Coming Home. Melanie Rose
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He fell silent but I judged from his ragged breathing that he was still battling to keep his emotions in check.
‘When Maria asked me if I had ever felt the presence of a ghost in this house of ours I admit I did consider the possibility of the property being haunted. I found myself wondering—hoping even—that Maria had sensed the spirit of my little girl.’ He uttered the words so quietly I could barely hear him.
I was surprised and a little uneasy at his strange admission. Up until then I’d thought of Vincent as a bit of a pragmatist.
Leaning forward, I found my hand resting lightly against his as it now lay by his glass on the table. All at once I felt Vincent’s fingers encircling mine and he lifted my hand to his face so that my knuckles rested against his lips. Closing his eyes, he pressed his mouth to my hand.
‘I need forgiveness, Kate,’ he mumbled. ‘I wasn’t there for my daughter when she needed me most and I can’t bear the fact that it is too late to do anything to change that.’
‘Maybe it’s too late for Amber,’ I whispered, holding my hand very still, ‘but you’ve been given another chance with Jadie. You still have your other little girl.’
He raised tortured eyes to mine and gazed at me for a long moment. Then, as if registering for the first time that he was touching me, he released my hand abruptly and gave a curt nod. Before I could say anything else he had picked up the torch and walked quietly from the room, leaving me sitting alone in a stranger’s kitchen in virtual darkness in the middle of a snowy night.
Once upstairs and back in the warmth of my bed I lay awake for a long time thinking about what Vincent had said to me. I wondered if he’d unburdened himself to me because I was an outsider, in much the same way as Jadie had when she’d chosen to break her self-imposed silence with me two days before. I wished Vincent could have realised how a counsellor might help him, if only he would go and seek that help. I was prepared to listen, but I wasn’t qualified to advise. I was merely a passing stranger, who had landed in their midst by chance.
At least that’s what I tried to tell myself as I slipped at last into an uneasy sleep.
In the morning it was snowing heavily again. I went downstairs to find Tara furiously trying to light the fire in the sitting room. I watched as she struck match after match while Jadie looked on from where she sat huddled on the couch.
‘Here, let me try.’ Taking the matches from Tara I kneeled next to her at the hearth. I struck a match and it flared easily, and I held it quickly to the torn newspaper she had wrapped round some kindling and watched as the small flame grew. ‘What’s the matter?’
‘It’s freezing, that’s what the ruddy matter is.’ I noticed she’d got her coat on over yesterday’s jeans and sweater, and yet her lips were still blue with cold. ‘We need to keep Jadie warm and I can’t even boil a kettle to make her a hot drink.’
I glanced round at Jadie, who was watching us quietly, swathed in blankets. She did seem even paler than usual and a shiver of dread ran through me. If this child was too delicate even to play outside in the snow, she was going to be in trouble living in an old house that was quickly growing damp and bitingly cold. I realised that Tara’s intense, almost fanatical concern for the child was horribly infectious.
‘Where’s Vincent?’
‘He’s not here. I went to speak to him about Jadie and I couldn’t find him anywhere.’ Her voice was anxious. ‘I can’t understand it.’
The fire was growing now as little tongues of flame licked at the kindling and took hold, warming the pieces of wood Tara had dotted about the top of the fire until they too began to smoulder.
‘Come and sit on the rug in front of the fire,’ Tara urged to Jadie. ‘See if we can get you warmed up.’
We lifted Jadie across between us to save having to unwrap her from her bulky layers and she gave an ominous chesty cough as she moved.
‘I’ve only just finished doing her physical therapy.’ Tara crouched anxiously beside Jadie, vigorously rubbing her hands. ‘She’s so bunged up this morning.’
‘Can we make more angels?’ Jadie asked me croakily as I wriggled onto the rug next to her.
‘Maybe after breakfast,’ I said distractedly.
I was worried about Vincent. Last night he had opened up for perhaps the first time since losing his child and being abandoned by his wife, and now he had disappeared. After two years of denying his grief, it had all come bubbling to the surface. His emotions must have been raw and overwhelming. I hoped he hadn’t done anything stupid.
‘I’ve had breakfast already,’ Jadie said. ‘I had peanut butter sandwiches.’
‘Oh, good,’ I tried to instil some cheer into my voice. ‘Did you save some for me?’
‘There’s cereal and milk on the kitchen table,’ Tara told me as she patted and rubbed Jadie’s extremities. ‘Help yourself.’
I headed for the kitchen, poured cereal into a bowl and sat looking at it despondently. Whether it was from the three-day-old head injury or the red wine I’d drunk the previous night I didn’t know, but I felt somewhat queasy. After a while I decided I may as well eat something and I added milk, which felt as cold in the jug as if it had come straight from the fridge.
I felt much better after the cereal, though a cup of hot tea or coffee would have been very welcome. As soon as I’d cleared away I hurried down the passage to Vincent’s office and peered in; I knew Tara had said she’d already checked, but I needed to see for myself that he wasn’t busying himself somewhere, too embarrassed about our nocturnal chat to see me. There was no sign of him. I looked into the boot room and the downstairs loo, but he wasn’t there either. Retracing my steps, I went into the icy-cold dining room but it looked unlived in, uninviting. Then I jogged up the stairs, trying to keep myself warm by moving quickly.
Starting at the end of the landing I worked my way back, hurrying up the uneven staircase that led into Tara’s attic room. I peered round the door at the empty room with its sloping ceiling and single bed, walked back down past my own room, the bathroom and Jadie’s room. Everywhere had a blue glow of light coming from the windows, a reflection of the thickly falling snow outside. At the door to Amber’s room, I paused and listened. This would be the obvious place for him to come if the grieving process had begun for him at last, and it was somewhere Tara might not have looked. Slowly I turned the door knob and poked my head into the room.
It was a pretty girly room, all decked out with pink hearts. The wallpaper was pink, the curtains were purple with pink heart shapes, the bed was tidily made up with a pink duvet and matching pillowcases with heart-shaped cushions strategically scattered. I noticed with a smile that even the white cupboards had pink hearts for door handles. There were soft toys on the bed and a little white dressing table with a pink cushioned stool. On the dressing table there were a couple of elastic hairbands with pink bobbles on them. Everything looked as if the room’s occupant was about to return at any minute; perhaps that was how it was meant to look, I thought sadly. Amber’s room had become a shrine.
But Vincent wasn’t in there and I began to feel afraid for him. He surely