The Naked Room

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The Naked Room Page 11

by Diana Hockley


  ‘Oh my God. No, surely not…it couldn’t be…’ Fear made me stumble over the words.

  ‘Suicide? No. Miss Hird was stabbed and then thrown onto the rocks below Wild Pony Rock.’

  Murdered.

  Cold radiated out from my stomach to slither throughout my torso and limbs. No. Unbearable pain lurked just around the corner.

  ‘I’m so sorry to have to tell you, Ms Carpenter, and particularly over the telephone.’ Again, Detective Prescott waited until my breathing slowed enough to speak. ‘Do you feel able to answer a couple of questions, or would you like to talk to me later?’

  ‘No, let’s get it over with.’

  ‘All right, if you’re sure you can cope right now. You said Ms Hird would never have gone near the—Wild Pony Rock?’

  ‘Never. She hated that rock. Several people have fallen from it over the years and she wouldn’t go near it even when I was with her.’

  ‘I see. Did Miss Hird have any enemies you know of?’ she asked.

  ‘No, I honestly can’t think of anyone who didn’t like her and I mean that. We’ve been friends since before Ally was born. She was an open, friendly person, happy to talk to everyone.’ My voice broke as I remembered the warmth of Georgie’s personality.

  Papers rustled on her desk. ‘When did you go to live on Master’s Island exactly, Ms Carpenter?’ Her tone sharpened, snapping me to attention.

  ‘I can’t remember the exact date, but it was September, 1984.’ I replied, puzzled.

  ‘I see. We’ll leave it for now then. If you think of anything, could you please ring me here at Police Headquarters and if I’m not in, they will relay a message. I might need to get back to you again for more information.’

  As we hung up, Pam staggered into the flat laden with shopping. I rushed to help her, thankful for the diversion. We put the groceries away, fed the cat yet again; we had to keep Basil’s strength up somehow, when the doorbell rang. My heart leaped. I wanted to throw myself into James’s arms and stay hidden until my child was safely found.

  Pam went to open the door and I heard him say something. Then her voice screeched down the hallway:

  ‘You? You’re Ally’s father?’

  CHAPTER 17

  Retreating from the Heat

  Ally

  Tuesday: before dawn.

  Time is divided into light and dark. The same car comes and goes, but I’ve given up trying to see it. My eyes are swollen. It’s hard to breathe and my face hurts so much I can hardly bear it. Got to get out, got to get out.

  I lie in total darkness as soon as the sun goes down and have no idea what day it is. They haven’t been in since yesterday afternoon. No food, only water. I try not to take more than a sip at a time and ignore my stomach’s pleading. I can only see out of a corner of my left eye. I’ve poured a tiny amount of water onto the towel and dabbed some of the blood off my face. The front of my camisole is stiff and dry. It stinks; I stink.

  The bare walls feel as though they’re shuffling closer, like in the movie, Egyptian Mummy, which I saw when I was fourteen at the Saturday afternoon flicks. This woman was trapped in a tomb—she was the evil one— and the walls crushed her for her sins. Yuk. Don’t think about it. ‘Think about your music. It calms you down,’ I tell myself.

  All the times I’ve moaned for a bit of peace and quiet come back to haunt me. Ironic. Traffic noises, boom boxes, endless music in shopping malls…once it drove me mad, but now I would give my eye teeth to be listening to the poxy stuff. I close my eyes and clamp my lips together to keep them from trembling. Terror freezes my belly; I can hardly breathe. I can’t do this.

  Chopin’s Etudé. I’ve played it thousand times and now my lips are too dry to hum the melody. My mind flits from one thing to another, like a demented moth. How long, then for—don’t even think it.

  Regrets, regrets. I try to remember the happy times in my life, like times with my friends, the concerts I’ve played and the awards I’ve won, with mum, Georgie and Aunt Rosalind leaping out of their seats, screaming and clapping their hands.

  What about the times Pam, Jess and I went out clubbing, laughing like hyenas, pretending we were secretaries or nurses so the blokes wouldn’t think we were too high-brow to dance with. The times we dragged each other home, half out of our minds—Pam and I almost got caught peeing in someone’s front garden one night. The security lights came on outside and we fled, pulling our knickers up as we ran. A bad moment…

  I remember the times on Masters Island, when mum and I would sit at home reading while the wind rocketed around our cottage or digging in the garden, planting seedlings with the cats coming along and squatting in the holes we dug. We laughed ourselves sick one time when we went mad and re-arranged our whole cottage. ‘Ally, you’ve got muscles like spider’s kneecaps!’ she laughed, as we struggled with a particularly heavy piece of furniture. Why couldn’t I be content with our family of two? Mum loves me and still I yearn for more. Ally, Ally, you greedy pig…

  Regret surfaces in my mind, sorrow for the times I was nasty, when I could have said a kind word and didn’t. The stupid choices I made years ago. Why can’t I forget them? I can hear myself screeching at mum: ‘You wouldn’t know what it’s like to be dumped!’ after my first boyfriend, Larry, sauntered away with Mary Roberts, who smirked at me over her shoulder as they went. I slammed my bedroom door in mum’s face while she was trying to comfort me. Perhaps my father dumped her?

  How could I have been so mean after mum spent thousands of dollars she could ill-afford on music lessons for me, beautiful clothes which she spent hours sewing for me to wear at school piano recitals. What about the times she sat waiting while I rehearsed or played in a concert? Or when I was in my teens and needed picking up from a party on the mainland, she would stay with Aunt Rosalind, get into the car at midnight and arrive at the house where the party was held.

  I remember squirming with embarrassment when my friends saw her parked out the front in pyjamas and pink fluffies. Of course, I ignored the fact that my friend’s parents were doing the same. It was only my mother who looked like an idiot.

  But I can’t get past the fact she’s obviously lied to me my whole life. Who is my father? Is he going to pay the money? What if he refuses? No, they would have done something to me by now—like kill me.

  Am I really Ally Parker? My red hair comes from mum, so what do I get from him? My musical talent? I can only think about how he looks in the photo. Has mum kept in touch since I was born? How do these people know who he is to demand money from him? Who told them?

  ‘Stop it, Ally. You may never know what happened between them. You can’t allow yourself to sleep because the dreams will come.’ Is the drug they’re putting in my water making me hallucinate? I have to take a sip now and then to keep from getting dehydrated. I have to get strong again, in case there’s another chance to get away. I want to smash their faces in and just run and run…

  Memories trickle, willy-nilly, into my mind, things that happened years ago.

  Calne, Wiltshire: 2004

  ‘Now you listen here to me love, you’ve got to find yourself a man. Your music won’t keep you warm at night, you know. You should be out dancing and enjoying life like the rest of the girls.’

  ‘But Mrs Gordon, I’m quite content the way I am. I’m not prepared to massage their egos, or anything else for that matter.’ I grin smugly as I toast myself by the fire, watching my landlady ironing the shirts which she takes in for extra money. The cat in my lap stirs, sticks out a paw and hooks a piece of wool in my sweater. We purr in unison.

  I was living in a ‘bed and breakfast’ in Calne at the time, standing in for the music teacher of a local school who had tripped over a hockey stick on the sports ground and broken her leg. I was ready to face raging fires for my career, but unfortunately it had hit a short hiatus. After being sacked by a bloke I was mad about, I decided all men could get stuffed. Most of the ones I’d met could fill their own lunatic asylum, and Franco, a h
orn player with delusions of grandeur, hadn’t lived up to his instrument’s reputation, which would seem to be indicative of all of them.

  The applause of audiences more than made up for the lonely hours spent in hotel rooms, being concertinaed into cattle class in aircraft and rehearsing in cold, bleak theatres or halls.

  I lived in student digs in the UK before Pam and Jess arrived. Firmly etched in my memory are sparsely furnished bedrooms and communal kitchens with bottles dripping HP and tomato sauce over vinyl tablecloths. If I close my eyes, I can hear the hiss of a gas heater and the smell of fish and chips at the end of the day. Please God, I will never have to go back to that way of life.

  Musicians are nomadic and mostly nocturnal. Broken artistic marriages litter the concert stage like pieces of smashed glass. Perhaps one day I’ll meet someone and marry him. Brie. Is he the one? I’m so lucky. I have my career, friends, mum…but is it all over? What if I can’t get out of here?

  I’ve blown my chances of getting away, but if they don’t come back no one will know where I am. How would anyone know where to look? I could starve to death. If I get out of this alive I’ll never, ever take anyone or anything for granted again. And treasure every day I’m given. An image flashes into my head of a dried out frog I once found under a cupboard in our cottage. Fresh waves of terror bunch in my stomach and spread outward. What if my—father—refuses to pay them?

  What can I do to save myself if they get the money and abandon me? Surely mum won’t stop looking for me? People go missing and then the police give up and the case is closed for years and a year…until a mummified body is found in the bush somewhere.

  I can’t breathe.

  Calm down.

  Brie. Will he forget me eventually? Like everyone except mum, Georgie and Pam and Aunt Rosalind. Jess might not care—she actually might be glad. That’s an awful thing to think about one of your closest friends. But is she really my friend?

  I’m so frightened. Slowly. Breathe slowly. Yoga breaths now, forget your ribs and think happy thoughts.

  How did I manage to fall for a gorgeous rogue like Briece Mochrie? When I discovered he wasn’t just eye-candy, I freaked out. Brie is as patient with people as he is with his work, a scary attribute when I don’t want involvement right now.

  ‘But why does he hang out with me when there are lots of younger and prettier musicians in the company?’ I asked once of an older musician in the Pacific orchestra.

  ‘You’re a challenge, love. You’re fun to fight with because you keep him on his toes. His groupies worship the ground he walks on. He always goes for the young chicks and you are…er…ah…’ Realising where this was leading him, Patrick, a much-married man, heeded his instinct for self-preservation and trailed into silence.

  ‘Getting on for twenty-six, Patrick?’ I asked, grinning.

  He smiled ruefully.

  ‘Well, let’s face it,’ I went on, knowing it would get back to Brie, ‘some men just aren’t capable of coping with a fully grown woman.’

  The side door at the theatre was often knee-deep in admirers of the younger members of the orchestra. Occasionally, because security is tight, the lads would invite girls they knew backstage and these girls would sometimes leave a keepsake for the object of their affections. The story of when Brie opened his cello case at rehearsal and found a red lace g-string tied around the end of his bow has passed into company legend. Apparently he’d been talking to someone at the time, not paying attention to what he was doing, whipped the bow out and flicked the g-string onto the conductor’s podium.

  ‘Mr Mochrie,’ said Sir James McPherson—the story went—’ I didn’t know you cared.’

  The orchestra roared.

  ‘We didn’t realise Brie still had a blush in him,’ chuckled Patrick.

  It wasn’t until we were on the outback tour that I allowed Brie to get nearer than talking distance. When we left Brisbane, I chose a seat next to a window on the bus and was secretly pleased when he threw himself into the seat beside me.

  ‘You can keep me amused on the way,’ he announced gleefully, leaning closer than necessary. Blimey.

  ‘In your dreams, Mochrie,’ I snarled.

  ‘What have you got against me, Ally? I’m house-trained, love animals and I’m kind to my family. I’m not bad-looking either,’ he added, and winked.

  I could see myself reflected in his dark blue, thickly-lashed eyes focused on my mouth. ‘Oh, I don’t know. I’ve seen better.’ Liar, liar, pants on fire.

  ‘And I wouldn’t trust you as far as I could kick you,’ I thought, as I turned to the window to hide the blush suffusing my breasts, creeping inexorably throughout my body. His muscular, denim-clad thigh pressed against mine and I could smell the maleness of him, clean and fresh-smelling, like a newly washed sheet drying in the sun.

  As he lifted his arm to wave to someone at the front of the bus, his t-shirt rode up to expose his tanned, six-pack stomach. A thin line of silky, dark hair marched under his jeans toward his obviously well-endowed crotch. Warm twitters scudded around the centre of my femininity. I squeezed my thighs together. My breasts swelled, my nipples hardened…damn…I couldn’t help watching those beautiful, strong hands, imagining them holding my…

  He turned and looked down the contours of my face, coming to rest on the flushed skin at the opening of my shirt, and smirked.

  I didn’t want to stuff up my reputation by becoming a Mochrie groupie, but after that, he played me like a fish on the end of his line. He would retreat a little, giving me breathing room and then stare at me until I looked over the top of the piano and meet his sexy, killer smile. He’d wink or raise an eyebrow, almost causing me to lose a note.

  I was ready to go to bed with him last Friday night. ‘If you hadn’t been kidnapped, you would have fallen right into it and he’d probably be looking for someone else by now,’ I chided myself. Isn’t that what they always do? Once the excitement of the chase is over? Grow up, Ally!

  At the moment, there doesn’t—didn’t—seem to be enough he could do for me. My lawn mowed, the drain under the sink unblocked; I don’t “do” drains. He’s a farmer’s son and knows how to fix things, but the times I most want to remember are when we’re practising our music together, or sitting in my lounge room reading or listening to music…

  What are you thinking? Marriage? Babies are not on my agenda. A couple of weeks ago, one of the clarinettists asked me to mind her three-month old son while she went to the dentist. I’ve never changed a nappy, let alone a pooey one, so I practically hurled. One thing’s for sure, I didn’t end up with any maternal urges. You might never get the chance now to have any.

  Scarpia and the Cow burst into the room. It’s barely daylight now. They’re agitated, their usual air of confidence missing. Her surgical mask is slightly askew. For a split second, I think I’ve seen her before, but then it’s gone. He makes no attempt to bait me but examines my face thoughtfully, his eyes narrowed and dangerous. Icy fear trickles through me.

  Something has happened.

  CHAPTER 18

  No Fresh Flowers by Request

  Jessica

  Tuesday: 9.00am.

  I sit staring into space, too frightened to move.

  Pam phoned just a few minutes ago to tell me that Georgie Hird is dead. Why would Georgie go to Wild Pony Rock? And after dark? I’ve never been to the rock when I visited the Carpenters on Master Island. The rotten thing terrifies me.

  The pulse in my throat throbs; I take deep breaths to steady myself.

  I’ve left a piece of dry toast and a half-empty cup of cold coffee on the kitchen bench. I need to clear them away and scrub the surface. I leap to my feet, don my rubber gloves and run the hot water into the sink. I have to keep control of the fear which threatens to dismantle my very being.

  Clean, clean.

  It’s Ally’s fault. If she hadn’t been so full of herself, so damn self-righteous, I would have never gotten into this mess. From the moment I first met
that girl, the day I answered Pam’s advertisement about sharing the flat, Ally has dominated my life. I know she doesn’t realise how pathetic she makes me feel. I couldn’t bear it if she knew, but not because she’d be snide. Oh no, not Ally. She’d be so nice and understanding. Her mother loves her. She’s got the mother I want.

  My own is a cold, unfeeling bitch. She has never really allowed me into her life and only lets me know her when she feels like it. Well, Mother, I no longer want to know you.

  Her favourite role is that of Mrs Lynda Rallison, solicitor and wife of Harold Rallison, architect and social climber.

  She hired nannies from the moment I was born. I remember my sister sitting in her cot, wet and crying for hours while the latest nanny was off somewhere. I got into trouble for climbing up, letting the side down and trying to drag her out. I wanted to change her, but mother accused me of being jealous and attempting to hurt her. It was the pattern of my relationship with Lynda. A couple more times of trying to help my sister after that, and I got the message along with the beltings. I left Julia alone from then on and in turn was so lonely, that sometimes I wanted to die.

  Mother is still as remote from me as the bird of prey she resembles. A stickler for convention, it was always, “What would the neighbours think?” if we wanted to do something even a bit out of the ordinary. As if they’d give a flying fuck what we did. But oh no, nothing must be out of place, “in case people will think I haven’t brought you up properly.”

  ‘Manners, Jess, manners. Look how well your sister behaves!’ she’d snarl, poking me in the middle of my back with a red claw.

  It was easy once I got older and worked out how to keep out of her way, but by then she didn’t seem to care whether I was there or not. So I behaved badly just so she would notice me. Even punishment was better than being ignored.

  I’d steal a glance at Julia and want to hit her as she sat beside me, eyes narrowed to slits, slyly watching the world go by. Now, I understand it was my sister’s way of protecting herself from our mother’s carping criticism and relentless drive for social dominance. Does she share the memories which butterfly through my consciousness?

 

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