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The Five Gates of Hell

Page 26

by Rupert Thomson


  ‘She died, didn’t she?’ Georgia said.

  He looked at her across the pillows. ‘I didn’t want to tell you.’

  ‘You did tell me. You’re my brother. You tell me everything.’

  He was silent.

  ‘How did it happen?’ she asked.

  ‘It was funny, people were always saying things about her, about how she’d come to no good –’ He stopped again.

  ‘Tell me.’

  ‘There was a bar in town, it was down at the end of the main street, right where the buildings ended and the scrub began. There was a hill there, pretty steep, and the bar was at the bottom of it. She went in for a drink one time, she liked a few drinks around midday, she used to say it helped the long hot afternoons slide by,’ and Nathan smiled to himself, because he could hear her saying it. ‘She met some guy in there that day, some guy she used to go with, and he must’ve said something because the next thing anyone knew, she was screaming at him, Pete was in the bar the morning after, he said the window was all over the floor, apparently she’d thrown an ashtray at the guy and it had missed and taken the whole window out instead, and when he took her by the arm and tried to calm her down, she shook him off and ran out of the bar, right out in the street, and like I said, it was the bottom of a hill and there was a truck coming –’

  He could see that part of Broken Springs so clearly, almost as if he was standing there. There was a wall on the far side of the street which was always being knocked over. Trucks would come hurtling down the hill, their brakes would fail, and they’d plough right through the wall and on into the field beyond. As soon as the wall was mended, another truck’s brakes would fail.

  He could see the bar opposite too. The road dipping down into town and the bar with its brown tin roof and its dusty verandah, and a woman running out into the street, hair horizontal in the air behind her, strings of wooden beads swinging in a loop around her neck like a cow’s jaw chewing, her mouth wide open, a wedge hewn out of her face, as if someone had taken an axe to her, as if her mouth was a wound and her screaming the bleeding.

  He looked across at Georgia. Her head on the pillow. Her face still, as it sometimes was before she began to cry. He felt for her hand and held it tight.

  ‘I didn’t want to tell you,’ he said.

  He watched their candle moving the shadows around, keeping the end of the world at bay, keeping the two of them alive.

  ‘I had to go to the hospital,’ she said eventually. ‘I had to collect his things.’

  ‘Did you see him?’

  ‘They asked me if I wanted to. I said no. I just wanted to get out of there.’

  ‘I think I’ve got to see him. I haven’t seen him for so long.’

  ‘You’ll have to call them.’

  ‘I’ll call tomorrow.’

  ‘Maybe I’ll come too,’ she said, though her voice had shrunk at the thought.

  ‘My brother still,’ he said after a while, ‘aren’t you?’ And he waited, and then he heard one word come back, spoken in a whisper, she must have been close to sleep.

  ‘Yes.’

  The hospital lay in the hills, about an hour away. Yvonne drove. Georgia and Harriet sat in the back. It was a bright day. White, blinding clouds and a breeze in the treetops like hands in hair. But Nathan felt a sickness rise in him at the thought of arriving, he didn’t want the journey to end. The sickness rose into his throat, and he had to keep swallowing. He was glad that they’d all decided to come. He wouldn’t have liked to be doing this alone.

  Nobody talked much on the way out. As they climbed into the hills, the sky lowered over the car. A light rain began to fall.

  The road that led to the hospital sloped upwards through a forest of pine trees. It was a straight road, the kind of road that leads to a temple or a sacred monument. Nathan looked out of the window. Once he saw a glade, a secret place with a floor of pale, sandy soil. Then the pines closed ranks again, their tall red trunks glowing softly in the gloom of the afternoon.

  When they reported to the hospital reception, the nurse on duty showed them into a waiting-room. They sat on orange plastic chairs. There was a fish tank and a heap of magazines. There were paintings of flowers on the walls. A man in a white coat limped past the open doorway, pushing a trolley piled high with linen, a cigarette between his fingers. Nathan stood by the window, and looked out into the gardens.

  That morning he’d revived an old custom. Leaving Georgia sleeping, he’d knocked on Yvonne’s door and asked her if she wanted to go swimming. They drove to a quiet beach west of High Head. It was still early. The sand took the glittery morning light and threw it back into his eyes like a mirror. One wooden jetty crept out over the water on brittle insect legs. And the waves, pale pale green and mauve between.

  When he was tired of swimming he climbed a ladder to the jetty. The wooden slats had bleached grey. A creaking like old doors opening and closing. The same rhythm as breathing. He walked down to the end. An old man was sitting on an upturned beer crate, a plastic bag for bait and a bucket of fish beside him. He wore great clothes. A maroon jacket and a panama hat with a shiny black ribbon. White bristles stood out on his cheeks. Nathan sat down. The wooden slats were already warm from the sun. He dangled his legs over the edge and let his body dry. He could see Yvonne, she was floating on her back. Beyond her, further out, a motor launch cut through the water. Not long afterwards he felt the wash slopping against the jetty. The jetty moved lazily, like someone in their sleep. He watched the old man fit another piece of bait on his line and flick the hook backhanded through the air. A prim plop as it landed, sank. The old man tugged gently on the line.

  ‘What kind of fish are you catching?’ Nathan asked.

  Smiling, the old man shrugged. ‘I don’t know the name of it.’

  It seemed right, what the old man said. You sat in the sun, the hours passed. In the end, sooner or later, something happened. You didn’t need to know the name of it.

  After their swim, Nathan and Yvonne stopped for coffee and doughnuts in a diner on the highway. They sat at a small table by the window. Sunlight on formica, salt on skin. Yvonne began to talk about Dad.

  ‘I hardly ever saw him,’ she said, ‘but we used to talk on the phone for hours. We used to send each other pictures. Look,’ and she opened her handbag and reached inside, ‘this was one I’d been saving for him –’ Her voice cracked and she began to cry.

  He put his hand over hers. ‘It’s all right.’

  ‘I’m stupid,’ she said.

  ‘No, you’re not.’

  ‘All these people,’ she said. ‘I’m embarrassing you.’

  He wanted to cheer her up. ‘Do you remember the time I was staying with you and that couple came round?’

  ‘Couple?’ She looked up, her eyes swollen.

  ‘That nervous couple,’ he said. ‘Their car broke down. You let them use the phone.’

  After they’d used the phone, Yvonne said they could wait in the lounge. She sat them down on the sofa. She gave them brandy. The wife didn’t know what to make of Yvonne at all. Her eyes kept alighting on Yvonne and taking off again. They tried the walls instead, but there were forty-six paintings on the walls. Every colour moon you could imagine (and some you couldn’t). Nowhere to land, not unless you had a spaceship.

  Her husband was braver. He rose from the sofa and placed himself in front of a picture. Green moon, yellow universe. ‘Very good,’ he said, ‘really very good.’

  Yvonne was standing at the far end of the room in her red tent dress, her arms extended, a glass of brandy glimmering in one hand. She looked like a sort of fierce lamp. She took one step forwards and shouted, ‘Yes, I’m in the middle of my ball period, if you want to know,’ and the brandy slopped out of her glass and dropped into the part of the carpet that was orange and was never seen again.

  ‘I think they’re moons,’ Nathan said. Then he turned to the couple. ‘What do you think they are?’

  But Yvonne couldn’t wait. �
��Balls,’ she shouted. ‘They’re balls.’

  Yvonne was smiling down into her coffee. ‘Those were good times,’ she said, ‘weren’t they?’

  He pressed her hand. They weren’t good times, of course, they were terrible, but he knew what she meant.

  ‘I’m so sorry to keep you waiting.’ It was the sister. She was standing in the doorway with a tight smile on her face. ‘We had an emergency.’

  She ushered them down a long corridor through countless swing doors. The temperature dropped. A morgue appeared on the left like a reason.

  She talked to fill the silence. ‘Mr Christie was known here,’ she said. ‘He was very well liked.’

  These were dead sentences. She might have been reading from a tombstone.

  There was nothing you could say.

  They passed through another set of doors and out into the open air. It seemed cold up here in the hills. Mist had collected in the trees. There was a sense of abandonment and neglect. A tap dripping endlessly.

  They followed the sister across a lawn and into a small chapel built, like the rest of the hospital, out of crumbling red brick. She vanished behind a velvet curtain. They waited, not speaking. A few moments later she appeared again and told them they could go in. She warned them about the steep steps. She said she’d be outside if they needed her.

  Nathan passed through the curtain and stopped at the top of the steps. Georgia stopped behind him. She was peering over his shoulder, he could feel her breath on his neck, warm and then nothing, warm and then nothing. Dad lay below, stretched out under a heavy cloth of blue and gold. Two candles flickered at his head. Nathan walked towards him, down the steps, across the stone floor.

  They’d covered his face with a square of gauze. It looked as if it had landed there by chance, like a piece of paper or a leaf. The next gust of wind would blow it away. Except there wasn’t any wind. The air was still, chilling.

  His face was curiously smooth and youthful. His mouth had fallen open in a kind of sigh. There were no signs of violence, nothing to suggest that his death had not been peaceful. He looked like a pope, Nathan thought, or a saint. A holy man who’d prepared for his death, who might even, perhaps, have welcomed it.

  It was only when he moved round to the side that he saw the blue, chapped ears and the hair, frozen and brittle, as if you could snap it off. It was only then that he noticed how raw and scalded the neck looked, how it bulged. Now that the death looked painful, now that he could see traces of a struggle, he began, in a kind of panic, to say things in his head, he began to talk to the dead man. He said he was sorry for not visiting more often, sorry for not being there, for not, for not, for not, these omissions of his, these confessions, they rose into his closed mouth until it seemed that he might choke, they were jumbled up, dislocated, like old bones in a crypt, but he knew they fitted together, he knew they would form a skeleton where he could hang the flesh and muscle of his guilt.

  He looked at Georgia. She tried to smile, but her smile wavered, didn’t hold. He remembered taking her to school, it was after their mother died, Georgia would’ve been seven, she didn’t want to go, there were girls who tied her to trees, it was her accent or her looks, he couldn’t remember now, but he had to take her because he’d promised Dad, Dad who didn’t know anything, the scratches on her legs were brambles, the bruises on her wrists were something else, he couldn’t remember now, how could they tell him the truth, how could they tell him anything when all he did was sit in dark rooms with his head in his hands, his head haunted by her ghost, and each dawn broke like the slow blow of a hammer. It was a nice road, the road that led to the school. High grass banks and trees for carving your initials on and ditches trickling with water. One morning he saw a clock lying under a bush. ‘Look at that,’ he said, and crouched and peered, drawing her in, ‘a clock, how strange,’ strange because it was an antique clock with inlaid wood and round brass knobs for legs, it should have been softly ticking away on someone wealthy’s mantelpiece, a china shepherdess on either side, a marble fireplace below, and yet here it was, lying under a bush, and tilted at a curious angle as if it was drunk, and not ticking at all. That morning they parted under the trees, he never took her all the way to the gates, that would only have made things worse, that morning she looked the way she always looked, rings under her eyes and her whole body braced for the ordeal that lay ahead, how hard it was to leave her always, maybe that was why they always drew the parting out, sometimes it took minutes, just the saying goodbye, they backed away from each other, then stopped and called something out, then backed away again, they called out special words that they’d made up, words to fill the distance between them, words for the things they couldn’t say, they backed away till he was under the trees or she was through the gates, whichever happened first, she looked the same way she always looked that morning, except for one thing, she had a clock tucked under her arm, the clock they’d found together, the clock that didn’t tick, the lonely clock. It was the same thing, his sister then, his father now, Georgia walking towards a beating in the school yard, Dad fighting for breath in his red chair, he wanted to save them, only he could do it, who else was there, but he hadn’t, he couldn’t, not really, but the wanting to, the failure to, you couldn’t get away from that.

  Harriet climbed back up the steps. Yvonne followed her.

  He wanted to leave now too, but he had to make some kind of contact with the dead man first. Touching the face through that gauze would have seemed like sacrilege, so he chose the hair instead. He reached out cautiously. It was stiff, chilled. It was both wet and dry at the same time. Like ice. He shivered, turned away. Georgia had been watching him.

  ‘What did it feel like?’ she whispered.

  ‘Cold,’ he whispered. ‘Not like hair at all.’

  She came closer, reached out, touched. Then drew back quickly, as if she’d just been burned.

  After leaving the chapel, they went walking in the gardens. They set off from the same place but, like pieces of something that had just exploded, they each took a different course across the lawn. Though later, driving home, Nathan saw it another way. It wasn’t like an explosion. They were separate, there was space between them, but, like flowers in a vase, they were all standing in the same water.

  The next morning Nathan and Georgia were required, as executors of the will, to meet with Dad’s lawyer. He was a dull man with bad teeth. His jacket was ripped at the armpit. They sat obediently in leather chairs while he read the document out loud. A massive, antiquated fan whirred and clattered in the corner of the office, turning on its metal stem, examining them one by one. The will was straightforward enough. Dad had left slightly more money than expected, and that money was to be divided equally between Nathan, Georgia and Rona, Rona’s share to be held in trust until she attained the age of eighteen. The lawyer reminded Nathan and Georgia that the house on Mahogany Drive already belonged to them since, as they doubtless knew, their mother had died intestate and, when their mother’s mother died some years later, the house, deemed to be two-thirds of her estate, became legally theirs. (Yvonne, the other beneficiary, had received a cash settlement.) Now their father was dead, the house was theirs to do with as they wished.

  ‘As for the manner of burial,’ the lawyer said, ‘it appears that your father wishes to be buried in the same place as his first wife. In other words, a sea burial in Coral Pastures. Just in case there’s any confusion,’ and he smiled, ‘he’s written down the exact co-ordinates.’

  ‘Harriet’s not going to like that,’ Georgia said.

  ‘Harriet?’ The lawyer’s eyebrows lifted.

  ‘Our father’s second wife,’ Nathan explained. ‘Our stepmother.’

  ‘Of course,’ the lawyer said. ‘I met her once.’ And then he drew his eyebrows down again. ‘Is she,’ and he hesitated, looking for the most delicate statement of his question, ‘involved in the proceedings?’

  ‘She’s staying with us,’ Georgia said. ‘In the house.’


  ‘Ah,’ the lawyer said. ‘Yes, I can see how that might be awkward.’ He leaned forwards. ‘It will require,’ and he paused, ‘a certain amount of tact.’

  On the way home Nathan turned to Georgia in the car and said, ‘It will require,’ and he paused, and then they both shouted, ‘a certain amount of tact.’

  They laughed so hard that Nathan had to pull off the road. Later, when they were over it, Georgia said, ‘I never knew death would be so funny.’

  It was the morning of the funeral. Almost twelve o’clock. From where Nathan was sitting, in a chapel adjacent to the altar, he could hear the cathedral filling up. Looking along the pew, he saw Georgia, Harriet, Yvonne, all three in profile, stern as the heads on coins.

  He realised suddenly that he had to go to the bathroom. He checked the watch on Georgia’s wrist. Five minutes till the service began. There was still time. Just.

  He slipped out of the pew and hurried back down the aisle. He was surprised at how crowded the cathedral was. He hadn’t realised that Dad knew so many people.

  Once outside he paused. He was standing in a square paved with dark-grey stone. There were statues on pedestals, angels or statesmen, he couldn’t tell. A great many people sat at the feet of the statues or stood about in groups near by. They were all dressed in black. They were all crying. Some dabbed at their eyes with handkerchiefs, others covered their faces and wept into their hands. One man stood alone, his breeches held up with string, his arms pinned to his sides. He shed tears the way a flower sheds petals, they fell to the ground, lay scattered round his feet. It struck Nathan that these were all people who had been unable to get in.

  But the pressure in his bladder was growing, and he set off across the square in search of a public toilet. He turned down the first street he came to, turned left, right, left again, he walked down a hill, along an alley, through a deserted square, but still he couldn’t find one anywhere. He noticed a clock on the top of a building. The two gold hands were almost one. He had to get back. And then, looking around him, he realised that he no longer knew where he was. He began to run in what he thought was the right direction, but he didn’t recognise any of the buildings. I was born here, he thought. Surely I’ll see something familiar soon. He could hardly hear his thoughts above the rasping of his breath.

 

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