Karen put her hands over her face and began to softly sob.
“Mum, I finished the movie,” came a small voice. “I don’t like it here anymore. I want to go home now.”
Luke and Joe stood in the doorway as Karen pushed back her chair, which fell to the ground with a cracking thud, and ran past them, not even looking at Joe.
“Karen,” Joe called in a low voice. “Where are you going? Karen? ” He kept his hand on Luke’s neck, propelling him toward his mother. Cat wrapped her arms around him and stared up at Joe.
“Go after her,” she said. Joe nodded, and left the room, his heavy footsteps thudding through the house. Seconds later, they heard the front door slam.
At the other end of the room, Martha said, “I’ll repay you all the money, of course.”
“Don’t be silly,” Florence interrupted her. She stood up and went over to her mother. “Oh, Ma. You’re very brave to have told us. I don’t know—I don’t know why she was like that.”
Martha stared at her, and she put her hands to her cheeks. “Flo. Oh, Florence, darling, you . . .” Her face was drained of color, her eyes glassy. Her eyes darted toward David, then back to Florence. “I don’t know why either, darling. That’s families for you. I had to tell you, you understand that, don’t you?”
Bill came and stood next to Florence. “Flo’s right.” He kissed his mother’s head. “I’m sorry, Ma. I’m so sorry.”
“I just wanted everything to be out in the open. I wanted us to be . . . happy again.” She looked down the long table at her husband, and then screamed.
“David? David! ”
Lucy, glancing at her grandfather, cried out. His head had fallen forward; his mouth was wide open.
“Oh, no. No, no! ” Bill ran over to his father and fell to his knees. He loosened David’s tie, patted his face. “Lucy, call an ambulance.” Lucy ran out of the room. “Tell them it’s urgent.”
Martha had stumbled out of her chair, over to her husband. “Urgent,” Bill shouted after his daughter, cradling David’s head in his hands. “Tell them it’s urgent.” He turned to Cat, nodding at Luke. “Get him out of here.”
Cat left, and the others stared at each other, blind panic on their faces. A weak afternoon winter sun shone into the stuffy room. “Help me,” Bill said to Florence, and the two of them lifted their father gently, terribly carefully, out of his chair and placed him on the worn carpet.
His face was gray, his mouth turned down, as though in ghastly mockery of a clown. He said, “Violet’s hat.”
“What’s he saying?” Martha moved closer.
“Violet. Bury me with my old hat.”
“What?” Florence said, squeezing his head to her, as if by holding him tightly she might make it better. “What hat? The one on your door? Of course, Pa, darling, but don’t be ridiculous.” She swallowed, struggled to speak. “You’re going to be all right.”
He raised his hand to try to touch hers, but he was too weak.
“You’re my girl,” he said. “I’m so proud of you, Flo.”
Then his head rolled away. Florence gently cradled it, brokenly whispering to him.
Five minutes later David died, his head in Florence’s lap, his hands folded on his chest. Martha, kneeling on the floor beside him, saw a movement out the window. She looked up and caught sight of Cat in the garden, hand in hand with Luke, the shadow of the house falling over them. Suddenly they heard sirens, ringing out loudly in the lane leading to the house. They all looked up at each other, and then, instinctively, at Martha.
She took David’s warm hand in hers and gently closed his eyes. They needed her to be in control. She was, she was completely in control.
“He’s tired,” she said, very calm. “He’s resting. He’s been tired for a while. Don’t let them in, not just yet. It’s going to be fine. He just needs a bit more time.”
She could feel them all, all of them, staring at her. Then came the sound of the door knocker, thudding loudly through the still house.
PART THREE
* * *
The Past and the Present
Does the road wind up-hill all the way?
Yes, to the very end.
Will the day’s journey take the whole long day?
From morn to night, my friend.
—Christina Rossetti, “Up-Hill”
Martha
ONE DAY, MANY years ago, Martha had had a premonition of death.
She’d never tried to explain it to anyone else: it sounded too unlikely. They had had an early supper one evening, and she was in the kitchen washing up, while David worked in his study. Cat was asleep upstairs; she must have been around twelve or so.
It was one of those still-light spring evenings, where the birds sing softly, the black earth is alive with promise, and the cool air is sweet. Rhapsody in Blue was playing on the radio. Martha loved Gershwin, and she was banging a wooden spoon on the sink in time to the piano, staring at nothing really in the soapy water, when suddenly she saw it, in front of her eyes.
She and David. They were walking down the lane together, like the first time. David was wearing the hat Violet had given him, all those years ago; light was falling between the trees. They went toward it gladly: it seemed to be sunshine. But the light fell on her like a cloak, and suddenly changed. She stared up at the sky, but saw only a gray, heavy nothing, and she realized she didn’t know where the light was coming from, and so she started to shout, to call for help. The lane, the trees, the hedgerow, David: they all disappeared, and she saw only gray around her, like a plane plummeting through clouds. She could hear him calling her; she could hear her own screams, could feel herself desperately running toward something; but nothing seemed to work, to change, and she was racing into the mist, into nothing. . . .
Martha had started running then, through the house, to the study. She’d flung the door open, and it was only then she realized she was soaking wet: dishwater all over her top, her hair, her cheeks. She was crying, shaking from head to toe.
“My love, what on earth’s wrong?” said David, standing up.
“I . . .” Martha began, and then she felt stupid. I have just seen how I’m going to die. I’m going to leave you. She couldn’t stop shaking now, and there was a sharp metallic taste in her mouth. She put her hands on her cheeks. “I saw something awful while I was washing up. It sounds crazy. How . . . you and me.”
The music floated in from the kitchen, but otherwise the house was still. David walked around the desk and took her in his arms. “Darling. Washing up can be dangerous, can’t it? Goose walk over your grave?” He held her tightly, and she rested her head on his shoulder, as she always did. She loved him then, more than ever, if it were possible. He understood, he knew.
“Something like that. I can’t explain it. It was terrifying.”
His hands, holding her close to him, patted her back softly. “Must have been.”
“I don’t want to leave you. I don’t want to be without you. Ever.”
“You won’t,” he said, and there was laughter in his voice. “Silly girl. I’m in the study drawing, and in twenty years’ time I’ll still be in the study drawing.”
But Martha couldn’t laugh. “Promise?”
“Promise. You and me, remember? Just us.”
From the radio in the kitchen there came the clashing final bars, a drumroll, and then applause, and it broke the tension. They laughed.
“I feel silly,” Martha said, but the strength of that deadening terror was still with her, and she felt sick.
David pulled his battered old hat off its hook. “I’m finished anyway. Let’s go and sit outside and have a drink, darling,” he said. “First outside of the year. No more ghosts tonight.”
• • •
Later that evening, he had suddenly said to her, as they sat on the steps by the French wi
ndows, “I’d die if you left me, you know that, don’t you?”
“David. Don’t be dramatic.” She felt completely herself again, remote, amused, in control. How unlike her that earlier scene had been. How silly. He was the romantic one who cried at films, who had wept when the last of Cat’s baby teeth came out and that was their final night of doing the tooth fairy, drawing chalk flowers and stars on the floor by the child’s bed. He was the one who had brought them all here, who had brought Florence into the family, who had fought tooth and nail for his own life. She was the pragmatist who said the dog had to be put down, who wrestled with wiring.
A life without each other was too far away to think about; they had conquered everything when they were young, and so they were careless about the future. It held no fear for them. She dismissed the premonition from her mind, for many years. Neither of them ever considered the possibility that their time together might end. They never thought about it: the truth was, Martha knew he would never leave her.
David
June 1968
MARTHA STOOD IN the hallway, mouth pursed into a worried bud, watching David as he put on his hat and picked up his battered old portfolio, which contained what he hoped was his best work yet.
“If he says no,” she said, “you’ll—well, you have to at least ask him if there’s anything else you can do for him. Cartoons, or some other kind of work. You have to come back with something, David. He’s known you for years; he can’t throw you off entirely.”
“For goodness’ sake, someone like Horace Sayers doesn’t deal in favors, Martha. And neither do I.” His voice was raised. “This meeting, it’s very important. Let me handle it, please, will you?”
“You’re the one who wanted us to move here.” Her voice was sharp, the Cockney she’d left behind sneaking away with her consonants, as it always did when she was cross. David had a tighter grip on it. He never let his past show through.
“We both wanted to come back here, Martha.”
“Dear God, David!” It was the same old argument they’d been having for months. “You’re the one who said it’ll be fine. And there’s damp in the dining room, we’ve got rats everywhere, I hate this paint, nothing keeps in this heat and we can’t afford a refrigerator, David. Daisy needs new shoes, for God’s sake. She crams her toes into the only ones she’s got, she’s walking like a cripple! All because of you and your bloody rewriting-history complex.” Martha was close to him now, her green eyes glowing with fury. She pushed her hair out of her face. “I gave up doing my job for this, David.”
He knew she was as good as he was. They both knew it. Somehow, this made him angrier. “Daisy’s a damned liar and she’ll say anything to get you on her side.”
“Fine. Do whatever you want.” Martha had turned and walked back into the kitchen, slamming the green baize door on her way.
He should have kept his mouth shut. Martha wouldn’t hear a word against Daisy. He stood there in the empty hall looking around him, wondering whether it was all worth it; but he told himself it had to be, he had to make it all right, otherwise something else would have won. He wasn’t sure what. As he fiddled one final time with his tie, he felt a wet nose nudging the fold of his knee, and he turned and crouched on the ground.
“You like it here, don’t you, old fellow?” he said to Wilbur, who looked at him with dark, solemn eyes, his lopsided pink tongue hanging crazily out of his mouth.
Wilbur gave a small, soft, yelping bark. As if to say, You’re all right with me. David fondled his soft, warm ears, touching his cheek to his muzzle.
A voice beside him said quietly, “Dad?” David jumped. Daisy was standing next to him; he never seemed to hear her approach. “Dad, did you look at the drawings? Of Wilbur?”
“Oh. Darling, I didn’t, I’m sorry.” He stood, picking up the portfolio.
Her small face got its pinched, dead-eyed look. “Oh.”
“I’ll look tonight.” He wished she’d leave; he wanted to look in the mirror, talk himself up a little. Daisy threw him off balance. In abstract he wanted to draw her closer to him, and yet in practice he frequently found himself wishing he could keep her at arm’s length. “What did you draw him doing, then?”
She curled a twine of straggling hair round one thin finger. “Look, they’re here.” She took a sheet of paper carefully out of a book of wildflowers on the sideboard. “Look at this one. He’s bouncing up and down so hard like he did the other day to catch the piece of meat that he hits his head on my hand and falls over. Then in the other one he’s waiting for me to come back from school and making that strange noise that he makes. And in the other one he’s chasing his own tail. And he’s saying, ‘It’s like a merry-go-round, but I’ll just catch this tail and then I’ll get off.’ ” Her eyes shone as David laughed and glanced at the drawing she held tightly in her hand. She was a funny little thing. He found himself dropping a kiss on her head. “Do you like it?”
“Love it, darling. His nose looks very wet. I’ll look at the rest of them later. Be nice to Florence.”
Her voice took on that wheedling, surprised tone. “Daddy! Of course I will be, I always am nice to Florence, it’s just—”
He patted her shoulder, and said good-bye. “I’ll miss my train.”
As he strode up the driveway he saw, as through fresh eyes, the gate hanging off its hinge, no post to attach it to. Wood pigeons cooed lazily in the trees above. David turned to look at the view of the valley sliding away from him, and breathed in once again. He knew where he’d come from to get here. Anything was better than that.
• • •
“Come in, come in, old chap, sit down. Drink? June, get Mr. Winter here a drink—what—G and T? Whiskey?”
“Oh—whiskey, please.”
“Wonderful, wonderful. Got that, dear? Right. David, jolly good to see you. How’s that beautiful wife of yours?”
“She’s very well. Says to say we must get you down to Winterfold sometime.”
“I’d love that.” Horace Sayers slouched and slid his arms across the table, fingers touching. “How is that house of yours? Pretty amazing place, I hear?”
“We’re very happy with it.”
“You, in the deepest English countryside. It’s really rather amusing. How long’s it been now?” Horace pointed one long finger precisely into his ear and wiggled it about in an explorative fashion.
“About a year now.” David put the portfolio on the table, fingers itching to open it. He didn’t want to make small talk. He especially didn’t want to discuss the house.
“Making the place your own, I hope.”
David found he was sweating. It was a close, oppressive day, thick cloud hanging heavy over London, trapping in the heat. The boardroom of Modern Man magazine was dank and reeked of stale cigarette smoke: a typical Soho office. “Can’t wait to see what you’ve got for me, old chap,” Horace said, lighting another cigarette and pushing his drink out of the way. “Truth is, we’re up against it for next week’s issue. Could be your lucky day.”
Delicately, David slid the sheets of construction paper out. He had labored all day and night for months on this project, and it sounded pompous if one said it aloud, but put simply, it was the climax of everything he wanted to achieve as an artist. He’d ignored Martha, swatted away the children, walked unseeing around this crumbling, malfunctioning white elephant he’d taken on while winter rain dripped through the old roof and rodents gamboled in the kitchen.
Meanwhile, deadlines for his existing commissions came and went. The weekly cartoon for the News Chronicle, the illustrations for Punch, the funny little details he was supposed to sketch for the theater column in the Daily News—he’d let them all down, these past weeks, chasing some ghost. He had known for some time he had to exorcise whatever it was that hung over him, even more so now he’d moved into Winterfold, and it had seemed to him that this was the only
way he knew how.
“I’ll show you . . . I’m rather excited about them myself.” He cleared his throat. “Right, here we go.”
“Jolly good.” Horace rubbed his hands together.
But his thin smile grew rigid as David spread the sketches over the table. “As you know, I began this series when I was”—he swallowed, his voice high and formal—“younger. It came about through my experiences in the war. I have always wanted to return to this subject, to explore the impact of the last twenty years on the bomb sites of London, and the people who still live there. So I went back to the East End, talked to the residents, drew the new landscapes that are springing up there alongside the craters that still haven’t been filled in.”
“Right.” Horace wasn’t really listening. He was scanning the drawings, fingers drumming the table. “Let me have a look. . . . Oh, I see. Pretty grim, David.”
“Yes, it was.”
Images started flashing through David’s mind: falling masonry like rocks raining down from the sky, houses ripped apart as if they were made of paper, bodies in the streets, rubble everywhere; and the sounds—screaming, whistling bombs, crying, agonized pleas for help, children hysterical with fear; the smell of shit, of piss, of terror and sand and fire.
Suddenly he was back there, curled up into the small shell shape his mother had told him to make, time and time again, crouching on the floor beside him in the kitchen. “Like this, little one. He doesn’t mean to hurt me. If you hide, though, he can’t see you and he can’t hurt you. So make yourself small. Like this.”
He couldn’t stop these memories. They came like a stabbing pain in the heart, and he couldn’t stop them, couldn’t acknowledge them, would simply have to go on as he had always done when this happened—
“David?” The laconic voice recalled him to the present. “I say, David!”
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