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Authors: Caro Fraser

Tags: #Fiction, #Literary

A Hallowed Place (26 page)

BOOK: A Hallowed Place
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‘Joshua, this doesn’t have to happen,’ he said at last, trying to keep his voice calm. ‘I overreacted last time. I can see that. But since you left it’s been unspeakable. I can’t work, I can’t sleep—’

‘I’m sorry, Leo. I really am.’ Joshua stuffed odds and ends into the rucksack, then straightened up. The expression on his face was one of genuine regret and Leo felt a faint hope, until Joshua went on, ‘But the fact is, the whole set-up is
false. I’ve been feeling like a real hypocrite these past couple of weeks. You want something from me that I can’t give you. And the longer it goes on, me taking things from you, presents and money and everything, the worse it will be in the end. I’ve thought it all out. I don’t want to belong to anybody.’

He moved towards the door, then stopped when he saw that Leo did not intend to move.

‘Please, Joshua,’ said Leo, ‘it doesn’t have to be that way. I want you to have freedom. I do. We can arrange it any way you like. Everything on your terms. I don’t care. I just can’t bear you to go. I love you, damn it.’ Leo’s voice cracked on these last words, and he felt all the weakness and unhappiness of his desperation rise to the surface in tears.

Joshua shook his head. ‘That’s it, you see, Leo. I really like you. I do, honestly. You’ve been great to me, and we’ve had some good times. I don’t want you to think I’m not fond of you. But—’ He stopped and searched for words. ‘But it was never going anywhere. Not where you wanted it to.’ He put out a hand to the doorknob. ‘Look, I’ve got to go. Please.’

Leo stepped away from the door and, as Joshua opened it he swallowed hard, regaining control of himself. ‘Joshua, just listen. I don’t care if it has no future. I just need you to stay now. Just until these people have gone. I have things to say to you.’ Joshua shook his head and went into the hallway with his rucksack. Leo’s voice rose as he went after him, heedless of the couple in the drawing room. ‘I have important things to say! You can’t
just go like this, without giving me some kind of chance!’

At that moment Mrs Jenkins opened the drawing room door and looked out. She still wore a smile, a tentative one. ‘Mr Davies, do you think we—’

Leo turned to her in rage, tears reddening his eyes. ‘Will you damn well shut up? I have something to sort out here!’ He turned back to Joshua. ‘Joshua, wait - leave me a number or something. This isn’t the right time, I know, but we can talk later.’

Joshua turned round, glanced in embarrassment at Mrs Jenkins and Mr Purser standing in the doorway, and looked directly at Leo. ‘There’s no point. I’m sorry if I picked a bad time. I just needed my things.’ He moved to the front door, Leo following him.

‘Joshua!’ Leo’s voice was anguished, desperate. ‘Joshua, for God’s sake wait!’ He tried to catch the sleeve of Joshua’s jacket as Joshua opened the door, but Joshua shook him off again, went out quickly and closed the door behind him, while Leo called after him, ‘Please! Please! Joshua, I love you! Oh, God …’

Leo turned away from the door and went down the hall and into the kitchen, ignoring the two figures in the doorway of the drawing room. He closed the kitchen door, leant over the sink and took several deep breaths, blinking away his tears. Then he splashed his face with water and dried it. The emotional outburst of the last few minutes had left him spent, shaking. He began to realise the implications of what he had just done. Those two people had witnessed everything, could draw only one conclusion. Taking a minute or two to collect himself, Leo went back through to
the drawing room to salvage what he could of the situation.

Mrs Jenkins and Mr Purser were now by the window, talking in low voices. They had clearly gone over there to watch Joshua’s departure. They stopped talking as Leo came into the room. Then Mrs Jenkins, clutching her clipboard against her anorak, came across the room, her smile quite gone now.

Before Leo could say anything, she spoke. Her voice was quiet and regretful. ‘Mr Davies, you know that the purpose of this visit here today is to ascertain that this would be a fit and proper place for your son to stay on a regular basis. We all have domestic upsets in our lives - believe me, I do appreciate that. Nobody’s perfect. But what you must understand is that your wife - your ex-wife, I should say - did raise certain questions regarding your lifestyle when we went to see her.’ Mrs Jenkins paused, plainly a little embarrassed. ‘She mentioned, for instance, that you regularly entertain young men and she is concerned that this might create circumstances where the environment is not one in which she would be happy for Oliver to stay. You understand my meaning?’

Leo turned away. He went over to a silver box lying on a table and took out a small cigar. He felt drained, dead. Nothing mattered. He lit the cigar and blew out the smoke. ‘What you mean is that the unfortunate little scene which you witnessed a few moments ago has reinforced your prejudices.’ His voice was flat.

‘Now, Mr Davies, I don’t like it when you use that word. This has nothing to do with your sexual orientation. It’s not our policy to let matters of that kind influence our thinking.
What we’re concerned with is a stable, calm environment for your son.’

Leo lifted his head and looked her in the eye. ‘I love my son. My emotional life is a bit of a mess. I accept that. But I would never let him it harm him, or touch him. You have to believe that. It has to be kept separate.’ Mrs Jenkins let out a little sigh, dropped her eyes and said nothing. ‘You have to write up your report. Fine. You have to say what you saw. But please accept that if Oliver came to stay with me, I would make sure that everything was as peaceful and stable as anyone could want.’

There was a silence, then Mrs Jenkins, her tentative smile returning, said, ‘I think we’ve seen everything we need to. We’ll make out our report and submit it to the court in due course. Thank you for your time.’

She and the silent Mr Purser left the room, Leo following them. He saw them out without a word, then went back into the drawing room and picked up his cigar from the ashtray. It was as though his mind and body were entirely devoid of life. He had never felt emptier. He looked at his watch and saw that it was half past three. The idea of going back to chambers was beyond him. He poured himself a large drink, sat down and finished his cigar. The afternoon light outside faded to early dusk, and Leo carried on drinking, letting his unhappy thoughts chase themselves more and more slowly round his mind as the whisky took hold. He kept on playing out a little fantasy in which Joshua came back, regretting what had happened and telling Leo that he had been right, and that he loved him and would stay. Even though he knew that all hope was now utterly gone,
dead, he let the fantasy thread through his mind, filling the silence with imagined words, until at last he was sitting in complete darkness, with his bottle and his glass.

Later that evening, Camilla and Anthony were sprawled comfortably together on the sofa in Anthony’s flat, Camilla’s legs resting across Anthony’s lap. The remains of a meal lay scattered on the coffee table.

Anthony yawned, then put out a hand to stroke Camilla’s hair. ‘Shall I put on some music? It seems dreadfully quiet.’

Camilla sipped her wine and studied him curiously. ‘That’s something I’ve noticed about you since I got back.’

‘What?’

‘This sudden need to fill silences. When you’re not talking non-stop, you’re doing something else to compensate.’ She gave a little smile.

‘I just thought it would be nice to have some music, that’s all.’ Anthony moved her legs gently aside and got up. He went over to the CD player and absently flipped through the discs. Had he been behaving differently since she’d got back? Certainly the knowledge of what he had done seemed to be constantly with him, colouring everything he did and said.

He slipped in a CD and glanced back to where Camilla lay on the sofa. He felt an urgent need to bridge the distance which his own guilt seemed to have created. The smooth balance of perfect trust and affection which had existed before she went away had been destroyed. It was something he had never contemplated in those lost, erotic nights spent with Sarah. Not that he had contemplated much beyond
the satisfaction of his own lust. Perhaps the only way to destroy the feeling was to stifle it, smother it, by bringing Camilla closer to him, so that then it wouldn’t matter.

He went back and sat down, drawing Camilla’s legs on to his lap again and stroking her feet. ‘Did you do any thinking while you were away?’

‘Thinking? What about?’

‘Us. You moving in here.’

Camilla set her glass down on the low table, as though preparing for something. ‘I suppose so. I mean, I suppose I thought about it a bit. But everything I said before I went away still stands, Anthony. I want to find somewhere of my own. We see so much of one another in chambers, I think it’s important that we have our own space.’

‘To do what? What are you going to do with this new space? See other people?’ He felt detached, wondering at his own brusqueness.

Camilla looked at him in amazement. ‘What makes you say that?’ She reached out a hand and touched his face. ‘I’m so lucky. We have something so special. But you must remember what it was like when you first got started. You have a feeling of independence. You want a place of your very own, a life that doesn’t belong to other people.’

‘In other words, what we have may be special, but it’s just not special enough. Look, you say you want independence. What can that mean, if it doesn’t mean that you want to put distance between us? I don’t understand.’

Camilla gave a little laugh of exasperation and took her hand away. ‘Anthony, are you being deliberately obtuse? If you want to talk about distance, well, ever since I got back
you’ve been—’ She hesitated. ‘You’ve been odd. Like there’s something on your mind.’ There was a silence as they gazed at one another. ‘Is there?’

Anthony felt vulnerable, confused. He wanted so badly to make everything whole again, to put it back the way it had been. He told himself that he loved Camilla. With her he felt a completeness, a sense of safety and warmth. But even at this moment he knew that he could think about Sarah, the things they had done, the smoky sound of her laugh and the touch of her fingers, and feel longing. If, in one brief absence from Camilla, he could give in so easily to the idle temptation of someone like Sarah, what might happen in the future? Perhaps he wanted Camilla to move in so that it would lessen the risk of anything like it happening again. Loving her as he did, he couldn’t even trust himself with other women. Miserably he leant his head back, sighing, and closed his eyes.

Should he tell her? The thought swam around in his mind in lazy circles with the music. If he did, then the weight of guilt and the fear of her finding out would all be lifted. He could tell her how sorry he was, make amends … No, he couldn’t tell her. Nothing was that simple. To know he had betrayed her trust while she was away would hurt her so much that it would badly damage things, if not destroy them. He would just have to let it be, hope that things would adjust, that his guilt would lessen.

He opened his eyes and looked at her. ‘No, there’s nothing on my mind. I just wish you’d think again about being with me.’

‘I’ve done enough thinking. Let’s just leave it, shall we?’
replied Camilla gently. ‘Don’t spoil the evening.’ And she leant forward to kiss him.

Leo woke on Monday morning a little before nine. He had, at first, no sense of its being morning, or indeed any particular day. He was conscious only of grey light from the window. The curtains were open. It was only the angle of the light which gradually brought home a rough realisation of what time of day it must be. He could hardly move his head from the pillow. A pressure like a tight band of steel bound fast against his skull enveloped it. Not pain, but a remorseless tightening sensation. His limbs felt cold and his tongue seemed to have swollen to the roof of his mouth. Shivering, he put out a hand and drew the duvet up around him, realising as he did so that he was still partially dressed, having managed to divest himself only of his trousers the night before.

The night before. He could remember little of it, except as a dark, empty remnant, the end of a grey day spent drinking himself back into oblivion. Saturday? Saturday came back to him in very gradual, crepuscular recollections. He had a memory of being in Earl’s Court, looking for Joshua, walking round the streets. How had he got there? He must have been drunk then, or somewhat, though he had no recollections of anything he had done on Saturday morning. He couldn’t even recall waking up. He must have gone by train, though again he recalled nothing of the journey. He remembered going back, though, on the tube, and going to the off-licence to buy more whisky. Then nothing. Back to Sunday, grey and lost.

He put up a hand to his chin and felt the three day stubble. He had, he realised, been on what was known as a bender. Never in his life had he done such a thing. Perhaps he was lucky he could remember anything at all. As though seeing himself through several layers of smoky glass, he remembered dimly that his sole aim and preoccupation for the past two days had been to stay in a state of partial oblivion. Well, he had succeeded and this was the result. Jesus Christ … He drew his knees up almost to his chin and lay there, curled up, stiff with self-hatred and disgust, his face screwed as though to shut out the thought of himself. Moisture seeped between his eyelids, not so much tears as a rheumy, exhausted watering. He could smell the rank scent of whisky from his very pores. It came very slowly and dimly to him that it was the start of the week. He tried to grasp hold of this, to gain some sense of the day’s significance. To do this, he had to put himself back to Friday and work through it from the very beginning.

Realisation, clarity, came to him with pain, a sudden, throbbing bolt of pain that seemed to lance his brain. If this was Monday morning, he had a hearing at ten o’clock in the High Court. The ship repair case. He turned to look at the clock and saw, thankfully, that he had an hour in hand. Then, as he heaved himself out of bed and put his bare feet on the floor, Leo realised with a thrill of horror that he hadn’t put in his skeleton argument. Of all procedural oversights, this was one of the most unpardonable. He showered, shaved and dressed in a kind of hideous, waking dream. His cuff-links were impossible. His hands shook so violently that he couldn’t begin to thread the links through.
With a curse, he went through to the drawing room. The whisky bottle, uncapped, stood on the mantelpiece. Leo lifted it to his mouth and took two swift swallows, then sat down in a chair, closing his eyes. After a few minutes he held out his hands. They still trembled, but only slightly. He went back to his room and managed to fumble the
cuff-links
in and knot his tie.

BOOK: A Hallowed Place
11.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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