As we’d arrived home late in the day, I made a simple supper of baked beans on toast.
I brought the plates into the sitting room on two trays which I placed on the coffee table, before sitting on the sofa and placing my tray (with the smaller helping) on my lap.
Frog was already on the sofa but he hadn’t turned the television on and he didn’t reach for his tray. He didn’t look at me either, or say anything.
After spending Christmas together at home we’d done a tour of the parents, staying first with John T who was managing just fine. He’d joined a dating agency, and being that rare thing, an older single man, had received countless replies from women who wanted to get to know him. He was working his way through them and Frog was disgusted.
‘It’s an insult to Ma,’ he said.
John T had cleared the house of all Mollie’s things and piled them into the garage. He wanted Frog to deal with them but he refused.
‘I can’t,’ he said. ‘Not yet.’
The house was now pristine and characterless, empty without Mollie’s presence.
Things were no better at my parents’ house, even if the house was bigger and easier to get lost in. No better for me anyway. In a strange way, my parents were almost warming to Frog, or at least they’d found a language in which they could communicate with him.
One Christmas Eve a few years earlier when 16 people were expected for the Christmas meal and more on Boxing Day when cousins joined us, the dishwasher failed. Frog had spent all morning lying on the kitchen’s stone floor repairing it. Ever since then my mother had greeted Frog with a list of practical jobs she needed help with. He was happy to do so. It gave him a role. He’d always done the same for his own mother and one of his missions in life, after spreading good music, was rescuing damsels in distress (not that my mother was a damsel).
Another Christmas my father took Frog out to show him a chain-saw he’d bought for chopping logs but had been too nervous to use. My father and Frog had spent a happy day working together, my father fetching and carrying and Frog chain-sawing. Ever since then, chain-sawing had been another of Frog’s jobs and whenever he didn’t know what else to do he would be out there adding to the log-pile.
I carried on pretending to my parents that I was different from what I really was. It was an awful strain.
During the visit Frog had done another of his disappearing acts saying he was going up to London for some reason or other. He’d arrived back at 7pm, saying he’d waited for the off-peak train. I’d been watching out for him since 5pm and raced out to the hall to hug him. My mother, who was skulking in kitchen doorway, gave us a funny look.
I paused with a spoonful of beans halfway to my mouth. I couldn’t go any further. My throat and stomach had locked.
‘There’s someone else, isn’t there,’ I blurted out.
It was one of those occasions when the words appeared before the thought. It had never occurred to me that something like that might be going on. I trusted Frog, and I was making the accusation almost as a challenge, expecting him to deny it vigorously.
He looked at me with a strange expression on his face – a mixture of pity, guilt and determination.
Silently, in slow motion, he nodded.
‘It’s an insult to Ma,’ he said.
John T had cleared the house of all Mollie’s things and piled them into the garage. He wanted Frog to deal with them but he refused.
‘I can’t,’ he said. ‘Not yet.’
The house was now pristine and characterless, empty without Mollie’s presence.
Things were no better at my parents’ house, even if the house was bigger and easier to get lost in. No better for me anyway. In a strange way, my parents were almost warming to Frog, or at least they’d found a language in which they could communicate with him.
One Christmas Eve a few years earlier when 16 people were expected for the Christmas meal and more on Boxing Day when cousins joined us, the dishwasher failed. Frog had spent all morning lying on the kitchen’s stone floor repairing it. Ever since then my mother had greeted Frog with a list of practical jobs she needed help with. He was happy to do so. It gave him a role. He’d always done the same for his own mother and one of his missions in life, after spreading good music, was rescuing damsels in distress (not that my mother was a damsel).
Another Christmas my father took Frog out to show him a chain-saw he’d bought for chopping logs but had been too nervous to use. My father and Frog had spent a happy day working together, my father fetching and carrying and Frog chain-sawing. Ever since then, chain-sawing had been another of Frog’s jobs and whenever he didn’t know what else to do he would be out there adding to the log-pile.
I carried on pretending to my parents that I was different from what I really was. It was an awful strain.
During the visit Frog had done another of his disappearing acts saying he was going up to London for some reason or other. He’d arrived back at 7pm, saying he’d waited for the off-peak train. I’d been watching out for him since 5pm and raced out to the hall to hug him. My mother, who was skulking in kitchen doorway, gave us a funny look.
I paused with a spoonful of beans halfway to my mouth. I couldn’t go any further. My throat and stomach had locked.
‘There’s someone else, isn’t there,’ I blurted out.
It was one of those occasions when the words appeared before the thought. It had never occurred to me that something like that might be going on. I trusted Frog, and I was making the accusation almost as a challenge, expecting him to deny it vigorously.
He looked at me with a strange expression on his face – a mixture of pity, guilt and determination.
Silently, in slow motion, he nodded.
To be continued . . .