HOLLIE HOPKIRK:
DAWN WITHEY:
Dawn settled down on the other end of the sofa. She’d thought so much about this conversation, written her own versions of it over and over in her mind, built it all up, ripped it all down. Prepared for the worst yet remained so, so hopeful. But now here it was, here they were, and all of that was gone. Her stream had finally hit a dam, all that trickled through was focused on Hollie.
“Of course –” her words came out at the same time as Pandora’s, and it caused a soft smile to cross her features. More hope. She doubted a lot of things these days, but she’d never doubted this. She picked up her own cup of tea now, ready to listen, ready to be there.
·
.
“This, this, um, this alcohol thing is– Oh, she’s a real tricky bitch.” A laugh released from her throat. She began to laugh until her throat went dry. “The deep shit I’ve gotten myself into so carelessly… I think I’ve ruined a family.” Hers, this one on Holyhead, or the poor, poor Parkinsons – she’d have to be more specific. “I’d been sleeping with my boss, you know, the man I was nannying for. That’s over, but it’s not over. I don’t know that I’ve even faced those repercussions, there are so many to face, but his wife knows, his daughter. But I’m not drinking anymore. I don’t know, doesn’t that sound so pale in comparison? I’ve home-wrecked a real family, written off my own family and friends. Written off myself. But hey, I’m not drinking alcohol.”
Hollie relieved the ache of her heart with a deep, warm sip of familiar tea. Dawn had always prepared it just as she needed, definitely with a spoonful of love that calmed Hollie to the core. It would do no good to shame herself in these times, even as ashamed as she felt. Even if was blanketed around her frame like a cocoon that would not easily free her. With a sense of courage that she had to dig beyond the surface for, she raised her line of vision and kept eye contact with her best friends. They’d understand or they’d help. Neither was doubted any longer.
“I’ve been so horrible, but I don’t want to be anymore,” she left it at that, somehow revealing her soul without a single tear. “I think I have it in me to become better than I was, if you’ll both have me, that is. I’m going to need you two more than you know.”
·
Pandora could feel the tears well up in her own eyes — but she would not cry. Not when Hollie wasn’t. She couldn’t reframe this conversation to centre around her. Instead she swallowed hard and reached for her friends’ hands — not taking, just extending her own so they knew what she silently asked.
“You’re not horrible,” Pandora said quietly. “No one who’s really, truly horrible could want to be better. And—” her voice gave way, against her will “—and of course I’ll always have you, Hol. And you’ll always have me. And I’m so proud of you, about the drinking.”
@dawnwitheyy















