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  Forgive Me Not

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Acknowledgements

  If I Fall

  Copyright

  Martin, Immy, Jay.

  Out of the many thousands of words I write those will always be the most awesome three.

  Chapter 1

  The carriage slid to a halt, its doors opened and Emma stepped off the train. Like old enemies, scenes from the past ambushed her mind. They took her back to her last day in Healdbury – home as it had been then. She could almost smell the blood that had permeated her dress as she’d run away from her sister’s voice. Yet today didn’t feel like going back – more like going forwards. She gripped the pull handle of her suitcase, readjusted the rucksack on her back and with determined strides left the platform. Early June sunshine hit her face as she headed along the narrow path that led into the village.

  Thank goodness she’d worn long cotton trousers, what with the straggle of nettles either side. Were the prickly leaves trying to safeguard the village from her arrival?

  ‘Don’t be ridiculous,’ she told herself firmly.

  Yet her chest tightened as certain questions persisted. Was this the right decision? Would Andrea and Mum take her back? What about her mother’s health? The diagnosis had been long-term. Surely she couldn’t have deteriorated that much?

  And what about the suffering she herself had caused during that last Christmas at the farm?

  She reached the first buildings in the village, trying to dispel negative thoughts. Compared to the Gothic architecture of Manchester, they looked Lilliput Lane quaint. The occasional dandelion growing between paving stones punctuated the way instead of cigarette butts and discarded takeaway food. She squinted in the sunshine. On the pavement ahead was Mrs Beatty from the gift shop. The old woman stopped for a second and did a double-take from under her sunhat. A handkerchief fell from her hand.

  Emma hurried forward and picked it up. ‘You dropped this,’ she said, and gave an unsure smile. The shop owner’s lips pursed shut like the top of a drawstring bag and she turned away and crossed the road.

  Emma’s heart beat faster as she carried on past the post office and the Badger Inn. She glanced left into the butcher’s window and a sense of relief flooded her limbs. Darts fan Bill was standing behind the counter preparing meat. He looked the same apart from his hairline, which had retreated even further. Perhaps her life, too, would just carry on as it had before. He caught her eye and wrinkled his nose, the sight of her more unpleasant than the smell of raw flesh. Still holding his knife, he went to the glass door and flipped the sign from Open to Closed. Well, it was almost five o’clock. Bill always used to shut the shop on time.

  She pulled the case onwards, past the small Tudor church hall. To her surprise, a homeless woman had set up outside the supermarket across the road. She had asymmetrical dyed red hair, shaved short on the left. Locals steered clear as if they might catch the rough sleeper’s bad luck.

  As she headed up Broadgrass Hill, Emma drank in the sight of trees, flowers and insects. She pulled her luggage over to one side to let an elderly man she didn’t know pass. He tipped his hat. Healdbury seemed impossibly lush after the greyness of the city, with its shades of green, colourful petals and tortoiseshell wings, and the scents that characterised journeys, be they of woody soil or fresh dewy grass. A dead blackbird lay in her path, wings broken, neck distorted. Emma released her case and crouched. Gloved with a dock leaf, she gently picked up the body and hid it in the verge’s foliage. Then she wiped her brow on her arm. Combined with the afternoon heat, the weight of her luggage had become stifling.

  She turned left into the dusty drive that led to her old home, and a bubble rose in her throat as she breathed in the sweet honeysuckle that grew all around a nearby birdbath. The last time she’d passed it, Andrea’s angry shouts had accompanied the pounding of Emma’s feet running away on frosty ground.

  She coughed and walked towards the side of the farmhouse, passing a large patch of wild flowers. Further on stood a cluster of apple trees. A road veered off to the right that eventually doubled back on itself and led to the main entrance and parking space. It was lined with pink foxgloves, which were preceded each year by a carpet of forget-me-nots, Mum’s favourite flower. With their yellow faces and tiny petals, a younger Emma had thought of them as the gentlest dance troupe as they swayed in the spring breeze.

  She turned away and stared ahead at the kissing gate, more crooked than ever, with hinges that needed fixing. It stood in the middle of a mossy stone wall and provided a short cut to the front door if you were on foot. She and Bligh had kissed there for the very first time – only out of respect for tradition, they’d insisted. Emma could almost feel the splintered beams against her back as Bligh’s lips pressed against hers.

  Bligh. Tall, with the shortest beard. Tanned, with the whitest T-shirts. The firmest arms and the lightest touch. A man of contradictions.

  Would he still be here? Had he gone to the police about what she’d done?

  A shaggy blur of black and white charged at her from behind the farmhouse. She hurried forward, juggled her luggage around the kissing gate and dropped to her knees, pulling off her rucksack just in time as the Border collie lunged at her chest with a joyous bark. She fell backwards and her face crumpled as she righted herself.

  ‘Dash! I’ve missed you so much, lad.’ She buried her face in his white bib, grateful that he hadn’t blanked her as well, and ran her hands through his tousled coat. Doggy breath hit her as Dash licked her face hard. Was he trying to remove the months – years – that had kept them apart?

  ‘I should have taken you with me,’ she croaked when he finally backed away and gazed at her, ears alert. ‘A three-legged pet would have earned me lots of spare change. Talk about the ultimate underdog.’ She gazed at the space where his front leg should have been. ‘I wanted to,’ she whispered, ‘but at the time all I could think about was myself.’

  The dog lay down and rolled on his back, begging for attention. His enthusiasm made Emma feel more optimistic. She crouched for a moment longer and tickled his stomach. It was her mum who’d saved him. She had heard that a local sheep farmer was putting him down: he couldn’t afford the upkeep of an animal that couldn’t keep up. Emma knew what it was like not to fit in, and like two halves of a lock slotted together, the doors to unconditional love had swung apart between them.

  She gave his tummy one last pat and got to her feet, making her way around to the front of Foxglove Farm. Dash stuck to her side, lolloping with his familiar bounce. Before crossing in front of the windows that might betray her presence, she stepped back and surveyed the L-shaped building.

  The wooden front door led straight into the lounge, with stairs going up to the bedrooms. Behind that was the dining room, and to the right of that the big kitchen and the farmhouse shop. Her eyes narrowed
in the sunshine as she studied the building’s uneven rubble-stone exterior, painted in the buttery limewash that had been applied during the final stages of renovation.

  Emma could still remember the dullness and damp from when they’d first moved in. Mum had dreamt of creating a pretty chocolate-box cliché, with thatched roof, painted beams and colourful window boxes. All of that had been achieved, but now… What had happened? The paintwork was peeling and the limewash badly needed a refresh. The windows looked dirty. Mum had always prided herself on how they shone, despite the continual onslaught of dust. And the window boxes, the hit of the summer show, were missing their usual cast of petunias and geraniums.

  She headed towards the front door, the loose ceramic name plate hanging lopsided. The doormat lay curled and weather-beaten. To the right-hand side stood the tallest sunflower, which hadn’t yet bloomed. Emma wiped perspiration from her brow and reached for the cold metal knocker. This was it. She couldn’t wait to see her family again so that they could all get things back on track. She’d missed the hugs. The laughs. The teamwork at harvest time. Recently she’d spent countless daydreams imagining a heartfelt reunion.

  Dash nudged his nose against her thigh as if to say: it’ll be all right. Emma scratched behind his ears and counted. Nothing. No footsteps. She rapped again. Sixteen, seventeen, eighteen… Finally she heard the thud of sensible heels on laminate and the door creaked open.

  The house seemed so different but surely Andrea would have stayed the same? Surely life had just plodded on here – in fact run more easily, without the chaos that Emma had brought? However, the sight of the dark rings under Andrea’s widening eyes blew this theory out of the water. Her long brown hair had been sliced shorter and was scraped back into a ponytail, with premature grey at the sides. She still had that scar above her top lip. Andrea and Mum had never been able to remember what caused it. Her feisty hazel eyes were now dull. She was still tall and tanned, but not as solid. She looked… fragile.

  Emma’s stomach twisted like the strongest bindweed. ‘Hi, Andrea. It’s me.’

  Her older sister’s lips rolled together before she slammed the door. The ceramic name plate fell to the ground and smashed into uneven pieces.

  Chapter 2

  Emma bent down and picked up the fragments of the broken sign before stacking them to the side. As she straightened up, she told herself sternly that Andrea’s reaction shouldn’t feel unexpected. Deep breaths. Dash had bolted at the noise but now returned to her side and nudged her leg again. Emma took hold of the knocker and rapped once more. This time footsteps quickly sounded and the door was yanked open.

  ‘You’ll wake Mum,’ said Andrea between gritted teeth. ‘She’s having a nap. Just go away. You’re not welcome here.’

  ‘Andrea. It’s so good to see you. Please. Just hear me out.’

  Dash took matters into his own hands, gave a small bark and lolloped inside. Slowly Andrea exhaled. ‘Fifteen minutes. That’s all you’ve got. Then I’ve got to make Mum’s tea.’

  As Emma entered the house, a chill descended upon her, like a cloak designed to cool not heat. Why was Mum asleep at teatime, and couldn’t she cook for herself? She gazed at the cream sofa and chairs. The white walls. The oak floor and coffee table. The vibrant watercolour of forget-me-nots Andrea had painted. Home. Her shoulders dropped with relief. At least indoors hadn’t changed that much.

  Or had it? At the end of the room, paperwork swamped the dining room table, next to a computer and printer, along with scattered jiffy bags and biros. Andrea sat down on the sofa and picked up a half-drunk mug of tea from the low table. Since her teenage years, she had always had a brew on the go.

  ‘So?’ she said abruptly, raising an eyebrow like a samurai lifting a sword.

  Emma dropped her rucksack and sat down on an armchair opposite. Dash snuggled up to her feet. She ran a hand over the smooth upholstery. Mum had insisted on ordering the pale leather three-piece suite. ‘Yes, it’s completely impractical for a cluttered farmhouse and small children,’ she’d said, ‘but this is a slice of simplicity I need at the end of the day.’ Her two daughters, aged four and nine, had made crowns out of cereal boxes, Andrea in charge of the scissors and glue, and used the luxurious chairs as thrones. Emma insisted on being Princess Diana. Budding gardener Andrea was happy to be Charles, as Aunt Thelma said he spoke to plants.

  Now Emma met her sister’s gaze. She’d practised this speech so often in her head, yet the crucial moment had deleted her thoughts.

  Andrea consulted her watch.

  ‘Firstly… I’m sorry,’ said Emma.

  ‘I’ve heard that before.’

  Heat flooded her face. ‘But I’m a different person now and—’

  ‘What do you want me to say? Congratulations?’

  Emma shifted uncomfortably.

  Andrea looked up as the staircase creaked. ‘Well done. You’ve woken her,’ she said stiffly.

  Emma stood up as Gail slowly descended the stairs. Her knees felt unsteady as she took in her mother’s appearance. The short hair stuck up on top, grey strands now outnumbering the red. A crumpled blouse was half tucked into linen trousers, at the bottom of which, just visible, were odd socks. In her hand was a purple chocolate wrapper, her fingers folding it like a magician practising some trick.

  Now and again during the last couple of years, Emma had dreamed of Gail holding her in that tight embrace that belonged solely to mothers and could salve the deepest upset. Like when Emma used to fall over and graze her knees, or worry about making friends, or when she lost her favourite teddy bear. Her mum would reassure her that her scrapes would heal, that friendships would grow and that Ted was just on holiday. Sure enough, he turned up a week later with a new jumper and longer legs. Mum said he must have had a growth spurt.

  ‘Mum.’ Emma stepped forward and held out her arms. At points during the last couple of years she’d found it hard to recall every detail of her mother’s face. She’d forgotten the sparse eyelashes, and the age spot on the chin. Yet she’d never forgotten the bright eyes and the efficient manner that were now both missing.

  Gail stood at the foot of the stairs and stared. She tilted her head to the side, then walked past Emma and sat down next to Andrea on the sofa. She picked up her daughter’s drink, took a sip and put it back.

  Emma looked at her sister, who gazed belligerently back. Mouth dry, she went over to Gail and crouched by her side.

  ‘How are things?’ she asked, and held her breath.

  Gail’s brow knotted. ‘Who are you?’

  Emma felt dizzy. No. This wasn’t happening.

  ‘It’s me, Emma. Your younger daughter.’

  ‘You can’t be. You aren’t shouting or swearing.’

  Emma enveloped her mum’s hands in hers. The frail fingers warned her off, squeezing too tight. ‘I’ve… I’ve come back to help,’ she said. She willed her mum to offer a flash of recognition, but there was nothing – the moment of semi-lucidity had passed.

  Gail took back her hands and stared out of the front window, once again fiddling with the chocolate wrapper.

  The leather armchair groaned as Emma fell back into it. ‘What’s happened?’ she whispered. ‘The diagnosis… This is much quicker than the doctors…’

  ‘You can say the words. Early-onset Alzheimer’s.’

  That label had only been decided a matter of weeks before Emma left, and she’d never accepted it back then. Her vibrant, laughing, crusading mother going dotty? At only fifty-three? They’d made a mistake. Or if not, the inevitable wouldn’t happen for years.

  ‘But it wasn’t supposed to get like this for—’

  ‘How would you know?’ Andrea asked, in a voice that sounded as if it were walking a tightrope. ‘You never came to any of the appointments. It was me sitting with Mum when they told her the news.’

  ‘I should have been there for her – for you. I know it must have been tough.’

  ‘Tough? No, uncooked meat is tough. Over-kneaded
dough. Chewing gum that’s gone hard. But holding Mum’s hand through the last few years as she’s lost her bearings around the village… the farm… the house? As she’s forgotten the names for places, objects and… loved ones? I’ve had to witness her distress as day by day she’s felt less useful, and panicked by familiar surroundings that now seem brand new.’ Andrea shook her head. ‘Tough? Try heartbreaking. That’s a far more suitable word.’

  ‘But what happened? Why has it progressed so quickly?’ With fresh eyes, Emma glanced at the watercolour.

  Forget. Me. Not. How could her mum not know who she was?

  Her fists curled. It was so unfair. All the years… no, the decades of productive life Mum had been robbed of.

  Andrea leant forward and rubbed her forehead. ‘About a year ago she was rushed into hospital with appendicitis. They removed the appendix in time but she was never the same afterwards. It was as if the general anaesthetic had thrown her forward several years, into the illness. They had to move her to a private ward to recover, because she kept seeing things that weren’t there during the night and waking the other patients.’

  ‘Oh Andrea. That must have been hard on you.’

  ‘Mum was my main concern,’ she said in a voice with no tone, like a song that only existed as written notes.

  ‘I wish I’d been here to support you both.’

  ‘I’m glad you weren’t.’

  Emma flinched. ‘How have you managed?’

  ‘Just fine.’

  ‘Please. Tell me the truth.’

  Andrea’s shoulders bobbed up and down. ‘Bligh, of course.’

  So he was still here.

  ‘And Polly…’

  The fifty-year-old landlady from the Badger Inn, married to Alan. Despite the age difference, Polly and Andrea were firm friends. They used to chat for hours in low voices, like Andrea and Emma used to before things got bad. The pair had a mutual love of Stilton and often shopped at the cheese shop in the village. Polly would invite Andrea over to the pub for a tasting evening in front of a DVD. When she visited the farm, Andrea allowed herself to relax, gossiping, joking and eating too much home-baked shortbread.