‘Medium.’
Either she hadn’t a clue, or she was clearly taking no chances on offending anyone. Martha sighed. ‘All right, I’ll have a glass of red.’ She hoped it was dry, whatever the quality.
She lit a cigarette and settled to wait. It was chilly in the cellar, despite the warm evening outside, and she put her quilted jacket over her shoulders. She had used it as a headrest during her afternoon on the beach, and when she lifted it, a few trapped grains of sand fell on the tablecloth. She swept them onto the stone floor, wincing at their gritty feel against her fingertips.
She had read until the incoming tide had driven her away from the beach, then she had gone back to the guesthouse for a bath. She had got sweaty sitting in the sun all afternoon with her jeans on and her shirt buttoned up to the neck. After that, feeling restless and edgy, she had gone walking nowhere in particular for a couple of hours, until hunger had driven her in search of somewhere to eat.
While she waited for her pizza, she rummaged in her holdall for the smooth, hard paperweight for the umpteenth time that day. Yes, it was still there. She needed to touch it, her talisman, to bolster her resolve.
At last the waitress returned with a small, thin-crusted pizza and a glass of wine. It was dry: some kind of cheap and ordinary Chianti, but at least drinkable. The pizza was barely edible. The crust was like tough cardboard, and about six slices of canned mushroom lay on top of a watery spread of tomato sauce – completely lacking in spicing or herbal ingredients – that dribbled over the edge when she cut into it. Still, it wasn’t fish and chips; she had that, at least, to be grateful for.
She ate as much as she could manage, and soon found herself getting full. A young couple came in, looked around the cavern suspiciously, and took a corner table in the shadows. They held hands and made eyes at one another in the candlelight. Martha felt sick. She ordered a cappuccino, wondering how that would turn out, and lit another cigarette. She still had time to kill.
The cappuccino turned out to be half a cup of Nescafé with what tasted like condensed milk, all churned up by a steam machine and dusted with a few grains of chocolate. The lovers talked in whispers, occasionally laughing and stroking one another’s bare arms on the tablecloth.
Martha could stand it no longer. She demanded the bill rather snappily as the waitress was dashing off with the couple’s order. It was still a good ten minutes before it arrived. Not bothering to leave a tip, Martha took the slip of paper upstairs and paid a sullen young man, who actually did look Italian, at the till.
Outside, it was already getting dark; the narrow channels of water left in the harbour rocked and twisted the strings of red and yellow lights in their oily mirror. It was almost nine o’clock, and the tide was well on its way out.
The man called Jack had left the pub at a quarter to ten the previous evening. Though the whole scene had the appearance of a ritual to Martha, she couldn’t be sure he would leave at exactly the same time again, or even if he’d be in the pub. For one thing, the darts game – part of the ritual – might last longer. What was even worse was that he might leave with his friend. Still, Martha planned simply to follow him, if she could, and find out where he lived. Even if he didn’t leave alone, he was bound to go home eventually.
It was her intention to lean against the iron railing close to the pub, near the jawbone at the top of West Cliff, and wait for him to come out. She would take note of which way he walked and would follow. She had thought of going inside the Lucky Fisherman again, alone this time, but that would only draw attention to her. He might even talk to her and try to pick her up, then everybody would see them. That was too dangerous to be worth the risk.
If she got there for nine-thirty, she would probably be all right. He would hardly leave before then. More likely later than earlier. That left her time for a quick nip to calm her nerves. She went into the first pub she saw, a bustling tourist place, and ordered a double whisky. She drank it slowly so it wouldn’t go straight to her head. The last thing she needed was to get drunk. But the cardboard pizza should be enough to soak up anything that came along in the next hour or so.
At quarter past nine, when she could wait no longer, she set off for the Lucky Fisherman. It was dark by then, and the town’s usual illuminations were all on. It took her five minutes to reach her waiting place. Once there, she leaned forward on the railing and looked over first at St Mary’s, basking in its sandy light directly opposite, then to her left, out to sea beyond the pincer-like piers, where all was dark. She could see the thin white line of waves breaking on the sand.
She looked at her watch. Nine-thirty-five. It seemed to be taking for ever. Time for a cigarette. No one but the occasional courting couple ambled by. They would pause for a moment, arm in arm, look out to sea by Captain Cook’s statue, perhaps kiss, and then walk around the corner by the white hotels along North Terrace. A strong fishy smell drifted up from the harbour. Martha remembered it was Thursday evening. The fishing boats would be coming in tomorrow.
Nine-forty-six. He was late. Must be having trouble getting that last double twenty or whatever it was he needed. She pictured him carrying his empty glass over to the bar and saying, ‘Well, that’s my limit for tonight. See you tomorrow, Bobby.’ Yes, he would be there! He had actually said so, she remembered: ‘See you tomorrow, Bobby.’ And Bobby would say, ‘Night, Jack,’ as usual. Any moment he would be walking out of that door. Martha was hardly breathing; her chest felt tight with excitement and apprehension. She ground out the cigarette and glanced over at the pub.
At ten o’clock, it happened. The door rattled open and one man – her man – walked out in his dark jersey and baggy jeans. She stayed where she was, as if rooted to the spot, her hands frozen to the railing. She must try to look like a casual tourist, she told herself, just admiring the night-time view: St Mary’s, the abbey ruin, the lights reflected in the harbour. A slight breeze ruffled her hair and brushed along her cheek like cold fingers.
He was walking in her direction, towards the Cook statue. She turned her head to watch him coming. How it happened, she wasn’t sure. Perhaps it was just the sudden movement, or maybe the light from a street lamp had caught her face as she turned. But he saw her. She could have sworn that he smiled and his eyes glittered more than usual. He started walking towards her.
She felt pure terror, as if her very bone marrow had turned to ice. He walked up beside her and rested his hands on the railing too.
‘Hello,’ he said, in that familiar, hoarse voice. ‘Lovely night, isn’t it?’
Martha could hardly catch her breath. She was shaking so much that she had to clutch the railings tight to stay on her feet. But she had to go through with it. It was too late to back off now. She turned to face him.
‘Hello,’ she said, in a voice that she hoped wasn’t trembling too much. ‘Don’t you remember me?’
18
KIRSTEN
The doctor insisted that Kirsten leave the hospital in a wheelchair, though by then she was quite capable of walking unaided. The demand was made even more ridiculous when she reached the top of the front steps and had to get up out of the chair and walk down them.
Her father’s Mercedes was parked right outside. With Galen in front, carrying her things, and one parent on each side, Kirsten made her way towards it.
At the car, Galen – who, true to his word, had visited her almost every day that week – shook hands with her father, said goodbye to her mother, who inclined her head regally, and gave Kirsten a peck on the cheek. He had learned, she noticed, not to expect too much from her physically, though she still hadn’t told him the full extent of her injuries.
‘Are you sure I can’t offer you a lift anywhere?’ her father asked him.
‘No, thank you,’ Galen said. ‘The station’s not much of a walk, and it’s out of your way. I’ll be fine.’
‘Back or front?’ her father asked Kirsten.
‘Back, please.’
In the spacious rear of t
he car she could stretch out, her head propped up against the window on a cushion, a blanket over her knees, and watch the world go by.
Are you sure you want me to go ahead?’ Galen asked her through the open window.
Kirsten nodded. ‘Be sensible, Galen. There’s no point missing the start of term. If you do that, you might as well not bother.’
‘And I can’t persuade you to come with me?’
‘Not yet, no. I told you, don’t worry about me. I’ll be okay.’
‘And you’ll join me soon?’
‘Yes.’
She had finally managed to convince him to go to Toronto, partly by insisting that she was fine and needed only rest, and partly by promising to join him as soon as she felt well enough. When he agreed, she wasn’t sure if it was due to the logic of her arguments or because she had given him an easy way of getting off the hook. He had acted a little stranger each day – distant, embarrassed – and Kirsten had come to believe that perhaps there was something in what Sarah had hinted about men friends turning ‘funny’ when women became victims of sexual attacks. Also, Hugo and Damon had sent more flowers and messages through Sarah, but they hadn’t visited again. Kirsten was beginning to feel rather like a pariah. In a way, it suited her, for at the moment what she wanted above all was to be left alone.
Galen stretched his arm through the window and patted Kirsten’s hand. ‘Take care,’ he said. And remember, I want to see a full recovery soon.’ Kirsten smiled at him and the car pulled away. She watched him waving as the Mercedes headed down the road, until it turned a corner and she could see him no longer.
Her father cleared his throat. ‘I suppose you’d like to drop by the flat first and pick up a few things,’ he suggested.
Kirsten didn’t, in particular, want to set foot in her tiny bedsit again, but neither did she want her parents to think she had lost all interest in life. Even if some of her deepest feelings were numb and her instincts were beyond her control, she could still make an effort to behave in the normal, accepted manner. They seemed dispirited enough as it was. Her mother had more or less accused her already of not trying hard enough to ‘snap out of it’, and her father had become more and more resigned and distant. If she showed no interest at all in her possessions, they would only worry more. So she said yes and offered directions. Appearances were important to her parents.
The car slid smoothly away from the gloomy Victorian hospital and towards the student area of town: rows of tall, old houses in which entire families and servants once used to live. Blackened by two hundred years of industry, and emptied by a succession of changes – the break up of the family unit, the Great War, the Depression, the inability of most people to afford servants – they had fallen into the hands of local businessmen, who transformed the once magnificent rooms, with their high ceilings and fixtures where the chandeliers used to hang, into small flats or bedsits – as many to a building as they could manage – and rented them to students.
Kirsten had an attic room in a cul-de-sac near the park. After spending her first year feeling miserable in a bright, noisy student residence, she had been happy there for the last two years. As the three of them got out of the sleek, silver-grey car, she noticed people along the street looking out through their curtains. It must be quite a spectacle, she supposed, finding a Mercedes parked in such a place, where the cobbles still stuck through the various attempts at tarmac.
Torn newspapers, chip wrappers, empty cigarette packets and cellophane paper littered the pavement and gutters; weeds and unmown grass consumed the garden. In the hallway, which looked as if it hadn’t been swept for a month, neat piles of mail lay on a rickety old table.
The time-switch Kirsten pressed revealed a bare bulb on each landing and cobwebs in the high cornices. The walls were painted a colour somewhere between eggshell blue and institutional green – painted, that is to say, some years ago – and the high ceilings were puce – what Sarah called ‘puke’. In the light of the unshaded sixty-watt bulbs, the place looked even worse than it was.
As they climbed the stairs, Kirsten was aware of her mother’s stiff disapproval. On entry, she seemed to have held her breath and not let it out for fear of having to breathe in again.
Feeling foolish as she did so, Kirsten knocked on her own door. She still had a key, but the room was officially Sarah’s now and she couldn’t just barge in. She hoped Sarah didn’t have a naked man in her bed.
The door opened. Kirsten noted with relief the empty room behind Sarah, who wasn’t even wearing one of her calculatedly offensive T-shirts that day. Instead, she wore white trousers and a baggy blue sweatshirt with UCLA printed across the front.
‘Kirstie, love!’ she yelled. Her fine, porcelain features broke into a smile anyone would have expected to shatter them, and she flung her arms around Kirsten.
Kirsten returned the embrace, then broke away gently. She didn’t react as badly as she had to Galen’s touch, but she still felt herself drawing back inside, holding in.
‘My mother and father.’ She stood back and introduced her parents, who hovered in the doorway.
‘Cup of tea?’ Sarah asked.
That’d be lovely.’ Kirsten looked at her father, who nodded. Her mother shook her head slightly and looked at her watch. ‘Not for me, thank you, dear. We really must set off soon if we’re to be home this evening.’ She directed the comment at her husband.
‘Oh, we’ve time for a cup of tea,’ he said, smiling at Sarah and sitting down in the scuffed red armchair with winged arms. It was Kirsten’s favourite, the spot where she had sat to do her reading and make notes for essays.
The L-shaped room was just about large enough to hold four people: all it contained were the two matching armchairs in front of the gas fire, a three-quarter mattress on the floor beneath the window, a small clothes cupboard set in the wall, and a desk and bookshelves by the other wall. A portable stereo cassette player stood on one of the shelves beside a rack of tapes. Sarah was playing Bruce Springsteen singing ‘Nebraska’. She turned down the volume before she went to put the kettle on in the kitchenette, which was tucked away in the short end of the L and separated from the rest of the room by a thin red curtain.
Kirsten sat on the mattress, which had always had to double as a sofa when she had guests. She gazed over at the poster on the wall above the pillows – a print of Van Gogh’s Sunflowers – and remembered the first time she and Galen had made love on that very mattress the night after the English Department Christmas dance at the start of their second year. As she thought about it, and about all the other wonderful times they had slept there together, her loins ached with longing and loss. She could still see him standing by the roadside waving. Of course, she would never see him again. It was for his own good.
Her mother made a point of standing by the window with her arms tightly folded. Whether it was the sight of the park – the scene of the crime – at the end of the street that intrigued her, or whether she was just keeping an eye on the Merc, Kirsten didn’t know. She could sense her mother’s disapproval of the bedsit. Nose in the air, she seemed only a hair’s breadth away from running her finger down the wall to see how much dirt came off. If she did that, Kirsten thought, she would run off screaming for the maids in two seconds flat.
Her parents had never visited the room – or even the city – before. The rough and ready atmosphere and basic living conditions must have been just as much of a shock to their tender southern sensibilities as they had been to hers at first. Over two years, though, she had had a chance to get used to it. At her age, too, she was more concerned about parties, books, films, plays and love than she was about living in a spotless mansion. Unlike her mother, Kirsten had never been particularly houseproud. Even her room at home had always been a mess. Surfaces hadn’t mattered too much as long as she had been having fun. She washed the dishes regularly, dusted and went to the launderette once a week: that was it. Besides, these houses were so old and decrepit you couldn’t do much with
them even if you tried. They were only temporary: places to pass through, not to make nests in.
Sarah came back with the cracked teapot and three mugs. Kirsten’s father accepted his sugarless tea graciously, and her mother continued to stand like a statue by the window. Her father made small talk with Sarah while Kirsten made a pretence of searching the room for the things she was supposed to want. She picked up the small pile of mail – mostly junk – from the desk and shoved a few clothes and a random selection of books into the old suitcase in the cupboard. Then she sat down to finish her tea, which had cooled by then.
‘Is that all you want?’ Sarah asked.
‘For the moment. I’ve got plenty of stuff back home – clothes and that.’
‘But the books . . . ?’
‘Hang on to them for me, will you? I think I need a rest from literature.’
Sarah eyed the shelves, still more than three-quarters full. ‘I suppose it’s about time I read Shelley and Coleridge,’ she said, smiling. ‘Though I’d planned on a summer with Thomas Hardy and George Eliot. I don’t know about the linguistics and phonetics stuff, though. You know I never could understand all that.’
Kirsten shrugged and took one book down for her. ‘That’s a good one. The prof who wrote it is supposed to be able to tell what village you come from just by your accent. They say he’s usually accurate within ten miles or so. I never got as good as that, but . . .’
‘Thanks,’ said Sarah. ‘I’ll give it a try.’
They must all, Kirsten thought, be conscious of her mother looming over them, radiating waves of discomfort. Were the circumstances different, she might have gone into one of her ‘Why did you have to leave a clean, decent home?’ spiels. Even her father might have reminded her of how he had tried to persuade her to go to a university closer to home instead of moving so far away. But she’d had to fly the coop. She knew she wouldn’t have been able to stand living at home while all the other students were free to live their own lives for the first time. How humiliating it would have been to have to run off back to Mummy and Daddy’s in time for tea after the Milton lecture. And the further the better, she had thought, while offering convincing arguments about the quality of teaching and the reputations of professors.
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