Part 18 (1/2)
”What is it?”
”Dunno. Skeleton.”
”Yah,” said Kari, incredulous.
”Honest.”
”Where'd you get it?”
”Ca.n.a.l. Claire found it. Her and her mates. Brownies.”
”When?”
”Last Sat.u.r.day.”
”Full-size one?”
”Nah. Little.”
”Murder,” Kari said. ”Let's have a look, will you?”
”Come down our den.”
”What d'you want?” Kari said with suspicion.
”Fetch us some UHU.”
”No.”
”Aw, go on. You go in Fletcher's in your school uniform. Tell 'em you're gluing for your project.”
”I might.”
”And I tell you what, Kari, nick us a clothespeg.”
”What for?”
”Sherwood's a Rasta and his plaits get in the glue.”
”Nick one hisself.”
”His mum don't do no was.h.i.+ng.” He paused. ”Honest, Kari, fetch us some glue, you can share the skeleton.”
Kari wavered. ”All right,” she said. ”What size tube you want?”
When Sylvia came home from her meeting she let herself into Florence's house and went upstairs. She stuck her head around the door and saw the pillow lying on Mrs. Sidney's chest. Her impulse was to close the door again and pretend she had not seen it, and let Colin discover for himself what had happened, since it was his mother who was apparently dead, and his sister who had apparently made her that way; she had a nice sense of delicacy, and she did not believe that an outsider, even an in-law, should interfere in such a close family matter.
But leaving her scruples aside-because she did not trust Colin to have any common sense-she crossed the room and removed the pillow to a less remarkable position. She put the back of her hand against Mrs. Sidney's cheek. There was not much doubt about what had happened, but it was hard to tell just by looking; the features were not distorted, there had been no struggle. She opened the wardrobe and squashed the pillow onto the top shelf, above the pile of folded Witney blankets. The wardrobe door creaked; the smell of camphor crept out into the room. She had an impulse to open the window; but it was raining hard, and it might not be respectful. The original position of the pillow would be a private satisfaction to her. She would know, and Florence would know that she did. So when Flo got pious in future, she could catch her eye. The balance of terror within the family would be altered; and in her favour. She was not surprised to find out what Florence was capable of; but if I had been in her position, she thought, I would not have signalled my intentions so clearly. She touched Mother's cheek again, wondering how long she had been dead. Florence must have slipped out and done it in her teabreak. She went downstairs to ring Dr. Rudge to come and give them a death certificate. The rain was turning to sleet.
You had to hand it to Florence, she said later to Colin (and he agreed); that clutch at the throat, the doubled fist striking the door frame, the way the blood drained from her highly coloured features. Perhaps it was natural, though, at the sight of Dr. Rudge; his sardonic expression as he looked down at the bedside cabinet, and with a forefinger separated the empty pill bottles from the rest. Sylvia hadn't noticed that. It argued a degree of premeditation, she thought. She caught Colin's eye, turning down the corners of her mouth in a meaningful way.
”But I didn't give them to her!” Florence was good at the innocence outraged; the pop-eyes, the pewter complexion. ”She must have taken them herself.”
”I see,” said Dr. Rudge nastily, ”and all you did, eh, was to leave them close at hand and with the top off? We're not accusing you of choking her, Miss Sidney, we're not saying that you forced them down her throat one by one. We know she was fond of the yellow ones, don't we?”
”But I didn't! I'm careful with her medicines!”
”Come, come,” said the doctor, smiling. ”If I wanted to take the matter further, your neighbours would no doubt remember the scene you made in the street.”
”What about Lizzie Blank?” Florence wailed. ”Why wasn't she attending to her? She was left in charge!”
”That's a digression, Miss Sidney, if I may say so.”
”Shall I phone the undertaker?” Sylvia said. ”Oh, come on, Flo, we all know you did it.”
”However,” Dr. Rudge said, ”I do call myself a compa.s.sionate man, and this is not the first time that a distressed relative in my practice has-as we call it-eased an elderly person out of a life of suffering-but in your case, Miss Sidney, I'm bound to say, it is very strange of you to try and pin the blame on the daily help.”
”Strange?” Colin said. ”It's monstrous. I'm not trying to take a moral stance, Florence, but honestly, you should have told us what you were up to.”
”We always hope,” Dr. Rudge said testily, ”that we don't have to discuss the matter quite so openly.”
”Prosecute me!” Florence said. ”Call the police! Put me in the dock!”
”Don't be melodramatic,” Sylvia said. ”You're embarra.s.sing us all. Think, Colin, I'll be able to cut down on Lizzie's hours now. I can go out in the evening again. I can take a more active part in the ca.n.a.l scheme.”
”There won't be an inquest?” Colin asked.
”Not necessary,” the doctor said.
”But of course there must be an inquest,” Florence said. ”I want my name cleared.” She looked around at her brother, at her sister-in-law, at the doctor. Their faces were closed, smug, blank with careful discretion. ”What will the neighbours say?” she asked. ”They'll say I did it. They'll all be talking about me, right up Arlington Road.”
”Better Arlington Road than the News of the World,” Colin said. He left them and went downstairs. Murder now, he thought.
After the New Year, the cold weather set in. Every morning when the new term started Colin had to go out with a shovel at a quarter to eight and clear the drive of snow. Vehicles were abandoned by the side of the road, pipes froze up and burst, and sleet blew in whirlwinds and eddies across the motorway. The black branches of the trees on the Avenue bent under the weight of the winter; and then came a thaw, the gutters running with icy flood water.
Towards the end of February, Suzanne's baby-a girl-was born in hospital. She did not hear from Jim Ryan. When her mother and father visited her that evening she turned her face away from them and looked steadfastly at the wall. The baby, Gemma, slept by her bed in a plastic bubble. She entertained fantasies of walking up the Ryans' front path; of dropping in at the bank and laying the baby on Jim's desk amid the statements and paper clips.
”When people say they want a child,” Colin explained, ”when people say that, as Jim did to you, they may be speaking figuratively. They may be saying they want a second chance.”
”She didn't think he was speaking figuratively,” Sylvia said. ”She saw herself walking up the aisle. That was no figure.”
”I didn't think girls dreamed of their weddings any more,” Colin said sadly. ”I thought the world had changed.”
”Oh no.” Sylvia looked down at the child, the drift of dark hair, the formless undersea face. Her expression softened. ”I love babies,” she said. ”I always did.”
”I don't love them,” Suzanne said. ”I don't have any feelings.” Her mother patted her wrist. Suzanne twitched her arm away. ”Why shouldn't people have second chances?” she demanded.
”I don't know,” Colin said, ”they just don't, these days. In the seventies, people had second chances. Ten years ago. Now it's all battening down the hatches, that sort of thing.”
”You could put the baby up for adoption,” Sylvia said. ”That is, we could adopt it. I'd be willing.”