This is the thirtieth part of a fiction serial, in 767 words.
When one suitcase was full, I ran out of steam, and just stuffed a load of underwear and socks into a holdall. Lugging them downstairs, I placed them strategically in the hallway, and left the inside light on. Then I wrote a note on some printer paper and sellotaped it to the front of the case.
‘Ronnie told me about you and Lauren. You had better go. I’m too tired now, but we can sort things out tomorrow’.
Back upstairs I was feeling drained, but unsure if I would sleep. Too many things to consider after the shock had worn off. Mainly the financial side, like how much Olly would have to pay for keeping us both, and whether he could afford that as well as contributing to living with Lauren, or renting another place to stay. Then telling my parents, if Ronnie hadn’t already done that. Then I also had to think about the truth that I wasn’t even that upset. And I sat in bed wondering if I had ever even loved Olly.
The sound of the key in the door tensed me up. I really didn’t want a huge argument that late, and when I was feeling very fragile. The door closed, and I heard Olly’s voice on his phone, speaking softly. Ten minutes later, the sound of a diesel engine stopping outside, presumably a taxi. Then the door closed again.
Leah might sleep for a good few hours without needing a feed. I decided to get some rest myself, and drifted off surpisingly easily.
There was no early phone call from Olly the next morning. I was feeling surprisingly fresh and positive, considering that the man I thought would be my life-partner had betrayed me. I resolved to do some things, and wrote them down in the back of an old diary.
1) Olly would pay through the nose, whatever it took.
2) Unless Leah improved, I would not be able to go back to work. I had to investgate what I could live on.
3) I was going to have to manage without Rosa, unless Olly carried on paying her.
4) I needed some support to deal with the mental impact of Leah’s development issues.
5) I would have to locate and join some kind of group that offered that help.
6) I would get my hair done and a few beauty treatments, while I still had access to the money to pay for them.
7) Olly wasn’t going to get the car. I needed that.
8) I would not blame Ronnie for telling me, and would try to make up with him.
9) I would not expect any help from my mum, whatever happened.
10) I would ask my dad to come over with his tools to fit the stair gates and door guards.
I started with number ten, ringing my dad. He seemed friendly, and appeared not to be aware of anything. My guess was that Ronnie hadn’t blabbed. I decided I would tell dad when he came over later that afternoon to do those jobs for me. Then I sorted Leah out, put her in a play pen, and had a shower. Before dad arrived, I got Leah ready and went to the supermarket to stock up on all sorts of stuff. Then I drew out two hundred from the cashpoint in case there was any stop on the account. That was probably an unfounded fear, but you never know. With that in mind, I also filled the car to the brim with petrol.
My dad arrived on time, and tried to play with Leah as I made him a cup of tea. When he was sat quietly with the tea in his hand, I told him what had happened. He was very calm about it, sitting shaking his head. “Lauren? He’s gone off with her? I never thought she would do something like that. You know, break up a family. Mind you, your mum never liked her, not one bit. To tell the truth, she never cared much for Olly either, love.”
It was clear to me that mum didn’t really like anyone that much, even her own husband and children. I said that to dad, and he nodded and laughed. Then he got up and started to fix the gates across the stairs, top and bottom, then fixed another one across the kitchen door from the hallway. He had been and bought that one on the way, knowing I only had the ones for the stairs. As I watched him working, he looked up and winked at me.
“You’ll be alright, love. I will make sure of that”.
Thanks to her dad. Very supportive, what she is in need. A very sad part is taking place in this story. Michael
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks, Michael. Angela has inner strengths.
Best wishes, Pete.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you for this information, Pete! Lets calm me down (at least a little bit!) Have a beautiful weekend! Michael
LikeLiked by 1 person
Angela’s list was great, every single one. The best thing is that she started with #10, her dad. I think he will prove to be a far stronger person than Angela realizes. This episode was excellent!
LikeLiked by 2 people
Thanks very much, Jennie. Some people, (including me) find lists are very useful for motivation.
Best wishes, Pete.
LikeLiked by 1 person
That includes me! I have a constant list, and enjoy scratching off each item as it gets done.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Angela’s Dad warms my heart! I can’t imagine dealing with all the things Angela has to manage, a list was a good place to start, C
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks, Cheryl. Lots of people like to make lists to get things clear in their minds. Including me! 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I love Angela’s Dad. He reminds me a little of my own.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I am glad to hear that people can identify with her dad, Kim.
Best wishes, Pete.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Should it be ‘Ronnie told me about you and Lauren?’ I’m a little confuzzled…
LikeLiked by 1 person
Her brother is Ronnie, and he told her about Olly and Lauren. Angela packed Olly’s clothes, and left the note fixed to the suitcase letting Olly know her brother had revealed the secret. Sorry if that reads confusingly, Stevie.
Best wishes, Pete.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I feel better for Angela now that dad has stepped in, hes a good egg. I hope Olly does pay, I know these things are never simple.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Unravelling a co-habitation or marriage is always tricky, especially when a child is involved.
Best wishes, Pete.
LikeLiked by 1 person
She started with the right one on the list. Everyone could use a helpful, non-judgmental dad.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks, Pete. I thought it likely that her dad would step up when things got really bad,.
Best wishes, Pete.
LikeLiked by 1 person
At least she has a supportive dad, and seems to have her head together too!
BTW, I think you have “Angela” instead of “Lauren” in the first couple of paragraphs.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks for spotting my error, Audrey. I have a bad habit of typing the wrong name in my serials. 🙂
Realising you are not going to get support, and worse than that have been betrayed, can either make you crack up, or be stronger. Angela became stronger.
Best wishes, Pete.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Love it Pete. Love her list and love her dad.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks, Siobhain. I don’t know if you ever made a list like that, but I did! 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Oh yes lol. I do remember taking a week off when we split and feeling the utmost satisfaction at having a clear out and bringing about 12 black bags full of stuff to the dump too. All nonsense that he kept but was never used lol
LikeLiked by 1 person
(1) Did the holdall hold all the underwear and socks?
(2) “And I sat in bed wondering if I had ever even loved Olly.” Unlike a certain Shar Pei with a similar name, Olly is neither faithful nor loving.
(3) The taxi with the diesel engine was driven by Cecil. Olly, the weasel, left in Cecil’s diesel.
(4) Angela’s “To Do” list:
— Olly would pay through the nose, but the banknotes would have to be tightly rolled.
— Unless Leah could fill Shirley Temple’s shoes, Angela would have to look into the financial benefits of child labor.
— Angela thought about moving to Nevada, but could she manage the Ponderosa?
— Angela would need some support to deal with the mental impact of putting Leah up for adoption. She’d already had an offer from Puff the magic dragon, who lived lived by the North Seah, and wished to frolic in the autumn mist with his lovely honey, Leah.
— Angela might just relocate. She and Leah could go live in Crimea, Tanzania, or North Korea. But she would need to join a language support group.
— Angela would put some Gorilla Glue in her hair, and also schedule toxic waste facial treatments, while she still had money in her purse.
— Angela needed the car. She envisioned Olly as roadkill.
— If Olly could make out with Lauren, Angela could make out with Ronnie.
— Since she didn’t expect any help from her mother, Angela would think of ways to blackmail her.
— Not that she feared Olly, but Angela would ask her father to dig a moat around her house, and stock it with “sharks with frickin’ laser beams attached to their head.” She would also ask him to station trigger-happy security guards at the door, and use “a very specific set of tools” to create a Stargate so that, in an emergency, she could escape by leaping through time and space.
(5) Bad citation: “It was suddenly clear to me that mum didn’t really like anyone that much, even her own husband and children. And yet, I’d always suspected that those Voodoo dolls served a purpose!”
LikeLiked by 1 person
I enjoyed that reference to the Peter, Paul, and Mary song, David.
I read on Twitter about the woman who sprayed Gorilla Glue in her hair, to keep it in place. At first , I thought it was a joke that I didn’t understand.
Best wishes, Pete.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Engrossed by this story Pete…love the list, which articulates exactly where we are in the story, and where we could go…knowing you, this trip will include plenty not on that page!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks, John. I have made similar lists, when a divorce was pending. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank heavens for Dad, hope he steps up to the mark. I can’t write what I think of Olly. Well I can, he’s a knob. Sorry. (A bit).
LikeLiked by 2 people
That’s okay, FR. Olly deserves it. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Nice that she has a good father who will help, unlike a mother who will just say ‘I told you so”.
LikeLiked by 1 person
We have to hope her dad gets a backbone, Don.
Best wishes, Pete.
LikeLike