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Vacant Possession Part 11

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At the second phone call Jim had softened his line a little. He had stopped offering Suzanne the money to terminate her pregnancy, and told her to do what she b.l.o.o.d.y well liked. Suzanne did not repeat his exact words to her parents, or his sentiments, even inexactly. She was convinced that once Jim had got over the immediate shock, he would rally round and have a serious talk with his mad wife about an imminent separation.

On Tuesday morning, when Muriel arrived to clean at Buckingham Avenue, she stepped inside and found the atmosphere instantly familiar. The curtains were not drawn back properly, and the place was half in darkness. Upstairs, a long shadow slid across the landing. She heard a door slam shut. Sylvia sat at the kitchen table, slumped over a cooling cup of coffee. "Help yourself," she said. "The kettle's just boiled. The milk's sour, though."

"You're drinking milk, Mrs. Sidney?"

"Why not?" her employer said. "What does it matter? We're all getting old. I'm not going to keep my figure, I'm just fooling myself." Sylvia looked away. Her mouth was set in a thin hard line. "My daughter's pregnant." She propped her elbow on the table and sucked despondently at a thumb nail. "Lizzie, you haven't got a f.a.g on you, have you?"

"Oh no, Mrs. Sidney, I never touch them."



"Don't you?" Sylvia's voice was dull. "I thought you had all the vices, duck."

"Which one is it, Karen?"

"Christ no, she's only thirteen."

"They say you can never tell these days."

"It's true, you can't. Better get to the shops, I suppose. Need anything?"

"No, but thank you all the same for asking. What a good woman you are, Mrs. Sidney! It's a privilege to wash down your fitments."

Sylvia smiled weakly. How odd the woman was. "But how could you be any other," Lizzie asked. "Now that you see so much of the Reverend Teller? Oh, and by the way..."

Sylvia looked displeased now. "Yes?"

The daily was fis.h.i.+ng in the pocket of her ap.r.o.n. "I saw Mr. Sidney, G.o.d bless him, he was rooting through the dustbin. Is this what he was after?" She held out her palm. On it were the two halves of a photograph. "Picture of Mrs. Jim Ryan," Lizzie said.

"What?" Sylvia stared down at it, horrified. "Picture of who?"

"It's a lady called Mrs. Ryan." I've seen her at the hospital, she was going to add, but bit it back in time. Her night job was another life, wasn't it?

Sylvia's fingers trembled. She took the photograph from Lizzie. She tried to fit the halves together; the girl's face, dreadfully bisected, stared back at her. There was a knowing look in each eye.

"It can't be. You've got the name wrong."

"Oh no, madam, I'm acquainted with this lady, I couldn't make a mistake."

"You're quite sure? You're quite positive, are you, who this is?"

"On my mother's life."

"There's no need to go to that extreme," Sylvia snapped. Her mind groped, very slowly, around the possibilities. "I want to know if you're quite certain."

"I told you. The old girlfriend, is she? Well, love makes the world go round, Mrs. Sidney. There's only one reason the gentlemen keep pictures."

"Shut up," Sylvia said. "That has nothing to do with you."

"Mr. Sidney seemed upset. Frantic, he was, throwing the rubbish about, got all yoghurt pots over his feet. I knew he was after it, but-" she gave Sylvia a broad wink-"us girls have got to stick together."

I'd like to sack you on the spot, Sylvia thought; except that if we're going to have a baby on our hands, I daren't. "Now listen," she said. "You don't mention this to anyone, right? Not to Mr. Sidney. Not to Suzanne. Understand?"

"Clear as day."

"So watch it."

At least she doesn't know the whole story, Sylvia thought. She's put a name to the face, but she doesn't know about the complications. And I won't tell Colin I know; not yet, anyhow. "Go and do the bathroom," she said. She looked down at the photograph again. It seemed to swim before her eyes. A sudden pain lanced through her right eye, her nose, her jaw. She was going to have a cras.h.i.+ng migraine, any minute now.

Going up the stairs with her sponge and her bottle of nonscratch scouring cream, Muriel felt an intense gratification. There was no need to connive with destiny; the family were managing nicely for themselves. The air was choked with tension and spite, and on the landing all the doors were closed; it was just like Mother's day. The children were locked in their rooms, sniffing glue and crying. From behind the doors came the soft sounds of breathing. It was nothing now but a matter of time. There would be strange pains in the dark bedrooms, despair in the breakfast room where Mother's kitchen used to be. Food getting cold, food getting bad; soon the lightbulbs would go, and no one would bother to replace them. The bills would go unpaid, and dirty milk bottles would stand in a row on the sink. Sylvia's hips would grow to 44 inches, as was their nature, and she would waddle and roll about the house, and hide when the doorbell rang. Just as Colin's athletic joints would swell and crack with rheumatism, so autumn moisture would crack and swell the plaster and brick of the new kitchen extension. He would take to drink, perhaps lose his position. Sanctimonious Flo would be found out in some lewdness, and Suzanne's untended child would wail from the back garden, bleating for the peace of the clouded water from which it came. The evergreens would grow, blocking out the light at the back of the house; foul necessities would incubate in the dark. Soon cracks would appear in the walls, and a green-black mould would grow along the cracks and spread its spores through the kitchen cupboards, through the wardrobes and the bedlinen. Given time, the roof of the extension would fall in. Where the lean-to had stood, the house would be open to the sky. Rubbish would fester uncollected, and the rat would be back. The girls, ostracised by society, would fall prey to crippling diseases. Alistair would be taken away to prison. No member of the household would fail to see their lives and motives laid bare. Their trivial domestic upsets would turn soon to confusion, abandonment, and rage. Acts of violence would occur; there would be bodies. Could they prevent it? She didn't think so. There was Resurrection, in various foul forms; but what came after? Now Muriel's rules were in operation, and the Sidneys were entirely in eclipse.

When Suzanne came downstairs at last, driven by hunger, Lizzie Blank said: "Don't take on so. It happened to me once."

"Did it?" Suzanne looked at her; she was interested. "I bet you've led quite a life."

"Oh yes," said Lizzie Blank. "A devastated charmer like me."

"And what did you do?"

"I got rid of it."

"That can't have been so easy, when you were young."

"No, but I had my mother to advise me. She knew all about that sort of thing."

"Did you have a good relations.h.i.+p with your mother?"

"In ways."

"I wish I had a good relations.h.i.+p with my mother. She's trying to push me into an abortion, you know, but Jim and I want this baby. Didn't you ever regret it, Lizzie?"

Lizzie thought for a moment. "I suppose I did. Not at the time. But nowadays I miss it. I reckon we'd have been two of a kind. And I need company."

"That's so honest of you, Lizzie. You're...such an honest person."

"I'd have liked to give it an inheritance. A lovely house like this."

"Do you think this house is lovely? I hate it. It stifles me."

"You'll be out of it soon enough."

"I'm going to get a flat or something, just till I get things sorted out with Jim."

"Jim your intended, is he?"

"Oh yes. But he's got to go through the divorce, you know. These things take time to sort out."

"So you could be on your own till the baby's born?"

"I hope not. I'm going to find a place, and he can move in with me as soon as he makes Isabel see sense. I mean, there's no point in dragging out a failing marriage, is there?"

"None at all. Mind, his wife will stop in the house, you'll need furniture, all that. Door furniture and fire irons I can get for you cheap, I have a friend. But I expect you'll need a cooker, you won't be able to afford to go out to restaurants."

"No." Suzanne looked bemused. "I expect I'll need a cooker."

"I've got money put away, you know. I can always let you have a loan."

"Oh, that's so sweet of you, Lizzie. But I hope I won't need it."

"Well, I like to oblige my friends. You'll have to look in the paper for a place to rent. I got mine out of a window at the newsagent's. But it wasn't easy."

"I know. There's not a lot of accommodation about. It's the same in Manchester, until I got my place in Hall I had to sleep on somebody's floor. But you can't do that with a baby."

"You could always stop with me a bit, until you sort yourself out."

"Oh, Lizzie." Suzanne burst into tears. "I'm sorry, I can't help it. To think that you should be so kind, when you're almost a stranger and don't know me at all, and my family who've known me all my life should be so horrible." Impulsively she threw her arms around the daily woman and kissed her violently rouged cheek.

"The offer's there," Muriel said.

The last days of the summer term were worse this year than Colin remembered. There was the usual rush and muddle, the disorderly behaviour on the corridors; and then there was his mood. For three days running he lost his temper before a.s.sembly; the days went downhill from there. He was churlish in the staff room, and was seen kicking the stencil machine. He lost an entire stack of reports-Form 3C's-and they were turned up at last by one of the cleaners, who would surely reminisce about it for a year or more. He stayed late, signing them, tidying his desk, then lurked about in the staff lavatories, b.u.t.ting his head at a square of ill-lit mirror, trying to spot grey hairs. He couldn't wait for the term to be over; though what ease, what leisure awaited him at home, better not to speculate. Better not to think too far ahead. He was conscious of an almost physical revulsion, a shrinking away, whenever he tried to imagine how his tangled circ.u.mstances might be unknotted. Even when school was let out and his pupils were set free to run amok down the High Street, he paced the empty corridors warily-echoes, white tiles-as if expecting an ambush.

Sylvia flew about the house, bossing the daily woman, nagging the children; she jangled her car keys and sprinted down the path. He tried to corner her, scrutinise her expression, lead her into conversational byways which would perhaps reveal what she made of the situation. Nine years ago she had been obtuse. Now social intercourse had sharpened her wits. Weekly at the Bishop Tutu Centre she listened to tales of human improvidence, criminality, and perversion. Nothing shocked her, she said. Let her only enquire too far into current events, and she might have to swallow her boast.

"Colin," said Sylvia.

"Yes?"

"You ought to go and see this man Jim Ryan, and find out what's going on." She turned away, so that he couldn't see her face.

Colin swallowed. "Where, at his home?"

"No, not at his home, Colin. At the bank."

"Oh, but the fuss...at his place of work..."

"Is there going to be a fuss?"

"Well...that depends on his att.i.tude."

"Perhaps you'd rather I go?"

"No," he said hurriedly, "no, Sylvia, I wouldn't want that. I'll deal with it. I promise you. We need to give Suzanne a little more time to come to terms with the reality of the situation. Then if she still insists that this man is going to set up house with her, I'll do whatever's needed-only please, Sylvia, let me do it in my own way."

"You're sweating, Colin."

"The topic makes me uncomfortable."

"Yes, I suppose it would." He searched her face. "Perhaps I could ask Francis to talk to her," she said.

"You can hardly ask a clergyman to talk her into an abortion."

"Oh, Francis has some very modern att.i.tudes. He's full of common sense, you'd be surprised."

Here we go, the same sickening conversational merry-go-round. Why doesn't she take off with Francis, if that's what she wants? I won't stop her. And Suzanne should have Jim. And I should have Isabel. Even if it is some other Isabel; I should marry her for a penance, and for the sake of her name.

I think I'm going mad, Colin thought. And not a bad idea at that. Have the summer in a padded cell somewhere, and come home when it's all over.

Francis-the Reverend Teller-came round just after midday. Claire was in the kitchen, making one of her cups of tea for Brownie Tea-Making Fortnight. Colin and Sylvia were preserving, between them, a strained silence. Colin noticed how his wife's face brightened at the sight of Francis pa.s.sing the kitchen window. She looked alert and keen, like someone ready to tackle a major social issue.

"Cup of tea?" Claire said.

"Why thank you, Claire, that's kind. I'd rather have coffee, if it's no trouble."

"I don't do coffee. Only tea."

Sylvia got up. "h.e.l.lo, Francis. I'll get it. Claire, come from under my feet."

"Don't put yourself out," said Francis in his relaxed way, which somehow implied that he was used to people putting themselves out but would waive his rights on this occasion. He was a solid man of forty-five, with blunt features and short cropped hair; despite his pacifist outlook, he was given to khaki clothing of military provenance, to ribbed sweaters with elbow patches, to epaulettes and complex trousers with pleated pockets b.u.t.toned on the thigh. When he laughed he showed pointed teeth which were unmistakably carnivorous. His whole person, Colin thought, exuded contradictions which were just too deep for hypocrisy and just too common for clinical schizophrenia.

"Hermione's got us on the old camomile tea," he said. "Gets it at the health-food shop. Must say I get a bit tired of it. Cup of Nescafe, strong, black, that's the way I like it. Got any sweeteners?"

"How about sugar?"

"Oh, of course we have," Sylvia said. "Colin, do you have to embarra.s.s me?"

The phone rang in the living room. Karen answered it.

"Mum, it's for you, it's Meals on Wheels."

"All right, I'm coming."

"Try this," Claire demanded, blocking her path and proffering a teacup. "Excellent, very good, or good?"

"I'm going to the phone, Claire. Give it to your father." Sidestepping her daughter, she gave Francis a sidelong glance as she left the room.

"Francis, you're an intelligent man," said Colin.

"Yes?" said Francis guardedly.

"I have to ask you something. No, not now, Claire, put it down. Do you believe in coincidence?"

"Coincidence?" The vicar took his pipe out and sucked it. "Funny you should ask me that."

Colin understood that the vicar had made a joke. A forced tremulous smile was his response. "No, but really?"

"I say, this is jolly good," said the vicar, tasting Claire's tea. "Of course I believe in it. Otherwise, when you were out on the street, you'd never see the same chap twice, would you?"

"Yes, well, that's coincidence at its most basic level-"

"Oh, very basic," the vicar agreed. "I say, what do I do now, fill in this mark sheet?"

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