Authors: Yelena Kopylova
here for life. Well, why not... ? He turned, and the words became an audible mutter now as he
repeated, ”Why not? With what’s looming up, why not?” He wasn’t blind, he wasn’t a fool of a
man. No? Wasn’t he? Why not indeed? There was just one reason why not and he knew it only
too well, as he also knew he’d better get rid of any thoughts regarding an alternative, because
Mrs Hilda Maxwell wasn’t that kind of a woman. Now if it had been Florrie. . . .
He dragged on his overcoat, picked up his soft felt hat, and went downstairs. As he opened the
bottom door the wind wrenched it from his hand and as he went to grab it with one hand he flung
out his other arm and caught hold of Florrie, where she was staggering back from the impact of
the door. Only in time he caught her and prevented her from falling, and as he held her he
shouted above the wind. ”I’m sorry; the door sprang out of my hand.”
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”It’s all right. It’s all right” - she was laughing as she pulled her hat straight on her head - ”it was my fault; I was hugging the wall.”
He was still steadying her when he shouted, ”She’s out. . . Hilda. She’s at the cemetery. But let
yourself in. She leaves the key on top of the wooden stanchion of the door.” He pointed, then
added on a laugh, ”First place a burglar would look.”
He didn’t loosen his hold on her but led her towards the door, and it was he who took the key
from its hiding place and opened the door, and not until he was inside and the door closed did his
hand leave her arm.
Both hands free now, she lifted them upwards and took off her hat, saying, ”I must look a right
mess. And trust me to wear a hat with a brim as big as this, on a day like this an’ all.” She
fluttered the hat in her hand as she added, ”But it goes with the suit.”
He stood a little way back from her now and looked her up and down before saying, ”It’s a lovely
suit, a lovely rig-out altogether. With your taste you couldn’t have gone in for anything else but
clothes; no, you couldn’t.”
He had discovered some weeks ago that she dealt in clothes, and not just ordinary clothes, club
clothes, or those to be found hanging in lines in the big stores. Hers were the exclusive Yvonne
models, sold in a small exclusive shop in a side street at the bottom of Brampton Hill.
He was taking a short cut one day when bringing in a car for repairs and he had drawn the car up
sharply on the sight of her locking the shop door - it was natural to offer her a lift home and
when she was seated beside him he said, ”So you work there ?”
”Yes, you could say that.”
”That sounds like a yes and no answer.”
”Well, I do work there, but it’s my shop.”
”Yours!”
”Yes. Look where you’re going!” she had said quickly as he turned towards her. ”Why be so
surprised? Why shouldn’t I have a shop like that ?”
”No ... no reason whatever I suppose, only I’ve heard it referred to as the most exclusive shop in
Fellburn. I’ve often wondered how it kept going, who the people are who have the money to
buy . . . well, your kind of clothes.”
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f
”You’d be surprised.” .
”Yes, I suppose I would.” : :
He said now, ”What is the material, corduroy?”
”Corduroy velvet.”
”It’s beautiful”
He was looking into her face. She was beautiful too. He had imagined her face as being just
interesting but now it was beautiful; her skin had picked up a glow from the reddish brown of the
material.
He blinked rapidly now as he asked, ”How is your father getting along?”
”Oh, he’s much better. He’s on his feet again and bawling like a bull, so he’s all right. I got him
into a new suit yesterday. Aw” she turned her head to the side - ”Aw, you never saw anything
like it. The poor man in the shop, it’s a good job he knew me else he would have thrown him out.
Dad said he’d come round here with me today just to show Hilda.” She poked her head forward
ntid made a moue with her lips. ”You know what he yelled out in the shop?”
He shook his head as he smiled widely at her.
” ’The next bloody thing you’ll have me in is nancy knickers, bloody plus-fours.’ I know I have a
tough hide but oh, was I glad when I got him outside.” She was bending towards him now, her
hand on her mouth as she laughed and his laugh was joining hers, deep and free, as he pictured
the old fellow being true to type, when the door burst open, seemingly they thought with the
wind, because they both turned swiftly and their shoulders touched; but there, her face
expressing her feelings, stood Hilda.
”How did you get in here ?” She was leaning against the door now staring at her sister, but it was
Abel who answered her, saying quickly, ”I told her where the key was, I opened the door.”
”Then you had no right to. What right have you anyway to come in here when I’m not about?
And you!” She pulled herself from the door and it looked for a moment as if she were going to
extend her arm either to strike or to punch Florrie, but instead she pointed at her. ”You knowl go
to the cemetery every Sunday. You picked your time, didn’t you? Oh, I know what you’re after.”
Florrie didn’t answer, but for a moment she seemed to grow taller; her face from being pink-hued
was now deathly white; and it was she who thrust out her arm now and, pushing her sister
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from the door, opened it and walked slowly out.
As Abel stood looking down into Hilda’s tight-drawn face he thought for the moment he was in
the cottage facing Lena again in the throes of one of their frequent battles, and his voice sounded
as if he was really dealing with his wife when he cried, ”You want to be careful, you can go so
far. . . .”
”Don’t tell me how far I can go, Mr Gray.” She walked round ’ him, then sidewards to the table,
keeping her eyes on him all the time, and there she tore off her black velour hat and flung it on to a chair as she used his very words:
”You
want to be careful,j/«w’// go too far.” Then leaning across the table towards him, she cried, ”You know nothing about it; you know nothing about
her. She’s bad, she’s man mad. Always has been. She breaks up homes. You think she’s nice,
funny, amusing to be with; the wives of the men she takes don’t think that, let me tell you. The
one who’s running her now is married with four children, and he’s lasted the longest, six years.
Just think, Mr Gray, just think what the wives must feel. And you say
I
go too far. Oh, I know what she’s up to, and if you had any sense you’d see it an’ all. Oooh!” She let out a long- ”
drawn sigh and her fury seemed to seep away with her escaping breath as she sank down into a
chair and dropped her head into her hand. She was quiet for a moment; then more to herself than
to him she said, ’ ’All my life I’ve been plagued with her, plagued that’s the word, and he’s taken
her part against me. But then, of course, he would, she’s a kept woman and she keeps him mostly
out of it, so of course he would take her part. It’s natural, isn’t it ?”
She seemed to have forgotten his presence until he said quietly, ”I’m going for a walk.” He had
opened the door and had one foot in the yard when she called softly, ”Abel. Abel, don’t go.”
He took no heed of the plea in her voice but closed the door before going quickly across the yard,
out into the road, past the gates, and into the open country.
He must have walked for two hours, by which time he had circled the outskirts of the town, come
through Bog’s End, through the deserted market place, up by the equally deserted park, and was
now approaching Brampton Hill itself.
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As he struggled up the incline, the force of the wind caused him to lower his head into his chest.
If anything, the wind had increased and he knew it wouldn’t let up until the rain started, and the
low, dark sky promised this at any moment. He was within ten minutes’ walk of the house but he
didn’t want to go back there, at least not until there was a chance of his getting up to his rooms
without her spotting him, and the light was good for another hour yet.
When he came to a stop at the big iron gates of number 46 he questioned himself if it had been
his intention from the beginning to make for here, and the answer gabbled in his mind, God no !
for he’d had enough for one day. He didn’t want to hear anything more from either of them.
Why did he get himself entangled in these situations ? Ever since first setting out on the road it
had been the same. No, no ; he had to be honest about it, the entanglement had started with Alice;
before that he had been just a married man, a bored, frustrated, unhappy man. But he was still a
married man, he must remember that, the only difference now was he was no longer bored or
frustrated. . . . Aw, hold your hand a minute. He jerked his shoulders and nodded his head at the
thought that had taken on shape, and he answered it, If I’m not frustrated then what is it that’s
eating me ? Why am I here ? Come on, why am I here ? The reply was a little while in coming, it
came as he was walking along the gravel drive: If she’s had so many one more won’t make much
difference.
As he walked around the side of the house towards the french windows the wind met him with
renewed force and, as he approached the windows, it seemed to be filled with voices. It was these
voices which brought him to a stop before he actually reached the door. The drawing-room he
saw was lighted and she was standwith her back to him ; and not a yard from the door and to the
side, holding on to one of the partially open french windows with both hands, was her father, and
he was yelling at her, ”You tell her an’ as God’s me judge I’ll never speak to you again as long as
I live. Do you hear? I’ll never open me lips to you. You breathe one word of it, one word . . .I’m
warnin’ you!”
”You can warn me all you like” - Florrie’s voice was as high as his now - ”you can threaten all
you like. You’ve done it since I can remember anything. Well, I’m telling you, Dad, and I mean
it, just one more insulting remark from her and she’ll get it, in one
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mouthful she’ll get it. You’re a bastard! I’ll say.
ïnfyery
sense of the word you’re a bastard.”
There was a pause during which only the voice of the gusting wind came to him; then he could
just make out Mr Donnelly’s words as he said, ”You wouldn’t, Florrie, you wouldn’t do that.”
”I would, Dad. Get this into your head, I would, and I will. I’ve stood enough. You’ve always
said yourself there’s nobody either black or white, but all shades of grey. Well, she’s made me
out to be deep black, pitch black. She tells people I’m bad, rotten. I know what I am, nobody
better, but I’m not what she makes me out to be. And that man today was given the impression I
was the lowest of the low. And you know why ?”
He saw her now thrust her hand out and place it above her father’s and bang the door closed, and
he strained his ears to listen but no sound came from the room. He could see her face now, her
profile contorted with anger; and her father’s face, his eyebrows raised, his hand napping as if
dismissing what she was saying.
He was actually hesitating whether to step forward or to go back when the decision was made for
him by a slate hurtling down from the roof and missing him by inches before crashing on to the
terrace to the side of him.
The french window was now open; Fred Donnelly was standing on the step looking at him and
shouting, ”What the hell do you want here?”
”Nothing.” The answer sounded inane even to himself.
”Well, I hope you bloody well find it. It’s a pity it missed you,” he said, looking down on the
splintered slate; then he marched away along by the side of the house.
”Come in; I want to close the door.” She was gasping as if she had been fighting against the
wind.
He paused a moment before stepping into the room, and when she closed the doors behind her
the peace, the warmth and the silence enveloped him so quickly and to such an extent that for the
moment he felt weak and slightly stupid as if the tile actually had hit him.
That was until she demanded, ”How long have you been standing there ?”
”I ... I couldn’t say.”
She turned from him, then put her doubled fist to her mouth and closed her eyes before walking
towards the fire. There she
no
thrust out her hands towards it as if she were seeking warmth, and now she asked flatly, ”Why
had you to come here at this time?”
”I don’t know.”
She swung round and faced him, shouting at him now, ”Don’t say that! That’s what they . . .”
She stopped abruptly and once more her doubled fist was pressed against her mouth. Nor did he
move from where he was as he said, ”Why don’t you finish, that’s what they all say?”
But his face screwed up in protest as she screamed at him. ”Yes ! that’s what they all say, all
three of them.”
Her voice had been so loud and so high that he looked quickly towards the door, then upwards.
”Don’t worry,” she cried; ”this is an old house, the walls are thick, and this flat is detached,
there’s only a cellar below. I can shout as much as I like. In any case if we were right in the
middle of the hall I’d still shout. And now I’m going to tell you something so we can get it
straight. I am thirtytwo years old; there have been three men in my life; the last one has lasted for six years.
I am not a prostitute,”