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A Division of the Light

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by Christopher Burns




  Christopher Burns is the author of five previous novels and a collection of short stories. He lives with his wife near the western edge of the English Lake District.

  A Division of the Light

  Christopher Burns

  New York • London

  © 2012 by Christopher Burns

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by reviewers, who may quote brief passages in a review. Scanning, uploading, and electronic distribution of this book or the facilitation of the same without the permission of the publisher is prohibited.

  Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

  Any member of educational institutions wishing to photocopy part or all of the work for classroom use or anthology should send inquiries to Permissions c/o Quercus Publishing Inc., 31 West 57th Street, 6th Floor, New York, NY 10019, or to permissions@quercus.com.

  ISBN 978-1-62365-224-1

  Distributed in the United States and Canada by Random House Publisher Services

  c/o Random House, 1745 Broadway

  New York, NY 10019

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, institutions, places, and events are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons—living or dead—events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  www.quercus.com

  for Iain Burns

  1974–2010

  CONTENTS

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  1

  It begins with a sudden blow, a young woman hurled onto a pavement, a waiting motorbike being revved in a quiet city street. A simple but efficient robbery is carried out on a stranger, and this takes place twenty paces in front of a man with a camera. The man is there only by chance, but he immediately takes his opportunity.

  He does not focus on the riders in their beetle-black helmets as they speed past in a clamor of acceleration. Instead his concentration is on how the hard-edged shadow of a tall building bisects the woman’s body. She is sprawled face down but has broken her fall with hands that are folded up beneath her. One leg is stuck out at an ungainly angle and a shoe hangs from the foot as if she has pitched forward while trying it on. Just beyond her grasp a pair of dark glasses gleam on the brightly sunlit paving.

  It is not the crime that excites the photographer’s attention, but a chance configuration of shape and texture—the smooth opacity of the lenses, the knotty tension in the victim’s hands, the summer clothing rubbed along the ground. These, and the disheveled hair that screens a face he cannot quite see and that could so easily have smashed into the pavement.

  Only after he has taken several rapid photographs does the man turn to look down the gently sloping street and focus on the thieves. In that instant the stolen bag is lobbed from the pillion as if it were an empty carton, and then with a brief flash of red the bike tilts and swings out dangerously into traffic. Squealing brakes and angrily punched horns momentarily clash with the clatter of its exhaust and then everything disperses into a rumbling hum.

  The narrow side street has become eerily quiet now that the thieves have gone. Both victim and photographer are motionless for a few seconds. Sultry heat slides down between the tall office blocks in an invisible layer and presses on the scene.

  Later, Gregory will consider what might have happened if someone else had been present. If they had been, then they could have made sure that the woman was unharmed. They might even have contacted the police. If there had been another witness—anyone—then his own life would not have been changed so unalterably. Gregory’s natural instinct was for avoidance and observation, not involvement. He had taken his few sly photographs and that was enough. The chances were that the sprawled woman did not even know he had done this. But there was no one else nearby; at the mouth of the street the indifferent traffic moved along the broad embankment, and no witnesses could be seen peering from the mirrored windows in the high buildings.

  Conscience took hold of Gregory. The victim was struggling to her knees and reaching forward for her glasses with arms that seemed too loosely articulated. The building shadow fell across her like a burden. Only now could he hear the shocked, convulsive sound of her breathing.

  He studied the woman with a professional eye. The lightweight olive trousers, ripped across one knee, had been dragged down a couple of extra inches to expose the pale skin at the base of her spine and the scalloped upper edge of white underwear. The woman was slender, a little taller than average, probably in her early thirties. Gregory considered it his job to notice such things. Just as he had noticed that beneath the open lightweight jacket her white T-shirt had been scuffed across the bust by contact with the unswept pavement.

  He bent closer, holding his camera bag close to his hip. The Canon swung in front of him like a sensor. The woman pushed her hair back with her left hand. It had been lightened to a reddish blond but was darker red at the roots. She wore no wedding ring.

  “Are you all right?” he asked. “Are you able to stand?”

  She pushed the glasses high up on a slightly prominent nose so that her eyes were shielded. Behind the large obscuring lenses her face was a pale oval. As if she were a child on the verge of tears, her lower jaw quivered noticeably.

  He stretched out a hand. “It’s all right, you can trust me.”

  But Gregory knew that although some women would claim that he had many admirable qualities, he had never inspired trust.

  She did not take his hand but remained kneeling, as if the ground were a penance and she a supplicant. Gregory knew the pavement must be hot. He could feel sweat gather on his forehead. Perhaps it made him look menacing.

  “I—” the woman began, and then stopped, her lungs still robbed of air. After a few seconds she put the shoe back on her foot in an odd, almost absentminded gesture.

  Gregory reached out a little further, this time with both hands. The camera was a barrier between their two bodies.

  “They threw away your bag further down the street.”

  She did not react.

  “We can go and find it, but they’ll have taken whatever was valuable.”

  The woman accepted his grasp and got to her feet with her weight pressing on his hands. The skin of her palms was roughened and he realized she must have scraped them along the ground. As soon as she was steady the woman pushed at the bridge of the dark glasses with one finger so that they rested even closer to her eyes. Then she tugged at the waistband of her trousers to adjust them on her hips. Gregory could see the outline of a white bra beneath her cotton T-shirt.

  “You took a hard fall. Are you hurt?”

  “Did you see them? How many were there?”

  Her voice was classless, educated, a little stunned.

  “Just two. The pillion passenger was the one who hit you and lifted the bag. It was all in one movement. His friend was the escape rider. They must have singled you out. You’re probably not the only victim they’ll get today. I know that won’t make you feel any better.”

  “What about your camera? Did you photograph them?”

  He did not trouble himself by debating how he should answer.

  “I onl
y had time for one shot. It won’t help identify them. Listen, if you can walk all right, then we can go down there and try to find your bag. But if you’re still shaky then just stay here, I’ll go, and if I can find it I’ll bring it back.”

  The woman said nothing.

  “I won’t steal it again. Promise. One theft is more than enough.”

  “I can walk. Thank you.”

  “Do you want to lean on me?”

  “No. No, I’ll manage.”

  They set off together along the pavement and through the motionless air. A set of spiked black railings in front of blank walls gave way to a second office block with smoky glass. The woman walked unevenly as if a stone had lodged in one shoe. Gregory feared that without warning she could topple to one side and he would have to catch her as she fell. If she did then he would have to be careful not to touch her breasts.

  “Are you sure you’re OK?”

  “I’ll survive. Could you recognize them again?”

  “Not with those helmets. They’re no fools. They make a living out of this.”

  The woman shook her head and he registered the way that her hair moved.

  Two men in business suits walked toward them, deep in loud conversation, jackets slung over their shoulders, and did not look up. Gregory realized that the men had probably walked past the stolen bag and simply ignored it.

  “I feel so stupid,” the woman said. “I always carry that bag across my shoulder on the inside, away from the traffic, and yet today I didn’t. I don’t know why. And this is what happens. I didn’t even plan to be walking down this street. Usually I take the busy one, just a block along.”

  “You were unlucky, that’s all.”

  “Maybe not.”

  “You shouldn’t think that. You were just in the wrong place at the wrong time.”

  “But maybe it was meant to happen.”

  This, Gregory thought, was an irrational comment made under stress. He ignored it because he had no reason to believe in fate.

  A little further on they came to an entrance to the building. There was a broad, shallow flight of half a dozen steps beside a disabled ramp with a metal handrail. Two women were standing on the ramp in the shade. The taller one had taken the higher position so that she appeared even taller than her colleague, and they were both smoking cigarettes that were almost finished. The taller one also held the missing bag at the end of two fingers of her free hand, delicately, as though aware that she should not presume to hold it any closer.

  “Is this yours?” she asked as they approached.

  “It’s mine,” the woman said.

  “We came out here on a smoking break and those bikers threw it away. We usually stand leaning on that rail but it would burn your arms off in this heat so we stood back here. We thought something bad must have gone on. Same thing once happened to a cousin of mine. But with her they ran away on foot.”

  “Some of those young bastards would steal from their own mother,” her smaller colleague announced.

  “I picked this up from where they threw it—just down here. Almost at our feet. I haven’t looked inside. Sorry, love, but whatever’s missing, they took.”

  The shorter woman quickly confirmed that neither of them had looked inside. And as the victim took the bag and examined it, the smokers began to ask for detail on exactly what had happened.

  As Gregory had expected, the woman’s wallet and mobile phone were missing, but all the other items were untouched.

  “I’ll ring the police,” he said, producing his own phone, “although they probably won’t be all that interested.”

  He was right. To the police it was just another street robbery, the kind that happened several times a day. Gregory handed his phone across for the woman to speak to an officer whom he imagined to be filling in a form at a desk and concerned that he get the details correct. She gave her name as Alice Fell and quoted an address. The smokers each lit another cigarette. In the still air a nicotine smell wreathed around everyone.

  After the report Alice turned back to him. “They say I have to get in touch with my bank straight away about any credit cards.”

  “Of course. Do you know their numbers?”

  She shook her head. Sunlight smeared the dark lenses. Gregory wondered what color her eyes were.

  “They’ll take you for whatever they can,” he warned. “Tell me which bank you use and we’ll do what we can to limit any damage.”

  The smokers brought tea in plastic cups from a dispensing machine and would not take payment; meanwhile Alice used Gregory’s phone again. As she talked, he began to wonder what would happen if his own daughter were attacked and robbed and there was no one there to help. At the end of the street an unbroken stream of traffic moved past.

  “I owe you for these,” Alice said when the last call was finished.

  “It’s all right. You owe me nothing.”

  At this moment she appeared to become disoriented again.

  “I’m at work,” she said. “I should get back there.”

  “Go on home,” the tall smoker said, collecting the empty cups. “You can’t go back to work in the state you’re in. Besides, look—those nice trousers are all torn at the knee.”

  “She’s right,” Gregory agreed.

  Alice looked unsure. “They’ll be expecting me back. This is my lunch-break and . . .” The sentence tailed away.

  The smokers were ever eager with advice.

  “Report in sick, love, that’s what you should do.” The tall one turned to Gregory. “Give her back your phone so she can do it—go on.”

  Alice did not need further persuasion. She dialed a number and told whoever answered that she had been attacked and robbed but would be all right soon. When she handed the mobile back to Gregory she told him that her employers had advised her to take the rest of the day off.

  “What did I tell you?” the tall smoker said. “You should get a taxi back home. It’s not right you standing around like this. It’ll make you feel better to get those dirty clothes off and have a shower and relax.”

  “Besides, you could go into shock real easy,” her friend added.

  “She’s right. You could start to shake all over and not stop. That wouldn’t do you any good.”

  “I’ll walk,” Alice announced.

  “You should do no such thing.”

  “I have to. All my money’s gone.”

  “Your friend here will lend you some cash—won’t you, darling?”

  The smokers fixed Gregory with challenging stares while Alice hid behind her dark lenses.

  “Don’t say you’re going to say no,” the tall smoker accused him.

  “We can get a taxi easily at the end of the street,” Gregory said.

  Alice moved her head like a blind person reacting to noise. “Thank you. I can pay the driver when I get home.”

  They walked to the end of the street and were surprised to find that the smokers accompanied them. Evidently they were not yet prepared to relinquish their part in the drama of the robbery. Gregory was sure that within a few short minutes they would be back in the office eagerly telling their colleagues what had happened.

  In the distance a taxi with an illuminated sign appeared and he hailed it.

  “Give her the fare,” the tall smoker said. “Go on.”

  Alice shook her head. “There’s no need.”

  “Course there is. You don’t mind, do you?”

  “I don’t mind,” Gregory said. There was little choice. He asked the driver approximately how much the fare would be. There were lots of hold-ups on that route, the driver said, and a few diversions; it all depended.

  Gregory took a twenty-pound note from his wallet.

  “It could be a bit more,” the driver said.

  “I don’t think so,” Gregory answered. He passed the note to Alice. She folded it several times and then closed her fist round it.

  “I’ll pay you back. Give me your address and I’ll send the money. Honestly.


  As she settled into the back of the cab Gregory handed over one of his business cards. In the dim interior Alice had to lift her glasses slightly to read the print. For just a second he saw that her eyes were puffed up with weeping. She had not cried since he had helped her up from the pavement. It must have been happening just before the attack.

  Alice lowered her glasses again.

  “Should I know you?” she asked. “It’s an unusual surname.”

  “Maybe you’ve seen it in print. When you get home will there be someone to look after you?”

  She hesitated for longer than he expected before she answered. “Yes, there will be.”

  Gregory closed the door and nodded at the driver. He expected Alice to say something else, or at least look at him as she was driven away, but instead she looked down, like a mourner at a funeral.

  The smokers surveyed him with the satisfaction of matchmakers.

  “Lovely woman, that,” the tall one said.

  “Lovely,” the shorter one echoed.

  Gregory nodded, said thanks, and began to walk away.

  “You won’t have seen the last of her,” the tall one added. “I know.”

  “We can tell,” the shorter one said.

  But Gregory did not expect to see the woman again. His life was filled with brief meetings and casual encounters. He believed that Alice Fell had been one of those. And besides, if he wanted, there were always other women.

  From across the city there was the sudden noiseless flash of summer lightning.

  2

  Alice topples like a felled tree, her arms flung out like spreading branches, the lost shoe parted from her like a root left in the ground by the stroke of an ax. Gregory’s photographs testify to the force that propelled her body forward with a single blow. He studies them on a monitor, weighing their virtues and failings, and it is not long before he begins to manipulate them. Because of the high contrast between sunlight and shade they have unintended limitations. However, adjustments that are merely necessary soon become creative.

  Gregory drains the images of color. He contracts the margins. He enlarges sections until their texture becomes granular. One of the frames he crops so severely that all it contains is Alice’s tumbled hair parted into shadowy roots and the fallen sunglasses that have darkened to jet. Her body is abstracted into balances of shape and texture. When he has finished, Gregory puts his visual rearrangements on a slideshow program and assesses them even more critically.

 

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