In the living room, we sit in a little triangle: Tom on the sofa, the adoring father and dutiful husband, daughter on his lap, wife at his side. And the ex-wife opposite, sipping her tea. Very civilized. Iâm sitting in the leather armchair that we bought from Healâs just after we got marriedâit was the first piece of furniture we got as a married couple: soft tan buttery leather, expensive, luxurious. I remember how excited I was when it was delivered. I remember curling up in it, feeling safe and happy, thinking, Tom is watching me, his brow knitted. Heâs working out what to do, how to fix things. Heâs not worried about Anna, I can see that. Iâm the problem.
âShe was a bit like you,â he says all of a sudden. He leans back on the sofa, shifting his daughter to a more comfortable position on his lap. âWell, she was and she wasnât. She had that thing . . . messy, you know. I canât resist that.â He grins at me. âKnight in shining armour, me.â
âYouâre no oneâs knight,â I say quietly.
âAh, Rach, donât be like that. Donât you remember? You all sad, because Daddyâs died, and just wanting someone to come home to, someone to love you? I gave you all that. I made you feel safe. Then you decided to piss it all away, but you canât blame me for that.â
âI can blame you for a lot of things, Tom.â
âNo, no.â He wags a finger at me. âLetâs not start rewriting history. I was good to you. Sometimes . . . well, sometimes you forced my hand. But I was good to you. I took care of you,â he says, and itâs only then that it really registers: he lies to himself the way he lies to me. He this. He actually believes that he was good to me.
The child starts to wail suddenly and loudly, and Anna gets abruptly to her feet.
âI need to change her,â she says âNot now.â
âSheâs wet, Tom. She needs changing. Donât be cruel.â
He looks at Anna sharply, but he hands the crying child to her. I try to catch her eye, but she wonât look at me. My heart rises into my throat as she turns to go upstairs, but it sinks again just as fast, because Tom is on his feet, his hand on her arm. âDo it here,â he says. âYou can do it here.â
Anna goes across into the kitchen and changes the childâs nappy on the table. The smell of shit fills the room, it turns my stomach.
âAre you going to tell us why?â I ask him. Anna stops whatâs sheâs doing and looks across at us. The room is still, quiet, save for the babbling of the child.
Tom shakes his head, almost in disbelief himself. âShe could be very like you, Rach. She wouldnât let things go. She didnât know when she was over. She just . . . she wouldnât . Remember how you always argued with me, how you always wanted the last word? Megan was like that. She wouldnât listen.â
He shifts in his seat and leans forward, his elbows on his knees, as if heâs telling me a story. âWhen we started, it was just fun, just fucking. She led me to believe that was what she was into. But then she changed her mind. I donât know why. She was all over the place, that girl. Sheâd have a bad day with Scott, or sheâd just be a bit bored, and sheâd start talking about us going away together, starting over, about me leaving Anna and Evie. As if I would! And if I wasnât there on demand when she wanted me, sheâd be furious, calling here, threatening me, telling me she was going to come round, that she was going to tell Anna about us.
âBut then it stopped. I was so relieved. I thought sheâd finally managed to get it into her head that I wasnât interested any longer. But then that Saturday she called, saying she needed to talk, that she had something important to tell me. I ignored her, so she started making threats againâshe was going to come to the house, that sort of thing. I wasnât too worried at first, because Anna was going out. You remember, darling? You were supposed to be going out to dinner with the girls, and I was going to babysit. I thought perhaps it wouldnât be such a bad thingâshe would come round and Iâd have it out with her. Iâd make her understand. But then you came along, Rachel, and fucked everything up.â
He leans back on the sofa, his legs spread wide apart, the big man, taking up space. âIt was your fault. The whole thing was actually fault, Rachel. Anna didnât end up having dinner with her friendsâshe was back here after five minutes, upset and angry because were out there, pissed as usual, stumbling around with some bloke outside the station. She was worried that you were going to head over here. She was worried about Evie.
âSo instead of sorting things out with Megan, I had to go out and deal with you.â His lip curls. âGod, the state of you. Looking like shit, stinking of wine . . . you tried to kiss me, do you remember?â He pretends to gag, then starts laughing. Anna laughs, too, and I canât tell whether she finds it funny or whether sheâs trying to appease him.
âI needed to make you understand that I didnât want you anywhere near meânear us. So I took you back up the road into the underpass so that you wouldnât be making a scene in the street. And I told you to stay away. And you cried and whined, so I gave you a smack to shut you up, and you cried and whined some more.â Heâs talking through gritted teeth; I can see the muscle tensing in his jaw. âI was so pissed off, I just wanted you to go away and leave us alone, you Megan. I have my family. I have a good life.â He glances over at Anna, who is trying to get the child to sit down in the high chair. Her face is completely expressionless. âIâve made a good life for myself, despite you, despite Meganâdespite everything.
âIt was after Iâd seen you that Megan came along. She was heading down towards Blenheim Road. I couldnât let her go to the house. I couldnât let her talk to Anna, could I? I told her that we could go somewhere and talk, and I meant itâthat was all I was going to do. So we got into the car and drove to Corly, to the wood. It was a place we sometimes used to go, if we hadnât got a room. Do it in the car.â
From my seat on the sofa, I can feel Anna flinch.
âYou have to believe me, Anna, I didnât intend for things to go the way they did.â Tom looks at her, then hunches over, looking down at the palms of his hands. âShe started going on about the babyâshe didnât know if it was mine or his. She wanted everything out in the open, and if it was mine sheâd be OK with me seeing it . . . I was saying, âIâm not interested in your baby, itâs got nothing to do with me.ââ He shakes his head. âShe got all upset, but when Megan gets upset . . . sheâs not like Rachel. Thereâs no crying and whining. She was screaming at me, swearing, saying all sorts of shit, telling me sheâd go straight to Anna, she wasnât going to be ignored, her child wasnât going to be neglected . . . Christ, she just wouldnât fucking shut up. So . . . I donât know, I just needed her to stop. So I picked up a rockââhe stares down at his right hand, as though he can see it nowââand I just . . .â He closes his eyes and sighs deeply. âIt was just one hit, but she was . . .â He puffs out his cheeks, exhales slowly. âI didnât mean for this. I just wanted her to stop. She was bleeding a lot. She was crying, making a horrible noise. She tried to crawl away from me. There was nothing I could do. I had to finish it.â
The sun is gone, the room is dark. Itâs quiet, save for the sound of Tomâs breathing, ragged and shallow. Thereâs no street noise. I canât remember the last time I heard a train.
âI put her in the boot of the car,â he says. âI drove a bit farther into the wood, off the road. There was no one around. I had to dig . . .â His breathing is shallower still, quickening. âI had to dig with my bare hands. I was afraid.â He looks up at me, his pupils huge. âAfraid that someone would come. And it was painful, my fingernails ripped in the soil. It took a long time. I had to stop to phone Anna, to tell her I was out looking for you.â
He clears his throat. âThe ground was actually quite soft, but I still couldnât go down as deep as I wanted. I was so afraid that someone would come. I thought there would be a chance to go back, later on, when things had all died down. I thought I would be able to move her, put her somewhere . . . better. But then it started raining and I never got the chance.â
He looks up at me with a frown. âI was almost sure that the police would go for Scott. She told me how paranoid he was about her screwing around, that he used to read her emails, check up on her. I thought . . . well, I was planning to put her phone in his house at some point. I donât know. I thought I might go round there for a beer or something, a friendly neighbour kind of thing. I donât know. I didnât have a plan. I hadnât thought it all through. It wasnât like a premeditated thing. It was just a terrible accident.â
But then his demeanour changes again. Itâs like clouds scudding across the sky, now dark, now light. He gets to his feet and walks slowly over to the kitchen, where Anna is now sitting at the table, feeding Evie. He kisses her on the top of the head, then lifts his daughter out of the chair.
âTom . . .â Anna starts to protest.
âItâs OK.â He smiles at his wife. âI just want a cuddle. Donât I, darling?â He goes over to the fridge with his daughter in his arms and pulls out a beer. He looks over at me. âYou want one?â
I shake my head.
âNo, best not, I suppose.â
I hardly hear him. Iâm calculating whether I can reach the front door from here before he can get hold of me. If itâs just on the latch, I reckon I could make it. If heâs locked it, then Iâd be in trouble. I pitch myself forward and run. I get into the hallwayâmy hand is almost on the door handleâwhen I feel the bottle hit the back of my skull. Thereâs an explosion of pain, white before my eyes, and I crumple to my knees. His fingers twist into my hair as he grabs a fistful and pulls, dragging me back into the living room, where he lets go. He stands above me, straddling me, one foot on either side of my hips. His daughter is still in his arms, but Anna is at his side, tugging at her.
âGive her to me, Tom, please. Youâre going to hurt her. Please, give her to me.â
He hands the wailing Evie over to Anna.
I can hear Tom talking, but it seems like heâs a long way away, or as though Iâm hearing him through water. I can make out the words but they somehow donât seem to apply to me, to whatâs happening to me. Everything is happening at one remove.
âGo upstairs,â he says. âGo into the bedroom and shut the door. You mustnât call anyone, OK? I mean it, Anna. You donât want to call anyone. Not with Evie here. We donât want things to turn nasty.â Anna doesnât look down at me. She clutches the child to her chest, steps over me and hurries away.
Tom bends down, slips his hands into the waistband of my jeans, grabs hold of them and drags me along the floor into the kitchen. Iâm kicking out with my legs, trying to get a hold of something, but I canât. I canât see properlyâtears are stinging my eyes, everything is a blur. The pain in my head is excruciating as I bump along the floor, and I feel a wave of nausea come over me. Thereâs hot, white pain as something connects with my temple. Then nothing.