ALWAYS
It was only a fraction of the stuff from Atholl Gardens, but the linen was washed and ironed, laid out and tied with blue ribbon, looking like old stories that had yet to be told. Over the TV set Anne draped an Edwardian tablecloth that had come from Canada after the death of her mother. She placed the ceramic rabbit on top of the tablecloth to hold it down and then she glanced at him while she moved between the bundles, unfolding the material and holding it up and tutting.
Jane, Jessie. Wait a minute. There was Grace. And Anna. Nobody came to the house in Glasgow once they were gone. It was just me up there. Before Luke was born I would build a fire because the pipes were frozen. My fingers used to get cold and they were stained with developer most of the time. I went to the camera club, that’s right. I used to massage that stuff into my fingers to stop the irritation. Camphor ice.
She didn’t notice her neighbour enter but didn’t flinch when she saw her. ‘Good heavens,’ Maureen said, stepping over the bundles. ‘Did you decide to have a wee spring clean?’
‘Stuff from the aunt-hill,’ Anne said.
‘I thought I heard a man’s voice earlier.’
Anne seemed distracted. ‘We were talking about camera work. I had to come back from New York and I didn’t want to come back, Maureen. I wanted to take pictures.’
‘You were very good.’
‘It’s in there somewhere.’ She pointed to the bathroom. ‘A lot of negatives and things like that.’ All of a sudden she seemed upset. She lifted a pillowcase and dabbed her eyes with it. ‘But Jessie used to read to them all in their beds at night,’ she said.
‘Who did she read to?’
‘The aunts.’
‘And could you get away sometimes and see Harry?’
‘I drove a car then.’
‘Oh, I wish I could drive,’ Maureen said. ‘I never took the test, you know. We took the train. My dad loved trains and we were always on them. Away days, they called them. I was an only child. He used to squeeze my hand and say I was his favourite person. Just like that.’
‘I had a nice father, too,’ Anne said.
‘We were lucky.’
Anne looked up as if she suddenly appreciated Maureen. ‘I’ve always had good neighbours,’ she said.
Maureen put her to bed and then went to bring a cup of tea from next door. She placed a sleeping pill on the saucer, to see if it didn’t relax her, but it turned out Anne was fast asleep when she got back so she just took it herself. She felt Anne was on her own, really. She had all these people and all these stories but it didn’t amount to much. You have to be ready to put the past behind you and learn to rely on yourself.
That’s what I did, thought Maureen. I never needed a man to make me into somebody. No way. I could stand on my own two feet. But her mind changed as she handled the cold linen. She didn’t want to admit it, but she understood how it sometimes took another person to turn you into your better self. And that’s what happened with her and Anne. In the old lady’s company she felt more like the person she ought to have been. Anne’s interests touched Maureen, revealing a bit of her to herself. Maureen had just finished the audiobook of Wuthering Heights and she thought of it as she looked at Anne lying asleep. She couldn’t imagine unquiet slumbers for a woman with that kind of nature and all this linen.
Maureen lifted a nice glass from the trolley and poured herself a whisky before coming back and sitting by the bed. It sometimes confused Anne to hear Luke’s letters, but Maureen wanted nonetheless to read them to her in a good, clear voice, capturing the words he’d written down. With the glass balanced on her knee, she took out a folded letter from the pocket of her cardigan.
I told all the boys to write letters so I better write one myself, eh? This is the one and only Captain Campbell here of the 1st Royal Western Fusiliers writing to you from the roasting desert.
As she read aloud the clock was ticking and the whisky tasted of smoke. The letter was full of news.
So that’s it, really. We’re in Camp Bastion and getting ready to push off. I’m not allowed to tell you where we’re going but it’s a good one. I’ve got the usual team here, Flannigan, Dooley and young Lennox, who spend all day playing ping-pong and slagging each other off. The major is here too and is doing his best for us, so if anything happens to me you’ll know it’s just bad luck. Main thing is I’m thinking of you. Keep smiling, Luke.
Maureen finished the letter and put it away. It said a lot for a young man that he could write a letter like that. Just to let the people at home know he loved them, just to do the right thing when it’s dangerous and he knows they must be worried with all the stuff they see on television. She poured another whisky and walked to the window. Half the things her own family said they probably didn’t mean. They were all right, really. You have to forgive people if you want to get along, yet it wasn’t the future she had expected with her children. She’d thought it would be holidays abroad and big dinners by the pool with all the women asking her opinion.
The darkness outside made a mirror of the window and the room looked back at itself as Maureen sat sleeping on the sofa with the tumbler in her hand and the linen stacked beside her. She opened her eyes with a start and found the siren was sounding. She got up slowly and went over to wash the tumbler and place it on the dish-rack before going into the bedroom. ‘In the name of God,’ said Anne.
‘It’s the fire alarm,’ Maureen said. She unhooked Anne’s dressing-gown from the back of the door and brought it to her. ‘We’ll have to go into the courtyard and be counted.’
‘What is it?’
‘The fire alarm. This is every other day. I bet you it’s that Mr MacDonald again in flat 29.’
‘McDonald’s? Like the hamburgers?’
‘No, it’ll be toast. But a pest, Anne. Why he insists on making toast at midnight I’ll never know.’
CHIAROSCURO
The road was black out there and the sea was black and the shore was blacker than the road. Anne could see the people gathered in the courtyard and the scene was entirely made of light as it passed through the glass doors of the reception area. Anne saw how the light picked out the eyes and the cheeks and the ears of the people standing against the blackness. She’d seen charcoals like that, where a person’s eye was a dot of white and a nose was nothing but the smallest stripe.
Housecoat, slippers. And somebody said: ‘Effing freezing out here, Jack.’
‘What time is it, then?’
‘Better ask the warden.’
Anne knew it wasn’t a fire. It wasn’t a house on fire. It was Mr MacDonald from flat 29.
You want fresh chemicals touching the film. You have to agitate the tank, keep it moving, swirl it, Anne, that’s the secret if you want good contrast. Get the chemicals rolling but not too much, darling, or there will be blemishes. Right there. Oh my the safelight’s out, love, would you believe it? Go down to Woolworth’s, would you not, and see if they’ve got the bulbs, ruby-red. And get the other ones for later. It says here: ‘A yellow-green or orange safelight is used for bromide papers and lantern slides, and a yellow or amber safelight for contact papers.’ He was serious and then not. Keep your hands to yourself, Harry; oh stop it now, you’re daft.
Anne was shivering in the cold and Maureen came up with a blanket to put round her shoulders. ‘This is a bloody pantomime,’ Maureen said with a look on her face. ‘The third time this month. They should tape up his cooker. I don’t see why your cooker’s taped up Anne and his is still going and all he ever does is set fire to things.’
‘Oh, stop it, Harry,’ said Anne.
‘This has been a long and complicated day for you,’ Maureen said and she stroked Anne’s cheek.
‘We could walk along the prom.’
‘Not tonight, Anne. It’s awful cold.’ But then she took her neighbour by the arm and walked just a little way down the path leading to the bandstand. Anne looked and smiled to see the warm colour on Maureen’s face, the street lamps drawing
out her eyes and the black distance making a perfect background as they walked along the front. Two yellow blinks appeared out there in the part of the sea where the water was darkest. Anne stopped and Maureen stopped.
‘What was that light?’ Anne said.
‘The Isle of Arran.’
To Anne it was all the walks. She couldn’t name them perhaps but she could see them in her mind. The ones she took as a child by Lake Ontario with her mother and father. The boating pond at the Menier Camp where she strolled with a Leitz Leica, 1948. It was all of these and other places as the night enclosed the promenade and the lighthouse again blinked twice. ‘I had a friend,’ she said. ‘We used to go rowing in the boating pond. A long time ago. They called us the Two Annes.’
THE ADDRESS BOOK
They didn’t need the fire brigade. It was all done with a phone call and an opened window. Anne, back in the flat and sitting up looking through the pages of her address book, found postcards of places she had liked when she was no longer young.
Campbeltown.
Girvan.
Blackwaterfoot.
Oban.
She knew of a morning in Oban with curls of butter at the guesthouse table, porridge and oatcakes, mackerel paste. The house was high on the hill above the port, under the pine trees, a place to be with Harry. Looking at the postcard, it wasn’t the house that came back to her but the breakfast table and the night before, the sound of him asleep. She read a story in an old, water-damaged book she found in the bookcase. She couldn’t have said the title of the book or the name of the guesthouse, but she could remember the story about the Lady Appin, who kept a painting of her lover in her private bedroom, a soldier who then died in the foreign wars. Anne couldn’t have told you his name any more, not a whisper now of his name, but Lady Appin locked her door and wept for a year and picked at the paint until the canvas was totally blank. ‘Maybe I can live,’ she said, ‘because now he lives nowhere but in my mind.’
She placed the postcards at the front of the address book. It had been with her since her days in New York and later she got it bound in red leather. She opened it at the letter T and a photograph fell out, a black-and-white snap of a boy and girl. After staring at it for a long time, Anne went and got the scissors and slowly cut the photograph in half, placing one piece in the book and dropping the other to the floor.
By the sea, by the sea, by the beautiful sea.
You and me. You and me.
‘Documentary work is the future. It’s the truth, darling, the whole truth and nothing but the truth,’ he said. One time he left a note pinned to the door of the flat in Blackpool saying he’d just driven over on the off-chance and would be back for the Illuminations because Jayne Mansfield was turning them on and a Canberra bomber was doing a fly-past.
‘All my love. See you Saturday.’
When she was with him he only had one life. She fell asleep playing that song in her mind about the beautiful sea, his eyes in front of her, Harry’s eyes. When the room was dark a single beam fell onto the bed from outside and lit the address book, where a cut picture of a young boy lay on the open page.
HEAT
‘It doesn’t flood the valley because there’s a good old dam holding it back.’
‘What you talking about, Major?’
‘I’m talking about the Helmand river.’
Scullion breathed out and nipped his cock. If you nip your cock in the wrong place you get piss on your boots. This was one of the helpful, sometimes philosophical facts that the major could retail at random. ‘What in the name of fuck is that noise?’ he said.
There was a guy peeing beside him. ‘Don’t worry,’ said the guy. ‘You’re cool. Stick with the programme. That’s not incoming fire, it’s just the rations truck choking on its Corn Pops.’
‘Its what?’
‘Corn Pops, dude? Don’t you eat breakfast in that dump you come from?’
‘We eat porridge, like the best human beings.’
‘Not us, Daddy. Not the Canadians. I’m talking Reese Puffs. I’m talking Froot Loops.’ The colonel laughed and it was one of those laughs that worked its way into a grunt.
‘That shit you people feed your children should be banned,’ Scullion said. ‘It’s toxic crap. No wonder those kids have two fucken heads and a massive need for semi-automatic weapons.’
‘That’s America, dude. Keep us out of it.’
‘You’re just America-on-ice.’
‘Whatever.’
Scullion stared at the mountains and thought about the dam while the sun sparked off the convoy’s mirrors. He peed into the bushes and spoke again. ‘But there’s drought and poverty down there, corruption like you’ve never seen and Terry bandits in their mud huts, begging to die for Allah. In time people will forget about the dam.’
He licked his lips and thought of R. White’s lemonade. In his memory he could see a whole crate of it in the cellar of a pub in Dominick Street, Mullingar, in the old, grey days before the heat. The colonel put away his dick and turned round to face Scullion.
‘But we can’t forget it. We can’t forget nothing because we’re running a mission here.’
‘The good thing is we’ll be giving those kids electricity once the turbines are installed,’ Scullion said. ‘That’s if we can pay enough bribes to the Taliban to let the power flow.’ A giant Mitsubishi crane roared past behind them. ‘That’s the job. And if we can haul all this kit up the valley and get the machines turning, then the Kajaki operation – this whole fucken thing right here – will have been the biggest public relations coup of the entire war, my dear boy.’
‘I ain’t your boy.’
‘You’re all my fucken boys.’
‘I’ll have you remember I’m a colonel with the 1st Royal Canadian Regiment.’ He smiled at Scullion: he knew his type. Everybody knew everybody’s type and they mistook it for experience.
‘Telling you straight. This operation’s a PR megaphone,’ Scullion said.
The colonel licked the salt from his middle finger. ‘Well, fuck that,’ he said and poked the air twice. ‘Fuck all that. If it’s all about giving the ragheads a bit of hydro, that’s cool with me. But if you’re telling me we’re risking soldiers’ lives just to climb up there for a photo op, so our armies can justify the Yankee dollar. Fuck that.’
‘It’s all in a day’s work,’ Scullion said. ‘That’s our mission, that’s our task. So don’t knock it, Sookie. You’ll be back in Hog Town whacking pucks before you know it.’
As they rumbled along, Scullion tried to imagine Alexander the Great riding into the land of bones. Weren’t the brown plains and jagged mountains a hostile shadowland, a place of dark minds filtering the light? He saw old armies coming with their cigars and their bagpipes to slay the enemies of civilisation. He saw men with mules and brass bands dying of cholera in the boiling wastes of the southern desert. In his mind he pictured Alexander’s handsome face, young and fair with a cut lip, a hero driving his units through the snow-filled passes of the Hindu Kush, leading other men through clouds of mosquitoes and over the rapids of the Oxus, and greeting them with handshakes one by one as they arrived at the place of battle, their sarissas already crusted in blood.
Earlier that morning, Scullion had sat on the short wall of an abandoned compound to speak to Rashid. He considered the Afghan a good soldier: just the sort you want to be teaching to protect his country. Scullion imagined Rashid to be like the local helping hand in colonial life, a smiling khitmutgar from the golden period, a child-man, subject to sentimental affection from the clubbable men of England.
‘But don’t forget I’m Irish, Rashid,’ said Scullion. ‘I’m probably more like you, when all’s said and done.’
‘You are tired, sir,’ said Rashid.
‘The boys are fine. They have each other. A senior officer has to stand apart.’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘Though some officers don’t know it.’
‘Yes, sir.’
&nbs
p; ‘You know who I mean?’
‘You are speaking of Captain Campbell, sir? I see you do not like each other as you once did.’
‘He’s the judge and jury, my friend,’ Scullion said. ‘But you see he knows nothing about life. He thinks we are all just characters in his drama. He can’t see any more why we are fighting. Such men lose faith and then they blame their brothers. I’ve seen it before.’
‘And you, sir. You still have faith?’
‘I have a task, so I do. My task is to help push the operation to a successful conclusion.’
‘But you are tired, sir.’
‘That’s true.’
‘Very tired.’
‘Luke has read some books. That’s something. Shame that it makes him see sickness everywhere.’
‘But you are sick, sir.’ As he said this, Rashid raised his patch to itch the skin around his eye and Scullion saw a gnarled, ragged hole. And, right there in the open air the major felt sick: he looked into the dead socket and his mouth went dry. Scullion knew finally that his nerve had gone. The years of shredded bone and sudden cries and blood on the grass were behind him, and he was lost, not knowing what to say or how to be. Just this blank disgust holding him there and sapping his spirit. He spat a plug of chewing gum onto the ground between them.
‘Pick that up,’ he said.
‘Sorry, sir.’
‘Pick it up.’
Rashid was silent. Scullion always liked the way he took his time to talk, searching through the concept before lighting on the word. ‘I want to learn how to speak more like you,’ he said. ‘In pictures.’
‘You will, Rashid.’
‘For my own people.’ Rashid picked up the piece of gum and put it in his mouth and he stared at the major with an unreadable expression. ‘Dust,’ he said. ‘I like the taste of my own land.’
It was hotter than usual and Scullion gave orders and checked supplies among his group and at various times that day he shivered with a secret revulsion. He didn’t know why.
A commander in Bosnia once told him he had no politics. It was the day after a young fellow Scullion was mentoring got shot in Vitez. ‘You’re a typical modern soldier,’ the commander said, ‘partly because you trust nothing. Everything’s doable and everything’s bullshit. You think like a flame-thrower, Scullion. You want to burn away the enemy and scorch their minds, without knowing what their minds are.’
The Illuminations Page 10