It had started at conception. Jess had longed to be pregnant again but feared it too, because it filled her with the promise of hope and loss in equal parts. She had been pregnant twice before. The first baby had been lost before the end of the first trimester. It had broken her heart, but eventually she had been able to accept it. But the second, her little girl, was stillborn nearly six months into the pregnancy.
Even now Jess could not bear to think of that grey morning in the delivery suite, with the rain rushing against the window and the faded frieze of bunny rabbits painted around the ceiling. It was the knowing that made it unbearable, the knowledge that every contraction that wracked her body wasn't bringing a new life into the world. Knowing that she was delivering a dead baby, a little girl who had somehow died in the womb. In
her
womb.
Between the waves of physical pain Jess could hear the cries of other children somewhere on the ward. She would always remember the laughter and joy of a family ringing off the walls in the corridor outside, and wanting to scream for them to shut up. But all she could do was to stay as quiet as she could with Lee at her side, holding her hand, telling her she was so brave and how much he loved her, brushing away his tears between reassurances.
What Jess found almost unbearable was that the baby had died without her even noticing her passing. That she hadn't even been able to do that much for her child, to reach inside and try to say goodbye. She felt that she should have known her baby was terribly sick, but instead she might have been asleep or shopping or sitting on the Tube reading the paper when it happened. It seemed such a banal way to lose a child.
It was no one's fault, the doctors told them; sometimes tragedies just happen, but that didn't comfort Jess at all. She always felt it
should
have been someone's fault â and if it was anybody's it had to be hers. It was a feeling that persisted steadily just under the surface of every breath she took and every thought she had had from that moment on.
Almost two years had passed since that morning in the delivery suite, and every day Jess tried as she knew she should to separate her losses from the gain of having Jacob. But it seemed impossible to do, impossible to stop expecting the worst.
Lee had wanted them to stop after they lost the second baby. He said that the doctors had told him there was plenty of time to wait and try again in a year or two. That there was no reason why Jess shouldn't carry a baby full term and deliver a healthy child. But Jess had not been able to wait. She told Lee she wanted to try again straight away. That had been hard for him to understand.
âIt would be like putting my life on hold,' she had tried to explain to him one morning. âLike the next year, or two years would be just treading water waiting for . . . what? There's never going to be a magic time when we know for sure everything will be all right. And I'm still going to be scared, Lee. I'm still going to be terrified even then. I need to try again
now
.'
Lee had sat on their sofa, his head bowed over his knees, and Jess knew he was struggling to find the right words to say and for a moment she wondered how they had ended up together.
She hadn't fallen for him because of his expertise at expressing his feelings and dealing with her in times of tragedy, she reminded herself. She loved him because he made her laugh like no other man ever had, even in bed, and because he loved dogs and hiking and real ale in an ironic way, and he wore his hair in little trendy spikes even though he was slowly going bald and had been since he was twenty-two. When they'd started out in an Islington pub four years ago it had never occurred to Jess to veto him for his ability to manage pain in times of deep despair. So she had to be as patient with him as he was being with her, she owed him that much. After all, when he bought her that first vodka and tonic he couldn't have foreseen that just over fifteen hundred days later they would be having this conversation.
âThe thing is,' Lee had said eventually, still staring hard at the laminate flooring, âI don't think
I'm
ready, Jess. I'm still grieving, I'm still missing . . . her. I . . . I don't think it's right to just . . . replace her.'
Those last two words had almost been the end of them. It
would
have been the end of them if either one had had enough strength to survive without the other. But neither one had. They'd clung on to each other despite everything, and less than a year later Jess discovered she was pregnant for the third time.
When she told Lee he didn't hug her or smile, he just looked at her for a long time saying nothing at all until eventually he rested the back of his cool hand against the heat of her cheek and said, âIt will be all right.'
They didn't tell anyone about the baby until Jess was three months gone. She gave up work straight away, forfeiting any rights she had to maternity leave. Lee said it would be a struggle but they'd manage, and that her health and well-being was what counted. She knew what he really meant was that he'd do anything to stop her from freaking out.
At the twenty-week scan Jess felt as if she was being taken to an execution. She lay on the hospital table completely drained of colour and her eyes brimming with unshed tears. When the technician told her the scan was fine she could hardly believe it. In fact, she didn't believe it.
Whilst Lee's tension seemed to lift then and finally give way to happiness, Jess's fears bound themselves even more tightly around her. And the following months had been just as bad. She'd thought that when she began to feel the baby move that would make things better, because she'd be able to feel him thriving inside her. But instead, when an hour or more passed without her registering a kick, she panicked, convinced that the worst had happened again. Twice the doctor had to come and find the baby's heartbeat for her. He told her that unborn babies sleep just like the rest of us, and that she shouldn't worry. He had become one in a long line of people who told her she was worrying too much, almost as if it was an indulgence that they thought she revelled in. The doctors, their parents, even Lee commanded her to stop fretting so much. But she couldn't imagine a time when she would be able to. She didn't tell the doctor that she had hardly slept for what felt like months and that when she did she woke up with a start, panicking that somehow she'd abandoned her post. That something terrible might happen while she was gone. When Lee tried to reassure her she told him that once the baby was here in her arms where she could see him and hold him, she was sure she would stop worrying. Then at last all the fears and ghosts of the past would be put to rest.
But she was wrong, just as she had known she would be.
From the second the midwife put him in her arms there was a whole new world of worry. Jess was scared that he didn't feed enough. She was worried that he slept for too long, or that he didn't sleep enough. That he didn't seem to poo as much as the book said he should or that he had too many wet nappies. Stupid things that when she asked the health visitor or doctor about them made them smile and look at her as if she was slightly mad.
âIt's normal,' the doctor would say.
âHe's perfectly healthy,' the health visitor would say.
âIt will be all right,' Lee would tell her.
And she'd know that they were right and they had to be right, but she still couldn't shake off this terrible feeling that somehow, somewhere, something was going to go terribly wrong.
âWake up, darling,' a voice said irritably in her ear. Jess looked up and saw a woman trying to pass her to get to a seat that had somehow become empty. She glanced out of the dirty window. The bus was at her stop.
âWait please!' she called out, as she struggled towards the bus doors. âHold on a minute, this is my stop!'
The bus lurched again, throwing Jess off balance and forcing her to stagger with Jacob in her arms to steady her feet. She watched the front door of her block of apartments slip past. Now she'd have to get off at the next stop and walk back.
âYou could have held the bus,' she said to the driver. âYou must have heard me calling you.'
He did not even look at her.
The sky was dark with the threat of rain by the time that Jess finally got the apartment door open. She left the buggy sprawled in the communal hallway half up and half down, not caring whether or not some of the opportunist thieves in the area made off with the vile thing.
She sat down in the gloom of the sitting room and before even shaking off her coat she put Jacob to her breast.
Gradually both of them began to feel better.
âYou're not mad,' Jess said aloud to a room that was almost quiet except for the subdued roar of the traffic on Green Lanes that managed to breach even the double glazing. âYou had a difficult time, it will take a while to adjust, that's all. All these people who look at you as if you were a bit weak-minded or silly don't know what you've been through â they don't know how well you're doing.'
She looked down at Jacob suckling and felt two or three still and calm moments pass by with each heartbeat. And then she remembered their visit to the clinic that morning, just before Natalie found her in the shop.
The health visitor had asked her if she had post-natal depression. Jess had laughed. Quite a feat because she had been crying at the time.
âAren't you supposed to tell me that?' she'd asked before adding, âI'm just a bit down and tired, that's all.'
âDo you ever feel like harming yourself or the baby?' the health visitor had asked her without looking up from her notes.
âNo!' Jess had exclaimed. âI would never,
ever
do that. He is the most precious thing in the world.' She had hesitated, but Lee was always telling her that talking about her problems would make them better. âIf anything,' she had said slowly, âI worry sort of obsessively about keeping him well. All the time.'
âOh well,' the health visitor had said. âThat's OK then.'
âThings aren't all bad,' Jess told Jacob, whose lips had disengaged from her nipple, leaving his small mouth gaping open as he slept. âAt least I bumped into Natalie and met the others. They seemed nice, didn't they? It's good that we've arranged to meet them again next week. It gives me something else to think about. Take our minds off things, hey, Jacob? You'll like Baby Music I reckon, won't you?' She bent her head to him and sniffed deeply. He needed changing. Jess knew she should have done it before feeding him, but his cries and the pain in her breasts had been too persistent to ignore. She knew that changing his nappy now would wake him, and that waking him would mean he'd be crying for hours. But she couldn't bear him to have nappy rash either. What if the health visitor saw that he had nappy rash?
âSorry, Jacob,' she whispered, carrying him into the nursery and laying him on the changing table. âI'll be quick.'
Jess had just about undone the poppers on Jacob's Babygro when she heard the front door click open. There was no call of hello. Lee had learnt from experience not to make any noise, on the off chance that his son and girlfriend might be sleeping. Carefully he pushed the front door to and eventually found his small family in the second bedroom.
âWhat's this?' Jess said, staring down at the baby, a frown drawing her eyebrows together.
âHello,' Lee whispered pleasantly. âIt's dead at work so I got off early. Good day?'
âLee, look at this â it's a rash,' Jess said, that familiar edge of panic beginning to sound in her voice.
Lee took a deep breath and looked at his son's tummy.
âLooks like a touch of heat rash,' he said. âHas he been in his sling or wrapped up too warm?'
âNo,' Jess said defensively. âHe hasn't and besides it's cold outside. What
is
it?' She picked up Jacob, who wriggled and began to whimper as his last chances of remaining asleep gradually faded away. Jess rested her palm on his forehead.
âAnd he's hot,' she said. âFeel him â don't you think he's hot?'
Lee touched his lips to the baby's forehead. His mum had told him that lips were far more sensitive to body heat than hands and fingers, which were always a bit colder than the rest of the body. Jacob's forehead felt normal to him.
âHe's fine,' Lee tried to reassure Jess.
âIs it meningitis?' Jess asked him, panic colouring her voice. âIt might be meningitis. We went on the bus, there was this woman coughing and sneezing . . . Get a glass from the kitchen. Is it supposed to disappear or stay visible? I can't remember â Lee!'
âIt's not meningitis,' Lee said firmly, putting his arms around both Jacob and Jess. âHe'd got a bit of a rash, from being so bundled up. He's fine, look at him!' He laughed with sheer joy as he held his amazingly beautiful boy in his arms. âJust look at him, Jess!' he pleaded. âHe's pissed off, but he's fine. He's got a touch of heat rash. It's nothing to worry about.'
And suddenly Jess's fear subsided and she knew that Lee was right, of course he was right. Jacob
had
had heat rash before. She knew exactly what it looked like. It looked like that.
âI'm sorry,' she said, her shoulders collapsing as she let go of her anxiety. âI just â'
âWorry.' Lee finished her sentence for her. âI know you do, but you don't have to. Nothing is going to happen to Jacob.'
Jess let his words sink in for a moment, but still they seemed to have no meaning.
âWhat do you want for tea?' she said wearily.
âWhy don't you have a bath,' Lee suggested. âRelax for a while and unwind. I'll settle him and order a takeaway later.'