Exquisite

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by Sarah Stovell




  Exquisite

  SARAH STOVELL

  To Guitty

  Thank you.

  Contents

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Her Majesty’s Prison for Women Yorkshire

  Part One: Meeting

  1: Bo

  2: Alice

  3: Bo

  4: Alice

  5: Bo

  6: Alice

  7: Bo

  8: Alice

  Her Majesty’s Prison for Women Yorkshire

  Part Two: Loving - Alice

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  Her Majesty’s Prison for Women Yorkshire

  Part Three: Denying - Bo

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  Her Majesty’s Prison for Women Yorkshire

  Part Four: Wreckage

  1: Alice

  2: Bo

  3: Alice

  4: Bo

  5: Alice

  6: Bo

  7: Alice

  8: Bo

  9: Alice

  10: Bo

  11: Alice

  12: Bo

  13: Alice

  14: Bo

  15: Alice

  16: Bo

  17: Alice

  18: Both

  19: Alice

  20: Bo

  21: Alice

  22: Bo

  23: Alice

  24: Bo

  25: Alice

  Her Majesty’s Prison for Women Yorkshire

  Part Five: Justice

  1: Alice

  2: Bo

  Part Six: Renewal

  Exquisite: Alice

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  Copyright

  Her Majesty’s Prison for Women

  Yorkshire

  It’s better out here, where the roses still bloom. Inside, nothing can bloom at all. There’s not enough light, for one thing, and for another, the flowers can sense everyone’s misery, and they wilt in half a day.

  The wardens think me fanciful when I say things like this, but they think me fanciful, anyway, on account of the fact that I live mostly in my mind and not in the here and now. But the here and now is a dreadful place; I’m grateful that my mind can take me out of it. Most people here don’t have that luxury. It’s why they ended up in prison in the first place – because they used fists and boots to make their feelings clear instead of words.

  I am not like them. I am not like anyone else here. I am a model prisoner. That’s why they let me work in the gardens instead of inside. The gardens aren’t part of the prison, of course. They’re the governor’s gardens – for the governor and her husband and children to enjoy. Prisoners aren’t allowed gardens. We only have only a courtyard, where our clothes are hung out to dry on good days, although there aren’t many good days, because the sun hardly reaches us.

  But here in the garden it’s better. Because I am a model prisoner who will slog away at whatever they set me to, and because it makes no difference to them whether I’m scrubbing floors or planting flowers, they let me choose my job. So any time I’m not in my cell, I choose to be outside. I tell them I have a greater chance of being rehabilitated if they keep me outside – my hands in the earth, my eyes fixed on the sky, feeling cold rain on my skin – and they listen to me, on account of my being brighter and less trouble than most prisoners.

  Today’s roses are white. White roses always remind me of her. I still remember that bunch of white roses and the gold twigs covered with berries. The berries seeped and could have been poisonous, but they’d looked just right, spread among the roses like that, tender and translucent as newly-hatched jellyfish.

  She would love these roses, if I could send them to her. White roses for eternal love. The meaning wouldn’t be lost on her. She was sensitive to symbolic meanings. And perhaps then she would forgive me.

  Part One

  MEETING

  1

  Bo

  In the mountains, daylight still falled. The frost raged and wind rang like steel through the ice. It was winter up there, but the gentle beat of spring ripened the valley below. Light fell on the church and stone cottages; it greened the trees and warmed the silent lake. Two seasons always claimed this far-flung nook of earth.

  It was my favourite time of day – the trek back through the fells after dropping my girls at school. Our home stood two miles outside the village, but from the moment we moved here I was insistent the girls walk to school, whatever the weather. That was the purpose of a Lake District childhood, to my mind: to know the slow movement of the seasons; to breathe beneath clean skies and hear the ice-cold motion of a stream; to run wild until the landscape wore their shoes out.

  I thought they’d fight me harder than they did. In Oxford, they’d refused to walk anywhere. Maggie, especially, complained of the cold, the ice, the dark; the cars that passed too quickly through the rainy streets and shocked her legs with spray. But here, walking became something new and exciting. It had been September when we moved, two years ago now, in time for the new school year. The girls had watched with awe as summer’s green faded and the burnished light of autumn emerged in the foliage. They liked running out in the morning mist, watching it dissolve to reveal the ochre flush of the fells. They filled their pockets with conkers and fir cones, took them home, scattered them over their bedroom floors, said they were making a bed for the hedgehog they planned to adopt over winter.

  I watched them, deeply satisfied. I’d long held a theory – Gus scoffed at the hippiness of it, but so what? – that humans were homesick for the outdoors. This strange urge to shut themselves away from the elements, locked up in houses, cars, offices, thinking they were protected from the wind and the rain and the cancerous sun … it was rotting their very hearts, making them sick. They didn’t know the cure was simple: Get outside. Walk. Breathe. Live.

  Moving here had been good for everyone, though we’d done it mainly because of my work. At the time, I was researching the murky lives of the women surrounding the Romantic Poets – the women who’d willingly tended to sensational but sick men who had abandoned domestic life and hurt themselves with sonnets.

  ‘I need to be in Grasmere to do this,’ I’d told Gus.

  He suggested a holiday, but I needed more than that. ‘A year at least,’ I said. ‘Maybe two.’

  ‘We can’t uproot the girls for a year or two. If we need to move, we move forever, or not at all.’

  It was exactly the response I’d wanted. I’d mastered this particular skill over the years: sowing the seed of half my desire, then letting him grab and plant the rest. That way, he’d always think of it as a joint decision; or, better still, his own idea.

  Gus was already retired when we moved. There were twenty-two years between us and he was ready, I thought, and he agreed, for a more peaceful life. A secluded world away from the fog of the city, the grey sky that fell into the dull Thames, the shoppers and the crowds.

  ‘There’ll be crowds in the Lake District,’ he said. ‘You can’t get away from the tourists. Even in January, they’ll be there.’

 
What he said was only partly true. Tourists always filled the valleys. They hung around the lakes and towns, took their children to Peter Rabbit World, rowed across Windermere and ate cream teas in lakeside gardens. They paid a duty call to Dove Cottage, and came away reminded of why they’d hated Wordsworth at school. But few of them really left the vales. They didn’t see Helvellyn silenced by snow, or the high mountain tarns lying dark beneath the rocky edges of the fells. For most of the year, our home stood unseen.

  I rounded a curve in the mountain path and the cottage came into view: limewashed walls, slate roof and a rose trellis, the branches knocking against the lattice in the breeze – so different from the four-storey town house we’d owned in Oxford.

  The door was unlocked. I opened it and stepped into the old, quarry-brick hall that took me through to the kitchen. Gus sat in the rocking chair by the woodburner, reading the Westmorland Gazette: all the news about stolen sheep, a campaign to save the post office and the decision to close a crumbling footpath in Buttermere. He took no notice of the national news these days. He said the only way to survive what was going on in the world – climate change, a refugee crisis, the Tory reign of terror – was to live in ignorance of it. He never used to be like this. There was a time when he’d read a paper every day on his commute to Paddington, watch the evening news at seven and again at ten, always making sure his opinions were informed. But his mind seemed empty now. It left too much space for dangerous, depressive pondering, and I had to take care around him.

  He didn’t look up as I walked in. Somehow, over the years, our everyday language had slipped away. We didn’t bother anymore with ‘Hello’ or ‘How was your day?’ We’d become like furniture to each other: necessary for an easy life, but really just part of our surroundings – noticed only if visitors arrived.

  I didn’t mind this; not really. There was something hugely comfortable about the way we lived – free to do our own thing, but bound together by companionship, by a life we’d shared for so long now, we could each hardly imagine the house without the other. Besides, I didn’t have enough leftover energy to mind. The girls were what mattered. Their needs were huge. I’d always been aware, even when they were tiny and single nights had gone on forever, that this time was fleeting. So I’d put everything I had into it. And although I craved more time for my work – a day, just one day! – I knew, always, that nothing would ever be this important again. There would never be anything in my future more meaningful than the care of my children – the two girls who wore out the very marrow in my bones and pushed me to the limits of my well-being, but made everything wonderful.

  I spooned coffee into the espresso maker and set it on the stove to heat, then whipped milk in the Aeroccino. (I’d had to stop using those coloured capsules when Gus went through his environmental crisis. I pointed out that they were recyclable, but he said that was most likely nonsense invented by Nestlé, and that we were just wasting more miles having them transported back to the factory to be tossed into landfill. My husband’s principles were admirable, but they did make him hard work to live with at times.)

  The smell of brewing coffee rose and mingled with the smell from the bread machine; even though I knew I was at risk of becoming a bourgeois stereotype, I loved it. I wanted this to be the defining smell of my house: warm and comforting, a home people would always be happy to come back to.

  I carried the coffee to my study – a small room off the kitchen that had once, a hundred years ago, or so, been the common parlour – and sat at my desk. It was covered in piles: a pile of pages from my manuscript; a pile of books about Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s women; and a pile of submissions from aspiring authors who wanted me to offer them a place on the course I was running the following month. My heart sagged as I looked at them. I had to select six from more than a hundred. All of them needed sifting into piles: definitely not; maybe; definitely yes. The definitely not pile was always disheartening – always so much bigger than the definitely yes pile. But in that yes pile might be the stirrings of something, some raw talent for me to grab hold of and grow. I longed to discover a voice of the future.

  I read four – three definitely no and one maybe – before the phone interrupted me. It was my biggest failing, this inability to ignore the ringing of the landline or the incoming ping of an email or Facebook alert. It robbed me of so much time. I probably lost two books a decade to frivolous chatting.

  It was my mother. Her tone today was injured: she hadn’t heard from me for months; she was seventy-five years old; she needed help with her shopping; she’d gone eight days without talking to another human being, and even then it had only been the postman, who made it clear he couldn’t wait to get away; she was feeling ill; she was lonely; she was afraid at night, here in her wagon, where anyone could get in; she was feeling, truth be told, abandoned ever since I’d taken the children and moved to the far north of the country.

  I tuned her out. I knew my friends had similar problems with their parents. Old age, they said; people became difficult in old age. But my mother had always been like this – demanding that everyone make her their sun, putting her at the centre of their lives, rotating around her, letting her shine but having no vital light of their own. If they didn’t do this, it meant they didn’t love her enough.

  Eventually, I said, ‘We’ll be down in the summer.’

  But my mother went on. I tuned her out again, holding the phone slightly away from my ear. I’d done a good job so far, I reminded myself, of not being like her; of not passing down to my own children this awful, hereditary madness. I was good. I was putting it all right.

  The phone call ended. I hadn’t been prepared for it, and for a while I sat exhausted, resting my forehead in my hands. There was no flare of the old anger, though; that was long gone. But I couldn’t entirely escape the guilt about how I really felt: My aging mother was upset, and I, frankly, did not give a shit.

  I returned to the pile of submissions on my desk. They were the usual, predictable stories about car crashes, murders, drugs raids and homosexuals coming out before they were ready and then killing themselves. I hadn’t known the world had room in it for this much crap.

  But then, there was one. Last Words. It was arresting. I read it to the end.

  Last Words

  The Japanese always burn their dead. Afterwards, the bones are taken out of the furnace and the entire family gathers round and picks them up with chopsticks. They put the bone of their choice into a jar, take it home with them and bury it. It seems a strangely sinister ritual to me. I think it’s the chopsticks that do it. They make the whole thing hover a bit too close to cannibalism for my liking. I imagine myself having to gather up my mother’s bones with a knife and fork. The idea makes me want to vomit, though I’m sure she herself would relish all the latent symbolism in the image. I have, after all, been wantonly drinking her blood since the day I was born.

  My mother is dying. She has cancer, of course, and no will to live. I haven’t seen her since I was sixteen and she went off and married Husband Four (the psychopath), leaving me on my own with Husband Three (the drunk) and the occasional weekend visit to Husband One (the father). Husband Two (the good one) died in a car accident when I was six.

  My family is the stuff of tragedy, or it would be if the lack of noble emotion hadn’t reduced us all to the level of soap opera. Divorce is the family sport. My mother is current champion, though this, like all records, could change at any moment.

  It won’t be me who inherits her title, though. I don’t go near anyone.

  I’ve always been hiding from my mother. Early on, I learnt how to make myself invisible. I kept quiet and endured her. Her fist in my face was just ice.

  All in all, it was good when she left. She was gone, and I was free to stop hoping that from beneath the violence would spring the fairy tale, dressed in floral skirts and smelling of fabric softener. They all said she’d regret it. I used to picture her as the years rocked by: alone in her big house, wee
ping tears of blood.

  Three years ago, I found her on Facebook. Emma Butterworth. Still his surname, but that didn’t mean it had lasted. I clicked on her every week, without becoming her friend, and knew from a distance whenever she changed her profile picture. I scrolled through her list of friends for anyone I remembered. There was no one. My mother did not hold on to people.

  Once, her profile picture changed to one of me and her when I was a baby. She was gazing at me with a devotion not seen since the Nativity. ‘I miss her’ she’d written. Below it, a few comments: ‘Sorry you’re having a bad day, Emma.’ ‘Be kind to yourself.’ ‘Let go of guilt.’ ‘You did your best.’

  A support group, full of supporters. I didn’t click on her again but I didn’t block her, either.

  And that’s how they found me. A message appeared in my inbox from a woman called Liz Elegant: ‘Dear Alice. Your mother has asked me to get in touch with you. I know it has been a long time since you two had any contact, but Emma is in hospital and approaching the end of her life. Please get in touch if you would like the hospital address.’

  I left it three days then sent a message.

  Now I’m here, in the waiting area. There’s a window that looks over the road to the park. Families, small and intact, hang around the swings in the sun. I glance out at them, then away. In all my old dreams of family, I didn’t know how hard it would be: the uphill slog to domestic fulfilment. I used to think it would happen simply because I deserved it. I’d had my fill, my spill, my broken homes, my bag on my back and nowhere to go. Someone would hand me a future. A golden apple, wet with love.

  Instead, I lay down on the floor for them. I unwrapped my skin and let them dance on my flesh with hobnailed boots. Pints of my blood still keep them strong.

  I know now. The world has no need for more of my genes.

  The door to her room has been closed since I got here. I’ve had no reason to wait. I’ve just been getting ready.

 

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