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The Patchwork Marriage

Information about the book

Chapter One  

 The sheets are drenched. Again. Andi takes a long time to wake 
up, drifting in and out, aware she is hot, then freezing, then 
fi nally, when she moves into a state of  consciousness, wet. 
 Opening an eye she looks at the clock:  4 . 02  a.m. It’s always 
four in the morning, these nights when she awakes, when she 
cannot get back to sleep. She turns her head to see Ethan, his 
back to her, his body rising and falling in deep sleep. 
 Lucky. 
 In the bathroom she pulls the wet T-shirt of , slides the  PJ  
bottoms down, and pads naked into the closet, pulling a dry 
T-shirt and boxer shorts of  the shelf. But that leaves the 
sheets. Warm and wet. 
 The linen closet is in the hall, at the other end of  the 
 corridor, where the girls’ bedrooms are. Andi knows she 
shouldn’t open the door, shouldn’t check up, but she is being 
a mother, she tells herself. This is what mothers do. A stepmother may not have the same rights, but she is trying, has 
tried so hard to turn this into a proper family, and that 
includes treating the girls as if  they were her own. 
 How she wishes she had children of  her own. Still. Even 
though she is in her early forties, on a good day she could 
surely pass for thirty-six. 
 Every month she keeps her fi ngers crossed that this may 
be the month, this may be the month a miracle happens. 
Every month she swallows her disappointment, and hopes 
for the next time. 
 She gently pushes Sophia’s door open to see Sophia fast
asleep, her bald teddy bear that she cannot sleep without 
now lying on its side, on the floor next to her bed, Sophia’s 
hand curled out towards it, as if  she is waiting for the bear to 
jump back in. Andi stands in the doorway and smiles, feeling 
a wave of  love for her stepdaughter. Her daughter. And 
Sophia  is  her daughter. 
 She was seven when Andi and Ethan met, and she fell in 
love with Andi instantly. Sophia now tells people she has two 
mothers; there is no differentiation in her head between Andi 
and her real mother. 
 On that first family date they went into the city, to Dim 
Sum in Chinatown, then walked down to the ferry and took it 
out to see the sea lions around the bay. Sophia grabbed Andi’s 
hand, skipped alongside her, and when they sat down for ice 
cream she climbed on Andi’s lap and leaned into her, like a 
much younger child, while Andi stroked her hair, thrilled. 
 Emily, on the other hand, at twelve, sulked the entire day. 
She squinted evil eyes at Andi, and when Andi attempted to 
engage her, asking her questions about school, hoping to 
share some of  her own stories about going to school in New 
York in a bid to bond, Emily just grunted. 
 ‘What is she?’ she sneered at her father at one point, with 
a savage gesture towards Andi. ‘Your  girlfriend   ?’ 
 ‘She’s my friend,’ Ethan said. ‘That’s all.’ Which wasn’t true. 
They had, by that time, been sleeping together for seven weeks. 
 On their fi rst date, Ethan talked about his children nonstop, which, as far as Andi was concerned, was an unexpected 
bonus. 
 They met through match.com, a continual embarrassment 
to Andi, but where else did anyone go to meet people? 
 She had done a series of  evening classes, ones with what 
she thought was a masculine bent: Fundamentals of  Investing; Estate Planning  101  and Beginner’s Best Barbecue (which 
was a dud. What red-blooded American man, she thought, as 
she sat in an empty classroom, would admit to not being able 
to barbecue?). 
 None produced so much as a date. There were, admittedly, random times she would meet men, or be flirted with 
in a coffee shop, but they never led to anything permanent. 
 At thirty-seven she realized, with a shock, she had to 
be pro-active. Sitting back and assuming, as she always had, 
that she would be married with a large group of  smiling kids, 
wasn’t the natural order of  her life, and unless she took the 
bull by the horns, she was going to find herself  single, possibly – frighteningly – for the rest of  her life. 
 It wasn’t as if  her life wasn’t full. Her twenties were spent 
working in interior design with a small store. As she approached thirty, her mother suggested she get a real-estate 
licence, which she did. And although Andi enjoyed selling 
houses it was making suggestions to the homeowners about 
what they could  do  to their houses in order to sell that was 
her true passion. 
 Andi loved design. Saw how the addition of  new rugs, 
curtain panels, or moving furniture around could transform 
a home. She started offering her services as a ‘home stager’ – 
someone who would come in and beautify the interiors, for 
minimum cost, in order to sell. Soon she had a warehouse 
filled with furniture she would rent out to her clients, and 
reams of  fabrics from which she could have curtains, or pillows, or bedspreads quickly made. 
 It wasn’t long before it was her primary business. 
 Her mother got sick after that. Breast cancer. She fought 
hard, and won a temporary reprieve. She assured Andi that 
moving to California with Brent, the man Andi thought she 
would marry, was absolutely the right thing to do.
Even when the cancer returned, spreading to her bones, 
then finally her liver and lungs, her mother insisted that Andi 
stayed in California. She knew that Andi had found a peace 
on the West Coast she had never found at home. 
 It was true that within a week of  landing in San Francisco, 
despite having spent her entire life on the East Coast, Andi 
knew that at heart she had always been a West Coast girl 
through and through. 
 The sunshine! The warmth! How laid-back everyone was! 
San Francisco! The Pacific Coast Highway! The Redwood 
Forests! The wine country! Andi couldn’t help exclaiming 
with pleasure about everything she came across, and the list 
was endless. 
 Brent married someone else (the woman he had started 
sleeping with almost as soon as he began his new job in San 
Francisco, in fact), and Andi stayed, staging homes all over 
the East Bay. 
 Match.com was fun for a while, and then disheartening. 
When preparing for a date she was always terrified they 
wouldn’t like her, that somehow, although she was blonde 
and green-eyed and girl-next-door-ish, they would be disappointed. 
 All of  them wanted to see her again, and she rarely wanted 
to see them. Until Ethan. He seduced her with his open face, 
his wide smile, his easy charm. They had met for drinks, 
which had become dinner, and when he left to go to the 
bathroom Andi had watched him walk through the restaurant with a smile on her face. He has a great butt, she found 
herself  thinking, with shock. 
 He had been divorced for three years. His little one, 
Sophia, seven, was great, he said, but Emily was harder. His 
eyes had welled up as he talked about Emily, about how much 
he loved his firstborn, how difficult this had been for her, and how he would do anything,  anything , to bring her some 
happiness. 
 I will help you, Andi had thought, her heart spilling over 
for this sensitive, kind, loving man. One date led to two, led 
to them sleeping together, led to Andi realizing, very quickly, 
that for the fi rst time in years she could see herself  spending 
the rest of  her life with a man. With  this  man. 
 She could see herself  building a proper life with him, having children with him. 
 Ethan was clever and creative and hard-working. He was 
supposed to be a banker, he told her, soon after they met. Or 
run a large executive corporation. He was supposed to do 
something that would make his parents proud, not start a 
landscape business in college – merely to pay of  his loan – 
that became so successful, so fast, he decided to devote 
himself  to growing it once he had graduated. 
 He started mowing lawns himself, with the help of  a couple of  low-paid assistants, Carlos and Jorge, who had recently 
made the arduous trek from Mexico. 
 ‘I was a clean-cut college kid with good ideas,’ he dismissed Andi when she said how talented he must have been. 
‘And I was willing to work hard. That was all. I’d show up 
with some men to mow a lawn, and start chatting with the 
homeowner, asking the wives if  they’d ever thought of  planting a lavender bed next to the path, or the husbands if  they’d 
ever considered a built-in barbecue, or fi repit.’ 
 ‘I bet they always said yes.’ Andi’s eyes sparkled in amusement. 
 Ethan just grinned. 
 He took on a mason, and by the time he graduated from 
Berkeley, he had four full-time crews working for him. 
 When he met Andi he had six. Now he has ten, plus a 
thriving landscape-design business.
Andi couldn’t have imagined a more perfect man for herself  had she tried. 
 He cooked her dinner at his house in Mill Valley, and during 
the appetizers Andi silently redesigned the whole place. She 
would remove the  1950 s windows and replace them with 
French doors, spilling out to a gravel terrace with olive trees 
and lavender. 
 The kitchen wall would come down, opening it up into 
one great big kitchen/family room, a place where kids would 
be happy. It would have a giant island with a host of  kids 
lined up on stools, tucking into pancakes she would be happily fl ipping as the children laughed. 
 The kids would be, she thought, a great combination of  
the two of  them. Would three children be too much to ask 
for? Five in total? She shuddered at the thought and reduced 
it down to two. A boy and a girl. The boy dark, like Ethan, 
and the girl a towhead, much as she had been. 
 She tuned Ethan out for a while, so caught up in the fantasy, so convinced this would be her future that she couldn’t 
think of  anything other than how to create the house she 
had always wanted, for the family she would now have. 
 Coming back to earth she noticed there were photographs 
all over the house. Ethan and his girls, all of  them laughing. 
Gorgeous girls, dark-haired, dark-eyed, who clearly adored 
their father. Andi picked one up, of  Emily hanging round her 
father’s neck with a huge grin, at around seven or eight years 
old. 
 Dii  cult? Andi looked into the laughing eyes of  the girl in 
the picture. No. She just needs love. She needs the security 
of  a loving family, of  a brother and sisters, of  a stepmother 
who will love her. 
 Ethan didn’t talk much about his ex-wife, which Andi liked, 
not being the sort of  woman who needed to know everything. He said that his ex was damaged and cold. That he 
realized he couldn’t carry on without af ection, with the constant negative sniping. That he felt he might die if  he stayed. 
 ‘How about the girls?’ Andi asked. ‘How is she with them?’ 
 Ethan’s eyes clouded over with sadness. ‘Distant,’ he said. 
‘And disinterested, although she would never admit it. She 
prides herself  on not having a babysitter, on being there for 
her kids, but when she’s not at work she’s out with her drinking buddies.’ 
 ‘She drinks?’ 
 Ethan nodded. 
 ‘You didn’t go for sole custody?’ 
 ‘I wanted to,’ he said. ‘I tried. But she cleaned up her act 
for a while, and I agreed to joint. The girls want to be with 
me all the time, but she won’t let them. She’ll scream at them 
and guilt them into staying, even if  she’s going out.’ 
 ‘You can’t do anything?’ Andi was horrifi ed. 
 He shrugged. ‘I’m doing the best I can. I’m trying to provide a loving, stable home for them, and they know they are 
welcome here all the time. Soon they’ll reach an age when 
Janice won’t be able to control them, and if  they want to stay 
here she won’t be able to stop them.’ 
 They need love, Andi thought. Love and care and a happy 
family. And I will make them happy. I will create the home 
they have always wanted. I will create the perfect family. 
 Even when Emily was rude and dii  cult and squinty-eyed at 
that fi rst meeting Andi knew she could get through to her. 
 Children loved Andi. It helped that she looked vaguely 
like a fairy-tale princess, or at least had the correct-coloured 
hair and eyes. She was fun, bubbly, cool, and kids had always 
gravitated towards her.
But Andi loved children more. As a little girl she couldn’t 
wait to be a mother, couldn’t wait to have a family of  her own; 
she wanted to fi ll the house with kids. Ethan already having 
two children of  his own was a bonus, and when he said, initially, he would have more children that was better still. 
 On their next family date, Ethan made the mistake of  
quietly taking Andi’s hand as they meandered side by side, 
the girls in front of  them, Emily scui  ng the pavement as 
she walked, hunched over to hide the changes puberty was 
bringing her. 
 Emily turned around briefl y and saw them holding hands. 
Ethan dropped Andi’s hand like a hot stone, but Emily came 
whirling back and literally, physically, shoved Andi aside and 
grabbed her father’s hand. 
 Andi, shocked, waited for Ethan to say something, but he 
merely looked adoringly at his daughter and gave a resigned 
smile to Andi. 
 Other times there were tantrums. Many of  them. Emily 
would explode in anger, with a rage that left Andi shaking in 
fear and bewilderment. 
 ‘I hate her,’ she would hear Emily scream. ‘She’s ruined 
our life. Why? Why, Daddy? Why, Daddy? Why, Daddy? 
Whhhhhhhhyyyyyy?’ Her voice would become a plaintive 
moan, rising to shrieks and wails. ‘If  she stays, I’m going,’ 
she would shout. 
 Ethan, panicky and guilty at his child being in pain, would 
sit and talk her through, while Andi sat alone in bed, quaking, 
wondering why no one stood up to this child, no one stated 
that this behaviour was unacceptable; and then she understood. 
 Ethan was as scared of  the screaming as she was. 
 Emily had all the power. 
 And yet . . . and yet. Amidst the tantrums, the screaming,
the slamming doors, the tumult of  those first years, were 
moments of  glory. Moments when Emily would come and 
sit next to Andi on the sofa, and lean her head on her shoulder; when Andi would feel herself  overcome with love to the 
point of  crying. 
 Moments when Emily knocked gently on the door of  
their bedroom and asked to snuggle. Ethan would be in the 
shower and she and Andi would watch funny animal videos 
on YouTube, and giggle together, tucked up in bed. 
 Andi would take the girls shopping, and buy them anything they wanted, within reason. She spoiled them: American 
Girl dolls for Sophia, and cool teenage clothes for Emily. All 
Andi wanted was for them to be happy. 
 And children of  her own. 
 Ethan and Andi married three years ago, and stopped 
using protection on their wedding night. Ironically, that was 
the fi rst night Andi woke up drenched. 
 Her next period didn’t arrive, and she had never been late. 
Andi ran out to the pharmacy and came back with a pregnancy test, knowing the pink lines would indicate pregnancy. 
She peed on the stick with a huge smile on her face, staring 
at the stick in disbelief  when it came back negative. 
 Twenty-four sticks later, all negative, her period came. She 
looked at the blood and burst into tears, at a client’s house, in 
the small half-bathroom to one side of  the mud room. She 
hadn’t wanted to come out, and the client eventually knocked 
on the door and asked if  everything was okay. 
 It wasn’t. 
 They kept trying. Several months later Andi, who hated 
going to the doctor unless she thought she was truly dying, 
went to the doctor. The night sweats, she had decided, after 
spending an afternoon on the Internet on various medical 
websites, were cancer.
She wasn’t sure which kind, but she was sure it was cancer. 
Ever since her mother’s diagnosis, every ailment, every mole, 
every headache was something more. 
 It was the fear that always hung over Andi. A headache was 
never just a headache, it was a brain tumour. A stomach ache 
was pancreatic cancer, and so on. Except Andi never actually 
went to a doctor about it, using the Internet as her unofficial 
diagnostician instead. She would convince herself  she had 
something terrible, but would not go and see a doctor, and 
after a few days she would have forgotten about it entirely. 
 But these night sweats were bad. Usually whatever symptom she was worried about would go  away,  but this was 
happening more and more often. 
 ‘Will you just go to the doctor?’ Ethan finally said. ‘If  
nothing else it will put your mind at rest.’ 
 And so she did. 
 Dr Kurrish peered over her glasses at Andi, and asked a 
 series of  questions. Had her periods changed? Yes, Andi 
admitted. They either came every two weeks, or sometimes 
not for six, and when they did they were shockingly heavy. 
 How were her moods? Terrible, Andi told Dr Kurrish, but 
that was largely due to a stepdaughter who hated her most of  
the time, who had started coming home at night drunk at fifteen (although Andi didn’t actually tell the doctor that part), 
and to a husband who refused to do anything other than tell 
his daughter he understood her pain. 
 Any unusual changes in hair? Her hair had become thinner, she said, and, with embarrassment, admitted she had 
taken to plucking out a few stray whiskers on her chin. 
 ‘I think,’ Dr Kurrish said, ‘you are going through the perimenopause.’ 
 ‘Menopause!’ Andi exclaimed, louder than she intended.
 
‘But I’m only forty-one. I’m trying to have children. How am 
I going through the menopause?’ 
 ‘Not menopause,’ Dr Kurrish smiled. ‘Perimenopause – 
the period leading up to the menopause, and it can happen to 
women even in their thirties. It doesn’t mean you  can’t  get 
pregnant,’ she said gently, although the expression on her 
face told a different story, ‘but it’s unlikely. Your ovulation is 
much more erratic, and it becomes harder –’ 
 She stopped at that point, as Andi started to sob. 
 She and Ethan talked about  IVF , but the chances of  it being 
successful, given her age and the added bonus of  the perimenopause, were slim, and not worth the vast expense.
They talked about adoption, although vaguely. Ethan 
wasn’t a fan, and eventually he pointed out that they already 
had two children, that although Emily was dii  cult at times, 
Sophia loved and adored Andi, and perhaps . . . wouldn’t it 
be better . . . might she fi nd a way to be happy with the family she had, rather than the one she didn’t have? 
 She agreed to try to reconcile herself, still hoping that she 
would be one of  the lucky ones, that despite the advancing 
menopause it would still happen, but the hope was fading. 
She would lie awake in the middle of  the night, particularly 
those nights when she woke up cold and wet, feeling an 
empty hole in her heart. 
 They hadn’t used protection since their wedding, and yet 
every month brought disappointment. There were times she 
cried. She couldn’t stop herself  gazing longingly at the young 
mothers in town, their newborn babies cradled in slings 
around their chests, and feeling a physical pang of  loss. 
 She loves these girls, Sophia particularly, but the longing for 
a child hasn’t gone, and these nights, as she moves quietly.
around the house, looking in on the girls, she feels it more 
strongly than ever. 
 Andi moves quietly from Sophia’s room and stands for a 
while outside Emily’s. Emily is seventeen now. She drives. The 
tantrums have lessened, but there have been other problems. 
 Last month she had her car taken  away for a week, for 
coming home drunk. She hadn’t been driving, she had been 
a passenger that night, but still, there had to be a consequence. 
 ‘I hate you!’ she screamed, this time at her father. ‘You 
can’t tell me what to do! I’m almost eighteen! I’m an adult, 
not a fucking child!’ 
 ‘Don’t swear at me,’ Ethan said, sounding calm, although 
the muscle in his left cheek was twitching, always a giveaway. 
‘And I am your father. While you are living in this house, you 
will follow the house rules.’ 
 ‘Fuck you!’ she shouted, throwing the car keys at her 
father, who ducked, so they hit the door frame, leaving a 
small chip and a grey mark. Emily stormed out, while Ethan 
just sank down on the sofa, looking dazed. 
 ‘You can’t let her speak to you like that,’ hissed Andi, 
standing at the bottom of  the stairs with her arms crossed. 
‘It’s disgusting. I’ve never heard of  a child speaking to a 
 parent like that.’ 
 ‘What am I supposed to do?’ his voice rose in anger. 
‘You’re always telling me how to deal with my child, but you 
have no idea what it’s like.’ 
 There was an icy silence. 
 ‘What’s that supposed to mean?’ Andi asked slowly. Her 
voice cold. 
 ‘Nothing.’ He shook his head, burying his face in his 
hands. ‘I didn’t mean anything. I just mean I don’t know what 
else to do.’
‘You did the right thing,’ Andi said eventually, breathing 
through her anger, for she knew what he meant: she wasn’t a 
mother. She couldn’t understand. ‘You took the car away for 
a week. Now you have to stick to it.’ 
 Ethan nodded. ‘I know.’ 
 ‘Really,’ Andi warned. ‘When she comes to you tomorrow, 
crying and saying how sorry she is and she’ll never do it 
again, you can’t do what you did last time; you can’t give her 
the car back.’ 
 Ethan looked up at her sharply. ‘Last time? I’ve never done 
this before.’ 
 ‘No, but last time she was drunk you told her she couldn’t 
go to Michaela’s party, and when she apologized you said she 
could.’ 
 Ethan sighed. ‘I’m trying,’ he said finally. ‘I’m just doing 
the best I can.’ 
 The latest transgression resulted in a curfew being 
imposed. Midnight. This is for two weeks. Starting three days 
ago. 
 Some of  the times when Andi wakes up drenched she 
changes and goes straight back to sleep. Tonight is not one 
of  those nights. Back in bed she tosses and turns before 
sighing deeply and reaching over to click on the bedside light. 
 Next to her, Ethan moans slightly and stirs, but doesn’t 
wake up. 
 Damn. Her book is downstairs. 
 Reluctantly – but sleep is no longer an option, and what 
else will she do? – she climbs out of  bed again, padding out 
of  the bedroom to go downstairs. 
 The woven wool carpet is warm and comfortable, and she 
braces herself  for the cool wood floors outside their room, 
making yet another mental note to buy some slippers.
At the far end of  the hallway, Andi realizes she hadn’t 
noticed there is a light coming from Emily’s bedroom. 
Strange. Surely she should be asleep by now. Perhaps she has 
fallen asleep with the light on. Andi moves down the corridor and gently pushes the door open, shaking her head in 
dismay as she surveys the chaos. 
 Crumpled clothes are strewn all over the floor. A pyramid 
of  make-up, with a fine dusting of  face powder covering the 
carpet, lies by the mirror. The duvet on the bed is scrunched 
up, and it is hard to tell whether there is anyone in it until 
Andi, gingerly stepping over odd shoes, bowls half-fi lled 
with days-old encrusted food, draws closer. 
 The bed is empty. Emily is nowhere to be seen.