Remembering Rose (Mapleby Memories Book 1)
Remembering Rose
Mapleby Memories Book 1
By Sheila Claydon
Digital ISBN 978-1-77299-133-8
Print ISBN 978-1-77299-134-5
Copyright 2016 by Sheila Claydon
Cover art by Michelle Lee Copyright 2016
All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book
Dedication
To Rose, whose picture started it all.
Chapter One
I wasn’t expecting the world to turn into such a scary place the moment Leah was born. While I was pregnant I didn’t think much beyond how I was going to love taking her for a walk in her stroller, mainly because it was the only new thing she was going to have. Everything else was coming from the Pavalak family collection.
Before I became Mrs. Daniel Ryan my name was Rachel Pavalak, and everyone around here knows the Pavalak girls. There are seven of us, all with children. I’m the youngest, the last to produce, so when Leah arrived she already had fifteen cousins, and my parents had so much outgrown baby stuff in their barn they were threatening to hold a garage sale. Instead they brought most of it over to our cottage and drove away before we had time to unpack the boxes, so buying new things for her would not only have been a waste of money, it would have caused a riot. I did insist on a new stroller though: a red one.
“I just want her to have one thing of her own,” I said when Daniel objected to the price tag.
“Rachel, your parents have at least three strollers in their barn, all of them in working order, so what’s the sense of spending this sort of money on something we can have for free?”
As I couldn’t think of a valid reason I resorted to the pregnant woman’s ultimate weapon. Tears. So by the time Leah was born, the red stroller was waiting for her along with freshly washed piles of second-hand clothes, a crib that had been used by at least four of her cousins, and all the other free stuff I still needed to sort through.
Not that it was entirely free. The payback was that I had to listen to the Pavalak family advice, all of it, which is how I learned that the world is a scary place. Until I had Leah I was the happy-go-lucky Pavalak sister. Now I was the depressed one. I knew all about crib death, choking on small objects, croup, asthma, eczema, bacterial meningitis, drowning in a bath and the most important thing of all, not letting my baby near a single nut until she is at least five years old, so when I went into the nursery early one morning in May I should have been ready for anything. I wasn’t though, and when I saw a complete stranger bending over Leah’s crib I did what any other new mother would do. I screamed.
Daniel arrived dripping from the shower. He was still trying to fix a towel around his middle when he burst into the room. “What’s the matter? Has something happened to Leah?”
I had even managed to infect him with my irrational fears and that was a real achievement I can tell you because, before Leah, Daniel never worried about anything.
I didn’t take my eyes off the woman as I edged towards the crib. “What is she doing here?”
I took two steps forward as I spoke, grabbed her shoulder and spun her around. Daniel’s voice had an edge to it. “Who? What are you talking about, Rachel?”
I tightened my grip, or at least that is what I intended to do, but somehow she wriggled free and made for the door. With a cry of alarm, I shouted to Daniel to stop her. He stared at me as if I were mad and then very carefully lifted Leah from the crib and carried her through to the living room. I heard him pick up the phone at the very moment the woman put her finger to her lips, gave me a sort of ‘see you later’ nod, and disappeared.
I was staring at the space she had left behind her when Daniel returned. He was still carrying Leah who was awake now and rooting around for my breast. I reached for her, feeling the overwhelming love I always feel when it’s time to feed her, but Daniel didn’t give her to me like he usually did. Instead he lied. “Your mother just called. She’s coming for breakfast. She said something about pancakes.”
Daniel is such a bad liar that at any other time I would have laughed but I was too freaked out to call him on this one. Besides, even without the pancakes, I was glad my mother was coming.
* * *
By the time she arrived Daniel had given in and Leah was halfway through her early morning feed. He hadn’t left my side though, not for a minute, not even to get dressed. He was still wrapped in a towel and his hair had dried in a tangle, a sure sign he was worried. Normally he gels and spikes his hair before he even goes searching for his underwear.
Ma came in like she always does, full of breezy, no nonsense practicality, and sat on the bed next to me. When Leah, drowsy-drunk from a surfeit of milk, finally slipped off my nipple, she took her from me and began to rub her back. With an audible sigh of relief my husband left us to it.
“Daniel says you’ve been hallucinating again,” she has never been one to mince words, my mother. “He’s going to ask Doctor Gove to call in to see you when he’s finished morning surgery.”
“I wasn’t seeing things, Ma. She was standing beside Leah’s cot. I touched her for goodness sake. I put my hand on her shoulder and touched her.”
I didn’t mean to raise my voice but somehow it came out as a shout that was loud enough to bring Daniel running again. He halted in the doorway and I saw him and my mother exchange worried glances. I knew what that meant. They thought my brief bout of post-natal depression was back and with it all the paranoid thoughts I’d had in the first few weeks after Leah was born. Great! As that meant they weren’t going to believe a single word I said, I decided there was no point in making things more difficult for myself. Besides, I’m a better liar than Daniel.
“I guess I must have been half asleep,” I ducked my head and fussed with the front of my pajamas so they couldn’t see how confused I was. The woman had been there. I’d felt my fingers bite into her shoulder, heard her gasp as I spun her around, and yet Daniel hadn’t seen a thing. And the way she left was odd too. That little half wave as if she already knew me, as if we were halfway to being friends. I wasn’t going to work it out if Doctor Gove started prescribing again though. I’d only just come off medication so unless I could outsmart him, Daniel and Ma, I would be back on antidepressants by the end of the day.
I heard the relief in my mother’s voice as she accepted my excuse, stood up and walked across to the door. “You’re just tired from all those night feeds Rachel, so how about going back to bed for an hour or two while I look after Leah.”
Anyone who doesn’t know my mother like I do wouldn’t have realized she was humoring me. They would have thought she was just looking for an excuse to cuddle her latest granddaughter. Her maternal instinct, always shaky, had finally bitten the dust around the time her sixth grandchild was born however. Nowadays she only turned out when there was a crisis, so the fact that she was here at all was scary. It was still better than being on my own with Daniel though, and trying to pretend that everything was fine between us when we both knew it wasn’t.
* * *
I lay on the bed with my eyes closed for a full ten minutes until I heard Daniel start up the car. Good. That meant he had finally gone to open up the shop, leaving Ma to look after me until Doctor Gove arrived. I knew she would be watching morning TV while Leah slept on the couch beside her because she and Daniel would have agreed it wasn’t safe to leave her un
supervised. With a sigh that was a mixture of frustration and relief, I swung my legs over the side of the bed and tiptoed across the floor.
The door to the nursery was slightly ajar and I pushed it open. The room, with its frieze of colorful animals marching across the white paintwork, was the same as always. There was a pile of diapers stacked beneath the changing table, Leah’s blankets were thrown across the nursing chair I never used, and the musical mobile Daniel had fixed over her cot was still playing softly. As I leaned forward to turn it off I frowned. Who had turned it on? Daniel? Ma? And if they had, then why, because they obviously didn’t intend to put Leah back into the nursery until Doctor Gove gave them the all clear.
For the briefest moment I wondered if they were right after all. Perhaps I had been imagining things and in my confusion had turned on Leah’s mobile myself, except I knew I hadn’t. I never switched it on until she was wide awake and smiling. Then we watched it go round while I sang to her. It was a routine we both loved, me because of her toothless grin, and Leah because she loved the attention.
I stood beside the cot trying to calm my thoughts. If I hadn’t turned it on, and Ma and Daniel hadn’t, well that only left one other person. Had the woman turned it on while she was standing watching Leah and I just hadn’t noticed, or had she come back?
* * *
Dr. Gove arrived at midday. By then Ma had spooned some pureed carrot into Leah’s eager mouth while I had a shower and got dressed. Then she had handed her over to me for her lunchtime feed. All the time I was nursing her Ma stayed with me and chatted about nothing in particular while we both pretended it wasn’t because she didn’t trust me.
To be fair to her and Daniel they both had reason to be worried. I was so depressed after Leah was born that I spent all my time in pajamas and only brushed my hair and cleaned my teeth when they told me to. It was hard on the whole family but everyone had rallied round, especially Ma, bringing casseroles and cakes and taking away piles of dirty washing. I’ll always be grateful. None of them had the first clue what was the matter though, and I couldn’t explain.
I heard them talking while they sprayed the kitchen counter with disinfectant and scrubbed my kitchen floor. The problem with Rachel is that Ma spoiled her. She was such a cute baby that she gave in to all her temper tantrums. That was my oldest sister, Hester.
I knew she’d be like this. As soon as I heard she was pregnant I said so, didn’t I Ma? I said she wouldn’t cope with the sleepless nights and all the washing and cleaning, not Rachel, because she never had to help around the house like we did when we were kids. That was Ruth. She always had too much to say even when she was being kind, which wasn’t often.
There were other remarks too, some so hurtful that I’ve locked them away at the back of my mind so I don’t have to remember them. That’s the problem with the Pavalak family; everyone has an opinion. And they especially have an opinion about me because I was born long after the younger ones had started school, and when the oldest ones were thinking of leaving home, so they all think they know better than me.
It was Daniel’s Mum who realized I was ill. She lives thousands of miles away because she met a big, burly Australian after Daniel’s Dad died, and he swept her off her feet and far away across the Pacific Ocean. The distance and the expense mean she doesn’t visit often and Leah was almost a month old before she saw her. By then I was having several panic attacks a week and had begun to believe that everyone was against me. I was so sure they were making plans to take Leah away that I refused to leave her alone, even for a second. I even dragged her crib out of the nursery and jammed it into the cramped space beside the bed. Then I hung a toy with jingly bells on the door handle so I would wake up if someone tried to take her in the middle of the night. I hardly slept, and when I did I had such vivid dreams that it was worse than being awake.
Daniel’s Mum took one look at me, and at the mess the house was in despite Ma’s best efforts, and marched me off to the local surgery. Although Dr. Gove is old and pretends to be crotchety, he’s a good doctor. It didn’t take him more than a few minutes to diagnose post natal depression. He prescribed a low dose of anti-depressants and told me to ignore the housework, sleep when Leah was sleeping, and take her for a brisk walk as often as I could. All really simple stuff, and in less than a month the grey fog I’d been living in lifted and I began to smile again. I stopped imagining things too, stopped thinking people wanted to harm my baby.
I know I’m one of the lucky ones and I’m grateful, truly I am. I could have taken a lot longer to recover. I could have become addicted to the anti-depressants or become so anxious that it began to affect Leah. I’ve heard of women who are still depressed when their children start school and the thought of being like that makes my heart ache for them. Being depressed even briefly has its downside though and Dr. Gove warned me about it when I was well enough to listen.
“It will be a while before people forget Rachel. Each time you have a bad day, and you will have them, everyone is going to worry that it’s all starting up again, especially your husband.”
A wise man, Dr. Gove, and he was right. Even after I was off the meds and back to being a fully functioning mum, I was aware of the raised eyebrows and the muttered remarks. Recovering from a broken leg would be easier because then all my sisters and Ma and Pa would understand and sympathize, but they’ve never accepted my depression. It’s for other people you see, the ones who can’t cope, the ones my judgmental family dismiss as losers.
Daniel’s not judgmental but my behavior changed him. He wouldn’t talk about it though; not to me or to anyone in my family, and not to his mum either. Finding a convenient time to phone Australia is a nightmare even if he wanted to, which I doubt. He loves her but they’ve lived apart for too long now for her to feature much in his everyday life.
I sat opposite the doctor while he took my blood pressure and asked a few questions. We had been here before, Dr. Gove and I, so I knew all the right answers. I was wearing make-up too, and one of my nicer sweaters, and he noticed. Refusing the cup of coffee Ma offered to make him, he repacked his bag and stood up. “No problems that a change of scene won’t put right,” he said.
I gave him a grateful smile and saw his jowly old face twitch in unexpected complicity just before he turned to Ma. “Maybe you could babysit tonight Mrs. Pavalak, so Rachel and her husband can have a night out.”
Babysitting is not my mother’s thing, and with so many grandchildren who can blame her. Besides, I’ve nieces and nephews who are old enough to babysit when I go out, and despite their carping I know my sisters will look after Leah too, just as long as I don’t ask too often. Besides, I wasn’t sure I wanted to do as Dr. Gove had suggested. Ma wasn’t about to let me argue with him though, so she just tightened her lips and nodded. He nodded too, and then I walked him to the door.
As he opened it he gave me another of his twitchy smiles, the ones that look more like a frown. “How’s that husband of yours?”
I started to say he was fine but Dr. Gove heard the hesitation in my voice. He shook his head. “Let your mother babysit, Rachel.”
Chapter Two
We couldn’t decide between the local pub or a restaurant in town. Eventually we settled on the pub, mainly because of the price if I’m honest. Now I’m a stay-at-home mum we have to pay someone else to help out in the shop, which means we don’t have a lot of spare cash. Not that we ever had that much anyway but in the days before Leah we could afford an occasional splurge.
“Are you sure your mother is fine about the babysitting?” Daniel asked as we walked into the village.
I nodded. “Thanks to Dr. Gove she couldn’t say no.”
He gave my hand a squeeze. “I didn’t know you could be so evil Rach, not when you know how much she hates it.”
I grinned at him. “It was an opportunity. Besides, she’s been with me all day so another hour or two won’t hurt her, and Pa says he’ll collect a pizza on his way over.”
He chuckled as he pushed open the door to the pub and followed me across to the bar. Tom, the owner, was in the middle of serving a customer, but he gave us a wide smile of welcome. As soon as he could he came over. “So he does let you out then. I was beginning to think he’d chained you to Leah’s crib. Welcome back, Rachel.”
We laughed because we were expected to but I knew Daniel was upset. I couldn’t tell Tom it had been me who refused to leave the house though, nor that Daniel had eventually stopped asking me to. That was private stuff, shameful even, and not something to be shared with Tom despite the fact I’d known him forever. Instead I pasted on my brightest smile. “We’re celebrating getting our life back now that Leah sleeps through and has started to eat solids.”
Pushing a foaming glass of beer towards Daniel, he gave a mock shudder. “Broken nights! Don’t remind me. I’m glad I’m past all that.”
As Tom’s only daughter had been my best friend before she upped sticks and moved to London, I was surprised he could even remember. To change the subject, I asked him about Ella. By the time he’d brought me up-to-date and told me she was coming down at the end of the month, Daniel had finished looking at the menu and was ready to order. I said I’d have chicken and chips, then changed to liver and bacon when I remembered Dr. Gove had told me to eat more red meat as I was borderline anemic.
“And what are you having to drink? The house red is good at the moment,” Tom reached for a wine glass.
I shook my head. “I’m sticking with the soft stuff until I’ve stopped feeding Leah. I’ll have an orange juice.”
“Coming up just as soon as I’ve put your order through. Go and sit next to the fire and I’ll bring your drink over in a minute.”