The Babysitter

Mel stared at him, stunned. He didn’t really think…? No, surely not. She never drank vodka. She didn’t even like the stuff. ‘It’s not mine. Whoever put it there, it wasn’t me.’

Mark held her gaze. Apart from a telltale tic in his cheek, his expression didn’t flinch. ‘Right,’ he said, shortly, and turned away.

‘Mark! I didn’t. It’s not mine!’ Mel sounded desperate, even to herself.

Mark stopped.

‘It’s not, Mark. I swear it’s not.’

Mark pushed his hands into his pockets, his shoulders tensing.

‘Why would I put it there?’ Mel implored him. ‘Why would I do that, and then tell you the sink’s blocked? Why would I do that, Mark?’

Mark shrugged. ‘Because you forgot you’d put it there?’

‘It’s not mine!’ Mel screamed it.

Mark whirled around. ‘So, who did put it there then, Mel?’ he demanded angrily. ‘Hey? Jade? Poppy? Evie?’

Mel shook her head, confused and scared – by the tone of his voice as much as the nightmare her life had become. She was losing him. He was pulling away from her. Second by second, right there in front of her, he was pulling away. And there was nothing she could do about it.

‘Hercules?’ Mark shouted when she didn’t answer, causing her to jump. ‘The fucking fairies?’

Mel bit back her tears. She wouldn’t. She wouldn’t cry in front of him. Her heart twisted painfully, because, truthfully, she knew he wouldn’t come to her now if she did. ‘I… I don’t know,’ she stuttered, desperately scrambling through her dysfunctional brain, acknowledging, not wanting to acknowledge, that there was only one person it could be. ‘Jade,’ she whispered finally. ‘It must have been Jade.’

‘Right.’ Mark laughed bitterly. ‘Without Jade,’ he said, his eyes now burning with fury, ‘this house would be falling apart.’

The comment hit her like a low blow to the stomach. Mel didn’t speak. She couldn’t.

Mark sucked in a breath and looked away, absolutely disgusted. ‘I’m going,’ he said hoarsely. ‘I can’t do this.’

‘Who else?’ Mel shouted, behind him. ‘Who else could it have… Oh God.’ She stopped, cold foreboding sweeping through her. ‘It was you.’

Mark didn’t answer. His step faltered, but he didn’t turn around.

‘You want me gone, don’t you?’ Mel swallowed back a sick taste in her throat. ‘Is that it, Mark?’ she asked him, her emotions swinging violently. ‘Is that why you’re trying to convince me I’m going out of my mind? Why you’re driving me away? So you can be with Lisa?’ Someone else, if not her? Who, Mark? How many other women do you have intimate conversations with?’

Still Mark didn’t say anything. Her heart now beating a rapid drumbeat in her chest, Mel watched as he walked calmly out of the room without uttering even a word.





Forty-Four





MARK





Mark sat at the kitchen island, his head in his hands, wondering whether it was him who was going out of his mind. She believed it. She really did believe he was having affairs. Worse, she believed him capable of such horrendous manipulation. And to what end? To move someone else in in her place? Jesus.

Swallowing hard, he pulled himself to his feet. Going to the kitchen cupboard, he extracted the prescription drugs, pulled out the leaflet and studied it, yet again, desperately trying to find some explanation as to what was happening.

His wife was delusional, paranoid to the point of insanity. Hallucinating. Having screaming nightmares most nights, for most of the night, and then suffering insomnia when she wasn’t. The drowsiness, dizziness, obvious depression and irritability, those symptoms could be put down to the medication, but not this. This was extreme. He needed to speak to her GP; he hoped data protection wouldn’t prevent Meadows from speaking to him. Somehow, though, Mark doubted changing the medication would make any difference. She needed help, more help than he or her GP could offer. She needed professional help. God help him, she might even need sectioning. Mark could hardly stand the thought, but if he had to, for the sake of their children… How much was this damaging them?

Thanks to Jade, Poppy seemed almost oblivious, although she had asked him why Mummy was strange when he’d read her a bedtime story the other night. Last night, she’d prayed to God to ‘make Mummy smile again’. Mark swiped angrily at an errant tear on his cheek. Evie was fine, sleeping better than she had been. She’d sat in her bouncer for a good hour after her eleven o’clock feed, smiling and gurgling and reaching a hand towards her mobiles. Her hand–eye coordination was good. She was content. She was unaffected. For now.

Deliberating whether to take Mel a drink up, he decided against it. She’d been out of it, dead to the world, when he’d retrieved the lunch she hadn’t eaten. He’d taken the opportunity to check the bathroom cabinets. He’d never imagined, even when she’d been at her lowest ebb, after Jacob, that she would ever contemplate taking an overdose, but he was imagining it now.

Time to bite the bullet, he supposed. Searching the house for hidden bottles – Mark had never imagined himself doing that either. He didn’t want to prove anything, confront her again – he just needed to know.



* * *



Three bottles, all partially drunk. Feeling sick to his soul, Mark lined them up in the kitchen. One stuffed down an armchair – Mel’s chair. One in the airing cupboard, nestled between the sheets. Another secreted in a Perspex storage box in a rarely used cupboard. Mark might have missed it, if he hadn’t been looking. How many more were there? One under the mattress maybe? A couple in the workshop? No doubt she would have booze hidden away there. Fuck!

Grabbing the first bottle, Mark squeezed his hand hard around it, sorely tempted to smash it against the nearest wall. Only Evie’s presence in the house stopped him. Breathing hard, he unscrewed the top. Mel wouldn’t hurt her. He recalled her saying it. But why had she said it? Because the thought had occurred to her? Because the urge had possessed her? Not bloody surprising, putting this lot away on top of the pills. Mark furiously ditched the second bottle, and then the third, down the sink that had been blocked.

Blocked with clay. Mark stopped, the final bottle still poised. How had it been blocked with clay? From Mel washing her hands there, he’d thought. Hadn’t she said the sink in the workshop had been blocked too? From washing her tools there, he’d thought. He’d assumed the clay had accumulated in the U-bend. Except it hadn’t been particles of clay, collecting at the bottom of the bend like sand. It had been a solid lump.

Mark thought about it as he headed for the back door to dump the bottles and search the workshop. He was halfway out when he paused, thinking of Evie. She wouldn’t hurt her, he assured himself, carrying on out.

Still, though, Mark searched with haste. He checked the kiln, the shelves and cupboards, workbenches and the spaces beneath them. He was heading back to the door when he remembered the clay bin. She wouldn’t, would she? But then, it was precisely what addicts did. Mark had been a copper long enough to know that. Crouching, he made sure his sleeve was out of the way and delved down into the slip-sodden clay. Bingo, he thought bitterly, as his hand made contact with what felt like a polythene-wrapped package.

Tightening his grip, Mark attempted to pull it out, but the clay seemed reluctant to part with it. Bloody hell, what was it? A two-litre bottle? He pulled harder. The package finally unsuckered itself with a squelch, causing Mark to fall back on his haunches. Retrieving the parcel from where it had landed on the floor, he eyed it curiously, wiped some of the muck from it, and then dropped it, scrambling backwards.

Jesus Christ. Mark’s heart slammed into his ribcage, his stomach turning over as his mind registered what his eyes refused to believe. The cat’s eyes were wild, wide and terrified, its fanged mouth wide open, the polythene clinging to its face.



* * *

Sheryl Browne's books