: Part 3 – Chapter 18
Cherry Girl
Neil drove me home. I was numb and it wasnât from the cold rain. Subdued was a good word to describe how we both were after that blow up on the pavement. Iâd never seen Neil lose his temper like that. So angry. Heâd driven his car up onto the pavement for Christâs sake.
He pulled into the drive of my house and I found the courage to ask him.
âAre you coming in? Mum wants you to stay.â
He turned and met me head on, his big hands still gripping the steering wheel. âWhat about you, Elaina? Do you want me to stay?â
âWell, is itâis it all right for you to be here?â
He looked puzzled by my question.
âWhat?â
He wasnât going to make this easy on me apparently. I swallowed and went for it.
âAre you married?â
His eyes widened for an instant. âCome again?â
âDonât make me ask that again, please.â
He paused for a minute before responding, as if he really needed to choose the right words. âIâm going to chalk that one up to the fact youâre not yourself right now. Youâre soaked through to the skin, and weâve had a row thatâs upset both of usâbut did you just ask me if Iâm married?â
âYes,â I whispered.
He scoffed and shook his head, looking away from me now and out the window. âNo. Iâm not married.â
âSo you and Cora didnât stay together?â
He flipped back toward me. âUmm, no,â he said slowly, shaking his head again, his lips slightly parted.
âWhy didnât you, Neil?â
âI didnât want to, Elaina.â
Fear had started to bloom in the pit of my stomach and I suddenly felt ice cold again. âBut the b-babyâ¦I saw Cora after you left. She was pregnant and showing. I saw with my own eyes.â While Neil sat glaring at me, a thought rushed through my mind. Oh no. âDid she lose it?â
âNo, she didnât lose it. She had a son.â Neil had turned away again, as if he couldnât stand the sight of me. He was answering my questions while speaking to the window and looking out at the rain.
âOh. Whatâs his name?â
âI donât know. I only saw him one time and she didnât tell me.â
âYou donâtâyou donât see your son?â This wasnât the man that I knew. I didnât understand any of this. Why didnât he see his son or even know his name?
He turned back to me once more and told me why, his eyes full of sadness I could read clearly even from the dim light inside his car. âI donât see him, because he is not mine.â
I shuddered as a chill rushed through my whole body and froze me. I was speechless for a moment, unable to speak, afraid to look at him. Terrified for what else Iâd see in his eyes.
I donât see him, because he is not mine.
âButâbut she saidâI saw you with the doctor scanâ¦You never denied itâ¦â
I donât see him because he is not mine.
âI wrote you a letter. I told you I understood why you had to be with Coraâ¦â
Neil didnât react at first. He just looked at me, his expression growing darker and darker as understanding dawned for both of us. I realized why he was so angry.
I donât see him, because he is not mine.
âOh, God.â I slammed a hand over my mouth, trying to quiet the rising panic flooding me.
As if that would work.
Involuntary reactions, nothing more.
He still hadnât said anything. Neil was letting me do all the talking, giving me plenty of rope to hang myself on.
âIf he wasnât your baby, then whyâ¦why didnât you say something? You let me go and didnât tell meâ¦Neilâplease say this wasnât all for nothing.â
I could feel the hysteria letting loose. The truth dawning on me with such brutal force I could barely breathe.
I donât see him, because he is not mine.
He leaned in very close and grabbed me by the shoulders, forcing me to own up to my horrifying mistake, gripping tightly and shaking me a little with every sharp bite of each word he spoke.
âWhy did you leave without ever giving me a chance to tell you anything? You just left me there on the eve of my deployment. You let me go. Didnât you love me enough to even listen at all, Elaina? Was I not worth even that much to you?â
I closed my eyes as my heart collapsed in on itself. My tragically grievous error now apparent, I had nowhere to escape. What had I done? Iâd been the cause of so much needless pain for the both of us, all because Iâd been afraid to listen, and to share any part of him with anyone else.
Silent tears poured out of me as I tried to find the words. âNo, no, noooo.â I sobbed, âI saw her pregnantâwe all believed it was your babyâ¦even you believed itâ¦â I lost the ability to say any more. What could I say to him, anyway? What words were there to offer?
Very few. Actually, none at all.
Iâd not stayed around to find out the truth back then, why should he believe anything I said to him now? I couldnât fathom why Neil was even beside me at this very moment, giving a thought to my needs, and seeing me safely home at night. I didnât deserve it from him. He must be doing it only out of a sense of devotion to my family, after all, theyâd never let him go. I had been the only one to do that.
I spoke. The words came out of me and they were all I had to give to him. Words. Bitter sawdust in my mouthâthat gave no comfort, only more painâin the realization of what all this really meant about me and him, and our long years apart.
âYou were worth it, Neil. You were. I wasnât though. IâIâI am so sorryâ¦â
He closed his eyes, still holding onto me, as if he couldnât bear to hear the confession of my regret.
From somewhere deep inside me, a source of adrenaline started pumping because I pulled out of his tight grip and got the hell out of his car. I bolted.
Running was something I was really good at.
I managed to stumble inside the house, ignoring my motherâs comments about trying to walk home alone in a storm, her inquiry about Neil, and wasnât he having dinner with us? I donât know what I said to her.
I reached the safety of my bedroom, somehow. A sanctuary of sorts. A place where I could weep in solitude, and in peace. Iâd figure out what to do tomorrow.
I just wanted to sleep and grieve for what I had done to him. To us.
To even accept it, hurt so much, I was afraid to close my eyes for fear of what my dreams would be like once I finally slept.
I had to see for myself. There are some things a woman cannot take on good authority and this was one of them. I had to see her and ask her why sheâd done it. She may not tell me, and more pain was surely coming my way for my efforts, but I had to ask.
I stood on a street, looking at a house in a Barnet neighbourhood, the address of which Iâd pried out of my brother. The house, where Cora lived with her husband.
Just as I was about to cross the street, the door opened and out came a mother with two small children. A little boy holding her hand, and a younger girl in pink, riding in a pram. It was her. Cora looked mostly the same, maybe not quite as fit as before sheâd given birth to two kids, but it was her.
I followed them to the park.
It didnât take long to understand how apparent it was that Neil was not the father of her son. The children were very dark with skin that couldnât have come from Neil and his Anglo DNA. At one point, the boy came over to where I sat on my bench and dug around in the sand pit with some toys. He was a handsome little lad, but not Neilâs son. This little boyâs father was Black.
âI thought it was you sitting here.â Cora had spotted me and made her way over. âI heard youâd returned to England.â
I stared up at her and asked one word. âWhy?â
She sat down on the bench beside me.
âWhy did I tell Neil that my little Nigel belonged to him? Thatâs a story that you wonât like to hear, Iâm afraid.â
âTell me anyway,â I said, numbly. Here it was. The truth behind everything Iâd sacrificed on the back of a lie and my fear of losing my heart.
âIâm not proud of what I did to him. Having children of your own changes your perspective on things, though. Iâve learned a lot since. But basically it came down to survival.â
âSurvival, Cora? Whoâs survival?â
âI needed money and Denny Tompkins came along at just the right moment for it. He hated Neil for taking you away from him. I told Denny I was knocked up and without any good prospects, and that you and Neil could just sod off together in loverâs land. He offered me a tidy sum to show my scan to Neil, and to tell him the baby was his. I did my part and Denny made good on the payment.â
âSo, I left Neil over a lie.â It wasnât a question I was asking. Just greater understanding of what I had done.
Cora was still beside me. No harsh words or gloating, she only shared the bare simple truths.
âDenny didnât make out so well, though. You wouldnât take him back and a few months later you went away to Spain.â
âItalyâ¦I went to Italy.â Even the sound of my own voice was nearly unrecognizable to my ears.
Cora kept talking. âWherever you went, you were gone, so Denny didnât ever get you back. I owed it to Neil to tell him though, and I did that as soon as I could. He even saw us in the market once and gave his regards. It all worked out. Nigel married me and we had little Allison not two years after Nigel Jr., so yeah, it all worked out in the end.â
âIt didnât work out for me,â I said, staring out at all the busy children and parents in the park.
âSo, why didnât you ever ask him about it then? Neil would have told you what I told him, that the baby wasnât his.â I could tell she was staring at me with a puzzled expression.
So simple a question. Why didnât I ever ask him? Why didnât I stay and try to work it out with him? Why didnât I ever give Neil the chance to tell me what had really happened?
âI donât know,â I whispered.
Neil I watched it all. I followed her at a distance and surveyed her visit to the park with Cora. I was still trailing her, curious as to where she was off to. It probably made me a sick bastard, but I was stalking Elaina and had no intentions of stopping.
Thank Christ Ian had rang me to say what he thought his sister was up to. She wanted Coraâs address and that meant Elaina was going to confront her.
Observing their exchange in the park surprised me, though. I read their lips through some of the conversation thanks to the high powered lenses I was privy to in my line of work. The surprising part was precisely how non-confrontational their exchange was. No screaming catfight for me to break up. No hair pulling or gloves thrown down. Nothing. They were both very well behaved throughout the whole thing. At the end of it, Cora asked her a question about me. I could tell she asked her a question because I got the words why and Neil clearly, through reading her lips.
Elaina answered her very shortly with just a word or two. And then, she got up off the bench and left the park. I saw her brush at her eyes a few times. Her head was down in the autumn wind, a long, trailing blue scarf blowing back away from her body as she walked.
She looked to be crying and it was easy to see she was upset, but I left her alone. She would resent what I was doing, and I wouldâve too if the tables were turned. We were both private people.
I watched her walk to the nearest Underground station and go down to the trains.
There was no choice but to follow in the Rover and make a guess as to where she might end up. I texted Ian and told him to ring her and find out for me.
I had to be there for her. I was going to be there for her.
There was no place else for me to be.