Hit and Run Maria Frankland (general ebook reader .txt) š
- Author: Maria Frankland
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On my way to the meeting, I find myself at the āspot.ā I donāt know how I have ended up here ā I hadnāt even planned to come this way. I slow down as I pass, realising that I canāt even recount the journey Iāve made so far. I keep doing this ā zoning out. Itās dangerous really. If I canāt recall my journey, I probably shouldnāt be on the road. I guess that Iām just trying to hold everything inside my head.
More bunches of flowers have been added to Robās roadside memorial. I have laid none and donāt feel inclined to. Not with everything that is coming to light. Somehow, I have to piece it together and try to reconcile everything with the husband I thought I knew. I donāt have time to stop and inspect the flowers. If you donāt get to the meeting on time, the door is closed. Theyāre strict on that.
We only know each other by first names here. When I first started coming, I worried I may be recognised, or know someone else. Thatās why I joined a group in Ilkley, rather than Otley. Still, itās not exactly a million miles away. There are one or two people who look familiar, but I canāt place them.
The heatwave has broken today, which Iām glad about. It was almost taunting me, the beautiful sunshine, clear blue sky and cheery people dressed in summery clothes. Itās been too much at odds with my own darkness and my struggle to keep putting one foot in front of the other.
āWould you like a hug?ā My sponsor approaches me as I make myself a drink. The familiar warmth pricks at my eyes again as I allow myself to be momentarily enveloped in the warmth of another human being. Lately, even Jackās not as cuddly as he normally is, seemingly preferring the company of his granddad. Somewhere in my psyche though, Iām aware heās detaching from me, perhaps because he fears losing me as well.
Nobody here seems to know anything about what has happened to me this week. I guess that even if theyāve heard the news, they wonāt make the connection with me as they will have only heard Robās name. They only know me as Fiona, a recovering alcoholic, not Fiona Matherson, wife, mother, daughter, and woman.
We all sit down, and the usual introductions pass around the circle. I want to scream out, how can you all be so trivial? Do you want to know whatās happening to me? Iāve got a lid on my temper these days though, so I keep schtum, I used to lose it readily when I was in my twenties. Iāve lost count of how many jobs I walked out of and how many arguments, to the point of brawling at times, that I got into when drunk. Iām relieved Iām not that person anymore.
We chant AAās cornerstone twelve steps, church-like. At each meeting, a member takes a turn to be the main sharer about an aspect of their recovery from alcoholism. Weāre not allowed to interrupt, but we can add comments or ask questions once theyāve finished speaking.
I sit through a rendition of the manās three instances of being banned for drink driving. He stopped drinking on the third occasion, after knocking down and killing a pedestrian. It really is close to the bone right now. He had been three times over the limit and served nearly two years in prison. Heās found God since being released, he says, and subsequently has to be reminded by this weekās chairperson that Alcoholics Anonymous is not affiliated with any religion.
I look around the room. Everyone appears to be listening intently. My sponsor keeps looking at me. Sheās the only one in here who knows what has happened. Thereās a strong stench of feet combined with an overpowering deodorant smell. Cloth is draped over boxes of toys and musical instruments, and the AAās posters have been temporarily pinned up around the room. All is normal and familiar in here. Except itās not.
The manās voice drones on. Heās had his driving licence returned this week and knows he will never lose it again. Heās thankful for what the period of sobriety in prison, along with AA, has done for him. Itās all about him. I want to shout at him. What about your victim? What about their family? I wonder if they, too, have been left with empty bank accounts, and secrets which are crawling out of the ashes of the person who died. I canāt sit in here, I really canāt. I push my chair back with a scrape and lurch towards the door.
āFiona!ā I hear my sponsor call as I slide into the car. āCome back.ā
My wheels screech as I reverse the Jeep, and again as I lurch forwards. I drive away from her then pull up in the road once Iāve got far enough away. I donāt want to talk to anyone.
āBastard!ā I shout into the void of the car. āBastard! Bastard! Bastard!ā I thump the steering wheel in time to my shouting until my fists feel as though they might bleed. I donāt know who is the bastard. Rob, the AA man, Bryony, Mum, James Turner, Phillip Bracken, or the bloody lot of them. āBastard.ā I thump the wheel, less enthusiastically this time, and my body dissolves into tears. I cradle the steering wheel in my arms and let my head rest on it, sobbing so hard that my body shakes. āBastard!ā I howl into the silence.
āAre you alright?ā I hear a muffled voice from the pavement and a tap on the passenger side window of the Jeep. Without looking at the man, I turn the key and quickly drive away, tyres screeching again.
* * *
Iām in the clear,
Iām sure of
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