The old lady looked confused. She adjusted her glasses as if that would help her hear better.
 
 ‘Able to what, dear?’
 
 ‘Confirm his whereabouts,’ I clarified over the thud of my tell-tale heart.
 
 She patted my arm. Her nails were painted coral pink, her skin was warm. She wore antique rings, Yardley’s Lavender.
 
 Funny the way memory works. I can remember everything about her, the stuffy central heating, the smell of dust burning on the lights. But nothing of what I said next. Only the fire in my stomach, the nausea welling in my throat.
 
 ‘I couldn’t say. Frankly when you get to my age. . .’ She trailed off, looked momentarily concerned. ‘I told them what a wonderful young man he is, though. Always so polite and helpful, bless his heart. Such a hard worker too, the hours he puts in at that crisis centre. I hope his boss appreciates him.’
 
 ‘Did you tell them that?’ my mother asked.
 
 ‘Tell them what?’
 
 ‘About Matty working late.’
 
 ‘Oh dear, no, I didn’t. Do you think I should have?’
 
 ‘No. I don’t think so.’
 
 But she didn’t sound sure.
 
 ‘Do you believe that?’ I asked my mother, once we were in the Volvo on our way home, my heart doing a tap dance inside my chest.
 
 ‘Believe what?’
 
 ‘That it was a routine visit.’
 
 She sighed, a heaviness in it.
 
 ‘Honestly, I don’t know what to believe any more.’
 
 We spent the rest of the journey in silence. Me staring out of the window, her staring resolutely ahead.
 
 Later that evening, a deliveryman turned up with a huge bunch of flowers. Twenty-four long-stemmed roses and a card with a picture of a teddy bear holding a heart. On the back, a message from Matty:
 
 You give life meaning. M x
 
 My mother dumped them on the kitchen counter, left them in their wrapping.
 
 By the next morning, the petals had started to brown.