Anansi Boys
Neil Gaiman
Neil Gaiman
Anansi Boys
You know how it is. You pick up a
book, flip to the dedication, and find that, once again, the author has
dedicated a book to someone else and not to you.
Not this
time.
Because we haven’t yet met/have only a glancing
acquaintance/are just crazy about each other/haven’t seen each other in much
too long/are in some way related/will never meet, but will, I trust, despite
that, always think fondly of each other!
This one’s for
you.
With you know what, and you probably know
why.
Note: the author would like to take
this opportunity to tip his hat respectfully to the ghosts of Zora Neale
Hurston, Thorne Smith, P.G. Wodehouse, and Frederick “Tex”
Avery.
Chapter One
which is mostly about names and family
relationships
It begins, as most things begin,
with a song.
In the beginning, after all, were the words,
and they came with a tune. That was how the world was made, how the void was
divided, how the lands and the stars and the dreams and the little gods and the
animals, how all of them came into the world.
They were
sung.
The great beasts were sung into existence, after the
Singer had done with the planets and the hills and the trees and the oceans and
the lesser beasts. The cliffs that bound existence were sung, and the hunting
grounds, and the dark.
Songs remain. They last. The right
song can turn an emperor into a laughingstock, can bring down dynasties. A song
can last long after the events and the people in it are dust and dreams and
gone. That’s the power of songs.
There are other things you
can do with songs. They do not only make worlds or recreate existence. Fat
Charlie Nancy’s father, for example, was simply using them to have what he hoped
and expected would be a marvelous night out.
Before Fat
Charlie’s father had come into the bar, the barman had been of the opinion that
the whole karaoke evening was going to be an utter bust; but then the little old
man had sashayed into the room, walked past the table of several blonde women
with the fresh sunburns and smiles of tourists, who were sitting by the little
makeshift stage in the corner. He had tipped his hat to them, for he wore a hat,
a spotless green fedora, and lemon-yellow gloves, and then he walked over to
their table. They giggled.
“Are you enjoyin’ yourselves,
ladies?” he asked.
They continued to giggle and told him
they were having a good time, thank you, and that they were here on vacation. He
said to them, it gets better, just you wait.
He was older
than they were, much, much older, but he was charm itself, like something from a
bygone age when fine manners and courtly gestures were worth something. The
barman relaxed. With someone like this in the bar, it was going to be a good
evening.
There was karaoke. There was dancing. The old man
got up to sing, on the makeshift stage, not once, that evening, but twice. He
had a fine voice, and an excellent smile, and feet that twinkled when he danced.
The first time he got up to sing, he sang “What’s New Pussycat?” The second time
he got up to sing, he ruined Fat Charlie’s
life.
Fat Charlie was only ever fat for a handful
of years, from shortly before the age of ten, which was when his mother
announced to the world that if there was one thing she was over and done with
(and if the gentleman in question had any argument with it he could just stick
it you know where) it was her marriage to that elderly goat that she had made
the unfortunate mistake of marrying and she would be leaving in the morning for
somewhere a long way away and he had better not try to follow, to the age of
fourteen, when Fat Charlie grew a bit and exercised a little more. He was not
fat. Truth to tell, he was not really even chubby, simply slightly soft-looking
around the edges. But the name Fat Charlie clung to him, like chewing gum to the
sole of a tennis shoe. He would introduce himself as Charles or, in his early
twenties, Chaz, or, in writing, as C. Nancy, but it was no use: the name would
creep in, infiltrating the new part of his life just as cockroaches invade the
cracks and the world behind the fridge in a new kitchen, and like it or not—and
he didn’t—he would be Fat Charlie again.
It was, he knew,
irrationally, because his father had given him the nickname, and when his father
gave things names, they stuck.
There was a dog who had
lived in the house across the way, in the Florida street on which Fat Charlie
had grown up. It was a chestnut-colored boxer, long-legged and pointy-eared with
a face that looked like the beast had, as a puppy, run face-first into a wall.
Its head was raised, its tail nub erect. It was, unmistakably, an aristocrat
amongst canines. It had entered dog shows. It had rosettes for Best of Breed and
for Best in Class and even one rosette marked Best in Show. This dog rejoiced in
the name of Campbell’s Macinrory Arbuthnot the Seventh, and its owners, when
they were feeling familiar, called it Kai. This lasted until the day that Fat
Charlie’s father, sitting out on their dilapidated porch swing, sipping his
beer, noticed the dog as it ambled back and forth across the neighbor’s yard, on
a leash that ran from a palm tree to a fence post.
“Hell of
a goofy dog,” said Fat Charlie’s father. “Like that friend of Donald Duck’s. Hey
Goofy.”
And what once had been Best in Show suddenly
slipped and shifted. For Fat Charlie, it was as if he saw the dog through his
father’s eyes, and darned if he wasn’t a pretty goofy dog, all things
considered. Almost rubbery.
It didn’t take long for the
name to spread up and down the street. Campbell’s Macinrory Arbuthnot the
Seventh’s owners struggled with it, but they might as well have stood their
ground and argued with a hurricane. Total strangers would pat the once proud
boxer’s head, and say, “Hello, Goofy. How’s a boy?” The dog’s owners stopped
entering him in dog shows soon after that. They didn’t have the heart.
“Goofy-looking dog,” said the judges.
Fat Charlie’s
father’s names for things stuck. That was just how it
was.
That was far from the worst thing about Fat Charlie’s
father.
There had been, during the years that Fat Charlie
was growing up, a number of candidates for the worst thing about his father: his
roving eye and equally as adventurous fingers, at least according to the young
ladies of the area, who would complain to Fat Charlie’s mother, and then there
would be trouble; the little black cigarillos, which he called cheroots, which
he smoked, the smell of which clung to everything he touched; his fondness for a
peculiar shuffling form of tap dancing only ever fashionable, Fat Charlie
suspected, for half an hour in Harlem in the1920 s; his total and invincible
ignorance about current world affairs, combined with his apparent conviction
that sitcoms were half-hour-long insights into the lives and struggles of real
people. These, individually, as far as Fat Charlie was concerned, were none of
them the worst thing about Fat Charlie’s father, although each of them had
contributed to the worst thing.
The worst thing about Fat
Charlie’s father was simply this: He was embarrassing.
Of
course, everyone’s parents are embarrassing. It goes with the territory. The
nature of parents is to embarrass merely by existing, just as it is the nature
of children of a certain age to cringe with embarrassment, shame, and
mortification should their parents so much as speak to them on the
street.
Fat Charlie’s father, of course, had elevated this
to an art form, and he rejoiced in it, just as he rejoiced in practical jokes,
from the simple—Fat Charlie would never forget the first time he had climbed
into an apple-pie bed—to the unimaginably complex.
“Like
what?” asked Rosie, Fat Charlie’s fiancée, one evening, when Fat Charlie, who
normally did not talk about his father, had attempted, stumblingly, to explain
why he believed that simply inviting his father to their upcoming wedding would
be a horrendously bad idea. They were in a small wine bar in South London at the
time. Fat Charlie had long been of the opinion that four thousand miles and the
Atlantic Ocean were both good things to keep between himself and his
father.
“Well—” said Fat Charlie, and he remembered a
parade of indignities, each one of which made his toes curl involuntarily. He
settled upon one of them. “Well, when I changed schools, when I was a kid, my
dad made a point of telling me how much he had always looked forward to
Presidents’ Day, when he was a boy, because it’s the law that on Presidents’
Day, the kids who go to school dressed as their favorite presidents get a big
bag of candy.”
“Oh. That’s a nice law,” said Rosie. “I wish
we had something like that in England.” Rosie had never been out of the U.K., if
you didn’t count a Club18 -30 holiday to an island in, she was fairly certain,
the Mediterranean. She had warm brown eyes and a good heart, even if geography
was not her strongest suit.
“It’s not a nice law,”
said Fat Charlie. “It’s not a law at all. He made it up. Most states don’t even
have school on Presidents’ Day, and even for the ones that do, there is no
tradition of going to school on Presidents’ Day dressed as your favorite
president. Kids dressed as presidents do not get big bags of candy by an act of
Congress, nor is your popularity in the years ahead, all through middle school
and high school, decided entirely by which president you decided to dress as—the
average kids dress as the obvious presidents, the Lincolns and Washingtons and
Jeffersons, but the ones who would become popular, they dressed as John Quincy
Adams or Warren Gamaliel Harding, or someone like that. And it’s bad luck to
talk about it before the day. Or rather it isn’t, but he said it
was.”
“Boys and girls dress up as
presidents?”
“Oh yes. Boys and girls. So I spent the week
before Presidents’ Day reading everything there was to read about presidents in
the World Book Encyclopedia, trying to choose the right
one.”
“Didn’t you ever suspect that he was pulling your
leg?”
Fat Charlie shook his head. “It’s not something you
think about, when my dad starts to work you over. He’s the finest liar you’ll
ever meet. He’s convincing.”
Rosie took a sip of her
Chardonnay. “So which President did you go to school
as?”
“Taft. He was the twenty-seventh president. I wore a
brown suit my father had found somewhere, with the legs all rolled up and a
pillow stuffed down the front. I had a painted-on moustache. My dad took me to
school himself that day. I walked in so proudly. The other kids just screamed
and pointed, and somewhere in there I locked myself in a cubicle in the boys’
room and cried. They wouldn’t let me go home to change. I went through the day
like that. It was Hell.”
“You should have made something
up,” said Rosie. “You were going to a costume party afterwards or something. Or
just told them the truth.”
“Yeah,” said Fat Charlie
meaningfully and gloomily, remembering.
“What did your dad
say, when you got home?”
“Oh, he hooted with laughter.
Chuckled and chortled and, and chittered and all that. Then he told me that
maybe they didn’t do that Presidents’ Day stuff anymore. Now, why didn’t we go
down to the beach together and look for mermaids?”
“Look
for—mermaids?”
“We’d go down to the beach, and walk along
it, and he’d be as embarrassing as any human being on the face of this planet
has ever been—he’d start singing, and he’d start doing a shuffling sort of
sand-dance on the sand, and he’d just talk to people as he went—people he didn’t
even know, people he’d never met, and I hated it, except he told me there were
mermaids out there in the Atlantic, and if I looked fast enough and sharp
enough, I’d see one.
“ ‘There!’ he’d say. ‘Did you see her?
She was a big ol’ redhead, with a green tail.’ And I looked, and I looked, but I
never did.”
He shook his head. Then he took a handful of
mixed nuts from the bowl on the table and began to toss them into his mouth,
chomping down on them as if each nut was a twenty-year-old indignity that could
never be erased.
“Well,” said Rosie, brightly, “I think he
sounds lovely, a real character! We have to get him to come over for the
wedding. He’d be the life and soul of the party.”
Which,
Fat Charlie explained, after briefly choking on a Brazil nut, was really the
last thing you wanted at your wedding, after all, wasn’t it, your father turning
up and being the life and soul of the party? He said that his father was, he had
no doubt, still the most embarrassing person on God’s Green Earth. He added that
he was perfectly happy not to have seen the old goat for several years, and that
the best thing his mother ever did was to leave his father and come to England
to stay with her Aunt Alanna. He buttressed this by stating categorically that
he was damned, double-damned, and quite possibly even thrice-damned if he was
going to invite his father. In fact, said Fat Charlie in closing, the
best thing about getting married was not having to invite his dad
to their wedding.
And then Fat Charlie saw the expression
on Rosie’s face and the icy glint in her normally friendly eyes, and he
corrected himself hurriedly, explaining that he meant the second-best, but it
was already much too late.
“You’ll just have to get used to
the idea,” said Rosie. “After all, a wedding is a marvelous opportunity for
mending fences and building bridges. It’s your opportunity to show him that
there are no hard feelings.”
“But there are hard
feelings,” said Fat Charlie. “Lots.”
“Do you have an
address for him?” asked Rosie. “Or a phone number? You probably ought to phone
him. A letter’s a bit impersonal when your only son is getting married- you are
his only son, aren’t you? Does he have e-mail?”
“Yes. I’m
his only son. I have no idea if he has e-mail or not. Probably not,” said Fat
Charlie. Letters were good things, he thought. They could get lost in the post
for a start.
“Well, you must have an address or a phone
number.”
“I don’t,” said Fat Charlie, honestly. Maybe his
father had moved away. He could have left Florida and gone somewhere they didn’t
have telephones. Or addresses.
“Well,” said Rosie, sharply,
“who does?”
“Mrs. Higgler,” said Fat Charlie, and all the
fight went out of him.
Rosie smiled sweetly. “And who is
Mrs. Higgler?” she asked.
“Friend of the family,” said Fat
Charlie. “When I was growing up, she used to live next
door.”
He had spoken to Mrs. Higgler several years earlier,
when his mother was dying. He had, at his mother’s request, telephoned Mrs.
Higgler to pass on the message to Fat Charlie’s father, and to tell him to get
in touch. And several days later there had been a message on Fat Charlie’s
answering machine, left while he was at work, in a voice that was unmistakably
his father’s, even if it did sound rather older and a little
drunk.
His father said that it was not a good time, and
that business affairs would be keeping him in America. And then he added that,
for everything, Fat Charlie’s mother was a damn fine woman. Several days later a
vase of assorted flowers had been delivered to the hospital ward. Fat Charlie’s
mother had snorted when she read the card.
“Thinks he can
get around me that easily?” she said. “He’s got another think coming, I can tell
you that.” But she had had the nurse put the flowers in a place of honor by her
bed and, several times since, had asked Fat Charlie if he had heard anything
about his father coming and visiting her before it was all
over.
Fat Charlie said he hadn’t. He grew to hate the
question, and his answer, and the expression on her face when he told her that,
no, his father wasn’t coming.
The worst day, in Fat
Charlie’s opinion, was the day that the doctor, a gruff little man, had taken
Fat Charlie aside and told him that it would not be long now, that his mother
was fading fast, and it had become a matter of keeping her comfortable until the
end.
Fat Charlie had nodded, and gone in to his mother. She
had held his hand, and was asking him whether or not he had remembered to pay
her gas bill, when the noise began in the corridor—a clashing, parping,
stomping, rattling, brass-and-bass-and-drum sort of noise, of the kind that
tends not to be heard in hospitals, where signs in the stairwells request quiet
and the icy glares of the nursing staff enforce it.
The
noise was getting louder.
For one moment Fat Charlie
thought it might be terrorists. His mother, though, smiled weakly at the
cacophony. “Yellow bird,” she whispered.
“What?” said Fat
Charlie, scared that she had stopped making sense.
“
‘Yellow Bird,’ “ she said, louder and more firmly. “It’s what they’re
playing.”
Fat Charlie went to the door, and looked
out.
Coming down the hospital corridor, ignoring the
protests of nurses, the stares of patients in pajamas and of their families, was
what appeared to be a very small New Orleans jazz band. There was a saxophone
and a sousaphone and a trumpet. There was an enormous man with what looked like
a double bass strung around his neck. There was a man with a bass drum, which he
banged. And at the head of the pack, in a smart checked suit, wearing a fedora
hat and lemon yellow gloves, came Fat Charlie’s father. He played no instrument
but was doing a soft-shoe-shuffle along the polished linoleum of the hospital
floor, lifting his hat to each of the medical staff in turn, shaking hands with
anyone who got close enough to talk or to attempt to
complain.
Fat Charlie bit his lip, and prayed to anyone who
might be listening that the earth would open and swallow him up or, failing
that, that he might suffer a brief, merciful and entirely fatal heart attack. No
such luck. He remained among the living, the brass band kept coming, his father
kept dancing and shaking hands and smiling.
If there is
any justice in the world, thought Fat Charlie, myfather will keep
going down the corridor, and he’ll go straight past us and into the
genito-urinary department; however, there was no justice, and his father
reached the door of the oncology ward and stopped.
“Fat
Charlie,” he said, loudly enough that everyone in the ward—on that floor—in the
hospital—was able to comprehend that this was someone who knew Fat Charlie. “Fat
Charlie, get out of the way. Your father is here.”
Fat
Charlie got out of the way.
The band, led by Fat Charlie’s
father, snaked their way through the ward to Fat Charlie’s mother’s bed. She
looked up at them as they approached, and she smiled.
“
‘Yellow Bird,’ “ she said, weakly. “It’s my favorite
song.”
“And what kind of man would I be if I forgot that?”
asked Fat Charlie’s father.
She shook her head slowly, and
she reached out her hand and squeezed his hand in its lemon yellow
glove.
“Excuse me,” said a small white woman with a
clipboard, “are these people with you?”
“No,” said Fat
Charlie, his cheeks heating up. “They’re not. Not
really.”
“But that is your mother, isn’t it?” said
the woman, with a basilisk glance. “I must ask you to make these people vacate
the ward momentarily, and without incurring any further
disturbance.”
Fat Charlie
muttered.
“What was that?”
“I said,
I’m pretty sure I can’t make them do anything,” said Fat Charlie. He was
consoling himself that things could not possibly get any worse, when his father
took a plastic carrier bag from the drummer and began producing cans of brown
ale and handing them out to his band, to the nursing staff, to the patients.
Then he lit a cheroot.
“Excuse me,” said the woman with the
clipboard, when she saw the smoke, and she launched herself across the room at
Fat Charlie’s father like a Scud missile with its watch on upside
down.
Fat Charlie took that moment to slip away. It seemed
the wisest course of action.
He sat at home that night,
waiting for the phone to ring or for a knock on the door, in much the same
spirit that a man kneeling at the guillotine might wait for the blade to kiss
his neck; still, the doorbell did not ring.
He barely
slept, and slunk in to the hospital the following afternoon prepared for the
worst.
His mother, in her bed, looked happier and more
comfortable than she had looked in months. “He’s gone back,” she told Fat
Charlie, when he came in. “He couldn’t stay. I have to say, Charlie, I do wish
you hadn’t just gone like that. We wound up having a party here. We had a fine
old time.”
Fat Charlie could think of nothing worse than
having to attend a party in a cancer ward, thrown by his father with a jazz
band. He didn’t say anything.
“He’s not a bad man,” said
Fat Charlie’s mother, with a twinkle in her eye. Then she frowned. “Well, that’s
not exactly true. He’s certainly not a good man. But he did me a power of good
last night,” and she smiled, a real smile and, for just a moment, looked young
again.
The woman with the clipboard was standing in the
doorway, and she crooked her finger at him. Fat Charlie beetled down the ward
toward her, apologizing before she was even properly within earshot. Her look,
he realized, as he got closer to her, was no longer that of a basilisk with
stomach cramps. Now she looked positively kittenish. “Your father,” she
said.
“I’m sorry,” said Fat Charlie. It was what he had
always said, growing up, when his father was
mentioned.
“No, no, no,” said the former basilisk. “Nothing
to apologize for. I was just wondering. Your father. In case we need to get in
touch with him—we don’t have a telephone number or an address on file. I should
have asked him last night, but it completely got away from
me.”
“I don’t think he has a phone number,” said Fat
Charlie. “And the best way to find him is to go to Florida, and to drive up
Highway A1A—that’s the coast road that runs up most of the east of the state. In
the afternoon you may find him fishing off a bridge. In the evening he’ll be in
a bar.”
“Such a charming man,” she said, wistfully. “What
does he do?”
“I told you. He says it’s the miracle of the
loafs and the fishes.”
She stared at him blankly, and he
felt stupid. When his father said it, people would laugh. “Um. Like in the
Bible. The miracle of the loaves and the fishes. Dad used to say that he loafs
and fishes, and it’s a miracle that he still makes money. It was a sort of
joke.”
A misty look. “Yes. He told the funniest jokes.” She
clucked her tongue, and once more was all business. “Now, I need you back here
at five-thirty.”
“Why?”
“To pick up
your mother. And her belongings. Didn’t Dr. Johnson tell you we were discharging
her?”
“You’re sending her home?”
“Yes,
Mr. Nancy.”
“What about the, about the
cancer?”
“It seems to have been a false
alarm.”
Fat Charlie couldn’t understand how it could have
been a false alarm. Last week they’d been talking about sending his mother to a
hospice. The doctor had been using phrases like “weeks not months” and “making
her as comfortable as possible while we wait for the
inevitable.”
Still, Fat Charlie came back at 5:30 and
picked up his mother, who seemed quite unsurprised to learn that she was no
longer dying. On the way home she told Fat Charlie that she would be using her
life savings to travel around the world.
“The doctors were
saying I had three months,” she said. “And I remember I thought, if I get out of
this hospital bed then I’m going to see Paris and Rome and places like that. I’m
going back to Barbados, and to Saint Andrews. I may go to Africa. And China. I
like Chinese food.”
Fat Charlie wasn’t sure what was going
on, but whatever it was, he blamed his father. He accompanied his mother and a
serious suitcase to Heathrow Airport, and waved her good-bye at the
international departures gate. She was smiling hugely as she went through,
clutching her passport and tickets, and she looked younger than he remembered
her looking in many years.
She sent him postcards from
Paris, and from Rome and from Athens, and from Lagos and Cape Town. Her postcard
from Nanking told him that she certainly didn’t like what passed for Chinese
food in China, and that she couldn’t wait to come back to London and eat
proper Chinese food.
She died in her sleep in a
hotel in Williamstown, on the Caribbean island of Saint
Andrews.
At the funeral, at a South London crematorium, Fat
Charlie kept expecting to see his father: perhaps the old man would make an
entrance at the head of a jazz band, or be followed down the aisle by a clown
troupe or a half-dozen tricycle-riding, cigar-puffing chimpanzees; even during
the service Fat Charlie kept glancing back, over his shoulder, toward the chapel
door. But Fat Charlie’s father was not there, only his mother’s friends and
distant relations, mostly big women in black hats, blowing their noses and
dabbing at their eyes and shaking their heads.
It was
during the final hymn, after the button had been pressed and Fat Charlie’s
mother had trundled off down the conveyor belt to her final reward, that Fat
Charlie noticed a man of about his own age standing at the back of the chapel.
It was not his father, obviously. It was someone he did not know, someone he
might not even have noticed, at the back, in the shadows, had he not been
looking for his father—and then there was the stranger, in an elegant black
suit, his eyes lowered, his hands folded.
Fat Charlie let
his glance linger a moment too long, and the stranger looked at Fat Charlie and
flashed him a joyless smile of the kind that suggested that they were both in
this together. It was not the kind of expression you see on the faces of
strangers, but still, Fat Charlie could not place the man. He turned his face
back to the front of the chapel. They sang “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot,” a song
Fat Charlie was pretty sure his mother had always disliked, and the Reverend
Wright invited them back to Fat Charlie’s Great-Aunt Alanna’s for something to
eat.
There was nobody at his Great-Aunt Alanna’s whom he
did not already know. In the years since his mother had died, he sometimes
wondered about that stranger: who he was, why he was there. Sometimes Fat
Charlie thought that he had simply imagined him—
“So,” said
Rosie, draining her Chardonnay, “you’ll call your Mrs. Higgler and give her my
mobile number. Tell her about the wedding and the date—that’s a thought: do you
think we should invite her?”
“We can if we like,” said Fat
Charlie. “I don’t think she’ll come. She’s an old family friend. She knew my dad
back in the dark ages.”
“Well, sound her out. See if we
should send her an invitation.”
Rosie was a good person.
There was in Rosie a little of the essence of Francis of Assisi, of Robin Hood,
of Buddha and of Glinda the Good: the knowledge that she was about to bring
together her true love and his estranged father gave her forthcoming wedding an
extra dimension, she decided. It was no longer simply a wedding: it was now
practically a humanitarian mission, and Fat Charlie had known Rosie long enough
to know never to stand between his fiancée and her need to Do
Good.
“I’ll call Mrs. Higgler tomorrow,” he
said.
“Tell you what,” said Rosie, with an endearing
wrinkle of her nose, “call her tonight. It’s not late in America, after
all.”
Fat Charlie nodded. They walked out of the wine bar
together, Rosie with a spring in her step, Fat Charlie like a man going to the
gallows. He told himself not to be silly: After all, perhaps Mrs. Higgler had
moved, or had her phone disconnected. It was possible. Anything was
possible.
They went up to Fat Charlie’s place, the upstairs
half of a smallish house in Maxwell Gardens, just off the Brixton
Road.
“What time is it in Florida?” Rosie
asked.
“Late afternoon,” said Fat
Charlie.
“Well. Go on then.”
“Maybe we
should wait a bit. In case she’s out.”
“And maybe we should
call now, before she has her dinner.”
Fat Charlie found his
old paper address book, and under H was a scrap of an envelope, in his mother’s
handwriting, with a telephone number on it, and beneath that, Callyanne
Higgler.
The phone rang and
rang.
“She’s not there,” he said to Rosie, but at that
moment the phone at the other end was answered, and a female voice said “Yes?
Who is this?”
“Um. Is that Mrs.
Higgler?”
“Who is this?” said Mrs. Higgler. “If you’re one
of they damn telemarketers, you take me off your list right now or I sue. I know
my rights.”
“No. It’s me. Charles Nancy. I used to live
next door to you.”
“Fat Charlie? If that don’t beat all. I
been looking for your number all this morning. I turn this place upside down,
looking for it, and you think I could find it? What I think happen was I had it
written in my old accounts book. Upside down I turn the place. And I say to
myself, Callyanne, this is a good time to just pray and hope the Lord hear you
and see you right, and I went down on my knees, well, my knees are not so good
any more, so I just put my hands together, but anyway, I still don’t find your
number, but look at how you just phone me up, and that’s even better from some
points of view, particularly because I ain’t made of money and I can’t afford to
go phoning no foreign countries even for something like this, although I was
going to phone you, don’t you worry, given the
circumstances—”
And she stopped, suddenly, either to take a
breath, or to take a sip from the huge mug of too-hot coffee she always carried
in her left hand, and during the brief quiet Fat Charlie said, “I want to ask my
dad to come to my wedding. Getting married.” There was silence at the end of the
line. “It’s not till the end of the year, though,” he said. Still silence. “Her
name’s Rosie,” he added, helpfully. He was starting to wonder if they had been
cut off; conversations with Mrs. Higgler were normally somewhat one-sided
affairs, often with her doing your lines for you, and here she was, letting him
say three whole things uninterrupted. He decided to go for a fourth. “You can
come too if you want,” he said.
“Lord, lord, lord,” said
Mrs. Higgler. “Nobody tell you?”
“Told me
what?”
So she told him, at length and in detail, while he
stood there and said nothing at all, and when she was done he said “Thank you,
Mrs. Higgler.” He wrote something down on a scrap of paper, then he said,
“Thanks. No, really, thanks,” again, and he put down the
phone.
“Well?” asked Rosie. “Have you got his
number?”
Fat Charlie said, “Dad won’t be coming to the
wedding.” Then he said, “I have to go to Florida.” His voice was flat, and
without emotion. He might have been saying, “I have to order a new
checkbook.”
“When?”
“Tomorrow.”
“Why?”
“Funeral.
My dad’s. He’s dead.”
“Oh. I’m sorry. I’m so sorry.” She
put her arms around him, and held him. He stood in her arms like a shop-window
dummy. “How did it, did he—was he ill?”
Fat Charlie shook
his head. “I don’t want to talk about it,” he said.
And
Rosie squeezed him tightly, and then she nodded, sympathetically, and let him
go. She thought he was too overcome with grief to talk about
it.
He wasn’t. That wasn’t it at all. He was too
embarrassed.
There must be a hundred thousand
respectable ways to die. Leaping off a bridge into a river to save a small child
from drowning, for example, or being mown down in a hail of bullets while
single-handedly storming a nest of criminals. Perfectly respectable ways to
die.
Truth to tell, there were even some
less-than-respectable ways to die that wouldn’t have been so bad. Spontaneous
human combustion, for example: it’s medically dodgy and scientifically unlikely,
but even so, people persist in going up in smoke, leaving nothing behind but a
charred hand still clutching an unfinished cigarette. Fat Charlie had read about
it in a magazine: he wouldn’t have minded if his father had gone like that. Or
even if he’d had a heart attack running down the street after the men who had
stolen his beer money.
This is how Fat Charlie’s father
died.
He had arrived in the bar early, and had launched the
karaoke evening by singing “What’s New Pussycat?” which song he had belted out,
according to Mrs. Higgler, who had not been there, in a manner that would have
caused Tom Jones to be festooned in flung feminine undergarments, and which
brought Fat Charlie’s father a complimentary beer, courtesy of the several
blonde tourists from Michigan who thought he was just about the cutest thing
they’d ever seen.
“It was their fault,” said Mrs. Higgler,
bitterly, over the phone. “They was encouragin’ him!” They were women who had
squeezed into tube tops, and they had reddish too-much-sun-too-early tans, and
they were all young enough to be his daughters.
So pretty
soon he’s down at their table, smoking his cheroots and hinting strongly that he
was in Army Intelligence during the war, although he was careful not to say
which war, and that he could kill a man in a dozen different ways with his bare
hands without breaking a sweat.
Now he takes the bustiest
and blondest of the tourists on a quick spin around the dance floor, such as it
was, while one of her friends warbled “Strangers in the Night” from the stage.
He appeared to be having a fine time, although the tourist was somewhat taller
than he was, and his grin was on a level with her
bosom.
And then, the dance done, he announced it was his
turn again, and, because if there was one thing you could say about Fat
Charlie’s father it was that he was secure in his heterosexuality, he sang “I Am
What I Am” to the room, but particularly to the blondest tourist on the table
just below him. He gave it everything he had. He had just got as far as
explaining to anyone listening that as far as he was concerned his life would
not actually be worth a damn unless he was able to tell everybody that he was
what he was, when he made an odd face, pressed one hand to his chest, stretched
the other hand out, and toppled, as slowly and as gracefully as a man could
topple, off the makeshift stage and onto the blondest holidaymaker, and from her
onto the floor.
“It was how he always would have wanted to
go,” sighed Mrs. Higgler.
And then she told Fat Charlie how
his father had, with his final gesture, as he fell, reached out and grasped at
something, which turned out to be the blonde tourist’s tube top, so that at
first some people thought he had made a lust-driven leap from the stage with the
sole purpose of exposing the bosom in question, because there she was,
screaming, with her breasts staring at the room, while the music for “I Am What
I Am” kept playing, only now without anyone singing.
When
the onlookers realized what had actually happened they had two minutes’ silence,
and Fat Charlie’s father was carried out and put into an ambulance while the
blonde tourist had hysterics in the ladies’ room.
It was
the breasts that Fat Charlie couldn’t get out of his head. In his mind’s eye
they followed him accusatively around the room, like the eyes in a painting. He
kept wanting to apologize to a roomful of people he had never met. And the
knowledge that his father would have found it hugely amusing simply added to Fat
Charlie’s mortification. It’s worse when you’re embarrassed about something you
were not even there to see: your mind keeps embroidering the events and going
back to it and turning it over and over, and examining it from every side. Well,
yours might not, but Fat Charlie’s certainly did.
As a
rule, Fat Charlie felt embarrassment in his teeth, and in the upper pit of his
stomach. If something that even looked like it might be embarrassing was about
to happen on his television screen Fat Charlie would leap up and turn it off. If
that was not possible, say if other people were present, he would leave the room
on some pretext and wait until the moment of embarrassment was sure to be
over.
Fat Charlie lived in South London. He had arrived, at
the age of ten, with an American accent, which he had been relentlessly teased
about, and had worked very hard to lose, finally extirpating the last of the
soft consonants and rich Rs while learning the correct use and placement of the
word innit. He had finally succeeded in losing his American accent for
good as he had turned sixteen, just as his schoolfriends discovered that they
needed very badly to sound like they came from the ‘hood. Soon all of them
except Fat Charlie sounded like people who wanted to sound like Fat Charlie had
talked when he’d come to England in the first place, except that he could never
have used language like that in public without his mum giving him a swift clout
round the ear.
It was all in the
voice.
Once the embarrassment over his father’s method of
passing began to fade, Fat Charlie just felt empty.
“I
don’t have any family,” he said to Rosie, almost
petulantly.
“You’ve got me,” she said. That made Fat
Charlie smile. “And you’ve got my mum,” she added, which stopped the smile in
its tracks. She kissed him on the cheek.
“You could stay
over for the night,” he suggested. “Comfort me, all
that.”
“I could,” she agreed, “but I’m not going
to.”
Rosie was not going to sleep with Fat Charlie until
they were married. She said it was her decision, and she had made it when she
was fifteen; not that she had known Fat Charlie then, but she had decided. So
she gave him another hug, a long one. And she said, “You need to make your peace
with your dad, you know.” And then she went home.
He spent
a restless night, sleeping sometimes, then waking, and wondering, and falling
back asleep again.
He was up at sunrise. When people got in
to work he would ring his travel agent and ask about bereavement fares to
Florida, and he would phone the Grahame Coats Agency and tell them that, due to
a death in the family, he would have to take a few days off and yes, he knew it
came out of his sick leave or his holiday time. But for now he was glad that the
world was quiet.
He went along the corridor to the tiny
spare room at the back of the house and looked down into the gardens below. The
dawn chorus had begun, and he could see blackbirds, and small hedge-hopping
sparrows, a single spotted-breasted thrush in the boughs of a nearby tree. Fat
Charlie thought that a world in which birds sang in the morning was a normal
world, a sensible world, a world he didn’t mind being a part
of.
Later, when birds were something to be afraid of, Fat
Charlie would still remember that morning as something good and something fine,
but also as the place where it all started. Before the madness; before the
fear.
Chapter Two
which is mostly about the things that happen after
funerals
Fat Charlie puffed his way through the
Memorial Garden of Rest, squinting at the Florida sunshine. Sweat stains were
spreading across his suit, beginning with the armpits and the chest. Sweat began
to pour down his face as he ran.
The Memorial Garden of
Rest did, in fact, look very much like a garden, but a very odd garden, in which
all the flowers were artificial, and they grew from metal vases protruding from
metal plaques set in the ground. Fat Charlie ran past a sign: “FREE Burial Space
for all Honorably Discharged Veterans!” it said. He ran through Babyland, where
multicolored windmills and sodden blue and pink teddy bears joined the
artificial flowers on the Florida turf. A moldering Winnie the Pooh stared up
wanly at the blue sky.
Fat Charlie could see the funeral
party now, and he changed direction, finding a path that allowed him to run
toward it. There were thirty people, perhaps more, standing around the grave.
The women wore dark dresses, and big black hats trimmed with black lace, like
fabulous flowers. The men wore suits without sweat stains. The children looked
solemn. Fat Charlie slowed his pace to a respectful walk, still trying to hurry
without moving fast enough for anyone to notice that he was in fact hurrying,
and, having reached the group of mourners, he attempted to edge his way to the
front ranks without attracting too much attention. Seeing that by now he was
panting like a walrus who had just had to tackle a flight of stairs, was
dripping with sweat and trod on several feet as he went by, this attempt proved
a failure.
There were glares, which Fat Charlie tried to
pretend he did not notice. Everyone was singing a song that Fat Charlie did not
know. He moved his head in time with the song and tried to make it look as if he
was sort of singing, moving his lips in a way that might have meant that he was
actively singing along, sotto voce, and he might have been muttering a prayer
under his breath, and might just have been random lip motion. He took the
opportunity to look down at the casket. He was pleased to see that it was
closed.
The casket was a glorious thing, made of what
looked like heavy-duty reinforced steel, gunmetal gray. In the event of the
glorious resurrection, thought Fat Charlie, when Gabriel blows his mighty horn
and the dead escape their coffins, his father was going to be stuck in his
grave, banging away futilely at the lid, wishing that he had been buried with a
crowbar and possibly an oxyacetylene torch.
A final, deeply
melodic hallelujah faded away. In the silence that followed, Fat Charlie could
hear someone shouting at the other end of the memorial gardens, back near where
he had come in.
The preacher said, “Now, does anyone have
anything they want to say in memory of the dear
departed?”
By the expressions on the faces of those nearest
to the grave, it was obvious that several of them were planning to say things.
But Fat Charlie knew it was a now-or-never moment. You need to make your
peace with your dad, you know. Right.
He took a deep
breath and a step forward, so he was right at the edge of the grave, and he said
“Um. Excuse me. Right. I think I have something to
say.”
The distant shouting was getting louder. Several of
the mourners were casting glances back over their shoulders, to see where it was
coming from. The rest of them were staring at Fat
Charlie.
“I was never what you would call close to my
father,” said Fat Charlie. “I suppose we didn’t really know how. I’ve not been
part of his life for twenty years, and he hasn’t been part of mine. There’s a
lot of things it’s hard to forgive, but then one day you turn around and you’ve
got no family left.” He wiped a hand across his forehead. “I don’t think I’ve
ever said ‘I love you, Dad’ in my whole life. All of you, you all probably knew
him better than I did. Some of you may have loved him. You were part of his
life, and I wasn’t. So I’m not ashamed that any of you should hear me say it.
Say it for the first time in at least twenty years.” He looked down at the
impregnable metal casket lid. “I love you,” he said. “And I’ll never forget
you.”
The shouting got even louder, and now it was loud
enough and clear enough, in the silence that followed Fat Charlie’s statement,
for everyone to be able to make out the words being bellowed across the memorial
gardens: “Fat Charlie! You stop botherin’ those people and get your ass over
here this minute!”
Fat Charlie stared at the sea of
unfamiliar faces, their expressions a seething stew of shock, puzzlement, anger
and horror; ears burning, he realized the truth.
“Er.
Sorry. Wrong funeral,” he said.
A small boy with big ears
and an enormous smile said, proudly, “That was my
gramma.”
Fat Charlie backed through the small crowd
mumbling barely coherent apologies. He wanted the world to end now. He knew it
was not his father’s fault, but also knew that his father would have found it
hilarious.
Standing on the path, her hands on her hips, was
a large woman with gray hair and thunder in her face. Fat Charlie walked toward
her as he would have walked across a minefield, nine years old again, and in
trouble.
“You don’t hear me yellin?” she asked. “You went
right on past me. Makin’ a embarrassment of yourself!” The way she said
embarrassment it began with the letter H. “Back this way,” she
said. “You miss the service and everythin’. But there’s a shovelful of dirt
waiting for you.”
Mrs. Higgler had barely changed in the
last two decades: she was a little fatter, a little grayer. Her lips were
pressed tightly together, and she led the way down one of the memorial garden’s
many paths. Fat Charlie suspected that he had not made the best possible first
impression. She led the way and, in disgrace, Fat Charlie
followed.
A lizard zapped up one of the struts of the metal
fence at the edge of the memorial garden, then poised itself at the top of a
spike, tasting the thick Florida air. The sun had gone behind a cloud, but, if
anything, the afternoon was getting hotter. The lizard puffed its neck out into
a bright orange balloon.
Two long-legged cranes he had
taken initially for lawn ornaments looked up at him as he passed. One of them
darted its head down and rose up again with a large frog dangling from its beak.
It began, in a series of gulping movements, to try to swallow the frog, which
kicked and flailed in the air.
“Come on,” said Mrs.
Higgler. “Don’t dawdle. Bad enough you missing your own father’s
funeral.”
Fat Charlie suppressed the urge to say something
about having come four thousand miles already that day, and having rented a car
and driven down from Orlando, and how he had got off at the wrong exit, and
whose idea was it anyway to tuck a garden of rest behind a Wal-Mart on the very
edge of town? They kept walking, past a large concrete building that smelled of
formaldehyde, until they reached an open grave at the very farthest reaches of
the property. There was nothing beyond this but a high fence, and, beyond that,
a wilderness of trees and palms and greenery. In the grave was a modest wooden
coffin. It had several mounds of dirt on it already. Beside the grave was a pile
of earth and a shovel.
Mrs. Higgler picked up the shovel
and handed it to Fat Charlie.
“It was a pretty service,”
she said. “Some of your daddy’s old drinkin’ buddies were there, and all the
ladies from our street. Even after he moved down the road we still kept in
touch. He would have liked it. Of course, he would have liked it more if you’d
been there.” She shook her head. “Now, shovel,” she said. “And if you got any
good-byes, you can say them while you’re shovelin’ down the
dirt.”
“I thought I was just meant to do one or two
spadefuls of dirt,” he said. “To show willing.”
“I give the
man thirty bucks to go away,” said Mrs. Higgler. “I tell him that the departed’s
son is flying in all the way from Hingland, and that he would want to do right
by his father. Do the right thing. Not just ‘show
willing.’”
“Right,” said Fat Charlie. “Absolutely. Got
it.” He took off his suit jacket and hung it on the fence. He loosened his tie,
pulled it over his head, and put it into the jacket pocket. He shoveled the
black dirt into the open grave, in Florida air as thick as
soup.
After a while it sort of began to rain, which is to
say that it was the kind of rain that never comes to a decision about whether
it’s actually raining or not. Driving in it, you would never have been certain
whether or not to turn on your wipers. Standing in it, shoveling in it, you
simply got sweatier, damper, more uncomfortable. Fat Charlie continued to
shovel, and Mrs. Higgler stood there with her arms folded across her gargantuan
bosom, with the almost-rain misting her black dress and her straw hat with one
black silk rose on it, watching him as he filled in the
hole.
The earth became mud, and became, if anything,
heavier.
After what seemed like a lifetime, and a very
uncomfortable one at that, Fat Charlie patted down the final shovelful of
dirt.
Mrs. Higgler walked over to him. She took his jacket
off the fence and handed it to him.
“You’re soaked to the
skin and covered in dirt and sweat, but you grew up. Welcome home, Fat Charlie,”
she said, and she smiled, and she held him to her vast
breast.
“I’m not crying,” said Fat
Charlie.
“Hush now,” said Mrs.
Higgler.
“It’s the rain on my face,” said Fat
Charlie.
Mrs. Higgler didn’t say anything. She just held
him, and swayed backward and forward, and after a while Fat Charlie said, “It’s
okay. I’m better now.”
“There’s food back at my house,”
said Mrs. Higgler. “Let’s get you fed.”
He wiped the mud
from his shoes in the parking lot, then he got into his gray rental car, and he
followed Mrs. Higgler in her maroon station wagon down streets that had not
existed twenty years earlier. Mrs. Higgler drove like a woman who had just
discovered an enormous and much-needed mug of coffee and whose primary mission
was to drink as much coffee as she was able to while driving as fast as
possible; and Fat Charlie drove along behind her, keeping up as best he could,
racing from traffic light to traffic light while trying to figure out more or
less where they were.
And then they turned down a street,
and, with mounting apprehension, he realized he recognized it. This was the
street he had lived on as a boy. Even the houses looked more or less the same,
although most of them had now grown impressive wire-mesh fences around their
front yards.
There were several cars already parked in
front of Mrs. Higgler’s house. He pulled up behind an elderly gray Ford. Mrs.
Higgler walked up to the front door, opened it with her
key.
Fat Charlie looked down at himself, muddy and
sweat-soaked. “I can’t go in looking like this,” he
said.
“I seen worse,” said Mrs. Higgler. Then she sniffed.
“I tell you what, you go in there, go straight into the bathroom, you can wash
off your hands and face, clean yourself up, and when you’re ready we’ll all be
in the kitchen.”
He went into the bathroom. Everything
smelled like jasmine. He took off his muddy shirt, and washed his face and hands
with jasmine-scented soap, in a tiny washbasin. He took a washcloth and wiped
down his chest, and scrubbed at the muddiest lumps on his suit trousers. He
looked at the shirt, which had been white when he put it on this morning and was
now a particularly grubby brown, and decided not to put it back on. He had more
shirts in his bag, in the backseat of the rental car. He would slip back out of
the house, put on a clean shirt, then face the people in the
house.
He unlocked the bathroom door, and opened
it.
Four elderly ladies were standing in the corridor,
staring at him. He knew them. He knew all of them.
“What
you doing now?” asked Mrs. Higgler.
“Changing shirt,” said
Fat Charlie. “Shirt in car. Yes. Back soon.”
He raised his
chin high, and strode down the corridor and out of the front
door.
“What kind of language was that he was talkin?” asked
little Mrs. Dunwiddy, behind his back, loudly.
“That’s not
something you see every day,” said Mrs. Bustamonte, although, this being
Florida’s Treasure Coast, if there was something you did see every day, it was
topless men, although not usually with muddy suit trousers
on.
Fat Charlie changed his shirt by the car, and went back
into the house. The four ladies were in the kitchen, industriously packing away
into Tupperware containers what looked like it had until recently been a large
spread of food.
Mrs. Higgler was older than Mrs.
Bustamonte, and both of them were older than Miss Noles, and none of them was
older than Mrs. Dunwiddy. Mrs. Dunwiddy was old, and she looked it. There were
geological ages that were probably younger than Mrs.
Dunwiddy.
As a boy, Fat Charlie had imagined Mrs. Dunwiddy
in Equatorial Africa, peering disapprovingly though her thick spectacles at the
newly erect hominids. “Keep out of my front yard,” she would tell a recently
evolved and rather nervous specimen of Homo habilis, “or I going to belt
you around your ear hole, I can tell you.” Mrs. Dunwiddy smelled of violet water
and beneath the violets she smelled of very old woman indeed. She was a tiny old
lady who could outglare a thunderstorm, and Fat Charlie, who had, over two
decades ago, followed a lost tennis ball into her yard, and then broken one of
her lawn ornaments, was still quite terrified of her.
Right
now, Mrs. Dunwiddy was eating lumps of curry goat with her fingers from a small
Tupperware bowl. “Pity to waste it,” she said, and dropped the bits of goat bone
into a china saucer.
“Time for you to eat, Fat Charlie?”
asked Miss Noles.
“I’m fine,” said Fat Charlie.
“Honest.”
Four pairs of eyes stared at him reproachfully
through four pairs of spectacles. “No good starvin’ yourself in your grief,”
said Mrs. Dunwiddy, licking her fingertips, and picking out another brown fatty
lump of goat.
“I’m not. I’m just not hungry. That’s
all.”
“Misery going to shrivel you away to pure skin and
bones,” said Miss Noles, with gloomy relish.
“I don’t think
it will.”
“I putting a plate together for you at the table
over there,” said Mrs. Higgler. “You go and sit down now. I don’t want to hear
another word out of you. There’s more of everything, so don’t you worry about
that.”
Fat Charlie sat down where she pointed, and within
seconds there was placed in front of him a plate piled high with stew peas and
rice, and sweet potato pudding, jerk pork, curry goat, curry chicken, fried
plantains, and a pickled cow foot. Fat Charlie could feel the heartburn
beginning, and he had not even put anything in his mouth
yet.
“Where’s everyone else?” he
said.
“Your daddy’s drinking buddies, they gone off
drinking. They going to have a memorial fishing trip off a bridge, in his
memory.” Mrs. Higgler poured the remaining coffee out of her bucket-sized
traveling mug into the sink and replaced it with the steaming contents of a
freshly brewed jug of coffee.
Mrs. Dunwiddy licked her
fingers clean with a small purple tongue, and she shuffled over to where Fat
Charlie was sitting, his food as yet untouched. When he was a little boy he had
truly believed that Mrs. Dunwiddy was a witch. Not a nice witch, more the kind
kids had to push into ovens to escape from. This was the first time he’d seen
her in more than twenty years, and he was still having to quell an inner urge to
yelp and hide under the table.
“I seen plenty people die,”
said Mrs. Dunwiddy. “In my time. Get old enough, you will see it your own self
too. Everybody going to be dead one day, just give them time.” She paused.
“Still. I never thought it would happen to your daddy.” And she shook her
head.
“What was he like?” asked Fat Charlie. “When he was
young?”
Mrs. Dunwiddy looked at him through her thick,
thick spectacles, and her lips pursed, and she shook her head. “Before my time,”
was all she said. “Eat your cow foot.”
Fat Charlie sighed,
and he began to eat.
It was late afternoon, and
they were alone in the house.
“Where you going to sleep
tonight?” asked Mrs. Higgler.
“I thought I’d get a motel
room,” said Fat Charlie.
“When you got a perfectly good
bedroom here? And a perfectly good house down the road. You haven’t even looked
at it yet. You ask me, your father would have wanted you to stay
there.”
“I’d rather be on my own. And I don’t think I feel
right about sleeping at my dad’s place.”
“Well, it’s not my
money I’m throwin’ away,” said Mrs. Higgler. “You’re goin’ to have to decide
what you’re goin’ to do with your father’s house anyway. And all his
things.”
“I don’t care,” said Fat Charlie. “We could have a
garage sale. Put them on eBay. Haul them to the
dump.”
“Now, what kind of an attitude is that?” She
rummaged in a kitchen drawer and pulled out a front door key with a large paper
label attached to it. “He give me a spare key when he move,” she said. “In case
he lose his, or lock it inside, or something. He used to say, he could forget
his head if it wasn’t attached to his neck. When he sell the house next door, he
tell me, don’t you worry, Callyanne, I won’t go far; he’d live in that house as
long as I remember, but now he decide it’s too big and he need to move house—“
and still talking she walked him down to the curb and drove them down several
streets in her maroon station wagon, until they reached a one-story wooden
house.
She unlocked the front door and they went
inside.
The smell was familiar: faintly sweet, as if
chocolate chip cookies had been baked there the last time the kitchen was used,
but that had been a long time ago. It was too hot in there. Mrs. Higgler led
them into the little sitting room, and she turned on a window-fitted
air-conditioning unit. It rattled and shook, and smelled like a wet sheepdog,
and moved the warm air around.
There were stacks of books
piled around a decrepit sofa Fat Charlie remembered from his childhood, and
there were photographs in frames: one, in black-and-white, of Fat Charlie’s
mother when she was young, with her hair up on top of her head all black and
shiny, wearing a sparkly dress; beside it, a photo of Fat Charlie himself, aged
perhaps five or six years old, standing beside a mirrored door, so it looked at
first glance as if two little Fat Charlies, side by side, were staring seriously
out of the photograph at you.
Fat Charlie picked up the top
book in the pile. It was a book on Italian
architecture.
“Was he interested in
architecture?”
“Passionate about it.
Yes.”
“I didn’t know that.”
Mrs.
Higgler shrugged and sipped her coffee.
Fat Charlie opened
the book and saw his father’s name neatly written on the first page. He closed
the book.
“I never knew him,” said Fat Charlie. “Not
really.”
“He was never an easy man to know,” said Mrs.
Higgler. “I knew him for what, nearly sixty years? And I didn’t know
him.”
“You must have known him when he was a
boy.”
Mrs. Higgler hesitated. She seemed to be remembering.
Then she said, very quietly, “I knew him when I was a
girl.”
Fat Charlie felt that he should be changing the
subject, so he pointed to the photo of his mother. “He’s got Mum’s picture
there,” he said.
Mrs Higgler took a slurp of her coffee.
“Them take it on a boat,” she said. “Back before you was born. One of those
boats that you had dinner on, and they would sail out three miles, out of
territorial waters, and then there was gamblin’. Then they come back. I don’t
know if they still run those boats. Your mother say it was the first time she
ever eat steak.”
Fat Charlie tried to imagine what his
parents had been like before he was born.
“He always was a
good-looking man,” mused Mrs. Higgler, as if she were reading his mind. “All the
way to the end. He had a smile that could make a girl squeeze her toes. And he
was always such a very fine dresser. All the ladies loved
him.”
Fat Charlie knew the answer before he asked the
question. “Did you—?”
“What kind of a question is that to
be asking a respectable widow-woman?” She sipped her coffee. Fat Charlie waited
for the answer. She said, “I kissed him. Long, long time ago, before he ever met
your mother. He was a fine, fine kisser. I hoped that he’d call, take me dancing
again, instead he vanish. He was gone for what, a year? Two years? And by the
time he come back, I was married to Mr. Higgler, and he’s bringing back your
mother. Is out on the islands he meet her.”
“Were you
upset?”
“I was a married woman.” Another sip of coffee.
“And you couldn’t hate him. Couldn’t even be properly angry with him. And the
way he look at her—damn, if he did ever look at me like that I could have died
happy. You know, at their wedding, is me was your mother’s matron of
honor?”
“I didn’t know.”
The
air-conditioning unit was starting to bellow out cold air. It still smelled like
a wet sheepdog.
He asked, “Do you think they were
happy?”
“In the beginning.” She hefted her huge thermal
mug, seemed about to take a sip of coffee and then changed her mind. “In the
beginning. But not even she could keep his attention for very long. He had so
much to do. He was very busy, your father.”
Fat Charlie
tried to work out if Mrs. Higgler was joking or not. He couldn’t tell. She
didn’t smile, though.
“So much to do? Like what? Fish off
bridges? Play dominoes on the porch? Await the inevitable invention of karaoke?
He wasn’t busy. I don’t think he ever did a day’s work in all the time I knew
him.”
“You shouldn’t say that about your
father!”
“Well, it’s true. He was crap. A rotten husband
and a rotten father.”
“Of course he was!” said Mrs Higgler,
fiercely, “But you can’t judge him like you would judge a man. You got to
remember, Fat Charlie, that your father was a god.”
“A god
among men?”
“No. Just a god.” She said it without any kind
of emphasis, as flatly and as normally as she might have said “he was diabetic”
or simply “he was black.”
Fat Charlie wanted to make a joke
of it, but there was that look in Mrs. Higgler’s eyes, and suddenly he couldn’t
think of anything funny to say. So he said, softly, “He wasn’t a god. Gods are
special. Mythical. They do miracles and things.”
“That’s
right,” said Mrs. Higgler. “We wouldn’t have told you while he was alive, but
now he is gone, there can’t be any harm in it.”
“He was not
a god. He was my dad.”
“You can be both,” she said. “It
happens.”
It was like arguing with a crazy person, thought
Fat Charlie. He realized that he should just shut up, but his mouth kept going.
Right now his mouth was saying, “Look. If my dad was a god, he would have had
godlike powers.”
“He did. Never did a lot with them, mind
you. But he was old. Anyway, how do you think he got away with not working?
Whenever he needed money, he’d play the lottery, or go down to Hallendale and
bet on the dogs or the horses. Never win enough to attract attention. Just
enough to get by.”
Fat Charlie had never won anything in
his whole life. Nothing whatsoever. In the various office sweepstakes he had
taken part in, he was only able to rely on his horse never making it out of the
starting gate, or his team being relegated to some hitherto unheard-of division
somewhere in the elephants’ graveyard of organized sport. It
rankled.
“If my dad was a god—something which I do not for
one moment concede in any way, I should add—then why aren’t I a god too?
I mean, you’re saying I’m the son of a god, aren’t
you?”
“Obviously.”
“Well then, why
can’t I bet on winning horses or do magic or miracles or
things?”
She sniffed. “Your brother got all that god
stuff.”
Fat Charlie found that he was smiling. He breathed
out. It was a joke after all, then.
“Ah. You know, Mrs.
Higgler, I don’t actually have a brother.”
“Of course you
do. That’s you and him, in the photograph.”
Although he
knew what was in it, Fat Charlie glanced over at the photograph. She was mad all
right. Absolutely barking. “Mrs. Higgler,” he said, as gently as possible.
“That’sme . Just me when I was a kid. It’s a mirrored door. I’m standing next to
it. It’s me, and my reflection.”
“It is you, and it is also
your brother.”
“I never had a
brother.”
“Sure you did. I don’t miss him. You were always
the good one, you know. He was a handful when he was here.” And before Fat
Charlie could say anything else she added, “He went away, when you are just a
little boy.”
Fat Charlie leaned over. He put his big hand
on Mrs. Higgler’s bony hand, the one that wasn’t holding the coffee mug. “It’s
not true,” he said.
“Louella Dunwiddy made him go,” she
said. “He was scared of her. But he still came back, from time to time. He could
be charming when he wanted to be.” She finished her
coffee.
“I always wanted a brother,” said Fat Charlie.
“Somebody to play with.”
Mrs. Higgler got up. “This place
isn’t going to clean itself up,” she said. “I’ve got garbage bags in the car. I
figure we’ll need a lot of garbage bags.”
“Yes,” said Fat
Charlie.
He stayed in a motel that night. In the morning,
he and Mrs. Higgler met, back at his father’s house, and they put garbage into
big black garbage bags. They assembled bags of objects to be donated to
Goodwill. They also filled a box with things Fat Charlie wanted to hold on to
for sentimental reasons, mostly photographs from his childhood and before he was
born.
There was an old trunk, like a small pirate’s
treasure chest, filled with documents and old papers. Fat Charlie sat on the
floor going through them. Mrs. Higgler came in from the bedroom with another
black garbage bag filled with moth-eaten clothes.
“It’s
your brother give him that trunk,” said Mrs. Higgler, out of the blue. It was
the first time she had mentioned any of her fantasies of the previous
night.
“I wish I did have a brother,” said Fat Charlie, and
he did not realize he had said it aloud until Mrs. Higgler said, “I already told
you. You do have a brother.”
“So,” he said. “Where
would I find this mythical brother of mine?” Later, he would wonder why he had
asked her this. Was he humoring her? Teasing her? Was it just that he had to say
something to fill the void? Whatever the reason, he said it. And she was chewing
her lower lip, and nodding.
“You got to know. It’s your
heritage. It’s your bloodline.” She walked over to him and crooked her finger.
Fat Charlie bent down. The old woman’s lips brushed his ear as she whispered,
“—need him—tell
a—”
“What?”
“I say,” she said, in
her normal voice, “if you need him, just tell a spider. He’ll come
running.”
“Tell a spider?”
“That’s
what I said. You think I just talkin’ for my health? Exercisin’ my lungs? You
never hear of talkin’ to the bees? When I was a girl in Saint Andrews, before my
folks came here, you would go tell the bees all your good news. Well, this is
just like that. Talk to spider. It was how I used to send messages to your
father, when he would vanish
off.”
“—right.”
“Don’t you say ‘right’
like that.”
“Like what?”
“Like I’m a
crazy old lady who don’t know the price of fish. You think I don’t know which
way is up?”
“Um. I’m quite sure you do.
Honestly.”
Mrs. Higgler was not mollified. She was far from
gruntled. She picked up her coffee mug from the table and cradled it,
disapprovingly. Fat Charlie had done it now, and Mrs. Higgler was determined to
make sure that he knew it.
“I don’t got to do this, you
know,” she said. “I don’t got to help you. I’m only doing it because your
father, he was special, and because your mother, she was a fine woman. I’m
telling you big things. I’m telling you important things. You should listen to
me. You should believe me.”
“I do believe you,” said Fat
Charlie, as convincingly as he could.
“Now you’re just
humoring an old woman.”
“No,” he lied. “I’m not. Honestly
I’m not.” His words rang with honesty, sincerity and truth. He was thousands of
miles from home, in his late father’s house, with a crazy old woman on the verge
of an apoplectic seizure. He would have told her that the moon was just some
kind of unusual tropical fruit if it would have calmed her down, and meant it,
as best he could.
She sniffed.
“That’s
the trouble with you young people,” she said. “You think because you ain’t been
here long, you know everything. In my life I already forget more than you ever
know. You don’t know nothin’ about your father, you don’t know nothin’ about
your family. I tell you your father is a god, you don’t even ask me what god I
talking about.”
Fat Charlie tried to remember the names of
some gods. “Zeus?” he suggested.
Mrs. Higgler made a noise
like a kettle suppressing the urge to boil. Fat Charlie was fairly sure that
Zeus had been the wrong answer. “Cupid?”
She made another
noise, which began as a sputter and ended in a giggle. “I can just picture your
dad wearing nothin’ but one of them fluffy diapers, with a big bow and arrow.”
She giggled some more. Then she swallowed some
coffee.
“Back when he was a god,” she told him. “Back then,
they called him Anansi.”
Now, probably you know
some Anansi stories. Probably there’s no one in the whole wide world doesn’t
know some Anansi stories.
Anansi was a spider, when the
world was young, and all the stories were being told for the first time. He used
to get himself into trouble, and he used to get himself out of trouble. The
story of the Tar-Baby, the one they tell about Bre’r Rabbit? That was Anansi’s
story first. Some people thinks he was a rabbit. But that’s their mistake. He
wasn’t a rabbit. He was a spider.
Anansi stories go back as
long as people been telling each other stories. Back in Africa, where everything
began, even before people were painting cave lions and bears on rock walls, even
then they were telling stories, about monkeys and lions and buffalo: big dream
stories. People always had those proclivities. That was how they made sense of
their worlds. Everything that ran or crawled or swung or snaked got to walk
through those stories, and different tribes of people would venerate different
creatures.
Lion was the king of beasts, even then, and
Gazelle was the fleetest of foot, and Monkey was the most foolish, and Tiger was
the most terrible, but it wasn’t stories about them people wanted to
hear.
Anansi gave his name to stories. Every story is
Anansi’s. Once, before the stories were Anansi’s, they all belonged to Tiger
(which is the name the people of the islands call all the big cats), and the
tales were dark and evil, and filled with pain, and none of them ended happily.
But that was a long time ago. These days, the stories are
Anansi’s.
Seeing we were just at a funeral, let me tell you
a story about Anansi, the time his grandmother died. (It’s okay: she was a very
old woman, and she went in her sleep. It happens.) She died a long way from
home, so Anansi, he goes across the island with his handcart, and he gets his
grandmother’s body, and puts it on the handcart, and he wheels it home. He’s
going to bury her by the banyan tree out the back of his hut, you
see.
Now, he’s passing through the town, after pushing his
grandmother’s corpse in the cart all morning, and he thinks I need some
whisky. So he goes into the shop, for there is a shop in that village, a
store that sells everything, where the shopkeeper is a very hasty-tempered man.
Anansi, he goes in and he drinks some whisky. He drinks a little more whisky,
and he thinks, I shall play a trick on this fellow, so he says to the
shopkeeper, go take some whisky to my grandmother, sleeping in the cart outside.
You may have to wake her, for she’s a sound sleeper.
So the
shopkeeper, he goes out to the cart with a bottle, and he says to the old lady
in the cart, “Hey, here’s your whisky,” but the old lady she not say anything.
And the shopkeeper, he’s just getting angrier and angrier, for he was such a
hasty-tempered man, saying get up, old woman, get up and drink your whisky, but
the old woman she says nothing. Then she does something that the dead sometimes
do in the heat of the day: she flatulates loudly. Well, the shopkeeper, he’s so
angry with this old woman for flatulating at him that he hits her, and then he
hits her again, and now he hits her one more time and she tumbles down from the
handcart onto the ground.
Anansi, he runs out and he starts
a-crying and a-wailing and a-carrying on, and saying my grandmother, she’s a
dead woman, look what you did! Murderer! Evildoer! Now the shopkeeper, he says
to Anansi, don’t you tell anyone I done this, and he gives Anansi five whole
bottles of whisky, and a bag of gold, and a sack of plantains and pineapples and
mangos, to make him hush his carrying-on, and to go
away.
(He thinks he killed Anansi’s grandmother, you
see.)
So Anansi, he wheels his handcart home, and he buries
his grandmother underneath the banyan tree.
Now the next
day, Tiger, he’s passing by Anansi’s house, and he smells cooking smells. So he
invites himself over, and there’s Anansi having a feast, and Anansi, having no
other option, asks Tiger to sit and eat with them.
Tiger
says, Brother Anansi, where did you get all that fine food from, and don’t you
lie to me? And where did you get these bottles of whisky from, and that big bag
filled with gold pieces? If you lie to me, I’ll tear out your
throat.
So Anansi, he says, I cannot lie to you, Brother
Tiger. I got them all for I take my dead grandmother to the village on a
handcart. And the storekeeper gave me all these good things for bringing him my
dead grandmother.
Now, Tiger, he didn’t have a living
grandmother, but his wife had a mother, so he goes home and he calls his wife’s
mother out to see him, saying, grandmother, you come out now, for you and I must
have a talk. And she comes out and peers around, and says what is it? Well,
Tiger, he kills her, even though his wife loves her, and he places her body on a
handcart.
Then he wheels his handcart to the village, with
his dead mother-in-law on it. Who want a dead body? he calls. Who want a dead
grandmother? But all the people they just jeered at him, and they laughed at
him, and they mocked him, and when they saw that he was serious and he wasn’t
going anywhere, they pelted him with rotten fruit until he ran
away.
It wasn’t the first time Tiger was made a fool of by
Anansi, and it wouldn’t be the last time. Tiger’s wife never let him forget how
he killed her mother. Some days it’s better for Tiger if he’s never been
born.
That’s an Anansi story.
‘Course,
all stories are Anansi stories. Even this one.
Olden days,
all the animals wanted to have stories named after them, back in the days when
the songs that sung the world were still being sung, back when they were still
singing the sky and the rainbow and the ocean. It was in those days when animals
were people as well as animals that Anansi the spider tricked all of them,
especially Tiger, because he wanted all the stories named after
him.
Stories are like spiders, with all they long legs, and
stories are like spiderwebs, which man gets himself all tangled up in but which
look so pretty when you see them under a leaf in the morning dew, and in the
elegant way that they connect to one another, each to
each.
What’s that? You want to know if Anansi looked like a
spider? Sure he did, except when he looked like a man.
No,
he never changed his shape. It’s just a matter of how you tell the story. That’s
all.
Chapter Three
in which there is a family reunion
Fat
Charlie flew home to England; as home as he was going to get,
anyway.
Rosie was waiting for him as he came out of the
customs hall carrying a small suitcase and a large, taped-up cardboard box. She
gave him a huge hug. “How was it?” she asked.
He shrugged.
“Could’ve been worse.”
“Well,” she said, “at least you
don’t have to worry about him coming to the wedding and embarrassing you
anymore.”
“There is that.”
“My mum
says that we ought to put off the wedding for a few months as a mark of
respect.”
“Your mum just wants us to put off the wedding,
full stop.”
“Nonsense. She thinks you’re quite a
catch.”
“Your mother wouldn’t describe a combination of
Brad Pitt, Bill Gates, and Prince William as ‘quite a catch.’ There is nobody
walking the earth good enough to be her son-in-law.”
“She
likes you,” said Rosie, dutifully, and without
conviction.
Rosie’s mother did not like Fat Charlie, and
everybody knew it. Rosie’s mother was a high strung bundle of barely
thought-through prejudices, worries, and feuds. She lived in a magnificent flat
in Wimpole Street with nothing in the enormous fridge but bottles of vitaminized
water and rye crackers. Wax fruit sat in the bowls on the antique sideboards and
was dusted twice a week.
Fat Charlie had, on his first
visit to Rosie’s mother’s place, taken a bite from one of the wax apples. He had
been extremely nervous, nervous enough that he had picked up an apple—in his
defense, an extremely realistic apple—and had bitten into it. Rosie had signed
frantically. Fat Charlie spat out the lump of wax into his hand and thought
about pretending that he liked wax fruit, or that he’d known all along and had
just done it to be funny; however, Rosie’s mother had raised an eyebrow, walked
over, taken the remains of the apple from him, explained shortly just how much
real wax fruit cost these days, if you could find it, and then dropped the apple
into the bin. He sat on the sofa for the rest of the afternoon with his mouth
tasting like the inside of a candle, while Rosie’s mother stared at him to
ensure that he did not try to take another bite out of her precious wax fruit or
attempt to gnaw on the leg of a Chippendale chair.
There
were large color photographs in silver frames on the sideboard of Rosie’s
mother’s flat: photographs of Rosie as a girl and of Rosie’s mother and father,
and Fat Charlie had studied them intently, looking for clues to the mystery that
was Rosie. Her father, who had died when Rosie was fifteen, had been an enormous
man. He had been first a cook, then a chef, then a restaurateur. He was
perfectly turned-out in every photograph, as if dressed by a wardrobe department
before each shot, rotund and smiling, his arm always crooked for Rosie’s mother
to hold.
“He was an amazing cook,” Rosie said. In the
photographs, Rosie’s mother had been curvaceous and smiling. Now, twelve years
on, she resembled a skeletal Eartha Kitt, and Fat Charlie had never seen her
smile.
“Does your mum ever cook?” Fat Charlie had asked,
after that first time.
“I don’t know. I’ve never seen her
cook anything.”
“What does she eat? I mean, she can’t live
on crackers and water.”
Rosie said, “I think she sends out
for things.”
Fat Charlie thought it highly likely that
Rosie’s mum went out at night in bat form to suck the blood from sleeping
innocents. He had mentioned this theory to Rosie once, but she had failed to see
the humor in it.
Rosie’s mother had told Rosie that she was
certain that Fat Charlie was marrying her for her
money.
“What money?” asked
Rosie.
Rosie’s mother gestured to the apartment, a gesture
that took in the wax fruit, the antique furniture, the paintings on the walls,
and pursed her lips.
“But this is all yours,” said Rosie,
who lived on her wages working for a London charity—and her wages were not
large, so to supplement them Rosie had dipped into the money her father had left
her in his will. It had paid for a small flat, which Rosie shared with a
succession of Australians and New Zealanders, and for a secondhand VW
Golf.
“I won’t live forever,” sniffed her mother, in a way
that implied that she had every intention of living forever, getting harder and
thinner and more stonelike as she went, and eating less and less, until she
would be able to live on nothing more than air and wax fruit and
spite.
Rosie, driving Fat Charlie home from Heathrow,
decided that the subject should be changed. She said, “The water’s gone off in
my flat. It’s out in the whole building.”
“Why’s that
then?”
“Mrs. Klinger downstairs. She said something sprung
a leak.”
“Probably Mrs.
Klinger.”
“Charlie. So, I was wondering—could I take
a bath at your place tonight?”
“Do you need me to sponge
you down?”
“Charlie.”
“Sure.
Not a problem.”
Rosie stared at the back of the car in
front of her, then she took her hand off the gear stick and reached out and
squeezed Fat Charlie’s huge hand. “We’ll be married soon enough,” she
said.
“I know,” said Fat
Charlie.
“Well, I mean,” she said. “There’ll be plenty of
time for all that, won’t there?”
“Plenty,” said Fat
Charlie.
“You know what my mum once said?” said
Rosie.
“Er. Was it something about bringing back
hanging?”
“It was not. She said that if a
just-married couple put a coin in a jar every time they make love in their first
year, and take a coin out for every time that they make love in the years that
follow, the jar will never be emptied.”
“And this
means—?”
“Well,” she said. “It’s interesting, isn’t it?
I’ll be over at eight tonight with my rubber duck. How are you for
towels?”
“Um—”
“I’ll bring my own
towel.”
Fat Charlie did not believe it would be the end of
the world if an occasional coin went into the jar before they tied the knot and
sliced the wedding cake, but Rosie had her own opinions on the matter, and there
the matter ended. The jar remained perfectly
empty.
The problem, Fat Charlie realized, once he
got home, with arriving back in London after a brief trip away, is that if you
arrive in the early morning, there is nothing much to do for the rest of the
day.
Fat Charlie was a man who preferred to be working. He
regarded lying on a sofa watching Countdown as a reminder of his
interludes as a member of the unemployed. He decided that the sensible thing to
do would be to go back to work a day early. In the Aldwych offices of the
Grahame Coats Agency, up on the fifth and topmost floor, he would feel part of
the swim of things. There would be interesting conversation with his fellow
workers in the tearoom. The whole panoply of life would unfold before him,
majestic in its tapestry, implacable and relentless in its industry. People
would be pleased to see him.
“You’re not back until
tomorrow,” said Annie the receptionist, when Fat Charlie walked in. “I told
people you wouldn’t be back until tomorrow. When they phoned.” She was not
amused.
“Couldn’t keep away,” said Fat
Charlie.
“Obviously not,” she said, with a sniff. “You
should phone Maeve Livingstone back. She’s been calling every
day.”
“I thought she was one of Grahame Coats’s
people.”
“Well, he wants you to talk to her. Hang on.” She
picked up the phone.
Grahame Coats came with both names.
Not Mister Coats. Never just Grahame. It was his agency, and it represented
people, and took a percentage of what they earned for the right to have
represented them.
Fat Charlie went back to his office,
which was a tiny room he shared with a number of filing cabinets. There was a
yellow Post-it note stuck to his computer screen with “See me. GC” on it, so he
went down the hall to Grahame Coats’s enormous office. The door was closed. He
knocked and then, unsure if he had heard anyone say anything or not, opened the
door and put his head inside.
The room was empty. There was
nobody there. “Um, hello?” said Fat Charlie, not very loudly. There was no
reply. There was a certain amount of disarrangement in the room, however: the
bookcase was sticking out of the wall at a peculiar angle, and from the space
behind it he could hear a thumping sound that might have been
hammering.
He closed the door as quietly as he could and
went back to his desk.
His telephone rang. He picked it
up.
“Grahame Coats here. Come and see
me.”
This time Grahame Coats was sitting behind his desk,
and the bookcase was flat against the wall. He did not invite Fat Charlie to sit
down. He was a middle-aged white man with receding, very fair hair. If you
happened to see Grahame Coats and immediately found yourself thinking of an
albino ferret in an expensive suit, you would not be the
first.
“You’re back with us, I see,” said Grahame Coats.
“As it were.”
“Yes,” said Fat Charlie. Then, because
Grahame Coats did not seem particularly pleased with Fat Charlie’s early return,
he added, “Sorry.”
Grahame Coats pinched his lips together,
looked down at a paper on his desk, looked up again. “I was given to understand
that you were not, in fact, returning until tomorrow. Bit early, aren’t
we?”
“We—I mean, I—got in this morning. From Florida. I
thought I’d come in. Lots to do. Show willing. If that’s all
right.”
“Absa-tively,” said Grahame Coats. The word—a car
crash between absolutely and positively—always set Fat Charlie’s
teeth on edge. “It’s your funeral.”
“My father’s,
actually.”
A ferretlike neck twist. “You’re still using one
of your sick days.”
“Right.”
“Maeve
Livingstone. Worried widow of Morris. Needs reassurance. Fair words and fine
promises. Rome was not built in a day. The actual business of sorting out Morris
Livingstone’s estate and getting money to her continues unabated. Phones me
practically daily for handholding. Meanwhilst, I turn the task over to
you.”
“Right,” said Fat Charlie. “So, um. No rest for the
wicked.”
“Another day, another dollar,” said Grahame Coats,
with a wag of his finger.
“Nose to the grindstone?”
suggested Fat Charlie.
“Shoulder to the wheel,” said
Grahame Coats. “Well, delightful chatting with you. But we both have much work
to do.”
There was something about being in the vicinity of
Grahame Coats that always made Fat Charlie (a) speak in clichés and (b) begin to
daydream about huge black helicopters first opening fire upon, then dropping
buckets of flaming napalm onto the offices of the Grahame Coats Agency. Fat
Charlie would not be in the office in those daydreams. He would be sitting in a
chair outside a little café on the other side of the Aldwych, sipping a frothy
coffee and occasionally cheering at an exceptionally well-flung bucket of
napalm.
From this you would presume that there is little
you need to know about Fat Charlie’s employment, save that he was unhappy in it,
and, in the main, you would be right. Fat Charlie had a facility for figures
which kept him in work, and an awkwardness and a diffidence which kept him from
pointing out to people what it was that he actually did, and how much he
actually did. All about him, Fat Charlie would see people ascending implacably
to their levels of incompetence, while he remained in entry-level positions,
performing essential functions until the day he rejoined the ranks of the
unemployed and started watching daytime television again. He was never out of a
job for long, but it had happened far too often in the last decade for Fat
Charlie to feel particularly comfortable in any position. He did not, however,
take it personally.
He telephoned Maeve Livingstone, widow
of Morris Livingstone, once the most famous short Yorkshire comedian in Britain
and a longtime client of the Grahame Coats Agency. “Hullo,” he said. “This is
Charles Nancy, from the accounts department of the Grahame Coats
Agency.”
“Oh,” said a woman’s voice at the other end of the
line. “I thought Grahame would be phoning me
himself.”
“He’s a bit tied up. So he’s um, delegated it,”
said Fat Charlie. “To me. So. Can I help?”
“I’m not sure. I
was rather wondering—well, the bank manager was wondering—when the rest of the
money from Morris’s estate would be coming through. Grahame Coats explained to
me, the last time—well, I think it was the last time—when we spoke—that it was
invested—I mean, I understand that these things take time—he said otherwise I
could lose a lot of money—”
“Well,” said Fat Charlie, “I
know he’s on it. But these things do take time.”
“Yes,” she
said. “I suppose they must do. I called the BBC and they said they’d made
several payments since Morris’s death. You know, they’ve released the whole of
Morris Livingstone, I Presume on DVD now? And they’re bringing out both
series of Short Back and Sides for Christmas.”
“I
didn’t know,” admitted Fat Charlie. “But I’m sure Grahame Coats does. He’s
always on top of that kind of thing.”
“I had to buy my own
DVD,” she said, wistfully. “Still, it brought it all back. The roar of the
greasepaint, the smell of the BBC club. Made me miss the spotlight, I can tell
you that for nothing. That was how I met Morris, you know. I was a dancer. I had
my own career.”
Fat Charlie told her that he’d let Grahame
Coats know that her bank manager was a bit concerned, and he put down the
phone.
He wondered how anyone could ever miss the
spotlight.
In Fat Charlie’s worst nightmares, a spotlight
shone down upon him from a dark sky onto a wide stage, and unseen figures would
try to force Fat Charlie to stand in the spotlight and sing. And no matter how
far or how fast he ran, or how well he hid, they would find him and drag him
back onto the stage, in front of dozens of expectant faces. He would always
awake before he actually had to sing, sweating and trembling, his heart beating
a cannonade in his chest.
A day’s work passed. Fat Charlie
had worked there almost two years. He had been there longer than anyone except
Grahame Coats himself, for the staff turnover at the Grahame Coats Agency tended
to be high. And still, nobody had been pleased to see
him.
Fat Charlie would sometimes sit at his desk and stare
out of the window as the loveless gray rain rattled against the glass, and he
would imagine himself on a tropical beach somewhere, with the breakers crashing
from an impossibly blue sea onto the impossibly yellow sands. Often Fat Charlie
would wonder if the people on the beach in his imagination, watching the white
fingers of the waves as they wriggled toward the shore, listening to the
tropical birds whistling in the palm trees, whether they ever dreamed of being
in England, in the rain, in a cupboard-sized room in a fifth-floor office, a
safe distance from the dullness of the pure golden sand and the hellish boredom
of a day so perfect that not even a creamy drink containing slightly too much
rum and a red paper umbrella can do anything to alleviate it. It comforted
him.
He stopped at the off-license on the way home and
bought a bottle of German white wine, and a patchouli-scented candle from the
tiny supermarket next door, and picked up a pizza from the Pizza Place
nearby.
Rosie phoned from her yoga class at 7:30 PM to let
him know that she was going to be a little late, then from her car at 8:00 PM to
let him know she was stuck in traffic, at 9:15 to let him know that she was now
just around the corner, by which time Fat Charlie had drunk most of the bottle
of white wine on his own, and consumed all but one lonely triangle of
pizza.
Later, he wondered if it was the wine that made him
say it.
Rosie arrived at 9:20, with towels, and a Tescos
bag filled with shampoos, soaps, and a large pot of hair mayonnaise. She said
no, briskly but cheerfully, to a glass of the white wine and the slice of
pizza—she had, she explained, eaten in the traffic jam. She had ordered in. So
Fat Charlie sat in the kitchen, and poured himself the final glass of white
wine, and picked the cheese and the pepperoni from the top of the cold pizza
while Rosie went off to run the bath and then started, suddenly and quite
loudly, to scream.
Fat Charlie made it to the bathroom
before the first scream had finished dying away, and while Rosie was filling her
lungs for the second. He was convinced that he would find her dripping with
blood. To his surprise and relief, she was not bleeding. She was wearing a blue
bra and panties, and was pointing to the bath, in the center of which sat a
large brown garden spider.
“I’m sorry,” she wailed. “It
took me by surprise.”
“They can do that,” said Fat Charlie.
“I’ll just wash it away.”
“Don’t you dare,” said Rosie,
fiercely. “It’s a living thing. Take it outside.”
“Right,”
said Fat Charlie.
“I’ll wait in the kitchen,” she said.
“Tell me when it’s all over.”
When you have drunk an entire
bottle of white wine, coaxing a rather skittish garden spider into a clear
plastic tumbler using only an old birthday card becomes more of a challenge to
hand-eye coordination than it is at other times; a challenge that is not helped
by a partially unclothed fiancée on the edge of hysterics, who, despite her
announcement that she would wait in the kitchen, is instead leaning over your
shoulder and offering advice.
But soon enough, despite the
help, he had the spider inside the tumbler, the mouth of which was firmly
covered by a card from an old schoolfriend which told him that YOU ARE ONLY AS
OLD AS YOU FEEL (and, on the inside humorously topped this with SO STOP FEELING
YOURSELF YOU SEX MANIAC—HAPPY BIRTHDAY).
He took the spider
downstairs and out of the front door, into the tiny front garden, which
consisted of a hedge, for people to throw up in, and several large flagstones
with grass growing up between them. He held the tumbler up. In the yellow sodium
light, the spider was black. He imagined it was staring at
him.
“Sorry about that,” he said to the spider, and, white
wine slooshing comfortably around inside him, he said it
aloud.
He put the card and the tumbler down on a cracked
flagstone, and he lifted the tumbler, and waited for the spider to scuttle away.
Instead, it simply sat, unmoving, on the face of the cheerful cartoon teddy bear
on the birthday card. The man and the spider regarded each
other.
Something that Mrs. Higgler said came to him then,
and the words were out of his mouth before he could stop them. Perhaps it was
the devil in him. Probably it was the alcohol.
“If you see
my brother,” said Fat Charlie to the spider, “tell him he ought to come by and
say hello.”
The spider remained where it was, and raised
one leg, almost as if it were thinking it over, then it scuttled across the
flagstone toward the hedge, and was gone.
Rosie
had her bath, and she gave Fat Charlie a lingering peck on the cheek, and she
went home.
Fat Charlie turned on the TV, but he found
himself nodding so he turned it off, and went to bed, where he dreamed a dream
of such vividness and peculiarity that it would remain with him for the rest of
his life.
One way that you know something is a dream is
that you are somewhere you have never been in real life. Fat Charlie had never
been to California. He had never been to Beverly Hills. He had seen it enough,
though, in movies and on television to feel a comfortable thrill of recognition.
A party was going on.
The lights of Los Angeles glimmered
and twinkled beneath them.
The people at the party seemed
to divide neatly into the ones with the silver plates, covered with perfect
canapés, and the ones who picked things off the silver plates, or who declined
to. The ones who were being fed moved around the huge house gossiping, smiling,
talking, each as certain of his or her relative importance in the world of
Hollywood as were the courtiers in the court of ancient Japan—and, just as in
the ancient Japanese court, each of them was certain that, just one rung up the
ladder, they would be safe. There were actors who wished to be stars, stars who
wanted to be independent producers, independent producers who craved the safety
of a studio job, directors who wanted to be stars, studio bosses who wanted to
be the bosses of other, less precarious studios, studio lawyers who wanted to be
liked for themselves or, failing that, just wanted to be
liked.
In Fat Charlie’s dream, he could see himself from
inside and outside at the same time, and he was not himself. In Fat Charlie’s
usual dreams he was probably just sitting down for an exam on double-entry
bookkeeping that he had forgotten to study for in circumstances which made it a
certainty that when he finally stood up he would discover that he had somehow
neglected to put anything on below the waist when he got dressed that morning.
In his dreams, Fat Charlie was himself, only clumsier.
Not
in this dream.
In this dream, Fat Charlie was cool, and
beyond cool. He was slick, he was fly, he was smart, he was the only person at
the party without a silver tray who had not received an invitation. And (this
was something that was a source of astonishment to the sleeping Fat Charlie, who
could think of nothing more embarrassing than being anywhere without an
invitation) he was having a marvelous time.
He told each
person who asked him a different story about who he was and why he was there.
After half an hour, most of the people at the party were convinced that he was
the representative of a foreign investment house, seeking to buy outright one of
the studios, and after another half an hour it was common knowledge at the party
that he would be putting in a bid for Paramount.
His laugh
was raucous and infectious, and he seemed to be having a better time than any of
the other people at the party, that was for certain. He instructed the barman in
the preparation of a cocktail he called a “Double Entendre” which, while it
seemed to begin with a base of champagne, he explained was actually
scientifically nonalcoholic. It contained a splash of this and a splash of that
until it went a vivid purple color, and he handed them out to the partygoers,
pressing them upon them with joy and enthusiasm until even the people who had
been sipping fizzy water warily, as if it might go off, were knocking back the
purple drinks with pleasure.
And then, with the logic of
dreams, he was leading them all down to the pool, and was proposing to teach
them the trick of Walking on the Water. It was all a matter of confidence, he
told them, of attitude, of attack, of knowing how to do it. And it seemed to the
people at the party that Walking on the Water would be a very fine trick to
master, something they had always known how to do, deep down in their souls, but
they had forgotten, and that this man would remind them of the technique of
it.
Take off your shoes,he said to them, so they took off
their shoes, Sergio Rossis and Christian Louboutins and Renè Caovillas lined up
side by side with Nikes and Doc Martens and anonymous black leather agent-shoes,
and he led them, in a sort of a conga line, around the side of the swimming pool
and then out onto its surface. The water was cool to the touch, and it quivered,
like thick jelly, under their feet; some women, and several men, tittered at
this, and a couple of the younger agents began jumping up and down on the
surface of the pool, like children at a bouncy castle. Far below them the lights
of Los Angeles shone through the smog, like distant
galaxies.
Soon every inch of the pool was taken up with
partygoers—standing, dancing, shaking or bouncing up and down on the water. The
press of the crowd was so strong that the fly guy, the Charlie-in-his-dream,
stepped back onto the concrete poolside to take a falafel-sashimi ball from a
silver plate.
A spider dropped from a jasmine plant onto
the fly guy’s shoulder. It scuttled down his arm and onto the palm of his hand,
where he greeted it with a delighted Heyyy.
There
was a silence, as if he was listening to something the spider was saying,
something only he could hear; then he said, Ask, and you shall receive.
Ain’t that the truth?
He placed the spider down, carefully,
on a jasmine leaf.
And at that selfsame moment, each of the
people standing barefoot on the surface of the swimming pool remembered that
water was a liquid, and not a solid, and that there was a reason why people did
not commonly walk, let alone dance or even bounce, on water, viz., its
impossibility.
They were the movers and the shakers of the
dream machine, those people, and suddenly they were flailing, fully dressed, in
from four to twelve feet of water, wet and scrabbling and
terrified.
Casually, the fly guy walked across the pool,
treading on the heads of people, and on the hands of other people, and never
once losing his balance. Then, when he reached the far end of the pool, where
everything dropped into a steep hill, he took one huge jump and dove into the
lights of Los Angeles at night, which shimmered and swallowed him like an
ocean.
The people in the pool scrambled out, angry, upset,
confused, wet, and in some cases, half-drowned—
It was
early in the morning in South London. The light was
blue-gray.
Fat Charlie got out of bed, troubled by his
dream, and walked to the window. The curtains were open. He could see the
sunrise beginning, a huge blood orange of a morning sun surrounded by gray
clouds tinged with scarlet. It was the kind of sky that makes even the most
prosaic person discover a deeply buried urge to start painting in
oils.
Fat Charlie looked at the sunrise. Red sky in the
morning, he thought. Sailor’s warning.
His dream had been
so strange. A party in Hollywood. The secret of Walking on the Water. And that
man, who was him and was not him—
Fat Charlie realized that
he knew the man in his dream, knew him from somewhere, and he also
realized that this would irritate him for the rest of the day if he let it, like
a snag of dental floss caught between two teeth, or the precise difference
between the words lubricious and lascivious, it would sit there,
and it would irritate him.
He stared out of the
window.
It was barely six in the morning, and the world was
quiet. An early dog-walker, at the end of the road, was encouraging a Pomeranian
to defecate. A postman ambled from house to house and back to his red van. And
then something moved on the pavement beneath his house, and Fat Charlie looked
down.
A man was standing by the hedge. When he saw that Fat
Charlie, in pajamas, was looking down at him, he grinned, and waved. A moment of
recognition that shocked Fat Charlie to the core: he was familiar with both the
grin and the wave, although he could not immediately see how. Something of the
dream still hung about Fat Charlie’s head, making him uncomfortable, making the
world seem unreal. He rubbed his eyes, and now the person by the hedge was gone.
Fat Charlie hoped that the man had moved on, wandered down the road into the
remnants of the hanging morning mist, taking whatever awkwardnesses and
irritants and madnesses he had brought away with him.
And
then the doorbell rang.
Fat Charlie pulled on his dressing
gown, and he went downstairs.
He had never fastened the
safety chain before opening a door, never in his life, but before he turned the
handle he clicked the head of the chain into place, and he pulled the front door
open six inches.
“Morning?” he said,
warily.
The smile that came through the crack in the door
could have illuminated a small village.
“You called me and
I came,” said the stranger. “Now. You going to open this door for me, Fat
Charlie?”
“Who are you?” As he said it, he knew where he
had seen the man before: at his mother’s funeral service, in the little chapel
at the crematorium. That was the last time he had seen that smile. And he knew
the answer, knew it even before the man could say the
words.
“I’m your brother,” said the
man.
Fat Charlie closed the door. He slipped off the safety
chain and opened the door all the way. The man was still
there.
Fat Charlie was not entirely sure how to greet a
potentially imaginary brother he had not previously believed in. So they stood
there, one on one side of the door, one on the other, until his brother said,
“You can call me Spider. You going to invite me in?”
“Yes.
I am. Of course I am. Please. Come in.”
Fat Charlie led the
man upstairs.
Impossible things happen. When they do
happen, most people just deal with it. Today, like every day, roughly five
thousand people on the face of the planet will experience
one-chance-in-a-million things, and not one of them will refuse to believe the
evidence of their senses. Most of them will say the equivalent, in their own
language, of “Funny old world, isn’t it?” and just keep going. So while part of
Fat Charlie was trying to come up with logical, sensible, sane explanations for
what was going on, most of him was simply getting used to the idea that a
brother he hadn’t known he had was walking up the staircase behind
him.
They got to the kitchen and stood
there.
“Would you like a cup of
tea?”
“Got any coffee?”
“Only instant,
I’m afraid.”
“That’s fine.”
Fat
Charlie turned on the kettle. “You come far, then?” he
asked.
“Los Angeles.”
“How was the
flight?”
The man sat down at the kitchen table. Now he
shrugged. It was the kind of shrug that could have meant
anything.
“Um. You planning on staying
long?”
“I haven’t really given it much thought.” The
man—Spider—looked around Fat Charlie’s kitchen as if he had never been in a
kitchen before.
“How do you take your
coffee?”
“Dark as night, sweet as
sin.”
Fat Charlie put the mug down in front of him, and
passed him a sugar bowl. “Help yourself.”
While Spider
spooned teaspoon after teaspoon of sugar into his coffee, Fat Charlie sat
opposite him, and stared.
There was a family resemblance
between the two men. That was unarguable, although that alone did not explain
the intense feeling of familiarity that Fat Charlie felt on seeing Spider. His
brother looked like Fat Charlie wished he looked in his mind, unconstrained by
the faintly disappointing fellow that he saw, with monotonous regularity, in the
bathroom mirror. Spider was taller, and leaner, and cooler. He was wearing a
black-and-scarlet leather jacket, and black leather leggings, and he looked at
home in them. Fat Charlie tried to remember if this was what the fly guy had
been wearing in his dream. There was something larger-than-life about him:
simply being on the other side of the table to this man made Fat Charlie feel
awkward and badly constructed, and slightly foolish. It wasn’t the clothes
Spider wore, but the knowledge that if Fat Charlie put them on he would look as
if he were wearing some kind of unconvincing drag. It wasn’t the way Spider
smiled—casually, delightedly—but Fat Charlie’s cold, incontrovertible certainty
that he himself could practice smiling in front of a mirror from now until the
end of time and never manage a single smile one half so charming, so cocky, or
so twinklingly debonair.
“You were at Mum’s cremation,”
said Fat Charlie.
“I thought about coming over to talk to
you after the service,” said Spider. “I just wasn’t certain that it would be a
good idea.”
“I wish you had.” Fat Charlie thought of
something. He said, “I would have thought you’d have been at Dad’s
funeral.”
Spider said, “What?”
“His
funeral. It was in Florida. Couple of days ago.”
Spider
shook his head. “He’s not dead,” he said. “I’m pretty sure I’d know if he were
dead.”
“He’s dead. I buried him. Well, I filled the grave.
Ask Mrs. Higgler.”
Spider said, “How’d he
die?”
“Heart failure.”
“That doesn’t
mean anything. That just means he died.”
“Well, yes. He
did.”
Spider had stopped smiling. Now he was staring down
into his coffee as if he suspected he was going to be able to find an answer in
there. “I ought to check this out,” said Spider. “It’s not that I don’t believe
you. But when it’s your old man. Even when your old man is my old man.” And he
made a face. Fat Charlie knew what that face meant. He had made it himself, from
the inside, enough times, when the subject of his father came up. “Is she still
living in the same place? Next door to where we grew
up?”
“Mrs. Higgler? Yes. Still
there.”
“You don’t have anything from there, do you? A
picture? Maybe a photograph?”
“I brought home a box of
them.” Fat Charlie had not opened the large cardboard box yet. It was still
sitting in the hall. He carried the box into the kitchen and put it down on the
table. He took a kitchen knife and cut the packing tape that surrounded it;
Spider reached into the box with his thin fingers, riffling through the
photographs like playing cards, until he pulled out one of their mother and Mrs.
Higgler, sitting on Mrs. Higgler’s porch, twenty-five years
earlier.
“Is that porch still
there?”
Fat Charlie tried to remember. “I think so,” he
said.
Later, he was unable to remember whether the picture
grew very big, or Spider grew very small. He could have sworn that neither of
those things had actually happened; nevertheless, it was unarguable that Spider
had walked into the photograph, and it had shimmered and rippled and swallowed
him up.
Fat Charlie rubbed his eyes. He was alone in the
kitchen at six in the morning. There was a box filled with photographs and
papers on the kitchen table, along with an empty mug, which he placed in the
sink. He walked along the hall to his bedroom, lay down on his bed and slept
until the alarm went off at seven fifteen.
Chapter Four
which concludes with an evening of wine, women and
song
Fat Charlie woke
up.
Memories of dreams of a meeting with some film-star
brother mingled with a dream in which President Taft had come to stay, bringing
with him the entire cast of the cartoon. Tom and Jerry . He showered, and he
took the tube to work.
All through the workday something
was nagging at the back of his head, and he didn’t know what it was. He
misplaced things. He forgot things. At one point, he started singing at his
desk, not because he was happy, but because he forgot not to. He only realized
he was doing it when Grahame Coats himself put his head around the door of Fat
Charlie’s closet to chide him. “No radios, Walkmans, MP3players or similar
instruments of music at the office,” said Grahame Coats, with a ferrety glare.
“It bespeaks a lackadaisical attitude, of the kind one abhors in the workaday
world.”
“It wasn’t the radio,” admitted Fat Charlie, his
ears burning.
“No? Then what, pray tell, was
it?”
“It was me,” said Fat
Charlie.
“You?”
“Yes. I was singing.
I’m sorry—”
“I could have sworn it was the radio. And yet I
was wrong. Good Lord. Well, with such a wealth of talents at your disposal, with
such remarkable skills, perhaps you should leave us to tread the boards,
entertain the multitudes, possibly do an end-of-the-pier show, rather than
cluttering up a desk in an office where other people are trying to work. Eh? A
place where people’s careers are being managed.”
“No,” said
Fat Charlie. “I don’t want to leave. I just wasn’t
thinking.”
“Then,” said Grahame Coats, “you must learn to
refrain from singing—save in the bath, the shower, or perchance the stands as
you support your favorite football team. I myself am a Crystal Palace supporter.
Or you will find yourself seeking gainful employment
elsewhere.”
Fat Charlie smiled, then realized that smiling
wasn’t what he wanted to do at all, and looked serious, but by that point
Grahame Coats had left the room, so Fat Charlie swore under his breath, folded
his arms on the desk and put his head on them.
“Was that
you singing?” It was one of the new girls in the Artist Liaison department. Fat
Charlie never managed to learn their names. They were always gone by
then.
“I’m afraid so.”
“What were you
singing? It was pretty.”
Fat Charlie realized he didn’t
know. He said, “I’m not sure. I wasn’t listening.”
She
laughed at that, although quietly. “He’s right. You should be making records,
not wasting your time here.”
Fat Charlie didn’t know what
to say. Cheeks burning, he started crossing out numbers and making notes and
gathering up Post-it notes with messages on them and putting those messages up
on the screen, until he was sure that she had gone.
Maeve
Livingstone phoned: Could Fat Charlie please ensure that Grahame Coats
phoned her bank manager. He said he’d do his best. She told him pointedly to see
that he did.
Rosie called him on his mobile at four in the
afternoon, to let him know that the water was now back on again in her flat and
to tell him that, good news, her mother had decided to take an interest in the
upcoming wedding and had asked her to come round that evening and discuss
it.
“Well,” said Fat Charlie. “If she’s organizing the
dinner, we’ll save a fortune on food.”
“That’s not nice.
I’ll call you tonight and let you know how it went.”
Fat
Charlie told her that he loved her, and he clicked the phone off. Someone was
looking at him. He turned around.
Grahame Coats said, “He
who maketh personal phone calls on company time, lo he shall reap the whirlwind.
Do you know who said that?”
“You
did?”
“Indeed I did,” said Grahame Coats. “Indeed I did.
And never a truer word was spoken. Consider this a formal warning.” And he
smiled then, the kind of self-satisfied smile that forced Fat Charlie to ponder
the various probable outcomes of sinking his fist into Grahame Coats’s
comfortably padded midsection. He decided that it would be a toss-up between
being fired and an action for assault. Either way, he thought, it would be a
fine thing—
Fat Charlie was not by nature a violent man;
still, he could dream. His daydreams tended to be small and comfortable things.
He would like to have enough money to eat in good restaurants whenever he
wished. He wanted a job in which nobody could tell him what to do. He wanted to
be able to sing without embarrassment, somewhere there were never any people
around to hear him.
This afternoon, however, his daydreams
assumed a different shape: he could fly, for a start, and bullets bounced off
his mighty chest as he zoomed down from the sky and rescued Rosie from a band of
kidnapping scoundrels and dastards. She would hold him tightly as they flew off
into the sunset, off to his Fortress of Cool, where she would be so overwhelmed
with feelings of gratitude that she would enthusiastically decide not to bother
with the whole waiting-until-they-were-married bit, and would start to see how
high and how fast they could fill their jar—
The daydream
eased the stress of life in the Grahame Coats Agency, of telling people that
their checks were in the post, of calling in money the agency was
owed.
At 6:00 PM Fat Charlie turned off his computer, and
walked down the five flights of stairs to the street. It had not rained.
Overhead, the starlings were wheeling and cheeping: the dusk chorus of a city.
Everyone on the pavement was hurrying somewhere. Most of them, like Fat Charlie,
were walking up Kingsway to Holborn tube. They had their heads down and the look
about them of people who wanted to get home for the
night.
There was one person on the pavement who wasn’t
going anywhere, though. He stood there, facing Fat Charlie and the remaining
commuters, and his leather jacket flapped in the wind. He was not
smiling.
Fat Charlie saw him from the end of the street. As
he walked toward him everything became unreal. The day melted, and he realized
what he had spent the day trying to remember.
“Hello,
Spider,” he said, when he got close.
Spider looked like a
storm was raging inside him. He might have been about to cry. Fat Charlie didn’t
know. There was too much emotion on his face, in the way he stood, so the people
on the street looked away, ashamed.
“I went out there,” he
said. His voice was dull. “I saw Mrs. Higgler. She took me to the grave. My
father died, and I didn’t know.”
Fat Charlie said, “He was
my father too, Spider.” He wondered how he could have forgotten Spider, how he
could have dismissed him so easily as a
dream.
“True.”
The dusk sky was
crosshatched with starlings; they wheeled and crossed from rooftop to
rooftop.
Spider jerked, and stood straight. He seemed to
have come to a decision. “You are so right,” he said. “We got to do this
together.”
“Exactly,” said Fat Charlie. Then he said, “Do
what?” but Spider had already hailed a cab.
“We are men
with troubles,” said Spider to the world. “Our father is no more. Our hearts are
heavy in our chests. Sorrow settles upon us like pollen in hay fever season.
Darkness is our lot, and misfortune our only
companion.”
“Right, gentlemen,” said the cabbie, brightly.
“Where am I taking you?”
“To where the three remedies for
darkness of the soul may be found,” said Spider.
“Maybe we
could get a curry,” suggested Fat Charlie.
“There are three
things, and three things only, that can lift the pain of mortality and ease the
ravages of life,” said Spider. “These things are wine, women and
song.”
“Curry’s nice too,” pointed out Fat Charlie, but
nobody was listening to him.
“In any particular order?”
asked the cabbie.
“Wine first,” Spider announced. “Rivers
and lakes and vast oceans of wine.”
“Right you are,” said
the cabbie, and he pulled out into the traffic.
“I have a
particularly bad feeling about all this,” said Fat Charlie,
helpfully.
Spider nodded. “A bad feeling,” he said. “Yes.
We both have a bad feeling. Tonight we shall take our bad feelings and share
them, and face them. We shall mourn. We shall drain the bitter dregs of
mortality. Pain shared, my brother, is pain not doubled, but halved. No man is
an island.”
“Seek not to ask for whom the bell tolls,”
intoned the cabbie. “It tolls for thee.”
“Whoa,” said
Spider. “Now that’s a pretty heavy koan you got
there.”
“Thank you,” said the
cabbie.
“That’s how it ends, all right. You are some kind
of philosopher. I’m Spider. This is my brother, Fat
Charlie.”
“Charles,” said Fat
Charlie.
“Steve,” said the cabbie. “Steve
Burridge.”
“Mister Burridge,” said Spider, “how would you
like to be our personal driver this evening?”
Steve
Burridge explained that he was coming up to the end of his shift and would now
be driving his cab home for the night, that dinner with Mrs. Burridge and all
the little Burridges awaited him.
“You hear that?” said
Spider. “A family man. Now, my brother and I are all the family that we have
left. And this is the first time we’ve met.”
“Sounds like
quite a story,” said the cabbie. “Was there a feud?”
“Not
at all. He simply did not know that he had a brother,” said
Spider.
“Did you?” asked Fat Charlie. “Know about
me?”
“I may have done,” said Spider. “But things like that
can slip a guy’s mind so easily.”
The cab pulled over to
the curb. “Where are we?” asked Fat Charlie. They hadn’t gone very far. He
thought they were somewhere just off Fleet Street.
“What he
asked for,” said the cabbie. “Wine.”
Spider got out of the
cab and stared at the grubby oak and grimy glass exterior of the ancient wine
bar. “Perfect,” he said. “Pay the man, Brother.”
Fat
Charlie paid the cabbie. They went inside: down wooden steps to a cellar where
rubicund barristers drank side by side with pallid money market fund managers.
There was sawdust on the floor, and a wine list chalked illegibly on a
blackboard behind the bar.
“What are you drinking?” asked
Spider.
“Just a glass of house red, please,” said Fat
Charlie.
Spider looked at him gravely. “We are the final
scions of Anansi’s line. We do not mourn our father’s passing with house
red.”
“Er. Right. Well, I’ll have what you’re having
then.”
Spider went up to the bar, easing his way through
the crush of people as if it was not there. In several minutes he returned,
carrying two wineglasses, a corkscrew, and an extremely dusty wine bottle. He
opened the bottle with an ease that left Fat Charlie, who always wound up
picking fragments of cork from his wine, deeply impressed. Spider poured from
the bottle a wine so tawny it was almost black. He filled each glass, then put
one in front of Fat Charlie.
“A toast,” he said. “To our
father’s memory.”
“To Dad,” said Fat Charlie, and he
clinked his glass against Spider’s—managing, miraculously, not to spill any as
he did so—and he tasted his wine. It was peculiarly bitter and herby, and salt.
“What is this?”
“Funeral wine, the kind you drink for gods.
They haven’t made it for a long time. It’s seasoned with bitter aloes and
rosemary, and with the tears of brokenhearted
virgins.”
“And they sell it in a Fleet Street wine bar?”
Fat Charlie picked up the bottle, but the label was too faded and dusty to read.
“Never heard of it.”
“These old places have the good stuff,
if you ask for it,” said Spider. “Or maybe I just think they
do.”
Fat Charlie took another sip of his wine. It was
powerful and pungent.
“It’s not a sipping wine,” said
Spider. “It’s a mourning wine. You drain it. Like this.” He took a huge swig.
Then he made a face. “It tastes better that way, too.”
Fat
Charlie hesitated, then took a large mouthful of the strange wine. He could
imagine that he was able to taste the aloes and the rosemary. He wondered if the
salt was really tears.
“They put in the rosemary for
remembrance,” said Spider, and he began to top up their glasses. Fat Charlie
started to try and explain that he wasn’t really up for too much wine tonight
and that he had to work tomorrow, but Spider cut him off. “It’s your turn to
make a toast,” he said.
“Er. Right,” said Fat Charlie. “To
Mum.”
They drank to their mother. Fat Charlie found that
the taste of the bitter wine was beginning to grow on him; he found his eyes
prickling, and a sense of loss, profound and painful, ran through him. He missed
his mother. He missed his childhood. He even missed his father. Across the
table, Spider was shaking his head; a tear ran down Spider’s face and plopped
into the wineglass; he reached for the bottle and poured more wine for them
both.
Fat Charlie drank.
Grief ran
through him as he drank, filling his head and his body with loss and with the
pain of absence, swelling through him like waves on the
ocean.
His own tears were running down his face, splashing
into his drink. He fumbled in his pockets for a tissue. Spider poured out the
last of the black wine, for both of them.
“Did they really
sell this wine here?”
“They had a bottle they didn’t know
they had. They just needed to be reminded.”
Fat Charlie
blew his nose. “I never knew I had a brother,” he said.
“I
did,” said Spider. “I always meant to look you up, but I got distracted. You
know how it is.”
“Not really.”
“Things
came up.”
“What kind of
things?”
“Things. They came up. That’s what things do. They
come up. I can’t be expected to keep track of them
all.”
“Well, give me a
f’rinstance.”
Spider drank more wine. “Okay. The last time
I decided that you and I should meet, I, well, I spent days planning it. Wanted
it to go perfectly. I had to choose my wardrobe. Then I had to decide what I’d
say to you when we met. I knew that the meeting of two brothers, well, it’s the
subject of epics, isn’t it? I decided that the only way to treat it with the
appropriate gravity would be to do it in verse. But what kind of verse? Am I
going to rap it? Declaim it? I mean, I’m not going to greet you with a limerick.
So. It had to be something dark, something powerful, rhythmic, epic. And then I
had it. The perfect first line: Blood calls to blood like sirens in the
night. It says so much. I knew I’d be able to get everything in there—people
dying in alleys, sweat and nightmares, the power of free spirits uncrushable.
Everything was going to be there. And then I had to come up with a second line,
and the whole thing completely fell apart. The best I could come up with was
Tum- tumpty- tumpty- tumpty got a fright.”
Fat
Charlie blinked. “Who exactly is Tum- tumpty- tumpty-
tumpty?”
“It’s not anybody. It’s just there to show you
where the words ought to be. But I never really got any further on it than that,
and I couldn’t turn up with just a first line, some tumpties and three words of
an epic poem, could I? That would have been disrespecting
you.”
“Well—”
“Exactly. So I went to
Hawaii for the week instead. Like I said, something came
up.”
Fat Charlie drank more of his wine. He was beginning
to like it. Sometimes strong tastes fit strong emotions, and this was one of
those times. “It couldn’t always have been the second line of a poem,
though,” he said.
Spider put his thin hand on top of Fat
Charlie’s larger hand. “Enough about me,” he said. “I want to hear about
you.”
“Not much to tell,” said Fat Charlie. He told his
brother about his life. About Rosie and Rosie’s mother, about Grahame Coats and
the Grahame Coats Agency, and his brother nodded his head. It didn’t sound like
much of a life, now that Fat Charlie was putting it into
words.
“Still,” Fat Charlie said, philosophically, “I
figure that there are those people you read about in the gossip pages of
newspapers. And they are always saying how dull and empty and pointless their
lives are.” He held the wine bottle above his glass, hoping there was just
enough of the wine left for another mouthful, but there was barely a drip. The
bottle was empty. It had lasted longer than it had any right to have lasted, but
now there was nothing left at all.
Spider stood up. “I’ve
met those people,” he said. “The ones from the glossy magazines. I’ve walked
among them. I have seen, firsthand, their callow, empty lives. I have watched
them from the shadows when they thought themselves alone. And I can tell you
this: I’m afraid there is not one of them who would swap lives with you at
gunpoint, my brother. Come on.”
“Whuh? Where are you
going?”
“We are going. We have accomplished the first part
of tonight’s triune mission. Wine has been drunk. Two parts left to
go.”
“Er—”
Fat Charlie followed Spider
outside, hoping the cool night air would clear his head. It didn’t. Fat
Charlie’s head was feeling like it might float away if it wasn’t firmly tied
down.
“Women next,” said Spider. “Then
song.”
It is possibly worth mentioning that in
Fat Charlie’s world, women did not simply turn up. You needed to be introduced
to them; you needed to pluck up the courage to talk to them; you needed to find
a subject to talk about when you did, and then, once you had achieved those
heights, there were further peaks to scale. You needed to dare to ask them if
they were doing anything on Saturday night, and then when you did, mostly they
had hair that needed washing that night, or diaries to update, or cockatiels to
groom, or they simply needed to wait by the phone for some other man not to
call.
But Spider lived in a different
world.
They wandered toward the West End, stopping when
they reached a crowded pub. The patrons spilled out onto the pavement, and
Spider stopped and said hello to what turned out to be a birthday celebration
for a young lady named Sybilla, who was only too flattered when Spider insisted
on buying a birthday round of drinks for her and for her friends. Then he told
jokes (“—and the duck says, put it on my bill? Whaddayathink I am?
Some kinda pervert?”) and he laughed at his own jokes, a booming, joyful
laugh. He could remember the names of all the people around him. He talked to
people and listened to what they said. When Spider announced it was time to find
another pub, the entire birthday group decided, as one woman, that they were
coming with him—
By the time they reached their third pub,
Spider resembled someone from a rock video. He was draped with girls. They
snuggled in. Several of them had kissed him, half-jokingly, half-seriously. Fat
Charlie watched in envious horror.
“You his bodyguard?”
asked one of the girls.
“What?”
“His
bodyguard. Are you?”
“No,” said Fat Charlie. “I’m
his brother.”
“Wow,” she said. “I didn’t know he had a
brother. I think he’s amazing.”
“Me, too,” said another,
who had spent some time cuddling Spider until forced away by the press of other
bodies with similar ideas. She noticed Fat Charlie for the first time. “Are you
his manager?”
“No. He’s the brother,” said the first girl.
“He was just telling me,” she added, pointedly.
The second
ignored her. “Are you from the States as well?” she asked. “You’ve sort of got a
bit of an accent.”
“When I was younger,” said Fat Charlie.
“We lived in Florida. My dad was American, my mum was from, well she was
originally from Saint Andrews, but she grew up in—.”
Nobody
was listening.
When they moved on from there, the remnants
of the birthday celebration accompanied them. The women surrounded Spider,
inquiring where they were going next. Restaurants were suggested, as were
nightclubs. Spider simply grinned and kept walking.
Fat
Charlie trailed along behind them, feeling more left-out than
ever.
They stumbled through the neon-and-striplight world.
Spider had his arms around several of the women. He would kiss them as he
walked, indiscriminately, like a man taking a bite from first one summer fruit,
then another. None of them seemed to mind.
It’s not
normal, thought Fat Charlie. That’swhat it’s not. He was not
even trying to keep up, merely attempting not to be left
behind.
He could still taste the bitter wine on his
tongue.
He became aware that a girl was walking along
beside him. She was small, and pretty in a pixieish sort of way. She tugged at
his sleeve. “What are we doing?” she asked. “Where are we
going?”
“We’re mourning my father,” he said, “I
think.”
“Is it a reality TV show?”
“I
hope not.”
Spider stopped and turned. The gleam in his eyes
was disturbing. “We are here,” he announced. “We have arrived. It is what he
would have wanted.” There was a handwritten message on a sheet of bright orange
paper on the door outside the pub. It said on it, Tonight. Upstair’s.
KAROAKE.
“Song,” said Spider. Then he said, “It’s
showtime!”
“No,” said Fat Charlie. He stopped where he
was.
“It’s what he loved,” said
Spider.
“I don’t sing. Not in public. And I’m drunk. And, I
really don’t think this is a really good idea.”
“It’s a
great idea.” Spider had a perfectly convincing smile. Properly deployed,
a smile like that could launch a holy war. Fat Charlie, however, was not
convinced.
“Look,” he said, trying to keep the panic from
his voice. “There are things that people don’t do. Right? Some people don’t fly.
Some people don’t have sex in public. Some people don’t turn into smoke and blow
away. I don’t do any of those things, and I don’t sing
either.”
“Not even for
Dad?”
“Especially not for Dad. He’s not going to embarrass
me from beyond the grave. Well, not any more than he has
already.”
“ ‘Scuse me,” said one of the young women. “
‘Scuse me but are we going in? ‘Cause I’m getting cold out here, and Sybilla
needs to wee.”
“We’re going in,” said Spider, and he smiled
at her.
Fat Charlie wanted to protest, to stand his ground,
but he found himself swept inside, hating himself.
He
caught up with Spider on the stairs. “I’ll go in,” he said. “But I won’t
sing.”
“You’re already in.”
“I know.
But I’m not singing.”
“Not much point in saying you won’t
go in if you’re already in.”
“I can’t
sing.”
“You telling me I inherited all the musical talent
as well?”
“I’m telling you that if I have to open my mouth
in order to sing in public, I’ll throw up.”
Spider squeezed
his arm, reassuringly. “You watch how I do it,” he
said.
The birthday girl and two of her friends stumbled up
onto the little dais, and giggled their way through “Dancing Queen.” Fat Charlie
drank a gin and tonic somebody had put into his hand, and he winced at every
note they missed, at every key change that didn’t happen. There was a round of
applause from the rest of the birthday group.
Another of
the women took the stage. It was the pixieish one who had asked Fat Charlie
where they were going. The opening chords sounded to “Stand by Me,” and she
began, using the phrase in its most approximate and all-encompassing way, to
sing along: she missed every note, came in too soon or too late on every line,
and misread most of them. Fat Charlie felt for her.
She
climbed down from the stage and came toward the bar. Fat Charlie was going to
say something sympathetic, but she was glowing with joy. “That was so
great,” she said. “I mean, that was just amazing.” Fat Charlie bought her
a drink, a large vodka and orange. “That was such a laugh,” she told him.
“Are you going to do it? Go on. You have to do it. I bet you won’t be any
crapper than I was.”
Fat Charlie shrugged, in a way that,
he hoped, indicated that he contained within him depths of crap as yet
unplumbed.
Spider walked over to the little stage as if a
spotlight was following him.
“I bet this will be good,”
said the vodka and orange. “Did someone say you were his
brother?”
“No,” muttered Fat Charlie, ungraciously. “I said
that he was my brother.”
Spider began to
sing. It was “Under the Boardwalk.”
It wouldn’t have
happened if Fat Charlie had not liked the song so much. When Fat Charlie was
thirteen he had believed that “Under the Boardwalk” was the greatest song in the
world (by the time he was a jaded and world-weary fourteen-year-old, it had
become Bob Marley’s “No Woman No Cry”). And now Spider was singing his song, and
singing it well. He sang it in tune, he sang it as if he meant it. People
stopped drinking, stopped talking, and they looked at him, and they
listened.
When Spider finished singing, people cheered. Had
they been wearing hats, they might well have flung them into the
air.
“I can see why you wouldn’t want to follow that,” said
the vodka and orange to Fat Charlie. “I mean, you can’t follow that, can
you?”
“Well—” said Fat Charlie.
“I
mean,” she said with a grin, “you can see who’s got all the talent in your
family.” She tipped her head, as she said it, and tilted her chin. It was the
chin-tilt that did it.
Fat Charlie headed toward the stage,
putting one foot in front of the other in an impressive display of physical
dexterity. He was sweating.
The next few minutes passed in
a blur. He spoke to the DJ, chose his song from the list—“Unforgettable”—waited
for what seemed like a brief eternity, and was handed a
microphone.
His mouth was dry. His heart was fluttering in
his chest.
On the screen was his first word:
Unforgettable—
Now, Fat Charlie could really
sing. He had range and power and expression. When he sang his whole body became
an instrument.
The music started.
In
Fat Charlie’s head, he was all ready to open his mouth, and to sing.
“Unforgettable,” he would sing. He would sing it to his dead father and
to his brother and the night, telling them all that they were things it was
impossible to forget.
Only he couldn’t do it. There were
people looking up at him. Barely two dozen of them, in the upstairs room of a
pub. Many of them were women. In front of an audience, Fat Charlie couldn’t even
open his mouth.
He could hear the music playing, but he
just stood there. He felt very cold. His feet seemed a long way
away.
He forced his mouth open.
“I
think,” he said, very distinctly, into the microphone, over the music, and heard
his words echoing back from every corner of the room. “I think I’m going to be
sick.”
There was no graceful exit from the
stage.
After that, everything got a bit
wobbly.
There are myth-places. They exist, each
in their own way. Some of them are overlaid on the world; others exist beneath
the world as it is, like an underpainting.
There are
mountains. They are the rocky places you will reach before you come to the
cliffs that border the end of the world, and there are caves in those mountains,
deep caves that were inhabited long before the first men walked the
earth.
They are inhabited still.
Chapter Five
in which we examine the many consequences of the morning
after
Fat Charlie was
thirsty.
Fat Charlie was thirsty and his head
hurt.
Fat Charlie was thirsty and his head hurt and his
mouth tasted evil and his eyes were too tight in his head and all his teeth
twinged and his stomach burned and his back was aching in a way that started
around his knees and went up to his forehead and his brains had been removed and
replaced with cotton balls and needles and pins which was why it hurt to try and
think, and his eyes were not just too tight in his head but they must have
rolled out in the night and been reattached with roofing nails; and now he
noticed that anything louder than the gentle Brownian motion of air molecules
drifting softly past each other was above his pain threshold. Also, he wished he
were dead.
Fat Charlie opened his eyes, which was a
mistake, in that it let daylight in, which hurt. It also told him where he was
(in his own bed, in his bedroom), and because he was staring at the clock on his
bedside table, it told him that the time was11 :30.
That,
he thought, one word at a time, was about as bad as things could get: he had the
kind of hangover that an Old Testament God might have smitten the Midianites
with, and the next time he saw Grahame Coats he would undoubtedly learn that he
had been fired.
He wondered if he could sound convincingly
sick over the phone, then realized that the challenge would be convincingly
sounding anything else.
He could not remember getting home
last night.
He would phone the office, the moment he was
able to remember the telephone number. He would apologize—crippling
twenty-four-hour flu, flat on his back, nothing that could be
done—
“You know,” said someone in the bed next to him, “I
think there’s a bottle of water on your side. Could you pass it over
here?”
Fat Charlie wanted to explain that there was no
water on his side of the bed, and that there was, in fact, no water closer than
the bathroom sink, if he disinfected the toothbrush mug first, but he realized
he was staring at one of several bottles of water, sitting on the bedside table.
He reached his hand out, and closed fingers that felt like they belonged to
someone else around one of them, then, with the sort of effort people usually
reserve for hauling themselves up the final few feet of a sheer rock face, he
rolled over in bed.
It was the vodka and
orange.
Also, she was naked. At least, the bits of her he
could see were.
She took the water, and pulled the sheet up
to cover her chest. “Ta. He said to tell you,” she said, “when you woke, not to
worry about calling work and telling them you were ill. He said to tell you he’s
already taken care of it.”
Fat Charlie’s mind was not put
at rest. His fears and worries were not allayed. Then again, in the condition he
was in, he only had room in his head for a single thing to worry about at once,
and right now he was worrying about whether or not he would make it to the
bathroom in time.
“You’ll need more liquids,” said the
girl. “You’ll need to replenish your electrolytes.”
Fat
Charlie made it to the bathroom in time. Afterward, seeing he was there already,
he stood under the shower until the room stopped undulating, and then he brushed
his teeth without throwing up.
When he returned to the
bedroom, the vodka and orange was no longer there, which was a relief to Fat
Charlie, who had started to hope that she might have been an alcohol-induced
delusion, like pink elephants or the nightmarish idea that he had taken to the
stage to sing on the previous evening.
He could not find
his dressing gown, so he pulled on a tracksuit, in order to feel dressed enough
to visit the kitchen, at the far end of the hall.
His phone
chimed, and he rummaged through his jacket, which was on the floor beside the
bed, until he found it, and flipped it open. He grunted into it, as anonymously
as he could, just in case it was someone from the Grahame Coats Agency trying to
discern his whereabouts.
“It’s me,” said Spider’s voice.
“Everything’s okay.”
“You told them I was
dead?”
“Better than that. I told them I was
you.”
“But.” Fat Charlie tried to think clearly. “But
you’re not me.”
“Hey. I know that. I told them I
was.”
“You don’t even look like
me.”
“Brother of mine, you are harshing a potential mellow
here. It’s all taken care of. Oops. Gotta go. The big boss needs to talk to
me.”
“Grahame Coats? Look,
Spider—”
But Spider had put down the phone, and the screen
blanked.
Fat Charlie’s dressing gown came through the door.
There was a girl inside it. It looked significantly better on her than it ever
had on him. She was carrying a tray, on which was a water glass with a fizzing
Alka-Seltzer in it, along with something in a mug.
“Drink
both of these,” she told him. “The mug first. Just knock it
back.”
“What’s in the mug?”
“Egg yolk,
Worcestershire sauce, Tabasco, salt, dash of vodka, things like that,” she said.
“Kill or cure. Now,” she told him, in tones that brooked no argument.
“Drink.”
Fat Charlie drank.
“Oh my
god,” he said.
“Yeah,” she agreed. “But you’re still
alive.”
He wasn’t sure about that. He drank the
Alka-Seltzer anyway. Something occurred to him.
“Um,” said
Fat Charlie. “Um. Look. Last night. Did we. Um.”
She looked
blank.
“Did we what?”
“Did we. You
know. Do it?”
“You mean you don’t remember?” Her
face fell. “You said it was the best you’d ever had. That it was as if you’d
never made love to a woman before. You were part god, part animal, and part
unstoppable sex machine—”
Fat Charlie didn’t know where to
look. She giggled.
“I’m just winding you up,” she said.
“I’d helped your brother get you home, we cleaned you up, and, after that, you
know.”
“No,” he said. “I don’t
know.”
“Well,” she said, “you were completely out cold, and
it’s a big bed. I’m not sure where your brother slept. He must have the
constitution of an ox. He was up at the crack of dawn, all bright and
smiling.”
“He went into work,” said Fat Charlie. “He told
them he was me.”
“Wouldn’t they be able to tell the
difference? I mean, you’re not exactly twins.”
“Apparently
not.” He shook his head. Then he looked at her. She stuck out a small, extremely
pink tongue at him.
“What’s your
name?”
“You mean you’ve forgotten? I remember your
name. You’re Fat Charlie.”
“Charles,” he said. “Just
Charles is fine.”
“I’m Daisy,” she said, and stuck out her
hand. “Pleased to meet you.”
They shook hands
solemnly.
“I feel a bit better,” said Fat
Charlie.
“Like I said,” she said. “Kill or
cure.”
Spider was having a great day at the
office. He almost never worked in offices. He almost never worked. Everything
was new, everything was marvelous and strange, from the tiny lift that lurched
him up to the fifth floor, to the warren-like offices of the Grahame Coats
Agency. He stared, fascinated, at the glass case in the lobby filled with dusty
awards. He wandered through the offices, and when anyone asked him who he was,
he would say “I’m Fat Charlie Nancy,” and he’d say it in his god-voice, which
would make whatever he said practically true.
He found the
tea-room, and made himself several cups of tea. Then he carried them back to Fat
Charlie’s desk, and arranged them around it in an artistic fashion. He started
to play with the computer network. It asked him for a password. “I’m Fat Charlie
Nancy,” he told the computer, but there were still places it didn’t want him to
go, so he said “I’m Grahame Coats,” and it opened to him like a
flower.
He looked at things on the computer until he got
bored.
He dealt with the contents of Fat Charlie’s in
basket. He dealt with Fat Charlie’s pending basket.
It
occurred to him that Fat Charlie would be waking up around now, so he called him
at home, in order to reassure him; he just felt that he was making a little
headway when Grahame Coats put his head around the door, ran his fingers across
his stoatlike lips, and beckoned.
“Gotta go,” Spider said
to his brother. “The big boss needs to talk to me.” He put down the
phone.
“Making private phone calls on company time, Nancy,”
stated Grahame Coats.
“Abso-friggin’-lutely,” agreed
Spider.
“And was that myself you were referring to as ‘the
big boss’?” asked Grahame Coats. They walked to the end of the hallway and into
his office.
“You’re the biggest,” said Spider. “And the
bossest.”
Grahame Coats looked puzzled; he suspected he was
being made fun of, but he was not certain, and this disturbed
him.
“Well, sit ye down, sit ye down,” he
said.
Spider sat him down.
It was
Grahame Coats’s custom to keep the turnover of staff at the Grahame Coats Agency
fairly constant. Some people came and went. Others came and remained until just
before their jobs would begin to carry some kind of employment protection. Fat
Charlie had been there longer than anyone: one year and eleven months. One month
to go before redundancy payments or industrial tribunals could become a part of
his life.
There was a speech that Grahame Coats gave,
before he fired someone. He was very proud of his
speech.
“Into each life,” he began, “a little rain must
fall. There’s no cloud without a silver lining.”
“It’s an
ill wind,” offered Spider, “that blows no one good.”
“Ah.
Yes. Yes indeed. Well. As we pass through this vale of tears, we must pause to
reflect that—”
“The first cut,” said Spider, “is the
deepest.”
“What? Oh.” Grahame Coats scrabbled to remember
what came next. “Happiness,” he pronounced, “is like a
butterfly.”
“Or a bluebird,” agreed
Spider.
“Quite. If I may finish?”
“Of
course. Be my guest,” said Spider, cheerfully.
“And the
happiness of every soul at the Grahame Coats Agency is as important to me as my
own.”
“I cannot tell you,” said Spider, “how happy that
makes me.”
“Yes,” said Grahame
Coats.
“Well, I better get back to work,” said Spider.
“It’s been a blast, though. Next time you want to share some more, just call me.
You know where I am.”
“Happiness,” said Grahame Coats. His
voice was taking on a faintly strangulated quality. “And what I wonder, Nancy,
Charles, is this—are you happy here? And do you not agree that you might be
rather happier elsewhere?”
“That’s not what I wonder,” said
Spider. “You want to know what I wonder?”
Grahame
Coats said nothing. It had never gone like this before. Normally, at this point,
their faces fell, and they went into shock. Sometimes they cried. Grahame Coats
had never minded when they cried.
“What I wonder,” said
Spider, “is what the accounts in the Cayman Islands are for. You know, because
it almost sort of looks like money that should go to our client accounts
sometimes just goes into the Cayman Island accounts instead. And it seems a
funny sort of way to organize the finances, for the money coming in to rest in
those accounts. I’ve never seen anything like it before. I was hoping you could
explain it to me.”
Grahame Coats had gone off-white—one of
those colors that turn up in paint catalogs with names like “parchment” or
“magnolia.” He said, “How did you get access to those
accounts?”
“Computers,” said Spider. “Do they drive you as
nuts as they drive me? What can you do?”
Grahame Coats
thought for several long moments. He had always liked to imagine that his
financial affairs were so deeply tangled that, even if the Fraud Squad were ever
able to conclude that financial crimes had been committed, they would find it
extremely difficult to explain to a jury exactly what kind of crimes they
were.
“There’s nothing illegal about having offshore
accounts,” he said, as carelessly as possible.
“Illegal?”
said Spider. “I should hope not. I mean, if I saw anything illegal, I should
have to report it to the appropriate authorities.”
Grahame
Coats picked up a pen from his desk, then he put it down again. “Ah,” he said.
“Well, delightful though it is to chat, converse, spend time, and otherwise
hobnob with you, Charles, I suspect that both of us have work we should be
getting on with. Time and tide, after all, wait for no man. Procrastination is
the thief of time.”
“Life is a rock,” suggested Spider,
“but the radio rolled
me.”
“Whatever.”
Fat Charlie
was starting to feel human again. He was no longer in pain; slow, intimate waves
of nausea were no longer sweeping over him. While he was not yet convinced that
the world was a fine and joyous place, he was no longer in the ninth circle of
hangover hell, and this was a good thing.
Daisy had taken
over the bathroom. He had listened to the taps running, and then to some
contented splashes.
He knocked on the bathroom
door.
“I’m in here,” said Daisy. “I’m in the
bath.”
“I know,” said Fat Charlie. “I mean, I didn’t know,
but I thought you probably were.”
“Yes?” said
Daisy.
“I just wondered,” he said, through the door. “I
wondered why you came back here. Last night.”
“Well,” she
said. “You were a bit the worse for wear. And your brother looked like he needed
a hand. I’m not working this morning, so. Voilà.”
“Voilà,”
said Fat Charlie. On the one hand, she felt sorry for him. And on the other, she
really liked Spider. Yes. He’d only had a brother for a little over a day, and
already he felt there would be no surprises left in this new family
relationship. Spider was the cool one; he was the other
one.
She said, “You have a lovely
voice.”
“What?”
“You were singing in
the taxi, when we were going home. Unforgettable. It was
lovely.”
He had somehow put the karaoke incident out of his
mind, placed it in the dark places one disposes of inconvenient things. Now it
came back, and he wished it hadn’t.
“You were great,” she
said. “Will you sing to me later?”
Fat Charlie thought
desperately, and then was saved from thinking desperately by the
doorbell.
“Someone at the door,” he
said.
He went downstairs and opened the door and things got
worse. Rosie’s mother gave him a look that would have curdled milk. She said
nothing. She was holding a large white envelope.
“Hello,”
said Fat Charlie. “Mrs. Noah. Nice to see you. Um.”
She
sniffed and held the envelope in front of her. “Oh,” she said. “You’re here. So.
You going to invite me in?”
That’sright,
thought Fat Charlie. Yourkind always have to be invited. Just
say no, and she’ll have to go away. “Of course, Mrs. Noah. Please, come in.”
Sothat’show vampires do it. “Would you like a cup of
tea?”
“Don’t think you can get around me like that,” she
said. “Because you can’t.”
“Er.
Right.”
Up the narrow stairs and into the kitchen. Rosie’s
mother looked around and made a face as if to indicate that it did not meet her
standards of hygiene, containing, as it did, edible foodstuffs. “Coffee? Water?”
Don’tsay wax fruit. “Wax fruit?”
Damn.
“I understand from Rosie that your father
recently passed away,” she said.
“Yes. He
did.”
“When Rosie’s father passed, they did a four-page
obituary in Cooks and Cookery. They said he was solely responsible for
the arrival of Caribbean fusion cuisine in this
country.”
“Oh,” he said.
“It’s not
like he left me badly off, neither. He had life insurance, and he owned a share
of two successful restaurants. I’m a very well-off woman. When I die, it will
all go to Rosie.”
“When we’re married,” said Fat Charlie,
“I’ll be looking after her. Don’t you worry.”
“I’m not
saying you’re only after Rosie for my money,” said Rosie’s mother, in a tone of
voice that made it clear that that was exactly what she did
believe.
Fat Charlie’s headache started coming back. “Mrs.
Noah, is there anything I can help you with?”
“I’ve been
talking to Rosie, and we’ve decided that I should start helping with your
wedding plans,” she said, primly. “I need a list of your people. The ones you
were hoping to invite. Names, addresses, e-mail, and phone numbers. I’ve made a
form for you to fill out. I thought I’d save on postage and drop it off myself,
since I was going to be passing by Maxwell Gardens anyway. I was not expecting
to find you home.” She handed him the large white envelope. “There will be a
total of ninety people at the wedding. You will be permitted a total of eight
family members and six personal friends. The personal friends and four members
will comprise Table H. The rest of your group will be at Table C. Your father
would have been seated with us at the head table, but seeing that he has passed
over, we have allocated his seat to Rosie’s Aunt Winifred. Have you decided on
your best man yet?”
Fat Charlie shook his
head.
“Well, when you do, make certain he knows that there
won’t be any crude stuff in his speech. I don’t want to hear anything from your
best man I wouldn’t hear in a church. You understand
me?”
Fat Charlie wondered what Rosie’s mother would usually
hear in a church. Probably just cries of “Back! Foul beast of Hell!” followed by
gasps of “Is it alive?” and a nervous inquiry as to whether anybody had
remembered to bring the stakes and hammers.
“I think,” said
Fat Charlie, “I have more than ten relations. I mean, there are cousins and
great-aunts and things.”
“What you obviously fail to
grasp,” said Rosie’s mother, “is that weddings cost money. I’ve allocated £175 a
person to tables A to D—Table A is the head table—which takes care of Rosie’s
closest relations and my women’s club, and £125to tables E to G, which are, you
know, more distant acquaintances, the children and so on and so
forth.”
“You said my friends would be at Table H,” said Fat
Charlie.
“That’s the next tier down. They won’t be getting
the avocado shrimp starters or the sherry trifle.”
“When
Rosie and I talked about it last, we thought we’d go for a sort of a general
West Indian theme to the food.”
Rosie’s mother sniffed.
“She sometimes doesn’t know her own mind, that girl. But she and I are now in
full agreement.”
“Look,” said Fat Charlie, “I think maybe I
ought to talk to Rosie about all this and get back to
you.”
“Just fill out the forms,” said Rosie’s mother. Then
she said suspiciously, “Why aren’t you at work?”
“I’m. Um.
I’m not in. That is to say, I’m off this morning. Not going in today. I’m.
Not.”
“I hope you told Rosie that. She was planning to see
you for lunch, she told me. That was why she could not have lunch with
me.”
Fat Charlie took this information in. “Right,” he
said. “Well, thanks for popping over, Mrs. Noah. I’ll talk to Rosie,
and—”
Daisy came into the kitchen. She wore a towel wrapped
around her head, and Fat Charlie’s dressing gown, which clung to her damp body.
She said “There’s orange juice, isn’t there? I know I saw some, when I was
poking around before. How’s your head? Any better?” She opened the fridge door,
and poured herself a tall glass of orange juice.
Rosie’s
mother cleared her throat. It did not sound like a throat being cleared. It
sounded like pebbles rattling down a beach.
“Hullo,” said
Daisy. “I’m Daisy.”
The temperature in the kitchen began to
drop. “Indeed?” said Rosie’s mother. Icicles hung from the final
D.
“I wonder what they would have called oranges,” said Fat
Charlie into the silence, “if they weren’t orange. I mean, if they were some
previously unknown blue fruit, would they have been called blues? Would
we be drinking blue juice?”
“What?” asked Rosie’s
mother.
“Bless. You should hear the things that come out of
your mouth,” said Daisy, cheerfully. “Right. I’m going to see if I can find my
clothes. Lovely meeting you.”
She went out. Fat Charlie did
not resume breathing.
“Who,” said Rosie’s mother, perfectly
calmly. “Was. That.”
“My sis—cousin. My cousin,” said Fat
Charlie. “I just think of her as my sister. We were very close, growing up. She
just decided to crash here last night. She’s a bit of a wild child. Well. Yes.
You’ll see her at the wedding.”
“I’ll put her down for
Table H,” said Rosie’s mother. “She’ll be more comfortable there.” She said it
in the same way most people would say things like, “Do you wish to die quickly,
or shall I let Mongo have his fun first?”
“Right,” said Fat
Charlie. “Well,” he said. “Lovely to see you. Well,” he said, “you must have
lots of things to be getting on with. And,” he said, “I need to be getting to
work.”
“I thought you had the day
off.”
“Morning. I’ve got the morning off. And it’s nearly
over. And I should be getting off to work now so
good-bye.”
She clutched her handbag to her, and she stood
up. Fat Charlie followed her out into the hall.
“Lovely
seeing you,” he said.
She blinked, as a nictitating python
might blink before striking. “Good-bye Daisy,” she called. “I’ll see you at the
wedding.”
Daisy, now wearing panties and a bra, and in the
process of pulling on a T-shirt, leaned out into the hall. “Take care,” she
said, and went back into Fat Charlie’s bedroom.
Rosie’s
mother said nothing else as Fat Charlie led her down the stairs. He opened the
door for her, and as she went past him, he saw on her face something terrible,
something that made his stomach knot more than it was knotting already: the
thing that Rosie’s mother was doing with her mouth. It was pulled up at the
corners in a ghastly rictus. Like a skull with lips, Rosie’s mother was
smiling.
He closed the door behind her and he stood and
shivered in the downstairs hall. Then, like a man going to the electric chair,
he went back up the hall steps.
“Who was that?” asked
Daisy, who was now almost dressed.
“My fiancée’s
mother.”
“She’s a real bundle of joy, isn’t she?” She
dressed in the same clothes she had worn the previous
night.
“You going to work like
that?”
“Oh, bless. No, I’ll go home and change. This isn’t
how I look at work, anyway. Can you ring a taxi?”
“Where
are you headed?”
“Hendon.”
He called a
local taxi service. Then he sat on the floor in the hallway and contemplated
various future scenarios, all of them
uncontemplatable.
Someone was standing next to him. “I’ve
got some B vitamins in my bag,” she said. “Or you could try sucking on a
spoonful of honey. It’s never done anything for me, but my flatmate swears by it
for hangovers.”
“It’s not that,” said Fat Charlie. “I told
her you were my cousin. So she wouldn’t think you were my, that we, you know, a
strange girl in the apartment, all that.”
“Cousin, is it?
Well, not to worry. She’ll probably forget all about me, and if she doesn’t,
tell her I left the country mysteriously. You’ll never see me
again.”
“Really? Promise?”
“You don’t
have to sound so pleased about it.”
A car horn sounded in
the street outside. “That’ll be my taxi. Stand up and say
good-bye.”
He stood up.
“Not to
worry,” she said. She hugged him.
“I think my life is
over,” he said.
“No. It’s not.”
“I’m
doomed.”
“Thanks,” she said. And she leaned up, and she
kissed him on the lips, longer and harder than could possibly fit within the
bounds of recent introduction. Then she smiled, and walked jauntily down the
stairs and let herself out.
“This,” said Fat Charlie out
loud when the door closed, “probably isn’t really
happening.”
He could still taste her on his lips, all
orange juice and raspberries. That was a kiss. That was a serious kiss. There
was an oomph behind the kiss that he had never in his whole life had
before, not even from—
“Rosie,” he
said.
He flipped open his phone, and speed-dialed
her.
“This is Rosie’s phone,” said Rosie’s voice. “I’m
busy, or I’ve lost the phone again. And you’re in voice mail. Try me at home or
leave me a message.”
Fat Charlie closed the phone. Then he
put on his coat over his tracksuit and, wincing just a little at the terrible
unblinking daylight, he went out into the
street.
Rosie Noah was worried, which in itself
worried her. It was, as so many things in Rosie’s world were, whether she would
admit it to herself or not, Rosie’s mother’s fault.
Rosie
had become quite used to a world in which her mother hated the idea of her
marrying Fat Charlie Nancy. She took her mother’s opposition to the marriage as
a sign from the heavens that she was probably doing something right, even when
she was not entirely sure in her own mind that this was actually the
case.
And she loved him, of course. He was solid,
reassuring, sane—
Her mother’s about-turn on the matter of
Fat Charlie had Rosie worried, and her mother’s sudden enthusiasm for wedding
organization troubled her deeply.
She had phoned Fat
Charlie the previous night to discuss the matter, but he was not answering his
phones. Rosie thought perhaps he had had an early night.
It
was why she was giving up her lunchtime to talk to him.
The
Grahame Coats Agency occupied the top floor of a gray Victorian building in the
Aldwych, and was at the top of five flights of stairs. There was a lift, though,
an antique elevator which had been installed a hundred years before by
theatrical agent Rupert “Binky” Butterworth. It was an extremely small, slow,
juddery lift whose design and function peculiarities only became comprehensible
when you discovered that Binky Butter-worth had possessed the size, shape, and
ability to squeeze into small spaces of a portly young hippopotamus, and had
designed the lift to fit, at a squeeze, Binky Butterworth and one other, much
slimmer, person: a chorus girl, for example, or a chorus boy—Binky was not
picky. All it took to make Binky happy was someone seeking theatrical
representation squeezed into the lift with him, and a very slow and juddery
journey up all six stories to the top. It was often the case that by the time he
reached the top floor, Binky would be so overcome by the pressures of the
journey that he would need to go and have a little lie-down, leaving the chorus
girl or chorus boy to cool his or her heels in the waiting room, concerned that
the red-faced panting and uncontrolled gasping for breath that Binky had been
suffering from as they reached the final floors meant that he had been having
some kind of early Edwardian embolism.
People would go into
the lift with Binky Butterworth once, but after that they used the
stairs.
Grahame Coats, who had purchased the remains of the
Butterworth Agency from Binky’s granddaughter more than twenty years before,
maintained the lift was part of history.
Rosie slammed the
inner accordion door, closed the outer door, and went into reception, where she
told the receptionist she wanted to see Charles Nancy. She sat down beneath the
photographs of Grahame Coats with people he had represented—she recognized
Morris Livingstone, the comedian, some once famous boy-bands, and a clutch of
sports stars who had, in their later years, become “personalities”—the kind who
got as much fun out of life as they could until a new liver became
available.
A man came into reception. He did not look much
like Fat Charlie. He was darker, and he was smiling as if he were amused by
everything—deeply, dangerously amused.
“I’m Fat Charlie
Nancy,” said the man.
Rosie walked over to Fat Charlie and
gave him a peck on the cheek. He said, “Do I know you?” which was an odd thing
to say, and then he said, “Of course I do. You’re Rosie. And you get more
beautiful every day,” and he kissed her back, touching his lips to hers. Their
lips only brushed, but Rosie’s heart began to beat like Binky Butterworth’s
after a particularly juddery lift journey pressed up against a
chorine.
“Lunch,” squeaked Rosie. “Passing. Thought maybe
we could. Talk.”
“Yeah,” said the man who Rosie now thought
of as Fat Charlie. “Lunch.”
He put a comfortable arm around
Rosie. “Anywhere you want to go for lunch?”
“Oh,” she said.
“Just. Wherever you want.” It was the way he smelled, she thought. Why had she
never before noticed how much she liked the way he
smelled?
“We’ll find somewhere,” he said. “Shall we take
the stairs?”
“If it’s all the same to you,” she said, “I
think I’d rather take the lift.”
She banged home the
accordion door, and they rode down to street level slowly and shakily, pressed
up against each other.
Rosie couldn’t remember the last
time she had been so happy.
When they got out onto the
street Rosie’s phone beeped to let her know she had missed a call. She ignored
it.
They went into the first restaurant they came to. Until
the previous month it had been a high-tech sushi restaurant, with a conveyor
belt that ran around the room carrying small raw fishy nibbles priced according
to plate color. The Japanese restaurant had gone out of business and had been
instantly replaced, in the way of London restaurants, by a Hungarian restaurant,
which had kept the conveyor belt as a high-tech addition to the world of
Hungarian cuisine, which meant that rapidly cooling bowls of goulash, paprika
dumplings, and pots of sour cream made their way in stately fashion around the
room.
Rosie didn’t think it was going to catch
on.
“Where were you last night?” she
asked.
“I went out,” he said. “With my
brother.”
“You’re an only child,” she
said.
“I’m not. It turns out I’m half of a matched
set.”
“Really? Is this more of your dad’s
legacy?”
“Honey,” said the man she thought of as Fat
Charlie, “you don’t know the half of it.”
“Well,” she said.
“I hope he’ll be coming to the wedding.”
“I don’t believe
he would miss it for the world.” He closed his hand around hers, and she nearly
dropped her goulash spoon. “What are you doing for the rest of the
afternoon?”
“Not much. Things are practically dead back at
the office right now. Couple of fund-raising phone calls to make, but they can
wait. Is there. Um. Were you. Um. Why?”
“It’s such a
beautiful day. Do you want to go for a walk?”
“That,” said
Rosie, “would be quite lovely.”
They wandered down to the
Embankment and began to walk along the northern back of the Thames, a slow,
hand-in-hand amble, talking about nothing much in
particular.
“What about your work?” asked Rosie,
when they stopped to buy an ice cream.
“Oh,” he said. “They
won’t mind. They probably won’t even notice that I’m not
there.”
Fat Charlie ran up the stairs to the
Grahame Coats Agency. He always took the stairs. It was healthier, for a start,
and it meant he would never again have to worry about finding himself wedged
into the lift with someone else, too close to pretend they weren’t
there.
He walked into reception, panting slightly. “Has
Rosie been in, Annie?”
“Did you lose her?” said the
receptionist.
He walked back to his office. His desk was
peculiarly tidy. The clutter of undealt-with correspondence was gone. There was
a yellow Post-it note on his computer screen, with “See me. GC” on
it.
He knocked on Grahame Coats’s office door. This time a
voice said, “Yes?”
“It’s me,” he
said.
“Yes,” said Grahame Coats. “Come ye in, Master Nancy.
Pull up a pew. I’ve been giving our conversation of this morning a great deal of
thought. And it seems to me that I have misjudged you. You have been working
here, for, how long—?”
“Nearly two
years.”
“You have been working long and hard. And now your
father’s sad passing—.”
“I didn’t really know
him.”
“Ah. Brave soul, Nancy. Given that it is currently
the fallow season, how would you react to an offer of a couple of weeks off?
With, I hardly need to add, full pay?”
“Full pay?” said Fat
Charlie.
“Full pay, but, yes, I see your point. Spending
money. I’m sure you could do with a little spending money, couldn’t
you?”
Fat Charlie tried to work out what universe he was
in. “Am I being fired?”
Grahame Coats laughed then, like a
weasel with a sharp bone stuck in its throat. “Absatively not. Quite the
reverse. In fact I believe,” he said, “that we now understand each other
perfectly. Your job is safe and sound. Safe as houses. As long as you remain the
model of circumspection and discretion you have been so
far.”
“How safe are houses?” asked Fat
Charlie.
“Extremely safe.”
“It’s just
that I read somewhere that most accidents occur in the
home.”
“Then,” said Grahame Coats, “I think it vitally
important that you are encouraged to return to your own house with all
celerity.” He handed Fat Charlie a piece of rectangular paper. “Here,” he said.
“A small thank-you for two years of devoted service to the Grahame Coats
Agency.” Then, because it was what he always said when he gave people money,
“Don’t spend it all at once.”
Fat Charlie looked at the
piece of paper. It was a check. “Two thousand pounds. Gosh. I mean, I
won’t.”
Grahame Coats smiled at Fat Charlie. If there was
triumph in that smile, Fat Charlie was too puzzled, too shaken, too bemused to
see it.
“Go well,” said Grahame
Coats.
Fat Charlie went back to his
office.
Grahame Coats leaned around the door, casually,
like a mongoose leaning idly against a snake-den. “An idle question. If, while
you are off enjoying yourself and relaxing—a course of action I cannot press
upon you strongly enough—if, during this time, I should need to access your
files, could you let me know your password?”
“I think your
password should get you anywhere in the system,” said Fat
Charlie.
“Without doubt it will,” agreed Grahame Coats,
blithely. “But just in case. You know computers, after
all.”
“It’s mermaid,” said Fat Charlie.
“M-E-R-M-A-I-D.”
“Excellent,” said Grahame Coats.
“Excellent.” He didn’t rub his hands together, but he might as well have
done.
Fat Charlie walked down the stairs with a check for
two thousand pounds in his pocket, wondering how he could have so misjudged
Grahame Coats for the last two years.
He walked around the
corner to his bank, and deposited the check into his
account.
Then he walked down to the Embankment, to breathe,
and to think.
He was two thousand pounds richer. His
headache of this morning had completely gone. He was feeling solid and
prosperous. He wondered if he could talk Rosie into coming on a short holiday
with him. It was short notice, but still—
And then he saw
Spider and Rosie, walking hand in hand on the other side of the road. Rosie was
finishing an ice cream. Then she stopped and dropped the remainder of the ice
cream into a bin and pulled Spider toward her and, with an ice-creamy mouth,
began to kiss him with enthusiasm and gusto.
Fat Charlie
could feel his headache coming back. He felt paralyzed.
He
watched them kissing. He was of the opinion that sooner or later they would have
to come up for air, but they didn’t, so he walked in the other direction,
feeling miserable, until he reached the tube.
And he went
home.
By the time he got home, Fat Charlie felt pretty
wretched, so he got onto a bed that still smelled faintly of Daisy, and he
closed his eyes.
Time passed, and now Fat Charlie was
walking along a sandy beach with his father. They were barefoot. He was a kid
again, and his father was ageless.
So, his father
was saying, howareyou and Spider getting
on?
This is adream, pointed out Fat
Charlie, andIdon’t want to talk about
it.
You boys, said his father, shaking his head.
Listen. I’m going to tell you something
important.
What?
But his
father did not answer. Something on the edge of the waves had caught his eye,
and he reached down and picked it up. Five pointed legs flexed
languidly.
Starfish, said his father, musing.
When you cut one in half, they just grow into two new
starfish.
I thought you said you were going to tell
me something important.
His father clutched his chest,
and he collapsed onto the sand and stopped moving. Worms came out of the sand
and devoured him in moments, leaving nothing but
bones.
Dad?
Fat Charlie woke up
in his bedroom with his cheeks wet with tears. Then he stopped crying. He had
nothing to be upset about. His father had not died; it had simply been a bad
dream.
He decided that he would invite Rosie over tomorrow
night. They would have steak. He would cook. All would be
well.
He got up and got dressed.
He
was in the kitchen, twenty minutes later, spooning down a Pot Noodle, when it
occurred to him that, although what had happened on the beach had been a dream,
his father was still dead.
Rosie stopped in at
her mother’s flat in Wimpole street, late that
afternoon.
“I saw your boyfriend today,” said Mrs. Noah.
Her given name had been Eutheria, but in the previous three decades nobody had
used it to her face but her late husband, and following his death it had
atrophied and was unlikely to be used again in her
lifetime.
“So did I,” said Rosie. “My god I love that
man.”
“Well, of course. You’re marrying him, aren’t
you?”
“Well, yes. I mean, I always knew I loved him, but
today I really saw how much I loved him. Everything about
him.”
“Did you find out where he was last
night?”
“Yes. He explained it all. He was out with his
brother.”
“I didn’t know he had a
brother.”
“He hadn’t mentioned him before. They aren’t very
close.”
Rosie’s mother clicked her tongue. “Must be quite a
family reunion going on. Did he mention his cousin,
too?”
“Cousin?”
“Or maybe his sister.
He didn’t seem entirely sure. Pretty thing, in a trashy sort of way. Looked a
bit Chinese. No better than she should be, if you ask me. But that’s that whole
family for you.”
“Mum. You haven’t met his
family.”
“I met her. She was in his kitchen this morning,
walking about that place damn near naked. Shameless. If she was his
cousin.”
“Fat Charlie wouldn’t
lie.”
“He’s a man isn’t
he?”
“Mum!”
“And why wasn’t he
at work today, anyway?”
“He was. He was at work today. We
had lunch together.”
Rosie’s mother examined her lipstick
in a pocket mirror, then, with her forefinger, rubbed the scarlet smudges off
her teeth.
“What else did you say to him?” asked
Rosie.
“We just talked about the wedding, how I didn’t want
his best man making one of them near-the-knuckle speeches. He looked to me like
he’d been drinking. You know how I warned you about marrying a drinking
man.”
“Well, he looked perfectly fine when I saw him,” said
Rosie primly. Then, “Oh Mum, I had the most wonderful day. We walked and we
talked and—oh, have I told you how wonderful he smells? And he has the
softest hands.”
“You ask me,” said her mother, “he smells
fishy. Tell you what, next time you see him, you ask him about this cousin of
his. I’m not saying she is his cousin, and I’m not saying she’s not. I’m just
saying that if she is, then he has hookers and strippers and good-time girls in
his family and is not the kind of person you should be seeing
romantically.”
Rosie felt more comfortable, now her mother
was once more coming down against Fat Charlie. “Mum. I won’t hear another
word.”
“All right. I’ll hold my tongue. It’s not me that’s
marrying him, after all. Not me that’s throwing my life away. Not me that’ll be
weeping into my pillow while he’s out all night drinking with his fancy women.
It’s not me that’ll be waiting, day after day, night after empty night, for him
to get out of prison.”
“Mum!” Rosie tried to be indignant,
but the thought of Fat Charlie in prison was too funny, too silly, and she found
herself stifling a giggle.
Rosie’s phone trilled. She
answered it, and said “Yes,” and “I’d love to. That would be wonderful.” She put
her phone away.
“That was him,” she said to her mother.
“I’m going over there tomorrow night. He’s cooking for me. How sweet is that?”
And then she said, “Prison indeed.”
“I’m a mother,” said
her mother, in her foodless flat where the dust did not dare to settle, “and I
know what I know.”
Grahame Coats sat in his
office, while the day faded into dusk, staring at a computer screen. He brought
up document after document, spreadsheet after spreadsheet. Some of them he
changed. Most of them he deleted.
He was meant to be
traveling to Birmingham that evening, where a former footballer, a client of
his, was to open a nightclub. Instead he called and apologized: some things were
unavoidable.
Soon the light outside the window was gone
entirely. Grahame Coats sat in the cold glow of the computer screen, and he
changed, and he overwrote, and he deleted.
Here’s
another story they tell about Anansi.
Once, long, long ago,
Anansi’s wife planted a field of peas. They were the finest, the fattest, the
greenest peas you ever did see. It would have made your mouth water just to look
at them.
From the moment Anansi saw the pea field, he
wanted them. And he didn’t just want some of them, for Anansi was a man of
enormous appetites. He did not want to share them. He wanted them
all.
So Anansi lay down on his bed and he sighed, long long
and loud, and his wife and his sons all came a-running. “I’m a-dying,” said
Anansi, in this little weeny- weedy- weaky voice, “and my life is all over and
done.”
At this his wife and his sons began to cry hot
tears.
In his weensy-weak voice, Anansi says, “On my
deathbed, you have to promise me two things.”
“Anything,
anything,” says his wife and his sons.
“First, you got to
promise me you will bury me down under the big breadfruit
tree.”
“The big breadfruit tree down by the pea patch, you
mean?” asks his wife.
“Of course that’s the one I mean,”
says Anansi. Then, in his weensy-weak voice, he says, “And you got to promise
something else. Promise me that, as a memorial to me, you going to make a little
fire at the foot of my grave. And, to show you ain’t forgotten me, you going to
keep the little fire burning, and not ever let it go
out.”
“We will! We will!” said Anansi’s wife and children,
wailing and sobbing.
“And on that fire, as mark of your
respect and your love, I want to see a lickle pot, filled with saltwater, to
remind you all of the hot salt tears you shed over me as I lay
dying.”
“We shall! We shall!” they wept, and Anansi, he
closed his eyes, and he breathed no more.
Well, they
carried Anansi down to the big breadfruit tree that grew beside the pea patch,
and they buried him six feet down, and at the foot of the grave they built a
little fire, and they put a pot beside it, filled with
saltwater.
Anansi, he waits down there all the day but when
night falls he climbs out of the grave, and he goes into the pea patch, where he
picks him the fattest, sweetest, ripest peas. He gathers them up, and he boils
them up in his pot, and he stuffs himself with them till his tummy swells and
tightens like a drum.
Then, before dawn, he goes back under
the ground, and he goes back to sleep. He sleeps as his wife and his sons find
the peas gone; he sleeps through them seeing the pot empty of water and
refilling it; he sleeps through their sorrow.
Each night
Anansi comes out of his grave, dancing and delighting at the cleverness of him,
and each night he fills the pot with peas, and he fills his tummy with peas, and
he eats until he cannot eat another thing.
Days go by, and
Anansi’s family gets thinner and thinner, for nothing ever ripens that isn’t
picked in the night by Anansi, and they got nothing to
eat.
Anansi’s wife, she looks down at the empty plates, and
she says to her sons, “What would your father do?”
Her
sons, they think and they think, and they remember every tale that Anansi ever
told them. Then they go down to the tar pits, and they buy them sixpennyworth of
tar, enough to fill four big buckets, and they take that tar back to the pea
patch. And down in the middle of the pea patch, they make them a man out of tar:
tar face, tar eyes, tar arms, tar fingers, and tar chest. It was a fine man, as
black and as proud as Anansi himself.
That night, old
Anansi, fat as he has ever been in his whole life, he scuttles up out of the
ground, and, plump and happy, stomach swollen like a drum, he strolls over to
the pea patch.
“Who you?” he says to the tar
man.
The tar man, he don’t say one
word.
“This is my place,” said Anansi to the tar man. “It’s
my pea patch. You better get going, if you know what’s good for
you.”
The tar man, he don’t say one word, he don’t move a
muscle.
“I’m the strongest, mightiest, most powerful fellow
there is or was or ever will be,” says Anansi to the tar man. “I’m fiercer than
Lion, faster than Cheetah, stronger than Elephant, more terrible than Tiger.” He
swelled up with pride at his power and strength and fierceness, and he forgot he
was just a little spider. “Tremble,” says Anansi. “Tremble and
run.”
The tar man, he didn’t tremble and he didn’t run.
Tell the truth, he just stood there.
So Anansi hits
him.
Anansi’s fist, it sticks
solid.
“Let go of my hand,” he tells the tar man. “Let go
my hand, or I’m going to hit you in the face.”
The tar man,
he says not a word, and he doesn’t move the tiniest muscle, and Anansi hits him,
bash, right in the face.
“Okay,” says Anansi, “a joke’s a
joke. You can keep hold of my hands if you like, but I got four more hands, and
two good legs, and you can’t hold them all, so you let me go and I’ll take it
easy on you.”
The tar man, he doesn’t let go of Anansi’s
hands, and he doesn’t say a word, so Anansi hits him with all his hands and then
kicks him with his feet, one after another.
“Right,” says
Anansi. “You let me go, or I bite you.” The tar fills his mouth, and
covers his nose and his face.
So that’s how they find
Anansi the next morning, when his wife and his sons come down to the pea patch
by the old breadfruit tree: all stuck to the tar man, and dead as
history.
They weren’t surprised to see him like
that.
Those days, you used to find Anansi like that all the
time.
Chapter Six
in which Fat Charlie fails to get home, even by
taxi
Daisy woke up to the alarm. She stretched
in her bed like a kitten. She could hear the shower, which meant that her
flatmate was already up. She put on a pink fuzzy dressing gown and went into the
hall.
“You want porridge?” she called through the bathroom
door.
“Not much. If you’re making it, I’ll eat
it.”
“You certainly know how to make a girl feel wanted,”
said Daisy, and she went into the kitchenette and put the porridge on to
cook.
She went back into her bedroom, pulled on her work
clothes, then looked at herself in the mirror. She made a face. She put her hair
up into a tight bun at the back.
Her flatmate, Carol, a
thin-faced white woman from Preston, stuck her head around the bedroom door. She
was toweling her hair vigorously. “Bathroom’s all yours. What’s the word on the
porridge?”
“Probably needs a
stir.”
“So where were you the other night anyway? You said
you were going off to Sybilla’s birthday drinks, and I know you never came
back.”
“None of your beeswax, innit.” Daisy went into the
kitchen and stirred the porridge. She added a pinch of salt and stirred it some
more. She glopped the porridge into bowls and placed them on the
counter.
“Carol? Porridge is getting
cold.”
Carol came in, sat down, stared at the porridge. She
was only half-dressed. “S’not a proper breakfast, is it? You ask me, a proper
breakfast is fried eggs, sausages, black pudden, and grilled
tomatoes.”
“You cook it,” said Daisy, “I’ll eat
it.”
Carol sprinkled a dessert-spoonful of sugar on her
porridge. She looked at it. Then she sprinkled another one on. “No, you bloody
won’t. You say that you will. But you’ll start rabbiting on about cholesterol or
what fried food is doing to your kidneys.” She tasted the porridge as if it
might bite her back. Daisy passed her a cup of tea. “You and your kidneys.
Actually, that might be nice for a change. You ever eaten kidneys,
Daisy?”
“Once,” said Daisy. “If you ask me, you can get the
same effect by grilling half a pound of liver, then weeing all over
it.”
Carol sniffed. “That wasn’t called for,” she
said.
“Eat your porridge.”
They
finished their porridge and their tea. They put the bowls in the dishwasher and,
because it was not yet full, did not turn it on. Then they drove in to work.
Carol, who was now in uniform, did the driving.
Daisy went
up to her desk, in a room filled with empty desks.
The
phone rang as she sat down. “Daisy? You’re late.”
She
looked at her watch. “No,” she said. “I’m not. Sir. Now is there anything else I
can do for you this morning?”
“Too right. You can call a
man named Coats. He’s a friend of the chief super. Fellow Crystal Palace
supporter. He’s already texted me about it twice this morning. Who taught the
chief super to text, that’s what I want to know?”
Daisy
took down the details and called the number. She put on her most businesslike
and efficient tone of voice and said, “Detective Constable Day. How can I help
you?”
“Ah,” said a man’s voice. “Well, as I was telling the
chief superintendent last night, a lovely man, old friend. Good man. He
suggested I talk to someone in your office. I wish to report. Well, I’m not
actually certain that a crime has been committed. Probably a perfectly sensible
explanation. There have been certain irregularities, and, well, to be perfectly
frank with you, I’ve given my bookkeeper a couple of weeks’ leave while I try to
come to grips with the possibility that he may have been involved in certain,
mm, financial irregularities.”
“Suppose we get the
details,” said Daisy. “What’s your full name, sir? And the bookkeeper’s
name?”
“My name is Grahame Coats,” said the man on the
other end of the telephone. “Of the Grahame Coats Agency. My bookkeeper is a man
named Nancy. Charles Nancy.”
She wrote both names down.
They did not ring any bells.
Fat Charlie had
planned to have an argument with spider as soon as Spider came home. He had
rehearsed the argument in his head, over and over, and had won it, both fairly
and decisively, every time.
Spider had not, however, come
home last night, and Fat Charlie had eventually fallen asleep in front of the
television, half-watching a raucous game show for horny insomniacs, which seemed
to be called
Show Us Your Bum! He woke up on the
sofa, when Spider pulled open the curtains. “Beautiful day,” said
Spider.
“You!” said Fat Charlie. “You were kissing Rosie.
Don’t try to deny it.”
“I had to,” said
Spider.
“What do you mean, you had to? You didn’t have
to.”
“She thought I was you.”
“Well,
you knew you weren’t me. You shouldn’t have kissed
her.”
“But if I had refused to kiss her, she would have
thought it was you not kissing her.”
“But it wasn’t
me.”
“She didn’t know that. I was just trying to be
helpful.”
“Being helpful,” said Fat Charlie, from the sofa,
“is something you do that, generally speaking, involves
not kissing my
fiancée. You could have said you had a toothache.”
“That,”
said Spider, virtuously, “would have been lying.”
“But you
were lying already! You were pretending to be me!”
“Well,
it would have been compounding the lie, anyway,” explained Spider. “Something I
only did because you were in no shape to go to work. No,” he said, “I couldn’t
have lied further. I would have felt dreadful.”
“Well, I
did feel dreadful. I had to watch you kissing
her.”
“Ah,” said Spider. “But she
thought she was
kissing
you.”
“Don’t keep saying
that!”
“You should feel flattered.” Spider said, “Do you
want lunch?”
“Of course I don’t want lunch. What time is
it?”
“Lunchtime,” said Spider. “And you’re late for work
again. It’s a good thing I didn’t cover for you again, if this is all the thanks
I get.”
“S’okay,” said Fat Charlie. “I’ve been given two
weeks off. And a bonus.”
Spider raised an
eyebrow.
“Look,” said Fat Charlie, feeling like it was time
to move to the second round of the argument, “it’s not like I’m trying to get
rid of you or anything, but I was wondering when you were thinking of
leaving?”
Spider said, “Well, when I came here, I’d only
planned to visit for a day. Maybe two days. Long enough to meet my little
brother, and then I’d be on my way. I’m a busy man.”
“So
you’re leaving today.”
“That
was my plan,” said
Spider. “But then I met you. I cannot believe that we have let almost an entire
lifetime go by without each other’s company, my
brother.”
“I can.”
“The ties of
blood,” said Spider, “are stronger than water.”
“Water’s
not strong,” objected Fat Charlie.
“Stronger than vodka,
then. Or volcanoes. Or, or ammonia. Look, my point is that meeting you—well,
it’s a privilege. We’ve never been part of each other’s lives, but that was
yesterday. Let’s start a new tomorrow, today. We’ll put yesterday behind us and
forge new bonds—the bonds of brotherhood.”
“You’re totally
after Rosie,” said Fat Charlie.
“Totally,” agreed Spider.
“What do you plan to do about it?”
“Do about it? Well,
she’s
my fiancée.”
“Not to worry. She thinks I’m
you.”
“Will you stop saying
that?”
Spider spread his hands in a saintly gesture, then
ruined the effect by licking his lips.
“So,” said Fat
Charlie, “what are you planning to do next? Marry her, pretending to be
me?”
“Marry?” Spider paused and thought for a moment.
“What. A horrible. Idea.”
“Well, I was quite looking
forward to it, actually.”
“Spider does not marry. I’m not
the marrying kind.”
“So my Rosie’s not good enough for you,
is that what you’re saying?”
Spider did not answer. He
walked out of the room.
Fat Charlie felt like he’d scored,
somehow, in the argument. He got up from the sofa, picked up the empty foil
cartons that had, the previous evening, held a chicken chow mein and a crispy
pork balls, and he dropped them into the bin. He went into his bedroom, where he
took off the clothes he had slept in in order to put on clean clothes,
discovered that, due to not doing the laundry, he had no clean clothes, so
brushed yesterday’s clothes down vigorously—dislodging several stray strands of
chow mein—and put them back on.
He went into the
kitchen.
Spider was sitting at the kitchen table, enjoying
a steak large enough for two people.
“Where did you get
that from?” said Fat Charlie, although he was certain that he already
knew.
“I asked you if you wanted lunch,” said Spider,
mildly.
“Where did you get the
steak?”
“It was in the
fridge.”
“That,” declaimed Fat Charlie, wagging his finger
like a prosecuting attorney going in for the kill, “
that was the steak I
bought for dinner tonight. For dinner tonight for me and Rosie. The dinner I was
going to be cooking for her! And you’re just sitting there like a, a person
eating a steak, and, and eating it, and—”
“It’s not a
problem,” said Spider.
“What do you mean, not a
problem?”
“Well,” said Spider, “I called Rosie this morning
already, and I’m taking her out to dinner tonight. So you wouldn’t have needed
the steak anyway.”
Fat Charlie opened his mouth. He closed
it again. “I want you out,” he said.
“It’s a good thing for
man’s desire to outstrip his something or other—grasp or reach or something—or
what else is Heaven for?” said Spider, cheerfully, between mouthfuls of Fat
Charlie’s steak.
“What the hell does that
mean?”
“It means I’m not going anywhere. I like it here.”
He hacked off another lump of steak, shoveled it
down.
“Out,” said Fat Charlie, and then the hall telephone
rang. Fat Charlie sighed, walked into the hall, and answered it.
“What?”
“Ah. Charles. Good to hear your voice. I know
you’re currently enjoying your well-earned, but do you think it might be within
the bounds of possibility for you to swing by for, oh, half an hour or so,
tomorrow morning? Say, around ten-ish?”
“Yeah. Course,”
said Fat Charlie. “Not a problem.”
“Delighted to hear it.
I’ll need your signature on some papers. Well, until
then.”
“Who was that?” asked Spider. He had cleaned his
plate and was blotting his mouth with a paper
towel.
“Grahame Coats. He wants me to pop in
tomorrow.”
Spider said, “He’s a
bastard.”
“So? You’re a
bastard.”
“Different kind of bastard. He’s not good news.
You should find another job.”
“I love my job!” Fat Charlie
meant it when he said it. He had managed entirely to forget how much he disliked
his job, and the Grahame Coats Agency, and the ghastly,
lurking-behind-every-door presence of Grahame Coats.
Spider
stood up. “Nice piece of steak,” he said. “I’ve set my stuff up in your spare
room.”
“You’ve what?”
Fat Charlie
hurried down to the end of the hall, where there was a room that technically
qualified his residence as a two-bedroom flat. The room contained several
cartons of books, a box containing an elderly Scalextric Racing set, a tin box
filled with Hot Wheels cars (most of them missing tires), and various other
battered remnants of Fat Charlie’s childhood. It might have been a good-sized
bedroom for a normal-sized garden gnome or an undersized dwarf, but for anyone
else it was a closet with a window.
Or rather, it used to
be, but it wasn’t. Not anymore.
Fat Charlie pulled the door
open and stood in the hallway, blinking.
There was a room,
yes; that much was still true, but it was an enormous room. A magnificent room.
There were windows at the far end, huge picture windows, looking out over what
appeared to be a waterfall. Beyond the waterfall, the tropical sun was low on
the horizon, and it burnished everything in its golden light. There was a
fireplace large enough to roast a pair of oxen, upon which three burning logs
crackled and spat. There was a hammock in one corner, along with a perfectly
white sofa and a four-poster bed. Near the fireplace was something that Fat
Charlie, who had only ever seen them in magazines, suspected was probably some
kind of Jacuzzi. There was a zebra-skin rug, and a bear pelt hanging on one
wall, and there was the kind of advanced audio equipment that mostly consists of
a black piece of polished plastic that you wave at. On one wall hung a flat
television screen that was the width of the room that should have been there.
And there was more—
“What have you done?” asked Fat
Charlie. He did not go in.
“Well,” said Spider from behind
him, “seeing as I’m going to be here for a few days, I thought I’d bring my
stuff over.”
“Bring your stuff?
Bringing your stuff
is a couple of carrier bags filled with laundry, some PlayStation games and a
spider plant. This is—
this is—” He was out of
words.
Spider patted Fat Charlie’s shoulder as he pushed
past. “If you need me,” he said to his brother, “I’ll be in my room.” And he
shut the door behind him.
Fat Charlie shook the doorknob.
The door was now locked.
He went into the TV room, got the
phone from the hall, and dialed Mrs. Higgler’s number.
“Who
the hell is this at this time of the morning?” she
said.
“It’s me. Fat Charlie. I’m
sorry.”
“Well? What you callin’
about?”
“Well, I was calling to ask your advice. You see,
my brother came out here.”
“Your
brother.”
“Spider. You told me about him. You said to ask a
spider if I wanted to see him, and I did, and he’s
here.”
“Well,” she said, noncommittally, “that’s
good.”
“It’s not.”
“Why not? He’s
family, isn’t he?”
“Look, I can’t go into it now. I just
want him to go away.”
“Have you tried asking him
nicely?”
“We just got through with all that. He says he
isn’t going. He’s set up something that looks like the pleasure dome of Kublai
Khan in my box room and, I mean, round here you need the council’s permission
just to put in double glazing. He’s got some kind of waterfall in there. Not in
there, it’s on the other side of the window. And he’s after my
fiancée.”
“How do you know?”
“He said
so.”
Mrs. Higgler said, “I’m not at my best before I have
my coffee.”
“I just need to know how to make him go
away.”
“I don’t know,” said Mrs. Higgler. “I will talk to
Mrs. Dunwiddy about it.” She hung up.
Fat Charlie went back
down to the end of the corridor and knocked on the
door.
“What is it now?”
“I want to
talk.”
The door clicked and swung open. Fat Charlie went
inside. Spider was reclining, naked, in the hot tub. He was drinking something
more or less the color of electricity from a long, frosted glass. The huge
picture windows were now wide open, and the roar of the waterfall contrasted
with the low, liquid jazz that emanated from hidden speakers somewhere in the
room.
“Look,” said Fat Charlie, “you have to understand,
this is my house.”
Spider blinked. “
This?” he asked.
“
This is your house?”
“Well, not exactly. But the
principle’s the same. I mean, we’re in my spare room, and you’re a guest.
Um.”
Spider sipped his drink and luxuriated deeper in the
hot water. “They say,” he said, “that houseguests are like fish. They both stink
after three days.”
“Good point,” said Fat
Charlie.
“But it’s hard,” said Spider. “Hard when you’ve
gone a lifetime not seeing your brother. Hard when he didn’t even know you
existed. Harder still when you finally see him and learn that, as far as he’s
concerned, you’re no better than a dead fish.”
“But,” said
Fat Charlie.
Spider stretched in the tub. “I’ll tell you
what,” he said. “I can’t stay here forever. Chill. I’ll be gone before you know
it. And, for my part, I will never think of you as a dead fish. And I appreciate
that we’re both under a lot of stress. So let’s say no more about it. Why don’t
you go and get yourself some lunch—leave your front-door key behind—and then go
and see a movie.”
Fat Charlie put on his jacket and went
outside. He put his door key down beside the sink. The fresh air was wonderful,
although the day was gray and the sky was spitting drizzle. He bought a
newspaper to read. He stopped at the chippie and bought a large bag of chips and
a battered saveloy for his lunch. The drizzle stopped, so he sat on a bench in a
churchyard and read his newspaper and ate his saveloy and
chips.
He very much wanted to see a
film.
He wandered into the Odeon, bought a ticket for the
first thing showing. It was an action-adventure, and it was already on when he
went inside. Things blew up. It was great.
Halfway through
the film it occurred to Fat Charlie that there was something that he was not
remembering. It was in his head somewhere, like an itch an inch behind his eyes,
and it kept distracting him.
The film
ended.
Fat Charlie realized that, although he had enjoyed
it, he had not actually managed to keep much of the film he had just seen in his
head. So he bought a large bag of popcorn and sat through it again. It was even
better the second time.
And the
third.
After that, he thought that perhaps he ought to
think about getting home, but there was a late-night double feature of
Eraserhead and
True Stories, and he had never actually seen either
film, so he watched them both, although he was, by now, really quite hungry,
which meant that by the end he was unsure of what
Eraserhead had actually
been about, or what the lady was doing in the radiator, and he wondered if
they’d let him stay and watch it again, but they explained, very patiently, over
and over, that they were going to close for the night, and inquired as to
whether he didn’t have a home to go to, and wasn’t it time for him to be in
bed?
And of course, he did, and it was, although the fact
of it had slipped his mind for a while. So he walked back to Maxwell Gardens and
was slightly surprised to see that the light was on in his
bedroom.
The curtains were drawn as he reached the house.
Still, there were silhouettes on the window, moving about. He thought he
recognized both of the silhouettes.
They came together;
they blended into one shadow.
Fat Charlie uttered one deep
and terrible howl.
In Mrs. Dunwiddy’s house there
were many plastic animals. The dust moved slowly through the air in that place,
as if it were better used to the sunbeams of a more leisurely age, and could not
be doing with all this fast modern light. There was a transparent plastic cover
on the sofa, and chairs that crackled when you sat down on
them.
In Mrs. Dunwiddy’s house there was pine-scented hard
toilet paper—shiny, uncomfortable strips of greaseproof paper. Mrs. Dunwiddy
believed in economy, and pine-scented hard toilet paper was at the bottom of her
economy drive. You could still get hard toilet paper, if you looked long enough
and were prepared to pay more for it.
Mrs. Dunwiddy’s house
smelled of violet water. It was an old house. People forget that the children
born to settlers in Florida were already old men and women when the dour
Puritans landed at Plymouth Rock. The house didn’t go that far back; it had been
built in the1920 s, during a Florida land development scheme, to be the show
house, to represent the hypothetical houses that all the other buyers would find
themselves eventually unable to build on the plots of gatory swamp they were
being sold. Mrs. Dunwiddy’s house had survived hurricanes without losing a roof
tile.
When the doorbell rang, Mrs. Dunwiddy was stuffing a
small turkey. She tutted, and washed her hands, then walked down the corridor to
her front door, peering out at the world through her thick, thick glasses, her
left hand trailing on the wallpaper.
She opened the door a
crack and peered out.
“Louella? It’s me.” It was Callyanne
Higgler.
“Come in.” Mrs. Higgler followed Mrs. Dunwiddy
back to the kitchen. Mrs. Dunwiddy ran her hands under the tap, then recommenced
taking handfuls of soggy cornbread stuffing and pushing them deep into the
turkey.
“You expectin’ company?”
Mrs.
Dunwiddy made a noncommittal noise. “It always a good idea to be prepared,” she
said. “Now, suppose you tell me what’s going on?”
“Nancy’s
boy. Fat Charlie.”
“What about
him?”
“Well, I tell him about his brother, when he out here
last week.”
Mrs. Dunwiddy pulled her hand out of the
turkey. “That’s not the end of the world,” she said.
“I
tell him how he can contact his brother.”
“Ahh,” said Mrs.
Dunwiddy. She could disapprove with just that one syllable.
“And?”
“He’s turned up in Hingland. Boy’s at his wit’s
end.”
Mrs. Dunwiddy took a large handful of wet cornbread
and rammed it into the turkey with a force that would have made the turkey’s
eyes water, if it still had any. “Can’t get him to go
away?”
“Nope.”
Sharp eyes peered
through thick lenses. Then Mrs. Dunwiddy said, “I done it once. Can’t do it
again. Not that way.”
“I know. But we got to do
something.”
Mrs. Dunwiddy sighed. “It’s true what they say.
Live long enough, you see all your birds come home to
roost.”
“Isn’t there another
way?”
Mrs. Dunwiddy finished stuffing the turkey. She
picked up a skewer, pinned the flap of skin closed. Then she covered the bird
with silver foil.
“I reckon,” she said, “I put it on to
cook late tomorrow morning. It be done in the afternoon, then I put it back into
a hot oven early evening, to get it all ready for
dinner.”
“Who you got comin’ to dinner?” asked Mrs.
Higgler.
“You,” said Mrs. Dunwiddy, “Zorah Bustamonte,
Bella Noles. And Fat Charlie Nancy. By the time that boy gets here, he have a
real appetite.”
Mrs. Higgler said, “He’s coming
here?”
“Aren’t you listening, girl?” said Mrs. Dunwiddy.
Only Mrs. Dunwiddy could have called Mrs. Higgler “girl” without sounding
foolish. “Now, help me get this turkey into the
fridge.”
It would be fair to say that Rosie had,
that evening, just had the most wonderful night of her life: magical, perfect,
utterly fine. She could not have stopped smiling, not even if she had wanted to.
The food had been fabulous, and once they had eaten Fat Charlie had taken her
dancing. It was a proper dance hall, with a small orchestra and people in pastel
clothes who glided across the floor. She felt as if they had traveled in time
together and were visiting a gentler age. Rosie had enjoyed dancing lessons from
the age of five, but had no one to dance with.
“I didn’t
know you could dance,” she told him.
“There are so many
things about me you do not know,” he said.
And that made
her happy. Soon enough, she and this man would be married. There were things
about him she did not know? Excellent. She would have a lifetime in which to
find them out. All sorts of things.
She noticed the way
other women, and other men, looked at Fat Charlie as she walked beside him, and
she was happy she was the woman on his arm.
They walked
through Leicester Square, and Rosie could see the stars shining up above them,
the starlight somehow crisply twinkling, despite the glare of the
streetlights.
For a brief moment, she found herself
wondering why it had never been like this with Fat Charlie before. Sometimes,
somewhere deep inside herself, Rosie had suspected that perhaps she had only
kept going out with Fat Charlie because her mother disliked him so much; that
she had only said
yes when he had asked her to marry him because her
mother would have wanted her to say
no—
Fat Charlie
had taken her out to the West End once. They’d gone to the theater. It was a
birthday surprise for her, but there had been a mix-up on the tickets, which, it
turned out, had actually been issued for the day before; the management were
both understanding and extremely helpful, and they had managed to find Fat
Charlie a seat behind a pillar in the stalls, while Rosie took a seat in the
upper circle behind a violently giggly hen party from Norwich. It had not been a
success, not as these things were counted.
This evening,
though, this evening had been magic. Rosie had not had many perfect moments in
her life, but whatever the total was, it had just gone up by
one.
She loved how she felt when she was with
him.
And once the dancing was done, after they had stumbled
out into the night, giddy on movement and champagne, then Fat Charlie—and, she
thought, why did she think of him as Fat Charlie anyway? for he wasn’t the least
bit fat—put his arm around her and said, “Now, you’re coming back to my place,”
in a voice so deep and real it made her abdomen vibrate; and she said nothing
about working the next day, nothing about there’d be time enough for that kind
of thing when they were married, nothing at all, in fact, while all the time she
thought about how much she didn’t want the evening to end, and how very very
much she wished—no, she
needed—to kiss this man on the lips, and to hold
him.
And then, remembering she had to say something, she
said
yes.
In the cab back to his flat, her hands
held his, and she leaned against him and stared at him as the light from passing
cars and streetlamps illuminated his face.
“You have a
pierced ear,” she said. “Why didn’t I ever notice before that you have a pierced
ear?”
“Hey,” he said with a smile, his voice a deep bass
thrum, “how do you think it makes me feel, when you’ve never even noticed
something like that, even when we’ve been together for, what is it
now?”
“Eighteen months,” said
Rosie.
“For eighteen months,” said her
fiancée.
She leaned against him, breathed him in. “I love
the way you smell,” she told him. “Are you wearing some kind of
cologne?”
“That’s just me,” he told
her.
“Well, you should bottle it.”
She
paid the taxi while he opened the front door. They went up the stairs together.
When they got to the top of the stairs, he seemed to be heading along the
corridor, toward the spare room at the back.
“You know,”
she said, “the bedroom’s here, silly. Where are you
going?”
“Nowhere. I knew that,” he said. They went into Fat
Charlie’s bedroom. She closed the curtains. Then she just looked at him, and was
happy.
“Well,” she said, after a while, “aren’t you going
to try to kiss me?”
“I guess I am,” he said, and he did.
Time melted and stretched and curved. She might have kissed him for a moment, or
for an hour, or for a lifetime. And then—
“What was
that?”
He said, “I didn’t hear
anything.”
“It sounded like someone in
pain.”
“Cats fighting, maybe?”
“It
sounded like a person.”
“Could have been an urban fox. They
can sound a lot like people.”
She stood there with her head
tipped to one side, listening intently. “It’s stopped now,” she said. “Hmm. You
want to know the strangest thing?”
“Uh-huh,” he said, his
lips now nuzzling her neck. “Sure, tell me the strangest thing. But I’ve made it
go away now. It won’t bother you again.”
“The strangest
thing,” said Rosie, “is that it sounded like
you.”
Fat Charlie walked the streets, trying to
clear his head. The obvious course of action was to bang on his own front door
until Spider came down and let him in, then to give Spider and Rosie a piece of
his mind. That was obvious. Perfectly, utterly obvious.
He
just needed to go back to his flat and explain the whole thing to Rosie, and
shame Spider into leaving him alone. That was all he had to do. How hard could
that be?
Harder than it ought to be, that was for certain.
He was not quite sure why he had walked away from his flat. He was even less
certain how to find his way back. Streets he knew, or thought he knew, seemed to
have reconfigured themselves. He found himself walking down dead ends, exploring
endless cul-de-sacs, stumbling through the tangles of late-night London
residential streets.
Sometimes he saw the main road. There
were traffic lights on it, and the lights of fast-food places. He knew that once
he got onto the main road he would be able to find his way back to his house,
but whenever he walked to the main road he would wind up somewhere
else.
Fat Charlie’s feet were starting to hurt. His stomach
rumbled, violently. He was angry, and as he walked he became angrier and
angrier.
The anger cleared his head. The cobwebs
surrounding his thoughts began to evaporate; the web of streets he was walking
began to simplify. He turned a corner and found himself on the main road, next
to the all-night “New Jersey Fried Chicken” outlet. He ordered a family pack of
chicken, and sat and finished it off without any help from anyone else in his
family. When that was done he stood on the pavement until the friendly orange
light of a For Hire sign, attached to a large black cab, came into view, and he
hailed the cab. It pulled up next to him, and the window rolled
down.
“Where to?”
“Maxwell Gardens,”
said Fat Charlie.
“You taking the mickey or something?”
asked the cab driver. “That’s just around the
corner.”
“Will you take me there? I’ll give you an extra
fiver. Honest.”
The cabbie breathed in loudly through his
clenched teeth: it was the noise a car mechanic makes before asking you whether
you’re particularly attached to that engine for sentimental reasons. “It’s your
funeral,” said the cabbie. “Hop in.”
Fat Charlie hopped.
The cabbie pulled out, waited for the lights to change, went around the
corner.
“Where did you say you wanted to go?” asked the
cabbie.
“Maxwell Gardens,” said Fat Charlie. “Number 34.
It’s just past the off-license.”
He was wearing yesterday’s
clothes, and he wished he wasn’t. His mother had always told him to wear clean
underwear, in case he was hit by a car, and to brush his teeth, in case they
needed to identify him by his dental records.
“I know where
it is,” said the cabbie. “It’s just before you get to Park
Crescent.”
“That’s right,” said Fat Charlie. He was falling
asleep in the backseat.
“I must have taken a wrong
turning,” said the cabbie. He sounded irritated. “I’ll turn off the meter, all
right? Call it a fiver.”
“Sure,” said Fat Charlie, and he
snuggled down in the backseat of the taxi, and he slept. The taxi drove on
through the night, trying to get just around the
corner.
Detective Constable Day, currently on a
twelve-month secondment to the Fraud Squad, arrived at the offices of the
Grahame Coats Agency at 9:30A.M. Grahame Coats was waiting for her in reception,
and he walked her back into his office.
“Would you care for
a coffee, tea?”
“No, thank you. I’m fine.” She pulled out a
notebook and sat looking at him expectantly.
“Now, I cannot
stress enough that discretion must needs be the essence of your investigations.
The Grahame Coats Agency has a reputation for probity and fair dealing. At the
Grahame Coats Agency, a client’s money is a sacrosanct trust. I must tell you,
that when I first began to entertain suspicions about Charles Nancy, I dismissed
them as unworthy of a decent man and a hard worker. Had you asked me a week ago
what I thought about Charles Nancy, I would have told you that he was the very
salt of the earth.”
“I’m sure you would. So when did you
become aware that money might have been diverted from clients’
accounts?”
“Well, I’m still not certain. I hesitate to cast
aspersions. Or first stones, for that matter. Judge not, lest ye be
judged.”
On television, thought Daisy, they say “just give
me the facts.” She wished she could say it, but she
didn’t.
She did not like this
man.
“I’ve printed out all the anomalous transactions
here,” he said. “As you’ll see, they were all made from Nancy’s computer. I must
again stress that discretion is of the essence here: clients of the Grahame
Coats Agency include a number of prominent public figures, and, as I said to
your superior, I would count it as a personal favor if this matter could be
dealt with as quietly as possible. Discretion must be your watchword. If,
perchance, we can persuade our Master Nancy simply to return his ill-gotten
gains, I would be perfectly satisfied to let the matter rest there. I have no
desire to prosecute.”
“I can do my best, but at the end of
the day, we gather information and turn it over to the Crown Prosecution
Service.” She wondered how much pull he really had with the chief super. “So
what attracted your suspicions?”
“Ah yes. Frankly and in
all honesty, it was certain peculiarities of behavior. The dog that failed to
bark in the nighttime. The depth the parsley had sunk into the butter. We
detectives find significance in the smallest things, do we not, Detective
Day?”
“Er, it’s Detective Constable Day, really. So, if you
can give me the printouts,” she said, “along with any other documentation, bank
records all that. We may actually need to pick up his computer, to look at the
hard disk.”
“Absa
tively,” he said. His desk phone
rang, and—“If you’ll excuse me?”—he answered it. “He is? Good Lord. Well, tell
him to just wait for me in reception. I’ll come out and see him in a moment.” He
put down the phone. “That,” he said to Daisy, “is what I believe you would call,
in police circles, a right turn-up for the books.”
She
raised an eyebrow.
“That is the aforementioned Charles
Nancy himself, here to see me. Shall we show him in? If you need to, you may use
my offices as an interview room. I’m sure I even have a tape recorder you might
borrow.”
Daisy said, “That won’t be necessary. And the
first thing I’ll need to do is go through all the
paperwork.”
“Right-ho,” he said. “Silly of me. Um, would
you—would you like to look at him?”
“I don’t see that that
would accomplish anything,” said Daisy.
“Oh, I wouldn’t
tell him you were investigating him,” Grahame Coats assured her. “Otherwise he’d
be off to the
costa-del-crime before we could say
prima facie
evidence. Frankly, I like to think of myself as being extremely sympathetic
to the problems of contemporary policing.”
Daisy caught
herself thinking that anyone who would steal money from this man could not be
all bad, which was, she knew, no way for a police officer to
think.
“I’ll lead you out,” he said to
her.
In the waiting room a man was sitting. He looked as if
he had slept in his clothes. He was unshaven, and he looked a little confused.
Grahame Coats nudged Daisy and inclined his head toward the man. Aloud, he said,
“Charles, good Lord, man, look at the state of you. You look
terrible.”
Fat Charlie looked at him blearily. “Didn’t get
home last night,” he said. “Bit of a mix-up with the
taxi.”
“Charles,” said Grahame Coats, “this is Detective
Constable Day, of the Metropolitan Police. She is just here on routine
business.”
Fat Charlie realized there was someone else
there. He focused, saw the sensible clothes that might as well have been a
uniform. Then he saw the face. “Er,” he said.
“Morning,”
said Daisy. That was what she said with her mouth. Inside her head she was going
ohbollocks ohbollocks ohbollocks, over and
over.
“Nice to meet you,” said Fat Charlie. Puzzled, he did
something he had never done before: he imagined a plainclothes police officer
with no clothes on, and found his imagination was providing him with a fairly
accurate representation of the young lady beside whom he had woken up in bed,
the morning after his father’s wake. The sensible clothes made her look slightly
older, more severe, and much scarier, but it was her, all
right.
Like all sentient beings, Fat Charlie had a
weirdness quotient. For some days the needle had been over in the red,
occasionally banging jerkily against the pin. Now the meter broke. From this
moment on, he suspected, nothing would surprise him. He could no longer be
outweirded. He was done.
He was wrong, of
course.
Fat Charlie watched Daisy leave, and he followed
Grahame Coats back into his office.
Grahame Coats closed
the door firmly. Then he perched his bottom against his desk, and smiled like a
weasel who has just realized that he’s been accidentally locked into the
henhouse for the night.
“Let us be blunt,” he said. “Cards
on the table. No beating about the bush. Let us,” he elaborated, “let us call a
spade a spade.”
“All right,” said Fat Charlie, “Let’s. You
said you had something for me to sign?”
“No longer an
operative statement. Dismiss it from your mind. No, let us now discuss something
you pointed out to me several days ago. You alerted me to certain unorthodox
transactions occurring here.”
“I
did?”
“Two, as they say, Charles, two can play at that
game. Naturally, my first impulse was to investigate. Thus the visit this
morning from Detective Constable Day. And what I found will, I suspect, not come
as a shock to you.”
“It won’t?”
“No
indeed. There are, as you pointed out, definite indicators of financial
irregularities, Charles. But alas, there is only one place to which the fickle
finger of suspicion unerringly points.”
“There
is?”
“There is.”
Fat Charlie felt
completely at sea. “Where?”
Grahame Coats attempted to look
concerned, or at least to look as if he were trying to look concerned, managing
an expression which, in babies, always indicates that they are need of a good
burping. “You, Charles. The police suspect you.”
“Yes,”
said Fat Charlie. “Of course they do. It’s been that sort of a
day.”
And he went
home.
Spider opened the front door. It had
started raining, and Fat Charlie stood there looking rumpled and
wet.
“So,” said Fat Charlie. “I’m now allowed home now, am
I?”
“I wouldn’t do anything to stop you,” said Spider.
“It’s your home, after all. Where were you all night?”
“You
know perfectly well where I was. I was failing to come home. I don’t know what
kind of magic ‘fluence you were using on me.”
“It wasn’t
magic,” said Spider, offended. “It was a miracle.”
Fat
Charlie pushed past him and stomped up the stairs. He walked into the bathroom,
put in the plug, and turned on the taps. He leaned out into the hall. “I don’t
care what it’s called. You’re doing it in my house, and you stopped me coming
home last night.”
He took off the day-before-yesterday’s
clothes. Then he put his head back around the door. “And the police are
investigating me at work. Did you tell Grahame Coats that there were financial
irregularities going on?”
“Of course I did,” said
Spider.
“Hah! Well, he only suspects me, that’s
what.”
“Oh, I don’t think he does,” said
Spider.
“Shows all you know,” said Fat Charlie. “I talked
to him. The police are involved. And then there’s Rosie. And you and I are going
to have a very long conversation about Rosie when I get out of the bath. But
first of all, I’m going to get into the bath. I spent yesterday night wandering
around. I got the only sleep of the night in the backseat of a taxi. By the time
I woke up it was five in the morning and my taxi driver was turning into Travis
Bickle. He was conducting a monologue. I told him he might as well give up
looking for Maxwell Gardens, and that it obviously wasn’t a Maxwell Gardens kind
of night, and eventually he agreed so we went and had breakfast in one of those
places taxi drivers have breakfast. Eggs and beans and sausages and toast, and
tea you could stand a spoon up in. When he told the other taxi drivers he’d been
driving all around last night looking for Maxwell Gardens, well, I thought blood
was going to be spilled. It wasn’t. But it looked a pretty close thing for a
minute there.”
Fat Charlie stopped to take a breath. Spider
looked guilty.
“
After,” said Fat Charlie. “After my
bath.” He shut the bathroom door.
He climbed into the
bath.
He made a whimpering noise.
He
climbed out of the bath.
He turned off the
taps.
He wrapped a towel around his midriff and opened the
bathroom door. “No hot water,” he said much, much too calmly. “Do you have any
idea why we have no hot water?”
Spider was still standing
in the hallway. He hadn’t moved. “My hot tub,” he said.
“Sorry.”
Fat Charlie said, “Well, at least Rosie doesn’t. I
mean, she wouldn’t have—“ And then he caught the expression on Spider’s
face.
Fat Charlie said, “I want you out of here. Out of my
life. Out of Rosie’s life. Gone.”
“I like it here,” said
Spider.
“You’re ruining my bloody
life.”
“Tough.” Spider walked down the hallway and opened
the door to Fat Charlie’s spare room. Golden tropical sunlight flooded the
hallway momentarily, then the door was closed.
Fat Charlie
washed his hair in cold water. He brushed his teeth. He rummaged through his
laundry hamper until he found a pair of jeans and a T-shirt that were, by virtue
of being at the bottom, practically clean once more. He put them on, along with
a purple sweater with a teddy bear on it his mother had once given him that he
had never worn but had never got around to giving away.
He
went down to the end of the corridor.
The
boom-chagga-boom of a bass and drums penetrated the
door.
Fat Charlie rattled the door handle. It didn’t budge.
“If you don’t open this door,” he said, “I’m going to break it
down.”
The door opened without warning, and Fat Charlie
lurched inward, into the empty box room at the end of the hall. The view through
the window was the back of the house behind, what little you could see of it
through the rain that was now lashing the
windowpane.
Still, from somewhere only a wall’s thinness
away, a stereo was playing too loudly: everything in the box room vibrated to a
distant
boom-chagga-boom.
“Right,” said Fat Charlie
conversationally. “You realize, of course, that this means war.” It was the
traditional war cry of the rabbit when pushed too far. There are places in which
people believe that Anansi was a trickster rabbit. They are wrong, of course; he
was a spider. You might think the two creatures would be easy to keep separate,
but they still get confused more often than you would
expect.
Fat Charlie went into his bedroom. He retrieved his
passport from the drawer by his bed. He found his wallet where he had left it in
the bathroom.
He walked down to the main road, in the rain,
and hailed a taxi.
“Where
to?”
“Heathrow,” said Fat
Charlie.
“Right you are,” said the cabbie. “Which
terminal?”
“No idea,” said Fat Charlie, who knew that,
really, he ought to know. It had only been a few days, after all. “Where do they
leave for Florida?”
Grahame Coats had begun
planning his exit from the Grahame Coats Agency back when John Major was prime
minister. Nothing good lasts forever, after all. Sooner or later, as Grahame
Coats himself would have delighted in assuring you, even if your goose
habitually lays golden eggs, it will still be cooked. While his planning had
been good—one never knew when one might need to leave at a moment’s notice—and
he was not unaware that events were massing, like gray clouds on the horizon, he
wished to put off the moment of leaving until it could be delayed no
longer.
What was important, he had long ago decided, was
not leaving, but vanishing, evaporating, disappearing without
trace.
In the concealed safe in his office—a walk-in room
he was extremely proud of—on a shelf he had put up himself and had recently
needed to put up again when it fell down, was a leather vanity case containing
two passports, one in the name of Basil Finnegan, the other in the name of Roger
Bronstein. Each of the men had been born about fifty years ago, just as Grahame
Coats had, but had died in their first year of life. Both of the passport
photographs in the passports were of Grahame Coats. The case also contained two
wallets, each with its own set of credit cards and photographic identification
in the name of one of the names of the passport holders. Each name was a
signatory to the funnel accounts in the Caymans, which themselves funneled to
other accounts in the British Virgin Islands, Switzerland, and
Liechtenstein.
Grahame Coats had been planning to leave for
good on his fiftieth birthday, a little more than a year from now, and he was
brooding on the matter of Fat Charlie.
He did not actually
expect Fat Charlie to be arrested or imprisoned, although he would not have
greatly objected to either scenario had it occurred. He wanted him scared,
discredited, and gone.
Grahame Coats truly enjoyed milking
the clients of the Grahame Coats Agency, and he was good at it. He had been
pleasantly surprised to discover that, as long as he picked his clientele with
care, the celebrities and performers he represented had very little sense of
money and were relieved to find someone who would represent them and manage
their financial affairs and make sure that they didn’t have to worry. And if
sometimes statements or checks were late in coming, or if they weren’t always
what the clients were expecting, or if there were unidentified direct debits
from client accounts, well, Grahame Coats had a high staff turnover,
particularly in the bookkeeping department, and there was nothing that couldn’t
easily be blamed on the incompetence of a previous employee or, rarely, made
right with a case of champagne and a large and apologetic
check.
It wasn’t that people liked Grahame Coats, or that
they trusted him. Even the people he represented thought he was a weasel. But
they believed that he was
their weasel, and in that they were
wrong.
Grahame Coats was his own
weasel.
The telephone on his desk rang, and he picked it
up. “Yes?”
“Mister Coats? It’s Maeve Livingstone on the
phone. I know you said to put her through to Fat Charlie, but he’s off this
week, and I wasn’t sure what to say. Shall I tell her you’re
out?”
Grahame Coats pondered. Before a sudden heart attack
had carried him off, Morris Livingstone, once the best-loved short Yorkshire
comedian in the country had been the star of such television series as
Short
Back and Sides and his own Saturday-night variety-game show
Morris
Livingstone, I Presume. He had even had a top-ten single back in the
eighties, with the novelty song, “It’s Nice Out (But Put It Away).” Amiable,
easygoing, he had not only left all his financial affairs in the control of the
Grahame Coats Agency, but he had also appointed, at Grahame Coats’s suggestion,
Grahame Coats himself as trustee of his estate.
It would
have been criminal not to give in to temptation like
that.
And then there was Maeve Livingstone. It would be
fair to say that Maeve Livingstone had, without knowing it, featured for many
years in starring and costarring roles in a number of Grahame Coats’s most
treasured and private fantasies.
Grahame Coats said,
“Please. Put her through,” and then, solicitously, “Maeve, how lovely to hear
from you. How are you?”
“I’m not sure,” she
said.
Maeve Livingstone had been a dancer when she met
Morris, and had always towered over the little man. They had adored each
other.
“Well, why don’t you tell me about
it?”
“I spoke to Charles a couple of days ago. I was
wondering. Well, the bank manager was wondering. The money from Morris’s estate.
We were told we would be seeing something by now.”
“Maeve,”
said Grahame Coats, in what he thought of as his dark velvet voice, the one he
believed that women responded to, “the problem is not that the money is not
there—it’s merely a matter of liquidity. As I’ve told you, Morris made a number
of unwise investments toward the end of his life, and although, following my
advice, he made some sound ones as well, we do need to allow the good ones to
mature: we cannot pull out now without losing almost everything. But worry ye
not, worry ye not. Anything for a good client. I shall write you a check from my
own bank account in order to keep you solvent and comfortable. How much does the
bank manager require?”
“He says that he’s going to have to
start bouncing checks,” she said. “And the BBC tell me that they’ve been sending
money from the DVD releases of the old shows.
That’s not invested, is
it?”
“That’s what the BBC said? Actually,
we’ve been
chasing
them for money. But I wouldn’t want to put all the blame on BBC
Worldwide. Our bookkeeper’s pregnant, and things have been all at sixes and
sevens. And Charles Nancy, who you spoke to, has been rather distraught—his
father died, and he has been out of the country a great
deal—”
“Last time we spoke,” she pointed out, “you were
putting in a new computer system.”
“Indeed we were, and
please, do not get me started on the subject of bookkeeping programs. What is it
they say—to err is human, but to really, er, mess things up, you need a
computer. Something like that. I shall investigate this forcefully, by hand if
necessary, the old-fashioned way, and your moneys shall be wending their way to
you. It’s what Morris would have wanted.”
“My bank manager
says I need ten thousand pounds in right now, just to stop them bouncing
checks.”
“Ten thousand pounds shall be yours. I am writing
a check for you even as we speak.” He drew a circle on his notepad, with a line
going off the top of it. It looked a bit like an
apple.
“I’m very grateful,” said Maeve, and Grahame Coats
preened. “I hope I’m not becoming a bother.”
“You are never
a bother,” said Grahame Coats. “No sort of bother at
all.”
He put down the phone. The funny thing, Grahame Coats
always thought, was that Morris’s comedic persona had always been that of a
hardheaded Yorkshireman, proud of knowing the location of every
penny.
It had been a fine game, thought Grahame Coats, and
he added two eyes to the apple, and a couple of ears. It now looked, he decided,
more or less like a cat. Soon enough it would be time to exchange a life of
milking hard-to-please celebrities for a life of sunshine, swimming pools, fine
meals, good wines, and, if possible, enormous quantities of oral sex. The best
things in life, Grahame Coats was convinced, could all be bought and paid
for.
He drew a mouth on the cat and filled it with sharp
teeth, so it looked a little like a mountain lion, and as he drew he began to
sing, in a reedy tenor voice,
“When I were a young man my father would say
It’s lovely
outside, you should go out to play,
But now that I’m older, the ladies all
say,
It’s nice out, but put it
away—”
Morris Livingstone had bought
and paid for Grahame Coats’s penthouse flat on the Copacabana and for the
installation of the swimming pool on the island of Saint Andrews, and you must
not imagine that Grahame Coats was not grateful.
“It’s nice out, but put it
awaaaay.”
Spider felt
odd.
There was something going on: a strange feeling,
spreading like a mist through his life, and it was ruining his day. He could not
identify it, and he did not like it.
And if there was one
thing that he was definitely
not feeling, it was guilty. It simply wasn’t
the kind of thing he ever felt. He felt excellent. Spider felt cool. He did not
feel guilty. He would not have felt guilty if he was caught red-handed holding
up a bank.
And yet there was, all about him, a faint miasma
of discomfort.
Until now Spider had believed that gods were
different: they had no consciences, nor did they need them. A god’s relationship
to the world, even a world in which he was walking, was about as emotionally
connected as that of a computer gamer playing with knowledge of the overall
shape of the game and armed with a complete set of cheat
codes.
Spider kept himself amused. That was what he did.
That was the important bit. He would not have recognized guilt if he had an
illustrated guide to it with all the component parts clearly labeled. It was not
that he was feckless, more that he had simply not been around the day they
handed out feck. But something had changed—inside him or outside, he was not
sure—and it bothered him. He poured himself another drink. He waved a hand and
made the music louder. He changed it from Miles Davis to James Brown. It still
didn’t help.
He lay on the hammock, in the tropical
sunshine, listening to the music, basking in how extremely cool it was to be
him—and for the first time even that, somehow, wasn’t
enough.
He climbed out of the hammock and wandered over to
the door. “Fat Charlie?”
There was no answer. The flat felt
empty. Outside the windows of the flat, there was a gray day, and rain. Spider
liked the rain. It seemed appropriate.
Shrill and sweet,
the telephone rang. Spider picked it up.
Rosie said, “Is
that you?”
“Hullo Rosie.”
“Last
night,” she said. Then she didn’t say anything. Then she said, “Was it as
wonderful for you as it was for me?”
“I don’t know,” said
Spider. “It was pretty wonderful for me. So, I mean, that’s probably a
yes.”
“Mmm,” she said.
They didn’t say
anything.
“Charlie?” said
Rosie.
“Uh-huh?”
“I even like not
saying anything, just knowing you’re on the other end of the
phone.”
“Me too,” said Spider.
They
enjoyed the sensation of not saying anything for a while longer, savoring it,
making it last.
“Do you want to come over to my place
tonight?” asked Rosie. “My flatmates are in the
Cairngorms.”
“That,” said Spider, “may be a candidate for
the most beautiful phrase in the English language.
Myflatmates are in
the Cairngorms. Perfect poetry.”
She giggled. “Twit.
Um. Bring your toothbrush—?”
“Oh.
Oh.
Okay.”
And after several minutes of “you put down the
phone” and “no
you put the down the phone” that would have done credit to
a pair of hormonally intoxicated fifteen-year-olds, the phone was eventually put
down.
Spider smiled like a saint. The world, given that it
had Rosie in it, was the best world that any world could possibly be. The fog
had lifted, the world had ungloomed.
It did not even occur
to Spider to wonder where Fat Charlie had gone. Why should he care about such
trivia? Rosie’s flat-mates were in the Cairngorms, and tonight? Why, tonight he
would be bringing his toothbrush.
Fat Charlie’s
body was on a plane to Florida; it was crushed in a seat in the middle of a row
of five people, and it was fast asleep. This was a good thing: the rear toilets
had malfunctioned as soon as the plane was in the air, and although the cabin
attendants had hung Out of Order signs on the doors, this did nothing to
alleviate the smell, which spread slowly across the back of the plane like a
low-level chemical fug. There were babies crying and adults grumbling and
children whining. One faction of the passengers, en route to Walt Disney World,
who felt that their holidays began the moment they got on the plane, had got
settled into their seats then began a sing-song. They sang “Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo”
and “The Wonderful Thing About Tiggers,” and “Under the Sea” and “Heigh Ho,
Heigh Ho, It’s Off To Work We Go,” and even, under the impression that it was a
Disney song as well, “We’re Off to See the Wizard.”
Once
the plane was in the air it was discovered that, due to a catering confusion, no
coach class lunch meals had been put on-board. Instead, only breakfasts had been
packed, which meant there would be individual packs of cereal and a banana for
all passengers, which they would have to eat with plastic knives and forks,
because there were, unfortunately, no spoons, which may have been a good thing,
because pretty soon there wasn’t any milk for the cereal,
either.
It was a hell flight, and Fat Charlie was sleeping
through it.
In Fat Charlie’s dream he was in a huge
hall, and he was wearing a morning suit. Next to him was Rosie, wearing a white
wedding dress, and on the other side of her on the dais was Rosie’s mother, who
was, a little jarringly, also wearing a wedding dress, although this one was
covered with dust and with cobwebs. Far away, at the horizon, which was the
distant edge of the hall, there were people firing guns and waving white
flags. It’s just the people at Table H,
said Rosie’s
mother. Don’t pay them no attention.
Fat Charlie
turned to Rosie. She smiled at him with her soft, sweet smile, then she licked
her lips. Cake,
said Rosie, in his
dream.
This was the signal for an orchestra to begin
to play. It was a New Orleans jazz band, playing a funeral
march. The chef’s assistant was a police officer.
She was holding a pair of handcuffs. The chef wheeled the cake up onto the
dais. Now, said Rosie to Fat Charlie, in his dream.
Cut the cake. The people at Table B—who were not
people but cartoon mice and rats and barnyard animals, human-sized, and
celebrating—began to sing songs from Disney cartoons. Fat Charlie knew that they
wanted him to join in with them. Even asleep he could feel himself panicking at
the simple idea of having to sing in public, his limbs becoming numb, his lips
prickling. I can’t sing with you, he
told them,
desperate for an excuse. I have to cut this cake.
At
this, the hall fell into silence. And in the silence, a chef entered, wheeling a
little trolley with something on it. The chef wore Grahame Coats’s face, and on
the trolley was an extravagant white wedding cake, an ornate, many-tiered
confection. A tiny bride and tiny groom perched precariously on the topmost tier
of the cake, like two people trying to keep their balance on top of a
sugar-frosted
ChryslerBuilding. Rosie’s
mother reached under the table and produced a long, wooden-handled knife—almost
a machete—with a rusty blade. She passed it to Rosie, who reached for Fat
Charlie’s right hand and placed it over her own, and together they pressed the
rusty knife into the thick white icing on the topmost tier of the cake, pushed
it in between the groom and the bride. The cake resisted the blade at first, and
Fat Charlie pressed harder, putting all his weight on the knife. He felt the
cake beginning to give. He pushed harder. The blade
sliced through the topmost tier of the wedding cake. It slipped and sliced down
the cake, through every layer and tier, and as it did so, the cake
opened— In his dream, Fat Charlie supposed that the
cake was filled with black beads, with beads of black glass or of polished jet,
and then, as they tumbled out of the cake, he realized that the beads had legs,
each bead had eight clever legs, and they came out the inside of the cake like a
black wave. The spiders surged forward and covered the white tablecloth; they
covered Rosie’s mother and Rosie herself, turning their white dresses black as
ebony; then, as if controlled by some vast and malignant intelligence, they
flowed, in their hundreds, toward Fat Charlie. He turned to run, but his legs
were trapped in some kind of rubbery tanglefoot, and he tumbled to the
floor. Now they were upon him, their tiny legs
crawling over his bare skin; he tried to get up, but he was drowning in
spiders. Fat Charlie wanted to scream, but his mouth
was filled with spiders. They covered his eyes, and his world went
dark— Fat Charlie opened his eyes and saw nothing but
blackness, and he screamed and he screamed and he screamed. Then he realized the
lights were off and the window shades drawn, because people were watching the
film.
It was already a flight from hell. Fat Charlie had
just made it a little worse for everyone else.
He stood up
and tried to get out to the aisle, tripping over people as he went past, then,
when he was almost at the gangway, straightening up and banging the overhead
locker with his forehead, which knocked open the locker door and tumbled
someone’s hand luggage down onto his head.
People nearby,
the ones who were watching, laughed. It was an elegant piece of slapstick, and
it cheered them all up no end.
Chapter Seven
in which Fat Charlie goes a long way
The
immigration officer squinted at Fat Charlie’s American passport as if she were
disappointed he was not a foreign national of the kind she could simply stop
coming into the country then, with a sigh, she waved him
through.
He wondered what he was going to do once he got
through customs. Rent a car, he supposed. And eat.
He got
off the tram and walked through the security barrier, out into the wide shopping
concourse of Orlando Airport, and was nowhere nearly as surprised as he should
have been to see Mrs. Higgler standing there, scanning the faces of the
arrivals, her enormous mug of coffee clutched in her hand. They saw each other
at more or less the same moment, and she headed toward
him.
“You hungry?” she asked him.
He
nodded.
“Well,” she said, “I hope you like
turkey.”
Fat Charlie wondered if Mrs. Higgler’s
maroon station wagon was the same car he remembered her driving when he was a
boy. He suspected that it was. It must have been new once, that stood to reason.
Everything was new once, after all. The seats were cracked and flaking leather;
the dashboard was a dusty wooden veneer.
A brown paper
shopping bag sat between them, on the seat.
There was no
cup holder in Mrs. Higgler’s ancient car, and she clamped the jumbo mug of
coffee between her thighs as she drove. The car appeared to predate
air-conditioning, and she drove with the windows down. Fat Charlie did not mind.
After the damp chill of England, the Florida heat was welcome. Mrs. Higgler
headed south toward the toll road. She talked as she drove: She talked about the
last hurricane, and about how she took her nephew Benjamin to SeaWorld and to
Walt Disney World and how none of the tourist resorts were what they once were,
about building codes, the price of gas, exactly what she had said to the doctor
who had suggested a hip replacement, why tourists kept feeding ‘gators, and why
newcomers built houses on the beaches and were always surprised when the beach
or the house went away or the ‘gators ate their dogs. Fat Charlie let it all
wash over him. It was just talk.
Mrs. Higgler slowed down
and took the ticket that would take her down the toll road. She stopped talking.
She seemed to be thinking.
“So,” she said. “You met your
brother.”
“You know,” said Fat Charlie, “you could have
warned me.”
“I did warn you that he is a
god.”
“You didn’t mention that he was a complete and utter
pain in the arse, though.”
Mrs. Higgler sniffed. She took a
swig of coffee from her mug.
“Is there anywhere we can stop
and get a bite to eat?” asked Fat Charlie. “They only had cereal and bananas on
the plane. No spoons. And they ran out of milk before they got to my row. They
said they were sorry and gave us all food vouchers to make up for
it.”
Mrs. Higgler shook her head.
“I
could have used my voucher to get a hamburger in the
airport.”
“I tell you already,” said Mrs. Higgler. “Louella
Dunwiddy been cooking you a turkey. How do you think she feels if we get there
and you fill up already at McDonald’s and you ain’t got no appetite.
Eh?”
“But I’m starving. And it’s over two hours
away.”
“Not,” she said firmly, “the way I
drive.”
And with that she put her foot down. Every now and
then, as the maroon station wagon shuddered down the freeway, Fat Charlie would
close his eyes tightly while at the same time pushing his own left foot down on
an imaginary brake pedal. It was exhausting work.
In
significantly less than two hours they reached the tollway exit and got onto a
local highway. They drove toward the city. They drove past the Barnes and Noble
and the Office Depot. They went past the seven-figure houses with security
gates. They went down the older residential streets, which Fat Charlie
remembered as being much better cared-for when he was a boy. They went past the
West Indian takeaway and the restaurant with the Jamaican flag in the windows,
with handwritten signs pushing the oxtail and rice specials and the homemade
ginger beer and the curry chicken.
Fat Charlie’s mouth
watered; his stomach made a noise.
A lurch and a bounce.
Now the houses were older, and this time everything was
familiar.
The pink plastic flamingos were still striking
attitudes in Mrs. Dunwiddy’s front yard, although the sun had faded them almost
white over the years. There was a mirrored gazing ball as well, and when Fat
Charlie spotted it he was, only for a moment, as scared as he had ever been of
anything.
“How bad is it, with Spider?” asked Mrs. Higgler,
as they walked up to Mrs. Dunwiddy’s front door.
“Put it
this way,” said Fat Charlie. “I think he’s sleeping with my fiancée. Which is
rather more than I ever did.”
“Ah,” said Mrs. Higgler.
“Tch.” And she rang the doorbell.
It was sort of
like Macbeth, thought Fat Charlie, an hour later; in fact, if the witches
in Macbeth had been four little old ladies and if, instead of stirring
cauldrons and intoning dread incantations, they had just welcomed Macbeth in and
fed him turkey and rice and peas spread out on white china plates on a
red-and-white patterned plastic tablecloth—not to mention sweet potato pudding
and spicy cabbage—and encouraged him to take second helpings, and thirds, and
then, when Macbeth had declaimed that nay, he was stuffed nigh unto bursting and
on his oath could truly eat no more, the witches had pressed upon him their own
special island rice pudding and a large slice of Mrs. Bustamonte’s famous
pineapple upside-down cake, it would have been exactly like
Macbeth.
“So,” said Mrs. Dunwiddy, scratching a
crumb of pineapple upside-down cake from the corner of her mouth, “I understand
your brother come to see you.”
“Yes. I talked to a spider.
I suppose it was my own fault. I never expected anything to
happen.”
A chorus of tuts and tsks and
tchs ran around the table as Mrs. Higgler and Mrs. Dunwiddy and Mrs.
Bustamonte and Miss Noles clicked their tongues and shook their heads. “He
always used to say you were the stupid one,” said Miss Noles. “Your father, that
is. I never believed him.”
“Well, how was I to know?” Fat
Charlie protested. “It’s not as if my parents ever said to me, ‘By the way, Son,
you have a brother you don’t know about. Invite him into your life and he’ll
have you investigated by the police, he’ll sleep with your fiancée, he’ll not
just move into your home but bring an entire extra house into your spare room.
And he’ll brainwash you and make you go to films and spend all night trying to
get home and—’ “ He stopped. It was the way they were looking at
him.
A sigh went around the table. It went from Mrs.
Higgler to Miss Noles to Mrs. Bustamonte to Mrs. Dunwiddy. It was extremely
unsettling and quite spooky, but Mrs. Bustamonte belched and ruined the
effect.
“So what do you want?” asked Mrs. Dunwiddy. “Say
what you want.”
Fat Charlie thought about what he wanted,
in Mrs. Dunwiddy’s little dining room. Outside, the daylight was fading into a
gentle twilight.
“He’s made my life a misery,” said Fat
Charlie. “I want you to make him go away. Just go away. Can you do
that?”
The three younger women said nothing. They simply
looked at Mrs. Dunwiddy.
“We can’t actually make him go
away,” said Mrs. Dunwiddy. “We already—” and she stopped herself, and said,
“Well, we done all we can about that, you see.”
It is to
Fat Charlie’s credit that he did not, as deep down he might have wished to,
burst into tears or wail or collapse in on himself like a problematic soufflé.
He simply nodded. “Well, then,” he said. “Sorry to have bothered you all. Thank
you for the dinner.”
“We can’t make him go away,” said Mrs.
Dunwiddy, her old brown eyes almost black behind her pebble-thick spectacles.
“But we can send you to somebody who can.”
It was
early evening in Florida, which meant that in London it was the dead of night.
In Rosie’s big bed, where Fat Charlie had never been, Spider
shivered.
Rosie pressed close to him, skin to skin.
“Charles,” she said. “Are you all right?” She could feel the goose pimples
bumping the skin of his arms.
“I’m fine,” said Spider.
“Sudden creepy feeling.”
“Somebody walking over your
grave,” said Rosie.
He pulled her close then, and he kissed
her.
And Daisy was sitting in the small common room of the
house in Hendon, wearing a bright green nightdress and fluffy, vivid pink carpet
slippers. She was sitting in front of a computer screen, shaking her head and
clicking the mouse.
“You going to be much longer?” asked
Carol. “You know, there’s a whole computer unit that’s meant to be doing that.
Not you.”
Daisy made a noise. It was not a yes-noise and it
was not a no-noise. It was an
I-know-somebody-just-said-something-to-meand-if-I-make-a-noise-maybe-they’ll-go-away
sort of noise.
Carol had heard that noise
before.
“Oy,” she said. “Big bum. Are you going to be much
longer? I want to do my blog.”
Daisy processed the words.
Two of them sank in. “Are you saying I’ve got a big
bum?”
“No,” said Carol. “I’m saying that it’s getting late,
and I want to do me blog. I’m going to have him shagging a supermodel in the loo
of an unidentified London nightspot.”
Daisy sighed. “All
right,” she said. “It’s just fishy, that’s all.”
“What’s
fishy?”
“Embezzlement. I think. Right, I’ve logged out.
It’s all yours. You know you can get into trouble for impersonating a member of
the royal family.”
“Bog off.”
Carol
blogged as a member of the British Royal Family, young, male, and
out-of-control. There had been arguments in the press about whether or not she
was the real thing, many of them pointing to things she wrote that could only
have been known to an actual member of the British Royal Family, or to someone
who read the glossy gossip magazines.
Daisy got up from the
computer, still pondering the financial affairs of the Grahame Coats
Agency.
While fast asleep in his bedroom, in a large but
certainly not ostentatious house in Purley, Grahame Coats slept. If there was
any justice in the world, he would have moaned and sweated in his sleep,
tortured by nightmares, the furies of his conscience lashing him with scorpions.
Thus it pains me to admit that Grahame Coats slept like a well-fed milk-scented
baby, and he dreamed of nothing at all.
Somewhere in
Grahame Coats’s house, a grandfather clock chimed politely, twelve times. In
London, it was midnight. In Florida it was seven in the
evening.
Either way, it was the witching
hour.
Mrs. Dunwiddy removed the plasticated
red-and-white check tablecloth and put it away.
She said,
“Who’s got the black candles?”
Miss Noles said, “I got the
candles.” She had a shopping bag at her feet, and she rummaged about in it,
producing four candles. They were mostly black. One of them was tall and
undecorated. The other three were in the shape of a cartoon black-and-yellow
penguin, with the wick coming out of his head. “It was all they got,” she said
apologetically. “And I had to go to three stores until I found
anything.”
Mrs. Dunwiddy said nothing, but she shook her
head. She arranged the four candles at the four ends of the table, taking the
single nonpenguin at the head of the table, where she sat. Each of the candles
sat on a plastic picnic plate. Mrs. Dunwiddy took a large box of kosher salt,
and she opened the spout and poured salt crystals on the table in a pile. Then
she glared at the salt and pushed at it with a withered forefinger, prodding it
into heaps and whorls.
Miss Noles came back from the
kitchen with a large glass bowl, which she placed at the center of the table.
She unscrewed the top from a bottle of sherry and poured a generous helping of
sherry into the bowl.
“Now,” said Mrs. Dunwiddy, “the devil
grass, the St. John the Conqueror root, and the
love-lies-bleeding.”
Mrs. Bustamonte rummaged in her
shopping bag and took out a small glass jar. “It’s mixed herbs,” she explained.
“I thought it would be all right.”
“Mixed herbs!” said Mrs.
Dunwiddy. “Mixed herbs!”
“Will that be a problem?” said
Mrs. Bustamonte. “It’s what I always use when the recipe says basil this or
oregano that. I can’t be doin’ with it. You ask me, it’s all mixed
herbs.”
Mrs. Dunwiddy sighed. “Pour it in,” she
said.
Half a bottle of mixed herbs was poured into the
sherry. The dried leaves floated on the top of the
liquid.
“Now,” said Mrs. Dunwiddy, “The four earths. I
hope,” she said, choosing her words with care, “that no one here going to tell
me that they could not get the four earths, and now we have to make do with a
pebble, a dead jellyfish, a refrigerator magnet, and a bar of
soap.”
“I got the earths,” said Mrs. Higgler. She produced
her brown paper bag, and pulled from it four Ziploc bags each containing what
looked like sand or dried clay, each of a different color. She emptied each bag
at one of the four corners of the table.
“Glad somebody is
payin’ attention,” said Mrs. Dunwiddy.
Miss Noles lit the
candles, pointing out as she did so how easily the penguins lit, and how cute
and funny they were.
Mrs. Bustamonte poured out a glass of
leftover sherry for each of the four women.
“Don’t I get a
glass?” asked Fat Charlie, but he didn’t really want one. He didn’t like
sherry.
“No,” said Mrs Dunwiddy, firmly, “you don’t. You’ll
need your wits about you.” She reached into her purse and took out a small,
gold-colored pill case.
Mrs. Higgler turned off the
lights.
They five of them sat around the table in the
candlelight.
“Now what?” asked Fat Charlie. “Shall we all
join hands and contact the living?”
“We do not,” whispered
Mrs. Dunwiddy. “And I do not want to hear another word out of
you.”
“Sorry,” said Fat Charlie, then wished he hadn’t said
it.
“Listen,” said Mrs. Dunwiddy. “You will go where they
may help you. Even so, give away nothing you own, and make no promises. You
understand? If you have to give somebody something, then make sure you get
something of equal value in return. Yes?”
Fat Charlie
nearly said “yes,” but he caught himself in time and simply
nodded.
“It is good.” And with that, Mrs. Dunwiddy began to
hum tunelessly, in her old old voice which quavered and
faltered.
Miss Noles also began to hum, rather more
melodically. Her voice was higher and stronger.
Mrs.
Bustamonte did not hum. She hissed instead, an intermittent, snakelike hissing,
which seemed to find the rhythm of the humming and weave through it and beneath
it.
Mrs. Higgler started up, and she did not hum, and she
did not hiss. She buzzed, like a fly against a window, making a vibrating noise
with her tongue and her teeth as odd and as unlikely as if she had a handful of
angry bees in her mouth, buzzing against her teeth, trying to get
out.
Fat Charlie wondered if he should join in, but he had
no idea what sort of thing he ought to do if he did, so he concentrated on
sitting there and trying not to be weirded-out by all the
noises.
Mrs. Higgler threw a pinch of red earth into the
bowl of sherry and mixed herbs. Mrs. Bustamonte threw in a pinch of the yellow
earth. Miss Noles threw in the brown earth, while Mrs. Dunwiddy leaned over,
painstakingly slowly, and dropped in a lump of black
mud.
Mrs. Dunwiddy took a sip of her sherry. Then, with
arthritic fingers fumbling and pushing, she took something from the pill case
and dropped it into the candle flame. For a moment the room smelled of lemons,
and then it simply smelled as if something was
burning.
Miss Noles began to drum on the tabletop. She did
not stop humming. The candle flames flickered, dancing huge shadows across the
walls. Mrs. Higgler began to tap on the tabletop as well, her fingers knocking
out a different beat to Miss Noles’s, faster, more percussive, the two drumbeats
twining to form a new rhythm.
In Fat Charlie’s mind all the
sounds began to blend into one strange sound: the humming and the hissing and
the buzzing and the drums. He was starting to feel light-headed. Everything was
funny. Everything was unlikely. In the noises of the women he could hear the
sound of wildlife in the forest, hear the crackling of enormous fires. His
fingers felt stretched and rubbery, his feet were an immensely long way
away.
It seemed then that he was somewhere above them,
somewhere above everything, and that beneath him there were five people around a
table. Then one of the women at the table gestured and dropped something into
the bowl in the middle of the table, and it flared up so brightly that Fat
Charlie was momentarily blinded. He shut his eyes, which, he found, did no good
at all. Even with his eyes closed, everything was much too bright for
comfort.
He rubbed his eyes against the daylight. He looked
around.
A sheer rock face skyscrapered up behind him: the
side of a mountain. Ahead of him was a sheer drop: cliffs, going down. He walked
to the cliff edge and, warily, looked over. He saw some white things, and he
thought they were sheep until he realized that they were clouds; large, white,
fluffy clouds, a very long way below him. And then, beneath the clouds, there
was nothing: he could see the blue sky, and it seemed if he kept looking he
could see the blackness of space, and beyond that nothing but the chill
twinkling of stars.
He took a step back from the cliff
edge.
Then he turned and walked back toward the mountains,
which rose up and up, so high that he could not see the tops of them, so high
that he found himself convinced that they were falling on him, that they would
tumble down and bury him forever. He forced himself to look down again, to keep
his eyes on the ground, and in so doing, he noticed holes in the rock face near
ground level which looked like entrances to natural
caves.
The place between the mountainside and the cliffs,
on which he was standing, was, he guessed, less than quarter of a mile wide: a
boulder-strewn sandy path dotted with patches of greenery and, here and there, a
dusty brown tree. The path seemed to follow the mountainside until it faded into
a distant haze.
Someone is watching me, thought Fat
Charlie. “Hello?” he called, lifting his head back. “Hello, is anybody
there?”
The man who stepped out of the nearest cave mouth
was much darker of skin than Fat Charlie, darker even than Spider, but his long
hair was a tawny yellow and it framed his face like a mane. He wore a ragged
yellow lion-skin around his waist, with a lion’s tail hanging down from it
behind, and the tail swished a fly from his shoulders.
The
man blinked his golden eyes.
“Who are you?” he rumbled.
“And on whose authority do you walk in this place?”
“I’m
Fat Charlie Nancy,” said Fat Charlie. “Anansi the Spider was my
father.”
The massive head nodded. “And why do you come
here, Compé Anansi’s child?”
They were alone on the rocks,
as far as Fat Charlie knew, yet it felt as if there were many people listening,
many voices saying nothing, many ears twitching. Fat Charlie spoke loudly, so
that anyone listening could hear. “My brother. He is ruining my life. I don’t
have the power to make him leave.”
“So you seek our help?”
asked the lion.
“Yes.”
“And this
brother. He is, like you, of Anansi’s blood?”
“He’s not
like me at all,” said Fat Charlie. “He’s one of you
people.”
A fluid, golden movement; the man-lion bounded
down lightly, lazily, from the cave mouth, over the gray rocks, covering fifty
yards in moments. Now he stood beside Fat Charlie. His tail swished
impatiently.
His arms folded, he looked down at Fat Charlie
and said, “Why do you not deal with this matter
yourself?”
Fat Charlie’s mouth had dried. His throat felt
extremely dusty. The creature facing him, taller than any man, did not smell
like a man. The tips of his canine teeth rested on his lower
lips.
“Can’t,” squeaked Fat
Charlie.
From the mouth of the next cave along, an immense
man leaned out. His skin was a brownish gray, and he had rumpled, wrinkled skin
and round, round legs. “If you and your brother quarrel,” he said, “then you
must ask your father to judge between you. Submit to the will of the head of the
family. That is the law.” He threw his head back and made a noise then, in the
back of his nose and in his throat, a powerful trumpeting noise, and Fat Charlie
knew he was looking at Elephant.
Fat Charlie swallowed. “My
father is dead,” he said, and now his voice was clear again, cleaner and louder
than he expected. It echoed from the cliff wall, bounced back at him from a
hundred cave mouths, a hundred jutting outcrops of rock. Dead dead dead
dead dead, said the echo. “That’s why I came
here.”
Lion said, “I have no love for Anansi the Spider.
Once, long ago, he tied me to a log, and had a donkey drag me through the dust,
to the seat of Mawu who made all things.” He growled at the memory, and Fat
Charlie wanted to be somewhere else.
“Walk on,” said Lion.
“There may be someone here who will help you, but it is not
I.”
Elephant said, “Nor I. Your father tricked me and ate
my belly fat. He told me he was making me some shoes to wear, and he cooked me,
and he laughed as he filled his stomach. I do not
forget.”
Fat Charlie walked on.
In the
next cave mouth along stood a man wearing a natty green suit and a sharp hat
with a snakeskin band around it. He wore snakeskin boots and a snakeskin belt.
He hissed as Fat Charlie came past. “Walk on, Anansi’s boy,” Snake said, his
voice a dry rattle. “Your whole damn family nothin’ but trouble. I ain’t gettin’
mixed up in your messes.”
The woman in the next cave mouth
was very beautiful, and her eyes were black oil drops, and her whiskers were
snowy white against her skin. She had two rows of breasts down her
chest.
“I knew your father,” she said. “Long time back.
Hoo-ee.” She shook her head in memory, and Fat Charlie felt like he had just
read a private letter. She blew Fat Charlie a kiss but shook her head when he
made to approach closer.
He walked on. A dead tree stuck up
from the ground before him like an assemblage of old gray bones. The shadows
were getting longer now, as the sun was slowly descending in the endless sky,
past where the cliffs cragged down into the end of the world; the eye of the sun
was a monstrous gold-orange ball, and all the little white clouds beneath it
were burnished with gold and with purple.
The Assyrian
came down like a wolf on the fold, thought Fat Charlie, the line of the poem
surfacing from some long-forgotten English lesson. Andhis cohorts were
gleaming in purple and gold. He tried to remember what a cohort was,
and failed. Probably, he decided, it was some kind of
chariot.
Something moved, close to his elbow, and he
realized that what he had thought was a brown rock, beneath the dead tree, was a
man, sandy-colored, his back spotted like a leopard’s. His hair was very long
and very black, and when he smiled his teeth were a big cat’s teeth. He only
smiled briefly, and it was a smile without warmth or humor or friendship in it.
He said, “I am Tiger. Your father, he injured me in a hundred ways and he
insulted me in a thousand ways. Tiger does not
forget.”
“I’m sorry,” said Fat
Charlie.
“I’ll walk along with you,” said Tiger. “For a
short while. You say that Anansi is
dead?”
“Yes.”
“Well. Well, well. He
played me for a fool so many times. Once, everything was mine—the stories, the
stars, everything. He stole it all away from me. Maybe now he is dead people
will stop telling those damn stories of his. Laughing at
me.”
“I’m sure they will,” said Fat Charlie. “I’ve never
laughed at you.”
Eyes the color of polished emeralds
flashed in the man’s face. “Blood is blood,” was all he said. “Anansi’s
bloodline is Anansi.”
“I am not my father,” said Fat
Charlie.
Tiger bared his teeth. They were very sharp. “You
don’t go around making people laugh at things,” explained Tiger. “It’s a big,
serious world out there; nothing to laugh about. Not ever. You must teach the
children to fear, teach them to tremble. Teach them to be cruel. Teach them to
be the danger in the dark. Hide in the shadows, then pounce or spring or leap or
drop, and always kill. You know what the true meaning of life
is?”
“Um,” said Fat Charlie. “Is it love one
another?”
“The meaning of life is the hot blood of your
prey on your tongue, the meat that rends beneath your teeth, the corpse of your
enemy left in the sun for the carrion eaters to finish. That is what life
is. I am Tiger, and I am stronger than Anansi ever was, bigger, more dangerous,
more powerful, crueler, wiser—”
Fat Charlie did not want to
be in that place, talking to Tiger. It was not that Tiger was mad; it was that
he was so earnest in his convictions, and all his convictions were uniformly
unpleasant. Also, he reminded Fat Charlie of someone, and while he could not
have told you who, he knew it was someone he disliked. “Will you help me get rid
of my brother?”
Tiger coughed, as if he had a feather, or
perhaps a whole blackbird, stuck in his throat.
“Would you
like me to get you some water?” asked Fat Charlie.
Tiger
eyed Fat Charlie with suspicion. “Last time Anansi offered me water, I wound up
trying to eat the moon out of a pond, and I drowned.”
“I
was just trying to help.”
“That was what he said.”
Tiger leaned in to Fat Charlie, stared him in the eye. Close-up, he did not look
even faintly human—his nose was too flat, his eyes were positioned differently,
and he smelled like a cage at the zoo. His voice was a rumbling growl. “This is
how you help me, Anansi’s child. You and all your blood. You keep well away from
me. Understand? If you want to keep the meat on those bones.” He licked his lips
then, with a tongue the red of fresh-killed flesh and longer than any human
tongue had ever been.
Fat Charlie backed away, certain that
if he turned, if he ran, he would feel Tiger’s teeth in his neck. There was
nothing remotely human about the creature now: it was the size of a real tiger.
It was every big cat that had turned man-eater, every tiger that had broken a
human’s neck like a house cat dispatching a mouse. So he stared at Tiger as he
edged backward, and soon enough the creature padded back to its dead tree and
stretched out on the rocks and vanished into the patchy shadows, only the
impatient swish of its tail betraying its position.
“Don’t
you worry yourself about him,” said a woman, from a cave mouth. “Come
here.”
Fat Charlie could not decide if she was attractive
or monstrously ugly. He walked toward her.
“He come on all
high-and-so-mighty, but he’s a-scairt of his own shadow. And he’s scairter of
your daddy’s shadow. He got no strength in his jaws.”
There
was something doglike about her face. No, not
doglike—.
“Now, me,” she continued, as he reached her, “me,
I crush the bone. That’s where the good stuff is hid. That’s where the sweetest
meats are hid, and nobody knows it but me.”
“I’m looking
for someone to help me get rid of my brother.”
The woman
threw back her head and laughed, a wild bray of a laugh, loud, long and insane,
and Fat Charlie knew her then.
“You won’t find anyone here
to help you,” she said. “They all suffered, when they went up against your
father. Tiger hates you and your kind more than anyone has ever hated anything,
but even he won’t do anything while your father’s out there in the world.
Listen: Walk this path. You ask me, and I got a stone of prophecy behind my eye,
you won’t find nobody to help you till you find an empty cave. Go in. Talk to
whoever you find there. Understand me?”
“I think I
do.”
She laughed. It was not a good laugh. “You want to
stop with me for a while first? I’m an education. You know what they say—nothing
leaner, meaner, or obscener than Hyena.”
Fat Charlie shook
his head and kept walking, past the caves that line the rocky walls at the end
of the world. As he passed the darkness of each cave, he would glance inside.
There were people of all shapes and all sizes, tiny people and tall people, men
and women. And as he passed, and as they moved in and out of the shadows, he
would see flanks or scales, horns or claws.
Sometimes he
scared them as he passed, and they would retreat into the back of the cave.
Others would come forward, staring aggressively or
curiously.
Something tumbled through the air from the rocks
above a cave mouth and landed beside Fat Charlie. “Hello,” it said
breathlessly.
“Hello,” said Fat
Charlie.
The new one was excitable and hairy. Its arms and
legs seemed all wrong. Fat Charlie tried to place it. The other
animal-people were animals, yes, and people, too, and there was nothing strange
or contradictory about this—the animalness and the humanness combined like the
stripes on a zebra to make something other. This one, however, seemed
both human and almost human, and the oddness of it made Fat Charlie’s teeth
hurt. Then he got it.
“Monkey,” he said. “You’re
Monkey.”
“Got a peach?” said Monkey. “Got a mango? Got a
fig?”
“ ‘Fraid not,” said Fat
Charlie.
“Give me something to eat,” said Monkey. “I’ll be
your friend.”
Mrs. Dunwiddy had warned him about this.
Give nothing away, he thought. Make no
promises.
“I’m not giving you anything, I’m
afraid.”
“Who are you?” asked Monkey. “What are you? You
seem like half a thing. Are you from here or from
there?”
“Anansi was my father,” said Fat Charlie. “I’m
looking for someone to help me deal with my brother, to make him go
away.”
“Might get Anansi mad,” said Monkey. “Very bad idea
that. Get Anansi mad, you never in any more
stories.”
“Anansi’s dead,” said Fat
Charlie.
“Dead there,” said Monkey. “Maybe. But dead here?
That’s another stump of grubs entirely.”
“You mean, he
could be here?” Fat Charlie looked up at the mountainside more warily: the idea
that he might, in one of the cave mouths, find his father creaking back and
forward in a rocking chair, green fedora hat pushed back on his head, sipping
from a can of brown ale and stifling a yawn with his lemon yellow gloves, was
troubling indeed.
“Who? What?”
“Do you
think he’s here?”
“Who?”
“My
father.”
“Your
father?”
“Anansi.”
Monkey leapt to the
top of a rock in terror, then he pressed himself against the rock, his gaze
flicking from side to side as if keeping an eye out for sudden tornadoes.
“Anansi? He’s here?”
“I was asking you that,” said Fat
Charlie.
Monkey swung suddenly, so he was hanging upside
down from its feet, his upside-down face staring straight into Fat Charlie’s. “I
go back to the world sometimes,” he said. “They say, Monkey, wise Monkey, come,
come. Come eat the peaches we have for you. And the nuts. And the grubs. And the
figs.”
“Is my father here?” asked Fat Charlie,
patiently.
“He doesn’t have a cave,” said Monkey. “I would
know if he had a cave. I think. Maybe he had a cave and I forgot. If you gave me
a peach, I would remember better.”
“I don’t have anything
on me,” said Fat Charlie.
“No
peaches?”
“Nothing, I’m
afraid.”
Monkey swung himself up to the top of his rock,
and he was gone.
Fat Charlie continued along the rocky
path. The sun had sunk until it was level with the path, and it burned a deep
orange. It shone its old light straight into the caves, and showed each cave to
be inhabited. That must be Rhinoceros, gray of skin, staring out shortsightedly;
there, the color of a rotten log in shallow water, was Crocodile, his eyes as
black as glass.
There was a rattle behind him of stone
scuttering against stone, and Fat Charlie turned with a jerk. Monkey stared up
at him, his knuckles brushing the path.
“I really haven’t
got any fruit,” said Fat Charlie. “Or I’d give you
some.”
Monkey said, “Felt sorry for you. Maybe you should
go home. This is a bad bad bad bad bad idea.
Yes?”
“No,” said Fat Charlie.
“Ah,”
said Monkey. “Right. Right right right right right.” He stopped moving,
then a sudden burst of loping speed, and he bounded past Fat Charlie and stopped
in front of a cave some little distance away.
“Not to go in
there,” he called. “Bad place.” He pointed to the cave
opening.
“Why not?” asked Fat Charlie. “Who’s in
there?”
“Nobody’s in there,” said Monkey, triumphantly. “So
it’s not the one you want, is it?”
“Yes,” said Fat Charlie.
“It is.”
Monkey chittered and bounced, but Fat Charlie
walked past him and clambered up the rocks until he reached the mouth of the
empty cave, as the crimson sun fell below the cliffs at the end of the
world.
Walking the path along the edge of the mountains at
the beginning of the world (it’s only the mountains at the end of the world if
you’re coming from the other direction), reality seemed strange and strained.
These mountains and their caves are made from the stuff of the oldest stories
(this was long before human-people, of course; whatever made you imagine that
people were the first things to tell stories?), and stepping off the path into
the cave, Fat Charlie felt as if he were walking into someone else’s reality
entirely. The cave was deep; its floor was splashed white with bird droppings.
There were feathers on the cave floor too, and here and there, like a desiccated
and abandoned feather duster, was the corpse of a bird, flattened and
dried.
At the back of the cave, nothing but
darkness.
Fat Charlie called “Hello?” and the echo of his
voice came back to him from the interior of the cave. Hello hello hello
hello. He kept walking. Now the darkness in the cave seemed almost palpable,
as if something thin and dark had been laid over his eyes. He walked slowly, a
step at a time, his arms outstretched.
Something
moved.
“Hello?”
His eyes were learning
to use what little light there was, and he could make something out. It’s
nothing. Rags and feathers, that’s all. Another step, and the wind
stirred the feathers and flapped the rags on the floor of the
cave.
Something fluttered about him, fluttered
through him, beating the air with the clatter of a pigeon’s
wings.
Swirling. Dust stung his eyes and his face, and he
blinked in the cold wind and took a step back as it rose up before him, a storm
of dust and rags and feathers. Then the wind was gone, and where the feathers
had been blowing was a human figure, which reached out a hand and beckoned to
Fat Charlie.
He would have stepped back, but it reached out
and took him by the sleeve. Its touch was light and dry, and it pulled him
toward it—
He took one step forward into the
cave—
—and was standing in the open air, on a treeless,
copper-colored plain, beneath a sky the color of sour
milk.
Different creatures have different eyes. Human eyes
(unlike, say, a cat’s eyes, or an octopus’s) are only made to see one version of
reality at a time. Fat Charlie saw one thing with his eyes, and he saw something
else with his mind, and in the gulf between the two things, madness waited. He
could feel a wild panic welling up inside him, and he took a deep breath and
held it in while his heart thudded against his rib cage. He forced himself to
believe his eyes, not his mind.
So while he knew that he
was seeing a bird, mad-eyed, ragged-feathered, bigger than any eagle, taller
than an ostrich, its beak the cruel tearing weapon of a raptor, its feathers the
color of slate overlaid with an oilslick sheen, making a dark rainbow of purples
and greens, he really only knew that for an instant, somewhere in the very back
of his mind. What he saw with his eyes was a woman with raven-black hair,
standing where the idea of a bird had been. She was neither young nor old, and
she stared at him with a face that might have been carved from obsidian in
ancient times, when the world was young.
She watched him,
and she did not move. Clouds roiled across the sour milk
sky.
“I’m Charlie,” said Fat Charlie. “Charlie Nancy. Some
people, well, most people, call me Fat Charlie. You can, too. If you
like.”
No response.
“Anansi was my
father.”
Still nothing. Not a quiver; not a
breath.
“I want you to help me make my brother go
away.”
She tilted her head at this. Enough to show that she
was listening, enough to show that she was alive.
“I can’t
do it on my own. He’s got magic powers and stuff. I spoke to a spider, and the
next thing you know, my brother turns up. Now I can’t make him go
away.”
Her voice, when she spoke, was as rough and as deep
as a crow’s. “What do you wish me to do about it?”
“Help
me?” he suggested.
She appeared to be
thinking.
Later, Fat Charlie tried and failed to remember
what she had been wearing. Sometimes he thought it must have been a cloak of
feathers; at other times he believed it must have been rags of some kind, or
perhaps a tattered raincoat, of the kind she wore when he saw her in Piccadilly,
later, when it had all started to go bad. She was not naked, though: of that he
was nearly certain. He would have remembered if she had been naked, wouldn’t
he?
“Help you,” she echoed.
“Help me
get rid of him.”
She nodded. “You wish me to help you get
rid of Anansi’s bloodline.”
“I just want him to go away and
leave me alone. I don’t want you to hurt him or
anything.”
“Then promise me Anansi’s bloodline for my
own.”
Fat Charlie stood on the vast coppery plain, which
was somehow, he knew, inside the cave in the mountains at the end of the world
and was, in its turn, in some sense, inside Mrs. Dunwiddy’s violet-scented front
room, and he tried to make sense of what she was asking
for.
“I can’t give things away. And I can’t make
promises.”
“You want him to go,” she said. “Say it. My time
is precious.” She folded her arms and stared at him with mad eyes. “I am not
scared of Anansi.”
He remembered Mrs. Dunwiddy’s voice.
“Um,” said Fat Charlie. “I mustn’t make promises. And I have to ask for
something of equal value. I mean, it has to be a
trade.”
The Bird Woman looked displeased, but she nodded.
“Then I shall give you something of equal value in trade. I give my word.” She
put her hand over his hand, as if she was giving him something, then squeezed
his hand closed. “Now say it.”
“I give you Anansi’s
bloodline,” Fat Charlie said.
“It is good,” said a voice,
and at that she went, quite literally, to pieces.
Where a
woman had been standing, there was now a flock of birds, which were flying, as
if startled by a gunshot, all in different directions. Now the sky filled with
birds, more birds than Fat Charlie had ever imagined, brown birds and black,
wheeling and crossing and flowing like a cloud of black smoke vaster than the
mind could hold, like a cloud of midges as big as the
world.
“You’ll make him go away, now?” called Fat Charlie,
shouting the words into the darkening milky sky. The birds slipped and slid in
the sky. Each moved only a fraction, and they kept flying, but suddenly Fat
Charlie was staring up at a face in the sky, a face made of swirling birds. It
was very big.
It said his name in the screams and caws and
calls of a thousand, thousand, thousand birds, and lips the size of tower blocks
formed the words in the sky.
Then the face dissolved into
madness and chaos as the birds that made it flew down from that pale sky, flew
straight toward him. He covered his face with his hands, trying to protect
himself.
The pain in his cheek was harsh and sudden. For an
instant he believed that one of the birds must have gashed him, torn at his
cheek with its beak or talons. Then he saw where he
was.
“Don’t hit me again!” he said. “It’s all right. You
don’t have to hit me!”
On the table, the penguins were
guttering low; their heads and shoulders were gone, and now the flames were
burning in the shapeless black-and-white blobs that had once been their bellies,
their feet in frozen pools of blackish candle wax. There were three old women
staring at him.
Miss Noles threw the contents of a glass of
water into his face.
“You didn’t have to do that either,”
he said. “I’m here, aren’t I?”
Mrs. Dunwiddy came into the
room. She was holding a small brown glass bottle triumphantly. “Smelling salts,”
she announced. “I know I got some somewhere. I buy these in, oh, sixty-seven,
sixty-eight. I don’t know if they still any good.” She peered at Fat Charlie,
then scowled. “He wake up. Who did wake him up?”
“He wasn’t
breathing,” said Mrs. Bustamonte. “So I give him a
slap.”
“And I pour water on him,” said Miss Noles, “which
help bring him around the rest of the way.”
“I don’t need
smelling salts,” said Fat Charlie. “I’m already wet and in pain.” But, with
elderly hands, Mrs. Dunwiddy had removed the cap from the bottle, and she was
pushing it under his nose. He breathed in as he moved back, and inhaled a wave
of ammonia. His eyes watered, and he felt as if he had been punched in the nose.
Water dripped down his face.
“There,” said Mrs. Dunwiddy.
“Feeling better now?”
“What time is it?” asked Fat
Charlie.
“It’s almost five in the morning,” said Mrs.
Higgler. She took a swig of coffee from her gigantic mug. “We all worried about
you. You better tell us what happened.”
Fat Charlie tried
to remember. It was not that it had evaporated, as dreams do, more as if the
experience of the last few hours had happened to somebody else, someone who was
not him, and he had to contact that person by some hitherto unpracticed form of
telepathy. It was all a jumble in his mind, the technicolor Ozness of the other
place dissolving back into the sepia tones of reality. “There were caves. I
asked for help. There were lots of animals there. Animals who were people. None
of them wanted to help. They were all scared of my daddy. Then one of them said
she would help me.”
“She?” said Mrs.
Bustamonte.
“Some of them were men, and some of them were
women,” said Fat Charlie. “This one was a woman.”
“Do you
know what she was? Crocodile? Hyena? Mouse?”
He shrugged.
“I might have remembered before people started hitting me and pouring water on
me. And putting things in my nose. It drives stuff out of your
head.”
Mrs. Dunwiddy said, “Do you remember what I tell
you? Not giving anything away? Only trade?”
“Yes,” he said,
vaguely proud of himself. “Yes. There was a monkey who wanted me to give him
things, and I said no. Look, I think I need a drink.”
Mrs.
Bustamonte took a glass of something from the table. “We thought maybe you need
a drink. So we put the sherry through the strainer. There may be a few mixed
herbs in there, but nothin’ big.”
His hands were fists in
his lap. He opened his right hand to take the glass from the old woman. Then he
stopped, and he stared.
“What?” asked Mrs. Dunwiddy. “What
is it?”
In the palm of his hand, black and crushed out of
shape, and wet with sweat, Fat Charlie was holding a feather. He remembered,
then. He remembered all of it.
“It was the Bird Woman,” he
said.
Gray dawn was breaking as Fat Charlie
climbed into the passenger seat of Mrs. Higgler’s station
wagon.
“You sleepy?” she asked
him.
“Not really. I just feel
weird.”
“Where do you want me to take you? My place? Your
dad’s house? A motel?”
“I don’t
know.”
She put the car into gear and lurched out into the
road.
“Where are we going?”
She did
not answer. She slurped some coffee from her megamug. Then she said, “Maybe what
we do tonight is for the best and maybe it ain’t. Sometimes family things, they
best left for families to fix. You and your brother. You’re too similar. I guess
that is why you fight.”
“I take it this is some obscure
West Indian usage of the word ‘similar’ which means ‘nothing at all
alike’?”
“Don’t you start going all British on me. I know
what I’m sayin’. You and him, you both cut from the same cloth. I remember your
father sayin’ to me, Callyanne, my boys, they stupider than—you know, it don’t
matter what he actually said, but the point is, he said it about both of you.” A
thought struck her. “Hey. When you go to the place where the old gods are, you
see your father in that place?”
“I don’t think so. I’d
remember.”
She nodded, and said nothing as she
drove.
She parked the car, and they got
out.
It was chilly in the Florida dawn. The Garden of Rest
looked like something from a movie: there was a low ground mist which threw
everything into soft focus. Mrs. Higgler opened the small gate, and they walked
through the cemetery.
Where there had been only fresh earth
filling his father’s grave, now there was turf, and at the head of the grave was
a metal plaque with a metal vase built into it, and in the vase a single yellow
silk rose.
“Lord have mercy on the sinner in this grave,”
said Mrs Higgler, with feeling. “Amen, amen, amen.”
They
had an audience: the two red-headed cranes which Fat Charlie had observed on his
previous visit strutted toward them, heads bobbing, like two aristocratic prison
visitors.
“Shoo!” said Mrs. Higgler. The birds started at
her, incuriously, and did not leave.
One of them ducked its
head down into the grass, came up again with a lizard struggling in its beak. A
gulp and a shake, and the lizard was a bulge in the bird’s
neck.
The dawn chorus was beginning: grackles and orioles
and mockingbirds were singing in the day in the wilderness beyond the Garden of
Rest. “It’ll be good to be home again,” said Fat Charlie. “With any luck she’ll
have made him leave by the time I get there. Then everything will be all right.
I can sort everything out with Rosie.” A mood of gentle optimism welled up
within him. It was going to be a good day.
In the
old stories, Anansi lives just like you do or I do, in his house. He is greedy,
of course, and lustful, and tricky, and full of lies. And he is good-hearted,
and lucky, and sometimes even honest. Sometimes he is good, sometimes he is bad.
He is never evil. Mostly, you are on Anansi’s side. This is because Anansi owns
all the stories. Mawu gave him the stories, back in the dawn days, took them
from Tiger and gave them to Anansi, and he spins the web of them so
beautifully.
In the stories, Anansi is a spider, but he is
also a man. It is not hard to keep two things in your head at the same time.
Even a child could do it.
Anansi’s stories are told by
grandmothers and by aunts in the West Coast of Africa and across the Caribbean,
and all over the world. The stories have made it into books for children: big
old smiling Anansi playing his merry tricks upon the world. Trouble is,
grandmothers and aunts and writers of books for children tend to leave things
out. There are stories that aren’t appropriate for little children
anymore.
This is a story you won’t find in the nursery
tales. I call it,
—————————
ANANSI and BIRD
—————————
Anansi did not like Bird, because
when Bird was hungry she ate many things, and one of the things that Bird ate
was spiders, and Bird, she was always hungry.
They used to
be friends, but they were friends no longer.
One day Anansi
was walking, and he saw a hole in the ground, and that gave him an idea. He puts
wood in the bottom of the hole, and he makes a fire, and he puts a cookpot in
the hole and drops in roots and herbs. Then he starts running around the pot,
running and dancing and calling and shouting, going, I feel good. I feel
soooo good. Oh boy, all my aches and pains be gone and I never felt so
good in my whole damn life!
Bird hears the commotion. Bird
flies down from the skies to see what all the fuss is about. She goes, What you
singing about? Why you carrying on like a madman,
Anansi?
Anansi sings, I had a pain in my neck, but now it’s
gone. I had a pain in my belly, but not any longer. I had creaks in my joints,
but now I’m supple as a young palm tree, I’m smooth as Snake the morning after
he sheds his skin. I’m powerful happy, and now I shall be perfect, for I know
the secret, and nobody else does.
What secret? asks
Bird.
My secret, says Anansi. Everyone going to give me
their favorite things, their most precious things, just to learn my secret.
Whoo! Whee! I do feel good!
Bird hops a little
closer, and she puts her head on one side. Then she asks, Can I learn your
secret?
Anansi looks at Bird with suspicion on his face,
and he moves to stand in front of the pot in the hole, bubbling
away.
I don’t think so, Anansi says. May not be enough to
go around. Don’t bother yourself about it.
Bird says, Now
Anansi, I know we haven’t always been friends. But I’ll tell you what. You share
your secret with me, and I promise you no bird will never eat no spider ever
again. We’ll be friends until the end of time.
Anansi
scratches his chin, and he shakes his head. It’s a mighty big secret, he says,
making people young and spry and lusty and free from all
pain.
Bird, she preens. Bird she says, Oh, Anansi, I’m sure
you know that I have always found you a particularly handsome figure of a man.
Why don’t we lie by the side of the road for a little while, and I’m sure I can
make you forget all your reservations about telling me your
secret.
So they lie by the side of the road, and they get
to canoodling and laughing and getting all silly, and once Anansi has had what
he wants Bird says, Now Anansi, what about your
secret?
Anansi says, Well, I wasn’t going to tell anyone.
But I’ll tell you. It’s an herbal bath, in this hole in the ground. Watch, I’ll
drop in these leaves and these roots. Now, anyone who goes into the bath they
going to live forever, feeling no pain. I had the bath, and now I’m frisky as a
young goat. But I don’t think I should let anyone else use the
bath.
Bird, she looks down at the bubbling water, and quick
as anything she slips down into the pot.
It’s awful hot,
Anansi, she says.
It’s got to be hot for the herbs to do
their good things, says Anansi. Then he takes the lid of the pot and he covers
the pot with it. It’s a heavy lid, and Anansi, he puts a rock on top of it, to
weigh it down more.
Bam! Bem!Bom! comes the
knocking from inside the cookpot.
If I let you out now,
calls Anansi, all the good work of the bubbling bath will be undone. You just
relax in there and feel yourself getting healthier.
But
maybe Bird did not hear him or believe him, because the knocking and the pushing
kept on coming from inside the pot for a while longer. And then it
stopped.
That evening Anansi and his family had the most
delicious Bird soup, with boiled Bird. They did not go hungry again for many
days.
Since that time, birds eat spiders every chance they
get, and spiders and birds aren’t never going to be friends.
—————————
There’s another version of the
story where they talk Anansi into the cookpot, too. The stories are all
Anansi’s, but he doesn’t always come out ahead.
Chapter Eight
in which a pot of coffee comes in particularly
useful
If anything was making Spider go away,
Spider didn’t know about it. On the contrary, Spider was having an excellent
time being Fat Charlie. He was having such a good time being Fat Charlie he
began to wonder why he hadn’t been Fat Charlie before. It was more fun than a
barrelful of monkeys. [
1]
The
bit of being Fat Charlie that Spider liked best was
Rosie.
Until now Spider had regarded women as more or less
interchangeable. You didn’t give them a real name, or an address that would work
for longer than a week, of course, or anything more than a disposable cell-phone
number. Women were fun, and decorative, and terrific accessories, but there
would always be more of them; like bowls of goulash coming along a conveyor
belt, when you were done with one, you simply picked up the next, and spooned in
your sour cream.
But Rosie—
Rosie was
different.
He couldn’t have told you how she was different.
He had tried and failed. Partly it was how he felt when he was with her: as if,
seeing himself in her eyes, he became a wholly better person. That was part of
it.
Spider liked knowing that Rosie knew where to find him.
It made him feel comfortable. He delighted in the pillowy curves of her, the way
she meant nothing but good to the world, the way she smiled. There was really
nothing at all wrong with Rosie, apart from having to spend time away from her,
and, of course, he was beginning to discover, the little matter of Rosie’s
mother. On this particular evening, while Fat Charlie was in an airport four
thousand miles away in the process of being bumped up to first class, Spider was
in Rosie’s mother’s flat in Wimpole Street, and he was learning about her the
hard way.
Spider was used to being able to push reality
around a little, just a little but that was always enough. You just had to show
reality who was boss, that was all. Having said that, he had never met anyone
who inhabited her own reality quite so firmly as Rosie’s
mother.
“Who’s this?” she asked, suspiciously, as they
walked in.
“I’m Fat Charlie Nancy,” said
Spider.
“Why is he saying that?” asked Rosie’s mother. “Who
is he?”
“I’m Fat Charlie Nancy, your future son-in-law, and
you really like me,” said Spider, with utter
conviction.
Rosie’s mother swayed and blinked and stared at
him. “You may be Fat Charlie,” she said, uncertainly, “but I don’t like
you.”
“Well,” said Spider, “you should. I am remarkably
likeable. Few people have ever been as likeable as I am. There is, frankly, no
end to my likeability. People gather together in public assemblies to discuss
how much they like me. I have several awards, and a medal from a small country
in South America which pays tribute both to how much I am liked and my general
all-around wonderfulness. I don’t have it on me, of course. I keep my medals in
my sock drawer.”
Rosie’s mother sniffed. She did not know
what was going on, but whatever it was, she did not like it. Until now, she felt
that she had got the measure of Fat Charlie. She might, she admitted to herself,
have mishandled things a little in the beginning: it was quite possible that
Rosie would not have attached herself to Fat Charlie with such enthusiasm if,
following the first meeting of her mother and Fat Charlie, her mother had not
expressed her opinion quite so vociferously. He was a loser, Rosie’s mother had
said, for she could smell fear like a shark scenting blood across the bay. But
she had failed to persuade Rosie to dump him, and now her main strategy involved
assuming control of the wedding plans, making Fat Charlie as miserable as
possible, and contemplating the national divorce statistics with a certain grim
satisfaction.
Something different was now happening, and
she did not like it. Fat Charlie was no longer a large vulnerable person. This
new, sharp creature confused her.
Spider, for his part, was
having to work.
Most people do not notice other people.
Rosie’s mother did. She noticed everything. Now she sipped her hot water from a
bone china cup. She knew that she had just lost a skirmish, even if she could
not have told you how or what the battle was about. So she moved her next
assault to higher ground.
“Charles, dear,” she said, “tell
me about your cousin Daisy. I worry that your family is underrepresented. Would
you like her to be given a larger role in the wedding
party?”
“Who?”
“Daisy,” said Rosie’s
mother, sweetly. “The young lady I met at your house the other morning,
wandering around in her scanties. If she
was your cousin, of
course.”
“Mother! If Charlie says she was his
cousin—”
“Let him talk for himself, Rosie,” said her
mother, and she took another sip of hot water.
“Right,”
said Spider. “Daisy,” said Spider.
He cast his mind back to
the night of wine, women and song: he had brought the prettiest and funniest of
the women back to the flat with them, after telling her that it was her idea,
and then had needed her help in getting the semiconscious bulk of Fat Charlie up
the stairs. Having already enjoyed the attentions of several of the other women
during the course of the evening, he had brought the little funny one back with
him rather as one might set aside an after-dinner mint, but he had found, on
getting home and putting a cleaned-up Fat Charlie to bed, that he was no longer
hungry. That one.
“Sweet little cousin Daisy,” he
continued, without a pause. “I am certain that she would love to be involved in
the wedding, should she be in the country. Alas, she’s a courier. Always
traveling. One day she’s here, the next, she’s dropping off a confidential
document in Murmansk.”
“You don’t have her address? Or her
phone number?”
“We can look for her together, you and I,”
agreed Spider. “Zooming around the world. She comes, she
goes.”
“Then,” said Rosie’s mother, much as Alexander the
Great might have ordered the sacking and pillaging of a little Persian village,
“the next time she is in the country, you must invite her over. I thought she
was such a pretty little thing, and I am sure that Rosie would just love to meet
her.”
“Yes,” said Spider. “I must. I really
must.”
Each person whoever was or is or will be
has a song. It isn’t a song that anybody else wrote. It has its own melody, it
has its own words. Very few people get to sing their own song. Most of us fear
that we cannot do it justice with our voices, or that our words are too foolish
or too honest, or too odd. So people live their songs
instead.
Take Daisy, for example. Her song, which had been
somewhere in the back of her head for most of her life, had a reassuring,
marching sort of beat, and words that were about protecting the weak, and it had
a chorus that began “Evildoers beware!” and was thus much too silly ever to be
sung out loud. She would hum it to herself sometimes though, in the shower,
during the soapy bits.
And that is, more or less,
everything you need to know about Daisy. The rest is
details.
Daisy’s father was born in Hong Kong. Her mother
came from Ethiopia, of a family of wealthy carpet exporters: they owned a house
in Addis Ababa, and another house and lands outside Nazret. Daisy’s parents met
at Cambridge—he was studying computing before that was something that was seen
as being a sensible career path, and she was devouring molecular chemistry and
international law. They were two young people who were equally studious,
naturally shy, and generally ill-at-ease. They were both homesick, but for very
different things; however, they both played chess, and they met on a Wednesday
afternoon, at the chess club. They were, as novices, encouraged to play
together, and during their first game Daisy’s mother beat Daisy’s father with
ease.
Daisy’s father was nettled by this, enough that he
shyly asked for a rematch on the following Wednesday, and on every successive
Wednesday after that (excluding vacations and public holidays) for the next two
years.
Their social interaction increased as their social
skills and her spoken English improved. Together, they held hands as part of a
human chain and protested the arrival of large trucks loaded with missiles.
Together, although as part of a much larger party, they traveled to Barcelona in
order to protest the unstoppable flood of international capitalism and to
register stern protests at corporate hegemonies. This was also the time they got
to experience officially squirted tear gas, and Mr. Day’s wrist was sprained as
he was being pushed out of the way by the Spanish
police.
And then, one Wednesday at the beginning of their
third year at Cambridge, Daisy’s father beat Daisy’s mother at chess. He was
made so happy by this, so elated and triumphant that, buoyed and emboldened by
his conquest, he proposed marriage; and Daisy’s mother, who had been, deep down,
afraid that as soon as he won a game he would lose interest in her, said yes, of
course.
They stayed in England and remained in academia,
and they had one daughter, whom they called Daisy because at the time they owned
(and, to Daisy’s later amusement, actually rode) a tandem—a bicycle built for
two. They moved from university to university across Britain: he taught computer
sciences while his wife wrote books that nobody wanted to read about
international corporate hegemonies, and books that people did want to read about
chess, its strategies and its history, and thus in a good year she would make
more money than he did, which was never very much. Their involvement in politics
waned as they grew older, and as they approached middle age they had become a
happy couple with no interests beyond each other, chess, Daisy, and the
reconstruction and debugging of forgotten operating
systems.
Neither of them understood Daisy, not even a
little.
They blamed themselves for not having nipped her
fascination with the police force in the bud when it first began to manifest,
more or less at the same time that she began talking. Daisy would point out
police cars in the same excited way that other little girls might point out
ponies. Her seventh birthday party was held in fancy dress to allow her to wear
her junior policewoman’s costume, and there are still photographs in a box in
her parents’ attic of her face suffused with a seven-year-old’s perfect joy at
the sight of her birthday cake: seven candles ringing a flashing blue
light.
Daisy was a diligent, cheerful, intelligent teenager
who made both her parents happy when she went to the University of London to
study law and computing. Her father had dreams of her becoming a lecturer in
law; her mother nurtured dreams of her daughter taking silk, perhaps even
becoming a judge and then using the law to crush corporate hegemonies whenever
they appeared. And then Daisy went and ruined everything by taking the entry
exams and joining the police force. The police welcomed her with open arms: on
the one hand, there were directives on the need to improve the diversity of the
force, while on the other, computer crime and computer-related fraud was on the
increase. They needed Daisy. Frankly, they needed a whole string of
Daisies.
At this point, four years on, it would be fair to
say that a career in the police force had failed to live up to Daisy’s
expectations. It was not, as her parents had warned her repeatedly, that the
police force was an institutionally racist and sexist monolith that would crush
her individuality into something soul-destroying and uniform, that would make
her as much a part of the canteen culture as instant coffee. No, the frustrating
part of it was getting other coppers to understand that she was a copper, too.
She had come to the conclusion that, for most coppers, police work was something
you did to protect Middle England from scary people of the wrong social
background, who were probably out to steal their cell phones. From where Daisy
stood it was about something else. Daisy knew that a kid in his den in Germany
could send out a virus that would shut down a hospital, causing more damage than
a bomb. Daisy was of the opinion that the real bad guys these days understood
FTP sites and high-level encryption and disposable prepaid cell phones. She was
not sure that the good guys did.
She took a sip of coffee
from a plastic cup and made a face; while she had been paging through screen
after screen, her coffee had gone cold.
She had gone
through all the information that Grahame Coats had given her. There was
certainly a prima facie case for thinking that something was wrong—if nothing
else there was a check for two thousand pounds that Charles Nancy had apparently
written to himself the previous week.
Except. Except
something did not feel right.
She walked down the corridor
and knocked on the superintendent’s
door.
“Come!”
Camberwell had smoked a
pipe at his desk for thirty years, until the building had instituted a
no-smoking policy. Now he made do with a lump of Plasticine, which he balled and
squashed and kneaded and prodded. As a man with a pipe in his mouth, he had been
placid, good-natured, and, as far as those beneath him were concerned, the salt
of the earth. As a man with a lump of Plasticine in his hand, he was uniformly
irritable and short-tempered. On a good day he made it as far as
tetchy.
“Yes?”
“The Grahame Coats
Agency case.”
“Mm?”
“I’m not sure
about it.”
“Not sure about it? What on earth is there not
to be sure about?”
“Well, I think maybe I should take
myself off the case.”
He did not look impressed. He stared
at her. Down on the desk, unwatched, his fingers were kneading the blue
Plasticine into the shape of a meerschaum. “Because?”
“I’ve
met the suspect socially.”
“And? You’ve been on holiday
with him? You’re godmother to his kids? What?”
“No. I met
him once. I stayed overnight at his house.”
“So are you
saying you and he did the nasty?” A deep sigh, in which world-weariness,
irritation, and a craving for half an ounce of Condor ready-rubbed mingled in
equal parts.
“No sir. Nothing like that. I just slept
there.”
“And that’s your total involvement with
him?”
“Yes sir.”
He crushed the
Plasticine pipe back into a shapeless blob. “You realize you’re wasting my
time?”
“Yes sir. Sorry sir.”
“Do
whatever you have to do. Don’t bother me.”
Maeve
Livingstone rode the lift up to the fifth floor alone, the slow jerky journey
giving her plenty of time to rehearse in her head what she would say to Grahame
Coats when she got there.
She was carrying a slim brown
briefcase, which had belonged to Morris: a peculiarly masculine object. She wore
a white blouse and a blue denim skirt and over it, a gray coat. She had very
long legs and extremely pale skin and hair which remained, with only minimal
chemical assistance, quite as blonde as it had been when Morris Livingstone had
married her twenty years earlier.
Maeve had loved Morris
very much. When he died, she did not delete him from her cell phone, not even
after she had canceled his service and returned his phone. Her nephew had taken
the photo of Morris that was on her phone, and she did not want to lose that.
She wished she could phone Morris now, ask his advice.
She
had told the speakerphone who she was, to be buzzed in downstairs, and when she
walked into reception Grahame Coats was already waiting for
her.
“How de do, how de do, good lady,” he
said.
“We need to talk privately, Grahame,” said Maeve.
“Now.”
Grahame Coats smirked; oddly enough, many of his
private fantasies began with Maeve saying something fairly similar, before she
went on to utter such statements as “I need you, Grahame, right now,” and “Oh
Grahame, I’ve been such a bad bad bad bad girl who needs to be taught some
discipline,” and, on rare occasions, “Grahame, you are too much for one woman,
so let me introduce you to my identical naked twin sister, Maeve
II.”
They went into his office.
Maeve,
slightly disappointingly as far as Grahame Coats was concerned, said nothing
about needing it right here, right now. She did not take off her coat. Instead
she opened her briefcase and took out a sheaf of papers, which she placed upon
the desk.
“Grahame, at my bank manager’s suggestion, I had
your figures and statements for the last decade independently audited. From back
when Morris was still alive. You can look at them if you like. The numbers don’t
work. None of them. I thought I’d talk to you about it before I called in the
police. In Morris’s memory, I felt I owed you that.”
“You
do indeed,” agreed Grahame Coats, smooth as a snake in a butter churn. “Indeed
you do.”
“Well?” Maeve Livingstone raised one perfect
eyebrow. Her expression was not reassuring. Grahame Coats liked her better in
his imagination.
“I’m afraid we’ve had a rogue employee at
the Grahame Coats Agency for quite a while, Maeve. I actually called in the
police myself, last week, when I realized that something was amiss. The long arm
of the law is already investigating. Due to the illustrious nature of several of
the clients of the Grahame Coats Agency—yourself among them—the police are
keeping this as quiet as possible, and who can blame them?” She did not seem as
mollified as he had hoped. He tried another tack. “They have high hopes of
recovering much, if not all, of the money.”
Maeve nodded.
Grahame Coats relaxed, but only a little.
“Can I ask which
employee?”
“Charles Nancy. I have to say I trusted him
implicitly. It came as quite a shock.”
“Oh. He’s
sweet.”
“Appearances,” pointed out Grahame Coats, “can be
deceptive.”
She smiled then, and a very sweet smile it was.
“It won’t wash, Grahame. This has been going on for yonks. Since long before
Charles Nancy started here. Probably since before my time. Morris absolutely
trusted you, and you stole from him. And now you’re trying to tell me that
you’re hoping to frame one of your employees—or blame one of your
confederates—well, it won’t wash.”
“No,” said Grahame
Coats, contritely. “Sorry.”
She picked up the sheaf of
papers. “Out of interest,” she said, “how much do you think you got from Morris
and me over the years? I make it about three million
quid.”
“Ah.” He was not smiling at all, now. It was
certainly more than that, but still. “That sounds about
right.”
They looked at each other, and Grahame Coats
calculated, furiously. He needed to buy time. That was what he needed. “What
if,” he said, “what if I were to repay it, in full, in cash, now. With interest.
Let’s say, fifty percent of the amount in
question.”
“You’re offering me four and a half million
pounds? In cash?”
Grahame Coats smiled at her in exactly
the same way that striking cobras tend not to. “Absa-tively. If you go to the
police, then I will deny everything, and hire excellent lawyers. In a worst-case
scenario, after an extremely lengthy trial, during which I shall be forced to
blacken Morris’s good name in every way I possibly can, I will be sentenced at
most to ten to twelve years in prison. I might actually serve five years, with
good behavior—and I should be a model prisoner. Given the general overcrowding
of the prison services, I’d serve most of my sentence in an open prison, or even
on day release. I don’t see this as being too problematic. On the flip side, I
can guarantee that if you go to the police, you will never get a penny of
Morris’s money. The alternative is to keep your mouth shut, get all the money
you need and more, while I buy myself a little time to—to do the decent thing.
If you see what I mean.”
Maeve thought about it. “I
would like to see you rot in prison,” she said. And then she sighed, and
nodded. “All right,” she said. “I take the money. I never have to see or deal
with you again. All future royalty checks come directly to
me.”
“Absatively. The safe is over here,” he told
her.
There was a bookcase on the far wall, on which were
uniform leatherbound editions of Dickens, Thackeray, Trollope, and Austen, all
unread. He fumbled with a book, and the bookcase slipped to one side, revealing
a door behind it, painted to match the wall.
Maeve wondered
if it would have a combination, but no, there was just a small keyhole, which
Grahame Coats unlocked with a large brass key. The door swung
open.
He reached in and turned on the light. It was a
narrow room, lined with rather amateurishly fixed shelves. At the far end was a
small, fireproof filing cabinet.
“You can take it in cash,
or in jewelry, or in a combination of the two,” he said, bluntly. “I’d advise
the latter. Lots of nice antique gold back there. Very
portable.”
He unlocked several strongboxes and displayed
the contents. Rings and chains and lockets glittered and gleamed and
shone.
Maeve’s mouth opened. “Take a look,” he told her,
and she squeezed past him. It was a treasure cave.
She
pulled out a golden locket on a chain, held it up, stared at it in wonder. “This
is gorgeous,” she said. “It must be worth—” and she broke off. In the polished
gold of the locket she saw something moving behind her, and she turned, which
meant that the hammer did not hit her squarely on the back of the head, as
Grahame Coats had intended, but instead glanced off the side of her
cheek.
“You little shit!” she said, and she kicked him.
Maeve had good legs and a powerful kick, but she and her attacker were at close
quarters.
Maeve’s foot connected with his shin, and she
reached for the hammer he was holding. Grahame Coats smashed out with it; this
time it connected, and Maeve stumbled to one side. Her eyes seemed to unfocus.
He hit her again, squarely on the top of the head, and again, and again, and she
went down.
Grahame Coats wished that he had a gun. A nice,
sensible handgun. With a silencer, like in the films. Honestly, if it had ever
occurred to him that he would need to kill someone in his office he would have
been much better prepared for it. He might even have laid in a supply of poison.
That would have been wise. No need for any of this
nonsense.
There was blood and blonde hair adhering to the
end of the hammer. He put it down with distaste and, stepping around the woman
on the floor, grabbed the safe-deposit boxes containing the jewelry. He tipped
them out onto his desk and returned them to the safe, where he removed an
attaché case containing bundles of hundred-dollar bills and of five-hundred euro
notes, and a small black velvet bag half full of unset diamonds. He removed some
files from the filing cabinet. And, last but—as he would have pointed out—by no
means least, he took out from the secret room the small leather vanity case
containing two wallets and two passports.
Then he pushed
the heavy door closed, and locked it, and swung the bookcase back into
position.
He stood there, panting somewhat, and caught his
breath.
All in all, he decided, he was rather proud of
himself. Good job, Grahame. Good man. Good show. He had improvised with the
materials at hand and come out ahead: bluffed and been bold and creative—ready,
as the poet said, to risk it all on a turn of pitch-and-toss. He had risked, and
he had won. He was the pitcher. He was the tosser. One day, on his tropical
paradise, he would write his memoirs, and people would learn how he had bested a
dangerous woman. Although, he thought, it might be better if she had actually
been holding a gun.
Probably, he realized on reflection,
she
had pulled a gun on him. He was fairly sure he had seen her reach for
it. He had been extremely fortunate that the hammer had been there, that he had
a tool kit in the room for moments of necessary DIY, or he would not have been
able to act in self-defense with it so swiftly or so
effectively.
Only now did it occur to him to lock the main
door to his office.
There was, he noticed, blood on his
shirt and on his hand, and on the sole of one shoe. He took off his shirt, and
wiped down his shoe with it. Then he dropped the shirt into the bin beneath his
desk. He surprised himself by putting his hand to his mouth and licking the
gobbet of blood off it, like a cat, with his red
tongue.
And then he yawned. He took Maeve’s papers from the
desk, ran them through the shredder. She had a second set of documents in her
briefcase, and he shredded them as well. He reshredded the
shreddings.
He had a closet in the corner of his office,
with a suit hanging in it, and spare shirts, socks, underpants, and so on. You
never knew when you would need to head to a first night from the office, after
all. Be prepared.
He dressed with
care.
There was a small suitcase with wheels in it in the
closet, too, of the kind that is meant to be placed in overhead lockers, and he
put things into it, moving them around to make room.
He
called reception. “Annie,” he said. “Would you pop out and get me a sandwich?
Not from Prêt, no. I thought the new place in Brewer Street? I’m just wrapping
up with Mrs Livingstone. I may actually wind up taking her out for a spot of
real lunch, but best to be prepared.”
He spent several
minutes on the computer, running the kind of disk-cleaning program that takes
your data, overwrites it with random ones and zeroes, then grinds it up
extremely small before finally depositing it at the bottom of the Thames wearing
concrete overshoes. Then he walked down the hall, pulling his wheeled suitcase
behind him.
He put his head around one office door.
“Popping out for a bit,” he said. “I’ll be back in about three, if anyone
asks.”
Annie was gone from reception, which, he thought,
was a good thing. People would assume that Maeve Livingstone had already left
the agency, just as they would expect Grahame Coats to return at any time. By
the time they started looking for him, he would be a long way
away.
He descended in the lift. This was all happening
early, he thought. He would not turn fifty for more than a year. But the exit
mechanisms were already in place. He needed simply to think of it as a golden
handshake, or perhaps a golden parachute.
And then, pulling
the wheelie suitcase behind him, he walked out of the front door into the sunny
Aldwych morning, and out of the Grahame Coats Agency
forever.
Spider had slept peacefully in his own
enormous bed, in his place in Fat Charlie’s spare room. He had begun to wonder,
in a vague sort of way, whether Fat Charlie had gone for good, and had resolved
to investigate the matter the next time that he could in any way be bothered to
do so, unless something more interesting distracted him or he
forgot.
He had slept late, and was now on his way to meet
Rosie for lunch. He would pick her up at her flat, and they would go somewhere
good. It was a beautiful day in early autumn, and Spider’s happiness was
infectious. This was because Spider was, give or take a little, a god. When
you’re a god, your emotions are contagious—other people can catch them. When
people stood near Spider on a day that he was this happy, their worlds would
seem a little brighter. If he hummed a song, other people around him would start
humming, in key, like something from a musical. Of course, if he yawned, a
hundred people nearby would yawn, and when he was miserable it spread like a
damp river-mist, making the world even gloomier for everyone caught up in it. It
wasn’t anything he did; it was something that he
was.
Right now, the only thing casting a damper on
his happiness was that he had resolved to tell Rosie the
truth.
Spider was not terribly good at telling the truth.
He regarded truth as fundamentally malleable, more or less a matter of opinion,
and Spider was able to muster some pretty impressive opinions when he had
to.
Being an imposter was not the problem. He liked being
an imposter. He was good at it. It fitted in with his plans, which were fairly
simple and could until now have been summarized more or less as: (a) go
somewhere; (b) enjoy yourself; and (c) leave before you get bored. And it was
now, he knew deep down, definitely time to leave. The world was his lobster, his
bib was round his neck, and he had a pot of melted butter and an array of
grotesque but effective lobster-eating implements and devices at the
ready.
Only—
Only he didn’t want to
go.
He was having second thoughts about all this, something
Spider found fairly disconcerting. Normally he didn’t even have first thoughts
about things. Life without thinking had been perfectly pleasant—instinct,
impulse, and an obscene amount of luck had served him quite well up to now. But
even miracles can only take you so far. Spider walked down the street, and
people smiled at him.
He had agreed with Rosie that he
would meet her at her flat, so he was pleasantly surprised to see her standing
at the end of the road, waiting for him. He felt a pang of something that was
still not entirely guilt, and waved.
“Rosie?
Hey!”
She came toward him along the pavement, and he began
to grin. They would sort things out. Everything would work out for the best.
Everything would be fine. “You look like a million dollars,” he told her. “Maybe
two million. What are you hungry for?”
Rosie smiled and
shrugged.
They were passing a Greek restaurant. “Is Greek
okay?” She nodded. They walked down some steps and went inside. It was dark and
empty, having only just opened, and the proprietor pointed them toward a nook,
or possibly a cranny, toward the rear.
They sat opposite
each other, at a table just big enough for two. Spider said, “There’s something
that I wanted to talk to you about.” She said nothing. “It’s not bad,” he went
on. “Well, it’s not good. But. Well. It’s something you ought to
know.”
The proprietor asked them if they were ready to
order anything. “Coffee,” said Spider, and Rosie nodded her agreement. “Two
coffees,” said Spider. “And if you can give us, um, five minutes? I need a
little privacy here.”
The proprietor
withdrew.
Rosie looked at Spider
inquiringly.
He took a deep breath. “Right. Okay. Let me
just say this, because it isn’t easy, and I don’t know that I can—right. Okay.
Look, I’m not Fat Charlie. I know you think I am, but I’m not. I’m his brother,
Spider. You think I’m him because we sort of look
alike.”
She did not say
anything.
“Well, I don’t really look like him. But. Y’know,
none of this really comes easy to me. Ookay. Uh. I can’t stop thinking about
you. So I mean, I know you’re engaged to my brother, but I’m sort of asking if
you, well, if you’d think about maybe dumping him and possibly going out with
me.”
A pot of coffee arrived on a small silver tray, with
two cups.
“Greek coffee,” said the proprietor, who had
brought it.
“Yes. Thanks. I
did ask for a couple of
minutes—”
“Is very hot,” said the proprietor. “Very hot
coffee. Strong. Greek. Not Turkish.”
“That’s great. Listen,
if you don’t mind—five minutes. Please?”
The proprietor
shrugged and walked away.
“You probably hate me,” said
Spider. “If I was you I’d probably hate me, too. But I mean this. More than I’ve
ever meant anything in my life.” She was just looking at him, without
expression, and he said, “Please. Just say something.
Anything.”
Her lips moved, as if she were trying to find
the right words to say.
Spider
waited.
Her mouth opened.
His first
thought was that she was eating something, because the thing he saw between her
teeth was brown, and was certainly not a tongue. Then it moved its head and its
eyes, little black-bead eyes, stared at him. Rosie opened her mouth impossibly
wide and the birds came out.
Spider said “Rosie?” and then
the air was filled with beaks and feathers and claws, one after the other. Birds
poured out from her throat, each accompanied by a tiny coughing-choking noise,
in a stream directed at him.
He threw up an arm to protect
his eyes, and something hurt his wrist. He flailed out, and something flew at
his face, heading for his eyes. He jerked his head backward, and the beak
punctured his cheek.
A moment of nightmare clarity: there
was still a woman sitting opposite him. What he could no longer understand was
how he could ever have mistaken her for Rosie. She was older than Rosie, for a
start, her blue-black hair streaked here and there with silver. Her skin was not
the warm brown of Rosie’s skin but black as flint. She was wearing a ragged
ochre raincoat. And she grinned and opened her mouth wide once more, and now
inside her mouth he could see the cruel beaks and crazy eyes of
seagulls—
Spider did not stop to think. He acted. He
grabbed the handle of the coffeepot, swept it up in one hand, while with the
other he pulled off the lid; then he jerked the pot toward the woman in the seat
opposite him. The contents of the pot, scalding hot black coffee, went all over
her.
She hissed in pain.
Birds crashed
and flapped through the air of the cellar restaurant, but now there was nobody
sitting opposite him, and the birds flew without direction, flapping into walls
wildly.
The proprietor said, “Sir? Are you hurt? I am
sorry. They must have come in from the street.”
“I’m fine,”
said Spider.
“Your face is bleeding,” said the man. He
handed Spider a napkin, and Spider pressed it against his cheek. The cut
stung.
Spider offered to help the man get the birds out. He
opened the door to the street, but now the place was as empty of birds as it had
been before his arrival.
Spider pulled out a five-pound
note. “Here,” he said. “For the coffee. I’ve got to
go.”
The proprietor nodded, gratefully. “Keep the
napkin.”
Spider stopped and thought. “When I came in,” he
asked, “was there a woman with me?”
The proprietor looked
puzzled—possibly even scared, Spider could not be sure. “I do not remember,” he
said, as if dazed. “If you had been alone, I would not have seated you back
there. But I do not know.”
Spider went back out into the
street. The day was still bright, but the sunlight no longer seemed reassuring.
He looked around. He saw a pigeon, shuffling and pecking at an abandoned ice
cream cone; a sparrow on a window ledge; and, high above, a flash of white in
the sunlight, its wings extended, a seagull circled.
Chapter Nine
in which Fat Charlie answers the door and spider encounters
flamingos
Fat Charlie’s luck was changing. He
could feel it. The plane on which he was returning home had been oversold, and
he had found himself bumped up to first class. The meal was excellent. Halfway
across the Atlantic, a flight attendant came over to inform him that he had won
a complimentary box of chocolates, and presented it to him. He put it in his
overhead locker, and ordered a Drambuie on ice.
He would
get home. He would sort everything out with Grahame Coats—after all, if there
was one thing that Fat Charlie was certain of, it was the honesty of his own
accounting. He would make everything good with Rosie. Everything was going to be
just great.
He wondered if Spider would already be gone
when he got home, or whether he would get the satisfaction of throwing him out.
He hoped it would be the latter. Fat Charlie wanted to see his brother
apologize, possibly even grovel. He started to imagine the things that he was
going to say.
“Get out!” said Fat Charlie, “And take your
sunshine, your Jacuzzi, and your bedroom with
you!”
“Sorry?” said the flight
attendant.
“Talking,” said Fat Charlie. “To myself. Just
um.”
But even the embarrassment he felt at this wasn’t
really that bad. He didn’t even hope the plane would crash and end his
mortification. Life was definitely looking up.
He opened
the little kit of useful amenities he had been given, and put on his eyeshade,
and pushed his seat back as far as it would go, which was most of the way. He
thought about Rosie, although the Rosie in his mind kept shifting, morphing into
someone smaller who wasn’t really wearing much of anything. Fat Charlie guiltily
imagined her dressed, and was mortified when he realized that she seemed to be
wearing a police uniform. He felt terrible about this, he told himself, but it
didn’t seem to make much of an impression. He ought to feel ashamed of himself.
He ought to—
Fat Charlie shifted in his seat and emitted
one small, satisfied snore.
He was still in an excellent
mood when he landed at Heathrow. He took the Heathrow Express into Paddington
and was pleased to note that in his brief absence from England the sun had
decided to come out. Every little thing, he told himself, is going to
be all right.
The only odd note, which added a flavor
of wrongness to the morning, occurred halfway through the train journey. He was
staring out of the window, wishing he had bought a newspaper at Heathrow. The
train was passing an expanse of green—a school playing field, perhaps, when the
sky seemed, momentarily, to darken, and, with a hiss of brakes, the train
stopped at a signal.
That did not disturb Fat Charlie. It
was England in the autumn: the sun was, by definition, something that only
happened when it wasn’t cloudy or raining. But there was a figure standing on
the edge of the green by a stand of trees.
At first glance,
he thought it was a scarecrow.
That was foolish. It could
not have been a scarecrow. Scarecrows are found in fields, not on football
pitches. Scarecrows certainly aren’t left on the edge of the woodland. Anyway,
if it was a scarecrow it was doing a very poor job.
There
were crows everywhere, after all, big black ones.
And then
it moved.
It was too far away to be anything more than a
shape, a slight figure in a tattered brown raincoat. Still, Fat Charlie knew it.
He knew that if he had been close enough, he would have seen a face chipped from
obsidian, and raven-black hair, and eyes that held
madness.
Then the train jerked and began to move, and in
moments the woman in the brown raincoat was out of
sight.
Fat Charlie felt uncomfortable. He had practically
convinced himself by now that what had happened, what he thought had
happened, in Mrs. Dunwiddy’s front room had been some form of hallucination, a
high-octane dream, true on some level but not a real thing. Not something that
had happened; rather, it was symbolic of a greater truth. He could not have gone
to a real place, nor struck a real bargain, could he?
It
was only a metaphor, after all.
He did not ask himself why
he was now so certain that everything would soon begin to improve. There was
reality, and there was reality, and some things were more real than
others.
Faster and faster, the train rattled him further
into London.
Spider was almost home from the
Greek restaurant, napkin pushed against his cheek, when someone touched him on
the shoulder.
“Charles?” said
Rosie.
Spider jumped, or at least, he jerked and made a
startled noise.
“Charles? Are you all right? What happened
to your cheek?”
He stared at her. “Are you you?” he
asked.
“What?”
“Are you
Rosie?”
“What kind of a question is that? Of course I’m
Rosie. What did you do to your cheek?”
He pressed the
napkin against his cheek. “I cut it,” he said.
“Let me
see?” She took his hand away from his cheek. The center of the white napkin was
stained crimson, as if he had bled into it, but his cheek was whole and
untouched. “There’s nothing
there.”
“Oh.”
“Charles? Are you all
right?”
“Yes,” he said. “I am. Unless I’m not. I think we
should go back to my place. I think I’ll be safer
there.”
“We were going to have lunch,” said Rosie, in the
tone of voice of one who worries that she’ll only understand what’s actually
going on when a TV presenter leaps out and reveals the hidden
cameras.
“Yes,” said Spider. “I know. I think someone just
tried to kill me, though. And she pretended she was
you.”
“Nobody’s trying to kill you,” said Rosie, failing to
sound like she wasn’t humoring him.
“Even if nobody’s
trying to kill me, can we skip lunch and go back to my place? I’ve got food
there.”
“Of course.”
Rosie followed
him down the road, wondering when Fat Charlie had lost all that weight. He
looked good, she thought. He looked really good. They walked into Maxwell
Gardens in silence.
He said, “Look at
that.”
“What?”
He showed her. The
fresh bloodstain had vanished from the napkin. It was now perfectly
white.
“Is it a magic trick?”
“If it
is, I didn’t do it,” he said. “For once.” He dropped the napkin into a bin. As
he did so, a taxi pulled up in front of Fat Charlie’s house, and Fat Charlie got
out, rumpled and blinking and carrying a white plastic
bag.
Rosie looked at Fat Charlie. She looked at Spider. She
looked back at Fat Charlie, who had opened the bag and pulled out an enormous
box of chocolates.
“They’re for you,” he
said.
Rosie took the chocolates and said, “Thank you.”
There were two men and they looked and sounded completely different, and she
still could not work out which one of them was her fiancée. “I’m going mad,
aren’t I?” she said, her voice taut. It was easier, now she knew what was
wrong.
The thinner of the two Fat Charlies, the one with
the earring, put his hand on her shoulder. “You need to go home,” he said. “Then
you need a nap. When you wake up, you’ll have forgotten all about
this.”
Well, she thought, thatmakes life
easier. It’s better with a plan. She walked back to her flat with a spring
in her step, carrying her box of chocolates.
“What did you
do?” asked Fat Charlie. “She just seemed to turn
off.”
Spider shrugged. “I didn’t want to upset her,” he
said.
“Why didn’t you tell her the
truth?”
“It didn’t seem
appropriate.”
“Like you’d know what was
appropriate?”
Spider touched the front door and it
opened.
“I have keys, you know,” said Fat Charlie. “It’s
my front door.”
They walked into the hallway, walked
up the stairs.
“Where have you been?” asked
Spider.
“Nowhere. Out,” said Fat Charlie, as if he were a
teenager.
“I was attacked by birds in the restaurant this
morning. Do you know anything about that? You do, don’t
you.”
“Not really. Maybe. It’s just time for you to leave,
that’s all.”
“Don’t start anything,” said
Spider.
“Me? Me start anything? I think I’ve been a
model of restraint. You came into my life. You got my boss upset, and got the
police onto me. You, you’ve been kissing my girlfriend. You screwed up my
life.”
“Hey,” said Spider. “You ask me, you’ve done a great
job of screwing up your life on your own.”
Fat Charlie
clenched his fist, swung back, and hit Spider in the jaw, like they do on the
movies. Spider staggered back, more surprised than hurt. He put his hand to his
lip, then looked down at the blood on his hand. “You hit me,” he
said.
“I can do it again,” said Fat Charlie, who wasn’t
sure that he could. His hand hurt.
Spider said “Yeah?” and
launched himself at Fat Charlie, pummeling him with his fists, and Fat Charlie
went over, his arm around Spider’s waist, pulling Spider down with
him.
They rolled up and down the hallway floor, hitting and
flailing at each other. Fat Charlie half-expected Spider to launch some kind of
magical counterattack or to be supernaturally strong, but the two of them seemed
fairly evenly matched. Both of them fought unscientifically, like boys—like
brothers—and as they fought, Fat Charlie thought he remembered doing this once
before, a long, long time ago. Spider was smarter and faster, but if Fat Charlie
could just get on top of him, and get Spider’s hands out of the
way—
Fat Charlie grabbed for Spider’s right hand, twisted
it behind Spider’s back, then sat on his brother’s chest, putting all his weight
on him.
“Give in?” he asked.
“No.”
Spider wriggled and twisted, but Fat Charlie was solidly in position, sitting on
Spider’s chest.
“I want you to promise,” said Fat Charlie,
“to get out of my life, and to leave me and Rosie alone
forever.”
At this, Spider bucked, angrily, and Fat Charlie
was dislodged. He landed, sprawled, on the kitchen floor. “Look,” said Spider.
“I told you.”
There was a banging on the door
downstairs, an imperious knocking of the kind that indicated someone needed to
come in rather urgently. Fat Charlie glared at Spider, and Spider scowled at Fat
Charlie, and slowly they got to their feet.
“Shall I answer
it?” said Spider.
“No,” said Fat Charlie. “It’s my
bloody house. And I’m going to bloody answer my own front door,
thank you very much.”
“Whatever.”
Fat
Charlie edged toward the stairs. Then he turned around. “Once I’ve dealt with
this,” he said, “I’m dealing with you. Pack your stuff. You are on your way
out.” He walked downstairs, tucking himself in, brushing the dust off, and
generally trying to make it look as if he hadn’t been brawling on the
floor.
He opened the door. There were two large uniformed
policemen and one smaller, rather more exotic policewoman in extremely plain
clothes.
“Charles Nancy?” said Daisy. She looked at him as
if he was a stranger, her eyes expressionless.
“Glumph,”
said Fat Charlie.
“Mister Nancy,” she said, “you are under
arrest. You have the right—”
Fat Charlie turned back to the
interior of the house. “Bastard!” he shouted up the stairs. “Bastard bastard
bastarding bastardy bastard!”
Daisy tapped him on
the arm. “Do you want to come quietly?” she asked, quietly. “Only if you don’t,
we can subdue you first. I wouldn’t recommend it, though. They’re very
enthusiastic subduers.”
“I’ll come quietly,” said Fat
Charlie.
“That’s good,” said Daisy. She walked Fat Charlie
outside and locked him into the back of a black police
van.
The police searched the flat. The rooms were empty of
life. At the end of the hall was a little spare bedroom, containing several
boxes of books and toy cars. They poked around in there, but they didn’t find
anything interesting.
Spider lay on the couch in
his bedroom, and sulked. HE had gone to his room when Fat Charlie went off to
answer the door. He needed to be on his own. He didn’t do confrontations
terribly well. When it got to that point was normally when he went away, and
right now Spider knew it was time to go, but he still didn’t want to
leave.
He wasn’t sure that sending Rosie home was the right
thing to have done.
What he wanted to do—and Spider was
driven entirely by wants, never by oughts or shoulds—was to
tell Rosie that he wanted her—he, Spider. That he wasn’t Fat Charlie.
That he was something quite different. And that, in itself, wasn’t the problem.
He could simply have said to her, with enough conviction, “I’m actually Spider,
Fat Charlie’s brother, and you’re completely okay with this. It doesn’t bother
you,” and the universe would have pushed Rosie just a little, and she would have
accepted it, just as she’d gone home earlier. She’d be fine with it. She would
not have minded it, not at all.
Except, he knew, somewhere
deep inside, she would.
Human beings do not like being
pushed about by gods. They may seem to, on the surface, but somewhere on the
inside, underneath it all, they sense it, and they resent it. They know.
Spider could tell her to be happy about the situation, and she would be happy,
but it would be as real as painting a smile on her face—a smile that she would
truly believe, in every way that mattered, was her own. In the short term (and
until now Spider had only ever thought in the short term) none of this would be
important, but in the long term it could only lead to problems. He didn’t want
some kind of seething, furious creature, someone who, though she hated him way
down deep, was perfectly placid and doll-like and normal on the surface. He
wanted Rosie.
And that wouldn’t be Rosie, would
it?
Spider stared out of the window at the glorious
waterfall and the tropical sky beyond it, and Spider began to wonder when Fat
Charlie would come knocking on his door. Something had happened this morning in
the restaurant, and he was certain that his brother knew more about it than he
was saying.
After a while, he got bored with waiting, and
wandered back into Fat Charlie’s flat. There was nobody there. The place was a
mess—it looked like it had been turned upside down by trained professionals.
Spider decided that, in all probability, Fat Charlie had messed the place up
himself to indicate how upset he was that Spider had beaten him in their
fight.
He looked out of the window. There was a police car
parked outside beside a black police van. As he watched, they drove
away.
He made himself some toast, and he buttered it and
ate it. Then he walked through the flat, carefully closing all the
curtains.
The doorbell rang. Spider closed the last of the
curtains, then he walked downstairs.
He opened the door and
Rosie looked at him. She still seemed a little dazed. He looked at her. “Well?
Aren’t you going to invite me in?”
“Of course. Come
in.”
She walked up the stairs. “What happened here? It
looks like an earthquake
hit.”
“Yeah?”
“Why are you just
sitting in the dark?” She went to open the curtains.
“Don’t
do that! Just keep them closed.”
“What are you scared of?”
asked Rosie.
Spider looked out of the window. “Birds,” he
said, eventually.
“But birds are our friends,” said Rosie,
as if addressing a small child.
“Birds,” Spider said, “are
the last of the dinosaurs. Tiny velociraptors with wings. Devouring defenseless
wiggly things and, and nuts, and fish, and, and other birds. They get the early
worms. And have you ever watched a chicken eat? They may look innocent, but
birds are, well, they’re vicious.”
“There was a thing on
the news the other day,” said Rosie, “about a bird who saved a man’s
life.”
“That doesn’t change the fact
that—”
“It was a raven, or a crow. One of those big black
ones. The man was lying on the lawn in his home in California, reading a
magazine, and he hears this cawing and cawing, and it’s a raven, trying to
attract his attention. So he gets up and goes over to the tree it’s perched on,
and down beneath it is a mountain lion, that had been getting all ready to
pounce on him. So he went inside. If that raven hadn’t warned him, he would have
been lion-food.”
“I don’t think that’s usual raven
behavior,” said Spider. “But whether one raven once saved someone’s life or not,
it doesn’t change anything. Birds are still out to get
me.”
“Right,” said Rosie, trying to sound as if she wasn’t
humoring him. “Birds are out to get
you.”
“Yes.”
“And this is
because—?”
“Um.”
“There must be a
reason. You can’t tell me the great plurality of birds has just decided to treat
you as an enormous early worm for no particular reason.”
He
said, “I don’t think you’d believe me,” and he meant
it.
“Charlie. You’ve always been really honest. I mean,
I’ve trusted you. If you tell me something, I’ll do my best to believe it. I’ll
try really hard. I love you and I believe in you. So why don’t you let me
find out if I believe you or not?”
Spider thought about
this. Then he reached out for her hand, and he squeezed
it.
“I think I ought to show you something,” he
said.
He led her to the end of the corridor. They stopped
outside the door to Fat Charlie’s spare room. “There’s something in here,” he
said. “I think it’ll explain it a bit better than I
can.”
“You’re a superhero,” she said, “and this is where
you keep the batpoles?”
“No.”
“Is it
something kinky? You like to dress up in a twinset and pearls and call yourself
Dora?”
“No.”
“It’s not—a model train
set, is it?”
Spider pushed open the door to Fat Charlie’s
spare room, and at the same time he opened the door to his bedroom. The picture
windows at the end of the room showed a waterfall, which crashed down into a
jungle pool far below. The sky though the windows was bluer than
sapphires.
Rosie made a small
noise.
She turned around, walked back down the hall, into
the kitchen, and looked out of the window at the gray London sky, doughy and
unwelcoming. She came back. “I don’t understand,” she said. “Charlie? What’s
happening?”
“I’m not Charlie,” said Spider. “Look at me.
Really look at me. I don’t even look like
him.”
She made no pretense of humoring him any longer. Her
eyes were wide and scared.
“I’m his brother,” said Spider.
“I’ve screwed everything up. Everything. And I think probably the best thing I
can do is just get out of all your lives and go away.”
“So
where’s Fat—where’s Charlie?”
“I don’t know. We were having
a fight. He went off to answer the door, and I went off to my room, and he
didn’t come back.”
“He didn’t come back? And you didn’t
even try to find out what had happened to him?”
“Er.
He might have been taken away by the police,” said Spider. “It’s just an idea. I
have no proof or anything.”
“What’s your name?” she
demanded.
“Spider.”
Rosie repeated it.
“Spider.” Outside the window, above the spray of the waterfall, she could see a
flock of flamingos in the air, the sunlight blurring their wings in pink and
white. They were stately and uncountable, and it was one of the most beautiful
things Rosie had ever seen. She looked back at Spider, and looking at him, she
could not understand how she had ever believed that this man was Fat Charlie.
Where Fat Charlie was easygoing, open, and uncomfortable, this man was like a
steel rod bent back and ready to snap. “You really aren’t him, are
you?”
“I told you I wasn’t.”
“So. So
who did I. Who have I. Who was it—who did I sleep
with?”
“That would be me,” said
Spider.
“I thought so,” said Rosie. She slapped him, as
hard as she could, across his face. He could feel his lip start bleeding once
more.
“I guess I deserved that,” he
said.
“Of course you deserved it.” She paused. Then she
said, “Did Fat Charlie know about this? About you? That you were going out with
me?”
“Well, yes. But he—”
“You are
both sick,” she said. “Sick, sick, evil men. I hope you rot in
Hell.”
She took one last puzzled glance around the enormous
bedroom and then out of the bedroom window at the jungle trees and the huge
waterfall and the flock of flamingos, and she walked away down the
hall.
Spider sat down on the floor with a thin trickle of
blood coming from his lower lip, feeling stupid. He heard the front door slam.
He walked over to the hot tub and dipped the end of a fluffy towel into the hot
water. Then he wrung it out and put it on his mouth. “I don’t need any of this,”
said Spider. He said it aloud; it’s easier to lie to yourself when you say
things out loud. “I didn’t need any of you people a week ago and I don’t need
you now. I don’t care. I’m done.”
The flamingos hit the
window glass like feathery pink cannonballs, and the glass shattered, fragments
of window flying across the room, scattering and embedding themselves in the
walls, the floor, the bed. The air was filled with plummeting pale pink bodies,
a confusion of huge pink wings, and curved black beaks. The roar of a waterfall
exploded into the room.
Spider pushed back against the
wall. There were flamingos between him and the door, hundreds of them:
five-foot-tall birds, all legs and neck. He got to his feet and took several
steps through a minefield of angry pink birds, each of them glowering at him
through mad pink eyes. From a distance, they might have been beautiful. One of
them snapped at Spider’s hand. It didn’t break the skin, but it
hurt.
Spider’s bedroom was a large room, but it was rapidly
filling with crash-landing flamingos. And there was a dark cloud in the blue sky
above the waterfall that appeared to be another flock on its
way.
They were pecking at him and clawing at him and
buffeting him with their wings, and he knew that that was not actually the
problem. The problem would be being suffocated under a fluffy pink blanket of
feathers with birds attached. It would be an astonishingly undignified way to
go, crushed by birds, and not even particularly intelligent
birds.
Think, he told himself. They’re flamingos.
Bird-brains. You’re Spider.
So? he thought back
at himself, irritated. Tell me something I don’t
know.
The flamingos on the ground were mobbing him. The
ones in the air were diving toward him. He pulled his jacket over his head, and
then the airborne flamingos began hitting him. It was like having someone firing
chickens at you. He staggered and went down. Well, trick them,
stupid.
Spider pushed himself to his feet and waded
through the sea of wings and beaks until he reached the window, now an open jaw
of jagged glass.
“Stupid birds,” he said, cheerfully. He
pulled himself up onto the window ledge.
Flamingos are not
famed for their cutting intelligence, nor for their problem-solving abilities:
confronted with a twist of wire and a bottle with something edible in it, a crow
might try to make a tool out of the wire in order to get at the contents of the
bottle. A flamingo, on the other hand, will try and eat the wire, if it looks
like a shrimp, or possibly even if it doesn’t, just in case it was a new kind of
shrimp. So if there was something slightly smoky and insubstantial about
the man who stood on the window ledge insulting them, the flamingos failed to
perceive it. They glared at him with the crazed ruby eyes of killer rabbits, and
they rushed toward him.
The man dove from the window, down
into the spray of the waterfall, and a thousand flamingos launched themselves
into the air after him, many of them, given the run-up a flamingo needs to get
properly airborne, tumbling like stones.
Soon the bedroom
contained only injured or dead flamingos: the ones who had broken the windows,
the ones who had crashed into the walls, the ones who had been crushed beneath
other flamingos. Those of the birds who were still alive watched the bedroom
door open, apparently by itself, and close again, but, being flamingos, they
thought very little of it.
Spider stood in the corridor of
Fat Charlie’s flat and tried to catch his breath. He concentrated on letting the
bedroom stop existing, which was something that he hated to do, mostly because
he was incredibly proud of his sound system, and also because it was where he
kept his stuff.
You can always get more stuff,
though.
If you’re Spider, all you really have to do is
ask.
Rosie’s mother was not a woman given to
gloating loudly, so when Rosie broke down in tears on the Chippendale sofa, her
mother refrained from whooping, from singing, or from doing a small victory
dance and then shimmying around the room. A careful observer, however, might
have noticed a glint of triumph in her eyes.
She gave Rosie
a large glass of vitaminized water with an ice cube in it and listened to her
daughter’s tearful litany of heartbreak and deception. By the end of it, the
glint of triumph had been replaced with a look of confusion, and her head was
starting to spin.
“So Fat Charlie wasn’t really Fat
Charlie?” said Rosie’s mother.
“No. Well, yes. Fat Charlie
is Fat Charlie, but for the last week I’ve been seeing his
brother.”
“They are twins?”
“No. I
don’t even think they look alike. I don’t know. I’m so
confused.”
“So which one of them did you break up
with?”
Rosie blew her nose. “I broke up with Spider. That’s
Fat Charlie’s brother.”
“But you weren’t engaged to
him.”
“No, but I thought I was. I thought he was Fat
Charlie.”
“So you broke up with Fat Charlie as
well?”
“Sort of. I just haven’t told him
yet.”
“Did he, did he know about this, this brother thing?
Was it some kind of evil kinky conspiracy they did to my poor
girl?”
“I don’t think so. But it doesn’t matter. I can’t
marry him.”
“No,” agreed her mother. “You certainly cannot.
Not one bit.” Inside, in her head, she did a victory jig and set off a large but
tasteful celebratory display of fireworks. “We can find you a good boy. Don’t
you worry. That Fat Charlie. He was always up to no good. I knew it the first
moment I saw him. He ate my wax fruit. I knew he was trouble. Where is he
now?”
“I’m not sure. Spider said he might have been taken
away by the police,” said Rosie.
“Hah!” said her
mother, who increased the fireworks in her head to New Year’s Eve at Disneyland
proportions and mentally sacrificed a dozen flawless black bulls for good
measure. Aloud, all she said was, “Probably in prison, you ask me. Best place
for him. I always said that was where that young man would end
up.”
Rosie began to cry, if anything even harder than
before. She pulled out another wad of paper tissues and blew her nose with an
extreme honk. She swallowed bravely. Then she cried some more. Her mother patted
the back of Rosie’s hand as reassuringly as she knew how. “Of course you can’t
marry him,” she said. “You can’t marry a convict. But if he’s in prison you can
easily break off the engagement.” A spectre of a smile haunted the corners of
her lips as she said, “I could call on him for you. Or go there on a visitor’s
day and tell him he’s a lousy crook and you never want to see him again. We
could get a restraining order, as well,” she added
helpfully.
“Th-that’s not why I can’t marry Fat Charlie,”
said Rosie.
“No?” asked her mother, raising one perfectly
penciled eyebrow.
“No,” said Rosie. “I can’t marry Fat
Charlie because I’m not in love with him.”
“Of course you
aren’t. I always knew that. It was a girlish infatuation, but now you see the
true—”
“I’m in love,” continued Rosie, as if her mother had
not spoken, “with Spider. His brother.” The expression that made its way across
her mother’s face then was a cloud of wasps arriving at a picnic. “It’s okay,”
said Rosie. “I’m not going to marry him, either. I’ve told him I never want to
see him again.”
Rosie’s mother pursed her lips. “Well,” she
said, “I can’t pretend I understand any of this, but I can’t say it’s bad news,
either.” The gears in her head shifted, and the cogs interlocked in new and
interesting ways: ratchets ratchetted and springs resprung. “You know,” she
said, “what would be the best thing for you right now? Have you thought about
taking a little holiday? I’m happy to pay for it, all the money I’m saving on
the wedding after all—”
That may have been the wrong thing
to say. Rosie began to sob into her tissues once again. Her mother went on,
“Anyway, it would be my treat. I know you’ve got holiday time you haven’t used
at work. And you said things were quiet right now. At a time like this, a girl
needs to get away from everything and simply relax.”
Rosie
wondered whether she’d misjudged her mother all these years. She sniffed and
swallowed and said, “That would be nice.”
“Then it’s
settled,” said her mother. “I shall come with you, to take care of my baby.” In
her head, underneath the grand finale of the fireworks display, she added,
And to make sure that my baby only meets the right sort of
man.
“Where are we going?” asked
Rosie.
“We’re going to go,” said her mother, “on a
cruise.”
Fat Charlie was not handcuffed. That was
good. Everything else was bad, but at least he wasn’t in handcuffs. Life had
become a confused blur filled with too-sharp details: the duty sergeant
scratching his nose and signing him in—“Cell six is free”—through a green door
and then the smell of the cells, a low-level stench he had never before
encountered but which was immediately and horribly familiar, a pervasive fug of
yesterday’s vomit and disinfectant and smoke and stale blankets and unflushed
toilets and despair. It was the smell of things at the bottom, and that was
where Fat Charlie seemed to have ended up.
“When you need
to flush the lavvy,” said the policeman accompanying him down the corridor, “you
press the button in your cell. One of us’ll be by, sooner or later, to pull the
chain for you. Stops you trying to flush away the
evidence.”
“Evidence of what?”
“Leave
it out, Sunshine.”
Fat Charlie sighed. He’d been flushing
away his own bodily waste products since he’d been old enough to take a certain
pride in the activity, and the loss of that, more than the loss of his liberty,
told him that everything had changed.
“It’s your first
time,” said the
policeman.
“Sorry.”
“Drugs?” said the
policeman.
“No, thank you,” said Fat
Charlie.
“Is that what you’re in
for?”
“I don’t know what I’m in for,” said Fat Charlie.
“I’m innocent.”
“White-collar crime, eh?” said the
policeman, and he shook his head. “I’ll tell you something the blue-collar boys
know without being told. The easier you make it on us, the easier we make it on
you. You white-collar people. Always standing up for your rights. You just make
it harder on yourselves.”
He opened the door to cell six.
“Home sweet home,” he said.
The cell-stench was worse
inside the room, which had been painted in the kind of speckled paint that
resists graffiti and contained only a shelflike bed, low to the ground, and a
lidless toilet in the corner.
Fat Charlie put the blanket
he’d been issued down on the bed.
“Right,” said the
policeman. “Well. Make yourself at home. And if you get bored, please don’t
block the toilet with your blanket.”
“Why would I do
that?”
“I often wonder that myself,” said the policeman.
“Why indeed? Perhaps it breaks the monotony. I shouldn’t know. Being a
law-abiding sort with a police pension waiting for me, I’ve never actually had
to spend much time in the cells.”
“You know, I didn’t do
it,” said Fat Charlie. “Whatever it was.”
“That’s good,”
said the policeman.
“Excuse me,” said Fat Charlie. “Do I
get anything to read?”
“Does this look like a lending
library to you?”
“No.”
“When I was a
young copper, bloke asked me for a book, I went and found him the book I’d been
reading. J. T. Edson, it was, or maybe Louis L’Amour. He only went and blocked
up his toilet with it, didn’t he? Won’t catch me doing that again in a
hurry.”
Then he went out and locked the door, with Fat
Charlie on the inside and himself on the
outside.
The oddest thing, thought
Grahame Coats, who was not given to self-inspection, was how normal and chipper
and generally good he felt.
The captain told them to fasten
their safety belts, and mentioned that they would be landing soon on Saint
Andrews. Saint Andrews was a small Caribbean island which, on declaring
independence in 1962, had elected to demonstrate its freedom from colonial rule
in a number of ways, including the creation of its own judiciary and a singular
lack of extradition treaties with the rest of the
world.
The plane landed. Grahame Coats got off and walked
across the sunny tarmac dragging his wheeled bag behind him. He produced the
appropriate passport—Basil Finnegan’s—and had it stamped, collected the rest of
his luggage from the carousel, and walked out through an unattended customs hall
into the tiny airport and from there into the glorious sunshine. He wore a
T-shirt and shorts and sandals and looked like a British Holidaymaker
Abroad.
His groundskeeper was waiting for him outside the
airport, and Grahame Coats sat himself in the back of the black Mercedes and
said “Home, please.” On the road out of Williamstown, the road to his clifftop
estate, he stared out at the island with a satisfied and proprietorial smile on
his face.
It occurred to him that before he left England he
had left a woman for dead. He wondered if she was still alive; he rather doubted
it. It did not bother him to have killed. It felt instead immensely satisfying,
like something he had needed to do to feel complete. He wondered if he would
ever get to do it again.
He wondered if it would be
soon.
Chapter Ten
in which Fat Charlie sees the world and Maeve Livingstone is
dissatisfied
Fat Charlie sat on the blanket on
the metal bed and waited for something to happen, but it didn’t. What felt like
several months passed, extremely slowly. He tried to go to sleep but he couldn’t
remember how.
He banged on the
door.
Someone shouted, “Shut up!” but he couldn’t tell
whether it was an officer or a fellow inmate.
He walked
around the cell for what, at a conservative estimate, he felt must have been two
or three years. Then he sat down and let eternity wash over him. Daylight was
visible through the thick glass block at the top of the wall that did duty as a
window, by all appearances the same daylight that had been visible when the door
was locked behind him that morning.
Fat Charlie tried to
remember what people did in prison to pass the time, but all he could come up
with was keeping secret diaries and hiding things in their bottoms. He had
nothing to write on, and felt that a definite measure of how well one was
getting on in life was not having to hide things in one’s
bottom.
Nothing happened. Nothing continued to happen. More
Nothing. The Return of Nothing. Son of Nothing. Nothing Rides Again. Nothing and
Abbott and Costello meet the Wolfman—
When the door was
unlocked, Fat Charlie nearly cheered.
“Right. Exercise
yard. You can have a cigarette if you need one.”
“I don’t
smoke.”
“Filthy habit anyway.”
The
exercise yard was an open space in the middle of the police station surrounded
by walls on all sides and topped by wire mesh, which Fat Charlie walked around
while deciding that, if there was one thing he didn’t like being in, it was
police custody. Fat Charlie had had no real liking for the police, but until
now, he had still managed to cling to a fundamental trust in the natural order
of things, a conviction that there was some kind of power—a Victorian might have
thought of it as Providence—that ensured that the guilty would be punished while
the innocent would be set free. This faith had collapsed in the face of recent
events and had been replaced by the suspicion that he would spend the rest of
his life pleading his innocence to a variety of implacable judges and
tormenters, many of whom would look like Daisy, and that he would in all
probability wake up in cell six the following morning to find that he had been
transformed into an enormous cockroach. He had definitely been transported to
the kind of maleficent universe that transformed people into
cockroaches—
Something dropped out of the sky above him
onto the wire mesh. Fat Charlie looked up. A blackbird stared down at him with
lofty disinterest. There was more fluttering, and the blackbird was joined by
several sparrows and by something that Fat Charlie thought was probably a
thrush.
They stared at him; he stared back at
them.
More birds came.
It would have
been hard for Fat Charlie to say exactly when the accumulation of birds on the
wire mesh moved from interesting to terrifying. It was somewhere in the first
hundred or so, anyway. And it was in the way they didn’t coo, or caw, or trill,
or sing. They simply landed on the wire, and they watched
him.
“Go away,” said Fat Charlie.
As
one bird, they didn’t. Instead, they spoke. They said his
name.
Fat Charlie went over to the door in the corner. He
banged on it. He said, “Excuse me,” a few times, and then he started shouting,
“Help!”
A clunk. The door was opened, and a heavy-lidded
member of Her Majesty’s constabulary said, “This had better be
good.”
Fat Charlie pointed upward. He didn’t say anything.
He didn’t need to. The constabular mouth dropped open peculiarly wide, and it
hung there slackly. Fat Charlie’s mother would have told the man to shut his
mouth or something would fly into it.
The mesh sagged under
the weight of thousands of birds. Tiny avian eyes stared down,
unblinkingly.
“Christ on a bike,” said the policeman, and
he ushered Fat Charlie back into the cellblock without saying another
word.
Maeve Livingstone was in pain. She was
sprawled on the floor. She woke, and her hair and face were wet and warm, and
then she slept, and when next she woke her hair and face were sticky and cold.
She dreamed and woke and dreamed again, woke enough to be conscious of the hurt
at the back of her head, and then, because it was easier to sleep, and because
when she slept it did not hurt, she allowed sleep to embrace her like a
comfortable blanket.
In her dreams she was walking through
a television studio, looking for Morris. Occasionally she would catch glimpses
of him on the monitors. He always looked concerned. She tried to find her way
out, but all ways led her back to the studio floor.
“I’m so
cold,” she thought, and knew that she was awake once more. The pain, though, had
subsided. All things considered, thought Maeve, she felt pretty
good.
There was something she was upset about, but she was
not entirely sure what it was. Perhaps it had been another part of her
dream.
It was dark, wherever she was. She seemed to be in
some kind of broom closet, and she put out her arms to avoid bumping into
anything in the darkness. She took a few nervous steps with her arms
outstretched and her eyes closed, then she opened her eyes. Now she was in a
room she knew. It was an office.
Grahame Coats’s
office.
She remembered then. The just-awake grogginess was
still there—she wasn’t yet thinking clearly, knew she wouldn’t be properly all
there until she had had her morning cup of coffee—but still, it came to her:
Grahame Coats’s perfidiousness, his treachery, his criminality,
his—
Why, she thought,
he assaulted me. He hit
me. And then she thought,
The police. I should call the
police.
She reached down for the phone on the table and
picked it up, or tried to, but the phone seemed very heavy, or slippery, or
both, and she was unable to grasp it properly. It felt wrong for her
fingers.
I must be weaker than I thought, Maeve
decided.
I had better ask them to send a doctor as
well. In the pocket of her jacket was a small silver
phone which played “Greensleeves” when it rang. She was relieved to find the
phone still here, and that she had no problems at all in holding it. She dialed
the emergency services. As she waited for someone to answer she wondered why
they still called it
dialing when there weren’t dials on telephones, not
since she was much younger, and then after the phones with dials came the
trim-phones with buttons on them and a particularly annoying ring. She had, as a
teenager, had a boyfriend who could and continually did imitate the
breep
of a trimphone, an ability that was, Maeve decided, looking back, his only real
achievement. She wondered what had happened to him. She wondered how a man who
could imitate a trimphone coped in a world in which telephones could and did
sound like
anything—
“We apologize for the delay in
placing your call,” said a mechanical voice. “Please hold the
line.”
Meave felt oddly calm, as if nothing bad could ever
happen to her again.
A man’s voice came on the line.
“Hello?” it said. It sounded extremely efficient.
“I need
the police,” said Maeve.
“You do not need the police,” said
the voice. “All crimes will be dealt with by the appropriate and inevitable
authorities.”
“You know,” said Maeve, “I think I may have
dialed the wrong number.”
“Likewise,” said the voice, “all
numbers are, ultimately, correct. They are simply numbers and cannot thus be
right or wrong.”
“That’s all very well for you to say,”
said Maeve. “But I
do need to speak to the police. I may also need an
ambulance. And I have obviously called a wrong number.” She ended the call.
Perhaps, she thought,
999 didn’t work from a cell phone. She
pulled up her onscreen address book and called her sister’s number. The phone
rang once, and a familiar voice said. “Let me clarify: I am not saying that you
dialed a wrong number on purpose. What I trust that I am saying is that all
numbers are by their nature correct. Well, except for
Pi, of course. I
can’t be doing with
Pi. Gives me a headache just thinking about it, going
on and on and on and on and on—”
Maeve pressed the red
button and ended the call. She dialed her bank manager.
The
voice that answered said, “But here am I, wittering on about the correctness of
numbers, and you’re undoubtedly thinking that there’s a time and a place for
everything—”
Click. Called her best
friend.
“—and right now what we should be discussing is
your ultimate disposition. I’m afraid traffic is extremely heavy this afternoon,
so if you wouldn’t mind waiting where you are for a little while, you will be
collected—” It was a reassuring voice, the voice of a radio vicar in the process
of telling you his thought for the day.
If Maeve had not
felt so placid, she would have panicked then. Instead, she pondered. Seeing that
her phone had been—what would they call it,
hacked?—then she would simply
have to go down to the street and find a police officer and make a formal
complaint. Nothing happened when Maeve pressed the button for the lift, so she
walked down the stairs, thinking that there was probably never a police officer
about when you wanted one anyway, they were always zooming about in those cars,
the ones that went
neenorneenor. The police, Maeve thought, should be
strolling around in pairs telling people the time or waiting at the bottom of
drainpipes as burglars with bags of swag over their shoulder make their
descent—
At the very bottom of the stairs, in the hallway,
were two police officers, a man and a woman. They were out of uniform, but they
were police all right. There was no mistaking them. The man was stout and
red-faced, the woman was small and dark and might, in other circumstances, have
been extremely pretty. “We know she came this far,” the woman was saying. “The
receptionist remembered her coming in, just before lunchtime. When she got back
from lunch, they’d both gone.”
“You think they ran off
together?” asked the stout man.
“Um, excuse me,” said Maeve
Livingstone, politely.
“It’s possible. There’s got to be
some kind of simple explanation. The disappearance of Grahame Coats. The
disappearance of Maeve Livingstone. At least we’ve got Nancy in
custody.”
“We certainly did
not run off together,”
said Maeve, but they ignored her.
The two police officers
got into the lift and slammed the doors behind them. Maeve watched them judder
up and away, toward the top floor.
She was still holding
her cell phone. It vibrated in her hand now and then began to play
“Greensleeves.” She glanced down at it. Morris’s photograph filled the screen.
Nervously, she answered the phone. “Yes?”
“ ‘Ullo love.
How’s tricks?”
She said, “Fine thank you.” Then she said,
“Morris?” And then, “No, it’s not fine. It’s all awful,
actually.”
“Aye,” said Morris. “I thought it might be.
Still, nothing that can be done about that now. Time to move
on.”
“Morris?
Where are you calling
from?”
“It’s a bit complicated,” he said. “I mean, I’m not
actually on the phone. Just really wanted to help you
along.”
“Grahame Coats,” she said. “He was a
crook.”
“Yes, love,” said Morris. “But it’s time to let all
that go. Put it behind you.”
“He hit me on the back of the
head,” she told him. “And he’s been stealing our
money.”
“It’s only material things, love,” said Morris,
reassuringly. “Now you’re beyond the vale—”
“Morris,” said
Maeve. “That pestilent little worm attempted to murder your wife. I
do
think you should try to show a little more concern.”
“Don’t
be like that, love. I’m just trying to explain—”
“I have to
tell you, Morris, that if you’re going to take that kind of attitude, I’ll
simply deal with this myself. I’m certainly not going to forget about it. It’s
all right for you, you’re dead. You don’t have to worry about these
things.”
“You’re dead, too,
love.”
“That is
quite beside the point,” she said.
Then, “I’m what?” And then, before he could say anything, Maeve said, “Morris, I
said that he
attempted to murder me. Not that he
succeeded.”
“Erm,” the late Morris Livingstone sounded lost
for words. “Maeve. Love. I know this may come as a bit of a shock to you, but
the truth of the matter is that—”
The telephone made a
“plibble” noise, and the image of an empty battery appeared on the
screen.
“I’m afraid I didn’t get that, Morris,” she told
him. “I think the telephone battery is going.”
“You don’t
have a phone battery,” he told her. “You don’t have a phone. All is illusion. I
keep trying to tell you, you’ve now transcended the vale of oojamaflip, and now
you’re becoming, oh heck, it’s like worms and butterflies, love. You
know.”
“Caterpillars,” said Maeve. “I think you mean
caterpillars and butterflies.”
“Er, that sounds right,”
said Morris’s voice over the telephone. “Caterpillars. That was what I meant. So
what do worms turn into, then?”
“They don’t turn into
anything, Morris,” said Maeve, a little testily. “They’re just worms.” The
silver phone emitted a small noise, like an electronic burp, showed the picture
of an empty battery again, and turned itself off.
Maeve
closed it and put it back into her pocket. She walked over to the nearest wall
and, experimentally, pushed a finger against it. The wall felt clammy and
gelatinous to the touch. She exerted a little more pressure, and her whole hand
went into it. Then it went through it.
“Oh dear,” she said,
and felt herself, not for the first time in her existence, wishing that she had
listened to Morris, who after all, she admitted to herself, by now probably knew
rather more about being dead than she did.
Ah well, she thought.
Being
dead is probably just like everything else in life: you pick some of it up as
you go along, and you just make up the rest.
She walked
out the front door, and found herself coming through the wall at the back of the
hall, into the building. She tried again, with the same result. Then she walked
into the travel agency that occupied the bottom floor of the building, and tried
pushing through the wall on the west of the building.
She
went through it, and came out in the front hall again, entering from the east.
It was like being in a TV set and trying to walk off the screen. Topographically
speaking, the office building seemed to have become her
universe.
She went back upstairs to see what the detectives
were doing. They were staring at the desk, at the debris that Grahame Coats had
left when he was packing.
“You know,” said Maeve helpfully,
“I’m in a room behind the bookcase. I’m in there.”
They
ignored her.
The woman crouched down and rummaged in the
bin. “Bingo,” she said, and pulled out a man’s white shirt, spattered with dried
blood. She placed it into a plastic bag. The stout man pulled out his
phone.
“I want Forensic down here,” he
said.
Fat Charlie now found himself viewing his
cell as a
refuge rather than as a prison. Cells were deep inside the
building, for a start, far from the haunts of even the most adventurous birds.
And his brother was nowhere to be seen. He no longer minded that nothing ever
happened in cell six. Nothing was infinitely preferable to most of the
somethings he found himself coming up with. Even a world populated exclusively
with castles and cockroaches and people named K was preferable to a world filled
with malignant birds that whispered his name in chorus.
The
door opened.
“Don’t you knock?” asked Fat
Charlie.
“No,” said the policeman. “We don’t, actually.
Your solicitor’s finally here.”
“Mister Merryman?” said Fat
Charlie, and then he stopped. Leonard Merryman was a rotund gentleman with small
gold spectacles, and the man behind the cop most definitely
wasn’t.
“Everything’s fine,” said the man who wasn’t his
solicitor. “You can leave us here.”
“Buzz when you’re
done,” said the policeman, and he closed the door.
Spider
took Fat Charlie by the hand. He said, “I’m busting you out of
here.”
“But I don’t want to be busted out of here. I didn’t
do anything.”
“Good reason for getting
out.”
“But if I leave then I
will have done
something. I’ll be an escaped prisoner.”
“You’re not a
prisoner,” said Spider, cheerfully. “You’ve not been charged with anything yet.
You’re just helping them with their inquiries. Look, are you
hungry?”
“A bit.”
“What do you want?
Tea? Coffee? Hot chocolate?”
Hot chocolate sounded
extremely good to Fat Charlie. “I’d love a hot chocolate,” he
said.
“Right,” said Spider. He grabbed Fat Charlie’s hand
and said, “Close your
eyes.”
“Why?”
“It makes it
easier.”
Fat Charlie closed his eyes, although he was not
certain what it would make easier. The world stretched and squeezed and Fat
Charlie was certain that he was going to be sick. Then the inside of his mind
settled down, and he felt a warm breeze touch his face.
He
opened his eyes.
They were in the open air, in a large
market square, somewhere that looked extremely
un-English.
“Where is this?”
“I think
it’s called Skopsie. Town in Italy or somewhere. I started coming here years
ago. They do amazing hot chocolate here. Best I’ve ever
had.”
They sat down at a small wooden table. It was painted
fire-engine red. A waiter approached and said something to them in a language
that didn’t sound like Italian to Fat Charlie. Spider said “Dos Chocolatos,
dude,” and the man nodded and went away.
“Right,” said Fat
Charlie. “Now you’ve got me into even deeper trouble. Now they’ll just do a
manhunt or something. It’ll be in the papers.”
“What are
they going to do?” asked Spider with a smile. “Send you to
jail?”
“Oh please.”
The hot chocolate
arrived, and the waiter poured it into small cups. It was roughly the same
temperature as molten lava, was halfway between a chocolate soup and a chocolate
custard, and it smelled astonishingly good.
Spider said,
“Look, we’ve made rather a mess of this whole family reunion business, haven’t
we?”
“We’ve made rather a mess of it?” Fat Charlie managed
outrage extremely well. “
I wasn’t the one who stole my fiancée.
I
wasn’t the one who got me sacked from work.
I wasn’t the one who got me
arrested—”
“No,” said Spider. “But you were the one who
brought the birds into it, weren’t you?”
Fat Charlie took a
very small initial sip of his hot chocolate. “Ow. I think I’ve just burned my
mouth.” He looked at his brother and saw his own expression staring back at him:
worried, tired, frightened. “Yes, I was the one who brought the birds into it.
So what do we do now?”
Spider said, “They do a really nice
sort of noodly-stew thing here, by the way.”
“Are you sure
we’re in Italy?”
“Not really.”
“Can I
ask you a question?”
Spider
nodded.
Fat Charlie tried to think of the best way to put
it. “The bird thing. Where they all turn up and pretend they’ve escaped from an
Alfred Hitchcock film. Do you think it’s something that only happens in
England?”
“Why?”
“Because I think
those pigeons have noticed us.” He pointed to the far end of the
square.
The pigeons were not doing the things that pigeons
usually do. They were not pecking at sandwich crusts or bobbing along with their
heads down hunting for tourist-dropped food. They were standing quite still, and
they were staring. A clatter of wings, and they were joined by another hundred
birds, most of them landing on the statue of a fat man wearing an enormous hat
that dominated the center of the square. Fat Charlie looked at the pigeons, and
the pigeons looked back at him. “So what’s the worst that could happen?” he
asked Spider, in an undertone. “They crap all over us?”
“I
don’t know. But I expect they can do worse than that. Finish your hot
chocolate.”
“But it’s
hot.”
“And we’ll need a couple of bottles of water,
won’t we?
Garçon?”
A low susurrus of wings; the
clack of more arriving birds; and beneath it all, low, burbling secretive
coos.
The waiter brought them bottles of water. Spider, who
was, Fat Charlie observed, now wearing his black-and-red leather jacket once
more, put them into his pockets.
“They’re only pigeons,”
said Fat Charlie, but even as he said it, he knew the words were inadequate.
They were not just pigeons. They were an army. The statue of the fat man had
almost vanished from view beneath the gray and purple
feathers.
“I think I preferred birds before they thought
about ganging up on us.”
Spider said, “And they’re
everywhere.” Then he grabbed Fat Charlie’s hand. “Close your
eyes.”
The birds rose as one bird then. Fat Charlie closed
his eyes.
The pigeons came down like the wolf on the
fold—
There was silence, and distance, and Fat Charlie
thought,
I’m in an oven. He opened his eyes and realized that it was
true: an oven with red dunes that receded into the distance until they faded
into a sky the color of mother-of-pearl.
“Desert,” said
Spider. “Seemed like a good idea. Bird-free zone. Somewhere to finish a
conversation. Here.” He handed Fat Charlie a bottle of
water.
“Thanks.”
“So. Would you like
to tell me where the birds come from?”
Fat Charlie said,
“There’s this place. I went there. There were lots of animal-people there. They
um. They all knew Dad. One of them was a woman, a sort of bird
woman.”
Spider looked at him. “
There’s this place?
That’s not exactly very helpful.”
“There’s a mountainside
with caves in it. And then there are these cliffs, and they go down into
nothing. It’s like the end of the world.”
“It’s the
beginning of the world,” corrected Spider. “I’ve heard of the caves. A girl I
knew once told me all about them. Never been there, though. So you met the Bird
Woman, and—?”
“She offered to make you go away. And, um.
Well, I took her up on it.”
“That,” said Spider, with a
movie-star smile, “was really stupid.”
“I didn’t tell her
to
hurt you.”
“What did you think she was going to
do to get rid of me? Write me a stiff letter?”
“I don’t
know. I didn’t think. I was upset.”
“Great. Well, if she
has her way, you’ll be upset, and I’ll be dead. You could have simply asked me
to leave, you know.”
“I did!”
“Er.
What did I say?”
“That you liked it in my house and you
weren’t going anywhere.”
Spider drank some of the water.
“So what
exactly did you say to her?”
Fat Charlie
tried to remember. Now he thought about it, it seemed an odd sort of thing to
say. “Just that I was going to give her Anansi’s bloodline,” he said,
reluctantly.
“You what?”
“It was what
she asked me to say.”
Spider looked incredulous. “But
that’s not just me. That’s both of us.”
Fat Charlie’s mouth
was suddenly very dry. He hoped it was the desert air, and sipped his bottled
water.
“Hang on. Why the desert?” asked Fat
Charlie.
“No birds. Remember?”
“So
what are those?” He pointed. At first they looked tiny, and then you realized
that they were simply very high: they were circling, and wobbling on the
wing.
“Vultures,” said Spider. “They don’t attack living
things.”
“Right. And pigeons are scared of people,” said
Fat Charlie. The dots in the sky circled lower, and the birds appeared to grow
as they descended.
Spider said, “Point taken.” Then,
“Shit.”
They weren’t alone. Someone was watching them on a
distant dune. A casual observer might have mistaken the figure for a
scarecrow.
Fat Charlie shouted, “Go away!” His voice was
swallowed by the sand. “I take it all back. We don’t have a deal! Leave us
alone!”
A flutter of overcoat on the hot wind, and the dune
was now deserted.
Fat Charlie said, “She went away. Who
would have thought it was going to be that simple?”
Spider
touched his shoulder, and pointed. Now the woman in the brown overcoat was
standing on the nearest ridge of sand, so close that Fat Charlie could see the
glassy blacks of her eyes.
The vultures were raggedy black
shadows, and then they landed: their naked mauve necks and scalps—featherless
because that’s so much easier when you’re putting your head into rotting
carcasses—extended as they stared shortsightedly at the brothers, as if
wondering whether to wait until the two men died or if they should do something
to hurry the process along.
Spider said, “What else was
there in the deal?”
“Um?”
“Was there
anything else? Did she give you something to seal the bargain? Sometimes things
like this involve a trade.”
The vultures were edging
forward, a step at a time, closing their ranks, tightening the circle. There
were more black slashes in the sky, growing and wobbling toward them. Spider’s
hand closed around Fat Charlie’s hand.
“Close your
eyes.”
The cold hit Fat Charlie like a punch to the gut. He
took a deep breath and felt like someone had iced his lungs. He coughed and
coughed while the wind howled like a great beast.
He opened
his eyes. “Can I ask where we are this time?”
“Antarctica,”
said Spider. He zipped up the front of his leather jacket, and did not seem to
mind the cold. “It’s a bit chilly, I’m afraid.”
“Don’t you
have any middle gears? Straight from desert to ice
field.”
“No birds here,” said
Spider.
“Wouldn’t it be easier to just to go and sit inside
a building that’s nice and bird-free? We could have
lunch.”
Spider said, “Right. Now you’re complaining, just
because it’s a little bit nippy.”
“It’s
not a little
bit nippy. It’s fifty below. And anyway,
look.”
Fat
Charlie pointed at the sky. A pale squiggle, like a miniature letter
m
chalked onto the sky, hung unmoving in the cold air. “Albatross,” he
said.
“Frigate,” said
Spider.
“Pardon?”
“It’s not an
albatross. It’s a frigate. He probably hasn’t even noticed
us.”
“Possibly not,” admitted Fat Charlie. “But
they
have.”
Spider turned, and said something else that sounded
a lot like “frigate.” There may not have been a million penguins waddling and
slipping and belly-sliding toward the brothers, but it certainly looked that
way. As a general rule, the only things properly terrified by the approach of
penguins tend to be small fish, but when the numbers get large
enough—
Fat Charlie reached out without being told, and he
held Spider’s hand. He closed his eyes.
When he opened
them, he was somewhere warmer, although opening his eyes made no difference to
what he saw. Everything was the color of night. “Have I gone
blind?”
“We’re in a disused coal mine,” said Spider. “I saw
a photo of this place in a magazine a few years back. Unless there are flocks of
sightless finches who have evolved to take advantage of the darkness and eat
coal chips, we’re probably fine.”
“That’s a joke, isn’t it?
About the sightless finches?”
“More or
less.”
Fat Charlie sighed, and the sigh echoed through the
underground cavern. “You know,” he said, “If you’d just gone away, if you’d left
my house when I asked you to, we’d not be in this
mess.”
“That isn’t very helpful.”
“It
wasn’t meant to be. God knows how I’m going to explain all this to
Rosie.”
Spider cleared his throat. “I don’t think you’ll
have to worry about
that.”
“Because—?”
“She’s broken up
with us.”
There was a long silence. Then Fat Charlie said,
“Of course she has.”
“I made a kind of a sort of a mess of
that part of things.” Spider sounded uncomfortable.
“But
what if I explain it to her? I mean, if I tell her that I wasn’t you, that you
were pretending to be me—”
“I already did. That was when
she decided she didn’t want to see either of us ever
again.”
“Me as well?”
“ ‘Fraid
so.”
“Look,” said Spider’s voice in the darkness. “I really
never meant to make—. Well, when I came to see you, all I wanted to
do
was say hello. Not to. Um. I’ve pretty much completely cocked this all up,
haven’t I?”
“Are you trying to say
sorry?”
Silence. Then, “I guess.
Maybe.”
More silence. Fat Charles said, “Well, then I’m
really sorry I called the Bird Woman to get rid of you.” Not seeing Spider while
they were talking made it easier, somehow.
“Yeah. Thanks. I
just wish I knew how to get rid of her.”
“A
feather!” said Fat Charlie.
“No, you’ve lost
me.”
“You asked if she gave me anything to seal the deal.
She did. She gave me a feather.”
“Where is
it?”
Fat Charlie tried to remember. “I’m not sure. I had it
when I woke up in Mrs. Dunwiddy’s front room. I didn’t have it when I got on the
plane. I suppose that Mrs. Dunwiddy must still have
it.”
The silence that met this was long and dark and
unbroken. Fat Charlie began to worry that Spider had gone away, that he had been
left abandoned in the darkness under the world. Eventually he said, “Are you
still there?”
“Still here.”
“That’s a
relief. If you abandoned me down here I don’t know how I’d get
out.”
“Don’t tempt me.”
More
silence.
Fat Charlie said, “What country are we
in?”
“Poland, I think. Like I said, I saw a picture of it.
Only they had the lights on in the photo.”
“You need to see
photos of places to go to them?”
“I need to know where they
are.”
It was astounding, thought Fat Charlie, how truly
quiet it was in the mine. The place had its own special silence. He started to
wonder about silences. Was the silence of the grave different in kind to the
silence of, say, outer space?
Spider said, “I remember Mrs.
Dunwiddy. She smells of violets.” People have said, “All hope has fled. We’re
going to die,” with more enthusiasm.
“That’s her,” said Fat
Charlie. “Small, old as the hills. Thick glasses. I suppose we’ll just have to
go and get the feather from her. Then we’ll give it back to the Bird Woman.
She’ll call off this nightmare.” Fat Charlie finished the last of the bottled
water, carried here from the little square somewhere that wasn’t Italy. He
screwed the top back onto the bottle and put the empty bottle down into the
darkness, wondering if it was littering if no one was ever going to see it. “So
let’s hold hands and go and see Mrs. Dunwiddy.”
Spider made
a noise. The noise was not cocky. It was unsettled and unsure. In the darkness
Fat Charlie imagined Spider deflating, like a bullfrog or a week-old balloon.
Fat Charlie had wanted to see Spider taken down a peg; he had not wanted to hear
him make a noise like a terrified six-year-old. “Hang on. You’re scared of Mrs.
Dunwiddy?”
“I—I can’t go near
her.”
“Well, if it’s any consolation, I was scared of her,
too, when I was a kid, and then I met her again at the funeral and she wasn’t
that bad. Not really. She’s just an old lady.” In his mind she lit the black
candles once more and sprinkled the herbs into the bowl. “Maybe a bit spooky.
But you’ll be okay when you see her.”
“She made me go
away,” said Spider. “I didn’t want to go. But I broke this ball in her garden.
Big glass thing, like a giant Christmas tree ornament.”
“I
did that, too. She was pissed.”
“I know.” The voice from
the dark was small and worried and confused. “It was the same time. That was
when it all started.”
“Well. Look. It’s not the end of the
world. You take me to Florida, I can go and get the feather back from Mrs.
Dunwiddy. I’m not scared. You can stay away.”
“I can’t do
that. I can’t go to where she is.”
“So, what are you trying
to say? She’s taken out some kind of magical restraining
order?”
“More or less. Yes.” Then Spider said, “I miss
Rosie. I’m sorry about. You know.”
Fat Charlie thought
about Rosie. He found it peculiarly hard to remember her face. He thought about
not having Rosie’s mother as his mother-in-law; about the two silhouettes on the
curtains in his bedroom window. He said, “Don’t feel bad about it. Well, you can
feel bad about it if you want, because you behaved like a complete bastard. But
maybe it was all for the best.” There was a twinge in the general region of Fat
Charlie’s heart, but he knew that he was speaking the truth. It’s easier to say
true things in the dark.
Spider said, “You know what
doesn’t make sense
here?”
“Everything?”
“No. Only one
thing. I don’t understand why the Bird Woman got involved. It doesn’t make
sense.”
“Dad pissed her off—”
“Dad
pissed
everybody off. She’s wrong, though. And if she wanted to kill us,
why doesn’t she just try to do it?”
“I gave her our
bloodline.”
“So you said. No, something else is going on,
and I don’t get it.” Silence. Then Spider said, “Hold my
hand.”
“Do I need to close my
eyes?”
“May as well.”
“Where are we
going? The moon?”
“I’m going to take you somewhere safe,”
said Spider.
“Oh good,” said Fat Charlie. “I like safe.
Where?”
But then, without even opening his eyes, Fat
Charlie knew. The smell was a dead giveaway: unwashed bodies and unflushed
toilets, disinfectant, old blankets and apathy.
“I bet I
would have been just as safe in a luxury hotel room,” he said aloud, but there
was nobody there to hear him. He sat down on the shelflike bed of cell six and
wrapped the thin blanket around his shoulders. He might have been there
forever.
Half an hour later, someone came and led him to
the interrogation room.
“Hullo,” said Daisy, with
a smile. “Would you like a cup of tea?”
“You might as well
not bother,” said Fat Charlie. “I’ve seen the telly. I know how it goes. This is
that whole good-cop bad-cop thing, isn’t it? You’ll give me a cup of tea and
some Jaffa cakes, then some big hard-bitten bastard with a hair-trigger temper
comes in and shouts at me and pours the tea away and starts eating my Jaffa
cakes and then you stop him from physically attacking me, and make him give me
my tea and Jaffa cakes back, and in my gratitude I tell you everything you want
to know.”
“We could skip all that,” said Daisy, “and you
could just tell us what we want to know. Anyway, we don’t have any Jaffa
cakes.”
“I told you everything I know,” said Fat Charlie.
“Everything. Grahame Coats gave me a check for two grand and told me to take two
weeks off. He said he was pleased I’d brought some irregularities to his
attention. Then he asked for my password and waved me good-bye. End of
story.”
“And you still say you don’t know anything about
the disappearance of Maeve Livingstone?”
“I don’t think I
ever actually met her properly. Maybe once when she came through the office. We
talked on the phone a few times. She’d want to talk to Grahame Coats. I’d have
to tell her the check was in the post.”
“Was
it?”
“I don’t know. I thought it was. Look, you can’t
believe I had anything to do with her disappearance.”
“No,”
she said, cheerfully, “I don’t.”
“Because I honestly don’t
know what could have—you what?”
“I don’t think you had
anything to do with Maeve Livingstone’s disappearance. I also don’t believe that
you had anything to do with the financial irregularities being perpetrated at
the Grahame Coats Agency, although someone seems to have worked very hard to
make it look like you did. But it’s pretty obvious that the weird accounting
practices and the steady syphoning off of money predates your arrival. You’ve
only been there two years.”
“About that,” said Fat Charlie.
He realized that his jaw was open. He closed it.
Daisy
said, “Look, I know that cops in books and movies are mostly idiots, especially
if it’s the kind of book with a crime-fighting pensioner or a hard-arsed private
eye in it. And I’m really sorry that we don’t have any Jaffa cakes. But we’re
not all completely stupid.”
“I didn’t say you were,” said
Fat Charlie.
“No,” she said. “But you were thinking it.
You’re free to go. With an apology if you’d like
one.”
“Where did she, um, disappear?” asked Fat
Charlie.
“Mrs. Livingstone? Well, the last time anyone saw
her, she was accompanying Grahame Coats into his
office.”
“Ah.”
“I meant it about the
cup of tea. Would you like one?”
“Yes. Very much. Um. I
suppose your people already checked out the secret room in his office. The one
behind the bookcase?”
It is to Daisy’s credit that all she
said, perfectly calmly, was “I don’t believe they did.”
“I
don’t think we were supposed to know about it,” said Fat Charlie, “but I went in
once, and the bookshelf was pushed back, and he was inside. I went away again,”
he added. “I wasn’t spying on him or anything.”
Daisy said,
“We can pick up some Jaffa cakes on the way.”
Fat
Charlie wasn’t certain that he liked freedom. There was too much open air
involved.
“Are you okay?” asked
Daisy.
“I’m fine.”
“You seem a bit
twitchy.”
“I suppose I am. You’ll think this is silly, but
I’m a bit—well, I have a thing about birds.”
“What, a
phobia?”
“Sort of.”
“Well, that’s the
common term for an irrational fear of birds.”
“What do they
call a rational fear of birds, then?” He nibbled the Jaffa
cake.
There was silence. Daisy said, “Well, anyway, there
aren’t any birds in this car.”
She parked the car on the
double yellow lines outside the Grahame Coats Agency offices, and they went
inside together.
Rosie lay in the sun by the pool
on the aft deck of a Korean cruise ship with a magazine over her head and her
mother beside her, trying to remember why s [
2]he
had ever thought a holiday with her mother would be a good
idea.
There were no English newspapers on the cruise ship,
and Rosie did not miss them. She missed everything else, though. In her mind the
cruise was a form of floating purgatory, made bearable only by the islands they
visited every day or so. The other passengers would go ashore and shop or
parasail or go for rumsodden trips on floating pirate ships. Rosie, on the other
hand, would walk, and talk to people.
She would see people
in pain, see people who looked hungry or miserable, and she wanted to help.
Everything seemed very fixable to Rosie. It just needed someone to fix
it.
Maeve Livingstone had expected death to be a
number of things, but
irritating had never been one of them. Still, she
was irritated. She was tired of being walked through, tired of being ignored,
and, most of all, tired of not being able to leave the offices in the
Aldwych.
“I mean, if I
have to haunt anywhere,” she
said to the receptionist, “why can’t I haunt Somerset House, over the road?
Lovely buildings, excellent view over the Thames, several architecturally
impressive features. Some very nice little restaurants as well. Even if you
don’t need to eat any longer, it’d be nice for
people-watching.”
Annie the receptionist, whose job since
the vanishment of Grahame Coats had been to answer the phone in a bored voice
and say, “I’m afraid I don’t know” to pretty much any question she was asked,
and who, when she was not performing this function, would phone her friends and
discuss the mystery in hushed but excitable tones, did not reply to this, as she
had not replied to anything Maeve had said to her.
The
monotony was broken by the arrival of Fat Charlie Nancy, accompanied by the
female police officer.
Maeve had always rather liked Fat
Charlie, even when his function had been to assure her that a check would soon
be in the mail, but now she saw things she had never seen before: there were
shadows that fluttered about him, always keeping their distance: bad things
coming. He looked like a man on the run from something, and it worried
her.
She followed them into Grahame Coats’s office and was
delighted to see Fat Charlie head straight over to the bookshelf at the back of
the room.
“So where’s the secret panel?” asked
Daisy.
“It’s not a panel. It was a door. Behind the
bookshelf over here. I don’t know. Maybe there’s a secret catch or
something.”
Daisy looked at the bookshelf. “Did Grahame
Coats ever write an autobiography?” she asked Fat
Charlie.
“Not that I’ve ever heard
about.”
She pushed on the leatherbound copy of
My
Lifeby Grahame Coats. It clicked, and the bookshelf swung away from
the wall, revealing a locked door behind it.
“We’ll need a
locksmith,” she said. “And I don’t really think we need you here any longer, Mr
Nancy.”
“Right,” said Fat Charlie. “Well,” he said, “It’s
been, um. Interesting.”
And then he said, “I don’t suppose
you’d like. To get some food. With me. One day?”
“Dim sum,”
she said. “Sunday lunchtime. We’ll go dutch. You’ll need to be there when they
open the doors at eleven-thirty, or we’ll have to queue for ages.” She scribbled
down the address of a restaurant and handed it to Fat Charlie. “Watch out for
birds on the way home,” she said.
“I will,” he said. “See
you Sunday.”
The locksmith unfolded a black cloth
wallet and took out several slim pieces of
metal.
“Honestly,” he said. “You’d think they’d learn. It’s
not like good locks are expensive. I mean, you look at that door, lovely piece
of work. Solid that is. Take you half a day to get through it with a blow torch.
And then they let the whole thing down with a lock that a five-year old could
open with a spoon-handle—. There we go—. Easy as falling off the
wagon.”
He pulled on the door. The door opened and they saw
the thing on the floor.
“Well, for goodness’ sake,” said
Maeve Livingstone. “That’s not
me.” She thought she’d have more affection
for her body, but she didn’t; it reminded her of a dead animal at the side of
the road.
Soon enough the room was filled with people.
Maeve, who had never had much patience for detective dramas, was quickly bored,
only taking an interest in what was happening when she felt herself being
pulled, unarguably, downstairs and out the front door, as the human remains were
taken away in a discreet blue plastic bag.
“This is more
like it,” said Maeve Livingstone.
She was
out.
At least she was out of the office in the
Aldwych.
Obviously, she knew, there were rules. There had
to be rules. It’s just that she wasn’t very sure what they
were.
She found herself wishing she’d been more religious
in life, but she’d never been able to manage it: as a small girl she had been
unable to envision a God who disliked anyone enough to sentence them to an
eternity of torture in Hell, mostly for not believing in Him properly, and as
she grew up her childhood doubts had solidified into a rocky certainty that
Life, from birth to grave, was all there was and that everything else was
imaginary. It had been a good belief, and it had allowed her to cope, but now it
was being severely tested.
Honestly, she wasn’t sure that
even a life spent attending the right sort of church would have prepared her for
this. Maeve was rapidly coming to the conclusion that in a well-organized world,
Death should be like the kind of all-expenses-included luxury vacation where
they give you a folder at the start filled with tickets, discount vouchers,
schedules, and several phone numbers to ring if you get into
trouble.
She didn’t walk. She didn’t fly. She moved like
the wind, like a cold autumn wind that made people shiver as she passed, that
stirred the fallen leaves on the pavements.
She went where
she always went first when she came to London: to Selfridges, the department
store in Oxford Street. Maeve had worked in the cosmetics department of
Selfridges when she was much younger, between dancing jobs, and she had always
made a point of going back whenever she could, and buying expensive makeup, just
as she had promised herself she would in the old days.
She
haunted the makeup department until she was bored, then took a look around home
furnishings. She wasn’t ever going to get another dining room table, but really,
there wasn’t any harm in looking—
Then she drifted through
the Selfridges home entertainment department, surrounded by television screens
of all sizes. Some of the screens were showing the news. The volume was off on
each set, but the picture that filled each screen was Grahame Coats. The dislike
rose burning hot within her, like molten lava. The picture changed and now she
was looking at herself—a clip of her at Morris’s side. She recognized it as the
“Give me a fiver and I’ll snog you rotten” sketch from
Morris Livingstone, I
Presume.
She wished she could figure out a way to
recharge her phone. Even if the only person she could find was the irritating
voice that had sounded like a vicar, she thought, she would even have spoken to
him. But mostly she just wanted to talk to Morris. He’d know what to do. This
time, she thought, she’d let him talk. This time, she’d
listen.
“Maeve?”
Morris’s face was
looking out at her from a hundred television screens. She thought for a
heartbeat that she was imagining it, then that it was part of the news, but he
looked at her with concern, and said her name again, and she knew it was
him.
“Morris—?”
He smiled his famous
smile, and every face on every screen focused on her. “Hullo, love. I was
wondering what was taking you so long. Well, it’s time for you to come on
over.”
“Over?”
“To the other side.
Move beyond the vale. Or possibly the veil. Anyway, that.” And he held out a
hundred hands from a hundred screens.
She knew that all she
needed to do was reach out and take his hand. She surprised herself by saying,
“No, Morris. I don’t think so.”
A hundred identical faces
looked perplexed. “Maeve, love. You need to put the flesh behind
you.”
“Well, obviously, dear. And I will. I promise I will.
As soon as I’m ready.”
“Maeve, you’re dead. How much more
ready can you be?”
She sighed. “I’ve still got a few things
to sort out at this end.”
“For
instance?”
Maeve pulled herself up to her full height.
“Well,” she said. “I was planning on finding that Grahame Coats creature and
then doing—well, whatever it is that ghosts do. I could haunt him or
something.”
Morris sounded slightly incredulous. “You want
to haunt Grahame Coats? Whatever for?”
“Because,” she said,
“I’m not done here.” She set her mouth into a line and raised her
chin.
Morris Livingstone looked at her from a hundred
television screens at the same time, and he shook his head, in a mixture of
admiration and exasperation. He had married her because she was her own woman,
and had loved her for that reason, but he wished he could, just for once,
persuade her of something. Instead, he said, “Well, I’m not going anywhere, pet.
Let us know when you’re ready.”
And then he began to
fade.
“Morris. Do you have any idea how I go about finding
him?” she asked. But the image of her husband had vanished completely, and now
the televisions were showing the weather.
Fat
Charlie met Daisy for Sunday Dim Sum, in a dimly lit restaurant in London’s tiny
Chinatown.
“You look nice,” he
said.
“Thank you,” she said. “I feel miserable. I’ve been
taken off the Grahame Coats case. It’s now a full-scale murder investigation. I
reckon I was probably lucky to have been with it as long as I
was.”
“Well,” he said brightly, “if you hadn’t been part of
it you would never have had the fun of arresting
me.”
“There is that.” She had the grace to look slightly
rueful.
“Are there any leads?”
“Even
if there were,” she said, “I couldn’t possibly tell you about them.” A small
cart was trundled over to their table, and Daisy selected several dishes from
it. “There’s a theory that Grahame Coats threw himself off the side of a Channel
Ferry. That was the last purchase on one of his credit cards—a day ticket to
Dieppe.”
“Do you think that’s
likely?”
She picked a dumpling up from her plate with her
chopsticks, popped it into her mouth.
“No,” she said. “My
guess is that he’s gone somewhere with no extradition treaty. Probably Brazil.
Killing Maeve Livingstone might have been a spur-of-the-moment thing, but
everything else was so meticulous. He had a system in place. Money went into
client accounts. Grahame took his fifteen percent off the top and standing
orders ensured that a whole lot more came off the bottom. Lot of foreign checks
never even made it into the client accounts in the first place. What’s
remarkable is how long he had kept it up.”
Fat Charlie
chewed a rice ball with something sweet inside it. He said, “I think you know
where he is.”
Daisy stopped chewing her
dumpling.
“It was something about the way you said he’d
gone to Brazil. Like you know he wasn’t there.”
“That would
be police business,” she said. “And I’m afraid I cannot possibly comment. How’s
your brother?”
“I don’t know. I think he’s gone. His room
wasn’t there when I got home.”
“His
room?”
“His stuff. He’d taken his stuff. And no sign of him
since.” Fat Charlie sipped his jasmine tea. “I hope he’s all
right.”
“You think he wouldn’t
be?”
“Well, he’s got the same phobia that I
have.”
“The birds thing. Right.” Daisy nodded
sympathetically. “And how’s the fiancée, and the future
mother-in-law?”
“Um. I don’t think either description is,
um, currently
operative.”
“Ah.”
“They’ve gone
away.”
“Was this because of the
arrest?”
“Not as far as I know.”
She
looked across at him like a sympathetic pixie. “I’m
sorry.”
“Well,” he said. “Right now I don’t have a job, I
don’t have a love life, and—thanks mostly to your efforts—the neighbors are now
all convinced I’m a yardie hit man. Some of them have started crossing the road
to avoid me. On the other hand, my newsagent wants me to make sure the bloke who
knocked up his daughter is taught a lesson.”
“What did you
tell him?”
“The truth. I don’t think he believed me though.
He gave me a free bag of cheese-and-onion crisps and a pack of Polo mints, and
told me there would be more where that came from once I’d done the
job.”
“It’ll blow over.”
Fat Charlie
sighed. “It’s mortifying.”
“Still,” she said. “It’s not as
if it’s the end of the world.”
They split the bill, and the
waiter gave them two fortune cookies with their
change.
“What does yours say?” asked Fat
Charlie.
“
Persistence will pay off,” she read. “What
about yours?”
“It’s the same as yours,” he said. “Good old
persistence.” He crumpled up the fortune into a pea-sized ball and dropped it
into his pocket. He walked her down to Leicester Square tube
station.
“Looks like it’s your lucky day,” said
Daisy.
“How do you mean?”
“No birds
around,” she said.
As she said it, Fat Charlie realized it
was true. There were no pigeons, no starlings. Not even any
sparrows.
“But there are
always birds in Leicester
Square.”
“Not today,” she said. “Maybe they’re
busy.”
They stopped at the tube, and for one foolish moment
Fat Charlie thought that she was going to kiss him good-bye. She didn’t. She
just smiled and said “bless,” and he half-waved at her, an uncertain hand
movement that might have been a wave and could as easily have been an
involuntary gesture, and then she was down the stairs and out of
sight.
Fat Charlie walked back across Leicester Square,
heading for Piccadilly Circus.
He pulled out the fortune
cookie slip from his pocket and un-crumpled it. “Meet you by Eros,” it said, and
next to that was a hasty little drawing of something that looked like large
asterisk, and might, conceivably, have been a spider.
He
scanned the skies and the buildings as he walked, but there were no birds, and
that was strange because there were always birds in London. There were always
birds everywhere.
Spider was sitting beneath the statue,
reading the
News of the World. He looked up as Fat Charlie
approached.
“It’s not actually Eros, you know,” said Fat
Charlie. “It’s the statue of Christian Charity.”
“So why is
it naked and holding a bow and arrow? That doesn’t seem a particularly
charitable or Christian thing to do.”
“I’m just telling you
what I read,” said Fat Charlie. “Where have you been? I was worried about
you.”
“I’m all right. I’ve just been avoiding birds, trying
to get my head around all this.”
“You’ve noticed there
aren’t any birds around today?” said Fat Charlie.
“I’ve
noticed. I don’t really know what to make of it. But I’ve been thinking. And you
know,” said Spider, “there’s something wrong with this whole
thing.”
“Everything, for a start,” said Fat
Charlie.
“No. I mean there’s something wrong with the Bird
Woman trying to hurt us.”
“Yup. It’s wrong. It’s a very,
very bad thing to do. Do you want to tell her, or shall
I?”
“Not wrong like that. Wrong like—well, think about it.
I mean, despite the Hitchcock film, birds aren’t the best thing to hurt someone
with. They may be death-on-wings for insects but they really aren’t very good at
attacking people. Millions of years of learning that, on the whole, people will
probably eat you first. Their first instinct is to leave us
alone.”
“Not all of them,” said Fat Charlie. “Not vultures.
Or ravens. But they only turn up on the battlefield, when the fighting’s done.
Waiting for you to die.”
“What?”
“I
said, except for vultures and ravens. I didn’t mean
anything—”
“No.” Spider concentrated. “No, it’s gone. You
made me think of something, and I almost had it. Look, have you got hold of Mrs.
Dunwiddy yet?”
“I phoned Mrs. Higgler, but there isn’t any
answer.”
“Well go and talk to
them.”
“It’s all very well for you to say that, but I’m
skint. Broke. Cleaned out. I can’t keep flying back and forwards across the
Atlantic. I don’t even have a job any longer. I’m—”
Spider
reached into his black-and-scarlet jacket and pulled out a wallet. He took out a
sheaf of notes in an assortment of currencies, pushed them into Fat Charlie’s
hand. “Here. This should be enough to get you there and back. Just get the
feather.”
Fat Charlie said, “Listen. Has it occurred to you
that maybe Dad isn’t dead after
all?”
“What?”
“Well, I was thinking.
Maybe all this was one of his jokes. It feels like the kind of thing he’d do,
doesn’t it?”
Spider said, “I don’t know. Could
be.”
Fat Charlie said, “I’m sure it is. That’s the first
thing I’m going to do. I’m going to head down to his grave
and—”
But he said nothing else, because that was when the
birds came. They were city birds; sparrows and starlings, pigeons and crows,
thousands upon thousands of them, and they wove and wound as they flew like a
tapestry, forming a wall of birds coming toward Fat Charlie and Spider down
Regent Street. A feathered phalanx huge as the side of a skyscraper, perfectly
flat, perfectly impossible, all of it in motion, weaving and fluttering and
swooping; Fat Charlie saw it, but it would not fit inside his mind, slipping and
twisting and thinning the whole time inside his head. He looked up at it and
tried to make sense of what he was seeing.
Spider jerked at
Fat Charlie’s elbow. He shouted “Run!”
Fat Charlie turned
to run. Spider was methodically folding his newspaper, putting it down on the
bin.
“You run too!”
“It doesn’t want
you. Not yet,” said Spider, and he grinned. It was a grin that had, in
its time, persuaded more people than you can imagine to do things they did not
want to do; and Fat Charlie really wanted to run. “Get the feather. Get Dad,
too, if you think he’s still around. Just
go.”
Fat
Charlie went.
The wall of birds swirled and transformed,
became a whirlwind of birds heading for the statue of Eros and the man beneath
it. Fat Charlie ran into a doorway and watched as the base of the dark tornado
slammed into Spider. Fat Charlie imagined he could hear his brother screaming
over the deafening whirr of wings. Maybe he could.
And then
the birds dispersed and the street was empty. The wind teased a handful of
feathers along the gray pavement.
Fat Charlie stood there
and felt sick. If any of the passers-by had noticed what had happened, they had
not reacted. Somehow, he was certain that no one had seen it but
him.
There was a woman standing beneath the statue, near
where his brother had been. Her ragged brown coat flapped in the wind. Fat
Charlie walked back to her. “Look,” he said, “When I said to make him go away, I
meant just to get him out of my life. Not do whatever it is you’ve done to
him.”
She looked into his face and said nothing. There is a
madness in the eyes of some birds of prey, a ferocity that can be perfectly
intimidating. Fat Charlie tried not to be intimidated by it. “I made a mistake,”
he said. “I’m willing to pay for it. Take me instead. Bring him
back.”
She continued to stare. Then she said, “Do not doubt
your turn shall come, CompÉ Anansi’s child. In time.”
“Why
do you want him?”
“I don’t want him,” she told him. “Why
would I want him? I had an obligation to another. Now I shall deliver him, and
then my obligation shall be done.”
The newspaper fluttered,
and Fat Charlie was alone.
Chapter Eleven
in which Rosie learns to say No to strangers and Fat Charlie acquires a
lime
Fat Charlie looked down at his father’s
grave. “Are you in there?” he said aloud. “If you are, come out. I need to talk
to you.”
He walked over to the floral grave marker and
looked down. He was not certain what he was expecting—a hand to push up through
the soil, perhaps, punching up and grabbing his leg—but nothing of the kind
seemed to be about to happen.
He had been so
certain.
Fat Charlie walked back through the Garden of Rest
feeling stupid, like a game show contestant who had just made the mistake of
betting his million dollars on the Mississippi being a longer river than the
Amazon. He should have known. His father was as dead as roadkill, and he had
wasted Spider’s money on a wild goose chase. By the windmills of Babyland he sat
down and wept, and the moldering toys seemed even sadder and lonelier than he
remembered.
She was waiting for him in the parking lot,
leaning against her car, smoking a cigarette. She looked
uncomfortable.
“Hullo, Mrs. Bustamonte,” said Fat
Charlie.
She took one final drag on the cigarette, then
dropped it to the asphalt and ground it out beneath the sole of her flat shoe.
She was wearing black. She looked tired. “Hello
Charles.”
“I think if I’d expected to see anyone here, it
would be Mrs. Higgler. Or Mrs. Dunwiddy.”
“Callyanne’s gone
away. Mrs. Dunwiddy sent me. She wants to see you.”
It’s
like the mafia, thought Fat Charlie. A postmenopausal mafia. “She’s
going to make me an offer I can’t refuse?”
“I doubt it. She
is not very well.”
“Oh.”
He climbed
into his rental, followed Mrs. Bustamonte’s Camry along the Florida streets. He
had been so certain about his father. Certain he’d find him alive. Sure that
he’d help—
They parked outside Mrs. Dunwiddy’s house. Fat
Charlie looked at the front yard, at the faded plastic flamingos and the gnomes
and the red mirrored gazing ball sitting on a small concrete plinth like an
enormous Christmas tree ornament. He walked over to the ball, just like the one
he had broken when he was a boy, and saw himself distorted, staring back from
it.
“What’s it for?” he said.
“It’s
not for anything. She liked it.”
Inside the house the smell
of violets hung thick and cloying. Fat Charlie’s Great-Aunt Alanna had kept a
tube of parma violet candies in her handbag, but even as a chunky kid with a
sweet tooth, Fat Charlie would eat them only if there wasn’t anything else. This
house smelled like those sweets had tasted. Fat Charlie hadn’t thought of parma
violets in twenty years. He wondered if they still made them. He wondered why
anyone had ever made them in the first place—
“She’s at the
end of the hall,” said Mrs. Bustamonte, and she stopped and she pointed. Fat
Charlie went into Mrs. Dunwiddy’s bedroom.
It was not a big
bed, but Mrs. Dunwiddy lay in it like an oversized doll. She wore her glasses,
and above them something that Fat Charlie realized was the first nightcap he had
ever seen, a yellowing tea-cosy-like affair, trimmed in lace. She was propped up
on a mountain of pillows, her mouth open, and she was snoring gently as he
walked in.
He coughed.
Mrs. Dunwiddy
jerked her head up, opened her eyes, and stared at him. She pointed her finger
to the nightstand beside the bed, and Fat Charlie picked up the glass of water
sitting there and passed it to her. She took it with both hands, like a squirrel
holding a nut, and she took a long sip before handing it back to
him.
“My mouth get all dry,” she said. “You know how old I
am?”
“Um.” There was, he decided, no right answer.
“No.”
“Hunnert and four.”
“That’s
amazing. You’re in such good shape. I mean, that’s quite
marvelous—”
“Shut up, Fat
Charlie.”
“Sorry.”
“Don’t say ‘sorry’
like that neither, like a dog that get tell off for messin’ on the kitchen
floor. Hold your head up. Look the world in the eye. You hear
me?”
“Yes. Sorry. I mean, just
yes.”
She sighed. “They want to take me to the hospital. I
tell them, when you get to be hunnert and four, you earn the right to die in
your own bed. I make babies in this bed long time back, and I birth babies in
this bed, and damned if I going to die anywhere else. And another thing—” She
stopped talking, closed her eyes, and took a slow, deep breath. Just as Fat
Charlie was convinced she had fallen asleep, her eyes opened, and she said, “Fat
Charlie, if someone ever ask if you want to live to be hunnert and four, say no.
Everything hurt. Everything. I hurt in places nobody ain’t discover
yet.”
“I’ll bear that in mind.”
“None
of your back talk.”
Fat Charlie looked at the little woman
in her white wooden bed. “Shall I say sorry?” he
asked.
Mrs. Dunwiddy looked away, guiltily. “I do you
wrong,” she said. “Long time ago, I do you wrong.”
“I
know,” said Fat Charlie.
Mrs. Dunwiddy might have been
dying, but she still shot Fat Charlie the kind of look that would have sent
children under the age of five screaming for their mothers. “What you mean, you
know?”
Fat Charlie said, “I figured it out. Probably not
all of it, but some of it. I’m not stupid.”
She examined
him coldly through the thick glass of her spectacles, then she said, “No. You
not. True thing, that.”
She held out a gnarled hand. “Give
me the water back. That’s better.” She sipped her water, dabbing at it with a
small, purple tongue. “Is a good thing you’re here today. Tomorrow the whole
house be fill with grievin’ grandchildren and great-grandchildren, all of them
tryin’ to make me to die in the hospital, makin’ up to me so I give them things.
They don’t know me. I outlive all my own children. Every one of
them.”
Fat Charlie said, “Are you going to talk about the
bad turn you did to me?”
“You should never have break my
garden mirror ball.”
“I’m sure I
shouldn’t.”
He remembered it, in the way you remember
things from childhood, part memory, part memory of the memory: following the
tennis ball into Mrs. Dunwiddy’s yard, and once he was there, experimentally
picking up her mirrored ball to see his face in it, distorted and huge, feeling
it tumble to the stone path, watching it smash into a thousand tiny shards of
glass. He remembered the strong old fingers that grabbed him by the ear and
dragged him out of her yard and into her house—
“You sent
Spider away,” he said. “Didn’t you?”
Her jaw was set like a
mechanical bulldog’s. She nodded. “I did a banishment,” she said. “Didn’t mean
for it to go so. Everybody know a little magic back in those days. We didn’t
have all them kinda DVDs and cell phones and microwaves, but still, we know a
lot regardless. I only wanted to teach you a lesson. You were so full of
yourself, all mischief and back talk and vinegar. So I pull Spider out of you,
to teach you a lesson.”
Fat Charlie heard the words, but
they made no sense. “You pulled him out?”
“I break him off
from you. All the tricksiness. All the wickedness. All the devilry. All that.”
She sighed. “My mistake. Nobody tell me that if you do magic around a, around
people like your daddy’s bloodline, it magnify everything. Everything get
bigger.” Another sip of the water. “Your mother never believe it. Not really.
But that Spider, he worse than you. Your father never say nothing about it until
I make Spider go away. Even then, all he tell me is if you can’t fix it you not
no son of his.”
He wanted to argue with her, to tell her
how this was nonsense, that Spider was not a part of him, no more than he, Fat
Charlie, was part of the sea or of the darkness. Instead he said, “Where’s the
feather?”
“What feather you talking
about?”
“When I came back from that place. The place with
the cliffs and the caves. I was holding a feather. What did you do with
it?”
“I don’t remember,” she said. “I’m an old woman. I’m a
hunnert and four.”
Fat Charlie said, “Where is
it?”
“I forget.”
“Please tell
me.”
“I ain’t got it.”
“Who
does?”
“Callyanne.”
“Mrs.
Higgler?”
She leaned in, confidentially. “The other two,
they’re just girls. They’re flighty.”
“I called Mrs.
Higgler before I came out. I stopped at her house before I went to the cemetery.
Mrs. Bustamonte says she’s gone away.”
Mrs. Dunwiddy swayed
gently from side to side in the bed, as if she were rocking herself to sleep.
She said, “I not going to be here for much longer. I stop eating solid food
after you leave the last time. I done. Only water. Some women say they love your
father, but I know him long long before them. Back when I had my looks, he would
take me dancing. He come pick me up and whirl me around. He was an old man even
then, but he always make a girl feel special. You don’t feel—” She stopped, took
another sip of water. Her hands were shaking. Fat Charlie took the empty glass
from her. “Hunnert and four,” she said. “And never in my bed in the daytime
except for confinements. And now I finish.”
“I’m sure
you’ll reach a hundred and five,” said Fat Charlie,
uneasily.
“Don’t you say that!” she said. She looked
alarmed. “Don’t! Your family do enough trouble already. Don’t you go
making things happen.”
“I’m not like my dad,” said Fat
Charlie. “I’m not magic. Spider got all that side of the family,
remember?”
She did not appear to be listening. She said,
“When we would go dancing, way before the Second World War, your daddy would
talk to the bandleader, and plenty times they call him up to sing with them. All
the people laugh and cheer. Is so he make things happen.
Singing.”
“Where is Mrs.
Higgler?”
“Gone home.”
“Her house is
empty. Her car isn’t there.”
“Gone
home.”
“Er—you mean she’s
dead?”
The old woman on the white sheets wheezed and gasped
for breath. She seemed unable to speak any longer. She motioned to
him.
Fat Charlie said, “Shall I get
help?”
She nodded, and continued to gasp and choke and
wheeze as he went out to find Mrs. Bustamonte. She was sitting in the kitchen,
watching Oprah on a very small countertop television. “She wants you,” he
said.
Mrs. Bustamonte went out. She came back holding the
empty water jug. “What do you say to set her off like
that?”
“Was she having an attack or
something?”
Mrs. Bustamonte gave him a look. “No, Charles.
She was laughing at you. She say you make her feel
good.”
“Oh. She said Mrs. Higgler had gone home. I asked if
she meant she was dead.”
Mrs. Bustamonte smiled then.
“Saint Andrews,” she said. “Callyanne’s gone to Saint Andrews.” She refilled the
jug in the sink.
Fat Charlie said, “When all this started I
thought that it was me against Spider, and you four were on my side. And now
Spider’s been taken, and it’s me against the four of
you.”
She turned off the water and gazed at him
sullenly.
“I don’t believe anyone anymore,” said Fat
Charlie. “Mrs. Dunwiddy’s probably faking being ill. Probably as soon as I leave
here she’ll be out of bed and doing the charleston around her
bedroom.”
“She not eating. She say it makes her feel bad
inside. Won’t take a thing to fill her belly. Just
water.”
“Where in Saint Andrews is she?” asked Fat
Charlie.
“Just go,” said Mrs. Bustamonte. “Your family, you
done enough harm here.”
Fat Charlie looked as if he was
about to say something, and then he didn’t, and he left without another
word.
Mrs. Bustamonte took the jug of water in to Mrs.
Dunwiddy, who lay quiet in the bed.
“Nancy’s son hates us,”
said Mrs. Bustamonte. “What you tell him anyhow?”
Mrs.
Dunwiddy said nothing. Mrs. Bustamonte listened, and when she was sure that the
older woman was still breathing, she took off Mrs. Dunwiddy’s thick spectacles
and put them down by the bed, then pulled up the sheet to cover Mrs. Dunwiddy’s
shoulders.
After that, she simply waited for the
end.
Fat Charlie drove off, not entirely certain
where he was going. He had crossed the Atlantic for the third time in two weeks,
and the money that Spider had given him was almost tapped out. He was alone in
the car, and being alone, he hummed.
He passed a clutch of
Jamaican restaurants when he noticed a sign in a storefront window: Cut Price
to the Islands. He pulled up and went inside.
“We at
A-One travel are here to serve all your travel needs,” said the travel agent, in
the hushed and apologetic tone of voice doctors normally reserve for telling
people that the limb in question is going to have to come
off.
“Er. Yeah. Thanks. Er. What’s the cheapest way to get
out to Saint Andrews?”
“Will you be going on
vacation?”
“Not really. I just want to go out for a day.
Maybe two days.”
“Leaving when?”
“This
afternoon.”
“You are, I take it, joshing with
me.”
“Not at all.”
A computer screen
was gazed at, lugubriously. A keyboard was tapped. “It doesn’t look like there’s
anything out there for less than twelve hundred
dollars.”
“Oh.” Fat Charlie
slumped.
More keyboard clicking. The man sniffed. “That
can’t be right.” Then he said, “Hold on.” A phone call. “Is this rate still
valid?” He jotted down some figures on a scratch pad. He looked up at Fat
Charlie. “If you could go out for a week and stay at the Dolphin Hotel, I could
get you a week’s vacation for five hundred dollars, with your meals at the hotel
thrown in. The flight will only cost you airport tax.”
Fat
Charlie blinked. “Is there a catch?”
“It’s an island
tourism promotion. Something to do with the music festival. I didn’t think it
was still going on. But then, you know what they say. You get what you pay for.
And if you want to eat anywhere else it will cost you.”
Fat
Charlie gave the man five crumpled hundred-dollar
bills.
Daisy was starting to feel like the kind
of cop you only ever see in movies: tough, hard-bitten, and perfectly ready to
buck the system; the kind of cop who wants to know whether or not you feel lucky
or if you’re interested in making his day, and particularly the kind of cop who
says “I’m getting too old for this shit.” She was twenty-six years old, and she
wanted to tell people she was too old for this shit. She was quite aware of how
ridiculous this was, thank you very much.
At this moment,
she was standing in Detective Superintendent Camberwell’s office and saying,
“Yes, sir. Saint Andrews.”
“Went there on my holidays some
years back, with the former Mrs. Camberwell. Very pleasant place. Rum
cake.”
“That sounds like the place, sir. The closed-circuit
footage from Gatwick is definitely him. Traveling under the name of Bronstein.
Roger Bronstein flies to Miami, changes planes, and takes a connection to Saint
Andrews.”
“You’re sure it’s
him?”
“Sure.”
“Well,” said Camberwell.
“That buggers us good and proper, doesn’t it? No extradition
treaty.”
“There must be something we can
do.”
“Mm. We can freeze his remaining accounts and grab his
assets, and we will, and that’ll be as much use to us as a water-soluble
umbrella, because he’ll have lots of cash sitting in places we can’t find it or
touch it.”
Daisy said, “But that’s
cheating.”
He looked up at her as if he wasn’t
certain exactly what he was looking at. “It’s not a playground game of tag. If
they kept the rules, they’d be on our side. If he comes back, then we arrest
him.” He squashed a little Plasticine man into a Plasticine ball and began to
mash it out into a flat sheet, pinching it between finger and thumb. “In the old
days,” he said, “they could claim sanctuary in a church. If you stayed in the
church the law couldn’t touch you. Even if you killed a man. Of course, it
limited your social life. Right.”
He looked at her as if he
expected her to leave now. She said, “He killed Maeve Livingstone. He’s been
cheating his clients blind for
years.”
“And?”
“We should be bringing
him to justice.”
“Don’t let it get to you,” he
said.
Daisy thought, I’m getting too old for this
shit. She kept her mouth shut, and the words simply went round and round
inside her head.
“Don’t let it get to you,” he repeated. He
folded the Plasticine sheet into a rough cube, then squeezed it viciously
between finger and thumb. “I don’t let any of it get to me. Think of it as if
you were a traffic warden. Grahame Coats is just a car that parked on the double
yellow lines but drove off before you were able to give him a ticket.
Yes?”
“Sure,” said Daisy. “Of course.
Sorry.”
“Right,” he said.
She went
back to her desk, went to the Police internal Web site, and examined her options
for several hours. Finally, she went home. Carol was sitting in front of
Coronation Street, eating a microwavable chicken
korma.
“I’m taking a break,” said Daisy. “I’m going on
holiday.”
“You don’t have any holiday time left,” pointed
out Carol reasonably.
“Too bad,” said Daisy. “I’m too old
for this shit.”
“Oh. Where are you
going?”
“I’m going to catch a crook,” said
Daisy.
Fat Charlie liked Caribbeair. They might
have been an international airline, but they felt like a local bus company. The
flight attendant called him “darlin’ “ and told him jus’ to sit anywhere that
struck his fancy.
He stretched out across three seats and
went to sleep. In Fat Charlie’s dream he was walking beneath copper skies and
the world was silent and still. He was walking toward a bird, vaster than
cities, its eyes aflame, its beak agape, and Fat Charlie walked into the beak
and down the creature’s throat.
Then, in the way of dreams,
he was in a room, its walls covered with soft feathers and with eyes, round like
the eyes of owls, which did not blink.
Spider was in the
center of the room, his legs and arms extended. He was held up by chains made of
bone, like the bones of a chicken’s neck, and they ran from each corner of the
room, and held him tightly, like a fly in a web.
Oh,
said Spider. It’s you.
Yes, said Fat Charlie
in his dream.
The bone chains pulled and tugged at Spider’s
flesh, and Fat Charlie could see the pain in his
face.
Well, said Fat Charlie. I suppose it could
be worse.
I don’t think this is it, said his
brother. I think she has plans for me. Plans for us. I just don’t know what
they are.
They’re only birds, said Fat Charlie.
How bad could it be?
Ever heard of
Prometheus?
Er—
Gave
fire to man. Was punished by the gods by being chained to a rock. Every day an
eagle would come down and tear out his liver.
Didn’t
he ever run out of liver?
He grew a new one every
day. It’s a god thing.
There was a pause. The two
brothers stared at each other.
I’ll sort it out,
said Fat Charlie. I’ll fix it.
Just like you
fixed the rest of your life, I suppose? Spider grinned, without
mirth.
I’m sorry.
No. I’m
sorry. Spider sighed. So look, have you got a
plan?
A plan?
I’ll take
that as a no. Just do whatever you have to do. Get me out of
here.
Are you in Hell?
I
don’t know where I am. If it’s anywhere, this is the Hell of Birds. You have to
get me out.
How?
You’re
Dad’s son, aren’t you? You’re my brother. Come up with something. Just get me
out of here.
Fat Charlie woke, shivering. The flight
attendant brought him coffee, and he drank it gratefully. He was awake now, and
he had no desire to go back to sleep, so he read the Caribbeair Magazine and
learned many useful things about Saint Andrews.
He learned
that Saint Andrews is not the smallest of the Caribbean Islands, but it tends to
be one of the ones that people forget about when they make lists. It was
discovered by the Spanish around 1500, an uninhabited volcanic hill teeming with
animal life, not to mention a multiplicity of plants. It was said that anything
that you planted in Saint Andrews would grow.
It belonged
to the Spanish, and then to British, then to the Dutch, then to the British
again, and then, for a short while after it was made independent in 1962, it
belonged to Major F. E. Garrett, who took over the government, broke off
diplomatic relations with all other countries except Albania and the Congo, and
ruled the country with a rod of iron until his unfortunate death from falling
out of bed several years later. He fell out of bed hard enough to break a number
of bones, despite the presence in his bedroom of an entire squad of soldiers,
who testified that they had all tried, but failed, to break Major Garrett’s
fall, and despite their best efforts he was dead by the time that he arrived in
the island’s sole hospital. Since then, Saint Andrews had been ruled by a
beneficent and elected local government and was everybody’s
friend.
It had miles of sandy beaches and an extremely
small rainforest in the center of the island; it had bananas and sugarcane, a
banking system that encouraged foreign investment and offshore corporate
banking, and no extradition treaties with anybody at all, except possibly the
Congo and Albania.
If Saint Andrews was known for anything,
it was for its cuisine: the inhabitants claimed to have been jerking chickens
before the Jamaicans, currying goats before the Trinidadians, frying flying fish
before the Bajans.
There were two towns on Saint Andrews:
Williamstown, on the southeast side of the island, and Newcastle, on the north.
There were street markets in which anything that grew on the island could be
bought, and several supermarkets, in which the same foodstuffs could be bought
for twice the price. One day Saint Andrews would get a real international
airport.
It was a matter of opinion whether the deep harbor
of Williamstown was a good thing or not. It was indisputable that the deep
harbor brought the cruise ships, though, floating islands filled with people,
who were changing the economy and nature of Saint Andrews as they were changing
the economy of many Caribbean islands. At high season there would be up to half
a dozen cruise ships in Williamstown Bay, and thousands of people waiting to
disembark, to stretch their legs, to buy things. And the people of Saint Andrews
grumbled, but they welcomed the visitors ashore, they sold them things, they fed
them until they could eat no more and then they sent them back to their
ships—
The Caribbeair plane landed with a bump that made
Fat Charlie drop his magazine. He put it back into the seat pocket in front of
him, walked down the steps and across the tarmac.
It was
late afternoon.
Fat Charlie took a taxi from the airport to
his hotel. During the taxi ride, he learned a number of things that had not been
mentioned in the Caribbeair magazine. For example, he learned that music, real
music, proper music, was country and western music. On Saint Andrews, even the
rastas knew it. Johnny Cash? He was a god. Willie Nelson? A
demigod.
He learned that there was no reason ever to leave
Saint Andrews. The taxi driver himself had seen no reason ever to leave Saint
Andrews, and he had given it much thought. The island had a cave, and a
mountain, and a rainforest. Hotels? It had twenty. Restaurants? Several dozen.
It contained a city, three towns, and a scattering of villages. Food? Everything
grew here. Oranges. Bananas. Nutmegs. It even, the taxi driver said, had
limes.
Fat Charlie said “No!” at this, mostly in order to
feel like he was taking part in the conversation, but the driver appeared to
take it as a challenge to his honesty. He slammed on the taxi’s brakes, sending
the car slewing over to the side of the road, got out of the car, reached over a
fence, pulled something from a tree and walked back to the
car.
“Look at this!” he said. “Nobody ever tell you that I
is a liar. What it is?”
“A lime?” said Fat
Charlie.
“Exactly.”
The taxi driver
lurched the car back into the road. He told Fat Charlie that the Dolphin was an
excellent hotel. Did Fat Charlie have family on the island? Did he know anyone
here?
“Actually,” said Fat Charlie, “I’m here looking for
someone. For a woman.”
The taxi driver thought this was a
splendid idea, since Saint Andrews was a perfect place to come if you were
looking for a woman. This was, he elaborated, because the women of Saint Andrews
were curvier than the women of Jamaica, and less likely to give you grief and
heartbreak than the Trinis. In addition, they were more beautiful than the women
of Dominica, and they were better cooks than you would find anywhere on Earth.
If Fat Charlie was looking for a woman, he had come to the right
place.
“It’s not just any woman. It’s a specific woman,”
said Fat Charlie.
The taxi driver told Fat Charlie that
this was his lucky day, for the taxi driver prided himself on knowing everyone
on the island. If you spend your life somewhere, he said, you can do that. He
was willing to bet that Fat Charlie did not know by sight all the people in
England, and Fat Charlie admitted that this was in fact the
case.
“She’s a friend of the family,” said Fat Charlie.
“Her name is Mrs. Higgler. Callyanne Higgler. You heard of
her?”
The taxi driver was quiet for a while. He seemed to
be thinking. Then he said that, no, he hadn’t ever heard of her. The taxi pulled
up in front of the Dolphin Hotel, and Fat Charlie paid
him.
Fat Charlie went inside. There was a young woman on
reception. He showed her his passport and the reservation number. He put the
lime down on the reservation desk.
“Do you have any
luggage?”
“No,” said Fat Charlie,
apologetically.
“Nothing?”
“Nothing.
Just this lime.”
He filled out several forms, and she gave
him a key and directions to his room.
Fat Charlie was in
the bath when a knock came on the door. He wrapped a towel around his midriff.
It was the bellman. “You left your lime in reception,” he said, and handed it to
Fat Charlie.
“Thanks,” said Fat Charlie. He went back to
his bath. Afterward, he went to bed, and dreamed uncomfortable
dreams.
In his house on the cliff top, Grahame
Coats was also having the strangest dreams, dark and unwelcome, if not actually
unpleasant. He could not remember them properly when he woke, but he would open
his eyes the next morning with a vague impression that he had spent the night
stalking smaller creatures through the long grass, despatching them with a blow
of his paw, rending their bodies with his teeth.
In his
dreams, his teeth were weapons of destruction.
He woke from
the dreams feeling disturbed, with the day slightly
charged.
And, each morning, a new day would begin and here,
only a week away from his old life, Grahame Coats was already experiencing the
frustration of the fugitive. He had a swimming pool, true, and cocoa trees, and
grapefruit and nutmeg trees; he had a full wine cellar and an empty meat cellar
and media center. He had satellite television, a large DVD collection, not to
mention art, thousands of dollars’ worth of art, all over the walls. He had a
cook, who came in each day and cooked his meals, a housekeeper and a
groundskeeper (a married couple who came in for a few hours each day). The food
was excellent, the climate was—if you liked warm, sunny days—perfect, and none
of these things made Grahame Coats as happy as he felt was his
due.
He had not shaved since leaving England, which had not
yet endowed him with a beard, merely given him a thin covering of the kind of
facial hair that makes men look shifty. His eyes sat in panda-dark sockets, and
the bags beneath his eyes were so dark as to appear to be
bruises.
He swam in the pool once each day, in the morning,
but otherwise avoided the sun; he had not, he told himself, amassed an
ill-gotten fortune to lose it to skin cancer. Or to anything else at
all.
He thought about London too much. In London, each of
his favorite restaurants had a maitre d’ who called him by name and ensured he
left happy. In London there were people who owed him favors, and there was never
any difficulty in getting first-night tickets, and for that matter in London
there were theaters to have first nights in. He had always thought he would make
a fine exile; he was starting to suspect that he had been
wrong.
Needing someone to blame, he came to the conclusion
that the entire affair was Maeve Livingstone’s fault. She had led him on. She
had attempted to rob him. She was a vixen, a minx, and a hussy. She had deserved
everything she had coming to her. She had gotten off easily. Should he be
interviewed on television, he could already hear the bruised innocence in his
voice as he explained that he had been defending his property and his honor from
a dangerous madwoman. Frankly, it was some kind of miracle that he’d made it out
of that office alive—
And he had liked being Grahame
Coats. He was now, as always while he was on the island, Basil Finnegan, and it
irked him. He didn’t feel like a Basil. His Basilhood had been hard-won—the
original Basil had died as an infant, and had a birth-date close to Grahame’s
own. One copy of the birth certificate, along with a letter from an imaginary
clergyman, later, and Grahame possessed a passport and an identity. He had kept
the identity alive—Basil had a solid credit history, Basil traveled to exotic
places, Basil had bought a luxury house on Saint Andrews without ever seeing it.
But in Grahame’s mind, Basil had been working for him, and now the servant had
become the master. Basil Finnegan had eaten him alive.
“If
I stay here,” said Grahame Coats. “I shall go mad.”
“What
you say?” asked the housekeeper, duster in hand, leaning in at the bedroom
door.
“Nothing,” said Grahame
Coats.
“Sound like you say if you stay in you go mad. You
ought to go for a walk. Walking good for you.”
Grahame
Coats did not go for walks; he had people to do that for him. But, he thought,
perhaps Basil Finnegan went for walks. He put on a broad-brimmed hat and
exchanged his sandals for walking shoes. He took his cell phone, instructed the
groundskeeper to come and get him when he called, and set out from the house on
the cliff edge, heading toward the nearest town.
It is a
small world. You do not have to live in it particularly long to learn that for
yourself. There is a theory that, in the whole world, there are only five
hundred real people (the cast, as it were; all the rest of the people in the
world, the theory suggests, are extras) and what is more, they all know each
other. And it’s true, or true as far as it goes. In reality the world is made of
thousands upon thousands of groups of about five hundred people, all of whom
will spend their lives bumping into each other, trying to avoid each other, and
discovering each other in the same unlikely teashop in Vancouver. There is an
unavoidability to this process. It’s not even coincidence. It’s just the way the
world works, with no regard for individuals or for
propriety.
So it was that Grahame Coats walked into a small
café on the road to Williamstown, in order to purchase a soft drink and to have
somewhere to sit while he called his gardener to tell him that he should come
and pick him up.
He ordered a Fanta and sat down at a
table. The place was practically empty: two women, one young, one older, sat in
the far corner, drinking coffee and writing
postcards.
Grahame Coats gazed out, across the road at the
beach. It was paradise, he thought. And it might behoove him to get more deeply
involved with local politics—perhaps as a sponsor of the arts. He had already
made several substantial donations to the island’s police force, and it might
even become necessary to make sure that—
A voice from
behind him, thrilled and tentative, said, “Mister Coats?” and his heart lurched.
The younger of the women sat down beside him. She had the warmest
smile.
“Fancy running into you here,” she said. “You on
your holidays too?”
“Something like that.” He had no idea
who this woman was.
“You remember me, don’t you? Rosie
Noah. I used to go out with Fat, with Charlie Nancy.
Yes?”
“Hello. Rosie. Yes, of
course.”
“I’m on a cruise, with my mum. She’s still writing
postcards home.”
Grahame Coats glanced back over his
shoulder to the back of the little café, and something resembling a South
American mummy in a floral dress glared back at
him.
“Honestly,” continued Rosie, “I’m not really a cruise
sort of person. Ten days of going from island to island. It’s nice to see a
familiar face, isn’t it?”
“Absatively,” said Grahame Coats.
“Should I take it that you and our Charles are no longer, well, an
item?”
“Yes,” she said. “I suppose you should. I mean,
we’re not.”
Grahame Coats smiled sympathetically on the
outside. He picked up his Fanta and walked with Rosie to the table in the
corner. Rosie’s mother radiated ill-will just as an old iron radiator can
radiate chill into a room, but Grahame Coats was perfectly charming and entirely
helpful, and he agreed with her on every point. It was indeed appalling what the
cruise companies thought they could get away with these days; it was disgusting
how sloppy the administration of the cruise ship had been allowed to get; it was
shocking how little there was to do in the islands; and it was, in every
respect, outrageous what passengers were expected to put up with: ten days
without a bathtub, with only the tiniest of shower facilities.
Shocking.
Rosie’s mother told him about the several quite
impressive enmities she had managed to cultivate with certain American
passengers whose main crime, as Grahame Coats understood it, was to overload
their plates in the buffet line of the Squeak Attack, and to sunbathe in
the spot by the aft deck pool that Rosie’s mother had decided, on the first day
out, was undisputedly hers.
Grahame Coats nodded, and made
sympathetic noises as the vitriol dripped over him, tching and agreeing
and clucking until Rosie’s mother was prepared to overlook her dislike both of
strangers and people connected in some way to Fat Charlie, and she talked, and
she talked, and she talked. Grahame Coats was barely listening. Grahame Coats
pondered.
It would be unfortunate, Grahame Coats was
thinking, if someone was to return to London at this precise point in time and
inform the authorities that Grahame Coats had been encountered in Saint Andrews.
It was inevitable that he would be noticed one day, but still, the inevitable
could, perhaps, be postponed.
“Let me,” said Grahame Coats,
“suggest a solution to at least one of your problems. A little way up the road I
have a holiday house. Rather a nice house I like to think. And if there’s one
thing I have a surplus of, it’s baths. Would you care to come back and indulge
yourselves?”
“No, thanks,” said Rosie. Had she agreed, it
is to be expected that her mother would have pointed out that they were due back
at the Williamstown Port for pickup later that afternoon, and would then have
chided Rosie for accepting such invitations from virtual strangers. But Rosie
said no.
“That is extremely kind of you,” said Rosie’s
mother. “We would be delighted.”
The gardener pulled up
outside soon after in a black Mercedes, and Grahame Coats opened the back door
for Rosie and her mother. He assured them he would absatively have them back in
the harbor well before the last boat back to their
ship.
“Where to, Mister Finnegan?” asked the
gardener.
“Home,” he said.
“Mister
Finnegan?” asked Rosie.
“It’s an old family name,” said
Grahame Coats, and he was sure it was. Somebody’s family anyway. He closed the
back door and went around to the front.
Maeve
Livingstone was lost. It had started out so well: she had wanted to be at home,
in Pontefract, and there was a shimmer and a tremendous wind, and in one
ectoplasmic gusting, she was home. She wandered around the house for one last
time, then went out into the autumn day. She wanted to see her sister in Rye,
and before she could think, there she was in the garden at Rye, watching her
sister walking her springer spaniel.
It had seemed so
easy.
That was the point she had decided that she wanted to
see Grahame Coats, and that was where it had all gone wrong. She was,
momentarily, back in the office in the Aldwych, and then in an empty house in
Purley, which she remembered from a small dinner party Grahame Coats had hosted
a decade back, and then—
Then she was lost. And everywhere
she tried to go only made matters worse.
She had no idea
where she was now. It seemed to be some kind of garden.
A
brief downpour of rain drenched the place and left her untouched. Now the ground
was steaming, and she knew she wasn’t in England. It was starting to get
dark.
She sat down on the ground, and she started to
sniffle.
Honestly, she told herself. Maeve
Livingstone. Pull yourself together. But the sniffling just got
worse.
“You want a tissue?” asked
someone.
Maeve looked up. An elderly gentleman with a green
hat and a pencil-thin moustache was offering her a
tissue.
She nodded. Then she said, “It’s probably not any
use, though. I won’t be able to touch it.”
He smiled
sympathetically and passed her the tissue. It didn’t fall through her fingers,
so she blew her nose with it and dabbed at her eyes. “Thank you. Sorry about
that. It all got a bit much.”
“It happens,” said the man.
He looked her up and down, appraisingly. “What are you? A
duppy?”
“No,” she said. “I don’t think so—what’s a
duppy?”
“A ghost,” he said. With his pencil moustache, he
reminded her of Cab Calloway, perhaps, or Don Ameche, one of those stars who
aged but never stopped being stars. Whoever the old man was, he was still a
star.
“Oh. Right. Yes, I’m one of them. Um.
You?”
“More or less,” he said. “I’m dead,
anyway.”
“Oh. Would you mind if I asked where I
was?”
“We’re in Florida.” he told her. “In the buryin’
ground. It’s good you caught me,” he added. “I was going for a walk. You want to
come along?”
“Shouldn’t you be in a grave?” she asked,
hesitantly.
“I was bored,” he told her. “I thought I could
do with a walk. And maybe a spot of fishin’.”
She
hesitated, then nodded. It was nice to have someone to talk
to.
“You want to hear a story?” asked the old
man.
“Not really,” she admitted.
He
helped her to her feet, and they walked out of the Garden of
Rest.
“Fair enough. Then I’ll keep it short. Not go too
long. You know, I can tell one of these stories so it lasts for weeks. It’s all
in the details—what you put in, what you don’t. I mean, you leave out the
weather and what people are wearing, you can skip half the story. I once told a
story—”
“Look,” she said, “if you’re going to tell a story,
then just tell it to me, all right?” It was bad enough walking along the side of
the road in the gathering dusk. She reminded herself that she wasn’t going to be
hit by a passing car, but it did nothing to make her feel more at
ease.
The old man started to talk in a gentle sing-song.
“When I say ‘Tiger,’ “ he said, “You got to understand it’s not just the stripy
cat, the India one. It’s just what people call big cats—the pumas and the
bobcats and the jaguars and all of them. You got
that?”
“Certainly.”
“Good. So—a long
time ago,” he began, “Tiger had the stories. All the stories there ever were was
Tiger stories, all the songs were Tiger songs, and I’d say that all the jokes
were Tiger jokes, but there weren’t no jokes told back in the Tiger days. In
Tiger stories all that matters is how strong your teeth are, how you hunt and
how you kill. Ain’t no gentleness in Tiger stories, no tricksiness, and no
peace.”
Maeve tried to imagine what kind of stories a big
cat might tell. “So they were violent?”
“Sometimes. But
mostly what they was, was bad. When all the stories and the songs were Tiger’s,
that was a bad time for everyone. People take on the shapes of the songs and the
stories that surround them, especially if they don’t have their own song. And in
Tiger times all the songs were dark. They began in tears, and they’d end in
blood, and they were the only stories that the people of this world
knew.
“Then Anansi comes along. Now, I guess you know all
about Anansi—”
“I don’t think so,” said
Maeve.
“Well, if I started to tell you how clever and how
handsome and how charming and how cunning Anansi was, I could start today and
not finish until next Thursday,” began the old man.
“Then
don’t,” said Maeve. “We’ll take it as said. And what did this Anansi
do?”
“Well, Anansi won the stories—won them? No. He
earned them. He took them from Tiger, and made it so Tiger couldn’t enter
the real world no more. Not in the flesh. The stories people told became Anansi
stories. This was, what, ten, fifteen thousand years
back.
“Now, Anansi stories, they have wit and trickery and
wisdom. Now, all over the world, all of the people they aren’t just thinking of
hunting and being hunted anymore. Now they’re starting to think their way
out of problems—sometimes thinking their way into worse problems. They still
need to keep their bellies full, but now they’re trying to figure out how to do
it without working—and that’s the point where people start using their
heads. Some people think the first tools were weapons, but that’s all upside
down. First of all, people figure out the tools. It’s the crutch before the
club, every time. Because now people are telling Anansi stories, and they’re
starting to think about how to get kissed, how to get something for nothing by
being smarter or funnier. That’s when they start to make the
world.”
“It’s just a folk story,” she said. “People made up
the stories in the first place.”
“Does that change things?”
asked the old man. “Maybe Anansi’s just some guy from a story, made up back in
Africa in the dawn days of the world by some boy with blackfly on his leg,
pushing his crutch in the dirt, making up some goofy story about a man made of
tar. Does that change anything? People respond to the stories. They tell them
themselves. The stories spread, and as people tell them, the stories change the
tellers. Because now the folk who never had any thought in their head but how to
run from lions and keep far enough away from rivers that the crocodiles don’t
get an easy meal, now they’re starting to dream about a whole new place to live.
The world may be the same, but the wallpaper’s changed. Yes? People still have
the same story, the one where they get born and they do stuff and they die, but
now the story means something different to what it meant
before.”
“You’re telling me that before the Anansi stories
the world was savage and bad?”
“Yeah. Pretty
much.”
She digested this. “Well,” she said cheerily, “it’s
certainly a good thing that the stories are now
Anansi’s.”
The old man nodded.
And
then she said, “Doesn’t Tiger want them back?”
He nodded.
“He’s wanted them back for ten thousand years.”
“But he
won’t get them, will he?”
The old man said nothing. He
stared into the distance. Then he shrugged. “Be a bad thing if he
did.”
“What about Anansi?”
“Anansi’s
dead,” said the old man. “And there ain’t a lot a duppy can
do.”
“As a duppy myself,” she said, “I resent
that.”
“Well,” said the old man, “Duppies can’t touch the
living. Remember?”
She pondered this a moment. “So whatcan
I touch?” she asked.
The look that flickered across his
elderly face was both wily and wicked. “Well,” he said. “You could touch
me.”
“I’ll have you know,” she told him, pointedly, “that
I’m a married woman.”
His smile only grew wider. It was a
sweet smile and a gentle one, as heartwarming as it was dangerous. “Generally
speaking, that kind of contract terminates in a till death us do
part.”
Maeve was
unimpressed.
“Thing is,” he told her, “you’re an immaterial
girl. You can touch immaterial things. Like me. I mean, if you want, we could go
dancing. There’s a place just down the street here. Won’t nobody notice a couple
of duppies on their dance floor.”
Maeve thought about it.
It had been a long time since she had gone dancing. “Are you a good dancer?” she
asked.
“I’ve never had any complaints,” said the old
man.
“I want to find a man—a living man—called Grahame
Coats,” she said. “Can you help me find him?”
“I can
certainly steer you in the right direction,” he said. “So, are you
dancing?”
A smile crept about the edges of her lips. “You
asking?” she said.
The chains that had kept
Spider captive fell away. The pain, which had been searing and continuous like a
bad toothache that occupied his entire body, began to
pass.
Spider took a step forward.
In
front of him was what appeared to be a rip in the sky, and he moved toward
it.
Ahead of him he could see an island. He could see a
small mountain in the center of the island. He could see a pure blue sky, and
swaying palm trees, a white gull high in the sky. But even as he saw it the
world seemed to be receding. It was as if he were looking at it through the
wrong end of a telescope. It shrank and slipped from him, and the more he ran
toward it the further away it seemed to get.
The island was
a reflection in a puddle of water, and then it was nothing at
all.
He was in a cave. The edges of things were
crisp—crisper and sharper than anywhere that Spider had ever been before. This
was a different kind of place.
She was standing in the
mouth of the cave, between him and the open air. He knew her. She had stared
into his face in a Greek restaurant in South London, and birds had come from her
mouth.
“You know,” said Spider, “I have to say, you’ve got
the strangest ideas about hospitality. You come to my world, I’d make you
dinner, open a bottle of wine, put on some soft music, give you an evening you
would never forget.”
Her face was impassive; carved from
black rock it was. The wind tugged at the edges of her old brown coat. She spoke
then, her voice high and lonely as the call of a distant
gull.
“I took you,” she said. “Now, you will call
him.”
“Call him? Call who?”
“You will
bleat,” she said. “You will whimper. Your fear will excite
him.”
“Spider does not bleat,” he said. He was not certain
this was true.
Eyes as black and as shiny as chips of
obsidian stared back into his. They were eyes like black holes, letting nothing
out, not even information.
“If you kill me,” said Spider,
“my curse will be upon you.” He wondered if he actually had a curse. He probably
did; and if he didn’t, he was sure that he could fake
it.
“It will not be I that kills you,” she said. She raised
her hand, and it was not a hand but a raptor’s talon. She raked her talon down
his face, down his chest, her cruel claws sinking into his flesh, tearing his
skin.
It did not hurt, although Spider knew that it would
hurt soon enough.
Beads of blood crimsoned his chest and
dripped down his face. His eyes stung. His blood touched his lips. He could
taste it and smell the iron scent of it.
“Now,” she said in
the cries of distant birds. “Now your death begins.”
Spider
said, “We’re both reasonable entities. Let me present you with a perhaps rather
more feasible alternative scenario that might conceivably have benefits for both
of us.” He said it with an easy smile. He said it
convincingly.
“You talk too much,” she said, and shook her
head. “No more talking.”
She reached into his mouth with
her sharp talons, and with one wrenching movement she tore out his
tongue.
“There,” she said. And then she seemed to take pity
on him, for she touched Spider’s face in a way that was almost kindly, and she
said, “Sleep.”
He
slept.
Rosie’s mother, now bathed, reappeared
refreshed, invigorated and positively glowing.
“Before I
give you both a ride into Williamstown, can I give you a hasty guided tour of
the house?” asked Grahame Coats.
“We do have to get back to
the ship, thanks all the same,” said Rosie, who had not been able to convince
herself that she wanted a bath in Grahame Coats’s
house.
Her mother checked her watch. “We have ninety
minutes,” she said. “It won’t take more than fifteen minutes to get back to the
harbor. Don’t be ungracious, Rosie. We would love to see your
house.”
So Grahame Coats showed them the sitting room, the
study, the library, the television room, the dining room, the kitchen and the
swimming pool. He opened a door beneath the kitchen stairs that looked as if it
would lead to a broom cupboard, and walked his guests down the wooden steps into
the rock-walled wine cellar. He showed them the wine, most of which had come
with the house when he had bought it. He walked them to the far end of the wine
cellar to the bare room that had, back in the days before refrigeration, been a
meat storage locker. It was always chilly in the meat locker, where heavy chains
came down from the ceiling, the empty hooks on the ends showing where once whole
carcasses had hung long before. Grahame Coats held the heavy iron door open
politely while both the women walked inside.
“You know,” he
said, helpfully, “I’ve just realized. The light switch is back where we came in.
Hold on.” And then he slammed the door behind the women, and he rammed closed
the bolts.
He picked out a dusty-looking bottle of1995
Chablis Premier Cru from a wine rack.
He went upstairs with
a swing in his step and let his three employees know that he would be giving
them the week off.
It seemed to him, as he walked up the
stairs to his study, as if something were padding soundlessly behind him, but
when he turned there was nothing there. Oddly, he found this comforting. He
found a corkscrew, opened the bottle and poured himself a pale glass of wine. He
drank it and, although he had never previously had much time for red wines, he
found himself wishing that what he was drinking was richer and darker. It
should be, he thought, the color of blood.
As he
finished his second glass of Chablis, he realized that he had been blaming the
wrong person for his plight. Maeve Livingstone was, he saw it now, merely a
dupe. No, the person to blame, obviously and undeniably, was Fat Charlie.
Without his meddling, without his criminal trespass into Grahame Coats’s office
computer systems, Grahame Coats wouldn’t be here, an exile, like a blond
Napoleon on a perfect, sunny Elba. He wouldn’t be in the unfortunate predicament
of having two women imprisoned in his meat locker. If Fat Charlie was
here, he thought, I would tear out his throat with my teeth, and the
thought shocked him even as it excited him. You didn’t want to screw with
Grahame Coats.
Evening came, and Grahame Coats watched the
Squeak Attack from his window as it drifted past his house on the cliff
and off into the sunset. He wondered how long it would take them to notice that
two passengers were missing. He even waved.
Chapter Twelve
in which Fat Charlie does several things for the first
time
The Dolphin Hotel had a concierge. He was
young and bespectacled, and he was reading a paperback novel with a rose and a
gun on the cover.
“I’m trying to find someone,” said Fat
Charlie. “On the island.”
“Who?”
“A
lady named Callyanne Higgler. She’s here from Florida. She’s an old friend of my
family.”
The young man closed his book thoughtfully, then
he looked at Fat Charlie through narrowed eyes. When people do this in paperback
books it gives an immediate impression of dangerous alertness, but in reality it
just made the young man look like he was trying not to fall asleep. He said,
“Are you the man with the
lime?”
“What?”
“The man with the
lime?”
“Yes, I suppose I am.”
“Lemme
see it, nuh?”
“My lime?”
The young man
nodded, gravely.
“No, you can’t. It’s back in my
room.”
“But you
are the man with the
lime.”
“Can you help me find Mrs. Higgler? Are there any
Higglers on the island? Do you have a phone book I could look at? I was hoping
for a phone book in my bedroom.”
“It’s a kinda common name,
you know?” said the young man. “The phone book not going to
help.”
“How common could it
be?”
“Well,” said the young man, “For example, I’m Benjamin
Higgler. She over there, on reception, she name Amerila
Higgler.”
“Oh. Right. Lots of Higglers on the island. I
see.”
“She on the island for the music
festival?”
“What?”
“It going on all
this week.” He handed Fat Charlie a leaflet, informing him that Willie Nelson
(canceled) would be headlining the St. Andrews Music
Festival.
“Why’d he cancel?”
“Same
reason Garth Brooks cancel. Nobody tell them it was happening in the first
place.”
“I don’t think she’s going to the music festival. I
really need to track her down. She’s got something I’m looking for. Look, if you
were me, how would you go about looking for her?”
Benjamin
Higgler reached into a desk drawer and pulled out a map of the island. “We’re
here, just south of Williamstown—” he began, making a felt pen mark on the
paper. From there, he began marking out a plan of campaign for Fat Charlie: he
divided the island into segments that could easily be covered in a day by a man
on a bicycle, marked out each rum shop and café with small crosses. He put a
circle beside each tourist attraction.
Then he rented Fat
Charlie a bicycle.
Fat Charlie pedaled off to the
south.
There were information conduits on Saint Andrews
that Fat Charlie, who, on some level believed that coconut palms and cellular
telephones ought to be mutually exclusive, had not expected. It did not seem to
make any difference who he talked to: old men playing draughts in the shade;
women with breasts like watermelons and buttocks like armchairs and laughter
like mockingbirds; a sensible young lady in the tourist office; a bearded rasta
with a green, red, and yellow—colored knit cap and what appeared to be a woollen
miniskirt: they all had the same response.
“You the one
with the lime?”
“I suppose so.”
“Show
us your lime.”
“It’s back at the hotel. Look, I’m trying to
find Callyanne Higgler. She’s about sixty. American. Big mug of coffee in her
hand.”
“Never heard of her.”
Bicycling
around the island, Fat Charlie soon discovered, had its dangers. The chief mode
of transportation on the island was the minibus: unlicensed, unsafe, always
overfilled, the minibuses hurtled around the island, tooting and squealing their
brakes, slamming around corners on two wheels whilst relying on the weight of
their passengers to ensure they never tipped over. Fat Charlie would have been
killed a dozen times on his first morning out were it not for the low thud of
drum and bass being played over each bus’s sound system: he could feel them in
the pit of his stomach even before he heard their engines, and he had plenty of
time to wheel the bicycle over to the side of the
road.
While none of the people he spoke to were exactly
what you could call helpful, they were still all extremely friendly. Fat Charlie
stopped several times on his day’s expedition to the south and refilled his
water bottle: he stopped at cafés and at private houses. Everyone was so pleased
to see him, even if they didn’t know anything about Mrs. Higgler. He got back to
the Dolphin Hotel in time for dinner.
On the following day
he went north. On his way back to Williamstown, in the late afternoon, he
stopped on a cliff top, dismounted, and walked his bike down to the entry gate
of a luxurious house that sat on its own, overlooking the bay. He pressed the
speakerphone button and said hello, but no one replied. A large black car sat in
the driveway. Fat Charlie wondered if perhaps the place was deserted, but a
curtain twitched in an upper room.
He pressed the button
again. “Hullo,” he said. “Just wanted to see if I could fill my water bottle
here.”
There was no reply. Perhaps he had only imagined
that there was someone at the window. He seemed extremely prone to imagining
things here: he started to fancy that he was being watched, not by someone in
the house, but by someone or something in the bushes that bordered the road.
“Sorry to have bothered you,” he said into the speaker, and clambered back onto
his bike. It was downhill from here all the way to Williamstown. He was sure
that he’d pass a café or two on the way, or another house, a friendly
one.
He was on his way down the road—the cliffs had become
a steepish hill down to the sea—when a black car came up behind him and
accelerated forward with a roar. Too late, Fat Charlie realized that the driver
had not seen him, for there was a long scrape of car against the bike’s
handlebars, and Fat Charlie found himself tumbling, with the bike, down the
hill. The black car drove on.
Fat Charlie picked himself up
halfway down the hill. “That could have been nasty,” he said aloud. The
handlebars were twisted. He hauled his bike back up the hill and onto the road.
A low bass rumble alerted him to the approach of a minibus, and he waved it
down.
“Can I put my bike in the
back?”
“No room,” said the driver, but he produced several
bungee cords from beneath his seat, and used them to fasten the bike onto the
roof of the bus. Then he grinned. “You must be the Englishman with the
lime.”
“I don’t have it on me. It’s back at the
hotel.”
Fat Charlie squeezed onto the bus, where the
booming bass resolved itself, extremely improbably, into Deep Purple’s “Smoke on
the Water.” Fat Charlie squeezed in next to a large woman with a chicken on her
lap. Behind them two white girls chattered about the parties they had attended
the previous night and the shortcomings of the temporary boyfriends they had
accumulated during their holiday.
Fat Charlie noticed the
black car—a Mercedes—as it came back up the road. It had a long scratch along
one side. He felt guilty, hoping his bike hadn’t scraped the paintwork too
badly. The windows were tinted so dark that the car might have been driving
itself—
Then one of the white girls tapped Fat Charlie on
the shoulder and asked him if he knew of any good parties on the island that
night, and when he said he didn’t, started telling him about one that she’d been
to in a cave two nights before, where there was a swimming pool and a sound
system and lights and everyfink, and so Fat Charlie completely failed to notice
that the black Mercedes was now following the minibus into Williamstown, and
that it only went on its way once Fat Charlie had retrieved his bike from the
roof of the minibus (“next time, you should bring the lime”) and carried the
bike into the hotel lobby.
Only then did the car return to
the house on the cliff top.
Benjamin the concierge examined
the bike and told Fat Charlie not to worry, and they’d have it all fixed and
good as new by tomorrow.
Fat Charlie went back to his hotel
room, the color of underwater, where his lime sat, like a small green Buddha, on
the countertop.
“You’re no help,” he told the lime. This
was unfair. It was only a lime; there was nothing special about it at all. It
was doing the best it could.
Stories are webs,
interconnected strand to strand, and you follow each story to the center,
because the center is the end. Each person is a strand of
story.
Daisy, for example.
Daisy could
not have lasted as long as she had in the police force without having a sensible
side to her nature, which was mostly all anybody saw. She respected laws, and
she respected rules. She understood that many of these rules are perfectly
arbitrary—decisions about where one could park, for example, or what hours shops
were permitted to open—but that even these rules helped the big picture. They
kept society safe. They kept things secure.
Her flatmate,
Carol, thought she’d gone mad.
“You can’t just leave and
say you’re going on holiday. It doesn’t work like that. You’re not on a TV cop
show, you know. You can’t just zoom all over the world to follow up a
lead.”
“Well, then, in that case I’m not,” Daisy had
retorted untruthfully. “I’m just going on holiday.”
She
said it so convincingly that the sensible cop who lived at the back of her head
was shocked into silence and then began to explain to her exactly what she was
doing wrong, beginning with pointing out that she was about to go off on an
entirely unauthorized leave—tantamount, muttered the sensible cop, to neglect of
duty—and moving on from there.
It explained it on the way
to the airport, and all across the Atlantic. It pointed out that even if she
managed to avoid a permanent black mark in her Personal File, let alone being
thrown out of the police force altogether, even if she did find Grahame Coats,
there was nothing she could do once she found him. Her Majesty’s constabulary
look unkindly on kidnapping criminals in foreign countries, let alone arresting
them, and she rather doubted she would be able to persuade him to return to the
UK willingly.
It was only when Daisy got off the little
plane from Jamaica and tasted the air—earthy, spicy, wet, almost sweet—of Saint
Andrews that the sensible cop stopped pointing out the sheer ill-considered
madness of what she was doing. That was because it was drowned out by another
voice. “
Evildoers beware!” it sang. “
Beware! Take care! Evildoers
everywhere!” and Daisy was marching to its beat. Grahame Coats had killed a
woman in his office in the Aldwych, and he had walked out of there scot-free. He
had done it practically under Daisy’s nose.
She shook her
head, collected her bag, brightly informed the immigration officer that she was
here on her holidays, and went out to the taxi rank.
“I
want a hotel that’s not too expensive, but isn’t icky, please,” she said to the
driver.
“I got just the place for you darlin’,” he said.
“Hop in.”
Spider opened his eyes and discovered
that he was staked-out, face down. His arms were tied to a large stake pounded
into the earth in front of him. He could not move his legs or twist his neck
enough to see behind him, but he was willing to bet that they were similarly
hobbled. The movement, as he tried to lift himself out of the dirt, to look
behind him, caused his scratches to burn.
He opened his
mouth, and dark blood drooled onto the dust, wetting it.
He
heard a sound and twisted his head as much as he could. A white woman was
looking down at him curiously.
“Are you all right? Silly
question. Just look at the state of you. I suppose you’re another duppy. Do I
have that right?”
Spider thought about it. He didn’t think
he was a duppy. He shook his head.
“If you are, it’s
nothing to be ashamed of. Apparently, I’m a duppy myself. I hadn’t heard the
term before, but I met a delightful old gentleman on the way here who told me
all about it. Let me see if I can be of any
assistance.”
She crouched down next to him and reached out
to help loosen his bonds.
Her hand slipped through him. He
could feel her fingers, like strands of fog, brushing his
skin.
“I’m afraid I don’t seem able actually to touch you,”
she said. “Still, that means that you’re not dead yet. So cheer
up.”
Spider hoped this odd ghost-woman would go away soon.
He couldn’t think straight.
“Anyway, once I had everything
sorted out, I resolved to remain walking the Earth until I take vengeance on my
killer. I explained it to Morris—he was on a television screen in Selfridges—and
he said he rather thought I was missing the entire point of having moved beyond
the flesh, but I ask you, if they expect me to turn the other cheek they have
several other thinks coming. There are a number of precedents. And I’m sure I
can do a Banquo-at-the-Feast thing, given the opportunity. Do you
talk?”
Spider shook his head, and blood dripped from his
forehead into his eyes. It stung. Spider wondered how long it would take him to
grow a new tongue. Prometheus had managed to grow a new liver on a daily basis,
and Spider was pretty sure that a liver had to be a lot more work than a tongue.
Livers did chemical reactions—bilirubin, urea, enzymes, all that. They broke
down alcohol, and that had to be a lot of work on its own. All tongues did was
talk. Well, that and lick, of course—
“I can’t keep
yattering on,” said the yellow-haired ghost-lady. “I’ve got a long way to go, I
think.” She began to walk away, and she faded as she walked. Spider raised his
head and watched her slip from one reality to another, like a photograph fading
in the sunlight. He tried to call her back, but all the noises he could make
were muffled, incoherent. Tongueless.
Somewhere in the
distance, he heard the cry of a bird.
Spider tested his
bonds. They held.
He found himself thinking, once again, of
Rosie’s story of the raven who saved the man from the mountain lion. It itched
in his head, worse than the claw tracks on his face and chest.
Concentrate. The man lay on the ground, reading or sunbathing. The raven
cawed in the tree. There was a big cat in the
undergrowth—
And then the story reshaped itself, and he had
it. Nothing had changed. It was all a matter of how you looked at the
ingredients.
What if, he thought, the bird wasn’t calling
to warn the man that there was a big cat stalking him? What if it was calling to
tell the mountain lion that there was a man on the ground—dead or asleep or
dying. That all the big cat had to do was finish the man off. And then the raven
would feast on what it left—
Spider opened his mouth to
moan, and blood ran from his mouth and puddled on the powdery
clay.
Reality thinned. Time passed, in that
place.
Spider, tongueless and furious, raised his head and
twisted it to look at the ghost birds that flew around him,
screaming.
He wondered where he was. This was not the Bird
Woman’s copper-colored universe, nor her cave, but neither was it the place he
had previously tended to think of as the real world. It was closer to the real
world, though, close enough that he could almost taste it, or would have tasted
it if he could taste anything in his mouth but the iron tang of the blood; close
enough that, if he were not staked out on the ground, he could have touched
it.
If he had not been perfectly certain of his own sanity,
certain to a degree that normally is only found in people who have concluded
that they’re definitely Julius Caesar and have been sent to save the world, he
might have thought that he was going mad. First he saw a blonde woman who
claimed to be a duppy, and now he heard voices. Well, he heard one voice anyway.
Rosie’s.
She was saying, “I dunno. I thought it would be a
holiday, but seeing those kids, without anything, it breaks your heart. There’s
so much they need.” And then, while Spider was trying to assess the significance
of this, she said, “I wonder how much longer she’s going to be in the bath. Good
thing you’ve got plenty of hot water here.”
Spider wondered
if Rosie’s words were meant to be important, whether they held the key to
escaping from his predicament. He doubted it. Still, he listened harder,
wondering whether the wind would carry any more words between the worlds. Apart
from the crash of the waves on breakers behind and far below him, he heard
nothing, only silence. But a specific kind of silence. There are, as Fat Charlie
once imagined, many kinds of silences. Graves have their own silence, space has
its silence, mountaintops have theirs. This was a hunting silence. It was a
stalking silence. In this silence something moved on velvet-soft pads, with
muscles like steel springs coiled beneath soft fur; something the color of
shadows in the long grass; something that would ensure that you heard nothing it
did not wish you to hear. It was a silence that was moving from side to side in
front of him, slowly and relentlessly, and with every arc it was getting
closer.
Spider heard that in the silence, and the hairs on
the back of his neck stiffened. He spat blood onto the dust by his face, and he
waited.
In his house on the cliff top, Grahame
Coats paced back and forth. He walked from his bedroom to the study, then down
the stairs to the kitchen and back up to the library and from there back to his
bedroom again. He was angry with himself: how could he have been so stupid as to
assume that Rosie’s visit was a coincidence?
He had
realized it when the buzzer had sounded and he had looked into the
closed-circuit TV screen at Fat Charlie’s inane face. There was no mistaking it.
It was a conspiracy. He had imitated the action of a
tiger, and climbed into the car, certain of an easy hit-and-run: if they found a
mangled bicycle rider, people would blame it on a minibus. Unfortunately, he had
not counted on Fat Charlie’s cycling so close to the road’s drop-off: Grahame
Coats had been unwilling to push his car any closer to the edge of the road, and
now he was regretting it. No, Fat Charlie had sent in the women in the meat
locker; they were his spies. They had infiltrated Grahame Coats’s house. He was
lucky that he had tumbled their scheme. He had known there was something
wrong about them.
As he thought of the women, he
realized that he had not fed them yet. He ought to give them something to eat.
And a bucket. They would probably need a bucket after twenty-four hours. Nobody
could say that he was an animal.
He had bought a handgun in
Williamstown, the previous week. You could buy guns pretty easily on Saint
Andrews, it was that sort of island. Most people didn’t bother with buying guns
though, it was that sort of island too. He took the gun from his bedside drawer
and went down to the kitchen. He took a plastic bucket from under the sink,
tossed several tomatoes, a raw yam, a half-eaten lump of cheddar cheese, and a
carton of orange juice into it. Then, pleased with himself for thinking of it,
he fetched a toilet roll.
He went down to the wine cellar.
There was no noise from inside the meat locker.
“I’ve got a
gun,” he said. “And I’m not afraid to use it. I’m going to open the door now.
Please go over to the far wall, turn around, and put your hands against it. I’ve
brought food. Cooperate and you will both be released unharmed. Cooperate and
nobody gets hurt. That means,” he said, delighted to find himself able to deploy
an entire battalion of clichés hitherto off-limits, “no funny
business.”
He turned on the lights inside the room, then
pulled the bolts. The walls of the room were rock and brick. Rusting chains hung
from hooks in the ceiling.
They were against the far wall.
Rosie looked at the rock. Her mother stared over her shoulder at him like a
trapped rat, furious and filled with hate.
Grahame Coats
put down the bucket; he did not put down the gun. “Lovely grub,” he said. “And,
better late than never, a bucket. I see you’ve been using the corner. There’s
toilet paper, too. Don’t ever say I didn’t do anything for
you.”
“You’re going to kill us,” said Rosie. “Aren’t
you?”
“Don’t antagonize him, you stupid girl,” spat her
mother. Then, assuming a smile of sorts, she said, “We’re grateful for the
food.”
“Of course I’m not going to kill you,” said Grahame
Coats. It was only as he heard the words coming out of his mouth that he
admitted to himself that, yes, of course he was going to have to kill them. What
other option did he have? “You didn’t tell me that Fat Charlie sent you
here.”
Rosie said, “We came on a cruise ship. This evening
we’re meant to be in Barbados for the fish fry. Fat Charlie’s in England. I
don’t even think he knows where we’ve gone. I didn’t tell
him.”
“It doesn’t matter what you say,” said Grahame Coats.
“I’ve got the gun.”
He pushed the door closed and bolted
it. Through the door he could hear Rosie’s mother saying, “The animal. Why
didn’t you ask him about the animal?”
“Because you’re just
imagining it, Mum. I keep telling you. There isn’t an animal in here. Anyway,
he’s nuts. He’d probably just agree with you. He probably sees invisible tigers
himself.”
Stung by this, Grahame Coats turned off their
lights. He pulled out a bottle of red wine and went upstairs, slamming the
cellar door behind him.
In the darkness beneath the house,
Rosie broke the lump of cheese into four bits and ate one as slowly as she
could.
“What did he mean about Fat Charlie?” she asked her
mother after the cheese had dissolved in her mouth.
“Your
bloody Fat Charlie. I don’t want to know about Fat Charlie,” said her mother.
“He’s the reason that we’re down here.”
“No, we’re here
because that Coats man is a total nutjob. A nutter with a gun. It’s not Fat
Charlie’s fault.” She had tried not to let herself think about Fat Charlie,
because thinking about Fat Charlie meant that she inevitably found herself
thinking about Spider—
“It’s back,” said her mother. “The
animal is back. I heard it. I can smell it.”
“Yes Mum,”
said Rosie. She sat on the concrete floor of the meat cellar and thought about
Spider. She missed him. When Grahame Coats saw reason and let them go, she’d try
to locate Spider, she decided. Find out if there was room for a new beginning.
She knew it was only a silly daydream, but it was a good dream, and it comforted
her.
She wondered if Grahame Coats would kill them
tomorrow.
A candle flame’s thickness away, Spider
was staked out for the beast.
It was late afternoon, and
the sun was low behind him.
Spider was pushing at something
with his nose and lips: it had been dry earth, before his spit and blood had
soaked into it. Now it was a ball of mud, a rough marble of reddish clay. He had
pushed it into a shape that was more or less spherical. Now he flicked at it,
getting his nose underneath it and then jerking his head up. Nothing happened,
as nothing had happened the previous how-many times. Twenty? A hundred? He
wasn’t keeping count. He simply kept on. He pushed his face further into the
dirt, pushed his nose further under the ball of clay, jerked his head up and
forward—
Nothing happened. Nothing was going to
happen.
He needed another approach.
He
closed his lips on the ball, closed them around it. He breathed in through his
nose, as deeply as he could. Then he expelled the air through his mouth. The
ball popped from his lips, with a pop like a champagne cork, and landed about
eighteen inches away.
Now he twisted his right hand. It was
bound at the wrist, with the rope pulling it tightly toward the stake. He pulled
the hand back, bent it around. His fingers reached for the lump of bloody mud,
and they fell short.
It was so
near—
Spider took another deep breath but choked on the dry
dust and began to cough. He tried again, twisting his head over to one side to
fill his lungs. Then he rolled over and began to blow, in the direction of the
ball, forcing the air from his lungs as hard as he
could.
The clay ball rolled—less than an inch, but it was
enough. He stretched, and now he was holding the clay in his fingers. He began
to pinch the clay between finger and thumb, then turning it and doing it again,
Eight times.
He repeated the process once more, this time
squeezing the pinched clay a little tighter. One of the pinches fell off onto
the dirt, but the others held. He had something in his hand that looked like a
small ball with seven points coming out of it, like a child’s model of the
sun.
He looked at it with pride: given the circumstances,
he felt as proud of it as anything a child has ever brought home from
school.
The word, that would be the hardest part. Making a
spider, or something quite like it, from blood and spit and clay, that was easy.
Gods, even minor mischief gods like Spider, know how to do that. But the final
part of Making was going to prove the hardest. You need a word to give something
life. You need to name it.
He opened his mouth.
“Hrrurrrurrr,” he said, with his tongueless mouth.
Nothing
happened.
He tried again. “Hrrurrurr!” The clay sat, a dead
lump in his hand.
His face fell back into the dirt. He was
exhausted. Every movement tore the scabs on his face and chest. They oozed and
burned and—worse—itched.
Think! he told himself. There had to be a way of
doing this—To talk without his tongue—
His lips still had a
layer of clay on them. He sucked at them, moistening as well as he could,
without a tongue.
He took a deep breath, and let the air
push through his lips, controlling it as best he could, saying a word with such
certainty that not even the universe could argue with him: he described the
thing on his hand, and he said his own name, which was the best magic he knew:
“
hhssspphhhrrriiivver.”
And on his hand, where the
lump of bloody mud had been, sat a fat spider, the color of red clay, with seven
spindly legs.
Help me, thought Spider.
Get
help.
The spider stared at him, its eyes gleaming in
the sunlight. Then it dropped from his hand to the earth, and it proceeded to
make its lopsided way into the grass, its gait wobbly and
uneven.
Spider watched it until it was out of sight. Then
he lowered his head into the dirt, and he closed his
eyes.
The wind changed then, and he smelled the ammoniac
scent of male cat on the air. It had marked its
territory—
High in the air, Spider could hear birds caw in
triumph.
Fat Charlie’s stomach growled. If he had
had any superfluous money he would have gone somewhere for dinner, just to get
away from his hotel, but he was, as near as dammit, now quite broke, and evening
meals were included in the cost of the room, so as soon as it turned seven, he
went down to the restaurant.
The maitre d’ had a glorious
smile, and she told him that they would open the restaurant in just a few more
minutes. They had to give the band time to finish setting up. Then she looked at
him. Fat Charlie was beginning to know that look.
“Are
you—?” she began.
“Yes,” he said, resigned. “I’ve even got
it with me.” He took the lime out of his pocket and showed it to
her.
“Very nice,” she said. “That’s definitely a lime
you’ve got there. I was going to say, are you going to want the à la carte menu
or would you rather do the buffet?”
“Buffet,” said Fat
Charlie. The buffet was free. He stood in the hall outside the restaurant
holding his lime.
“Just wait a moment,” said the maitre
d’.
A small woman came down the corridor from behind Fat
Charlie. She smiled at the maitre d’ and said, “Is the restaurant open yet? I’m
completely starved.”
There was a final
thrum-thung-thfum from the bass guitar and a
plunk from the
electric piano. The band put down their instruments and waved at the maitre d’.
“It’s open,” she said. “Come in.”
The small woman stared at
Fat Charlie with an expression of wary surprise. “Hello Fat Charlie,” she said.
“What’s the lime for?”
“It’s a long
story.”
“Well,” said Daisy. “We’ve got the whole of
dinnertime ahead of us. Why don’t you tell me all about
it?”
Rosie wondered whether madness could be
contagious. In the blind darkness beneath the house on the cliff, she had felt
something brush past her. Something soft and lithe. Something huge. Something
that growled, softly, as it circled them.
“Did you hear
that too?” she said.
“Of course I heard it, you stupid
girl,” said her mother. Then she said, “Is there any orange juice
left?”
Rosie fumbled in the darkness for the juice carton,
passed it to her mother. She heard the sound of drinking, then her mother said,
“The animal will not be the one that kills us.
He
will.”
“Grahame Coats. Yes.”
“He’s a
bad man. There is something riding him, like a horse, but he would be a bad
horse, and he is a bad man.”
Rosie reached out and held her
mother’s bony hand in her own. She didn’t say anything. There wasn’t anything
much to say.
“You know,” said her mother, after a while,
“I’m very proud of you. You were a good daughter.”
“Oh,”
said Rosie. The idea of not being a disappointment to her mother was a new one,
and something about which she was not sure she how she
felt.
“Maybe you should have married Fat Charlie,” said her
mother. “Then we wouldn’t be here.”
“No,” said Rosie. “I
should never have married Fat Charlie. I don’t love Fat Charlie. So you weren’t
entirely wrong.”
They heard a door slam
upstairs.
“He’s gone out,” said Rosie. “Quick. While he’s
out. Dig a tunnel.” First she began to giggle, and then she began to
cry.
Fat Charlie was trying to understand what
daisy was doing on the island. Daisy was trying, equally as hard, to understand
what Fat Charlie was doing on the island. Neither of them was having much
success. A singer in a long, red, slinky dress, who was too good for a little
hotel restaurant’s Friday Night Fun, was up on the little dais at the end of the
room singing “I’ve Got You Under My Skin.”
Daisy said,
“You’re looking for the lady who lived next door when you were a little boy,
because she may be able to help you find your brother.”
“I
was given a feather. If she’s still got it, I may be able to exchange it for my
brother. It’s worth a try.”
She blinked slowly,
thoughtfully, entirely unimpressed, and picked at her
salad.
Fat Charlie said, “Well, you’re here because you
think that Grahame Coats came here after he killed Maeve Livingstone. But you’re
not here as a cop. You just powered in under your own steam on the off-chance
that he’s here. And if he is here, there’s absolutely nothing you can do about
it.”
Daisy licked a fleck of tomato seed from the corner of
her lips, and looked uncomfortable. “I’m not here as a police officer,” she
said. “I’m here as a tourist.”
“But you just walked off the
job and came here after him. They could probably send you to prison for that, or
something.”
“Then,” she said, drily, “it’s a good thing
that Saint Andrews doesn’t have any extradition treaties, isn’t
it?”
Under his breath Fat Charlie said, “Oh
God.”
The reason Fat Charlie said “Oh God,” was because the
singer had left the stage and was now starting to walk around the restaurant
with a radio microphone. Right now, she was asking two German tourists where
they were from.
“Why would he come
here?” asked Fat
Charlie.
“Confidential banking. Cheap property. No
extradition treaties. Maybe he really likes citrus
fruit.”
“I spent two years terrified of that man,” said Fat
Charlie. “I’m going to get some more of that fish-and-green-banana thing. You
coming?”
“I’m fine,” said Daisy. “I want to leave room for
dessert.”
Fat Charlie walked over to the buffet, going the
long way around to avoid catching the singer’s eye. She was very beautiful, and
her red sequined dress caught the light and glittered as she moved. She was
better than the band. He wished she’d go back onto the little stage and keep
singing her standards—he had enjoyed her “Night and Day” and a peculiarly
soulful “Spoonful of Sugar”—and stop interacting with the diners. Or at least,
stop talking to people on his side of the room.
He piled
his plate high with more of the things he had liked the first time. The thing
about bicycling around the island, he thought, was that it gave you an
appetite.
When he returned to his table, Grahame Coats,
with something vaguely beardish growing on the lower part of his face, was
sitting next to Daisy, and he was grinning like a weasel on speed. “Fat
Charlie,” said Grahame Coats, and he chuckled uncomfortably. “It’s amazing,
isn’t it? I come looking for you here, for a little tête-à -tête, and
what do I find as a bonus? This glamorous little police officer. Please, sit
down over there and try not to make a scene.”
Fat Charlie
stood like a waxwork.
“Sit down,” repeated Grahame Coats.
“I have a gun pressed against Miss Day’s stomach.”
Daisy
looked at Fat Charlie imploringly, and she nodded. Her hands were on the
tablecloth, pressed flat.
Fat Charlie sat
down.
“Hands where I can see them. Spread them on the
table, just like hers.”
Fat Charlie
obeyed.
Grahame Coats sniffed. “I always knew you were an
undercover cop, Nancy,” he said. “An agent provocateur, eh? You come into my
offices, set me up, steal me blind.”
“I never—” said Fat
Charlie, but he saw the look in Grahame Coats’s eyes and shut
up.
“You thought you were so clever,” said Grahame Coats.
“You all thought I’d fall for it. That was why you sent the other two in, wasn’t
it? The two at the house? Did you think I’d believe they were really from the
cruise ship? You have to get up pretty early in the morning to put one over on
me, you know. Who else have you told? Who else
knows?”
Daisy said, “I’m not entirely sure what you’re
talking about, Grahame.”
The singer was finishing “Some of
These Days”: her voice was bluesy and rich, and it twined around them all like a
velvet scarf.
Some of these days
You’re going to miss me honey
Some of
these days
You’re gonna be so lonely
You’ll miss my huggin’
You’ll
miss my kissin’—
“You’re going to
pay the bill,” said Grahame. “Then I’ll escort you and the young lady out to the
car. And we’ll go back to my place, for a proper talk. Any funny business, and I
shoot you both.
Capiche? “
Fat Charlie capiched. He
also capiched who had been driving the black Mercedes that afternoon and just
how close he had already come to death that day. He was beginning to capiche how
utterly cracked Grahame Coats was and how little chance Daisy and he had of
getting out of this alive.
The singer finished her song.
The other people scattered around the restaurant clapped. Fat Charlie kept his
hands palms-down on the table. He stared past Graham Coats at the singer, and,
with the eye that Grahame Coats could not see, he winked at her. She was tired
of people avoiding her eyes; Fat Charlie’s wink was extremely
welcome.
Daisy said, “Grahame, obviously I came here
because of you, but Charlie’s just—” She stopped and made the kind of expression
you make when someone pushes a gun barrel deeper into your
stomach.
Grahame Coats said, “Listen to me. For the
purposes of the innocent bystanders here assembled, we’re all good friends. I’m
going to put the gun into my pocket, but it will still be pointing at you. We’re
going to get up. We’re going to my car. And I will—”
He
stopped. A woman with a red spangly dress and a microphone was heading for their
table with an enormous smile on her face. She was making for Fat Charlie. She
said into her microphone, “What’s your name, darlin’?” She put the microphone
into Fat Charlie’s face.
“Charlie Nancy,” said Fat Charlie.
His voice caught and wavered.
“And where you from,
Charlie?”
“England. Me and my friends. We’re all from
England.”
“And what do you do,
Charlie?”
Everything slowed. It was like diving off a cliff
into the ocean. It was the only way out. He took a deep breath and said it. “I’m
between jobs,” he started. “But I’m really a singer. I sing. Just like
you.”
“Like me? What kind of things you
sing?”
Fat Charlie swallowed. “What have you
got?”
She turned to the other people at Fat Charlie’s
table. “Do you think we could get him to sing for us?” she asked, gesturing with
her microphone.
“Er. Don’t think so. No. Absatively out of
the question,” said Grahame Coats. Daisy shrugged, her hands flat on the
table.
The woman in the red dress turned to the rest of the
room. “What do we think?” she asked them.
There was a
rustle of clapping from the diners at the other tables, and more enthusiastic
applause from the serving staff. The barman called out, “Sing us
something!”
The singer leaned in to Fat Charlie, covered
the mike, and said, “Better make it something the boys
know.”
Fat Charlie said, “Do they know ‘Under the
Boardwalk’?” and she nodded, announced it, and gave him the
microphone.
The band began to play. The singer led Fat
Charlie up to the little stage, his heart beating wildly in his
chest.
Fat Charlie began to sing, and the audience began to
listen.
All he had wanted was to buy himself some time, but
he felt comfortable. No one was throwing things. He seemed to have plenty of
room in his head to think in. He was aware of everyone in the room: the tourists
and the serving staff, and the people over at the bar. He could see everything:
he could see the barman measuring out a cocktail, and the old woman in the rear
of the room filling a large plastic mug with coffee. He was still terrified,
still angry, but he took all the terror and the anger, and he put it into the
song, and let it all become a song about lazing and loving. As he sang, he
thought.
What would Spider do? thought Fat Charlie.
What would my dad do? He sang. In his song, he told
them all exactly what he planned to do under the boardwalk, and it mostly
involved making love.
The singer in the red dress was
smiling and snapping her fingers and shimmying her body to the music. She leaned
into the keyboard player’s microphone and began to
harmonize.
I’m actually singing in front of an
audience, thought Fat Charlie.
Bugger me.
He
kept his eyes on Grahame Coats.
As he entered the last
chorus, he began to clap his hands above his head, and soon the whole room was
clapping along with him, diners and waiters and chefs, everyone except Grahame
Coats, whose hands were beneath the tablecloth, and Daisy, whose hands were flat
on the table. Daisy was looking at him as if he was not simply barking mad, but
had picked an extremely odd moment to discover his inner
Drifters.
The audience clapped, and Fat Charlie smiled and
he sang, and as he sang he knew, without any shadow of a doubt, that everything
was going to be all right. They were going to be just fine, him and Spider and
Daisy and Rosie, too, wherever she was, they’d be okay. He knew what he was
going to do: it was foolish and unlikely and the act of an idiot, but it would
work. And as the last notes of the song faded away, he said, “There’s a young
lady at the table I was sitting at. Her name’s Daisy Day. She’s from England
too. Daisy, can you wave at everyone?”
Daisy gave him a
sick look, but she raised a hand from the table, and she
waved.
“There’s something I wanted to say to Daisy. She
doesn’t know I’m going to say this.”
If this doesn’t work, whispered a
voice at the back of his head,
she’s dead.
You know that? “But
let’s hope she says yes. Daisy? Will you marry me?”
The
room was quiet. Fat Charlie stared at Daisy, willing her to understand, to play
along.
Daisy nodded.
The diners
applauded.
This was a floor show. The singer, the maitre d’, and several
of the waitresses descended on the table, hauled Daisy to her feet, and pulled
her over to the middle of the floor. They pulled her over to Fat Charlie, and,
as the band played “I Just Called to Say I Love You,” he put his arm around
her.
“You got a ring for her?” asked the
singer.
He put his hand into his pocket. “Here,” he said to
Daisy. “This is for you.” He put his arms around her and kissed her. If anyone
is going to get shot, he thought, it will be now. Then the kiss was over, and
people were shaking his hand and hugging him—one man, in town, he said, for the
music festival, insisted on giving Fat Charlie his card—and now Daisy was
holding the lime he had given her with a very strange expression on her face;
and when he looked back to the table they had been sitting at, Grahame Coats was
gone.
Chapter Thirteen
which proves to be unlucky for some
The
birds were excited, now. They were cawing and crying and chattering in the
treetops. It’s coming, thought Spider, and he cursed. He was spent and
done. There was nothing left in him. Nothing but fatigue, nothing but
exhaustion.
He thought about lying on the ground and being
devoured. Overall, he decided, it was a lousy way to go. He wasn’t even certain
that he’d be able to regrow a liver, while he was pretty sure that whatever was
stalking him had no plans to stop at just the liver
anyway.
He began to wrench at the stake. He counted to
three, and then, as best as he could and as much as he could, jerked both of his
arms toward him so they’d tense the rope and pull the stake, then he counted to
three and did it again.
It had about as much effect as if
he was to try to pull a mountain across a road. One two three—tug. And
again. And again.
He wondered if the beast
would come soon.
One two three—tug. One two
three—tug.
Somewhere, someone was singing, he could
hear it. And the song made Spider smile. He found himself wishing that he still
had a tongue: he’d stick it out at the tiger when it finally made its
appearance. The thought gave him strength.
On two
three—tug.
And the stake gave and shifted in his
hands.
One more pull and the stake came out of the ground,
slick as a sword sliding out of a stone.
He pulled the
ropes toward him, and held the stake in his hands. It was about three feet long.
One end had been sharpened to go into the ground. He pushed it out of the loops
of rope with numb hands. Ropes dangled uselessly from his wrists. He hefted the
stake in his right hand. It would do. And he knew then that he was being
watched: that it had been watching him for some time now, like a cat watching a
mousehole.
It came to him in silence, or nearly,
insinuating its way toward him like a shadow moving across the day. The only
movement that caught the eye was its tail, which swished impatiently. Otherwise,
it might have been a statue, or a mound of sand that looked, due to a trick of
the light, like a monstrous beast, for its coat was a sandy color, its
unblinking eyes the green of the midwinter sea. Its face was the wide, cruel
face of a panther. In the islands they called any big cat Tiger, and this was
every big cat there had ever been—bigger, meaner, more
dangerous.
Spider’s ankles were still hobbled, and he could
barely walk. Pins and needles pricked his hands and his feet. He hopped from one
foot to another and tried to look as if he was doing it on purpose, some kind of
dance of intimidation, and not because standing hurt
him.
He wanted to crouch and untie his ankles, but he did
not dare take his eyes off the beast.
The stake was heavy
and thick but was too short to be a spear, too clumsy and large to be anything
else. Spider held it by the narrower end, where it had been sharpened, and he
looked away, out to sea, intentionally not looking at the place the animal was,
relying on his peripheral vision for information.
What had
she said? You will bleat. You will whimper. Your fear will excite
him.
Spider began to whimper. Then he bleated, like an
injured goat, lost and plump and alone.
A flash of
sandy-colored motion, barely enough time to register teeth and claws as they
blurred toward him. Spider swung the stake like a baseball bat as hard as he
could, feeling it connect with a satisfying thunk across the beast’s
nose.
Tiger stopped, stared at him as if unable to believe
its eyes, then made a noise in the back of its throat, a querulous growl, and it
walked, stiff-legged, back in the direction it had come, toward the scrub, as if
it had a prior appointment that it wished it could get out of. It glared back at
Spider resentfully over its shoulder, a beast in pain, and gave him the look of
an animal who would be returning.
Spider watched it
go.
Then he sat down, and untangled and untied his
ankles.
He walked, a little unsteadily, along the cliff
edge, following it gently downhill. Soon a stream crossed his path, running off
the cliff edge in a sparkling waterfall. Spider went down on his knees, cupped
his hands together, and began to drink the cool water.
Then
he began to collect rocks. Good, fist-sized rocks. He stacked them together,
like snowballs.
“You’ve hardly eaten anything,”
said Rosie.
“You eat. Keep your strength up,” said
her mother. “I had a little of that cheese. It was
enough.”
It was cold in the meat cellar, and it was dark.
Not the kind of dark your eyes get used to, either. There was no light. Rosie
had walked the perimeter of the cellar, her fingers trailing against the
whitewash and rock and crumbling brick, looking for something that would help,
finding nothing.
“You used to eat,” said Rosie. “Back when
Dad was alive.”
“Your father,” said her mother, “used to
eat, too. And see where it got him? A heart attack, aged forty-one. What kind of
world is that?”
“But he loved his
food.”
“He loved everything,” said her mother bitterly. “He
loved food, he loved people, he loved his daughter. He loved cooking. He loved
me. What did it get him? Just an early grave. You mustn’t go loving things like
that. I’ve told you.”
“Yes,” said Rosie. “I suppose you
have.”
She walked toward the sound of her mother’s voice,
hand in front of her face to stop it banging into one of the metal chains that
hung in the middle of the room. She found her mother’s bony shoulder, put an arm
around her.
“I’m not scared,” said Rosie, in the
darkness.
“You’re crazy, then,” said her
mother.
Rosie let go of her mother, moved back into the
middle of the room. There was a sudden creaking noise. Dust and powdered plaster
fell from the ceiling.
“Rosie? What are you doing?” asked
Rosie’s mother.
“Swinging on the
chain.”
“You be careful. If that chain gives way, you’ll be
on the floor with a broken head before you can say Jack Robinson.” There was no
answer from her daughter. Mrs. Noah said, “I told you. You’re
crazy.”
“No,” said Rosie. “I’m not. I’m just not scared
anymore.”
Above them, in the house, the front door
slammed.
“Bluebeard’s home,” said Rosie’s
mother.
“I know. I heard,” said Rosie. “I’m still not
scared.”
People kept clapping Fat Charlie on the
back, and buying him drinks with umbrellas in them; in addition to which, he had
now collected five business cards from people in the music world on the island
for the festival.
All around the room, people were smiling
at him. He had an arm around Daisy: he could feel her trembling. She put her
lips to his ear. “You’re a complete loony, you know
that?”
“It worked, didn’t it?”
She
looked at him. “You’re full of surprises.”
“Come on,” he
said. “We’re not done yet.”
He made for the maitre d’.
“Excuse me—There was a lady. While I was singing. She came in, refilled her
coffee mug from the pot back there, by the bar. Where did she
go?”
The maitre d’ blinked and shrugged. She said, “I don’t
know—”
“Yes, you do,” said Fat Charlie. He felt certain,
and smart. Soon enough, he knew, he would feel like himself again, but he had
sung a song to an audience, and he had enjoyed it. He had done it to save
Daisy’s life, and his own, and he had done both these things. “Let’s talk out
there.” It was the song. While he had been singing, everything had become
perfectly clear. It was still clear. He headed for the hallway, and Daisy and
the maitre d’ followed.
“What’s your name?” he asked the
maitre d’.
“I’m Clarissa.”
“Hello,
Clarissa. What’s your last name?”
Daisy said, “Charlie,
shouldn’t we call the police?”
“In a minute. Clarissa
what?”
“Higgler.”
“And what’s your
relationship to Benjamin? The concierge?”
“He’s my
brother.”
“And how exactly are you two related to Mrs.
Higgler. To Callyanne Higgler?”
“They’re my niece and
nephew, Fat Charlie,” said Mrs. Higgler, from the doorway. “Now, I think you
better listen to your fiancée, and talk to the police. Don’t
you?”
Spider was sitting by the stream on the
cliff top, with his back to the cliff and a heap of throwing stones in front of
him, when a man came loping out of the long grass. The man was naked, save for a
pelt of sandy fur around his waist, behind which a tail hung down; he wore a
necklace of teeth, sharp and white and pointed. His hair was long and black. He
walked casually toward Spider as if he were merely out for an early-morning
constitutional, and Spider’s appearance there was a pleasant
surprise.
Spider picked up a rock the size of a grapefruit,
hefted it in his hand.
“Heya, Anansi’s child,” said the
stranger. “I was just passing, and I noticed you, and wondered if there was
anything I could do to help.” His nose looked crooked and
bruised.
Spider shook his head. He missed his
tongue.
“Seeing you there, I find myself thinking, poor
Anansi’s child, he must be so hungry.” The stranger smiled too widely. “Here.
I’ve got food enough to share with you.” He had a sack over his shoulder, and
now he opened the sack and reached his right hand into it, producing a freshly
killed black-tailed lamb. He held it by the neck. Its head lolled. “Your father
and I ate together on many an occasion. Is there any reason that you and I
cannot do likewise? You can make the fire and I will clean the lamb and make a
spit to turn it. Can you not taste it already?”
Spider was
so hungry he was light-headed. Had he still been in possession of his tongue,
perhaps he would have said yes, confident of his ability to talk himself
out of trouble; but he had no tongue. He picked up a second rock in his left
hand.
“So let us feast and be friends; and let there be no
more misunderstandings,” said the stranger.
And the
vulture and the raven will clean my bones, thought
Spider.
The stranger took another step toward Spider, who
decided that this was his cue to throw the first rock. He had a good eye and an
excellent arm, and the rock struck where he had intended it to strike, on the
stranger’s right arm; he dropped the lamb. The next rock hit the stranger on the
side of the head—Spider had been aiming for a spot just between the
too-widely-set eyes, but the man had moved.
The stranger
ran then, a bounding run, with his tail straight out behind him. Sometimes he
looked like a man when he ran, and sometimes he looked like a
beast.
When he was gone, Spider walked to the place he had
been, to retrieve the black-tailed lamb. It was moving, when he reached it, and
for a heartbeat he imagined that it was still alive, but then he saw that the
flesh was creeping with maggots. It stank, and the stench of the corpse helped
Spider forget how hungry he was, for a little while.
He
carried it at arm’s length to the cliff edge and threw it down into the sea.
Then he washed his hands in the stream.
He did not know how
long he had been in this place. Time was stretched and squashed here. The sun
was lowering on the horizon.
After the sun has set, and
before the moon has risen, thought Spider. That is when the beast will be
back.
The implacably cheerful representative
of the Saint Andrews Police force sat in the hotel front office with Daisy and
Fat Charlie, and listened to everything each of them had to say with a placid
but unimpressed smile on his wide face. Sometimes he would reach up a finger and
scratch his moustache.
They told the police officer that a
fugitive from justice called Grahame Coats had come in to them while they were
eating dinner, and threatened Daisy with a gun. Which, they were also forced to
admit, nobody but Daisy had actually seen. Then Fat Charlie told him about the
incident with the black Mercedes and the bicycle, earlier that afternoon, and
no, he hadn’t actually seen who was driving the car. But he knew where it came
from. He told the officer about the house on the cliff
top.
The man touched his pepper-and-salt moustache,
thoughtfully. “Indeed, there is a house where you describe. However, it does not
belong to your man Coats. Far from it. You are describing the house of Basil
Finnegan, an extremely respectable man. For many years, Mr. Finnegan has had a
healthy interest in law and order. He has given money to schools, but more
important, he contributed a healthy sum toward the construction of the new
police station.”
“He put a gun to my stomach,” said Daisy.
“He told me that unless we came with him, he’d shoot.”
“If
this was Mr. Finnegan, little lady,” said the police officer, “I’m sure that
there is a perfectly simple explanation.” He opened his briefcase, produced a
thick sheaf of papers. “I’ll tell you what. You think about the matter. Sleep on
it. If, in the morning, you are convinced that it was more than high spirits,
you simply have to fill in this form, and drop off all three copies at the
police station. Ask for the new police station, at the back of the city square.
Everyone knows where it is.”
He shook both of their hands
and went on his way.
“You should have told him you were a
cop too,” said Fat Charlie. “He might have taken you more
seriously.”
“I don’t think it would have done any good,”
she said. “Anyone who calls you ‘little lady’ has already excluded you from the
set of people worth listening to.”
They walked out into the
hotel reception.
“Where did she go?” asked Fat
Charlie.
Benjamin Higgler said, “Aunt Callyanne? She’s
waiting for you in the conference room.”
“There,”
said Rosie.” I knew I could do it, if I just kept
swinging.”
“He’ll kill you.”
“He’s
going to kill us anyway.”
“It won’t
work.”
“Mum. Have you got a better
idea?”
“He’ll see you.”
“Mum. Will you
please stop being so negative? If you’ve got any suggestions that would help,
please say them. Otherwise just don’t bother.
Okay?”
Silence.
Then, “I could show
him my bum.”
“What?”
“You heard
me.”
“Er. Instead of?”
“In addition
to.”
Silence. Then Rosie said, “Well, it couldn’t
hurt.”
“Hullo, Mrs. Higgler,”said Fat Charlie. “I
want the feather back.”
“What make you think I got your
feather?” she asked, arms folded across her vast
bosom.
“Mrs. Dunwiddy told me.”
Mrs.
Higgler seemed surprised by this, for the first time. “Louella did tell you I
got the feather?”
“She said you had the
feather.”
“I keeping it safe.” Mrs. Higgler gestured toward
Daisy with her mug of coffee. “You can’t expect me to start talkin’ in front of
her. I don’t know her.”
“This is Daisy. You can say
anything to her you’d say to me.”
“She’s your fiancée,”
said Mrs. Higgler. “I heard.”
Fat Charlie could feel his
cheeks starting to burn. “She’s not my—we aren’t, actually. I had to say
something to get her away from the man with the gun. It seemed the simplest
thing.”
Mrs. Higgler looked at him. Behind her thick
spectacles, her eyes began to twinkle. “I know that,” she said. “It was during
your song. In front of an audience.” She shook her head, in the way that old
people like to do when pondering the foolishness of the young. She opened her
black purse, took out an envelope, passed it to Fat Charlie. “I promised Louella
I keep it safe.”
Fat Charlie took out the feather from the
envelope, half-crushed, from where he had been holding it tightly the night of
the séance. “Okay,” he said. “Feather. Excellent. Now,” he said to Mrs. Higgler,
“What exactly do I do with it?”
“You don’t
know?”
Fat Charlie’s mother had told him, when he was
young, to count to ten before he lost his temper. He counted, silently and
unhurriedly, to ten, whereupon he lost his temper. “Of course I don’t know what
to do with it, you stupid old woman! In the last two weeks I’ve been arrested,
I’ve lost my fiancée and my job, I’ve watched my semi-imaginary brother get
eaten by a wall of birds in Piccadilly Circus, I’ve flown back and forth across
the Atlantic like some kind of lunatic transatlantic ping-pong ball, and today I
got up in front of an audience and I, and I sang because my psycho
ex-boss had a gun barrel against the stomach of the girl I’m having dinner with.
All I’m trying to do is sort out the mess my life has turned into since
you suggested I might want to talk to my brother. So, no. No, I don’t
know what to do with this bloody feather. Burn it? Chop it up and eat it? Build
a nest with it? Hold it out in front of me and jump out of the
window?”
Mrs. Higgins looked sullen. “You have to ask
Louella Dunwiddy.”
“I’m not sure that I can. She wasn’t
looking very well the last time I saw her. And we don’t have much
time.”
Daisy said, “Great. You got your feather back. Now,
can we please talk about Grahame Coats?”
“It’s not only a
feather. It’s the feather I swapped for my brother.”
“So
swap it back, and let’s get on with things. We’ve got to do
something.”
“It’s not as simple as that,” said Fat Charlie.
Then he stopped, and thought about what he had said and what she had said. He
looked at Daisy admiringly. “God, you’re smart,” he
said.
“I try,” she said. “What did I
say?”
They didn’t have four old ladies, but they had Mrs.
Higgler, Benjamin, and Daisy. Dinner was almost finished, so Clarissa, the
maitre d’, seemed perfectly happy to come and join them. They didn’t have earths
of four different colors, but there was white sand from the beach behind the
hotel and black dirt from the flower bed in front of it, red mud at the side of
the hotel, multicolored sand in test tubes in the gift shop. The candles they
borrowed from the poolside bar were small and white, not tall and black. Mrs.
Higgler assured them that she could find all the herbs they actually needed on
the island, but Fat Charlie had Clarissa borrow a pouch of bouquet garni from
the kitchen.
“I think it’s all a matter of confidence,” Fat
Charlie explained. “The most important thing isn’t the details. It’s the magical
atmosphere.”
The magical atmosphere in this case was not
enhanced by Benjamin Higgler’s tendency to look around the table and burst into
explosive giggles nor by Daisy’s continually pointing out that the whole
procedure was extremely silly.
Mrs. Higgler sprinkled the
bouquet garni into a bowl of leftover white wine.
Mrs.
Higgler began to hum. She raised her hands in encouragement, and the others
began to hum along with her, like drunken bees. Fat Charlie waited for something
to happen.
Nothing did.
“Fat Charlie,”
said Mrs. Higgler. “You hum too.”
Fat Charlie swallowed.
There’s nothing to be scared of, he told himself: he had sung in front of a
roomful of people; he had proposed marriage in front of an audience to a woman
he barely knew. Humming would be a doddle.
He found the
note that Mrs. Higgler was humming, and he let it vibrate in his
throat—.
He held his feather. He concentrated and he
hummed.
Benjamin stopped giggling. His eyes widened. There
was an expression of alarm on his face, and Fat Charlie was going to stop
humming to find out what was troubling him, but the hum was inside him now, and
the candles were flickering—
“Look at him!” said Benjamin.
“He’s—”
And Fat Charlie would have wondered what exactly he
was, but it was too late to wonder.
Mists
parted.
Fat Charlie was walking along a bridge, a long
white footbridge across an expanse of gray water. A little way ahead of him, in
the middle of the bridge, a man sat on a small wooden chair. The man was
fishing. A green fedora hat covered his eyes. He appeared to be dozing, and he
did not stir as Fat Charlie approached.
Fat Charlie
recognized the man. He rested his hand on the man’s
shoulder.
“You know,” he said, “I knew you were faking it.
I didn’t think you were really dead.”
The man in the chair
did not move, but he smiled. “Shows how much you know,” said Anansi. “I’m dead
as they come.” He stretched luxuriantly, pulled a little black cheroot from
behind his ear, and lit it with a match. “Yup. I’m dead. Figure I’ll stay dead
for a lickle while. If you don’t die now and again, people start takin’ you for
granted.”
Fat Charlie said
“But.”
Anansi touched his finger to his lips for silence.
He picked up his fishing rod and began to wind the reel. He pointed to a small
net. Fat Charlie picked it up, and held it out as his father lowered a silver
fish, long and wriggling, into it. Anansi took the hook from the fish’s mouth
then dropped the fish into a white pail. “There,” he said. “That’s tonight’s
dinner taken care of.”
For the first time it registered
with Fat Charlie that it had been dark night when he had sat down at the table
with Daisy and the Higglers, but that while the sun was low wherever he was now,
it had not set.
His father folded up the chair, and gave
Fat Charlie the chair and the bucket to carry. They began to walk along the
bridge. “You know,” said Mr. Nancy, “I always thought that if you ever came to
talk to me, I’d tell you all manner of things. But you seem to be doing pretty
good on your own. So what brings you here?”
“I’m not sure.
I was trying to find the Bird Woman. I want to give her back her
feather.”
“You shouldn’t have been messin’ about with
people like that,” said his father, blithely. “No good ever comes from it. She’s
a mess of resentments, that one. But she’s a coward.”
“It
was Spider—” said Fat Charlie.
“Your own fault. Letting
that old busybody send half of you away.”
“I was only a
kid. Why didn’t you do anything?”
Anansi pushed the
hat back on his head. “Ol’ Dunwiddy couldn’t do anything to you you didn’t let
her do,” he said. “You’re my son, after all.”
Fat
Charlie thought about this. Then he said, “But why didn’t you tell
me?”
“You’re doing okay. You’re figurin’ it all out by
yourself. You figured out the songs, didn’t you?”
Fat
Charlie felt clumsier and fatter and even more of a disappointment to his
father, but he didn’t simply say “No.” Instead he said, “What do you
think?”
“I think you’re gettin’ there. The important thing
about songs is that they’re just like stories. They don’t mean a damn unless
there’s people listenin’ to them.”
They were approaching
the end of the bridge. Fat Charlie knew, without being told, that this was the
last chance they’d ever have to talk. There were so many things he needed to
find out, so many things he wanted to know. He said, “Dad. When I was a kid. Why
did you humiliate me?”
The old man’s brow creased.
“Humiliate you? I loved you.”
“You got me to go to school
dressed as President Taft. You call that love?”
There was a
high-pitched yelp of something that might have been laughter from the old man,
then he sucked on his cheroot. The smoke drifted from his lips like a ghostly
speech balloon. “Your mother had something to say about that,” he said. Then he
said, “We don’t have long, Charlie. You want to spend the time we got left
fighting?”
Fat Charlie shook his head. “Guess
not.”
They had reached the end of the bridge. “Now,” said
his father. “When you see your brother. I want you to give him something from
me.”
“What?”
His father reached up a
hand, pulled Fat Charlie’s head down. Then he kissed him, gently, on the
forehead. “That,” he said.
Fat Charlie straightened up. His
father was looking up at him with an expression that, if he had seen it in
anyone else’s face, he would have thought of as pride. “Let me see the feather,”
said his father.
Fat Charlie reached into his pocket. The
feather was there, looking even more crumpled and dilapidated than it looked
before.
His father made a “tch” noise and held the feather
up to the light. “This is a beautiful feather,” said his father. “You don’t want
it to get all manky. She won’t take it back if it’s messed up.” Mr. Nancy ran
his hand over the feather, and it was perfect. He frowned at it. “Now, you’ll
just get it messed up again.” He breathed on his fingernails, polished them
against his jacket. Then he seemed to have arrived at a decision. He removed his
fedora and slipped the feather into the hatband. “Here. You could do with a
natty hat anyway.” He put the hat onto Fat Charlie’s head. “It suits you,” he
said.
Fat Charlie sighed. “Dad. I don’t wear hats. It’ll
look stupid. I’ll look a complete tit. Why do you always try to embarrass
me?”
In the fading light, the old man looked at his son.
“You think I’d lie to you? Son, all you need to wear a hat is attitude. And you
got that. You think I’d tell you you looked good if you didn’t? You look real
sharp. You don’t believe me?”
Fat Charlie said, “Not
really.”
“Look,” said his father. He pointed over the side
of the bridge. The water beneath them was still and smooth as a mirror, and the
man looking up at him from the water looked real sharp in his new green
hat.
Fat Charlie looked up to tell his father that maybe he
had been wrong, but the old man was gone.
He stepped off
the bridge into the dusk.
“Right. I want to know
exactly where he is. Where did he go? What have you done to
him?”
“I didn’t do anything. Lord, child,” said Mrs.
Higgler. “This never happened the last time.”
“It looked
like he was beamed up to the mothership,” said Benjamin. “Cool. Real-life
special effects.”
“I want you to bring him back,” said
Daisy, fiercely. “I want him backnow .”
“I don’t even know
where he is,” said Mrs. Higgler. “And I didn’t send him there. He do that
himself.”
“Anyway,” said Clarissa. “What if he’s off doing
what he’s doing and we make him come back? We could ruin it
all.”
“Exactly,” said Benjamin. “Like beaming the landing
party back, halfway through their mission.”
Daisy thought
about this and was irritated to realize that it made sense—as much as anything
made sense these days, anyway.
“If nothing else is
happening,” said Clarissa, “I ought to go back to the restaurant. Make sure
everything’s all right.”
Mrs. Higgler sipped her coffee.
“Nothin’ happenin’ here,” she agreed.
Daisy slammed her
hand down on the table. “Excuse me. We’ve got a killer out there. And now Fat
Charlie’s beamed up to the mastership.”
“Mothership,” said
Benjamin.
Mrs. Higgler blinked. “Okay,” she said. “We
should do something. What do you suggest?”
“I don’t know,”
admitted Daisy and she hated herself for saying it. “Kill time, I suppose.” She
picked up the copy of the Williamstown Courier that Mrs. Higgler had been
reading and began to flip through it.
The story about the
missing tourists, the women who hadn’t gone back to their cruise ship was a
column on page three. The two at the house, said Grahame Coats in her
head. Did you think I’d believe they were from the
ship?
At the end of the day, Daisy was a
cop.
“Get me the phone,” she
said.
“Who are you calling?”
“I think
we’ll start with the minister of tourism and the chief of police, and we’ll go
on from there.”
The crimson sun was shrinking on
the horizon. Spider, had he not been Spider, would have despaired. On the
island, in that place, there was a clean line between day and night, and Spider
watched the last red crumb of sun being swallowed by the sea. He had his stones
and the two stakes.
He wished he had
fire.
He wondered when the moon would be up. When the moon
rose, he might have a chance.
The sun set—the final smudge
of red sank into the dark sea, and it was night.
“Anansi’s
child,” said a voice from out of the darkness. “Soon enough, I shall feed. You
will not know I am there until you feel my breath on the back of your head. I
stood above you, while you were staked out for me, and I could have crunched
through your neck then and there, but I thought better of it. Killing you in
your sleep would have brought me no pleasure. I want to feel you die. I want you
to know why I have taken your life.”
Spider threw a rock
toward where he thought the voice was coming from, and heard it crash harmlessly
into the undergrowth.
“You have fingers,” said the voice,
“but I have claws sharper than knives. You have your two legs, but I have four
legs that will never tire, that can run ten times as fast as you ever will and
keep on running. Your teeth can eat meat, if it has been made soft and tasteless
by the fire, for you have little monkey teeth, good for chewing soft fruit and
crawling bugs; but I have teeth that rend and tear the living flesh from the
bones, and I can swallow it while the lifeblood still fountains into the
sky.”
And then Spider made a noise. It was a noise that
could be made without a tongue, without even opening his lips. It was a “meh”
noise of amused disdain. You may be all these things, Tiger, it seemed to
say, but so what? All the stories there ever were are Anansi’s. Nobody tells
Tiger stories.
There was a roar from the darkness, a
roar of fury and frustration.
Spider began to hum the tune
of the “Tiger Rag.” It’s an old song, good for teasing tigers with: “Hold
that tiger,” it goes. “Where’s that tiger?”
When
the voice came next from the darkness, it was nearer.
“I
have your woman, Anansi’s child. When I am done with you, I shall tear her
flesh. Her meat will taste sweeter than yours.”
Spider made
the “hmph!” sound people make when they know they’re being lied
to.
“Her name is Rosie.”
Spider made
an involuntary noise then.
In the darkness, someone
laughed. “And as for eyes,” it said, “You have eyes that see the obvious, in
broad daylight, if you are lucky, whereas my people have eyes that can see the
hairs prickle on your arms as I talk to you, see the terror on your face, and
see that in the nighttime. Fear me, Anansi’s child, and if you have any final
prayers to say, say them now.”
Spider had no prayers, but
he had rocks, and he could throw them. Perhaps he might get lucky, and a rock
might do some damage in the darkness. Spider knew that it would be a miracle if
it did, but he had spent his entire life relying on
miracles.
He reached for another
rock.
Something brushed the back of his
hand.
Hello, said the little clay spider, in his
mind.
Hi, thought Spider. Look, I’m a bit busy
here, trying not to be eaten, so if you don’t mind keeping out of the way for a
while—
But I brought them, thought the spider.
Like you asked.
Like I
asked?
You told me to go for help. I brought them
back with me. They followed my web strand. There are no spiders in this
creation, so I slipped back and webbed from there to here and from here to there
again. I brought the warriors. I brought the brave.
“A
penny for your thoughts,” said the big cat voice in the darkness. And then it
said, with a certain refined amusement, “What’s the matter? Cat got your
tongue?”
A single spider is silent. They cultivate silence.
Even the ones that do make noises will normally remain as still as they can,
waiting. So much of what spiders do is waiting.
The night
was slowly filled with a gentle rustling.
Spider thought
his gratitude and pride at the little seven legged spider he had made from his
blood and spittle and from the earth. The spider scuttled from the back of his
hand up to his shoulder.
Spider could not see them, but he
knew they were all there: the great spiders and the small spiders, venomous
spiders and biting spiders: huge hairy spiders and elegant chitinous spiders.
Their eyes took whatever light they could find, but they saw through their legs
and their feet, constructing vibrations into a virtual image of the world about
them.
They were an army.
Tiger spoke
again from the darkness. “When you are dead, Anansi’s child—when all of your
bloodline is dead—then the stories will be mine. Once again, people will tell
Tiger stories. They will gather together and praise my cunning and my strength,
my cruelty and my joy. Every story will be mine. Every song will be mine. The
world will be as it once was again: a hard place. A dark
place.”
Spider listened to the rustle of his
army.
He was sitting at the cliff edge for a reason. While
it gave him nowhere to retreat to, it meant that Tiger could not charge, he
could only creep.
Spider started to
laugh.
“What are you laughing at, Anansi’s child? Have you
lost your reason?”
At that, Spider laughed longer and
louder.
There was a yowl from the darkness. Tiger had met
Spider’s army.
Spider venom comes in many forms. It can
often take a long while to discover the full effects of the bite. Naturalists
have pondered this for years: there are spiders whose bite can cause the place
bitten to rot and to die, sometimes more than a year after it was bitten. As to
why spiders do this, the answer is simple. It’s because spiders think this is
funny, and they don’t want you ever to forget them.
Black
widow bites on Tiger’s bruised nose, tarantula bites on his ears: in moments his
sensitive places burned and throbbed, swelled and itched. Tiger did not know
what was happening: all he knew was the burning and the pain and the sudden
fear.
Spider laughed, longer and louder, and listened to
the sound of a huge animal bolting into the undergrowth, roaring in agony and in
fright.
Then he sat and he waited. Tiger would be back, he
had no doubt. It was not over yet.
Spider took the
seven-legged spider from his shoulder and stroked it, running his fingers back
and forth across its broad back.
A little way down the hill
something glowed with a cold green luminescence, and it flickered, like the
lights of a tiny city, flashing on and off into the night. It was coming toward
him.
The flickering resolved itself into a hundred thousand
fire-flies. Silhouetted and illuminated in the center of the firefly-light was a
dark figure, man-shaped. It was walking steadily up the
hill.
Spider raised a rock and mentally readied his spider
troops for one more attack. And then he stopped. There was something familiar
about the figure in the firefly-light; it wore a green
fedora.
Grahame Coats was most of the way through
a half bottle of rum he had found in the kitchen. He had opened the rum because
he had no desire to go down into the wine cellar, and because he imagined it
would get him drunk faster than wine would. Unfortunately, it didn’t. It did not
seem to be doing much of anything, let alone providing the emotional off-switch
he felt he needed. He walked around the house with a bottle in one hand and a
half-full glass in the other, and sometimes he took a swig from one, and
sometimes from the other. He caught sight of his reflection in the mirror,
hangdog and sweaty. “Cheer up,” he said aloud. “Might never happen. Cloud silver
lining. Life rain mus’ fall. Too many cooks. ‘S an ill wind.” The rum was pretty
much gone.
He went back into the kitchen. He opened several
cupboards before he noticed a bottle of sherry toward the back. Grahame picked
it up and cradled it gratefully, as if it were a very small old friend who had
just returned after years at sea.
He unscrewed the top of
the bottle. It was a sweet cooking sherry, but he drank it down like
lemonade.
There were other things Grahame Coats had noticed
while looking for alcohol in the kitchen. There were, for example, knives. Some
of them were very sharp. In a drawer, there was even a small stainless steel
hacksaw. Grahame Coats approved. It would be the very simple solution to the
problem in the basement.
“Habeas corpus,” he said.
“Or habeas delicti. One of those. If there is no body, then there was no
crime. Ergo .Quod erat demonstrandum.”
He took his
gun out of his jacket pocket, put it on the kitchen table. He arranged the
knives around it in a pattern, like the spokes of a wheel. “Well,” he said, in
the same tones he had once used to persuade innocent boy bands that it was time
to sign their contract with him and to say hello to fame if not actually
fortune, “no time like the present.”
He pushed three
kitchen knives blade-down through his belt, placed the hacksaw in his jacket
pocket, and then, gun in hand, he went down the cellar stairs. He turned on the
lights, blinked at the wine bottles on their side, each in their rack, each
covered with a thin layer of dust, and then he was standing beside the iron meat
locker door.
“Right,” he shouted. “You’ll be pleased to
hear that I’m not going to hurt you. I’ll be letting you both go now. All a bit
of a mistake. Still, no hard feelings. No use crying over spilt. Stand by the
far wall. Assume the position. No funny stuff.”
It was, he
reflected, as he pulled back the bolts, almost comforting how many clichÉs
already exist for people holding guns. It made Grahame Coats feel like one of a
brotherhood: Bogart stood beside him, and Cagney, and all the people who shout
at each other on COPS.
He turned the light on and
pulled open the door. Rosie’s mother stood against the far wall, with her back
to him. As he came in, she flipped up her skirt and waggled an astonishingly
bony brown bottom.
His jaw dropped open. That was when
Rosie slammed down a length of rusty chain onto Grahame Coats’s wrist, sending
the gun flying across the room.
With the enthusiasm and
accuracy of a much younger woman, Rosie’s mother kicked Grahame Coats in the
groin, and as he clutched his crotch and doubled up, making noises pitched at a
level that only dogs and bats could hear, Rosie and her mother stumbled out of
the meat locker.
They pushed the door closed and Rosie
pushed shut one of the bolts. They hugged.
They were still
in the wine cellar when all the lights went off.
“It’s just
the fuses,” said Rosie, to reassure her mother. She was not certain that she
believed it, but she had no other explanation.
“You should
have locked both bolts,” said her mother. And then, “Ow,” as she stubbed her toe
on something, and cursed.
“On the bright side,” said Rosie,
“He can’t see in the dark either. Just hold my hand. I think the stairs
are up this way.”
Grahame Coats was down on all fours on
the concrete floor of the meat cellar, in the darkness, when the lights went
out. There was something hot dripping down his leg. He thought for one
uncomfortable moment that he had wet himself, before he understood that the
blade of one of the knives he had pushed into his belt had cut deeply into the
top of his leg.
He stopped moving and lay on the floor. He
decided that he had been very sensible to have drunk so much: it was practically
an anaesthetic. He decided to go to sleep.
He was not alone
in the meat locker. There was someone in there with him. Something that moved on
four legs.
Somebody growled, “Get
up.”
“Can’t get up. I’m hurt. Want to go to
bed.”
“You’re a pitiful little creature and you destroy
everything you touch. Now get up.”
“Would love to,” said
Grahame Coats in the reasonable tones of a drunk. “Can’t. Just going to lie on
the floor for a bit. Anyway. She bolted the door. I heard
her.”
He heard a scraping from the other side of the door,
as if a bolt was slowly being released.
“The door is open.
Now: if you stay here, you’ll die.” An impatient rustling; the swish of a tail;
a roar, half-muffled in the back of a throat. “Give me your hand and your
allegiance. Invite me inside you.”
“I don’t
underst—”
“Give me your hand, or bleed to
death.”
In the black of the meat cellar, Grahame Coats put
out his hand. Someone—something—took it and held it, reassuringly. “Now, are you
willing to invite me in?”
A moment of cold sobriety touched
Grahame Coats then. He had already gone too far. Nothing he did would make
matters worse, after all.
“Absatively,” whispered
Grahame Coats, and as he said it he began to change. He could see through the
darkness easy as daylight. He thought, but only for a moment, that he saw
something beside him, bigger than a man, with sharp, sharp teeth. And then it
was gone, and Grahame Coats felt wonderful. The blood no longer spurted from his
leg.
He could see clearly in the darkness. He pulled the
knives from his belt, dropped them onto the floor. He pulled off his shoes, too.
There was a gun on the ground, but he left it there. Tools were for apes and
crows and weaklings. He was no ape.
He was a
hunter.
He pulled himself up onto his hands and his knees,
and then he padded, four-footed, out into the wine
cellar.
He could see the women. They had found the steps up
to the house, and they were edging up them blindly, hand-in-hand in the
darkness.
One of them was old and stringy. The other was
young and tender. The mouth salivated in something that was only partly Grahame
Coats.
Fat Charlie left the bridge, with his
father’s green fedora pushed back on his head, and he walked into the dusk. He
walked up the rocky beach, slipping on the rocks, splashing into pools. Then he
trod on something that moved. A stumble, and he stepped off
it.
It rose into the air, and it kept rising. Whatever it
was, it was enormous: he thought at first that it was the size of an elephant,
but it grew bigger still.
Light, thought Fat
Charlie. He sang aloud, and all the lightning bugs, the fireflies of that place,
clustered around him, flickering off and on with their cold green luminescence,
and in their light he could make out two eyes, bigger than dinner plates,
staring down at him from a supercilious reptilian face.
He
stared back. “Evening,” he said, cheerfully.
A voice from
the creature, smooth as buttered oil. “He-llo,” it said. “Ding-dong. You look
remarkably like dinner.”
“I’m Charlie Nancy,” said Charlie
Nancy. “Who are you?”
“I am Dragon,” said the dragon. “And
I shall devour you in one slow mouthful, little man in a
hat.”
Charlie blinked. What would my father do? he
wondered. What would Spider have done? He had absolutely no idea. Come
on. After all, Spider’s sort of a part of me. I can do whatever he can
do.
“Er. You’re bored with talking to me now, and
you’re going to let me pass unhindered,” he told the dragon, with as much
conviction as he was able to muster.
“Gosh. Good try. But
I’m afraid I’m not,” said the dragon, enthusiastically. “Actually, I’m going to
eat you.”
“You aren’t scared of limes, are you?” asked
Charlie, before remembering that he’d given the lime to
Daisy.
The creature laughed, scornfully. “I,” it said, “am
frightened of
nothing.”
“Nothing?”
“Nothing,” it
said.
Charlie said, “Are you extremely frightened of
nothing?”
“Absolutely terrified of it,” admitted the
Dragon.
“You know,” said Charlie, “I have nothing in my
pockets. Would you like to see it?”
“No,” said the Dragon,
uncomfortably, “I most definitely would not.”
There was a
flapping of wings like sails, and Charlie was alone on the beach. “That,” he
said, “was much too easy.”
He kept on walking. He made up a
song for his walk. Charlie had always wanted to make up songs, but he never did,
mostly because of the conviction that if he ever had written a song, someone
would have asked him to sing it, and that would not have been a good thing, much
as death by hanging would not be a good thing. Now, he cared less and less, and
he sang his song to the fireflies, who followed him up the hillside. It was a
song about meeting the Bird Woman and finding his brother. He hoped the
fireflies were enjoying it: their light seemed to be pulsing and flickering in
time with the tune.
The Bird Woman was waiting for him at
the top of the hill.
Charlie took off his hat. He pulled
the feather from the hatband.
“Here. This is yours, I
believe.”
She made no move to take
it.
“Our deal’s over,” said Charlie. “I brought your
feather. I want my brother. You took him. I want him back. Anansi’s bloodline
was not mine to give.”
“And if I no longer have your
brother?”
It was hard to tell, in the firefly light, but
Charlie did not believe that her lips had moved. Her words surrounded him,
however, in the cries of nightjars, and in the owls’ shrieks and
hoots.
“I want my brother back,” he told her. “I want him
whole and in one piece and uninjured. And I want him now. Or whatever went on
between you and my father over the years was just the prelude. You know. The
overture.”
Charlie had never threatened anyone before. He
had no idea how he would carry out his threats—but he had no doubt that he would
indeed carry them out.
“I had him,” she said, in the
bittern’s distant boom “But I left him, tongueless, in Tiger’s world. I could
not hurt your father’s line. Tiger could, once he found his
courage.”
A hush. The night frogs and the night birds were
perfectly silent. She stared at him impassively, her face almost part of the
shadows. Her hand went into the pocket of her coat. “Give me the feather,” she
said.
Charlie put it into her hand.
He
felt lighter, then, as if she had taken more from him than just an old
feather—
Then she placed something into his hand: something
cold and damp. It felt like a lump of meat, and Charlie had to quell the urge to
fling it away.
“Return it to him,” she said, in the voice
of the night. “He has no quarrel with me now.”
“How do I
get to Tiger’s world?”
“How did you get here?” she asked,
sounding almost amused, and the night was complete, and Charlie was alone on the
hill.
He opened his hand and looked at the lump of meat
that sat there, floppy and ridged. It looked like a tongue, and he knew whose
tongue it had to be.
He put the fedora back on his head,
and he thought, Put my thinking cap on, and as he thought it, it didn’t
seem so funny. The green fedora was not a thinking cap: but it was the kind of
hat that would be worn by someone who not only thought but also came to
conclusions of an important and vital kind.
He imagined the
worlds as a web: it blazed in his mind, connecting him to everyone he knew. The
strand that connected him to Spider was strong and bright, and it burned with a
cold light, like a lightning bug or a star.
Spider had been
a part of him once. He held onto this knowledge and let the web fill his mind.
And in his hand was his brother’s tongue: that had been part of Spider until
very recently, and it wished devoutly to be part of him again. Living things
remember.
The wild light of the web burned about him. All
Charlie needed to do was follow it—
He followed it, and the
fireflies clustered around and traveled with him.
“Hey,” he
said. “It’s me.”
Spider made a small, terrible
noise.
In the glimmer of firefly light, Spider looked
awful: he looked hunted and he looked hurt. There were scabs on his face and
chest.
“I think this is probably yours,” said
Charlie.
Spider took the tongue from his brother, with an
exaggerated thank you gesture, placed it into his mouth, pushed it in,
and held it down. Charlie watched and waited. Soon Spider seemed satisfied—he
moved his mouth experimentally, pushing the tongue to one side and then to the
other, as if he were preparing to shave off a moustache, opening his mouth
widely and waggling his tongue about. He closed his mouth and stood up. Finally,
in a voice that was still a little wobbly around the edges, he said, “Nice
hat.”
Rosie made it to the top of the steps
first, and she pushed open the wine cellar door. She stumbled into the house.
She waited for her mother, then she slammed and bolted the cellar door. The
power was out here, but the moon was high and nearly full, and, after the
darkness, the pallid moonlight coming through the kitchen windows might as well
have been floodlighting.
Boys and girls come out to
play, thought Rosie. The moon does shine as bright as
day—
“Phone the police,” said her
mother.
“Where’s the phone?”
“How the
hell should I know where the phone is? He’s still down
there.”
“Right,” said Rosie, wondering whether she should
find a phone to call the police or just get out of the house, but before she had
reached a decision, it was too late.
There was a bang so
loud it hurt her ears, and the door to the cellar crashed
open.
The shadow came out of the
cellar.
It was real. She knew it was real. She was looking
at it. But it was impossible: it was the shadow of a great cat, shaggy and huge.
Strangely, though, when the moonlight touched it, the shadow seemed
darker. Rosie could not see its eyes, but she knew it was looking at her,
and that it was hungry.
It was going to kill her. This was
where it would end.
Her mother said, “It wants you,
Rosie.”
“I know.”
Rosie picked up the
nearest large object, a wooden block that had once held knives, and she threw it
at the shadow as hard as she could, and then, without waiting to see if it made
contact, she moved as fast as she could out of the kitchen, into the hallway.
She knew where the front door was—
Something dark,
something four-footed, moved faster: it bounded over her head, landing almost
silently in front of her.
Rosie backed up against the wall.
Her mouth was dry.
The beast was between them and the front
door, and it was padding slowly toward Rosie, as if it had all the time in the
world.
Her mother ran out of the kitchen then, then, ran
past Rosie—tottered down the moonlit corridor toward the great shadow, her arms
flailing. With her thin fists she punched the thing in the ribs. There was a
pause, as if the world was holding its breath, and then it turned on her. A blur
of motion and Rosie’s mother was down on the ground, while the shadow shook her
like a dog with a rag doll between its teeth.
The doorbell
rang.
Rosie wanted to call for help but instead she found
she was screaming, loudly and insistently. Rosie, when confronted with an
unexpected spider in a bathtub, was capable of screaming like a B-movie actress
on her first encounter with a man in a rubber suit. Now she was in a dark house
containing a shadowy tiger and a potential serial killer, and one, perhaps both,
of those entities, had just attacked her mother. Her head thought of a couple of
courses of action (the gun: the gun was down in the cellar. She ought to
go down and get the gun. Or the door—she could try to get past her mother and
the shadow and unlock the front door) but her lungs and her mouth would only
scream.
Something banged at the front door. They’re
trying to break in, she thought. They won’t get through that door. It’s
solid.
Her mother lay on the floor in a patch of
moonlight, and the shadow crouched above her, and it threw back its head and it
roared, a deep rattling roar of fear and challenge and
possession.
I’m hallucinating, thought Rosie with a
wild certainty. I’ve been locked up in a cellar for two days and now I’m
hallucinating. There is no tiger.
By the same token,
she was certain that there was no pale woman in the moonlight, even though she
could see her walking down the corridor, a woman with blonde hair and the long,
long legs and narrow hips of a dancer. The woman stopped when she reached the
shadow of the tiger. She said, “Hello, Grahame.”
The
shadow-beast lifted its massive head and growled.
“Don’t
think you can hide from me in that silly animal costume,” said the woman. She
did not look pleased.
Rosie realized that she could see the
window through the woman’s upper body, and she backed up until she was pressing
hard against the wall.
The beast growled again, this time a
little more uncertainly.
The woman said, “I don’t believe
in ghosts, Grahame. I spent my life, my whole life, not believing in ghosts. And
then I met you. You let Morris’s career run aground. You steal from us. You
murder me. And finally, to add insult to injury, you force me to believe in
ghosts.”
The shadowy big-cat-shape was whimpering now, and
backing down the hall.
“Don’t think you can avoid me like
that, you useless little man. You can pretend to be a tiger all you like. You
aren’t a tiger. You’re a rat. No, that’s an insult to a noble and numerous
species of rodent. You’re less than a rat. You’re a gerbil. You’re a
stoat.”
Rosie ran down the hall. She ran past the
shadow-beast, past her fallen mother. She ran through the pale woman, and
it felt like she was passing through fog. She reached the front door, and began
feeling for the bolts.
In her head or in the world Rosie
could hear an argument. Someone was saying,
Pay no
attention to her, idiot. She can’t touch you. It’s just a duppy. She’s barely
real. Get the girl! Stop the girl!
And someone else was
replying,
You certainly do have a valid point here. But
I’m not convinced that you’ve taken all the circumstances into account,
vis-à-vis, well, discretion, um, better part of valor, if you follow
me—
I lead. You
follow.
But—
“What I want
to know,” said the pale woman, “is just how ghostly you currently are. I mean, I
can’t touch people. I can’t really even touch things. I can touch
ghosts.”
The pale woman aimed a serious kick at the beast’s
face. The shadow-cat hissed and took a step back, and the foot missed it by less
than an inch.
The next kick connected, and the beast
yowled. Another kick, hard against the place the cat’s shadowy nose would be,
and the beast made the noise of a cat being shampooed, a lonely wail of horror
and outrage, of shame and defeat.
The corridor was filled
with the sound of a dead woman laughing, a laugh of exultation and delight.
“Stoat,” said the pale woman’s voice again. “Grahame
Stoat.”
A cold wind blew through the
house.
Rosie pulled the last of the bolts, and she turned
the lock. The front door fell open. There were the beams of flashlights,
blinding-bright. People. Cars. A woman’s voice said, “It’s one of the missing
tourists.” And then she said, “My God.”
Rosie
turned.
In the flashlight’s beam Rosie could see her
mother, crumpled on the tiled floor and, beside her, shoeless and unconscious
and unmistakably human, Grahame Coats. There was a red liquid splashed all
around them, like crimson paint, and Rosie found herself, for a breath, unable
to work out what it was.
A woman was talking to her. She
was saying, “You’re Rosie Noah. My name’s Daisy. Let’s find somewhere for you to
sit down. Would you like to sit down?”
Someone must have
found the fuse box, for at that moment the lights went on all over the
house.
A large man in a police uniform was bent over the
bodies. He looked up and said, “It is definitely Mr. Finnegan. He is not
breathing.”
Rosie said, “Yes, please. I would like to sit
down very much.”
Charlie sat beside Spider on the
edge of the cliff, in the moonlight, his legs dangling over the
side.
“You know,” he said, “you used to be a part of me.
When we were kids.”
Spider put his head on one side.
“Really?”
“I think so.”
“Well, that
would explain a few things.” He held out his hand: a seven-legged clay spider
sat on the back of his fingers, tasting the air. “So what now? Are you going to
take me back or something?”
Charlie’s brow crinkled. “I
think you’ve turned out better than you would have done if you were part of me.
And you’ve had a lot more fun.”
Spider said, “Rosie. Tiger
knows about Rosie. We have to do something.”
“Of course we
do,” said Charlie. It was like bookkeeping, he thought: you put entries in one
column, deduct them from another, and if you’ve done it correctly, everything
should come out right at the bottom of the page. He took his brother’s
hand.
They stood up and took a step forward, off the
cliff—
—and everything was bright—
A
cold wind blew between the worlds.
Charlie said, “You’re
not the magical bit of me, you know.”
“I’m not?” Spider
took another step. Stars were falling now by the dozen, streaking their way
across the dark sky. Someone, somewhere, was playing high sweet music on a
flute.
Another step, and now distant sirens were blaring.
“No,” said Charlie. “You’re not. Mrs. Dunwiddy thought you were, I think. She
split us apart, but she never really understood what she was doing. We’re more
like two halves of a starfish. You grew up into a whole person. And so,” he
said, realizing it was true as he said it, “did I.”
They
stood on the cliff edge in the dawn. An ambulance was on its way up the hill,
lights flashing, and another behind that. They parked by the side of the road,
beside a cluster of police cars.
Daisy seemed to be telling
everyone what to do.
“Not much that we can do here. Not
now,” said Charlie. “Come on.” The last of the fireflies left him, and blinked
its way to sleep.
They rode the first minibus of the
morning back to Williamstown.
Maeve Livingstone
sat upstairs in the library of Grahame Coats’s house, surrounded by Grahame
Coats’s art and books and DVDs, and she stared out of the window. Down below the
island’s emergency services were putting Rosie and her mother into one
ambulance, Grahame Coats into another.
She had, she
reflected, really enjoyed kicking the beast-thing that Grahame Coats had become.
It was the most profoundly satisfying thing she had done since she had been
killed—although if she were to be honest with herself, she would have to admit
that dancing with Mr. Nancy came in an extremely close second. He had been
remarkably spry, and nimble on his feet.
She was
tired.
“Maeve?”
“Morris?” She looked
around her, but the room was empty.
“I wouldn’t want to
disturb you, if you were still busy, pet.”
“That’s very
sweet of you,” she said. “But I think I’m done now.”
The
walls of the library were beginning to fade. They were losing color and form.
The world behind the walls was starting to show, and in its light she saw a
small figure in a smart suit waiting for her.
Her hand
crept into his. She said, “Where are we going now,
Morris?”
He told her.
“Oh. Well, that
will be a pleasant change,” she said. “I’ve always wanted to go
there.”
And, hand in hand, they went.
Chapter Fourteen
which comes to several conclusions
Charlie
woke to a banging on a door. Disoriented, he looked around: he was in a hotel
room; various unlikely events clustered inside his head like moths around a
naked bulb, and while he tried to make sense of them he let his feet get up and
walk him to the hotel room door. He blinked at the diagram on the back of the
door which told him where to go in case of fire, trying to remember the events
of the previous night. Then he unlocked the door and pulled it
open.
Daisy looked up at him. She said, “Were you asleep in
that hat?”
Charlie put his hand up and felt his head. There
was definitely a hat on it. “Yes,” he said. “I think I must have
been.”
“Bless,” she said. “Well, at least you took your
shoes off. You know you missed all the excitement, last
night?”
“I did?”
“Brush your teeth,”
she said helpfully. “And change your shirt. Yes, you did. While you were—” and
then she hesitated. It seemed quite improbable, on reflection, that he really
had vanished in the middle of a séance. These things did not happen. Not in the
real world. “While you weren’t there. I got the police chief to go up to Grahame
Coats’s house. He had those
tourists.”
“Tourists—?”
“It was what
he said at dinner, something about us sending the two people in, the two at the
house. It was your fiancée and her mother. He’d locked them up in his
basement.”
“Are they okay?”
“They’re
both in the hospital.”
“Oh.”
“Her
mum’s in rough shape. I think your fiancée will be
okay.”
“Will you stop calling her that? She’s not my
fiancée. She ended the engagement.”
“Yes. But you didn’t,
did you?”
“She’s not in love with me,” said Charlie. “Now,
I’m going to brush my teeth and change my shirt, and I need a certain amount of
privacy.”
“You should shower too,” she said. “And that hat
smells like a cigar.”
“It’s a family heirloom,” he told
her, and he went into the bathroom and locked the door behind
him.
The hospital was a ten-minute-walk from the
hotel, and Spider was sitting in the waiting room, holding a dog-eared copy of
Entertainment Weekly magazine as if he were actually reading
it.
Charlie tapped him on the shoulder, and Spider jumped.
He looked up warily and then, seeing his brother, he relaxed, but not much.
“They said I had to wait out here,” Spider said. “Because I’m not a relation or
anything.”
Charlie boggled. “Well, why didn’t you just
tell them you were a relative? Or a doctor?”
Spider
looked uncomfortable. “Well, it’s easy to do that stuff if you don’t
care. If it doesn’t matter if I go in or I don’t, it’s easy to go in. But
now it matters, and I’d hate to get in the way or do something wrong, and I
mean, what if I tried and they said no, and then—what are you grinning
about?”
“Nothing really,” said Charlie. “It just all sounds
a bit familiar. Come on. Let’s go and find Rosie. You know,” he said to Daisy,
as they set off down a random corridor, “there are two ways to walk through a
hospital. Either you look like you belong there—here you go Spider. White coat
on back of door, just your size. Put it on—or you should look so out of place
that no one will complain that you’re there. They’ll just leave it for someone
else to sort out.” He began to hum.
“What’s that song?”
asked Daisy.
“It’s called ‘Yellow Bird,’ “ said
Spider.
Charlie pushed his hat back on his head, and they
walked into Rosie’s hospital room.
Rosie was sitting up in
bed, reading a magazine, and looking worried. When she saw the three of them
come in, she looked more worried. She looked from Spider to Charlie and back
again.
“You’re both a long way from home,” was all she
said.
“We all are,” said Charlie. “Now, you’ve met Spider.
This is Daisy. She’s in the police.”
“I’m not sure that I
am anymore,” said Daisy. “I’m probably in all kinds of hot
water.”
“You’re the one who was there last night? The one
who got the island police to come up to the house?” Rosie stopped. She said,
“Any word on Grahame Coats?”
“He’s in intensive care, just
like your mum.”
“Well, if she comes to before he does,”
said Rosie, “I expect she’ll kill him.” Then she said, “They won’t talk to me
about my mum’s condition. They just say that it’s very serious, and they’ll tell
me as soon as there’s anything to tell.” She looked at Charlie with clear eyes.
“She’s not as bad as you think she is, really. Not when you get time to know
her. We had a lot of time to talk, locked up in the dark. She’s all
right.”
She blew her nose. Then she said, “They don’t think
she’s going to make it. They haven’t directly said that to me, but they sort of
said it in a not-saying-it sort of way. It’s funny. I thought she’d live through
anything.”
Charlie said, “Me too. I figured even if there
was a nuclear war, it would still leave radioactive cockroaches and your
mum.”
Daisy stepped on his foot. She said, “Do they know
anything more about what hurt her?”
“I told them,” said
Rosie. “There was some kind of animal in the house. Maybe it was just Grahame
Coats. I mean it sort of was him, but it was sort of someone else. She
distracted it from me, and it went for her—” She had explained it all as best
she could to the island police that morning. She had decided not to talk about
the blonde ghost-woman. Sometimes minds snap under pressure, and she thought it
best if people did not know that hers had.
Rosie broke off.
She was staring at Spider as if she had only just remembered who he was. She
said, “I still hate you, you know.” Spider said nothing, but a miserable
expression crept across his face, and he no longer looked like a doctor: now he
looked like a man who had borrowed a white coat from behind a door and was
worried that someone would notice. A dreamlike tone came into her voice. “Only,”
she said, “only when I was in the dark, I thought that you were helping me. That
you were keeping the animal away. What happened to your face? It’s all
scratched.”
“It was an animal,” said
Spider.
“You know,” she said, “Now I see you both at once,
you don’t look anything alike at all.”
“I’m the
good-looking one,” said Charlie, and Daisy’s foot pressed down on his toes for
the second time.
“Bless,” said Daisy, quietly. And then,
slightly louder, “Charlie? There’s something we need to talk about outside.
Now.”
They went out into the hospital corridor, leaving
Spider inside.
“What?” said
Charlie.
“What what?” said
Daisy.
“What have we got to talk
about?”
“Nothing.”
“Then why are we
out here? You heard her. She hates him. We shouldn’t have left them alone
together. She’s probably killed him by now.”
Daisy looked
up at him with the kind of expression that Jesus might have given someone who
had just explained that he was probably allergic to bread and fishes, so could
He possibly do him a quick chicken salad: there was pity in that expression,
along with almost infinite compassion.
She touched a finger
to her lips and pulled him back toward the door. He looked back into the
hospital room: Rosie did not appear to be killing Spider. Quite the opposite, if
anything. “Oh,” said Charlie.
They were kissing. Put like
that, and you could be forgiven for presuming that this was a normal kiss, all
lips and skin and possibly even a little tongue. You’d miss how he smiled, how
his eyes glowed. And then, after the kiss was done, how he stood, like a man who
had just discovered the art of standing and had figured out how to do it better
than anyone else who would ever come along.
Charlie turned
his attention back to the corridor to find Daisy in conversation with several
doctors and the police officer they had encountered the previous
evening.
“Well, we always had him figured as a bad man,”
the police officer was saying to Daisy. “I mean, frankly, you only get this kind
of behavior from foreigners. The local people, they simply wouldn’t do that kind
of thing.”
“Obviously not,” said
Daisy.
“Very. Very grateful,” said the police chief,
patting her shoulder in a way that set Daisy’s teeth on edge. “This little lady
saved that woman’s life,” he told Charlie, giving his shoulder a patronizing pat
for good measure, before setting off with the doctors down the
corridor.
“So what’s happening?” asked
Charlie.
“Well, Grahame Coats is dead,” she said. “More or
less. And they don’t hold out any hope for Rosie’s mum,
either.”
“I see,” said Charlie. He thought about this. Then
he finished thinking and came to a decision. Said, “Would you mind if I just
chatted to my brother for a bit? I think he and I need to
talk.”
“I’m going back to the hotel anyway. I’m going to
check my e-mail. Probably going to have to say sorry on the phone a lot. Find
out if I still have a career.”
“But you’re a hero, aren’t
you?”
“I don’t think that’s what anyone was paying me for,”
she said, a little wanly. “Come and find me at the hotel when you’re
done.”
Spider and Charlie walked down the Williamstown high
street in the morning sun.
“You know, that really is a good
hat,” said Spider.
“You really think
so?”
“Yeah. Can I try it on?”
Charlie
gave Spider the green fedora. Spider put it on, looked at his reflection in a
shop window. He made a face and gave Charlie the hat back. “Well,” he said,
disappointed, “it looks good on you, anyway.”
Charlie
pushed his fedora back onto his head. Some hats can only be worn if you’re
willing to be jaunty, to set them at an angle and to walk beneath them with a
spring in your stride as if you’re only a step away from dancing. They demand a
lot of you. This hat was one of those, and Charlie was up to it. He said,
“Rosie’s mum is dying.”
“Yeah.”
“I
really, really never liked her.”
“I didn’t know her
as well as you did. But given time, I’m sure I would have really, really
disliked her too.”
Charlie said, “We have to try and save
her life, don’t we?” He said it without enthusiasm, like someone pointing out it
was time to visit the dentist.
“I don’t think we can do
things like that.”
“Dad did something like it for mum. He
got her better, for a while.”
“But that was him. I don’t
know how we’d do that.”
Charlie said, “The place at the end
of the world. With the caves.”
“Beginning of the world, not
the end. What about it?”
“Can we just get there? Without
all that candles-and-herbs malarkey?”
Spider was quiet.
Then he nodded, “I think so.”
They turned together, turned
in a direction that wasn’t usually there, and they walked away from the
Williamstown high street.
Now the sun was rising, and
Charlie and Spider walked across a beach littered with skulls. They were not
proper human skulls, and they covered the beach like yellow pebbles. Charlie
avoided them where he could, while Spider crunched his way through them. At the
end of the beach they took a left turn that was left to absolutely everything,
and the mountains at the beginning of the world towered above them and the
cliffs fell away below.
Charlie remembered the last time he
was here, and it seemed like a thousand years ago. “Where is everyone?” he said
aloud, and his voice echoed against the rocks and came back to him. He said,
loudly, “Hello?”
And then they were there, watching him.
All of them. They seemed grander, now, less human, more animal, wilder.
He realized that he had seen them as people last time because he had expected to
meet people. But they were not people. Arrayed on the rocks above them were Lion
and Elephant, Crocodile and Python, Rabbit and Scorpion, and the rest of them,
hundreds of them, and they stared at him with eyes unsmiling: animals he
recognized; animals that no one living would be able to identify. All the
animals that have ever been in stories. All the animals that people have dreamed
of, worshipped, or placated.
Charlie saw all of
them.
It’s one thing, he thought, singing for
your life, in a room filled with diners, on the spur of the moment, with a gun
barrel in the ribs of the girl you—
That
you—
Oh.
Well, thought
Charlie, I can worry about that later.
Right now he
badly wanted either to breathe into a brown paper bag or to
vanish.
“There must be hundreds of them,” said Spider, and
there was awe in his voice.
There was a flurry in the air,
on a nearby rock, which resolved itself into the Bird Woman. She folded her arms
and stared at them.
“Whatever it is you’re going to do,”
Spider said, “you better do it soon. They aren’t going to wait around
forever.”
Charlie’s mouth was dry.
“Right.”
Spider said, “So. Um. What exactly do we do
now?”
“We sing to them,” said Charlie,
simply.
“What?”
“It’s how we fix
things. I figured it out. We just sing it all, you and
I.”
“I don’t understand. Sing
what?”
Charlie said, “The song. You sing the
song, you fix things.” Now he sounded desperate. “The
song.”
Spider’s eyes were like puddles after the
rain, and Charlie saw things in them he had not seen before: affection, perhaps,
and confusion and, mostly, apology. “I don’t know what you’re talking
about.”
Lion watched them from the side of a boulder.
Monkey looked at them from the top of a tree. And
Tiger—
Charlie saw Tiger. It was walking gingerly on four
feet. Its face was swollen and bruised, but there was a glint in its eyes, and
it looked as if it would be more than happy to even the
score.
Charlie opened his mouth. A small croaking noise
came out, as if Charlie had recently swallowed a particularly nervous frog.
“It’s no use,” he whispered to Spider. “This was a stupid idea, wasn’t
it?”
“Yup.”
“Do you think we can just
go away again?” Charlie’s nervous glance swept the mountainside and the caves,
took in each of the hundreds of totem creatures from before the dawn of time.
There was one he had not seen the last time he had looked: a small man, with
lemon yellow gloves and a pencil-thin moustache and no fedora hat to cover his
thinning hair.
The old man winked when he caught Charlie’s
gaze.
It wasn’t much, but it was
enough.
Charlie filled his lungs, and he began to sing. “I
am Charlie,” he sang. “I am Anansi’s son. Listen as I sing my song. Listen to my
life.”
He sang them the song of a boy who was half a god,
and who was broken into two by an old woman with a grudge. He sang of his
father, and he sang of his mother.
He sang of names and
words, of the building blocks beneath the real, the worlds that make worlds, the
truths beneath the way things are; he sang of appropriate ends and just
conclusions for those who would have hurt him and his.
He
sang the world.
It was a good song, and it was his song.
Sometimes it had words, and sometimes it didn’t have any words at
all.
As he sang, all the creatures listening began to clap
and to stamp and to hum along; Charlie felt like he was the conduit for a great
song that took in all of them. He sang of birds, of the magic of looking up and
seeing them in flight, of the sheen of the sun on a wing feather in the
morning.
The totem creatures were dancing now, the dances
of their kind. The Bird Woman danced the wheeling dance of birds, fanning her
tail feathers, tossing back her beak.
There was only one
creature on the mountainside who did not dance.
Tiger
lashed his tail. He was not clapping or singing or dancing. His face was bruised
purple, and his body was covered in welts and in bite marks. He had padded down
the rocks, a step at a time, until he was close to Charlie. “The songs aren’t
yours,” he growled.
Charlie looked at him, and sang about
Tiger, and about Grahame Coats, and those who would prey upon the innocent. He
turned: Spider was looking up at him with admiration. Tiger roared in anger, and
Charlie took the roar and wound his song around it. Then he did the roar
himself, just like Tiger had done it. Well, the roar began just as Tiger’s roar
had, but then Charlie changed it, so it became a really goofy sort of roar, and
all the creatures watching from the rocks started to laugh. They couldn’t help
it. Charlie did the goofy roar again. Like any impersonation, like any perfect
caricature, it had the effect of making what it made fun of intrinsically
ridiculous. No one would ever hear Tiger roar again without hearing Charlie’s
roar underneath it. “Goofy sort of a roar,” they’d
say.
Tiger turned his back on Charlie. He loped through the
crowd, roaring as he ran, which only made the crowd laugh the harder. Tiger
angrily retreated back into his cave.
Spider gestured with
his hands, a curt movement.
There was a rumble, and the
mouth of Tiger’s cave collapsed in a small rock slide. Spider looked satisfied.
Charlie kept singing.
He sang the song of Rosie Noah and
the song of Rosie’s mother: he sang a long life for Mrs. Noah and all the
happiness that she deserved.
He sang of his life, all of
their lives, and in his song he saw the pattern of their lives as a web that a
fly had blundered into, and with his song he wrapped the fly, made certain it
would not escape, and he repaired the web with new
strands.
And now the song was coming to its natural
end.
Charlie realized, with no little surprise, that he
enjoyed singing to other people, and he knew, at that moment, that this was what
he would spend the rest of his life doing. He would sing: not big, magical songs
that made worlds or recreated existence. Just small songs that would make people
happy for a breath, make them move, make them for a little while, forget their
problems. And he knew that there would always be the fear before performing, the
stage fright, that would never go away, but he also understood that it would be
like jumping into a swimming pool—only uncomfortably chill for a few seconds—and
then the discomfort would pass and it would be good—
Never
this good. Never this good again. But good
enough.
And then he was done. Charlie hung his head. The
creatures on the cliff top let the last notes die away, stopped stamping,
stopped clapping, stopped dancing. Charlie took off his father’s green fedora
and fanned his face with it.
Under his breath, Spider said,
“That was amazing.”
“You could have done it too,” said
Charlie.
“I don’t think so. What was happening at the end?
I felt you doing something, but I couldn’t really tell what it
was.”
“I fixed things,” said Charlie. “For us. I think. I’m
not really sure—” And he wasn’t. Now the song was over, the content of the song
was unraveling like a dream in the morning.
He pointed to
the cave mouth that was blocked by rocks. “Did you do
that?”
“Yeah,” said Spider. “Seemed the least I could do.
Tiger will dig his way out eventually, though. I wish I’d done something worse
than just shut the door on him, to be honest.”
“Not to
worry,” said Charlie. “I did. Something much worse.”
He
watched the animals disperse. His father was nowhere to be seen, which did not
surprise him. “Come on,” he said. “We ought to be getting
back.”
Spider went back to see Rosie at visiting
time. He was carrying a large box of chocolates, the largest that the hospital
gift shop sold.
“For you,” he
said.
“Thanks.”
“They told me,” she
said, “that they think my mum’s going to pull through. Apparently she opened her
eyes and asked for porridge. The doctor said it’s a
miracle.”
“Yup. Your mother asking for food. Certainly
sounds like a miracle to me.”
She swatted his arm with her
hand, then left her hand resting on his arm.
“You know,”
she said, after a while, “You’re going to think this is silly of me. But when I
was in the dark, with Mum, I thought that you were helping me. I felt like you
were keeping the beast at bay. That if you hadn’t’ve done what you were doing,
he would have killed us.”
“Um. I probably
helped.”
“Really?”
“I don’t know. I
think so. I was in trouble as well, and I thought about
you.”
“Were you in very big
trouble?”
“Enormous. Yes.”
“Will you
pour me a glass of water, please?”
He did. She said,
“Spider, what do you
do?”
“Do?”
“For a
job.”
“Whatever I feel like doing.”
“I
think,” she said, “I may stay here, for a bit. The nurses have been telling me
how much they need teachers here. I’d like to see that I was making a
difference.”
“That might be fun.”
“And
what would you do, if I did?”
“Oh. Well, if you were here,
I’m sure I could find something to keep me busy.”
Their
fingers twined, tight as a ship’s knot.
“Do you think we
can make this work?” she asked.
“I think so,” said Spider,
soberly. “And if I get bored with you, I’ll just go away and do something else.
So not to worry.”
“Oh,” said Rosie, “I’m not worried.” And
she wasn’t. There was steel in her voice beneath the softness. You could tell
where her mother got it from.
Charlie found Daisy
on a deck chair out on the beach. He thought she was asleep in the sun. When his
shadow touched her, she said, “Hello Charlie.” She didn’t open her
eyes.
“How did you know it was
me?”
“Your hat smells like a cigar. Are you going to be
getting rid of it soon?”
“No,” said Charlie. “I told you.
Family heirloom. I plan to wear it till I die, then leave it to my children. So.
Do you still have a job with the police force?”
“Sort of,”
she said. “My boss said that it’s been decided that what I was suffering from
was nervous exhaustion brought on by overwork, and I’m on sick leave until I
feel well enough to come back.”
“Ah. And when will that
be?”
“Not sure,” she said. “Can you pass the suntan
oil?”
He had a box in his pocket. He took it out and put it
on the arm of the deck chair. “In a minute. Er.” He paused. “You know,” he said,
“we’ve already done the big embarrassing one of these at gunpoint.” He opened
the box. “But this is for you, from me. Well, Rosie returned it to me. And we
can swap it for one you like. Pick out a different one. Probably it won’t even
fit. But it’s yours. If you want it. And um. Me.”
She
reached into the box and took out the engagement
ring.
“Hmph. All right,” she said. “As long as you’re not
just doing it to get the lime back.”
Tiger
prowled. His tail lashed irritably from side to side as he paced back and forth
across the mouth of his cave. His eyes burned like emerald torches in the
shadows.
“Whole world and everything used to be mine,” said
Tiger. “Moon and stars and sun and stories. I owned them
all.”
“I feel it incumbent on me to point out,” said a
small voice from the back of the cave, “that you said that
already.”
Tiger paused in his pacing; he turned then and
insinuated himself into the back of his cave, rippling as he walked, like a fur
rug over hydraulic springs. He padded back until he came to the carcass of an
ox, and he said, in a quiet voice, “I beg your
pardon.”
There was a scrabbling from inside the carcass.
The tip of a nose protruded from the rib cage. “Actually,” it said, “I was, so
to speak, agreeing with you. That was what I was
doing.”
Little white hands pulled a thin strip of dried
meat from between two ribs, revealing a small animal the color of dirty snow. It
might have been an albino mongoose, or perhaps some particularly shifty kind of
weasel in its winter coat. It had a scavenger’s
eyes.
“Whole world and everything used to be mine. Moon and
stars and sun and stories. I owned them all.” Then he said, “Would have been
mine again.”
Tiger stared down at the little beast. Then,
without warning, one huge paw descended, smashing the rib cage, breaking the
carcass into foul-smelling fragments, pinning the little animal to the floor; it
wriggled and writhed, but it could not escape.
“You are
here,” said Tiger, his huge head nose to nose with the pale animal’s tiny head,
“you are here under my sufferance. Do you understand that? Because the next time
you say something irritating, I shall bite your head
off.”
“Mmmph,” said the weasely
thing.
“You wouldn’t like it if I bit off your head, would
you?”
“Nngk,” said the smaller animal. Its eyes were
a pale blue, two chips of ice, and they glinted as it twisted uncomfortably
beneath the weight of the huge paw.
“So will you promise me
that you will behave, and you will be quiet?” rumbled Tiger. He lifted his paw a
little to allow the beast to speak.
“Indeedy,” said the
small white thing, extremely politely. Then, with one weasely movement, it
twisted and sank its sharp little teeth into Tiger’s paw. Tiger bellowed in
pain, whipped the paw back, sending the little animal flying through the air. It
struck the rock ceiling, bounced over to a ledge, and from there it darted, like
a dirty white streak, to the very back of the cave, where the ceiling got low
and close to the floor, and where there were many hiding places for a small
animal, places a larger animal could not go.
Tiger padded
as far back into the cave as it could easily walk. “You think I can’t wait?” he
asked. “You have to come out sooner or later. I’m not going anywhere.” Tiger lay
down. He closed his eyes and soon began to make fairly convincing snoring
noises.
After about half an hour of snoring from Tiger, the
pale animal crept out from the rocks and slipped from shadow to shadow, making
for a large bone that still had plenty of good meat on it, if you didn’t mind a
certain rankness, and it didn’t. Still, to get to the bone, it would have to
pass the great beast. It lurked in the shadows, then it ventured out on little
silent feet.
As it passed the sleeping Tiger, a forepaw
shot out, and a claw slammed down on the creature’s tail, pinning it down.
Another paw held the little creature behind the neck. The great cat opened its
eyes. “Frankly,” it said, “we appear to be stuck with each other. So all I’m
asking is that you make an effort. We can both make an effort. I rather doubt
that we’ll ever be friends, but perhaps we could learn to tolerate each
other.”
“I take your point,” said the small ferretty thing.
“Needs must, as they say, when the Devil drives.”
“That’s
an example of what I’m saying,” said Tiger. “You just have to learn when to keep
your mouth shut.”
“It’s an ill wind,” said the little
animal, “that blows nobody any good.”
“Now you’re
irritating me again,” said Tiger. “I’m trying to tell you. Don’t irritate me,
and I won’t bite off your head.”
“You keep using the phrase
‘bite my head off.’ Now when you say ‘bite my head off,’ I take it I can assume
that this is actually some kind of metaphorical statement, implying that you’ll
shout at me, perhaps rather angrily?”
“Bite your head off.
Then crunch it. Then chew it. Then swallow it,” said Tiger. “Neither of us can
leave until Anansi’s child forgets we’re here. The way that bastard seems to
have arranged things, even if I kill you in the morning you’ll be reincarnated
back in this blasted cave by the end of the afternoon. So don’t irritate
me.”
The small white animal said, “Ah well. Another
day—“
“If you say ‘another dollar,’ “ said Tiger, “I will
be irritated, and there will be serious consequences. Don’t. Say anything.
Irritating. Do you understand?”
There was a brief silence
in the cave at the end of the world. It was broken by a small, weasely voice
saying, “Absatively.”
It started to say, “Oww!” but
the noise was suddenly and effectively silenced.
And then
there was nothing in that place but the sound of
crunching.
The thing they don’t tell you about
coffins in the literature, because frankly it’s not much of a selling point to
the people who are buying them, is just how comfortable they
are.
Mr. Nancy was extremely satisfied with his coffin. Now
that all the excitement was over, he’d gone back to his coffin and was
comfortably dozing. Every once in a while he would wake and remember where he
was, then he’d roll over and go back to sleep.
The grave,
as has been pointed out, is a fine place, not to mention a private one, and is
thus an excellent place to get a little downtime. Six feet down, best kind there
is. Another twenty years or so, he thought, and he would have to think about
getting up.
He opened one eye when the funeral
started.
He could hear them up above him: Callyanne Higgler
and the Bustamonte woman and the other one, the thin one, not to mention a small
horde of grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and great-great grandchildren, all
of them sighing and wailing and crying their eyes out for the late Mrs.
Dunwiddy.
Mr. Nancy thought about pushing one hand up
through the turf and grabbing Callyanne Higgler’s ankle. It was something he’d
wanted to do ever since he saw Carrie at a drive-in, thirty years
earlier, but now that the opportunity presented itself, he found himself able to
resist the temptation. Honestly, he couldn’t be bothered. She’d only scream and
have a heart attack and die, and then the damn Garden of Rest would get even
more crowded than it already was.
Too much like hard work,
anyway. There were good dreams to be dreamed in the world beneath the soil.
Twenty years, he thought. Maybe twenty-five. By that time, he
might even have grandchildren. It’s always interesting to see how the
grandchildren turn out.
He could hear Callyanne Higgler
wailing and carrying on up above him. Then she stopped her sobbing long enough
to announce, “Still. It’s not as if she don’t have a good life and a long one.
That woman’s a hundred and three years old when she passes from
us.”
“Hunnert and four!” said an irritated voice from under
the ground beside him.
Mr. Nancy reached one insubstantial
arm out and tapped the new coffin sharply on the side. “Keep it down, there,
woman,” he barked. “Some of us is tryin’ to
sleep.”
Rosie had made it clear to Spider that
she expected him to get a steady job, the kind that involved getting up in the
morning and going somewhere.
So one morning, the day before
Rosie was to be discharged from the hospital, Spider got up early and went down
to the town library. He logged on to the library computer, sauntered onto the
Internet and, very carefully, cleared out all Grahame Coats’s remaining bank
accounts, the ones that the police forces of several continents had so far
failed to find. He arranged for the stud farm in Argentina to be sold. He bought
a small, off-the-peg company, endowed it with the money, and applied for
charitable status. He sent off an e-mail, in the name of Roger Bronstein, hiring
a lawyer to administer the foundation’s business, and suggested that the lawyer
might wish to seek out Miss Rosie Noah, late of London, currently of Saint
Andrews, and hire her to Do Good.
Rosie was hired. Her
first task was to find office space.
Following this, Spider
spent four full days walking (and, at nights, sleeping on) the beach that
circled most of the island, tasting the food in each of the dining
establishments he encountered along the way until he came to Dawson’s Fish
Shack. He tried the fried flying fish, the boiled green figs, the grilled
chicken, and the coconut pie, then he went back into the kitchen and found the
chef, who was also the owner, and offered him money enough for partnership and
cooking lessons.
Dawson’s Fish Shack is now a restaurant,
and Mr. Dawson has retired. Sometimes Spider’s out front and sometimes he’s back
in the kitchen: you go down there and look for him, you’ll see him. The food is
the best on the island. He’s fatter than he used to be, though not as fat as
he’ll wind up if he keeps tasting everything he cooks.
Not
that Rosie minds.
She does some teaching, and some helping
out, and a lot of Doing Good, and if she ever misses London she never lets it
show. Rosie’s mother, on the other hand, misses London continually and vocally,
but takes any suggestion that she might want to return there as an attempt to
part her from her as-yet-unborn (and, for that matter, unconceived)
grandchildren.
Nothing would give this author greater
pleasure than to be able to assure you that, following her return from the
valley of the shadow of death, Rosie’s mother became a new person, a jolly woman
with a kind word for everyone, that her newfound appetite for food was only
matched by her appetite for life and all if had to offer. Alas, respect for the
truth compels perfect honesty and the truth is that when she came out of
hospital Rosie’s mother was still herself, just as suspicious and uncharitable
as ever, although significantly more frail and now given to sleeping with the
light on.
She announced that she would be selling her flat
in London and would move to wherever in the world Spider and Rosie were, to be
near her grandchildren; and, as time went on, she would drop pointed comments
about the lack of grandchildren, the quantity and motility of Spider’s
spermatozoa, the frequency and positions of Spider and Rosie’s sexual relations,
and the relative cheapness and ease of in vitro fertilization, to the
point where Spider seriously began to think about not going to bed with Rosie
anymore, just to spite Rosie’s mother. He thought about this for about eleven
seconds one afternoon, while Rosie’s mother was handing them photocopies of an
article from a magazine that she had found which suggested that Rosie should
stand on her head for half an hour after sex; and he mentioned these thoughts to
Rosie that night, and she laughed and told him that her mother wasn’t allowed in
their bedroom anyway, and that she wasn’t going to be standing on her head after
making love for anybody.
Mrs. Noah has a flat in
Williamstown, near Spider and Rosie’s house, and twice a week one of Callyanne
Higgler’s many nieces looks in on her, does the vacuuming, dusts the glass fruit
(the wax fruit melted in the island heat), and makes a little food and leaves it
in the fridge, and sometimes Rosie’s mum eats it and sometimes she
doesn’t.
Charlie’s a singer these days. He’s lost
a lot of the softness. He’s a lean man now, with a trademark fedora hat. He has
lots of different fedoras, in different colors; his favorite one is
green.
Charlie has a son. His name is Marcus: he is four
and a half and possesses that deep gravity and seriousness that only small
children and mountain gorillas have ever been able to
master.
Nobody ever calls Charlie “Fat Charlie” anymore,
and honestly, sometimes he misses it.
It was early in the
morning in the summer, and it was already light. There was already noise coming
from the room next door. Charlie let Daisy sleep. He climbed out of bed quietly,
grabbed a T-shirt and shorts, and went through the door to see his son naked on
the floor playing with a small wooden train set. Together they pulled on their
T-shirts and shorts and flip-flops, and Charlie put on a hat, and they walked
down to the beach.
“Daddy?” said the boy. His jaw was set,
and he seemed to be pondering something.
“Yes,
Marcus?”
“Who was the shortest
president?”
“You mean in height?”
“No.
In, in days. Who was the shortest.”
“Harrison. He caught
pneumonia during his inauguration and died. He was president for forty-something
days, and he spent most of his time in office dying.”
“Oh.
Well, who was the longest then?”
“Franklin Delano
Roosevelt. He served three full terms. Died in office during his fourth. We’ll
take off our shoes here.”
They placed their shoes on a rock
and carried on walking down toward the waves, their toes digging into the damp
sand.
“How do you know so much about
presidents?”
“Because my father thought it would do me good
to find out about them, when I was a
kid.”
“Oh.”
They waded out into the
water, making for a boulder, one that could only be seen at low tide. After a
while, Charlie picked the boy up and let him ride on his
shoulders.
“Daddy?”
“Yes,
Marcus.”
“P’choona says you’re
famous.”
“And who’s Petunia?”
“At
playgroup. She says her mom has all your CDs. She says she loves your
singing.”
“Ah.”
“Are you
famous?”
“Not really. A little bit.” He put Marcus down on
the top of the boulder, then he clambered up it himself. “Okay. Ready to
sing?”
“Yes.”
“What do you want to
sing?”
“My favorite song.”
“I don’t
know if she’ll like that one.”
“She will.” Marcus had the
certainty of walls, of mountains.
“Okay. One, two,
three—”
They sang “Yellow Bird” together, which was
Marcus’s favorite song that week, and then they sang “Zombie Jamboree,” which
was his second favorite, and “She’ll Be Coming Round the Mountain,” which was
his third favorite. Marcus, whose eyes were better than Charlie’s, spotted her
as they were finishing “She’ll Be Coming Round the Mountain” and he began to
wave.
“There she is, Daddy.”
“Are you
sure?”
The morning haze blurred the sea and sky together
into a pale whiteness, and Charlie squinted at the horizon. “I don’t see
anything.”
“She’s gone under the water. She’ll be here
soon.”
There was a splash, and she surfaced immediately
below them; with a reach and a flip and a wiggle she was sitting on the rock
beside them, her silvery tail dangling down into the Atlantic, flicking beads of
water up onto her scales. She had long, orange-red
hair.
They all sang together now, the man and the boy and
the mermaid. They sang “The Lady Is a Tramp” and “Yellow Submarine” and then
Marcus taught the mermaid the words to the Flintstones theme
song.
“He reminds me of you,” she said to Charlie, “when
you were a little boy.”
“You knew me
then?”
She smiled. “You and your father used to walk down
the beach, back then. Your father,” she said. “He was quite some gentleman.” She
sighed. Mermaids sigh better than anyone. Then she said, “You should go back
now. The tide’s coming in.” She pushed her long hair back and jackknifed into
the ocean. She raised her head above the waves, touched her fingertips to her
lips, and blew Marcus a kiss before vanishing under the
water.
Charlie put his son onto his shoulders, and he waded
through the sea, back to the beach, where his son slipped down from his
shoulders onto the sand. He took off his old fedora hat and placed it on his
son’s head. It was much too big for the boy, but it still made him
smile.
“Hey,” said Charlie, “You want to see
something?”
“Okay. But I want breakfast. I want pancakes.
No, I want oatmeal. No, I want pancakes.”
“Watch this.”
Charlie began to do a sand-dance in his bare feet, soft-shoe shuffling through
the sand.
“I can do that,” said
Marcus.
“Really?”
“Watch me,
Daddy.”
He could, too.
Together the
man and the boy danced their way back up the sand to the house, singing a
wordless song that they made up as they went along, which lingered in the air
even after they had gone in for breakfast.
End of Anansi Boys
Acknowledgments
To begin with, an enormous bunch of flowers to Nalo
Hopkinson, who kept a helpful eye on the Caribbean dialogue and not only told me
what I needed to fix but suggested ways to fix it; and also to Lenworth Henry,
who was there on the day I made it all up, and whose voice I heard in the back
of my head when I was writing it (which is why I was delighted to hear that he
would be narrating the audio book).
As with my last adult
novel, American Gods, I was given two bolt-holes while I was writing this
novel. I started writing it in Tori’s spare house in Ireland, and I finished it
there as well. She is a most gracious hostess. At one point in the middle,
hurricanes permitting, I worked in Jonathan and Jane’s spare house in Florida.
It’s a good thing to have friends with more houses than they have bodies,
especially if they’re happy to share. Most of the rest of the time I wrote in
the local coffee house, and drank cup after cup of terrible tea in a rather
pathetic demonstration of hope over experience.
Roger
Forsdick and Graeme Baker gave up their time to answer my questions about the
police, and fraud, and extradition treaties, while Roger also showed me around
the cells, fed me dinner, and looked over the finished manuscript. I’m very
grateful.
Sharon Stiteler kept an eye on the book to make
sure the birds passed muster and she answered my birding questions. Pam Noles
was the first person to read any of the book, and her responses kept me going.
There was a small host of other people who lent me their eyes and minds and
opinions, including Olga Nunes, Colin Greenland, Giorgia Grilli, Anne Bobby,
Peter Straub, John M. Ford, Anne Murphy and Paul Kinkaid, Bill Stiteler, and Dan
and Michael Johnson. Errors of fact or of opinion are mine, not
theirs.
Thanks also go to Ellie Wylie; Thea Gilmore; The
Ladies of Lakeside; to Miss Holly Gaiman, who turned up to help whenever she
decided I needed a sensible daughter around; to the Petes of Hill House,
Publishers; to Michael Morrison, Lisa Gallagher, Jack Womack, and Julia Bannon;
and to Dave McKean.
Jennifer Brehl, my editor at Morrow,
was the person who persuaded me that the story I told her over lunch that day
really would make a good novel, at a time when I really wasn’t sure what the
next novel was going to be, and she sat patiently when I phoned her up one night
and read her the first third of the book. For these things alone she should be
sainted. Jane Morpeth at Headline is the kind of editor writers hope to get if
they’re very good and eat all their vegetables. Merrilee Heifetz at Writers
House, with the assistance of Ginger Clark, and, in the U.K., Dorie Simmonds,
are my literary agents. I’m lucky to have them all on my side, and I know just
how lucky I am.
Jon Levin keeps the world of movies running
for me. My assistant, Lorraine, helped keep me writing and made really good cups
of tea.
I don’t think I could have written Fat Charlie
without having had both an excellent but embarrassing father and wonderful but
embarrassed children. Hurrah for families.
And a final
thank you to something that didn’t exist when I wroteAmerican Gods : to the
readers of the journal at www.neilgaiman.com, who were always there whenever I
needed to know anything, and who, between them all, as far as I can tell, know
everything there is to be known.
Neil
Gaiman,
June 2005
E-Book Extra One
The Adventures of Spider
by Neil Gaiman
(a deleted scene)
Think of this as being one
of those odd scenes that normally turn up as extras on DVDs—the scenes that
everyone liked, but that made the film work better without them. It’s one of
them.
I really enjoyed writing it, and my editor at
Headline, the redoubtable Jane Morpeth, was sad when I told her it was
going, because she liked it. And for that matter, I liked it too, only it messed
up the pacing of the chapter it was in, and once I was prepared to grit my teeth
and cut it, everything worked rather better.
I firmly
believe that cut scenes are best left cut.
Even so, it had
Spider in it, doing what Spider does best. And it had birds in. And in my head,
it was the bit of the novel that was almost a Warner Brothers’
cartoon.
So when Jane asked if I would be willing to let it
appear—just this once—in the back of the UK edition of Anansi Boys, I found
myself, slightly to my surprise, saying yes, and now here it is in the
electronic version.
I’ve let it run into an earlier version
of the scene that’s still in the novel, at the end of Chapter Eleven. (This
scene would have been in Chapter Eleven, split into two or three segments, and
occurred between Fat Charlie arriving at the hotel, and the end of the
chapter.)
Neil
The Adventures of Spider
(a deleted scene)
Spider was imagining
himself elsewhere. He was flicking, in his mind, through places he knew, or
remembered, or imagined, willing himself there. Nothing happened. He remained
precisely where he was, held by the chain of bones in his feathered
cell.
He tried doing it the other way, thinking of a
person, and trying to make himself be with them. This tended to be a fairly
unreliable method of travel for Spider at the best of times: Spider had trouble
with other people. He had trouble remembering their faces or their names, or
sometimes even that they really existed at all.
He thought
about Fat Charlie; he thought of old girlfriends, but they seemed peculiarly
unconvincing, reconfiguring in his head into an assembly of breasts and lips and
skin and smiles, and they evaporated in his mind; last of all, he thought of
Rosie. He thought of her eyes, her warmth, the curve of her nostrils, the smell
of her hair.
(And on a cruise ship, dozing by the pool,
Rosie shifted uncomfortably.)
Well, thought Spider, if he
could not get out one way, he would get out another. There was more than one way
to skin a cat, after all1.
He tried changing shape, with no
result. He tried shouting. He tried shouting some
more.
There was a flapping noise. Two sandhill cranes stood
in front of him. They looked at him curiously.
It’s not
impossible to be Spider, or something like him. All you need is a complete and
utter certainty that everything will work out; a cocky assurance that’s just a
hair’s breadth away from psychosis; the conviction that you’re a monstrously
clever fellow, and that the universe always looks after its
own.
“You know,” said Spider to the birds, “I don’t want to
cause a problem but these chains are a bit loose. One solid tug and I could fall
down.”
The birds might have looked concerned. Spider
couldn’t be sure. It’s hard to tell with birds.
“It’s a
shocking job,” said Spider. “Whoever made these chains should be properly
ashamed of themselves. Frankly, I could get out of them in a couple of minutes,
and think of the trouble you’d all be with herself if I simply fell out of them
and wandered off. Quite appalling workmanship.”
The cranes
looked at each other. One of them strutted back towards the wall. Spider watched
it—a jog to the left, then it reached out its beak to the wall, and it touched a
feather there, a feather paler than the others. And then it was
gone.
“You know,” said Spider to the remaining crane.
“Let’s just pretend I didn’t say anything. I’d hate to put you all to any
bother.”
A fluttering, and now the space was filled with
huge crows who landed on the bone chains, then strutted about like builders
examining the work of quite a different firm of builders, one that had left town
with the work left incomplete. They cawed and tokked in what Spider was certain
was the corvine equivalent of “So what sort of cowboy put this together
than?”
A word from their foreman and the chains were
covered in crows, pecking and clawing at the bones, tapping and prodding with
black beaks against the bones. A loud caw and the chains fell apart—the bones
tumbled to the floor, and Spider tumbled with them. The floor was littered with
twigs and tiny feathers, splashed and speckled with
birdshit.
Spider got to his feet, and noticed, for the
first time, the geese. There were five of them, and they surrounded him, pecking
at him, honking and hissing, to ensure that he stayed in the centre of them. A
goose with its dander up and its neck down can cow a Doberman with a hiss, and
these were the geese of nightmares.
Spider smiled at
them.
Beneath the clever beaks of the crows the bone chains
were expertly reassembled. The geese began to lower their necks once more,
honking and hissing, pushing Spider back to where the chains were
waiting.
“Hey,” he said to the geese.”Just give me room to
breathe. I’m going back.Yeah?”
He turned where the chains
hung, waiting for him, he counted to three, and then he turned and swung himself
back toward the wall, where the sandhill crane had vanished. In the dim light he
lunged for one feather paler than the others, and he
hoped.
The wall became thin, almost translucent, and he
pushed through it triumphantly, with angry geese pecking at his heels, and
realised, as he did so, that he might have made a slight
mistake.
Somehow, he had assumed that the cell was deep in
the earth—that’s where people build cells, after all. But on the whole, birds
don’t burrow. The tree was enormous, higher than a giant redwood, and it was
filled with a rookery of nests, including, just above him, the nest from which
he had escaped. Below him approaching with the speed of an out-of-control sports
car, was the ground.
“Not a problem,” Spider told
himself.
Again he tried to shift his location, with no more
luck or success than before. Again he tried to change his shape—a little brown
spider would simply have flown away on the air currents. Nothing happened, only
the ground was rather closer.
Still, he thought, if he
couldn’t move and he couldn’t change, the odds were that whatever kind of a
place he was in, it wasn’t a real place. It was made of mind, not world. As long
as he was able to bear in mind that this was Maya, was illusion, he thought, he
would be fine. The cold air rushed past him. He spread his arms and his legs.The
cold air rushed past him.
And then he hit the ground. “It’s
not real,” he thought, as the air was knocked out of him, and, for a moment,
everything went dark.
Spider picked himself up. He hurt,
all over, but nothing seemed to be broken.
He wondered if
he had his own pocket universe somewhere, hung with webs and scuttling,
industrious, storytelling spiders. He did not know. He was not sure where to
look for it, if he did have one. His father would have known, of
course—
The sky was the colour of beaten copper, and the
earth was sandy and grey, and everything smelled of cinnamon and nutmeg.There
had to be a way out.That was obvious.Ways in, ways out. He picked a direction,
and did not run. Instead, he strolled, but he covered a lot of ground like that.
Spider strolled like some people zoomed.
There was a large
bird on a bush looking at him. The bird said, “Spider.You know you’re never
going to escape from here.”
Spider said, “I’ll bet you all
I own that I shall. And that you’ll show me how to get
away.”
Birds can’t smirk, they don’t have the equipment,
but this one almost managed it. “All you own?”
“Everything,
if you don’t show me the way out. So please, show me the way out of
here.”
“Never,” said the bird.
“Close
your eyes,” said Spider, “And count to ten. I promise that by the time you’ve
finished counting you’ll have pointed me to the way out of
here.”
The bird closed its eyes. “One,” it said. “Two.
Three. Four.”
With one twist, Spider broke its neck, and it
stopped counting. “Still, I wouldn’t want you to think me a liar,” said Spider
to the bird. He plucked it, and set the feathers to one side, then he made a
small fire in the earth, roasted and ate the meat, cleaned off the bones, and,
last of all, he cast the bones onto the sand.
They fell
higgledy-piggledy, every which way. Spider scooped them up again. “Remember,” he
said, “You can’t lie when you’re dead. “This time when he cast the bones they
pointed unequivocally in one direction.
“That’s what I
like,” said Spider. “Someone who honours his bets.”
He put
the bird’s feathers on, and walked to the top of a hill. Ahead of him was a tear
in the sky, a small rip in the coppery fabric of everything, and darkness
spilled through it, and behind the darkness stars were twinkling. Spider no
longer cared that it was uncool to run. Now he ran.
As he
reached the bottom of the hill, birds descended around
him.
“Stop!” they called.
He stopped.
“I’m a bird,” he told them. “Just like you.” Even in the Bird Woman’s universe,
he was certain that he had enough conviction to make the things he said true for
those that heard them.
“What manner of bird are you?” asked
a heron, puzzled. “An emu? An ostrich? A moa?”
“Yeah. Sure.
Something like that,” said Spider. “Hey, have any of you seen Spider anywhere? I
heard that he had escaped, and I was told to guard the way out of
here.”
“We’re looking for him too,” said an eagle. “Haven’t
seen him, though. Actually, we thought you might be him, when we saw you coming
towards us.”
“No, you didn’t,” said Spider. “You thought I
was just another bird.”
“Oh. Right. That was what we
thought,” agreed the heron.
“So. You lot all wait here, and
guard the way out,” said Spider. “And I’ll just put my head through there and
make sure that he hasn’t got here ahead of us.”
Spider
walked forward. He walked through the rip in the sky.
Ahead
of him he could see an island. He could see a small mountain in the centre of
the island. He could see a pure blue sky, and swaying palm trees, a white gull
high in the sky. But even as he saw it the world seemed to be receding. It was
as if he was looking at it through the wrong end of a telescope. It shrank and
slipped from him, and the more he ran towards it the further away it seemed to
get.
The island was a reflection in a puddle of water, and
then it was nothing at all.
He was in a cave.The edges of
things were crisp—crisper and sharper than anywhere that Spider had ever been
before. This was a different kind of place.The feather she had worn fell to the
rocky floor. He turned to the daylight.
She was standing in
the mouth of the cave, between him and the open air. She had stared into his
face in a Greek Restaurant in South London, and birds had come from her
mouth.
“You know,” said Spider, “I was just in your world.
And I have to say, you’ve got the strangest ideas about hospitality. You come to
my world, I’d make you dinner, open a bottle of wine, put on some soft music,
give you an evening you would never forget.”
Her face was
impassive; carved from black rock it was. The wind tugged at the edges of her
old brown coat. She spoke then, her voice high and distant as the wrenching call
of a distant gull.
“I took you,” she said. “Now, you will
call him.”
“Call him? Call who?”
“You
will bleat,” she said.” You will whimper. Your fear will excite
him.”
“Spider does not bleat,” he said. He was not certain
it was true.
Eyes as black and as shiny as chips of
obsidian stared back into his. They were eyes like black holes, letting nothing
out, not even information.
“If you kill me,” said Spider,
“my curse will be upon you.” He wondered if he actually had a curse. He probably
did.
“It will not be I that kills you,” she said. She
raised her hand, and it was not a hand but a raptor’s talon. She raked her talon
down his face, down his chest, her cruel claws sinking into his flesh, ripping
his skin.
It did not hurt, although Spider knew that it
would hurt soon enough.
Beads of blood crimsoned his chest
and dripped down his face. His eyes stung. His blood touched his lips. He could
taste it and smell the iron scent of it.
“Now,” she said in
the cries of distant birds. “Now your death begins.”
Spider
said, “We’re both reasonable entities. Let me present you with a perhaps rather
more feasible alternative scenario that might conceivably have benefits for both
of us.” He said it with an easy smile. He said it
convincingly.
“You talk too much,” she said. Then she
reached into his mouth with her sharp talons, and with one wrenching movement
she tore out his tongue.
“There,” she said. And then she
said, “Sleep.”
E-Book Extra Two
How Dare You?
by Neil Gaiman
Nobody’s asked the question
I’ve been dreading, so far, the question I have been hoping that no-one would
ask. So I’m going to ask it myself, and try to answer it
myself.
And the question is this: How dare
you?
Or, in its expanded form,
How
dare you, an Englishman, try and write a book about America, about American
myths and the American soul? How dare you try and write about what makes America
special, as a country, as a nation, as an idea?
And, being
English, my immediate impulse is to shrug my shoulders and promise it won’t
happen again.
But then, I did dare, in my novelAmerican
Gods , and it took an odd sort of hubris to write it.
As a
young man, I wrote a comic-book about dreams and stories called Sandman
(collected, and still in print, in ten graphic novels, and you should read it if
you haven’t). I got a similar question all the time, back then: “You live in
England. How can you set so much of this story in
America?”
And I would point out that, in media terms, the
UK was practically the 51st state. We get American films, watch American TV. “I
might not write a Seattle that would satisfy an inhabitant,” I used to say, “But
I’ll write one as good as a New Yorker who’s never been to
Seattle.”
I was, of course, wrong. I didn’t do that at all.
What I did instead was, in retrospect, much more interesting: I created an
America that was entirely imaginary, in which Sandman could take place. A
delirious, unlikely place out beyond the edge of the
real.
And that satisfied me until I came to live in America
about eight years ago.
Slowly I realised both that the
America I’d been writing was wholly fictional, and that the real America, the
one underneath the what-you-see-is-what-you-get surface, was much more
interesting than the fictions.
The immigrant experience is,
I suspect, a universal one (even if you’re the kind of immigrant, like me, who
holds on tightly, almost superstitiously, to his UK citizenship). On the one
hand, there’s you, and on the other hand, there’s America. It’s bigger than you
are. So you try and make sense of it.You try to figure it out—something which it
resists. It’s big enough, and contains enough contradictions, that it is
perfectly happy not to be figured out.As a writer, all I could do was to
describe a small part of the whole.
And it was too big to
see.
I didn’t really know what kind of book I wanted to
write until, in the summer of 1998, I found myself in Reykjavik, in Iceland. And
it was then that fragments of plot, an unwieldy assortment of characters, and
something faintly resembling a structure, came together in my head. Either way,
the book came into focus. It would be a thriller, and a murder mystery, and a
romance, and a road trip. It would be about the immigrant experience, about what
people believed in when they came to America. And about what happened to the
things that they believed.
I wanted to write about America
as a mythic place.
And I decided that, although there were
many things in the novel I knew already, there were more I could find by going
on the road and seeing what I found. So I drove, until I found a place to write,
and then, in one place after another, sometimes at home, sometimes not, for
nearly two years, I put one word after another, until I had a book. The story of
a man called Shadow and the job he is offered when he gets out of prison. It
tells the story of a small Midwestern town and the disappearances that occur
there every winter. I discovered, as I wrote it, why roadside attractions are
the most sacred places in America. I discovered many other strange by-ways and
moments, scary and delightful and just plain weird.
When it
was almost done, when all that remained was to pull together all the diverse
strands, I left the country again, holed up in a huge, cold, old house in
Ireland, and typed all that was left to type, shivering, beside a peat
fire.
And then the book was done, and I stopped. Looking
back on it, it wasn’t really that I’d dared, rather that I had had no
choice.
© 2005 Neil Gaiman
E-Book Extra Three
Where Do You Get Your Ideas?
by Neil Gaiman
Every profession has its
pitfalls. Doctors, for example, are always being asked for free medical advice,
lawyers are asked for legal information, morticians are told how interesting a
profession that must be and then people change the subject fast. And writers are
asked where we get our ideas from.
In the beginning, I used
to tell people the not very funny answers, the flip ones: “From the
Idea-of-the-Month Club,” I’d say, or “From a little ideas shop in Bognor Regis,”
“From a dusty old book full of ideas in my basement,” or even “From Pete
Atkins.” (The last is slightly esoteric, and may need a little explanation. Pete
Atkins is a screenwriter and novelist friend of mine, and we decided a while ago
that when asked, I would say that I got them from him, and he’d say he got them
from me. It seemed to make sense at the time.)
Then I got
tired of the not very funny answers, and these days I tell people the
truth:
“I make them up,” I tell them. “Out of my
head.”
People don’t like this answer. I don’t know why
not.They look unhappy, as if I’m trying to slip a fast one past them. As if
there’s a huge secret, and, for reasons of my own, I’m not telling them how it’s
done.
And of course I’m not. Firstly, I don’t know myself
where the ideas really come from, what makes them come, or whether one day
they’ll stop. Secondly, I doubt anyone who asks really wants a three hour
lecture on the creative process. And thirdly, the ideas aren’t that important.
Really they aren’t. Everyone’s got an idea for a book, a movie, a story, a TV
series.
Every published writer has had it—the people who
come up to you and tell you that they’ve Got An Idea. And boy, is it a Doozy.
It’s such a Doozy that they want to Cut You In On It.The proposal is always the
same—they’ll tell you the Idea (the hard bit), you write it down and turn it
into a novel (the easy bit), the two of you can split the money
fifty-fifty.
I’m reasonably gracious with these people. I
tell them, truly, that I have far too many ideas for things as it is, and far
too little time. And I wish them the best of luck.
The
Ideas aren’t the hard bit. They’re a small component of the whole. Creating
believable people who do more or less what you tell them to is much harder.And
hardest by far is the process of simply sitting down and putting one word after
another to construct whatever it is you’re trying to build: making it
interesting, making it new.
But still, it’s the question
people want to know. In my case, they also want to know if I get them from my
dreams. (Answer: no. Dream logic isn’t story logic. Transcribe a dream, and
you’ll see. Or better yet, tell someone an important dream—“Well, I was in this
house that was also my old school, and there was this nurse and she was really
an old witch and then she went away but there was a leaf and I couldn’t look at
it and I knew if I touched it then something dreadful would happen—“—and watch
their eyes glaze over.) And I don’t give straight answers. Until
recently.
My daughter Holly, who is seven years of age,
persuaded me to come in to give a talk to her class. Her teacher was really
enthusiastic (“The children have all been making their own books recently, so
perhaps you could come along and tell them about being a professional writer.And
lots of little stories.They like the stories.”) and in I
came.
They sat on the floor, I had a chair, fifty
seven-year-old-eyes gazed up at me. “When I was your age, people told me not to
make things up,” I told them. “These days, they give me money for it.” For
twenty minutes I talked, then they asked questions.
And
eventually one of them asked it.
“Where do you get your
ideas?”
And I realized I owed them an answer. They weren’t
old enough to know any better. And it’s a perfectly reasonable question, if you
aren’t asked it weekly.
This is what I told
them:
You get ideas from daydreaming. You get ideas from
being bored. You get ideas all the time. The only difference between writers and
other people is we notice when we’re doing it.
You get
ideas when you ask yourself simple questions. The most important of the
questions is just, What if—?
(What if you woke up
with wings? What if your sister turned into a mouse? What if you all found out
that your teacher was planning to eat one of you at the end of term—but you
didn’t know who?)
Another important question is, If
only—
(If only real life was like it is in Hollywood
musicals. If only I could shrink myself small as a button. If only a ghost would
do my homework.)
And then there are the others: I
wonder—(“I wonder what she does when she’s alone—“) and If This Goes On—(“If
this goes on telephones are going to start talking to each other, and cut out
the middleman—“) and Wouldn’t it be interesting if—(“Wouldn’t it be interesting
if the world used to be ruled by cats?”)—
Those questions,
and others like them, and the questions they, in their turn, pose (“Well, if
cats used to rule the world, why don’t they any more? And how do they feel about
that?”) are one of the places ideas come from.
An idea
doesn’t have to be a plot notion, just a place to begin creating. Plots often
generate themselves when one begins to ask oneself questions about whatever the
starting point is.
Sometimes an idea is a person (“There’s
a boy who wants to know about magic”). Sometimes it’s a place (“There’s a castle
at the end of time, which is the only place there is—”). Sometimes it’s an image
(“A woman, sifting in a dark room filled with empty
faces.”)
Often ideas come from two things coming together
that haven’t come together before. (“If a person bitten by a werewolf turns into
a wolf what would happen if a goldfish was bitten by a werewolf? What would
happen if a chair was bitten by a were- wolf?”)
All fiction
is a process of imagining: whatever you write, in whatever genre or medium, your
task is to make things up convincingly and interestingly and
new.
And when you’ve an idea—which is, after all, merely
something to hold on to as you begin—what then?
Well, then
you write. You put one word after another until it’s finished—whatever it
is.
Sometimes it won’t work, or not in the way you first
imagined. Sometimes it doesn’t work at all. Sometimes you throw it out and start
again.
I remember, some years ago, coming up with a perfect
idea for a Sandman story. It was about a succubus who gave writers and artists
and songwriters ideas in exchange for some of their lives. I called it “Sex and
Violets.”
It seemed a straightforward story, and it was
only when I came to write it I discovered it was like trying to hold fine sand:
every time I thought I’d got hold of it, it would trickle through my fingers and
vanish.
I wrote at the time:
I’ve
started this story twice, now, and got about half-way through it each time, only
to watch it die on the screen.
Sandman is, occasionally, a
horror comic. But nothing I’ve written for it has ever gotten under my skin like
this story I’m now going to have to wind up abandoning (with the deadline
already a thing of the past). Probably because it cuts so close to home. It’s
the ideas—and the ability to put them down on paper, and turn them into
stories—that make me a writer. That mean I don’t have to get up early in the
morning and sit on a train with people I don’t know, going to a job I
despise.
My idea of hell is a blank sheet of paper. Or a
blank screen. And me, staring at it, unable to think of a single thing worth
saying, a single character that people could believe in, a single story that
hasn’t been told before.
Staring at a blank sheet of
paper.
Forever.
I wrote my way out of
it, though. I got desperate (that’s another flip and true answer I give to the
where-do-you-get-your- ideas question. “Desperation.” It’s up there with
“Boredom” and “Deadlines”. All these answers are true to a point.) and took my
own terror, and the core idea, and crafted a story called Calliope, which
explains, I think pretty definitively, where writers get their ideas from. It’s
in a book called DREAM COUNTRY. You can read it if you like. And,
somewhere in the writing of that story, I stopped being scared of the ideas
going away.
Where do I get my ideas
from?
I make them up.
Out of my
head.
© 2005 Neil Gaiman
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1
Several years earlier Spider had actually been
tremendously disappointed by a barrelful of monkeys. It had done nothing he had
considered particularly entertaining, apart from emit interesting noises, and
eventually, once the noises had stopped and the monkeys were no longer doing
anything at all—except possibly on an organic level—had needed to be disposed of
in the dead of night.
2
The ship had been the Sunny Archipelago until an
attack of gastric flu had made international news. A cheap attempt to rebrand it
without changing the ship’s initials done by the chairman of the board, who did
not speak English as well as he believed he did, had left the cruise ship
rejoicing in the name of the Squeak Attack.