Extract: The Herd by Emily Edwards

This entry was posted on 08 March 2022.

Elizabeth and Bryony are polar opposites, but they're the best of friends, and godmothers to each other's daughters – because they trust that the safety of their children is both of their top priority. Little do they know that they differ radically over one very important issue. And when Bryony, afraid of being judged, tells what is supposed to be a harmless white lie before a child's birthday party, the consequences are more catastrophic than either of them could ever have imagined. A topical and thought-provoking read that is both gripping and compulsive.

 


 

Farley County Court

December 2019

 

“They arrive in court separately. Bry first, early, perhaps to avoid the worst

of the demonstrations outside. She keeps her dark, hollow eyes fixed right

ahead of her, her head bowed as if in prayer, Ash’s arm around her, before

she crumples into her seat just in front of the judge’s bench.

The last time I saw Bry or Elizabeth was months ago at the now

infamous party. I remember watching them and feeling – as I always did

when it came to those two – a tug of envy, like a great hook in my abdomen,

pulling. It wasn’t what they said or did, quite the opposite in fact;

it was the absence of explanation. There was a calmness between them,

a knowing, because each was absolutely confident of the other. Their

friendship made them seem untouchable somehow. I’ve never had that

with anyone.

It’s a few minutes before the doors open again. The whole court shifts,

sits more upright, as Elizabeth walks into the large, serious room, Jack

a couple of paces behind. Her eyes cast about, scanning to see who is

there to support them. She nods at a couple of people. Her gaze lands

for just a beat on Bry and Ash. Her expression doesn’t even flicker

before she moves on. Her composure is impressive, silently letting us all

know she is blameless, unafraid. She takes her place on the other side of

the court to Bry. Her solicitor leans forward to whisper something and

Elizabeth nods in agreement, careful not to smile.

Next to me, a woman I recognise from the school gates says quietly,

‘It’s so sad, so sad, isn’t it?’

She sighs, then she finishes whatever she was doing on her phone

before dropping it into her coat pocket and turning back to me.

‘I always found their friendship a bit weird, to be honest. I mean,

they were so different, weren’t they?’

I nod and wonder whether she feels it too. This sense of something

Lacking – the hook, pulling – that behind all the gossip, all the bullshit

chat about school plays and football teams, we are starving for each

other, for connection. Is she, like me, desperate to see and truly be seen

by another woman?

‘I heard Elizabeth was almost assaulted by one of those anti-vax

demonstrators yesterday.’

Her voice is light, bouncy with glee. Her phone buzzes and she

snatches it out of her pocket. I turn back to face the court. And I think,

‘No, not her, she doesn’t feel it.’

Now, sitting here, I realise it was stupid of me, stupid to be jealous

of Bry and Elizabeth, because if this court case is the cost of true

friendship – families devastated, lives destroyed – then it can’t be worth

it. Maybe women like us are the lucky ones after all, maybe our distance

from each other keeps us safe, helps us to hide our wounds, our fears, so

we can’t be injured by others, lone wolves making our own way as best

we can.

 


“Bry has to admit it feels kind of leisurely being early, to be one of the first at the school gates, simply waiting, the afternoon sun warm on her face. It’s a relief not to feel a flood of panic rising in her; not to run.”


 

1 July 2019

For once, Bry isn’t late. She is waiting outside the Nettlestone

Primary School gates at exactly 3.30 p.m. She’d tiptoed out of

her vinyasa flow class a little early, been stern with herself

when she was tempted to nip into a shop on the short walk to

her goddaughter’s school, Elizabeth’s request in her ears:

Please don’t be too late, Clem panics if she thinks she’s been forgotten.

Bry has to admit it feels kind of leisurely being early, to be one

of the first at the school gates, simply waiting, the afternoon

sun warm on her face. It’s a relief not to feel a flood of panic

rising in her; not to run. So this is how it feels to be Elizabeth. More

parents start to gather, a few faces Bry recognises from around

town, parents she knows are friends with Elizabeth, but no

one Bry knows well enough to say hello to. They acknowledge

her vaguely and turn back to their conversations. Bry

can see why Elizabeth fits in perfectly here, leading the chats

about school trips and nit treatments.

Suddenly the school doors open and there’s a rush of

noise: small, high voices shrieking, laughing; a couple of

teachers’ voices lower, louder, warning, ‘Slow down!’ A fast-moving

cloud of children fills the little playground, all

clamouring towards the gates. Bry sees Clemmie immediately.

Her red hair, the same colour as Jack’s, makes her easy to spot.

Today it’s plaited, the plait moving side to side like a fox’s tail

as Clemmie runs. Her rucksack is too big and full for her

small six-year-old frame; it moves awkwardly on her back, out

of time with her run, but she’s laughing, her blue eyes and

freckled face creased in joy. Clemmie’s not laughing at anything

in particular; she’s laughing at the feeling of release, the

novelty of Auntie Bry collecting her from school, the chaotic

speed of her running. Bry bends, opens her arms, and laughs

too. Clemmie runs into her with a gentle thud. Her hair smells

of pencil shavings and strawberry lip balm.

‘Auntie Bry!’

Bry holds her and closes her eyes briefly. Clemmie wiggles

away before Bry is ready. She wipes a few strands of

hair from her face with her palm and says, ‘My class did the

song today in assembly, we did.’ Her rucksack starts falling

off her shoulders. Bry lifts it on to her own back and reaches

for her goddaughter’s hand. Clemmie starts singing a song,

presumably the one she sang in assembly, about baking a

cake for her friend. She looks up at Bry, dimples showing as

she beams. Bry swings their held hands so Clemmie knows

she loves her song as they start the short walk through the

narrow, hilly old streets of Farley, towards Saint’s Road,

where both their families – the Chamberlains and the

Kohlis – live. She gives Clemmie a two-pound coin, which

she drops into the cap of a man busking on the cobbled

bridge.

‘Cheers, girls,’ he says with a wink, and they both wave to

a friend who works in the health food shop.

‘Bry! Yoo-hoo! Bry, Clemmie, wait for us!’ Bry turns, slow

and reluctant, as her friend Row, still in her yoga leggings,

steams up the tree-lined pavement behind them, her daughter

Lily tinkling along by her side.

‘Told you you didn’t have to leave yoga early,’ Row says as

she catches up with them. Clemmie peels away from Bry and

greets Lily enthusiastically, before the two girls run ahead a

couple of paces.

‘But I guess Elizabeth would have killed you if you’d been

late,’ Row adds, her bangles jingling as she loops her arm

through Bry’s. ‘Where is she anyway?’

‘She has a meeting with the council about that petition she

got everyone to sign, about reducing the speed limit on

Saint’s Road to twenty.’

 


“She feels that she is justified in highlighting Elizabeth’s failings – how uptight and controlling she can be – but she can’t abide anyone else doing so.”


 

‘Oh yeah, right. I was wondering what was going on with

that,’ Row says, her tone slightly tinted with disdain, as

though Elizabeth has been sloppy letting the issue slide

when Elizabeth does more for the whole community than

anyone else, a fact that people seem to admire yet also

pisses them off in equal measure. Bry is used to Elizabeth

being divisive. She understands it – sometimes Elizabeth

pisses her off too – but she still bristles slightly at Row’s

tone. Like a sibling, she feels that she is justified in highlighting

Elizabeth’s failings – how uptight and controlling she can be

– but she can’t abide anyone else doing so, even

her own husband, Ash.

‘Lil, shoelace!’ Row calls to her daughter, and the four of

them stop so Lily can retie her lace before Row continues,

‘So, does it feel weird doing school pick-up? Alba will be here
in September, won’t she?’

Bry tries to picture her four-year-old daughter not in

her usual choice of outfit – yellow wellies and pink tutu,

perhaps – but wearing the same blue gingham dress and

black shoes as Lily and Clemmie. She imagines Alba shaking

her little brown head and saying, ‘Not wearing it, Mumma.’

It makes her heart flood and break simultaneously.

‘God, don’t. It’s such a weird thought.’

‘I know, I know. But everyone feels like that, trust me. I

cried and cried after I dropped Lil off the first time. But then,

you know, suddenly you have all this time and it’s amazing,

so . . .’

Bry nods; she does this a lot when she’s with Row.

Loves giving advice, whether you ask for it or not, doesn’t she?

Elizabeth said about her once.

‘Clemmie, what do you think about Alba coming to Nettlestone

after the summer holidays?’ Bry asks.

Clemmie’s head shoots up from her hushed conversation

with Lily and she says, ‘Baby Alba’s coming to my school?’

Bry nods, smiles, and Clemmie jumps up and down a couple

of times. From her kneeling position on the pavement, Lily

watches Clemmie, confused.

‘Why do you like her so much?’ she asks.

‘Baby Alba is like my little sister,’ Clemmie explains

patiently, still celebrating. ‘Isn’t she, Auntie Bry?’

Bry leans forward, kisses Clemmie on the top of her head,

and says, ‘Oh, that’s a lovely thing to say, Clem, so nice for

Alba to have a big sister . . . Just make sure she doesn’t hear

you call her Baby Alba,’ she adds with a wink, as though it’s

their secret how cross Alba gets when people do that.

Clemmie turns to Lily and says seriously, ‘Alba hates being

called a baby.’

The girls start to skip on and Row’s about to take Bry’s

arm again when Bry notices the corner shop on the other

side of the road is open.

‘Actually, Row, I think we’ll leave you here. I’ve got to pick

up a few bits.’

‘Oh, OK,’ Row says, pulling her arm away. ‘See you on

Saturday then?’

‘Saturday?’

Row laughs at Bry, her eyes widening in genuine surprise

as Bry adds quickly, trying to cover up her forgetfulness, ‘Oh

yeah, yeah, Elizabeth’s barbecue.’ She lifts her eyebrows, to

show that she exasperates herself sometimes, before calling

to Clemmie, holding her small hand in her own as they cross

the quiet road.

‘Bye, Lily, bye, Row!’ Clemmie waves; Lily waves back and

Row blows them a kiss before taking her phone out of her

pocket as she shoos Lily on.

In the shop, Bry heads straight to the ice cream fridge.

‘Choose whatever you like.’

‘Anything?’

‘Anything.’

They spend the next five minutes agonising over whether

Clemmie would like chocolate with sprinkles or strawberry

ice cream more, before she decides to have the same multicoloured

ice lolly as Bry.

Bry pays, forgetting the bread and milk Ash said they

needed at home, and the two of them leave hand in hand,

their ice lollies already melting in the afternoon sun, a medley

of red, orange and yellow creeping down their wrists.”

 

Extracted from The Herd by Emily Edwards, out now.

 


 
 
 
 

 

YOU MAY ALSO ENJOY

Extract: One Step Too Far by Lisa Gardner

 


 

Facebook  Twitter