The Hopes and Dreams of Lucy Baker: The most heart-warming book you’ll read this year. Jenni KeerЧитать онлайн книгу.
he’s allergic to cats.’ She knew she was being flippant, but George Aberdour didn’t bring out her charitable side.
Brenda patted Lucy’s arm with her fragile hand, and she noticed the transparent skin and pale liver spots. Was Brenda eating properly? Or was it all part of getting older: losing weight and becoming more forgetful? It was difficult when you saw someone regularly, but she was sure her friend was beginning to look more gaunt. There were times Brenda seemed momentarily unaware of what was going on around her and it was beginning to worry Lucy. Her glorious, technicolour friend had tiny flickers of grey, almost invisible to the casual observer.
‘Well, I certainly wouldn’t kick him out of bed. In fact, I’d be tempted to tie him to it. If I was twenty years younger, I’d be knocking on his door asking to borrow a cup of sugar. Probably in a silky negligee.’
‘Only twenty? You’d still be nearly sixty.’
‘I’ll have you know I hit my sexual peak in my early sixties. That’s probably what did for Jim. Oh, pop your eyes back in your head, child. I’m only joking. The athletic sex probably gave him an extra five years. I can still touch my toes, you know?’
Lucy envied her friend’s wild tales, thinking she’d have nothing more to tell her own grandchildren other than she’d helped to knit the world’s longest scarf for charity.
As she collected her bag from the kitchen later, Lucy remembered the parcel and handed it to Brenda.
‘I’ve got you a present – a book by Elliott Landy, the famous photographer. It’s a collection of his work focusing on the rock music scene in the Sixties and contains some unseen prints. Jim’s in there. I checked.’
‘How wonderful.’ Brenda slid the book from the envelope and clutched it as if she’d been given the moon.
Lucy shrugged. ‘I saw it online and knew you’d appreciate it. It’s just a little something to let you know I was thinking of you.’
‘But, my dear,’ Brenda said, reaching for her hand, ‘sometimes a little something can mean everything.’ And a happy tear trickled down her cheek.
‘What a lovely sentiment,’ said Lucy, and she watched Brenda begin to scan the pages for photographs of precious memories.
Lucy’s mum rang that evening, as she did every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at exactly seven o’clock.
‘Hello, darling. How are things since we popped by? I’ve hardly seen your father since he bought that bit for the silly old car. Straight home and in the garage without so much as a by-your-leave. Mind you, he’s been generally uncommunicative since I put him on that strict diet, but I refuse to buy him a new suit for September until he’s shifted some of that weight. I don’t want people thinking he’s letting himself go. I’m so glad we booked the venue when we did. I would have hated to settle for somewhere not quite so prestigious, and Mortlake Hall is very prestigious. It was used for that BBC period drama last year. Emily told me. And talking of your sister, she rang with simply marvellous news. Has she rung you yet?’ Her mother paused for breath.
‘You know we don’t call each other much. Facebook and text messages generally keep us in touch.’ Once Emily became a mother, the long chatter-filled phone calls the sisters used to share were replaced with less immediate forms of communication. By the time Lucy was home from work, Emily was up to her elbows in the bedtime routine, and when Emily was free, Lucy was with Brenda, at Knit and Natter, or leafleting for some community event – always keen to help out as long as it didn’t involve drawing unnecessary attention to herself. Facebook messages were the perfect compromise.
‘I’m sure she won’t mind me telling you – she’s expecting again. I do hope it will be a boy this time. I know Stuart would like a son, as much as he loves the girls.’ And another generous handful of sprinkles fell from the ether onto Emily’s cupcake of life.
‘That’s fantastic news. I’ll give her a ring.’
It was exciting to think another gorgeous, pink, talcum-powder-scented being would soon exist. Lucy adored her nieces to distraction, especially the tiny baby phase when they fell asleep across you in an instant, trusting and content. A doll-sized hand gripping your finger tightly as a tiny babygrow-covered chest rose and fell in the slow rhythm of sleep. But she also enjoyed the challenges that came with vocabulary and attitude. She must visit them all again soon. It had been far too long.
‘Perhaps send her a little congratulations card, darling. I doubt she’ll have time to chat, what with the girls and the pressures of work.’ Emily had fallen straight into a retail management job from university and continued to scale the career ladder, giving birth to two children merely a small hiatus on her ever-upward climb. At thirty, she was now troubleshooting for WHSmith and their mother refused to patronise any other stationer or bookseller to demonstrate her support, convinced her eldest daughter would be running the company within five years. ‘I hear she’s working on a failing store down in London. It’s probably all due to the multicultural workforce, but she’ll soon pull it round. She’s been working such long hours recently that I suspect there’s another promotion in the offing. You’ve got to admire a woman who is that career-driven yet still finds time to be such a marvellous mother to her little girls.’
‘Mmm…’ Lucy’s words got caught in her throat.
‘The baby is due in November and I must admit I was secretly relieved it wasn’t any earlier. It would be terribly inconvenient if she’d been due around my birthday because I have great plans for Emily to give a speech. I felt it was appropriate, what with her being my eldest child and everything.’
Lucy knew it was nothing to do with age but everything to do with Emily’s superior speech-making abilities, and was thankful her mother hadn’t asked her to perform a similar duty.
‘I should think that will be their family complete then, unless it’s another girl. You need to hurry up, young lady, or they won’t have any cousins of the same age. And if you do the whole baby thing with Emily, she can guide you through. She’s a natural. You only have to look at the girls to see how bright and well adjusted they are. And you can keep up your hobbies; maybe knit some little cardigans or something?’
Lucy was not an academic child, much to the despair of her mother, but Sandra did at least acknowledge Lucy’s creative flair, actively steering her away from the messier crafts as a child and encouraging her knitting, purely on the basis that it didn’t leave sticky patches everywhere or stain the tablecloth.
‘Mmm…’ Lucy mumbled again and got through the remainder of the call by making encouraging noises in the appropriate places.
Her mother updated her with every possible detail about the fiftieth party and she was reminded it would be terribly helpful if she sorted her outfit sooner rather than later so any unfortunate close family colour clashes could be avoided.
Lucy put the phone down knowing that she was loved, but possibly not understood.
The next morning, Lucy ambled into her living room and heaved back the faded green velvet curtains, determined to embrace a bolder version of herself. Standing in the middle of Lancaster Road, wearing not much and holding the battered, floral-patterned cake tin, was Brenda.
Seeing the movement of swishing curtains from the corner of her eye, the old lady looked across to the window but registered no recognition. Almost looking through Lucy, she returned her gaze to the tin and shook her head as if she was trying to focus.
It was then that Lucy noticed the rain – a drizzly mist, not proper splashy raindrops, but enough to get a scantily clad old lady wet and cold, even in May. A creeping panic swept through her body. It was the first real and frightening embodiment of her recent fears concerning her neighbour. Not pausing for thought, or to even change out of her pyjamas, Lucy dashed to the front