Beautiful Malice

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Beautiful Malice Page 2

by Rebecca James


  And Alice is the perfect hostess. She makes all her guests feel welcome and comfortable, but for some reason it’s me that she chooses to spend most of the evening with. She keeps her arm linked through mine, drags me from group to group, and involves me in every conversation. We dance together and gossip about what different people are wearing, who they are flirting with, who seems to be attracted to whom. I have a wonderful time. It’s more fun than I’ve had in years. And while I’m there I don’t think of my sister once, nor of my devastated parents. I dance and laugh and flirt. I forget, temporarily, about the night I realized the awful truth about myself. I forget all about the night I discovered the shameful, grubby coward at the core of my soul.

  3

  After Alice’s party, people at school are noticeably more friendly to me. I get smiles and nods in the corridors from students I don’t recognize, and a few even say “Hey, Katherine!” surprising me by knowing my name. And Alice finds me at lunchtime, sits down beside me in the cafeteria, and makes me laugh with stories about the other students, gossipy tidbits of information about people I barely know. It’s fun, and I’m more than happy for the company, glad not to be alone anymore.

  I don’t question why she would want to spend time with me. I used to be popular, after all, and am used to being liked. Alice says she wants to be my friend; she seems to enjoy my company; she listens, intently, to everything I have to say. So I am grateful and flattered and pleased. And for the first time since Rachel died, I feel something resembling happiness.

  On the Thursday following her party, I call Alice and invite her over for Saturday night. I live with my aunt Vivien, my father’s sister. I like living with Vivien; she’s warm and easygoing, and I’m grateful that I’m no longer at home, that I can finish high school where nobody has heard of Rachel or the Boydell sisters. I spend a lot of time alone because Vivien goes on so many business trips and if she’s free on weekends she goes away with friends. She’s always encouraging me to invite people to the apartment and clearly thinks it strange that I never socialize, but I’ve grown used to my own company and enjoy being able to choose exactly what to eat, what to watch, what music I listen to.

  “I’ll make dinner,” I tell Alice.

  “Awesome,” she says. “Hope you’re a good cook.”

  “I am. It’s one of my many secret talents.”

  “Secrets, hmm?” Alice is quiet for a minute. “Have a lot of them, do you?”

  I laugh, as if the very idea is absurd.

  I spend Saturday buying food. I used to cook a lot before Rachel died, when we were still a family, and so I know what I’m doing and what I’ll need. I buy all the ingredients—chicken thighs, cardamom pods, yogurt, cumin, ground coriander, basmati rice—to cook one of my favorite curries. That way I can make it early, before Alice arrives, and when she gets there I can let it simmer and grow more delicious as we talk.

  I’ve become so used to keeping everything guarded and private, so reluctant to let anyone close, that I’m surprised to realize how much I’m looking forward to Alice’s company. I don’t know when or how the idea of friendship and intimacy became so appealing, but all of a sudden the thought of having fun and getting to know someone new is quite irresistible. And although I’m still afraid of revealing too much, still conscious that friendship can be risky, I can’t quell this feeling of excited anticipation.

  I get home, prepare the curry, then shower and dress. I have an hour before Alice arrives, so I call my parents. Mom and Dad and I moved about a year ago. Too many people knew us at home, too many people knew what had happened to Rachel. It was impossible to cope with the pitying stares, the curious looks, the conspicuous whispering wherever we went. I moved in with Vivien so that I could finish high school in the city, a place so big I could keep to myself, remain anonymous. My parents bought a house a couple of hours north. They wanted me to live with them, of course, and argued that I was too young to be leaving home. But I’d started to find their sadness overwhelming, their very presence suffocating, and so I convinced them that the city was the perfect place for me to be, that my very happiness depended on it, and they finally relented.

  “Boydell residence.” My mother answers the phone. I changed my last name when I moved and now go by my grandmother’s maiden name, Patterson. It was surprisingly easy to cast off my old name—so easy, at least on paper, to become a new person. I miss my old name. But it goes with the old me, the happy, carefree, sociable me. Katherine suits the new, shyer version. Katie Boydell is no more. Rachel and Katie Boydell—the infamous Boydell sisters—both are gone.

  “Mom.”

  “Sweetheart. I was just about to call you. Daddy and I were talking about your car.”

  “Oh?”

  “Yes. Now, don’t argue, darling, please. But we’ve decided to get you a new one. It will be safer than the old one. We’ve got the money and it just feels ridiculous to let you drive around in that old bomb.”

  “It’s only eight years old, Mom.” I drive her old Volvo, which is already a very new and conservative car for someone my age.

  She continues as if I haven’t spoken. “We’ve found this lovely Honda. It gets great mileage, it’s a sweet little car, but best of all it scored really well on all the safety tests. It’ll be perfect for you.”

  There’s little point arguing, I don’t want to upset her or make a fuss. Since Rachel’s death my parents have been obsessed with my safety, with doing as much as is humanly possible to make sure that I stay alive. I have no choice but to accept their gifts, their concern.

  “Sounds great, Mom,” I say. “Thanks.”

  “How’s school going? Have your grades picked up at all?”

  “Yes,” I lie. “I’m doing much better.”

  “I’ve been reading about the pre-med program at the college here. It’s really highly rated, you know, and has a reputation as good as any in the country. In fact, it really seems to be the place to study the sciences and medicine these days. And there are a lot of outstanding doctors teaching there. It’s something I’d like you to consider, darling. For me. You could live with us, and you know how pleased Daddy would be if you did that, and you could really concentrate on your studies without worrying about rent or bills or your meals. We could take care of you, make it all easier.”

  “I don’t know, Mom, I don’t know. I’m enjoying English right now, and history, too.… Science isn’t … anyway, I thought I might get a degree in art history, maybe. And, Mom, I really like living here.”

  “Oh, of course you do. Vivien’s place is perfect and I know she’d be more than pleased to have you stay there. And what you’re studying now is a wonderful beginning to your education. But it really is only a beginning, darling. You will need to get back on track. Eventually. When you’re ready.”

  Back on track. When you’re ready. This is as close as Mom can get to mentioning what happened to Rachel, to acknowledging our loss, the life we had before she died. I was top of my class and doing very well. I’d hoped to do well enough to be pre-med in college and then go on to medical school. Obstetrics had been my ultimate goal, I had everything planned. But when Rachel died, my plans fell apart, things went completely off track. The track itself was ripped from beneath me, torn from the ground, obliterated.

  And I discovered, during that horrific time, that science and mathematics, all the precise and utterly dependable stuff I used to love so much, were completely useless when it came to understanding grief. Or dealing with guilt.

  And now I doubt that I’ll ever be ready to get back on track. I’m on another track now, just slowly, slowly gaining some momentum, and I don’t think I can, or want to, make the sideways leap off.

  “I’ll think about it.”

  “Good. And I’ll mail you some of these brochures.” My mother laughs then, but I hear the little catch in her throat, the sign that this conversation has made her want to cry. “I’ve collected quite a few of them.”

  I touch the mouthpiece o
f the phone, as if by doing so I can give her some comfort. And yet there is no comfort to be given. Her life is lived only in degrees of pain.

  “I bet you have,” I say, as warmly as I can.

  “Oh.” Her voice is once again crisp, businesslike, all emotion under control. “Listen to me hogging the conversation like this. I bet you want to speak to Daddy. He’s not here, darling, but I can get him to call you later.”

  “That’s okay. I’m having a friend over for dinner, actually. Maybe I’ll call tomorrow.”

  “Oh, I’m so glad you’re having some fun.” I hear that catch in her voice again, then her quick cough to bring her voice back under control. “Have a lovely evening. I’ll tell Daddy to call you tomorrow. Don’t you call. It’s our turn to pay.”

  When I hang up, I feel flat, all excitement for the evening ahead gone. I regret having made the call. It hasn’t made me happy—and I’m certain that it has only made Mom more miserable. It’s always this way with Mom, these days. She’s always talking, always planning, always full of ideas and pragmatic conversation. It’s as if she can’t bear to be quiet or to allow herself a moment’s silence. This way, she gives herself no space to remember, no room to think about what she’s lost. It also prevents the person she’s speaking to from getting a word in, from talking about something she would rather not talk about, from mentioning Rachel.

  The modern way to grieve is to talk about it, to let yourself cry and scream and wail. My counselor said we must talk. And I tried, that long, long first year after Rachel was killed, to talk about what happened, to express my sadness, to verbalize our loss, to own my despair. But Dad refused to listen and Mom would cut me off, change the subject, and if I pushed it she would start to cry and leave the room.

  I gave up. I felt as if I was torturing her and I became thoroughly sick of myself, of my neediness. In talking about it, I’d been seeking forgiveness, absolution from the feeling that Mom and Dad blamed me for what happened. But I was asking the impossible, I soon realized. Of course they blamed me—for my cowardice, for my escape, for my having lived. We all knew that if one of their daughters had to die, it should have been me.

  And I no longer believe that there is any better way to cope with bereavement. There is just a shitload of pain to carry—a permanent and dreadful burden—and talking about it doesn’t remove that load or make it any lighter. Rachel died in the most horrific way imaginable. Words are useless against the harsh truth of that. Rachel is dead. She is gone forever and we will never again see her lovely face, never again hear her music. She is dead.

  Why we should need to wallow in this reality, relive it again and again, poke and prod and examine it until our eyes are bleeding, our hearts crushed with the horror and inconceivable sadness of it, is beyond me. It cannot possibly help. Nothing can help. If Mom needs to be stoic, to pretend that she is fine, to hide her despair behind a transparent veil of crisp efficiency and businesslike conversation, then that’s okay by me. It seems as good a way as any to go on with her diminished life.

  I press my forefinger into the small circular scar above my knee. It’s the only physical evidence I have of the night Rachel was killed, the only physical injury I suffered. The wrong girl died that dreadful day. And though I can’t actually wish that I’d died instead of Rachel—I am nowhere near brave enough to be a martyr—I know too well that the better sister died.

  4

  Rachel walked onto the stage and the crowd fell silent instantly. She looked beautiful, tall and striking; her red velvet dress—which I knew Mom and Dad had paid a small fortune for—accentuated her height and poise. She was only fourteen, but onstage she could have passed for a woman in her twenties.

  Mom squeezed my hand excitedly, and I turned sideways to smile at her. Oblivious, she stared up at Rachel on the stage, her lips pursed in that funny expression she made when she was trying hard not to break into an enormous smile, her eyes wet with happy, devoted tears. On the other side of her, Dad turned to catch Mom’s eye but met mine instead; we smiled at each other—amused at Mom’s expression—bursting, both of us, with pride.

  Rachel sat at the piano with the skirt of her gown draped elegantly over her legs and began playing. She started the recital with a Mozart sonata—a pretty, delicate piece, with a melody so familiar to me that I could anticipate every note, every fortissimo and crescendo. And I watched her, mesmerized as I always was by the music she created, but also by the transformation that took place each time she performed. Onstage, all of Rachel’s shyness and awkwardness disappeared. Onstage she was majestic and commanding, so swept up with the performance and the music that she would forget herself. When she was playing, it was impossible to imagine that she could be shy and uncertain, that she was still just a girl.

  During the entire recital, which lasted more than an hour, Mom didn’t take her eyes from Rachel for a second. Whenever Mom listened to Rachel play, she seemed to lose herself, become unaware of time and place and whoever she happened to be with, and go into an almost trancelike state.

  I, too, played the piano. Technically I was quite accomplished. I’d even won school competitions. But Rachel was the one with real talent; she’d already been offered three different international scholarships. Whether she should accept a place in Berlin, London, or Boston for study—to pursue her dream of becoming a concert pianist—had been the main topic of conversation at our house for weeks. For me, the piano was just an enjoyable hobby and I had no desire to practice all day, every day. But the piano was Rachel’s great love, her passion, and she worked at it tirelessly.

  Rachel was eighteen months younger than me, and despite what people say about the older child being the high achiever, in our family the opposite was true. Rachel was driven and ambitious. I was far more interested in boys and parties and hanging out with friends than I was in achieving any academic or musical brilliance.

  Mom and Dad talked endlessly about Rachel’s future as a concert pianist—they were devoted to her career. I know that people were sometimes shocked by what could seem like favoritism on Mom and Dad’s behalf, their doting idolization of Rachel and apparent lesser interest in me. I’m sure people even felt sorry for me in the mistaken belief that I must feel neglected. But I didn’t feel that way, I didn’t have to—Rachel and I always wanted such very different things. I was more than happy for Rachel to be the brilliant sister. I knew the hard work she put into being a prodigy, and I had no desire to dedicate my own life that way. I enjoyed my friends and my social life far too much. Rachel might have been a genius but I had a lot more fun—and despite what it might have seemed like to an outsider, I always believed that I had the better deal.

  Rachel was different. She didn’t seem to need friends the way most people do. That wasn’t to say she was cold, or didn’t love people, because she wasn’t and she did. She loved deeply and generously. She was ferociously loyal to those she cared about. But she was shy; social events only made her awkward and uncomfortable and she was dreadful at making small talk. She could be so quiet and self-contained that to those who didn’t know her well, she could seem aloof or indifferent. But when you did manage to draw her into conversation, she would surprise you with how much she had actually noticed of what was going on. She had a gentle wisdom far beyond her years, and almost everyone who made the effort to get to know her grew to admire her. My sister was the only person I have ever met who was completely without envy, greed, or malice; the only person I would ever compare to an angel.

  And so, regardless of what the papers said when she was killed—all that painful speculation and misguided conjecture about our relationship—I never lost sight of how I really felt. I worshipped Rachel, both while she was alive and after her death. I was, and always will be, her greatest fan.

  5

  Alice turns up for dinner right on time. She is so cheerful and full of energy that as soon as she walks inside and starts talking, I feel better.

  “My God,” she says in a low voice, looking aro
und Vivien’s apartment. “This is totally fab. Your parents must be, like, super-trendy.”

  “No.” I shake my head. “This isn’t my mom and dad’s place. I live with my aunt. She’s away for the weekend.”

  “So it’s just us?”

  I nod and Alice jumps into the air and whoops with joy.

  “Yay. God, Katherine, I’m so glad. I thought your mother and father were here. I thought this was like some big ‘Come and meet my parents’ thing.” She rolls her eyes. “As if we were getting married or something. Thank God.” She kicks her shoes off and starts strolling around the room, looking at things, taking in the view.

  I’m all ready to explain to Alice why I live with my aunt instead of my parents, something about the reputation and quality of Drummond High compared to the schools back home, which isn’t actually untrue. But she’s far more interested in the actual apartment itself than in how or why I live there.

  “It must be fantastic to live like this,” she says, wandering down the hall, peeking into rooms. Her voice is loud and echoes down the hallway. “Have you ever had any parties here? I bet you haven’t, have you? Let’s have one. This’d be the most awesome place. I know heaps of people we could invite.

  “Ooh,” she exclaims suddenly. “Look at this!” And she reaches up and grabs a fancy-looking bottle. “Irish whiskey. Yum. I love it. Let’s have some.”

  “It’s not mine,” I say. “It’s Vivien’s.”

  “Doesn’t matter. We’ll replace it. Your aunt won’t notice.” And she carries the bottle into the kitchen, finds the glassware, and pours a generous amount into two glasses. “Got any Coke?”

  “Sorry.” I shake my head.

  “Water will do.” She goes to the tap and fills the glasses with water and hands one to me. I take a tiny sip. The whiskey smells foul and tastes even worse—bitter and dry and very strong—and I know I won’t be able to finish it.

 

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