I
I can remember the last day of my old life as vividly as if it was yesterday. It began with my hand slamming down to silence the jarring, banshee wail from the alarm clock as it tore me from a deep, dreamless sleep. I lay staring at the ceiling, half awake and in a state of disbelief and feeling as though I had been cheated, I had just closed my eyes the previous night only to have found myself here an instant later. I wanted nothing more than to roll over and drift off back to sleep, cocooned in the warmth of the duvet.
It was four thirty in the morning and still pitch black outside, save for the nearby street lamp that bathed the whole room in a sickly orange hue. I could see my breath in the chilly bedroom as I reluctantly got up, shivering as I pulled on my robe. As I walked towards the door, the husk of the woman I married stirred and groped lethargically at the bedside table for her cigarettes.
By the time I had showered and dressed she was already downstairs, sitting at the kitchen table in her worn, grimy robe, smoking what was probably by now her third cigarette. A cup of black, instant coffee sat in front of her, next to the overflowing ashtray and last night's empty wine bottles. Her hair looked dishevelled and lank, her eyes sunken and ringed with darkness, their gaze fixed at some impossible distance as she alternated between long pulls on the cigarette and sips of coffee.
For all I knew I could have died in the night and returned as a ghost, an unseen revenant haunting my own house. I seemed invisible to her as I made breakfast and gathered up the paraphernalia I needed for my working day. Out of habit I placed a kiss on her cheek as I set a plate of breakfast in front of her and she recoiled a little, momentarily shocked out of whatever deep contemplation she was lost in, before returning to her trance like state. I left the house without a word spoken between us.
My frozen breath hung heavy on the air and there was not a single light on in any other house on the street. I shivered as I scraped the thick layer of frost from my car windscreen, my thin suit jacket doing almost nothing to shield me from the bitter chill of the early November morning. I climbed into the car and turned the ignition key with numbed fingers. I glanced at my phone to check my email, my in-box was already filled with a cacophony of corporate bullshit. I tossed the phone contemptuously onto the passenger seat and set off on my way to the office, a two hour commute into London.
I took the exact same route to work every morning as if on autopilot, driving along that seemingly endless motorway like a box on a conveyor belt, seldom able to remember anything of the journey itself once I arrived. This particular morning was different though, I could see the blue lights of the police cars from almost a mile away as I approached the motorway. There had been some kind of incident during the night and the road was closed. I swore under my breath and pulled over and fumbled wearily around in the glove compartment for my sat-nav to plan an alternative route.
I sent a quick email to the office to warn them that I would be late and I set off on my way again, submissively following the new route laid out for me. After driving for a short while I realised that this change of direction would take me almost right through the town where I was born and spent the early part of my life, so I planned a further diversion so I could drive past the house I grew up in, I was going to be late anyway so what difference would a few more minutes make.
I soon found myself driving through familiar streets, past the houses of my childhood friends and the school I attended. I slowed down as I drove by the old corner shop where I had my first Saturday job, but it had long since been converted into a house. I spotted the bus stop on the corner of my old street, the place where I experienced my first awkward, fumbling kiss and I turned the car in.
I pulled up opposite the house and killed the engine, leaving just the radio quietly playing on some oldies channel that I didn't even remember tuning to. I hadn't been back here since the day of my Father's funeral, some ten years ago now, but it still looked much as I remembered it, a typical red brick 1920's semi-detached house with a small, tidy garden at the front. I had so many happy memories here and seeing the place again was bringing them flooding back, it was like suddenly travelling backwards in time.
I could almost see our old Morris Traveller parked in the drive, my sister and I restless with excitement on the back seat and my mother in the front, waiting patiently for my father to finish his final patrol of the house, making sure everything was switched off and locked up so we could get on our way to the coast for our summer holiday. Just for a moment I was ten years old again, The sun streamed through the windows carrying the promise of a perfect summer's day and I could smell the faint odour of petrol that always lingered in the ancient car. My mother in her red headscarf, cassette player on her lap, turning around to ask us what music we wanted to hear before my Father got in the car and insisted on playing Neil Diamond for the whole four hour trip.
Those car journeys felt never ending to a child but I was always content. My Father would let me select a couple of his ancient, yellowing pulp Sci-fi novels to keep me company, and my ever present sketch pad would always be close to hand. When I wasn't immersed in the stories themselves, they would inspire me to spend countless hours drawing imagined futures. I was still young enough to have remained untainted by cynicism and disappointment so my sketches were optimistic renderings of an idealised vision what life would be like in the future. None of them bore the slightest resemblance to how my life is now and I felt a pang of sadness as I realised I had let that little boy down.
As I snapped back to the present I became aware that I had tears in my eyes. I took a minute to compose myself before starting the car and pulling away, stealing one final look at the house. I knew I could never relive or hope to recapture the sheer unconditional happiness of my childhood, but I also knew I could no longer carry on with my life as it was.
As I reached the top of the road, that was when the epiphany came, the single moment of clarity when I realised how futile my day to day life had become. I had been making myself ill just to barely maintain what I had, and what I had was a miserable life, all held together with chewing gum and string, a life given over solely to perpetuating its own sorry existence. I realised that I was now at a fork in the road, both literal and metaphorical, and I knew there was only one route I could possibly take.
II
It was late morning and I was already at the coast by the time I was missed. I had spent an hour or so walking around the small town, reacquainting myself with the place where I had spent so many happy summer days as a child. I found it largely unchanged and I welcomed the ghosts that seemed to be waiting for me everywhere I looked. The cold eventually got the better of me and I ended up in a small cafe at the end of the sea front near the harbour, nursing a coffee while I watched the ocean and contemplated my next move.
I had switched my phone to silent but I could feel it buzzing and jumping around in my pocket as the calls began to come in thick and fast. I didn't answer a single one. I took out the phone and flicked through my work emails and noted the almost total lack of concern as my manager and colleagues expressed their annoyance at my no-show and lack of communication. I also received a text message from my wife, just a single question mark. I replied to her that she shouldn't worry, I perfectly fine and I would talk to her later.
I steeled myself and took a few moments to compose an email to my manager, explaining that I was never coming back and telling him in no uncertain terms exactly where he could stick his job. I felt a little pang of anxiety as my thumb hovered over the send button because I knew this would be the point of no return, but I also knew that if I backed down now I would never forgive myself. I hit send and felt the weight of the world lift from my shoulders.