Sherryn
wanted to close the door on the proof of her husband’s infidelity. But
there was no going back.
She avoided looking at the child, whose cupid’s bow of a mouth and tawny
eyes confirmed that he shared the same genes as her children. But the
similarity ended there - his ashy skin, underweight body and crumpled,
wash worn clothes broadcast a lack of concern for his well-being and
appearance. The woman with him smiled – a smug grimace that confirmed
Sherryn’s unspoken suspicion of his parentage.
Sherryn did not hide her distaste at the sight of the snug tank top
holding in a belly about to surge out of control or the short, tight
denim skirt that did little to cover a pair of lumpy thighs. A lustrous,
blonde weave complimented the woman’s caramel complexion and thick,
false eyelashes emphasized her glee.
Sherryn quickly scanned and assessed her as the stereotypical product of
one of Kingston’s ghettos and for a few seconds, felt like she was stuck
in a soundless movie. The wind stirred the flowers and shrubs in the
front yard, dried leaves blew over the lawn and a car passed by, but she
heard nothing.
Then the dancehall queen look-alike pushed the little boy forward,
dragging Sherryn back to the unthinkable scene unfolding on her
doorstep. “Tell Maurice him can have him pickney.”
Sherryn suppressed the shiver trying to claim her body by pulling her
shoulders back. She stood tall, squeezing the doorknob as a shipwreck
victim might cling to a life-saving piece of flotsam. After a quick
glance at the boy, she whispered, “Oh no, you’re not leaving him here!”
“You ca’an decide dat. Since Maurice won’ mind him pickney, him can keep
him.”
The woman dropped a black knapsack and spun away with an exaggerated
wiggle of the hips to saunter down the driveway to the gate, where a
marked taxi waited.
Damn ghetto rat! Why she choose to leave her child on another woman’s
doorstep like so much unwanted baggage?
The boy’s bottom lip trembled and he blinked hard several times.
Sherryn’s chest heaved and she struggled to slow her breathing. It
wouldn’t help either of them if she fell apart. Pressing her lips
together to keep them from trembling, she picked up the threadbare
knapsack and touched his shoulder. “Come with me.”
She led him to Reece’s office and left him sitting on the oversized
sofa. In the passage outside, she admitted the purpose for leaving him
there was twofold. Firstly, he was hidden from her, as if he didn’t
exist and secondly, Reece’s world would spin off its axis - just as hers
had - to find his secret tucked away in his private space. She hoped the
experience turned out to be as gut wrenching and devastating as hers.
In their spacious, high-ceilinged living room she perched on the edge of
the plump settee skimming the familiar paintings, family portraits and
oddments, absorbing all that meant home and family. But everything she’d
invested in her relationship with Reece, lay in invisible pieces around
her feet, like shattered glass.
Her insides felt cold and sterile, as though she would never be warm
again. She sighed, forced herself to get up and climbed the stairs to
their bedroom. Once there, she lay in the bed where five lives were
created. She allowed the warm tears to fall, searing her sinuses and
then her eyes. Other than anxiety over her children and surreptitious
tears shed while watching sad movies, no drama had touched her life in
ages.
And now this.
She was not sure how much time passed before she heard Reece’s Jeep
throttling in the yard. Her heart thumped painfully at the confrontation
to come. She hurried into the bathroom to wash her face, staring into
her dull, reddened eyes before returning to sit on the bed, facing the
doorway. After running an unsteady hand over her close-cropped hair, she
glanced at her watch, surprised to find that two hours had slipped away
since she had answered that fateful knock at the door. Briefly, she
spared a thought for the boy. He must be hungry.
Concern fled as Reece bounded up the stairs, calling her name. The door
opened, and the strong, energetic man at the centre of her world,
entered the room. He crossed the patterned tiles in a few steps. “Sher,
you never hear me calling you?”
Lifting her head, she told him - without words - that something had gone
awry.
“Sherryn, what happen’?”
She stood up, willing herself not to scream or lash out at him for
destroying her near perfect life. Instead, she said, “It’s not what, but
who.”
He attempted to touch her and she edged away, ignoring the hurt and
puzzlement in his darkening eyes.
“Come with me,” she said, not waiting to see if he followed.
His footsteps fell heavy on the wooden stairs behind her and Sherryn
rolled her eyes upward to prevent fresh tears escaping. She paused
outside his study and sucked in her belly to pull herself upright. Then
she turned the knob on the door and it swung inward to reveal the boy
curled up on the settee, sleeping with a thumb in his mouth. She pushed
sympathy aside, bit her lip and composed herself. Reece’s breath bathed
the back of her neck and he grunted in what she supposed could only be
surprise.
Sherryn faced him and spoke to his blue, pinstriped shirt through the
painful ball in her throat. “Don’ bother say anythin’, I don’ want to
know.”
She brushed past him and on the way out of the house, picked up her keys
from the antique style half-table in the hallway.
Reece sensed that whatever lay behind the door of his study meant the
end of eighteen years of happiness.
Sherryn opened his office door, sending shockwaves splintering across
his brain. The result of one regrettable encounter lay asleep on his
couch.
Now he understood her coldness. Reece wiped a sleeve across his forehead
as panic forced sweat out through his pores. He made sure he kept his
mouth shut. Anything he said would make little sense and serve to tee
Sherryn off further, but he swore in his mind to kill that piece of
trash, Gloria. She’d done this deliberately because he’d refused to play
along with her latest bit of blackmail.
Desperately hoping he was somehow trapped in a bad dream, he swallowed
hard and rubbed a hand over his mouth, while his stomach churned.
Sherryn glared at him with glittering eyes, brushed his hand away, and
left. That was no dream.
Sure he would go mad, Reece stalked around the massive desk, along the
edges of the carpet, past the bookshelves and the sofa. He refused to
think about the implications of the child’s presence, thereby avoiding
thoughts of losing Sherryn. He couldn’t face that possibility. Death was
better than forfeiting his home and family.
Reece sank into the heavy executive chair, rubbing his forehead, while
his heart beat a painful tattoo in his chest. The discomfort was so bad;
he wondered whether he was having a heart attack.
Moving at the pace of a centenarian, he dragged himself out of the chair
to pace aimlessly, his mind a blank whiteboard. The enormity of the
situation left him shell-shocked; he couldn’t think. What was he going
to do? He focused on the sofa, where the boy stirred, rubbed small hands
over his eyes and pulled himself upright.
Unable to contain his resentment, Reece glowered at him. The child
shrank into the settee, his knees drawn up to his chest. Reece shut his
eyes in an attempt to calm himself and get rid of the frown he wore.
None of this was the boy’s fault. He, Reece Allbright, was the stupid
adult who had created the current mess in a moment of drunken weakness.
Intuition had warned him a hundred times since the boy’s birth that this
day would come – for all his wishing that it would not. The day had
arrived, taking him by storm and leaving him with a sense of
powerlessness he hadn’t felt in more years than he cared to remember.
Running a hand over the prickly hairs on his chin, he tried to root
himself in the present. His voice was loud in the silence. “You hungry?”
The boy shied away, looking ready to dart away and hide, but he nodded.
“Come.”
They walked down the passage to the kitchen-cum-dining room, where
further dread settled over Reece at the sight of a red and blue truck on
one of the tiled counters. He stared at his son – he had no doubt the
boy was his – and tried to work out what he was going to tell his other
children. His stomach clenched again, for he ran the risk of losing his
family’s love and respect.
“Sit down.”
Reece made a tuna sandwich and placed it in front of the child he wished
had never been born.
The boy crammed the food into his mouth, obviously too hungry to
remember his fear. An idea came to Reece on his way back from the
refrigerator to pour out a glass of apple juice. He’d take the child
back to the tenement yard where Gloria lived before his kids got home
and started asking questions. Justin, his eldest, would take one look at
him and know he was a relative. Reece shook his head, envisioning the
disappointment and hurt to come if he did nothing to derail Gloria’s
plan.
Disgusted with himself, Reece flung a napkin at the boy. “Wipe yuh hand
and mouth and come.”
Then he grabbed the knapsack from his office and rushed out the door
with his sixth offspring.
Sherryn adjusted the mirror to get a better view of the children in the
back of the van. Sixteen-year-old Justin had Melaine, his
thirteen-year-old sister, in a headlock. Their younger sister,
eleven-year-old Celia, had her nose in a book, while Kyle - the baby at
three-years-old - chattered non-stop to himself in the car seat.
Brandon, who was far too mature for his six years, played a computer
game in the passenger seat beside her.
Her insides ached as though a debilitating disease had ravaged her. She
held back a sigh. What had possessed her to accede to Reece’s wish to
have so many children? And if she didn’t stand strong, he wanted to
round out the family with a sixth Allbright. Her lip curled in disgust.
He'd obviously made time to complete his family elsewhere!
Reece had no relatives worth staying in touch with, so together they had
fulfilled his desire to have a complete family unit. One corner of her
mouth twitched at Reece's single-mindedness, but what was there to be
amused about? The joke was clearly on her.
What am I going to do?
Kyle, catching her eye in the mirror, giggled and hid behind his
fingers. In return, she made a funny face at him and he laughed - a
joyous sound that pushed away her unpleasant thoughts.
No! I don’t regret giving any of them life. They’re good kids. It’s
their father who’s destroyed every striking thing!
Images of Reece naked with that woman flooded her mind, filling her
vision. How many times had he been in her bed over the years? Did he
love her?
She forced herself to focus on the road when Brandon shouted, along with
his brothers and sisters. “Mom!”
She’d missed hitting another van by several inches.
“Oh, God!” she whispered. “Sorry kids,” she threw over her shoulder and
tried to ignore the string of bad words the wronged motorist threw at
her.
She whispered a prayer of thanks, only to find two police officers
riding up behind them. One pulled alongside the van and pointed toward
the sidewalk. Sherryn parked and reached for her documents, hoping to
avoid a ticket. The blazing heat of the afternoon sun intensified with
the van at a standstill. She swiped at her forehead as sweat, brought on
by overworked nerves, popped out on her skin.
The officer got off his bike and crowded the window, peering inside the
vehicle. “Good afternoon, ma’am. You’re aware you just ran a red light?”
Sherryn marshalled her thoughts. “Yes, officer. Unfortunately, I wasn’t
paying enough attention. I thought something was wrong with the baby.”
She pointed to Kyle. “That’s how I ran through the light.”
She put on her best penitent expression. “Officer, please. Don’t ticket
me. You understand how it is when you have so many children in one
vehicle…”
The policeman removed his dark glasses and slipped one of the thin,
metal arms into his mouth, eyeing her from her low, curling hair to the
jeans covering her legs. “We can sort this out easy, easy. Leave a t’ing
wid me and mi partner, nuh?”
Reece would have a fit at what she was about to do, but Sherryn reached
down into the space between the two seats and rifled around in her
handbag for her purse. She pulled out a crisp, blue thousand-dollar note
bearing the portrait of one of the island’s past Prime Ministers and
deftly folded it into the policeman’s hand resting on the window.
“Respec’, ma’am.” He stepped away. “And remember to keep yuh eyes on the
road.”
She ease back into the traffic and only a few seconds passed before
Justin began to chastise her. “You shouldn’ give him nutten! Damn
thiefin’ police!”
Using disapproval as a means of defense, she said, “Excuse me?”
Justin sat back, grumbling. “Daddy woulda handle him differently, fi
real!”
“That’s how they’re teaching you to talk in school these days?”
Refusing to give up, he continued, “Mummy, you know that’s why they
continue to harrass people on di road? You shouldn’t give him a dollar!”
She sighed. Why did this have to happen today of all days? “Justin,
you’re right and I’m wrong. I shouldn’t have done it, okay? Now, relax.”
Their eyes met in the mirror. “Just don’t say anything to your father.”
She smiled when he avoided her by squinting at the watch on his wrist,
unwilling to be in cahoots with her when he could score points with his
father. He sprawled on the seat in his khakis, arms folded in defiance.
Sherryn stopped watching him, disturbed by how much he favoured Reece,
but then all their children did. Somehow, they’d all inherited his amber
eyes and the distinctive shape of his mouth. Justin and Brandon also
shared the deep bronze cast of his skin. The others had her dark-honey
complexion.
Sherryn gripped the wheel tight to keep her mind on the road, but
something occurred to her. If their home was destined to go topsy-turvy,
she had some groundwork to do.
“Um, guys.” She glanced behind her. “Your father may have a visitor.”
Brandon raised his head, frowning. “So?”
“Well, he’s a-a relative.”
Justin leaned forward. “You mean like a cousin or something?”
She nodded, wishing she knew how to brace them for the coming upheaval.
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