Didnt Let the Daughter Cross the Threshold
– Why didnt you let her in? I finally asked my mum a question that had been tearing at me all day. You always used to let her in before
Mum gave a bitter little smile.
– Because Im afraid for you, Alice. Do you think we dont notice how you shrink into the corner every time your sister bursts in at all hours of the night? How you hide your textbooks so she doesnt ruin them? She looks at you and gets angry. Angry because youre normal. You have a future ahead of you hers drowned in a bottle ages ago.
I hunched my head over my open book, just as an argument flared up again next door.
Dad hadnt even taken off his coat yet. He was standing in the hall gripping his mobile, shouting.
– Dont try your lies on me! he roared down the line. Two weeks, Mary! Two weeks since you got paid, and wheres it all gone?
Mum, Janet, poked her head around the kitchen door. After a moment of listening to Dads tirade she asked:
– Again?
Brian just waved his hand in the air and turned the speakerphone on. On the other end, the sobs began.
My older sister Mary had a way with tears she could wring pity from a stone. But our parents, after so many years, had grown a thick skin.
– What do you mean, hes thrown you out? Brian started pacing the narrow hallway. Too right he has! Who would put up with this never-ending drunken mess? When was the last time you looked at yourself? Youre thirty and your face looks like youve lost a dog.
Carefully, I edged my bedroom door open just a crack.
– Dad, please The crying suddenly stopped. Hes put my things out in the stairwell. Ive nowhere to go. Its cold and raining. Please, can I come back? Just for a couple of nights. I only need to sleep.
Mum jerked forward, wanting to grab the phone, but Dad turned away sharply.
– No! he said flatly. Youre not coming in. We settled this last time. After you pawned the telly while we were at the cottage the doors shut to you!
– Mum! Mum, tell him! Marys wails came through the phone.
Janet covered her face in her hands and her shoulders shook.
– Mary, how could you she said, voice dull, not even looking at Dad. We took you to the doctors. You promised. That last treatment was meant to last three years, they said. You didnt even make a month!
– Those treatments are useless! Mary snapped back, her sobbing instantly turning to anger. They just want your money! I feel awful, you know? Like Im burning up from the inside! But youre going on about the telly… Hes welcome to it! Ill buy you a new one!
– With what money? Brian suddenly stopped and stared at a spot on the wall. With what, after youve blown the lot? More loans from your mates? Or did you steal something else from that boyfriend of yours?
– Doesnt matter! Mary shouted. Dad, Ive got nowhere to live! Do you want me sleeping under a bridge?
– Go to a council shelter. Go wherever you like, Dads voice was chillingly calm. Youre not coming here. Ill change the locks if I see you near the house.
I sat on my bed, knees hugged to my chest.
Usually, when my sister pushed my parents to breaking point like this, the anger ricocheted off me.
– Why are you just sitting about? On your phone again? Youll end up just like your sister, a waste of space! Those words, spat over the last three years.
But tonight, no one even noticed me.
No shouting, no snapping. Dad hung up, took off his coat, and both parents drifted to the kitchen.
I emerged cautiously into the hallway.
– Brian, you cant Mum was saying, voice shaking. Shell be ruined, completely lost. You know what shes like when shes like that.
Shes out of control.
– And Im meant to control her? Dad slammed a kettle on the hob. Im fifty-five, Janet. All I want is to sit in peace in my armchair after work. Not hide my wallet under the pillow! Not listen to the neighbours complain about her hanging around the stairwell with all sorts and mouthing off!
– Shes our daughter, Mum said, almost whispering.
– She was our daughter till she was twenty. Now, shes just sucking the life out of us. Shes a hopeless case, Janet. You cant fix someone who doesnt want to be fixed. She likes living this way: wakes up, finds her bottle, glugs it down, and forgets about everything.
The phone rang again.
They both went very quiet. Then Dad answered.
– Yes?
– Dad Mary again. Im sitting at the train station. The police are making rounds. Ill get picked up if I stay.
Please
– Listen carefully, Dad cut her off. You are not coming home. Thats final.
– So what then? You want me to top myself? Marys voice turned hard. Is that it? Want the coroner to call you up from the morgue?
I froze. This was the card Mary always played when every other argument failed.
It used to work. Mum would break down sobbing, Dad would clutch at his chest, and theyd send her money, let her stay, feed and clean her up.
Tonight, though, Dad wasnt having it.
– Dont threaten, he said quietly. You love yourself too much for that. This is what will happen.
– What? There was a glimmer of hope in Marys tone.
– Ill find you a room. Cheapest I can manage, on the outskirts. Ill pay a months rent. Give you some money for groceries. Thats it. After that, youre on your own. Get a job, get your act together, youll be alright. If not youll be out on the street, and I wont care.
– Just a room? Not a flat? Dad, I cant live alone. Im scared And who knows who the neighbours are. How am I meant to rent with nothing? He kept all my bedding!
– Your mumll pack some sheets in a bag, leave it with the concierge. Collect it yourself. Youre not coming in, I warned you.
– Youre monsters! Mary screamed. Your own daughter, cast out like a rat! Youve a three-bed house and you want me to scuttle in some hole!
Mum snapped and grabbed the phone.
– Mary, thats enough! she shouted so loud I flinched. Your fathers right. This is your one and only chance. Take the room or take the street. Decide now tomorrow, even the room will be gone!
Silence from the other end.
– Fine, Mary mumbled at last. Send me the address. And can you transfer some money? Im starving.
– No money, Dad replied, and his voice was steel. Ill buy you food and leave it with the bedding. I know what food youll spend money on.
He hung up.
I figured it was time to move. I wandered into the kitchen, pretending I only wanted a glass of water.
Most times, this is when Id get the brunt of everything built up; Dad would look at my sleep shirt and call me a slob. Mum would say I didnt care that with all theyre going through, I just drifted about like nothings wrong.
Tonight, they didnt even look my way.
– Alice, Mum called gently.
– Yeah, Mum?
– In the top of the wardrobe the old sheets and pillowcases. Put them in that blue holdall in the cupboard, would you?
– Alright, Mum.
I set to it, shaking out the dusty bag, folding all the tired linen.
I couldnt understand how Mary was supposed to manage on her own. She couldnt even boil pasta. And that habit of hers
I knew she wouldnt last two days without drink.
Back in their room, I clambered onto a stool, reaching for the towels.
– Dont forget towels! Dad called.
– Already packed them, I said.
I watched as Dad pulled on his shoes and left with barely a word, off most likely to find that hole for Mary.
I walked into the kitchen. Mum sat as she had been, unmoving.
– Mum, do you want a tablet or something? I asked quietly, stepping closer.
She looked up, eyes tired.
– You know, Alice she began, voice oddly flat. When she was little, I thought shed be my help. That wed talk about everything. Now now I just hope she can remember the address of that room. I just hope she makes it there
– Shell manage, I said, perching at the edge of the chair. She always finds a way.
– Not this time, Mum shook her head. Her eyes are different now. Empty. Like theres nothing left inside but the craving.
She paused. I see the way youre frightened of her
I was silent. Id always thought they never noticed how scared I was, always so busy trying to save lost cause Mary.
– I thought you didnt care about me, I whispered.
Mum stroked my hair.
– We care, but weve got nothing left. Like on a plane fit your own mask first, then the childs. We tried for ten years to fix her. Ten years, Alice. We tried therapy, treatment, folk healers, expensive clinics. In the end nearly suffocated ourselves.
A buzz at the door. I jumped.
– Is it her? I asked.
– No, your dads got the only spare keys. Food delivery, maybe. He ordered groceries.
I answered the door. The delivery driver handed me two heavy bags.
I unpacked them in the kitchen: oats, tinned soup, oil, tea, sugar. No treats.
– She wont eat this, I said, putting the buckwheat to the side. She only wants ready meals.
– Shell cook if she wants to live, Mum replied sharply. For a moment, her old spirit flared. No more coddling. Our pity will kill her.
An hour later, Dad was back, looking as if hed worked a triple shift.
– Sorted, he told us. Got the keys. Landladys a strict old schoolteacher. Said one whiff or hint of trouble and out she goes. I told her, Just throw her out.
– Brian Mum sighed.
– No point lying to people. Let her know what shes in for.
He grabbed the packed bag and groceries and headed for the door.
– Ill leave everything with the concierge. Ill ring Mary and tell her where. And Alice lock the door, all the locks. If the landline rings, dont answer.
He left, and Mum collapsed in the kitchen, sobbing.
My heart ached. How had it come to this? Mary wasnt living just barely existing between binges, and dragging my parents down with her
***
My parents hopes didnt last the week. A call from the landlady Mary had let three strange men into her room and partied til dawn. The police sent her packing.
Even then, Mum and Dad couldnt leave her on the streets. Mary was sent off to a rehab centre strict, high security, a years treatment promised for hopeless cases.
Who knows, maybe this time a miracle really will happen
Diary reflection:
Its a strange thing, feeling both relief and guilt. Tonight I realised my parents always did care, even when it felt like theyd forgotten I existed. Their strength finally broke and maybe now, finally, with everyones boundaries set, we might all learn how to live for ourselves, even in the shadows of someone elses storm.












