The Day I Lost You by Fionnuala Kearney - Extract
The Day I Lost You by Fionnuala Kearney - Extract
The Day I Lost You by Fionnuala Kearney - Extract
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PART ONE
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Prologue
There are always before and after moments. Profound
instants when, one second, life is a clear, high-pixel image
and the next, its grainy, less focused.
The day it happened, the seventh of December 2014,
had been a normal day nothing unusual about it. A
band of low Arctic pressure produced the sort of cold
that froze my fingers through gloves and numbed my toes
through sheepskin-lined boots. The winter sky a perfect,
crisp blue was marred only by wispy white plane trails
latticing through it.
Theo and I were on the Irish coffee stall at the Christmas
fair all afternoon the most dreadful baristas, unable to
produce a straight line of cream along the top of the coffee
and a little too liberal with the alcohol. It was the season
of goodwill. Fairy lights flashed: home-made crackers with
loo-roll centres were snapped; high-pitched carols were
sung; crumbling, puff-pastry mince pies were trodden into
the polished parquet floor of the school hall, and the heady
scent of festive cinnamon and cloves filled the air.
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1. Jess
Ten Weeks Later Friday, 13 February 2015
I wake to the taste of salt on my lips. My eyes take a moment
to adjust to the early morning light; my mind takes a
little longer to realize that Ive been crying in my sleep.
With a glance at the neon clock by my bedside, my damp
lashes blink. Its useless I wont fall asleep again.
My limbs stiff, I climb slowly out of bed before crossing
the landing to check the room opposite. Shes there, fast
asleep. I resist the urge to touch her, to rest the back of
my fingers on her forehead. Its a habit; a throwback, I
think, to when she had pleurisy as a baby and we failed
to spot the temperature early.
Her breathing is soft, regular and rhythmic as a slow
beat on a metronome, her chest rising and falling under
the duvet. She turns onto her stomach, faces away from
me, one hand stretched in a curve above her head, the
other falling over the side of the bed. I take her arm and
tuck it in beside her.
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toddler and she had barely any hair yet. What she did
have was downy-fine and corkscrew. She would find mine
and pull it, gently unravelling the coil, fascinated by the
spiral twists. I was captivated. She was not my child, but
through the twists and turns of shared DNA, we had the
same twisting, turning hair.
And now, here I am, my fingers laced through her mane,
massaging her head in a way I know she loves.
I had a bad dream, she says, gripping me tighter.
Me too. I dreamt that your mummy had left us. Every
night I dream your mummy has left us. Then I wake up
and smell her pillow and tell myself it was just a dream.
Dont worry, love. I kiss her hair. It was just a dream.
Who were you talking to?
Nobody, I was just talking to myself.
Daddy says people talk to themselves when they get
old. She pulls away and peers directly into my eyes. Are
you old today, Nanny? Her mouth smiles, yet its her
eyes, lined by long curving lashes, that seem to laugh. The
wonder of that almost makes me gasp.
I tickle her under her arms. Cheeky, I say. Not that
old. Cmon, lets get you showered before breakfast. She
squeals and runs up the stairs ahead of me, shouting that
she has a card for me. At just five years old, she has no
memory that today is her mothers birthday too and, all
in all, perhaps thats a good thing.
At the school gate, Im joined by Leah, who sidles up
beside me. After Ive held onto the child for an irrational
length of time, I let go, and together we wave Rose into
school.
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Fionnuala Kearney
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2. Anna
Raw Honey Blogspot 02/09/2013
I love to sing! Anyone who knows me knows it; whether
Im white-wired into my phone on a Tube full of strangers looking at me oddly, or doing my thing from the
back row of the choir. Im the one in the karaoke bar
who doesnt need to look at a screen to know the
words. Im the one driving along singing at the top
of my voice to the radio. I still use the hairbrush as
a mic in the mirror. I know. Sad, but true.
My darling daughter (DD) has definitely inherited
this need to sing from me. That and long legs. Shes
just exhausted me for the last forty minutes; insisting
on wearing every hat in my collection (over forty last
count) while she sashayed around my bedroom on
those legs, singing to Katy Perrys Roar. We did the
chorus together and she does a good tiger roar, DD;
seems to get the story of the song; seems to want
to tell the world that even at four years old, shes
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Comment: Idiotlove
Whered you meet him, the soul-searcher guy?
Know any more like him?! Im such an idiot in
love (note blog name) and have never, ever, felt
a connection like that. That thing where you feel
someone instantly knows you? Youre really lucky.
Reply: Honey-girl
Were not together any more, but He was
special ...
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3. Theo
Theo Pope could recall the exact moment he knew his
marriage was over. It was the night that Leah had phoned
him with the news that Anna and a friend of hers were
missing after an avalanche and two people from the ski
party had already been confirmed dead. Harriet, his wife
of twelve years, had been beside him, folding linen. Shock
had registered on her face and she had made the right
noises at the news, sympathetic sounds for Jess and her
family. The pillowcases were folded into four, their creases
pressed down with her palm; all the while, one eye had
lingered on her BlackBerry. Theo had thought it odd;
remote and detached from the unfolding tragedy.
Johnny Mathis was singing about a child being born on
the television. The Christmas tree lights that Theo had been
fixing on his lap had fallen to the floor, some twinkling as
expected, some stubbornly refusing. He had gone to Jesss
immediately, and when he got back after seeing her and
her ex, Doug both devastated beyond words, both
readying to drive through the night to the tiny village inthe
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Jess frowned.
Im kidding. Shes a Spanish brunette who makes a
mean chicken casserole, he said.
Sorry. She folded the prescription and put it in her
coat pocket. Im supposed to be at Leahs. I bailed last
night and Gus is determined to cook me a birthday
meal. Her expression showed shed rather miss it a
second time. Im just not up for being nice to anyone.
Not Leah and Gus, not you and Finn. The phone rings,
I jump. Im a wreck.
As if on cue, Theos desk phone trilled.
Thatll be because Mrs Talbots getting irate. Jess leapt
up. Id better go. Thanks, Theo.
And then she was gone.
The rest of the morning was so busy, he scarcely had
time to breathe. Though he only covered one in four
Saturday morning surgeries, lately he had come to almost
resent them, feeling that he should be doing fatherly things
with his son at the weekend. Finn was probably glued to
his laptop, when he should be doing something with him.
Something fun. Instead, a morning filled with children
and their typical school holiday colds had made his own
sinuses tighten.
His eyes rested on the calendar on his desk. A present
from Finn years ago, it was a wooden block where each
date was displayed on a card. Above it, to the right, was
a smaller card for the month and beside that, to the left,
another card displaying the whole of the current year. He
placed the correct date in the front. Saturday, 14 February
2015. A quick calculation told him it was ten weeks since
his wife had left. Ten weeks since Anna went missing.
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Seventy days during which both he and Jess were beginning to learn how to navigate new lives.
Harriet was now living in a flat close to her office in
London, able to walk to the law firm where shed worked
for the last five years. Harriet was now making love to
another man in another bed in another bedroom in that
flat. Theo tried not to think about it, but when he did,
that was the indelible image he saw. Her making love to
someone else. Someone else hearing the way she would
sigh quietly, then louder and louder until she finally let
out a tiny whimper. He wondered if he hated Roland, her
lover; if he hated Harriet, or if a tiny part of him was
jealous of her freedom. Then he remembered Finn. Finn
was now the most important thing, and with his mother
only visiting his life these days, Finn was proving to be
a challenge.
Theo pressed the bridge of his nose with his thumb and
forefinger, then lifted a gilt-framed photograph from his
desk. One of the three of them skiing but rather than
think of his broken family unit, Anna came to mind. Where
was she now? His stomach clenched as it always did when
he thought of her. He couldnt help but picture her
entombed in frozen snow. He said a silent prayer he remembered from childhood; he prayed to faceless saints whose
names he had long forgotten. During the early days, after
the accident, he had prayed that Anna had seen that same
documentary on television as him; the one that told you
to spit at the snows surface to see which way was up or
down. It would show the way out. She hadnt come out,
so his prayer, over time, had changed to one where he
pleaded to the Gods to ensure that she hadnt felt a thing.
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