The Lodger

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The Lodger Page 1

by Louisa Treger




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  For my late mother, Hazel, and my father, Gerald,

  for my children, Adam, Imogen, and Alexandra,

  and especially for Julian, with love

  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Notice

  Dedication

  1906

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Afterword: A Note on Sources

  About the Author

  Copyright

  1906

  One

  Dorothy stepped off the train. She could feel the clammy sinking sensation beginning to creep round her, as though she was a ghost drifting through the world of the living. Taking a deep breath to anchor herself, she looked around. It was a small clean station, brightened by hanging baskets of ruffled mauve and white sweet peas, the sharp green of their leaves almost translucent in the May sunlight. She told herself there was nothing sinister; no one was going to find her guilty. It was just a visit to an old school friend, recently married.

  A short, tiny-footed man was hurrying toward her, already talking and flailing his arms in the air. He stopped in front of her; he wasn’t much taller than she was. He had sandy hair and a scraggy mustache; he could easily pass for an undernourished shop assistant. Yet as this thought flickered through her mind, she noticed his grey-blue dark-ringed eyes, vivid and edgy, taking her in approvingly. Instantly, hot color stained her cheeks and she willed it away fiercely, impotently.

  He either didn’t notice, or he chose to ignore her confusion: perhaps, she had misinterpreted his look? He held out his hand; his grip was warm and confident. “Miss Richardson, how nice to meet you. I’m Herbert Wells, but my friends call me Bertie. I’m delighted you’ve come for the weekend; Jane has spoken of you so often.”

  “Jane…?” She faltered, disoriented.

  He grinned. “My wife, your old school chum. The rest of the world knows her as Amy Catherine, but I’ve shoved the name Jane on her, and she has graciously taken it for everyday use.”

  She returned his smile hesitantly; she was unmoored by him. Jane? The name didn’t fit her friend. It was practical and plain; a touch governessy, even.

  Bertie carried on talking. His voice was high and reedy, almost atonal. But the words he spoke soon dissolved any taint of weakness or mediocrity. He asked questions by making statements: “You haven’t much luggage. We can take it ourselves, without help from the porter. You found us brilliantly. The house isn’t far from here.” Words seemed to stream off the ends of his mustache and tumble down his waistcoat.

  They approached the house from behind. As Bertie explained on their walk, it was built to open onto a view of the Kentish sea. He had designed it himself, he added, and Dorothy could feel his pride in creating such a home for his new wife and the family they would one day have.

  It was an imposing and attractively proportioned house, crowning the cliffs ninety feet above the ocean, with lawns and arbors reaching down to the beach. Dorothy saw a tennis court, a croquet lawn, and several alcoves sprinkled with chairs for reading, thinking, or writing. The walls of the house were thick, and gave a sense of great stability and continuance.

  As soon as they stepped through the Gothic front door, Amy Catherine—or Jane—came hurrying to greet them; she hugged Dorothy with a little cry of excitement. “Dora! I’m so glad you’re here, after all this time!”

  The contact with someone from Dorothy’s old life—perhaps it was the pressure of Amy Catherine’s warm and pliant body against hers—brought a flood of feeling: a blend of relief and pain so potent, Dorothy feared it would crack her open.

  Dorothy broke away and looked at her. Slender and fine-featured, Amy Catherine had thick fair hair and large limpid brown eyes. She was simply dressed in a white muslin blouse and navy skirt, with no ornaments.

  Amy Catherine was studying Dorothy’s face carefully.

  “You’re as pretty as ever,” she pronounced, in her soft clear voice. “Your hair has turned slightly darker blonde, but it suits you, and you’ve still got your lovely complexion. You’re looking a bit tired and thin, though. A weekend of sea air and home cooking will do you no end of good. Let’s go straight upstairs; I’ll show you to your room before dinner.”

  She led Dorothy up a wide green staircase to an airy high-ceilinged room that had an unobstructed view of the sea. A stream of golden light blazed through the open lattice windows, and shone in patches on the ceiling and walls. The room was dominated by a canopied four-poster bed, its counterpane embellished with brick-red flowers. A Primus stove stood inside the fireplace with a polished brass kettle on it. A little table nearby, covered with a brightly patterned cloth, held a teapot, a lemon, and a glass. Amy Catherine opened another door to reveal an adjoining bathroom. “See, you can live as though you’re in your own home,” she said gleefully. “Everything’s bang up to date. You’re one of our first visitors.”

  “It’s perfectly lovely, Catherine; I’m dumb with admiration. Just look at you, a married woman, running a grown-up house.” As she said it, she remembered how even in their school days, Amy Catherine seemed to possess a cryptic knowledge of how things worked, and exactly what needed to be done to get on in the world. Dorothy had half envied her without really wanting to be like her, because even the contemplation of such efficiency stripped the world of its beauty and mystery.

  “You dear old thing!” Amy Catherine walked over and hugged her. “I heard about your mother, Dora … I’m so sorry.”

  Dorothy broke free and sank onto the bed. She couldn’t reply; this was what she had dreaded. How much had Catherine been told? Was she thinking what everyone else thought, but no one had dared say to her: If you hadn’t left her alone, she would still be alive …

  “My father…” Amy Catherine hesitated. “He went the same way.”

  Dorothy managed to find her voice. “Yes, I heard.”

  Amy Catherine sat down beside her. For a time, neither of them moved nor spoke. But there was relief in having faced the same horror: each knew the brush of its dank webbed fingers. For once, Dorothy didn’t feel blighted, removed from humanity.

  “I’m glad to see you,” Amy Catherine said at last. “We’ve heaps of time to talk and catch up.”

  “I’m glad to see you, too, Cath.”

  She was taken aback to find the name sitting awkwardly on her tongue. The thoroughness with which Bertie had transformed her old friend into Jane was astonishing.

  * * *

  DINNER WAS PRESIDED over by two cheerful women servants. As they carved and opened bottles, Bertie turned to Dorothy. “So, you were at school with Jane.”

  She nodded.

  “What was Jane like at school?”

  “Well,” she began, “she’s still the same. People are themselves; they don’t change much, do they?”

  For a few moments, there was nothing but the sound of the fire flickering in the mild air. He was confounded by her banality. The maids began to hand around plates piled high with rich-smelling meat and veg
etables.

  “Did you see the sunset?” Bertie asked, at last. “It was extraordinary this evening; a pink effulgence basted all over the sky … God evidently ate raspberry custard for supper.”

  “Don’t be provocative,” Jane said mildly. “I sold my soul to the devil a long time ago, but for all you know, Dora’s a believer.”

  “What does selling your soul feel like?” Dorothy asked, trying for light-heartedness.

  “Quite exhilarating, really.”

  Bertie drained his glass of wine. “I hope you aren’t offended by our lack of piety, Miss Richardson?”

  She shook her head.

  “Good,” he said. “You see, personally, I think God was invented by man. Primitive man looked at the cosmos and couldn’t bear the idea of being alone; it was too isolating, too downright depressing. So he created ‘Mr. G’ as I like to call him, out of his fear of natural phenomena and his unquenchable need for reassurance.” He paused for breath, making little grunts in the back of his nose, as if he was trying to stave off rejoinders or interruptions before he’d had a chance to marshal his thoughts. “Most people don’t want to admit that there’s nothing but man, or—dreadful thought—that we’re descended from the ape … but the picture’s not entirely bleak. We’ve made some marvelous discoveries as we’ve evolved, like science. We should all be looking to science for salvation, not religion. Religion has had its day.”

  His way of seeing things made life unbearable. No God. No creation. Everyone fighting for existence, like animals … the strong clawing their way over the weak. Dorothy could feel astonishment and belligerence spilling out of her and—despite herself—admiration. She tried to rein in all her tangled emotions behind a relaxed enthusiastic smile, but they streamed from the pores of her skin and obstructed her limbs, making her ham-fisted with her cutlery. What made him so infuriatingly sure of everything? He was like a volcano, continually bubbling over with urgent thoughts and incandescent ideas.

  He was still going on about scientific imagination, scientific invention. “It’s our mission … imposing scientific method on primordial mayhem; we are winning against mayhem … nothing that came before science was worth contemplating…”

  “I don’t care a button for science,” Dorothy burst out, unable to restrain herself. “It’s just speculation; tittle-tattle about the cosmos.”

  “My word! What an extraordinary view!”

  “It’s true. Darwin chattered about apes and when he got old he exactly resembled one, and felt sorry that he hadn’t given more time to other interests, like art and music. One day, someone will find out that his conclusions were mistaken, that he omitted or miscalculated some vital piece of the puzzle, and his hypothesis, which has given thousands of people sleepless nights, will be discredited.”

  “Darwin was a great man. His theories aren’t a matter of speculation, they are fundamental truths; the cornerstone of biology … I can’t see your difficulty with him, not even with the strongest of magnifying glasses.”

  Bertie proclaimed facts, not opinions. Dorothy disagreed with nearly everything he said, and was beginning to resent the way he monopolized the conversation.

  She wanted to talk to Jane. “What do you remember about Miss Sandell’s school?” she wanted to ask. “Do you remember our English teacher, who was Browning’s pupil? What about Fräulein Schneider—she was so hot tempered, her lessons were a series of emotional scenes. Do you realize how lucky we were to be given classes in logic and psychology instead of household skills, to be taught to think for ourselves and form opinions? I didn’t then, though I’m starting to now…”

  But Bertie’s lively monologue prevented her from finding out what Jane thought or felt.

  As the meal progressed, Dorothy sensed uneasiness in Jane. She seemed to be chronically fearful lest a misunderstanding, an argument, a failure of good humor should occur. She was a jumble of anxiety and confidence. Her manner was bright, yet her voice was soft and unprepossessing. Her conversation consisted mainly of introducing subjects for the others to take up and develop, trying to keep things going. During pauses in the talk, she looked uneasy, almost scared. Once dessert was served, however, she seemed to relax visibly, as though a great weight had rolled off her.

  “Tell us about your life, Dora,” she said at this stage. “It’s so long since I’ve seen you properly.” The reflections from the many candles on the table illuminated Jane’s pretty bare arms and glowed in her eyes.

  Dorothy hesitated, searching for words to describe how far she had come. This was why she’d reached out to Jane after all this time: she wanted a long-standing friend to help reconcile her past self with the strange adventure of the present. And Jane had responded to her letter at once, with an invitation to stay for the weekend, so perhaps she felt the same need.

  Dorothy took a sip of the delicate amber wine, feeling the warmth of it sliding through her veins, giving her courage. “After my mother died, I longed to escape from the world of women,” she said, slowly. “So I moved to London; I live in a boardinghouse in Bloomsbury. I’m a secretary to a Harley Street dentist at a pound a week. The hours are long, and I don’t have much leisure. But the reward is a kind of freedom—I’m able to attend lectures and a range of political meetings. London is a melting pot of societies and ideas, and I can dip in and out of them as I please.”

  She stopped, realizing that in order to hold the Wells’s attention, she would have to be clever and amusing. She probed her mind for a suitable anecdote, yet without knowing quite how it happened, found herself pouring out her heart about work. She told them about the grueling hours, the cold which turned her fingernails blue, the cleaning solution used for dental instruments that dried and cracked her skin …

  She broke off, worried she’d lost them. But Bertie was nodding sympathetically.

  “Years ago, I worked as a draper’s apprentice,” he said. “I knew the grind of it all: the endless hours, the suffocating tedium, the many petty tyrannies. The feeling that I was trapped forever in a mindless, soulless machine from which there was no way out … but I can suggest a way of freeing yourself at one blow.”

  “How?”

  “Do what I did. Write a novel.”

  She raised her eyebrows. “Just like that?”

  “Of course not. It takes more work than goes into many a doctoral thesis, and countless arid days and fruitless attempts.”

  Dorothy found herself watching the curious mouthing of his lips as they formed the words, half hidden by the thin mustache, and saved from weakness only by his ironic smile.

  “The Time Machine was born after years of poverty and disappointments and cutting my teeth with journalism,” he went on. “I wrote it on holiday in Sevenoaks. Do you remember, Jane?”

  “Indeed I do, my dear.”

  “I couldn’t have done it without Jane,” Bertie admitted. “Her unwavering belief in me kept me going, even long after I’d ceased to believe in myself.” He turned to Jane. “Remember how we used to feel: it was you and me against the world?”

  “Yes, I remember.” Jane was looking at him fondly.

  For a moment, Bertie laid his hand on the back of Jane’s neck, beneath her hair. It was an astonishingly private gesture, so intimate and tender, Dorothy could hardly bear to watch. A pang of envy and longing shot through her.

  “I wrote at an open window on hot August nights, with the moths hurling themselves against the lamp,” he said. “I could hear the landlady in the garden below complaining loudly over the fence to her neighbor about my immoderate use of her lamp. So I wrote faster than ever, but she was still unhappy with me. She’d discovered, by snooping in our luggage and finding divorce papers from my first wife, that Jane and I weren’t yet married. She was scandalized by our morals and by the shameless way we’d foisted ourselves on her and taken advantage of her innocence…”

  As they were about to get up from the table, Bertie said “Hasn’t she got roses in her cheeks now, eh Jane? You must come and see
us more often, Miss Richardson. Being here evidently agrees with you. And we like having you around, don’t we Jane?”

  A sense of belonging was being offered. For a moment she hesitated, not quite sure how to respond. “Thank you, I like being here,” she said shyly.

  Meeting Jane’s eyes, she was surprised by their suddenly tense and watchful expression.

  * * *

  DOROTHY GOT READY for bed in the comfortable high-ceilinged guest room. When she turned out the gas, the windows shone faintly with moonlight. The air around her was still warm from the gas. She climbed into the four-poster bed, feeling drained. Perhaps, she’d be able to sleep properly here.

  She closed her eyes. Almost at once, the well-known flashbacks started arriving, playing themselves out vividly behind her sealed eyelids, transporting her back to the event that had torn her life apart.

  She sat upright, trying to erase the image of her mother’s body sprawled on the floor, runnels of blood forming viscous pools on the tattered linoleum. So much blood; Dorothy never knew a person’s frame contained that much.

  She pressed her knuckles hard into her eyes; pinpricks of brilliant white light danced in front of them. But it was useless; the memory was indelibly seared into her mind. Life had turned her inside out in seconds; everything disintegrated, and nothing was ever the same. All that was familiar vanished in a few instants, and the grief and guilt were like swallowing splinters of broken glass.

  * * *

  AFTER BREAKFAST THE next morning, Dorothy went for a walk in the garden. Jane was busy with household chores, and Bertie was nowhere to be seen. She was relieved to be alone. The night had left her raw and disunited; she needed space to gather up the scattered pieces of herself and glue them back into a semblance of normality.

  The garden was large and well kept, and it took time to explore. At the bottom of the lawn was a rose garden filled with lush bushes, the roses still in bud. A covered walk made of growing plants trained over a trellis ran down the middle of it. Pansies and foxgloves bloomed thickly in wide flower beds. She wandered arbitrarily across a walled vegetable garden that held cherry and apple trees, and through a door into a terraced square.

 

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