I left Molly at about ten o'clock on that Friday, but I was back before eight the next morning. I knew she was scared that Susan would make more trouble, or that Peter would start something now that Susan had failed.
So, we hung around together, and I began to realise how comfortable we had become with each other. I guessed we were beginning to get near to what I had wanted and hoped for, that we could become good friends.
I'd just finished watering Ralph's tomatoes and wandered back into the kitchen. Molly was leaning against the wall alongside the kitchen telephone, ashen faced. She looked at me, "It was her."
"Susan? What happened? What did she say."
"I was just putting the breakfast things into the dishwasher, and the phone rang. I picked it up without thinking. I answered with the number as I usually do, and she then said: Molly, I want you to know that I was extremely hurt with what you said last night..... And I put the phone down. I don't know what else she was going to say."
"You did exactly the right thing. Putting the phone down on her will get the message across that you meant it. Don't answer her if she calls."
I put my arm around her and gave her a hug. "Come on, let's have a cup of coffee."
We were just sitting in the kitchen, drinking our coffee and conjecturing as to what Susan's next move would be, when my phone started to vibrate in my pocket.
I looked at it, it was Carole calling me. "Hi, Carole, There's nothing wrong, I hope."
"Not at this end. But I was worried how things turned out last night."
"About as expected, I guess you'd say. Molly met with her mother and told her where to get off."
"Poor Molly, having to disown her own mother. It must be awful for her. But she did the right thing. Tell her that from me, please."
"You can tell her yourself, if you like. She's sitting right opposite me."
I looked up at Molly, "It's Carole; she'd like a word." And I passed the phone across.
Having said a tentative Hello, Molly was mainly quiet, just listening, with the occasional 'Yes' or 'It was' and a lot of 'Thank you's' until she eventually passed the phone back to me.
"It's me again, Carole."
"You know I believe shit happens. But no one deserves the amount of shit that's happening in Molly's life. You be kind to her, Chris. Otherwise you'll never forgive yourself."
"I'm trying."
"And I know that sometimes it isn't easy. You're in my prayers. Now I'll let you get on, and I'll see you on Monday."
I looked at Molly, "Carole is a nice lady; she's a sort of extra mum to me."
Molly smiled, "She is a nice lady. I'd met her, of course, but I don't really know her. But you can tell her from me, it really did help that an older woman told me that I'd done the right thing."
"Somehow I don't think I'll tell her that she's an older woman." I smiled.
She smiled back, more confidant this time, "I am OK. I can't imagine that Susan will try again. To be put down twice, last night and this morning, will be quite enough for her I'm sure." She paused, "Thank you. Last night I didn't know who else to call. I don't really have a right to call to call on you for my problems."
Now that was something that had never crossed my mind. Of course I was there for her in an emergency. But all I said was, "Well, I guess I'm not needed now, and we've both probably got lots to do."
She looked disappointed, but all she did was to say "Why don't you come round tomorrow evening. Ralph should be back by about seven o'clock, and I thought we'd wait for him and have a family meal.
So, on the Sunday I was back, in fact I just arrived after Ralph had returned. Molly said that he was upstairs having a shower, and that he'd be down soon, and that he seemed to have had a nice time.
"How is he?" I asked.
"Good, very good. But he really wanted to know if we were OK, and so I told him about Susan on Friday."
"So he knows all that. Good." I said.
Ralph was glowing, with both a suntan and excitement. He'd had a wonderful time, "You know I thought this holiday was going to be like taking medicine. It would be good for me, to see if I could do it without Susan. Hold my nose and swallow." He paused to look around the table, "Of course I missed her, but nowhere near as much as I expected. For the whole holiday I never had to dine alone, there was always someone or some couple that would invite me to join them. And there was a friendly crowd in the bar as well."
Molly beat me to the next question, "So what does that mean?"
"It means that I don't have to make a compromise that I would be ashamed of. That I don't have to share the rest of my life with someone who disgusts me. Tomorrow, I'll phone the solicitor and get things underway, and then I'll sit down and write to her. I don't want an unnecessary face to face, we've said all there is to be said."
Jamie looked up, "Are you going to divorce Nanny Susan, Grandpa?"
"Yes, Jamie, I am. I'm sorry. It means you won't be seeing her very much."
"That's OK. She had funny ideas, I didn't like them very much."
I was interested, "What ideas were those."
"Well, when you left us Dad, I cried, I was only little then of course. And Nanny Susan told me that I shouldn't cry, that I'd have a new daddy very soon. And I didn't like that, you were my Dad and I wanted you to come back."
I looked at Molly, who shrugged and looked mystified, "When was this?"
"It was one night when Mummy went to dinner with Peter, and Nanny Susan was with us. It was the first time Mummy had been out by herself; I remember that, 'cos I was worried about her. I didn't think she wanted to go, but Nanny Susan made her."
"Psalms 8:2" I muttered under my breath.
And Ralph said, "No, Matthew 21:16"
Which was followed by a friendly argument between myself and Ralph as to where 'out of the mouth of babes and sucklings' came from. And, after Jamie had fetched the Bible, we were both proved right, which was the best result for both of us. But then Ben, who was meant to be helping his mother serve, pulled my hand and led me to the kitchen, where Molly was meant to be collecting the pudding. She was in tears.
I looked at her and understood, "Of course they cried. Their home was broken. What was horrible was Susan using all her guile to break it."
"Yes, but it was them having to be old before their time. Jamie was four years old and he was worried about me." And a new wave of tears poured down her cheeks.
"I know. They never deserved this. There are no winners in this. We're all losers."
She looked at me, with anger in her eyes, "No, there were winners, Susan and Peter."
"But they're losers now. Everything comes full circle."
After that, for the next week, things were really good between myself and Molly. Our relationship was now fully back as a pair of parents, and as friends.
Ralph, on the other hand, had a rough week. On Thursday, Susan got her 'I'm going to divorce you' letter from Ralph, and apparently she was none too pleased. She phoned Ralph and told him that he had no right to divorce her, that she'd fight it all the way, followed by a one hour diatribe on all that was wrong with him as a husband. After that he refused to take her calls, and if he did answer her, it was only to tell her to let the solicitors deal with it.