controlling – that’s what made him so good at his job, but sometimes he’d bring it home with him.’
Kate shakes her head. She can’t remember a single time, not one, when her father wasn’t the most loving, caring person she could possibly imagine.
‘He was never that person,’ she says. ‘He loved us unconditionally.’
‘If everything was going his way,’ says Rose. ‘You only have to ask Lauren what he was capable of when it wasn’t. She knows how he could be.’
Kate looks to Lauren with raised eyebrows. She wonders if her sister is going to be brave enough to tell her truth.
‘Tell her,’ urges Rose, looking at Lauren. ‘Tell her what he made you do.’
‘About the abortion?’ asks Lauren.
Rose nods encouragingly.
‘You want me to say that he gave me no choice, that he manipulated the whole situation, that he called the father of my baby to tell him I’d already had the operation, when I hadn’t?’
‘Exactly,’ says Rose, looking at Kate imploringly. ‘I’m sorry, darling – I can only imagine how hard this must be for you to hear, but that’s the kind of man he could be sometimes.’
‘Except he wasn’t,’ says Lauren, choking back tears. ‘He was never that man. He was your puppet, and when you told him to jump, the only question he ever asked was, how high?’
Rose turns to look at Lauren with a confused expression.
‘I know, Mum,’ says Lauren. ‘I know you were the one behind him, pulling his strings, all the while telling me that I should do whatever I wanted to do.’
Rose shakes her head. ‘No darling, that’s not how it was. See how coercive he was? That’s what he wanted you to think. I only ever wanted you to be happy.’
‘Did you think making Justin walk away from me would make me happy?’ Lauren cries.
‘Of course not, but as much as I tried to reason with your father, sometimes I just couldn’t make him see sense. I didn’t even know that he’d called Justin, not until afterwards, when it was too late.’
Lauren rushes forward towards her mother and Kate’s hand instinctively reaches out and grabs hold of her wrist.
‘You were the instigator!’ Lauren shouts. ‘You didn’t want my mistake to upset the equilibrium of the perfect family you thought you had?’
‘It wasn’t about me,’ says Rose, aghast. ‘You were too young to be tied down with a baby, and with a boy who couldn’t support you. It was the right thing to do for all of us.’
‘Except it sent me off the rails, and your husband into the arms of another woman.’
Rose’s lip quivers and she pulls Noah and Emmy closer to her, as if goading Lauren. ‘Women were your father’s weakness.’
‘Don’t you dare!’ hisses Kate. ‘Don’t you dare try and justify your actions by blaming him. All he ever wanted to do was help people.’
Rose laughs bitterly. ‘Oh yes, he was very good at helping people, especially women whose husbands were beating them up. Your father liked to play the martyr and be on hand for his clients when they came out of hospital.’
‘Are you referring to my mother?’ asks Jess.
Kate had almost forgotten she was there.
Rose looks at Jess – her eyes silently saying yes.
‘So, you did know my mother?’ says Jess.
‘I knew of your mother,’ says Rose, correcting her.
‘Who are you lying for?’ asks Jess. ‘Your husband or yourself?’
‘Your father was going to leave us to be with Julia,’ says Rose, looking directly at Kate. ‘He wanted to be with her and the baby and there was nothing I could do to make him see sense.’
If it were possible for blood to freeze, Kate imagines this is what it would feel like. ‘He would never have left us!’ she shouts. ‘You know he wouldn’t!’
‘This is why I didn’t want to tell you anything,’ cries Rose. ‘I didn’t want to hurt you. I was only ever trying to protect you from knowing what your father was really like. But the reality was that he and Julia were going to make a new life together in London, with the baby.’ She throws Jess a disdainful look.
‘So what happened?’ presses Jess, when it looks like Rose has offered all that she’s going to.
‘Th-that was it,’ stutters Rose. ‘Your mother was killed and I presumed it was by her husband who found out what she was planning to do.’
Kate looks at her mother paralysed with fear on the floor. She can’t tell whether it’s because Jess is holding her grandson hostage, or she knows