‘What are you doing here?’ asked Tess. She didn’t seem especially pleased to see Connor.
‘I work here,’ he said.
‘As an accountant?’
‘No, no, I had a career change a few years back. I’m the PE teacher.’
‘You are?’ she said. ‘Well, that’s . . .’ Her voice drifted, and she finally said, ‘. . . nice.’
Connor cleared his throat. ‘Well, anyway, it’s very good to see you.’ He glanced at Liam, went to speak and then changed his mind and held up the sheaf of tennis forms. ‘Thanks for this, Mrs Crowley.’
‘My pleasure, Connor,’ said Rachel coldly.
Lucy turned to her daughter as soon as Connor left. ‘Who was that?’
‘Just someone I used to know. Years ago.’
‘I don’t think I remember him. Was he a boyfriend?’
‘Mum,’ Tess gestured at Rachel and the paperwork in front of her.
‘Sorry!’ Lucy smiled guiltily, while Liam looked up at the ceiling, stretched out his legs and yawned.
Rachel saw that the grandmother, mother and grandson all had identical full upper lips. It was like a trick. Those bee-stung lips made them more beautiful than they actually were.
She was suddenly inexplicably furious with all three of them.
‘Well, if you could just sign the “allergies and medications” sections here,’ she said to Tess, jabbing at the form with her fingertip. ‘No, not there. Here. Then we’ll be done and dusted.’
Tess had her keys in the ignition to drive them home from the school when her mobile rang. She lifted it from the console to check who was calling.
When she saw the name on the screen, she held up the phone for her mother to see.
Her mother squinted at the phone and sat back with a shrug. ‘Well I had to tell him. I promised him I’d always keep him up to date with what was going on in your life.’
‘You promised him that when I was ten!’ said Tess. She held the phone up, trying to decide whether to answer it or let it go to voicemail.
‘Is it Dad?’ asked Liam from the back seat.
‘It’s my Dad,’ said Tess. She’d have to talk to him sometime. It might as well be now. She took a breath and pressed the answer button. ‘Hi Dad.’
There was a pause. There was always a pause.
‘Hello love,’ said her father.
‘How are you?’ asked Tess in the hearty tone of voice she reserved for her father. When had they last spoken? It must have been Christmas Day.
‘I’m great,’ said her father dolefully.
Another pause.
‘I’m actually in the car with –’ began Tess, at the same time as her father said, ‘Your mother told me –’
They both stopped. It was always excruciating. No matter how hard she tried she could never seem to synchronise her conversations with her father. Even when they were face to face they never achieved a natural rhythm. Would their relationship have been less awkward if he and her mother had stayed together? She’d always wondered.
Her father cleared his throat. ‘Your mother mentioned you were having a spot of . . . trouble.’
Pause.
‘Thanks Dad,’ said Tess at the same time as her father said, ‘I’m sorry to hear that.’
Tess could see her mother rolling her eyes and she turned away slightly towards the car window, as if to protect her poor hopeless father from her mother’s scorn.
‘If there’s anything I can do,’ said her father. ‘Just . . . you know, call.’
‘Absolutely,’ said Tess.
Pause.
‘Well, I should go,’ said Tess at the same time as her father said, ‘I liked the fellow.’
‘Tell him I emailed him a link for that wine-appreciation course I was telling him about,’ said her mother.
‘Shhh,’ Tess waved her hand irritably at Lucy. ‘What’s that, Dad?’
‘Will,’ said her father. ‘I thought he was a good bloke. That’s no bloody help to you, though, is it, love?’
‘He’ll never do it, of course,’ murmured her mother, examining her cuticles. ‘Don’t know why I bother. The man doesn’t want to be happy.’
‘Thanks for calling, Dad,’ said Tess, at the same time as her father said, ‘How’s the little man doing?’
‘Liam is great,’ said Tess. ‘He’s right here. Do you want –’
‘I’ll let you go, love. You take care now.’
He was gone. He always finished the call in a sudden, frantic rush, as if the phone was bugged by the police and he had to get off before they tracked down his location. His location was a small, flat, treeless town on the opposite side of the country in Western Australia, where he had mysteriously chosen to live five years ago.
‘Had a whole heap of helpful advice then, did he?’ said Lucy.
‘He did his best, Mum,’ said Tess.
‘Oh, I’m sure he did,’ said her mother with satisfaction.
Chapter eight
‘So it was a Sunday when they put the Wall up. They called it Barbed Wire Sunday. You want to know why?’ said Esther from the back seat of the car. It was a rhetorical question. Of course they did. ‘Because everyone woke up in the morning and there was like this long barbed-wire fence right through the city.’
‘So what?’ said Polly. ‘I’ve seen a barbed-wire fence before.’