was the only reason Lewis said yes, when you invited us that last time. When she was asleep, there was no problem at all. She looked as perfect as Thomas and Emily had, even to Lewis. It was only when she opened her eyes that you could see the flaw.’
Flora sips her water. I wish I’d asked for some.
‘She slept nearly all that afternoon, do you remember? Even when Thomas started wailing about his blister, she didn’t wake. I’d promised Lewis that she wouldn’t. He said, “Good. I don’t want anyone knowing I’ve got a cross-eyed daughter.”’
‘That’s—’
Flora puts out a hand to silence me. ‘Please don’t say it’s awful or terrible or anything like that. You’re going to want to say that so many times if I tell you the truth, and I already know it’s terrible. You saying it doesn’t help.’
I nod.
‘That afternoon, the last time we saw you all as friends, I’d promised Lewis that if Georgina showed signs of waking, I’d take her off somewhere so that no one saw. I knew he had no need to worry. She only ever woke when she was hungry, and the second she started to feed, her eyes always closed again. I promised him I’d make sure no one saw her with her eyes open, and I kept my promise. No one saw a thing. Lewis was paranoid about it, though. As far as he was concerned, feeding meant she was awake, which meant there was a risk she’d open her eyes. He thought I was being reckless – that I might expose the shameful family secret: a non-perfect child. That’s why he screamed at me.’
I don’t know how I’m supposed to listen to this story and not react. My face must be expressing all the things I’m not saying in words.
‘I had other strict instructions that day too,’ Flora says.
‘Like what?’
‘Not to say anything about Georgina being premature. Lewis insisted: you and Dominic couldn’t know that my body had failed and ejected her too early. That’s how Lewis saw it. Zannah and Ben had both turned up on time, healthy and perfect, and Lewis needs to feel superior in order to find life bearable. For the first time, he didn’t. He blamed Georgina and me. Mainly me. Even Lewis understands that you can’t blame a baby for anything. He used to say it all the time: “It’s not her fault I don’t want her.” Sometimes it was, “It’s not her fault I wish she’d never been born.”’
‘Flora …’
‘It wasn’t only the strabismus,’ she goes on. ‘He never wanted a third child. He had his perfect boy and girl and he wanted to stop at two. He always said two was the perfect number, and that was how many children we were going to have. I should have listened. If only I’d listened …’ She covers her face with her hands. Her body heaves and she says something I can’t make out. I think it was ‘None of it would have happened.’
‘So you and Lewis didn’t agree to have a third child?’ I say.
Flora shakes her head. ‘He’d never have agreed. Never. I tried to persuade myself that I didn’t want another baby, but … When you want something so much, you don’t think straight, do you? I kept telling myself, “You’re so lucky already, you’ve got Thomas and Emily,” but the urge didn’t go away, and I thought Lewis would …’ Her face contorts in pain. ‘I miscalculated. I hadn’t seen the worst of him then – never directed at me, anyway. I’d seen him lay waste to other people, but … you remember how it was, Beth. He was so hard to resist when he was on your side and you had his approval. It made you feel invincible. I felt like the luckiest woman in the world when Lewis saw me as an asset. Then I went against what he wanted and got pregnant again, and everything changed.’
‘But if he knew you were trying to get pregnant and he didn’t want to …’
‘I didn’t tell him.’ Flora looks at me with pity. ‘You think I’d have had the nerve to defy him openly? No. I said it was an accident. “Good,” he said. “Then you won’t mind getting rid of it.” And he saw the look in my eyes and knew everything: that I’d disobeyed him, which would have been bad enough all on its own, and that I’d lied about it.’