by Heidi James
SO THE DOVES
Heidi James
Imprint
Copyright © Heidi James 2017
First published in 2017 by
Bluemoose Books Ltd
25 Sackville Street
Hebden Bridge
West Yorkshire
HX7 7DJ
www.bluemoosebooks.com
All rights reserved
Unauthorised duplication contravenes existing laws
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Hardback ISBN 978-1-910422-34-2
Paperback ISBN 978-1-910422-35-9
Printed and bound in the UK by Short Run Press
Dedication
For my vanished girls, Michelle and Louise. Always love.
And for my Charlie, the best of all dads.
*
So the doves cooed softly to each other, whispering of their own events, over Janey’s grave in the grey Saba Pacha cemetery in Luxor.
Soon many other Janeys were born and these Janeys covered the earth.
Kathy Acker, Blood and Guts in High School
*
You could say that Newton’s third law had been my guiding principle. That for every action there’s an opposite and equal reaction. You might think it strange for a journalist to apply the laws of physics in their work, but to me it was clear: all I needed to do was follow a series of events and their consequences and everything would all add up like a formula, an equation. A neat sum of facts, arriving at the truth.
I’d succumbed to the seductive powers of determinism. You could say that I was wrong.
You could also say that I’ve come to understand that lies are facts yet to become reality, though that took me longer than it should have. It’s all a con. Another physicist said: ‘What we take to be true is what we believe… What we believe determines what we take to be true.’ We live in an alternative-fact world. Honestly.
And yet, for a while, I was the purveyor of truth, a crusader for justice – all right, not quite that, but people read my work, they trusted me. I won an award or two. I was the good guy: I exposed the corrupt, the dirty, and the unfair. And I believed, completely and totally, in what I was doing. It mattered. You’re probably thinking how could I be that naïve, how could I be a hack and still idealistic? That would be a fair point and perhaps I did lie to myself, but you have to believe in what you’re doing. At least I did.
For the record, I was on to something with the St Clair bank and their links to terrorist organisations: that was real. I say was, because it isn’t now. Now it’s a poorly researched article written in bad faith. And Melanie? I was seventeen when she disappeared, just a kid. It’s as if she was a figment of my imagination, though she was flesh and blood – alive. What I mean is, she became a story, a myth, a series of actions and consequences folded into my own history. That was my fault.
Nothing ever really goes away; isn’t that another law of physics? A material version of Nietzsche’s eternal recurrence, atoms reorganised, reconfigured, but never totally destroyed? There’s only so long before a new version of truth reveals itself, the skeletons in the wardrobe rattle and clack and the body is discovered.
And there’s always a body, dead or alive. Every story needs a body.
Pride Comes
It’s the kind of assignment that signals one of two things: that you’re on the slide, in decline, ready for the chop, or that you’ve just pulled off one of the biggest exposés in British journalism and you deserve to take things easy for a while. Or both.
‘Here he is, our man of the moment, scourge of the corrupt, crusader of the truth! I don’t know how you do it, but I’m fucking glad you do.’ Edward, my editor, his face sun-raw from his latest jaunt to the Maldives, raised his arms in greeting like a rock star to his audience. ‘How’re you doing?’
‘Knackered, but pretty good.’
‘As you should! Circulation has shot up fifteen per cent in the last week. I’m sure it’s not all down to you, but you take some credit.’ He guffawed. ‘Sit.’
I sat.
‘There’s a story just come in from the police, from Kent, Medway actually. Your neck of the woods, right?’
‘Yeah, I grew up there.’
‘Thought so. A body’s been found while they were clearing old farmland for the Cross Euro Speed Link.’
‘Really?’
‘Yes, really, I’m sending you down there.’
‘Me? Why? Can’t a junior cover it? Or pick up the story from one of the local rags?’
‘I’m thinking that after your, our, latest triumph, my friend – which, by the way, has the bigwigs upstairs both nervous and delighted in equal measure – you deserve a little break.’
‘Why don’t I just go on a long break somewhere hot and far away?’
‘You will, just not right now. We’ll probably need a follow-up on the St Clair story and I can hardly trust anyone else now, can I?’
‘Then I should stick around here.’
‘Marcus, why are you being so difficult? I thought you’d be pleased.’
‘I don’t know, wouldn’t someone else be better at this local crime kind of thing?’
‘It’s hardly just a ‘local crime’. The delay in construction has got the Government hopping, especially with the EU wankers already pissed off. It could be a big story. Go down and get what you can. You can add a different perspective, the story behind the story. You could take a few days, see your family. Your mother’s down there, yes? Now’s your chance to spend time with her.’
‘Wonderful.’
‘Exactly. You’ll be killing two birds with one stone. That’s it then. Go now, today.’
I rolled my shoulders and swallowed hard to quell the dread rising and expanding like gas in my gut. ‘Any other information?’
‘Like?’
‘Condition of the body? Who to contact?’
‘Jesus, you need me to do your job for you?’
I stood up. ‘Alright. I’ll do it.’
‘Stay in touch,’ he called as I left. I felt his sweaty gaze on the back of my head all the way out, like the red laser dot of a gun sight. Hyperbole: that’s another thing they accused me of.
I got out of the city in under two hours. Grabbed my bag – habit of the job to have it packed and ready – locked the flat, got in the car. I called Mother on the way down, her surprise underscored by a long silence and the need for me to repeat my expected time of arrival.
‘Here,’ she said. ‘You’re coming here?’
I pulled off the motorway onto the slip road into town, crossing over the river where it’s just narrow enough to allow the span of a cast iron bridge, all Victorian curlicues and fuss, with the cathedral spires competing with the ruined crenellations of the castle ahead of me. From that angle the town looks historic, the best England has to offer, but just out of sight around the river curve there’s the decommissioned dockyard, a victim of Thatcher’s government, all gussied up now as a museum. It’s a shit hole, but a pretty one if you stick to the old High Street with its antique shops, tearooms and pubs, the half-timbered buildings leaning like old men.
I turned away from the river towards my mother’s house, driving up a wide avenue of Victorian and Edwardian houses, now all past their best and divided into flats and bedsits. I crossed the junction to the White Horse Estate, where Melanie had lived, and passed a bus stop crowded with kids in the Danner Comprehensive uniform, chunky headphones like earmuffs clamped over their ears. The town seemed to fold in on itself like a fairground fun house,
trapping me inside.
1989
He first saw Melanie from the top deck of the number 84 bus, on his first day at Danner Comprehensive School. Co-Ed. Locals called it the Danner bus, packed with rowdy kids in the uniform of black blazer, green tie, grey trousers or skirt. Long legs blocked the passage between seats, bodies sprawling and shouting, all red spots and hair spray and newly-bulged Adam’s apples and shoving and smoking and spitting. Only one or two old people on their way to work or the shops.
He hunched down in the middle row, breathing in second-hand smoke, hoping that maybe he would get away with being the new kid, unnoticed on the bus as it dieselled its way through the wide roads of Forestdale and the mock-Tudor semis. Then up through the estate and past the playing fields, picking up more and more kids until there was only standing room. He sat as low in the seat as he could, his collar around his ears.
It was September, the beginning of the new term, and it was pretty obvious that 1989 was a disaster, what with Hillsborough, the Kegworth air crash and a train crash somewhere in South London; having his heart broken and being expelled was just icing on the crap cake. Rumour had it that it was the second summer of love and everyone else was out raving and taking drugs and having real sex, but he’d spent the entire holiday inside reading, crying into his pillow and waiting for Anthony to phone. It was no wonder he was as pale and lumpy as rice pudding. But that morning of the new term he got up early to do his hair in a Morrissey quiff, and sprayed himself all over with the aftershave that Joyce, the housekeeper, had got him for Christmas. This time he would keep himself to himself. This time he would get it right.
That was when he saw her, not on the bus but walking along the street, going in the wrong direction, her long dark hair loose around her shoulders. Her school uniform accentuated her somehow, marking her out rather than blending her in, as if it was especially made for her and her alone. She wasn’t tall or as obviously pretty as the other girls with their permed and blonde-streaked hair: she just had that something that drew people to her, what his mother called charisma.
‘Oi, Gorgeous, where you going?’ A thickset boy, about the same age as Marcus, had stood and pressed his full-lipped mouth to the small opening in the window, yelling down to her. All confidence and swagger with his Brylcreemed curtains of blonde hair flopping into his eyes and a pop star slouch. Darren Shine. His gang of look-a-likes laughed and banged on the windows.
She looked up at them, leering at her from the top window of the bus, waved, smiled and just kept going in the wrong direction.
‘Slag,’ said one of the look-a-likes. Darren punched him on the arm.
‘Shut your mouth, Mazzer, or I’ll shut it for you. Got it?’
Mazzer tutted, rubbing his shoulder, ‘Just having a laugh, ain’t I?’
‘Well don’t.’ Shine looked up and almost caught Marcus watching, just before he turned back to window.
‘He just isn’t right for Coombe Hall, I’m afraid,’ the headmaster said when recommending that Marcus finish fifth form at a local comprehensive. ‘They have decent facilities there. He will fit in, I should imagine, or at least, better than here. After this last, uhm, event.’ He blinked and swallowed hard, lifting his chin to make enough space in his tight throat to accommodate his embarrassment. ‘I just don’t think Marcus is truly able to benefit from all we have to offer. It’s not that his intelligence is in any doubt, just his, ah, character, his commitment to his education. We won’t expel Marcus, if you withdraw him from the school with no fuss.’ Poking the words out of his mouth with the tip of his tongue.
Marcus stood in the corner, holding a plastic bag stuffed with all his school possessions. His mother didn’t argue: a state school meant saving her a fortune – so Marcus heard her say on the phone later – and anyway, Anthony’s parents had kicked up such a stink that arguing was futile. ‘Can’t I go to King’s? Or come to your school?’ Marcus had asked, but she frowned, ‘King’s won’t take you, you know that, and I run a girls’ school, Marcus, or hadn’t you noticed? My God, what on earth will you do with this… this shadow hanging over you?’
Danner Comp was modern, built only a few years before, all straight lines and flat roofs, with large rectangular windows and low ceilings. The classrooms were flimsy, the partition walls rattling whenever a door was slammed by a moody teenager. Everything felt temporary, like a theatre set, unlike Coombe Hall with its old stone walls and vaulted ceilings, solid oak panelling and book cases. The comprehensive was ugly but huge: it was easy to be swallowed up, anonymous, among a thousand or so other kids. For that he was grateful.
A short, thin woman dressed in a matching blue polyester skirt and blouse greeted Marcus at the office, signing him in, before handing him a timetable and walking him to a classroom. She didn’t say a word, just plodded along the corridors and past the stinking toilet block and the computer lab that hummed with the few pcs and word processors necessary for the nerdy IT A-Level kids and the girls doing secretarial skills BTEC. Outside, the school fields were dusty and featureless. The white lines marking out the running track and football pitches had dried up in the sun and floated away like chalk rubbed off a blackboard; the goal posts had not yet been put back up. Marcus felt himself relax, his shoulders loosening under the polyester blazer, imagining he could fit in, or that at least no one would notice him.
The morning passed in a blur of lessons and introducing himself to the teachers, who in turn introduced him, blushing and blinking and sweating, to the other pupils. They looked through him or grimaced or – rarely – smiled, before he was instructed to find somewhere to sit and try to follow the class.
Lunch was a ham sandwich packed by Joyce, which he ate sitting on the wall by the staff room. Afterwards, he took his place in registration, a couple of rows behind Darren Shine, told to sit there by the English teacher, Mr Laugham, whose six-and-a-half foot rugby bulk was wrapped in a Fred Perry shirt and Sta-Prest trousers.
Halfway through the register, (there were three Claires, two Sharons and four Darrens in the class), the door opened and she walked in. The other kids turned and watched her as she strode, head up, towards Marcus. Mr Laugham paused and looked up from the register.
‘So, Miss Melanie Shoreham, you’ve decided to join us, have you?’
‘Yes sir, I have indeed.’ She brought her right hand up to her forehead and flicked a swift, oddly respectful salute his way. Marcus couldn’t take his eyes off her, despite Anthony and his aching heart.
Mr Laugham stared at her too, as if trying to figure out what to say next, his mouth pursed and twitching; she smiled at him and sat down in the seat next to Marcus. Relieved of having to say or do anything by her perfectly acceptable behaviour, the teacher continued calling out the names of the rest of form and ticking them off the list; a little bald patch at the crown of his big head was just visible, shiny in the fluorescent lighting.
She was so close Marcus could smell her Lux soap, Impulse body spray and cigarettes. Her hair, draped black around her shoulders, looked greasy at the roots and her nails were unpolished and a little ragged. Her skin was smooth and soft and tanned. She glowed and Marcus blushed, his schoolboy ears pink at the tips.
‘Right then, class,’ Mr Laugham got up and wrote Sons and Lovers on the blackboard. ‘Take out your books.’ He turned back to the class. ‘Darren, why don’t you get us started?’
The kids tittered,
Shine shouted, ‘Which Darren, sir?’
‘You, Shine. Let’s hear a gem of insight from you, shall we?’
‘Didn’t read it, sir.’
‘There’s a surprise. Any particular reason? Or was the entire summer break not long enough for you?’
‘That’s about right.’ Darren laughed and his mate slapped his palm under the desk. Laugham, if he saw, ignored them.
‘Has anyone completed their homework? Or can’t any of you morons read?’
&
nbsp; Melanie raised her hand. ‘I have.’
Laugham turned to gaze at her.
‘Have you now?’
‘Yes sir, I have.’ She was matter-of-fact, not a trace of defiance or sarcasm.
‘So, Melanie, if you have read it, tell us: what do you think is the theme of this novel?’
‘The theme, sir?’ she said, her hand resting on the battered book, almost touching Marcus.
‘Yes, Melanie, you must have some idea of the theme. If you’ve read it, of course.’ Pleased with himself, Laugham puffed out his chest.
‘I’d say the main theme is the Oedipus complex, except of course what’s funny is that Paul actually kills his mother, rather than his father. So it’s not that simple.’
Laugham flicked his head to shift his fringe out of his eye. ‘Can you explain the Oedipus complex?’ The class watched him deflate a little.
‘Isn’t that your job?’ Melanie said. Everyone fell silent, stopped fidgeting and whispering, stopped scrawling on the desks; they sat up sensing trouble, hoping it was all going to kick off. Marcus held his breath and stared at his desk.
‘I’m asking you.’ Laugham turned an odd shade of pink, like undercooked pork.
‘It’s a theory from Freud. Basically, boys fancy their mothers and want to kill their fathers. In girls it’s called the Electra complex: girls desire their fathers and want to kill their mothers. Freud said it’s how we develop our sexuality, sir.’
The class laughed, and one of the Darrens said, ‘You’d know all about that, Melanie!’
She turned and blew a kiss in his direction. Marcus felt it breeze past his face.
‘All right, settle down you lot. Thanks Melanie, you’ve been very insightful.’ Laugham turned towards the blackboard.
‘Hang on, sir. I haven’t finished.’
Laugham stopped and turned back. ‘Is that so, Miss Shoreham? Do carry on.’