Authors: Cathy MacPhail
It was the worst thing she could have done. She lost her balance, tried to find something to grasp to keep herself steady, but there was only the long grass, the wild flowers. Roxy fell badly, and hurt her back. She
tried not to scream. She tried not to breathe. She let out a low moan and just lay there, hoping he would have moved off, thinking she had gone. She bit her lip and listened. She could hear a swishing through the tall grass. Footsteps striding towards her. He was coming, reaching out for her with those fingers, those nightmare fingers. Every instinct she had told her to get up and run, but she couldn't move. She was too clumsy with this stupid bump holding her back and once again she resented it.
Any moment now, he would be here above her. Any moment now â¦
âWhat on earth are you doing down there, my girl?'
It wasn't Stevens. It was Mr Dyce, with his Santa Claus smile. He reached down and gripped her hand to help her up.
âDid you fall, dear? Are you hurt? Do you need to see the doctor?' He fussed about her like an old granny, dusting her down, feeling her brow. âWhat happened to you?'
Roxy found her voice. âIt was that weirdo, Stevens. He scared me.'
âDid he say anything? Do anything?'
She steadied herself, thinking how to answer. A
second ago she had thought to tell the Dyces everything Stevens had said, ask them what he meant. âThey're taking care of you all right.' In the moment it took her to answer, something held her back. Some instinct she couldn't explain.
âHe's just scary,' she repeated. âWhy have you got someone like that working here? He's weird.'
âHe's always worked here, even before we came. He is a good worker.'
âWhy can't I get out of the gates? Why are they locked?' Roxy's questions took him by surprise.
âWas that what you were trying to do?'
âI don't see any reason why I can't go outside for a walk, or go to the village. There must be a village nearby.'
He looked flustered. He was never the one who was asked difficult questions. It was always his wife, she was the one always ready with a glib answer.
âIt's for your own safety, Roxy. You must understand that. If you go into the village, people might see you, recognise you.'
âRecognise me?' The idea surprised her. âWhy should anyone recognise me? Have I been on the telly? Has my photo been in the papers?' She had a vision of
her mother once again, sitting at a table at one of those press conferences, in a tearful appeal begging her daughter to come home.
Sweat was breaking out on his forehead. Was he so nervous? Or was it the heat? It was such a hot afternoon perhaps that could explain it.
âMaybe at the beginning, there was some publicity. But the police soon lose interest when it's clear that a young person has run away, and doesn't want to be found.' He took Roxy by the elbow and led her back to the house. âIt's not as if you've been kidnapped or anything.' He giggled as if he'd made a very funny joke.
Not kidnapped. No. But she wasn't allowed out, was she? The gates were locked, and she was kept inside.
âBut just a walk outside, what would be the harm in that?'
âPlenty of places to go walking inside the grounds, dear,' he said, and in truth that seemed a perfectly logical answer.
As were all of their answers, all of their explanations. All perfectly logical. She seemed to be the only one to question everything. Roxy remembered Sula who'd gone home to her family, and she felt guilty. The Dyces had helped Sula get home. They had only ever helped
her. She walked back to the house with Mr Dyce while he prattled on, gossiping like an old maid. He was a nice old man. She too could go home whenever she wanted, she told herself, and they would help her. They had only ever helped her, the Dyces. She tried to think like Anne Marie, but all the time there was a feeling as if something heavy was lying in her heart. Maybe it was guilt, she told herself over and over. Guilt about how much she distrusted the Dyces, and guilt about what she had done to her mother.
She would write to her.
The decision came in a flash. She would tell her mother that she was safe and well, and that there was no need to come looking for her. She would promise to get in touch again, soon. Roxy didn't want her worrying, or crying on television over her.
Although, deep down, there was also a fear that her mother wasn't worrying or crying. That, with Paul and Jennifer there beside her, Roxy, her wayward daughter, had been quickly forgotten.
A few days later, on a sultry afternoon, Babs went into labour. Roxy couldn't believe how calm she was as she packed up her bag and got ready to leave them. Wasn't
she nervous?
âKnow what's coming,' she answered her, casually. âThis isn't my first, you know.'
Roxy was shocked. She hadn't realised that at all. Babs, for all her worldliness, was only a young girl. âYou've had a baby before?'
Babs nodded.
âWhere is it?'
âHad it adopted.' She said it as if it didn't matter. âOr I should say, the Dyces got somebody to take it.'
âThe Dyces? You've been here before?'
âThat's why I knew to come this time. The last time they picked me up, just the way they did you, and they took me here. When the sprog was born, they sorted everything. Gave me money, good bit of money.' She raised her eyebrows with glee at the thought of that money. âSo, naturally, I came back here again. Wasn't going to pass this up, was I?'
Roxy looked at Babs as if for the first time. She realised she didn't like her. Babs was funny and common and loud â but she was selfish and heartless too.
âYou'll get money this time too?'
Babs knew by Roxy's tone how she felt about that. Her face grew hard. âSo what? I thought you were
getting yours adopted too. You'll get money. You're not any better than I am.'
Roxy didn't know how to answer that. Selfish and heartless, was that her too?
A flash of pain crossed Babs's face. âMrs Dyce!' she screamed. âTime I was going.'
Mrs Dyce came hurrying in and took her by the arm. âCome along, Babs.'
Babs waved cheerily to everyone as she waddled off. Roxy was the only one who didn't wave back. She just stood trying to take in what Babs had just told her. Now she was sure she knew what was happening here.
They were selling their babies.
âOf course they're not selling our babies! Roxy, what a thing to say!' Anne Marie was more amused than shocked when she told her what she thought.
âYou can't see anything bad in anything they do, Anne Marie. But there's something fishy going on here.'
It was their turn to make the evening meal, along with one of the new girls, dark-skinned, silent, with hardly any English. She looked perpetually frightened. She was already heavily pregnant and would undoubtedly drop her baby before Anne Marie. She sat at the big table in the middle of the kitchen peeling potatoes. When Anne Marie laughed, she looked round at her, but didn't smile.
Anne Marie had a musical laugh, almost like a tune. It made Roxy smile, even though she was trying hard to be serious.
âFishy. How appropriate, we're having fish for tea. Salmon cakes.'
Roxy wouldn't let it go. âBabs told me they gave her money the last time. They're giving her money this time too. Anne Marie, they're buying our babies and selling them for adoption.'
Anne Marie stopped what she was doing and looked at Roxy very seriously. âYou listened to Babs? Babs is what your mother would call a “loose woman”, any looser and she would fall apart.' Then she laughed again. âMind, my mother would have a cheek calling any woman loose. However, Babs is the type who
would
sell her baby, to the highest bidder too. But the Dyces would only have given her money to try to help her get started again. The money was to help her, not to buy her baby.'
âSo, where did the baby go? Who adopted it? When people want to adopt a baby they have to go through checks. Rigorous checks. The authorities have to make sure they're the right kind of people, decent people.'
âThe Dyces do make sure they're letting decent people adopt the babies. I'm sure of it. I trust them.'
But then, Anne Marie trusted everything about the
Dyces, didn't she? thought Roxy.
âAnyway,' she went on, âI'm not having my baby adopted. I'm keeping Aidan.'
That was the moment Roxy made up her mind. She was keeping hers too. It was also at that moment she realised her baby was no longer âthe bump'. It had become her baby.
And no one was going to sell her baby.
After dinner all the girls sat outside in the evening sun. Too hot to stay indoors and even uncomfortably hot outside. Summer smells scented the air. Roxy and Anne Marie lay on the grass and watched the first star appear in the blue sky. One by one the other girls drifted inside the house, but not them. It was too beautiful.
Roxy watched as the moon cast silver lights on the roof of the house, on the attic windows. âI wonder how you get into the rest of the house,' she said, almost to herself.
âI think that would be through the Dyces' apartments, probably.'
Roxy wasn't so sure. âYou think so? I mean, there must be a staircase up to the next floors, there must be
some kind of corridor leading into the rest of the house. I think it's strange we've never actually seen it. It's as if, if we stepped into that other part of the house we would be in a different world.'
âAren't you the one with the imagination, Roxy.' Anne Marie laughed. But a thought had been planted in Roxy's mind. She was going to find the entrance to those attics, and do a bit of exploring. If she couldn't wander outside the grounds, then nothing was going to stop her wandering inside.
Anne Marie breathed in deeply. âIt's nights like this that make life worth living,' she said softly.
Roxy leaned up on her elbow and watched her as she studied the sky dreamily. âFor someone who's had such a hard life you always look on the bright side of everything, don't you?'
âAnd for someone who's always had it so cushy, you are the most cynical person I have ever come across.'
âCushy? You think I've had it cushy?'
âYes, I do. A mum and dad who loved you, a little sister you ⦠used ⦠to get on with. A home. Yes. I think you've had it cushy.'
âUntil my dad died. Then everything changed.'
Anne Marie struggled to sit up. Roxy had to help her.
She stared at Roxy. âMaybe it was you who changed. Your dad died, but Jennifer's dad died too, and she didn't go off the rails. Your mum's husband died, and she didn't go wild.'
âShe got married again,' Roxy reminded her.
âSo, she got married again. I bet your dad would have wanted that for her.'
âWhose side are you on?'
Anne Marie smiled. âIt's not a case of sides, but from what you tell me, I think you should take your baby home. I think your mum would welcome you with open arms.'
Roxy dismissed that suggestion. âI'm never going home. I've done all right by myself up till now. I'll do just as well when my baby comes.'
âYour baby?' Anne Marie grabbed her into a hug. âThat's the first time you've called him “your baby”.'
She was still hugging her when Mrs Dyce turned the corner of the house and approached them. She seemed startled to find them there, still sitting in the twilight. âI thought all you girls had gone to bed.'
Anne Marie got to her feet and brushed the grass from her trousers. âIt's such a beautiful night, we didn't want to waste it.'
Mrs Dyce turned her face to the sky. âYes, it is, isn't it?'
âHow's Babs?' Roxy asked, and there it was again, that tight smile. Surely she couldn't be mistaken about that.
âBabs is doing fine. She had a little girl.'
Anne Marie clapped her hands together enthusiastically. âOh, that is so lovely.'
âCan we see her? Is she still here?' asked Roxy.
âBabs is gone already.'
âHow did she go? In an ambulance? We never see any ambulances coming or going. So, how do the girls leave, and the babies?' Roxy was asking too many questions. She could read that in Mrs Dyce's eyes.
âYoung girls are usually fit enough to leave in a car, Roxy. The delivery room has its own exit, that's why you don't see them going. We make sure the girls are well wrapped up, and rested before they leave. As for the babies who are being adopted, they're in tiny bassinets. We put them safely in the back seat and take them to their new families. Does that answer all your questions now?'
âYou don't waste any time, do you?'
Mrs Dyce didn't even look at Roxy when she said that. But she did look when Roxy asked the next question.
âCan we see the baby? After all, Babs won't have taken the baby with her. Is her baby still here?'
It was as if her smile was fixed to her face. She never got a chance to think up an answer, if that's what she was intending to do. Anne Marie burst in with her happy laugh. âYou'll never guess what suspicious little Roxy thinks is happening here. She only thinks you're selling babies.'
There was no mistaking the shock on Mrs Dyce's face this time. Her head swivelled round so fast Roxy thought it was going to be like that scene from
The Exorcist
.
âWhat on earth gave you such an idea?'
âBabs,' Anne Marie answered for Roxy. âBabs told her she'd been here before and you gave her money.'
The tension seemed to ooze out of Mrs Dyce. Her thin shoulders dropped and she breathed out slowly. A sigh of relief. That's how it seemed to Roxy.
âWe gave her money to help her start a new life. We never expected to see her again. And then, when she was brought back to us in the same condition ⦠what
could we do but help her again?'