * *



Downstairs Matthew’s on the computer.

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