Chapter 6 #2

Her sister’s kind enquiry was enough to summon tears. She sniffed them away; this was no time for crying. It seemed that any turbulence between them had passed.

Nina took a deep breath. ‘We are in a bit of trouble.’

‘What kind of trouble?’ Tiggy spoke quickly, with concern.

Nina braced herself to say the words out loud.

‘I found a note from Finn, he said that he felt like his world was made of glass and that he was cracking under the pressure and now that pressure is mine and I don’t know what to do next.’ She’d let slip more than had been her intention.

‘You’re not making a whole bunch of sense. What pressure? I don’t understand, Nina, but I do know that nothing can be that bad and there is always a solution.’

‘Things are that bad. We have nowhere to live, Tig. We need to move, start over. And I am broke.’ Nina rubbed her face.

‘For real?’ There was a hint of laughter in her question. Nina understood that this was not because her sister found the facts amusing, but simply that the idea that her wealthy sister in her huge house could even come close to being broke was indeed so unbelievable as to be laughable.

‘I need to find somewhere for the kids to sleep and I don’t have any money. I’m thinking we might go to Trowbridge or Chippenham or Swindon, somewhere not too far away, but a fresh start.’

There was a moment of silence.

‘I don’t understand. What’s happened? How come you don’t have any money?’

Nina felt the grit of irritation between her teeth. It was draining to have to recount the facts. ‘Finn lost the business and we are losing the house, losing everything.’ She tried not to picture the previous night when her possessions, the things she held dear, had been carted off to auction.

She heard Tiggy take a sharp intake of breath. ‘Shit!’

‘Yes,’ she agreed. ‘Shit.’

‘Don’t you have savings and stuff? Or things you can sell?’

‘Our savings have long gone trying to save the business, apparently, and anything I would have to sell wouldn’t come close to matching the debt. We owe a little under eight million pounds.’

Nina listened to the stunned silence on the other end of the line. There were no quips, no questions. This figure gave the true scale of her trouble and it was as sobering as it was frightening.

‘And you didn’t know?’ Tiggy asked softy.

She looked out over the gardens. ‘No. I didn’t know.’

Her sister gave a heavy sigh. ‘Shit,’ she offered again.

Nina held the phone close to her mouth and felt comforted by the connection.

‘Are the boys okay?’

She appreciated Tiggy’s concern; she thought of Kathy’s cool, mean response from earlier. Not once had she enquired as to any of their welfare.

‘They are lost, confused, upset – all as you’d expect.’

‘Come here,’ Tiggy stated matter-of-factly.

‘What?’

‘Come here. You know Southampton, and that must make it preferable to Trowbridge or Swindon where you have no support,’ Tiggy said sensibly.

‘We can’t just come there, you don’t have the space. But thanks for the offer.’

Nina didn’t want to share her thought that, actually, anywhere might be better than the city in which she had grown up. She heard her sister’s teeth grinding; Nina had quite forgotten that Tiggy did this when in thought.

‘Oh, I know! Aunty Mary’s flat is empty. The tenants have just moved out and they are having viewings on it right now. I saw the “To Let” board outside. I could have a word with Cousin Fred?’ Tiggy enthused loudly.

Nina pictured the ground-floor flat in a low-rise 1950s block that she had visited countless times in her childhood; it had belonged to her gran’s youngest sister, quiet and kind spinster Mary.

When they went over Aunt Mary gave them sweets that stuck to the flimsy plastic wrapper, as if they had got warm and then cooled and the wrapper had become enmeshed with the sugar.

Nina tried to remember the last time she had been there; it had to be over twenty years ago – more.

She felt no enthusiasm for living in her aunt’s flat, but this wasn’t about enthusiasm, it was about being desperate.

‘How much is it?’

‘About six hundred and fifty a month, I think. Can you manage that?’

Nina thought of the small amount of cash she had in her purse. This, along with the cash that Finn had left in the hamper, was the sum total of her liquidity. She pictured the grubby notes: just a little over a couple of months of rent, eight weeks of security! Her heart jumped with fear.

That was all she had.

And this before she considered food, bills and sundries.

She thought of the monthly florist bill that was about half this amount and felt a sickening ball of shame bounce in her gut.

‘I can manage for a short while, a couple of months, and I will get a job as soon as I can.’ She tried to picture living in Aunty Mary’s flat, tried to imagine working; both ideas felt surreal.

‘The area has gone downhill a bit, but it’s friendly enough,’ Tiggy said. Nina felt her throat constrict. Her memory of the place was not favourable, and to think that it might have declined further . . .

How can I take my boys there?

‘It’s very central, as you know, and it’s very cheap.’ Tiggy pointed out the obvious. ‘Fred still lives in Canada, and I’m sure he’d rather you lived in it than a stranger.’

Nina pictured the people Tiggy referred to with a lump of guilt in her throat.

She’d had no communication with Cousin Fred in years, other than the exchange of impersonal Christmas cards each year.

She had only been a few years older than Connor when she had settled into a routine with Finn as a newlywed in Bath, and then she had a new baby, and her whole miserable teenagehood faded into the grey shade of another life and another time.

There had been no explosive row, no cataclysmic event; their rift had occurred subtly, aided by physical separation.

The longer they spent apart, the wider the chasm had become.

There was only Tiggy left in Portswood, bar Cousin Fred’s occasional visits home with his Canadian wife and two daughters in tow.

Right now, however, it was this place, the one she had been so keen to escape from, that was calling her back, providing a potential lifeline.

‘And our school is within walking distance,’ Nina thought aloud.

‘Surely you are not thinking of sending your boys to Cottrell’s?’

‘I am. I need to get them in somewhere. It’s almost halfway through the school year and we need a roof over our heads.

It’s as simple as that. And it won’t be forever, just until I figure out what to do next.

I need to get a job, Tig, and quickly.’ The thought sent a jolt of nervous energy along her spine.

‘How will you . . . ?’ Tiggy halted mid-sentence.

Nina again sensed that there were so many things that Tiggy wanted to say, but thought better of it.

‘I’ll figure things out. I have to,’ Nina asserted.

There was another beat of silence.

‘Do you want me to have a word with Fred, then? I have his numbers, I can do that today if you like?’

She was overwhelmed by her sister’s instant and genuine offer of help.

‘That’d be great, thank you, Tiggy.’

‘It’ll be okay, you know. Nothing is ever as bad as you imagine.’

No wonder Connor had felt frustrated. The meaningless rhetoric made her realise how pointless it was to offer a cure-all without anything more concrete to back it up.

‘Who were you talking to?’ Connor asked, entering the kitchen, his brother trailing him.

‘Tiggy. I’m trying to sort out some accommodation.’

Connor stared at her. ‘Is this really happening?’

‘Connor . . .’ She sighed, hoping she didn’t have to find the energy for a fight. ‘This has already happened. Look at us!’ She raised her palms towards the ceiling. ‘Today we need to pack up our things.’

‘What’s left of them,’ Connor quipped.

Nina ignored him.

‘What can we take with us?’ Declan asked.

‘Clothes, books, anything precious to you, but that’s all.

We won’t have that much space.’ She listed pretty much all that was left after the bailiffs had made their sweep.

‘Anything else we’ll box up and put into storage.

’ She swallowed, thinking about Mr Firth’s offer to hold on to their things.

Without the fog of grief and shock, he had probably been at least three steps ahead of her thought process; she had only vaguely understood his suggestion for haste.

‘So go up to your rooms and make three piles. One of the things you want to take with you – but not too much. As I said, space is limited. Pack like it’s a long holiday. ’

Connor sneered. She could read his mind: Some holiday.

She continued, undeterred. ‘Make another pile of everything to be packed and stored, and a third pile of everything you want to give to charity.’

Declan nodded and left the room, his instructions clear.

‘And you, Connor.’

‘George has invited me to a party next Saturday, but I won’t be here, will I?’

‘What do you want me to say, Connor?’

She knew that this was about so much more than a party – this was about his whole life that felt as if it were in free fall – but there was nothing else she could say.

He seemed to look through her as he walked slowly from the room, and her heart sank at her inability to give him a more satisfactory response.

A few hours later, boxes were packed, sealed and labelled.

There were a few other items Mackintosh and Vooght missed that she placed in her bag: an antique silver cigarette case, Finn’s Montblanc pen-and-pencil set that had been in her cotton book bag, and three sets of gold cufflinks, each set engraved with the McCarrick family crest. She placed them in the zip pouch inside her bag with Finn’s watch and signet and wedding rings.

‘When will we go, Mum?’ Declan asked as he flicked through an encyclopaedia of insects.

‘As soon as we get the word from Tiggy. Hopefully tomorrow.’

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