Laurel drives past Hannaโs flat on her way from Floydโs to work that morning. Sheโs hoping for a sneaky glimpse of Theo and Hanna leaving for work together. But itโs dark and quiet and at least now Laurel can picture where her daughter has been. She has been in Theo Goodmanโs bed.
Theo is a schoolteacher now. Hanna had told her that, funnily enough, about a year ago. Said sheโd bumped into him somewhere or other. Laurel couldnโt really remember the details. That must have been when it started, she supposed.
Laurel is unfairly horrified by this twist in the fabric of things.
Theo was Ellieโs. Heโd belonged to her and sheโd belonged to him. Theyโd inhabited each other completely, like a pair of gloves folded into itself. And now she is cross with Hanna. Cross enough to wonder what Theo even sees in Hanna, in comparison to Ellie. She imagines, in the warped threads of her irrational thought processes, that Theo chose Hanna as a consolation prize.
But then she remembers seeing that blonde girl coming out of the supermarket on Sunday morning, that smiling, golden girl who looked nothing like the sour-faced girl who greets Laurel at her door from time to time, the pinched child who never laughs at her jokes, the tired-looking woman who sighs down the phone at the sound of her motherโs voice.
And it occurs to her for the very first time that maybe Hanna isnโt intrinsically unhappy.
That maybe she just doesnโt like her.
She calls Paul later that afternoon. Heโs at work and she can hear the warm rumble of normality in the background.
โListen,โ she says, โcan I ask you something? About Hanna?โ Thereโs a beat of silence before Paul says, โYes.โ
He knows, thinks Laurel, he already knows.
โHas she said anything to you about a boyfriend?โ Thereโs another silence. โYes, she has.โ
She exhales. โHow long have you known?โ โA few months,โ he replies.
โAnd you knowโyou know who it is?โ โYes. Yes, I do.โ
Laurel closes her eyes. โAnd she told you not to tell me?โ โYes. Something like that.โ
Now Laurel pauses. โPaul,โ she says after a moment, โdo you think that Hanna hates me?โ
โWhat?ย No. Of course she doesnโt hate you. Hanna doesnโt hate anyone. Why would you say that?โ
โItโs just, whenever weโre together sheโs so . . . spiky. And cold. And Iโve always put it down to arrested developmentโyou know, losing Ellie when she was just on the cusp of adult life. But I saw her the other day, with Theo. And she was so bright and so happy. She looked like a completely different person.โ
โWell, yes, she is madly in love, by all accounts.โ
โBut when sheโs with you, and Bonny, whatโs she like then? Is she lighthearted? Is she fun?โ
โYes. Iโd say she is. On the whole.โ
โSo, Iโm right, you see. Itย isย me. She canโt stand being with me.โ โIโm sure thatโs not true.โ
โIt is true, Paul. Youโve never seen it. Youโve never seen what sheโs like with me when itโs just the two of us. Sheโs like a . . . aย void. Thereโs nothing there. Just this blank stare. What did I do, Paul? What did I do wrong?โ
She hears Paul take a breath. โNothing,โ he says. โYou did nothing wrong. But Iโd say, well, it wasnโt just Ellie she lost, was it? It was you, too.โ
โMe?โ
โYes. You. You went kind ofโoff radar. You stopped cooking. You stoppedโ you stopped being a parent.โ
โI know, Paul! I know I did! And Iโve apologized to Hanna a million times for the way I was then. Why do you think I go to her house every week and clean it
for her? I try so hard with her, Paul. I try all the time and it makes no difference.โ
โLaurel,โ he says carefully, โI think what Hanna really needs from you is your forgiveness.โ
โForgiveness?โ she echoes. โForgiveness for what?โ
There is a long moment of silence as Paul forms his response. โForgiveness . . .โ he says finally, โfor not being Ellie.โ
Paulโs words have unfurled a whole roll of thoughts and feelings that Laurel hadnโt known were so tightly wound inside her and she is plunged straight back into the minutes and hours following Ellieโs disappearance, recalling the sour resentment at being left with Hanna, denying her the lasagna that Ellie had staked her claim on, as Ellie had staked her claim on so much in their family. Everyone had fought for Ellieโs attention, for a blast of her golden light. Then the light had gone and theyโd dissipated like death stars falling away from the sun.
And yes, Laurel had never accepted Hanna as a consolation prize. She really hadnโt. And as a result sheโd got the relationship with her daughter that she deserved. Well, now she knows this, she can work on it and make things better.
Laurel calls Hanna. It goes through to voicemail, as sheโd known it would.
But this canโt wait another moment. She needs to say it right now.
โDarling,โ she says, โI just wanted to say, I am so proud of you. You are the most extraordinary girl in the world and I am so lucky to have you in my life. And I also wanted to say that Iโm sorry, so sorry if anything Iโve ever done has made you feel like less than the center of my world. Because you are, you are absolutely the center of my world and I could not live without you. Andโโshe draws in her breath slightlyโโI wanted to say that I saw you the other day, I saw you with Theo, and I think itโs wonderful and I think heโs a very, very lucky man. A very lucky man indeed. Anyway, thatโs what I wanted to say and Iโm sorry I havenโt said it before and I love you and Iโll see you on Christmas Eve. I love you. Bye.โ
She turns off her phone and she rests it on the kitchen counter and feels a wave of relief and weightlessness pass through her. She is unburdened of
something she hadnโt even known she was carrying.