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Sugar Hall

Page 1

by Tiffany Murray




  Contents

  Also by Tiffany Murray

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Quotes

  1. Sunday, Easter Holidays, 1955, in Grandfather Sugar's House

  2. Lilia Sugar Stops to Think

  3. Dieter Writes Two Letters

  4. Mr John Phelps Helps

  5. The Shirt

  6. Lilia Digs

  7. A Murder

  8. John Phelps’ Secret

  9. Dachkammer

  10. Maybug

  11. The Hunt

  12. A Hammer, a Fruitcake, a Cake Knife, Tin Snips and a Metal File

  13. Awakenings

  14. Saskia’s Party

  15. A Trial

  16. The Snoopers

  17. A Visitor

  18. Strong Black Coffee

  19. Thunder

  20. The Lepidopterist

  21. Doctor Portman’s Orders

  22. A Midnight Feast

  23. Fire Lantern

  24. Set Them Free

  25. Saskia Says Goodbye

  26. A Gift

  27. The River

  28. Against the Clock

  29. The Cow

  30. July 13th, 1955, 7:00 BST

  31. July 13th, 8:50 BST

  32. Up, Up, in Our Air Balloon!

  33. A Late Autumn Auction

  34. Epilogue, September 12th, 1965

  Acknowledgements

  Advertisement

  Copyright

  Also by Tiffany Murray

  Diamond Star Halo

  Happy Accidents

  Sugar Hall

  Tiffany Murray

  for Kamau Brathwaite

  And limbo stick is the silence in front of me

  limbo

  limbo

  limbo like me

  limbo

  limbo like me

  long dark night is the silence in front of me

  limbo

  limbo like me

  From ‘Limbo’, by Kamau Brathwaite

  … All children – whether good or bad – eventually find their way home…

  The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, Junot Díaz

  For the last ninety years the drive had been growing narrower as the rhododendrons grew larger.

  In Youth is Pleasure, Denton Welch

  Sunday, Easter Holidays, 1955, in Grandfather Sugar’s House

  1

  When Dieter Sugar backed out of the long shed that edged the Hall’s red gardens, when he ran through the graveyard with its tiny headstones to make a stumbling shortcut across the grass meadow where frilled daffodils bobbed like sprung Jack-in-the-boxes, when he sprinted past the black water of the ancient swimming pool onto the yellow gravel that made a sound like crunched sugar between teeth (and ‘Sugar’ was his name after all), when Dieter bounded up those grey steps, into the ancient house that he could never think of as his, when he shot through that cathedral-sized hall that smelled of marzipan (on account of the rat poison and not the cake his mother had told him), when he sprinted past the carved oak staircase and into the long room someone had named ‘the reception’, gliding to a stop on the polished floor, Dieter Sugar knew he was afraid.

  He was petrified.

  ‘What is it, Dee?’ his mother asked as she unwrapped white tissue paper from small objects he had forgotten were theirs.

  Dieter’s words came out a jumble as he tried to tell his mother and sister what he’d seen. It was hard to put into words. There was a boy; there was a small boy and the boy appeared out of thin air, and he, Dieter Sugar, was sure this boy was something different, he was almost certain this boy wasn’t like any other boy he’d seen before.

  To begin with, the boy wore something bright round his neck: a silver collar. It had writing on it, but it had glinted in the sun and Dieter couldn’t read it.

  It was his older sister, Saskia, who interrupted. ‘Don’t you have anything better to do than make things up?’ The sharp snap of Saskia’s voice echoed in the long room and she shook those things she called her ‘heavenly hips’. (Dieter had once heard Saskia say her hips were more heavenly than a Knickerbocker Glory.)

  ‘I’m not making it up. He just popped into the air, from nothing, and he stared at me and didn’t say a word, and he looked so ill, and I felt dreadfully funny all over. There is a strange boy out there.’

  Dieter pointed to the bay window and the wild red gardens. He squinted; it was all too bright in the countryside and he didn’t like it. He didn’t like this house: he hated the fact it was home now. London was his place to be. By the river: Churchill Gardens.

  ‘He just appeared, and he wore a silver collar…’ Dieter’s voice tailed off.

  Saskia latched onto these last words and snorted. ‘Don’t be silly, Dee. Boys don’t wear collars. Vicars do and dogs do.’ She glared at him and Dieter felt his fear settle, a burrowing toad. The points of the toad’s wet, sharp feet, its warty sides, all dug deep into Dieter’s belly; his breath went and he collapsed into his grandfather’s lime-green armchair.

  Dust puffed.

  This reception room was green. Green silk wallpaper, patterned with gigantic open-winged butterflies and hairy moths, peeled just below the line of the ceiling; at times Dieter was sure he heard these insects flutter. Green velvet curtains held greener mould in their swags, and there, by the great gape of a fireplace – like a black mouth and such a long way away – was an even greener something Saskia called a chaise longue. It sat directly beneath the dead bulbs of a light Saskia had told him was a chandelier (Dieter was learning so many new words in this strange house, it was exhausting). As for the armchair he sat in, it was as lime green as the Mekon’s face, and how Dieter hated the Mekon: Dan Dare’s deadly adversary from outer space; evil, alien and so very, very green.

  ‘Dee, you must listen to your sister.’

  Dieter’s head tilted at the sound of his mother’s voice. Its tone had altered so much since they’d come to Sugar Hall. Of course it had the same part-English, mostly-German sound but now it was full of something both sticky and stuck, and Dieter didn’t like it. Ma sounded like she was talking through a mouthful of condensed milk.

  ‘You have to believe me,’ he pleaded, kicking his legs out. ‘A boy was out there, and he did wear a collar. It was silver and it shone in the sunlight—’

  ‘So you do mean like a dog?’ Saskia snorted again as she hopscotched on the parquet floor; the countryside had brought out the child in fifteen-year-old Saskia Sugar.

  ‘I don’t know, Sas, I’ve never seen a dog in a silver collar.’ That got her, Dieter thought. ‘And it was real silver, Ma, because it shone like your special necklace…’ Dieter stopped. That silver necklace was sitting in the window of Kinsey’s Pawn Shop, on Lupus Street, SW1. That was such a long thought away. It made Dieter think of walking with their suitcases from Number 52C, Shelley House, Churchill Gardens to the bus stop in the pink morning light because Ma couldn’t afford a taxicab. It made him think of bouncing on the creaking springs of his carriage seat at Paddington Station as the train mushroomed smoke into the thicker smog, shuuuu-tu-shuuuu-tu, and the pistons pumped and the whistle shrieked like a woman falling from a bridge. It made him think of Ma’s egg sandwiches that smelled like farts, and Ma turning and turning her wedding ring on her finger as the carriage rattled all the way to this horrid place.

  Then he remembered something else about the strange boy: the boy hadn’t worn clothes. When he appeared the boy was naked. Dieter didn’t know why but he couldn’t quite tell his mother this, so he said, ‘Ma, listen to this, when I saw him he didn’t have a shirt on, can you believe it?’

  ‘Don’t be ridiculous, it’s cold out there,’ Saskia sneered.

  ‘It’s true…!’

 
‘Please, Dee,’ his mother interrupted, ‘be good, a good boy. Please don’t make up these stories.’

  Frills of wood shavings patterned the floor around Dieter’s mother: and such a young mother she was.

  At last her children were quiet.

  Dieter watched her reach up and unwrap more forgotten things from the tea crate. Dieter didn’t know why it was taking his ma so long to unpack; perhaps it was because things disappeared, things moved, in this house.

  Like their shoes: like the figures in the paintings on the walls, like the ornaments on the mantelpieces; like the billiard table, Dieter thought.

  And Ma’s laugh: that had disappeared too.

  His ma, his beautiful ma, she was so scruffy now. This awful house had done that to her. She wore a pair of Pa’s old trousers with a belt and a dreadful green overcoat that swallowed her up. Dieter was used to her wearing pretty dresses patterned with bluebirds that seemed to fly up the short sleeves and flock at the little belt at the waist – and that dress made him want to sing, There’ll be bluebirds ovah, the white cliffs of Dov-ah!

  Not long ago Ma had been so glamorous.

  Glamour was a word Dieter loved because he had read it in a thick-as-a-brick magazine called Vogue that Ma kept between her mattress and bedsprings at 52C Shelley House, Churchill Gardens, SW1. ‘Glamour’ was a word Dieter loved because when you said it the words made your face smile at the first ‘gla’ and then they made you blow a kiss on the ‘mour’.

  ‘Gla-mour.’

  Dieter liked that. He liked it so much he once practised the word in the bathroom mirror, wearing Ma’s Siren Red lipstick.

  ‘Gla-mour.’

  It was London that had made Ma glamorous. In London, Dieter ran home from school longing to hug her. He wanted to smell the diesel fumes, the newspaper-scent that the city, his city had given her. Dieter wanted to smell this as the thud-thud-thud of her quick little heart beat through the satin and frill layers of her slips and dresses. Even Ma’s name was glamorous; she was ‘Lilia’, she wasn’t ‘Vera’ or ‘Daphne’.

  Now her heart had slowed to a dull thud and she smelled like the black damp that lurked behind the green silk wallpaper in this room: she smelled of the spores and the dust that danced busy as the flies in this ancient house; like the foxed pages of the ugly books that lined the bookshelves in the red library, like the silverfish, the earwigs; the living ones and the husky-dead.

  Dieter looked across the long room at his newly drab mother and his puppy-fat sister and the toad of fear burped inside him. Saskia had begun to sing, ‘Nearer My God to Thee’, and Dieter closed his eyes. He didn’t want to think about sadness today, about How It Was Before They Came to Sugar Hall, because How It Was Before made his muscles tense and his lungs shrink, and the thing that hung between his legs move back to where it had come from (and Dieter wasn’t exactly sure where that was, he had tried to see in a mirror once, but for now he just knew it was inside).

  He let his head drop back against lime-green upholstery and he thought of the Wee-Hoo Gang. That last afternoon in London, Dieter had stood on his dirt mound in the place they called the Wasteland and – as the smog came in from the Thames, and the cranes that were building, building, building chugged in the distance – he shook the dry hands of every member of his Wee-Hoo Gang, just like a grown-up leader would. His best friend, Cynthia Nurse, had cried.

  ‘See you, Dee,’ Tommy Perrot said as he wiped snot candles from his nose, and when none of them could see a thing because the smog was so bad, they held hands and walked in a crocodile all the way back to Churchill Gardens.

  In the long, cold reception room of Sugar Hall, Dieter tried to picture his friends; he thought of the twins, Deuteronomy and Comfort Jones, running through the Wasteland crying ‘weeeeeee-hoooooooo!’ at the roofless buildings with their brick steps that led to doors that led to rooms that weren’t there anymore – all because of the war, a war he didn’t know or remember. (It was Mr Hutchins, his old Form Teacher, who had told the class they had a different war now, and this war was about bombs called atom and hydrogen; Mr Hutchins said that if this new war happened there’d be no bombsites because there’d just be nothing left).

  How awful to have nowhere to play, Dieter thought. How awful it is to have no one to play with.

  If he concentrated, Dieter could hear Billy Foley and Tommy Perrot make spacemen ray-gun noises; he could hear Cynthia Nurse and Precious Palmer flicking their skipping rope, singing, ‘The wicked fairy cast a spell, cast a spell, cast a spell. The wicked fairy cast a spell, long, long ago!’

  If Dieter was with them, he’d be kicking about in the dust by the river until the sun set over Battersea Power Station and their different mothers’ different cries and the smells of their different cooking were carried out on the dry wind, all the way from their beloved council flats, the brand-spanking-new Churchill Gardens.

  A furry bluebottle hit against one of the tall windows in the long, green reception room and Dieter opened his eyes. If he crushed the fly he knew its guts would be yellow, just as he knew that being back home, in London, would make everything right.

  ‘A boy was out there,’ he whispered, ‘he did wear a silver collar and you’ll see, I’m going to make him my friend.’

  Lilia Sugar Stops to Think

  2

  Lilia Sugar loved to hear her children. Unfortunately Saskia had yet to grasp the fact that her gift did not lie in singing, and Lilia had retreated to the window seat of the library to escape her daughter’s mauling of ‘Nearer My God to Thee’.

  If Lilia hadn’t been so out of practice, she would have laughed.

  She glanced up at the leatherbound volumes sitting behind dust-caked grilles. Lilia saw hard work up there. Still, in this house she knew that if she could clean it, she could sell it.

  She thought about books.

  The first book she read in English was Jane Eyre. At the time she was fifteen, she was Lilia Fisch just come to England, and Jane Eyre suited her very well. Of course she had already read the book in German: as a child in Demmin, and again during that last black year in Berlin, but Lilia would always remember the first time she mouthed those words in English and in England, sitting on the hard wooden bench of the tall and almost round Quaker Meeting House in Nailsworth. She remembered she had been quite alone, quite cold, but content; and her fingers on the white page seemed very red.

  Nails-worth. At first it had seemed such a frightening word for a town.

  Drizzle spat against the library windows and Lilia shuddered.

  It had been a shock to discover that Nailsworth wasn’t far; it lay out there – she tapped the window – over those fields and past the wide mud of the Severn River. She didn’t care for that river; it was tidal, she couldn’t swim it and so it was useless to her. She’d heard dreadful stories, too, of ponies stranded and sinking to their deaths in the slick mud of the estuary, of a girl who jumped in at high tide and was never seen again. No, Lilia didn’t care for that brown churning river at all. She knew there was another behind them – the River Wye – she hadn’t ventured out there but she did hope it was proper, calm water, for Lilia loved to swim. It made her want to laugh, though she didn’t, the fact that rivers surrounded them.

  Sugar Hall is an island, she thought, and we are marooned in this new home.

  ‘Nearer my God to Thee!’ Saskia cried from the staircase. ‘Nearer to Theeeeeee!’

  Home. It wasn’t that. Sugar Hall was a dirty-grey square, spiked with fancy but useless chimneys. Two silly towers shot up from a porch decorated with stone roses and stone creatures that Dieter had insisted were lions, dragons and bears, but to Lilia they were rain-washed lumps that made her head hurt. Sugar Hall was the past, and Lilia did not care for the past. This was her husband’s past; it was Peter’s, and Lilia couldn’t think of Peter, not today.

  She dug her hands into the pockets of the army coat she’d found all those months ago in the boot room (the coat had got her through this winter
so well she’d forgotten that it made her itch). Lilia lit a cigarette, breathing in as deep as a poacher on a cold night.

  ‘Juniper, please come,’ she whispered at the windowpane: smoke clouded the view.

  In the rat-infested and freezing winter Lilia had been too busy surviving to consider loneliness; now she craved company, or the company of one person at least.

  Juniper Bledsoe had arrived one day in February when the drive was still banked with snow. Lilia was standing at these library windows when she saw a figure on a white horse pushing through the drifts. Lilia thought it was out of a book. Still, she’d hidden behind the red curtains.

  Lilia had always thought the English strange; either they were fawningly polite or they barged in like bulldogs. Juniper had marched into the hall and cried ‘Haalllooo! Haaalllooo!’ for so long that Lilia had to scurry out of her hiding place and open the library door. Juniper wore a long wax coat and trousers that flared above the knee, and for a moment Lilia thought it was another century.

  ‘Ah! There you are!’ Juniper said. ‘Christ, it’s an ice-cellar in this place. How do you survive, dear?’ She barked all this as she slammed her riding crop down on the hall table and tugged off her leather gloves. ‘I can only apologise that I haven’t visited until now. Ill, you see. Damned pneumonia. This winter is enough to kill us all. But I can’t tell you how thrilling it is to meet you at last.’ She shook Lilia’s hand with a grip that could crush bones and Lilia worried about her own hard, dry skin. ‘Now where do you bunk up? Where’s your warm retreat in this arctic place?’

  ‘I…’

  ‘I remember the old range in the servants’ kitchen, kept me toasty after many a ride. Old Sugar didn’t have the foggiest I was here.’

  ‘Yes, the kitchen,’ Lilia said and immediately she worried about how German she might sound, but Juniper hadn’t flinched; she simply took Lilia by the shoulders and marched her along the passage towards the worn stone steps that led down to the kitchen. Juniper knew the house.

  ‘By the way, it’s Mrs Bledsoe to most, Juniper to you.’ Her long wax coat creaked as she walked.

 

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