Authors: Lesley Glaister
âBut . . . remember what you promised when I was in hospital?' she said. Mother Clanger's eyes were bright and blank. âWhen you made me that' â she nodded at the toy â âit was the kindest thing ever. I think it was the kindest thing anyone ever did for me in my life.'
âNo,' I said. âAunt Regina was always kind.
Much
kinder than me.'
âBut it came naturally to her, so it was different.'
I stared.
âAnyway, when I told you I wanted to die, you were maybe right to say no â then. I was young. I could have been wrong. But I wasn't wrong, Mel; I've never wanted anything more than to die. Bringing up the children â it was like something I had to do before I went. And having Seth â well, maybe I said yes to put off the moment. Maybe that was the real reason. But now Dodie's all grown up with her own life. You're taking Seth away. And there's not even Aunt Regina or Derek to be upset.'
My mouth had gone dry. âBut there's
me
,' I said. âThere's your kids.'
She let this go.
âStella, you've still got years ahead, you could . . .' I tried to think of things that she could do, but she smiled and shook her head.
âDon't bother, Mel. You want Seth's passport; you keep your promise.'
âNo.'
âYou'll never get him out of the country without it.'
âI don't care that much.'
âBut Adam does.' She paused. âYou will look after Seth, won't you?'
âOf course I will.'
Stella was perfectly composed, Dodie; she was perfectly clear and determined: it's important you believe that. She opened a drawer, took out a pair of pop socks and rolled them onto her feet and up her shins. âIf you ever had any love for me, you'll keep your promise.' She held my eyes until I had to look away. I could see the two of us in the dressing table mirror, my hair cropped, hers long; my face wide, hers narrow; her eyes huge and grey, mine small and blue; every feature different but there was still something the same about us, I saw for the first time ever; something that showed that we were sisters.
âIf you want to kill yourself, why do you need me?' I asked. My voice was husky and I cleared my throat. âWhy don't you just get on and do it?'
âBecause I don't want to be alone and you're my only person.'
A bird thudded against the window and Stella and I both let out a shriek. I got up, opened the window, and leaned out to see a blackbird flapping about on its side on the grass. âI think it's broken its wing,' I said. But then it righted itself, hopped about and flew up into the laburnum, swaddled in its puffed-up feathers.
âWhat if it doesn't work?' she said. âI'm scared of that, Mel. Of hanging there. I do want it to be quick. I need you to make sure it's quick.'
I sat down again. The mattress was trembling.
âIf I helped you,' I said, and my voice came scraping out, âthen it might look like murder. I might end up in jail.' I stared at her face to try and read whether this was her intention, but she was grave and organized and I don't believe that was her plan.
âWe can clean all the door handles and everything you've touched so there are no fingerprints,' she said. From the
way she spoke it was obvious she had this all planned out to the last detail. âAnd scrub the teacups. Then you can wear rubber gloves and take them with you. My fingerprints will be all over everything. I'll write a note, all Bony Fido.' The corners of her mouth went up, acknowledging the joke â it was what Derek had called one of Aunt Regina's pugs. âThey'll believe it, with my history of depression and that. You wait till you know it's worked and then you can take Seth's passport â I'll tell you where it is just before â and then you just go. You can be out of the country before I'm found.'
We sat for a moment and then I was moving close to her and putting my arms around her. She was brittle and thin and smelled of shampoo and the old musky, incense-scented velvet. Even though we were two middle-aged women, she was still my little sister and I held her tight.
âDo you really want it?' I said.
âIt's
all
I want. It's time.'
We sat and rocked for a while.
âI would love to have seen Dodie.' I couldn't help saying that, but she pulled out of my arms and stood up. I could see her struggling for a moment, emotions flocking across her face, and then she caught sight of herself in the mirror, laughed and did a clumsy twirl. âI've been saving this dress for years.' She smoothed the velvet against her thighs. âI wore it to your wedding, remember?'
I nodded.
âIt's lasted very well,' she said. âOnly a little moth-hole here and there.'
She sent me down to begin the task of cleaning the banister, the door handles, the cups, and came down with her hair brushed, reeking of fresh patchouli. I wore her yellow rubber gloves and she worked with bare hands. All the time we were cleaning, in such a strange companionable silence, I didn't think that it would really happen. I didn't think I could really stand by and let her do it.
She wrote a note on the paper bag she planned to put over her head so I didn't have to see her dead or dying
face. I was thinking I'd wait until she told me where Seth's passport was and then stop her. She had a rope tied ready in a knot. How did she know what kind of knot to tie? It was brand-new blue polypropylene. Where did she get it? How long had she had it? I finished cleaning the bathroom and when I came out she was on the landing with the rope around her neck.
âNow,' she said. She was trembling so hard her teeth were chattering.
âNo.' I backed away from her intensity. A rank animal smell was coming through the patchouli.
âPlease. You're the only person I can ask. You don't have to do a thing. Please just make sure I've gone before you leave.' She squeezed my hands; hers were shaking and cold, yet wet with sweat. âBe brave, Mel,' she said, âit's what I want.' She got up on to the banister, balanced herself against the wall and put the bag over her head. I watched how her toes bent to cling onto the wood, an instinctive reaction as her body fought to save itself. I grabbed hold of her ankle but she kicked back with such a force I was knocked to the floor.
âIn my sock,' were the last words she said, and then she dropped with a great creak of wood and a scream from her mouth or my own and a brutal scrunching crack. I crouched on the landing floor with my hands over my eyes and my fingers over my ears. I stayed there for minutes, I don't know how many. I could hear water running and a faint squeak from the rope but nothing else. I stood up and walked down the stairs. My shoulder was numb where she'd kicked me. The watery sound was urine. I still had the rubber gloves on and they were full of sweat. I reached up. She'd not told a lie. The passport and Seth's birth certificate were tucked into one of her pop socks and they were warm and wet. It took me a few goes to have the nerve to hold her swinging body still and take them out.
It had definitely worked.
I went out of the back door still in the rubber gloves and got into the car and drove away. Someone might have seen
me, I don't know. I drove all over the place and stopped by the park. I went into the Ladies and was sick and then I went back to the hotel.
Adam was really too ill to move, but for once I put my own needs first. I moved our seats onto the next flight to Kennedy airport and off we went. At the airport I was terrified each time I saw a policeman and, of course, owing to the current state of security, it was swarming with them. I was sick in the airport Ladies, and again on the plane. I was too shocked to cry. I couldn't look after Adam the way I liked to. Seth stayed plugged into his electronic world and Adam in his trance of exhausted pain.
â
Seth wasn't nursed into Soul-Life as you were, Dodie. There was no parlour, no gentle introduction â and no warning about what he was about to be plunged into. Neither Adam nor I were in a state to talk to him on the flight or on arrival. I withdrew. I could think of nothing but Stella. I learned, later, that Seth had become distressed on arrival at Soul-Life and it had been necessary to medicate him to prevent harm to himself or others. I should have stayed with him: maybe then he'd have been all right. But once we were back I was almost paralysed. I couldn't speak for days, not even to Adam. I couldn't even hum. Or cry. And the pain in my chest came clamping back, as if someone was taking my heart in their fist and squeezing.
And in the time that I was incapacitated, Hannah took Seth over â and it was she who nursed Adam, too. If it couldn't be me, he would have no one else. For a time, I didn't care, but as soon as my strength began to return I went back to Adam's room, our room, to find Hannah there.
You should have seen her smile. I wouldn't rise to her. I said nothing. Adam was lying back against the pillows, fidgety and troubled.
âI want to see my son,' he said. âBring Seth to me.'
âI've explained to Adam that he has a cold,' Hannah said. âHe's infectious.'
Adam sighed, his old hands fretting each other. âMartha?'
âShe's right,' I said, though I wouldn't look at her. âWe can't have you catching a cold, can we?'
He seemed to accept this, though he wasn't happy. And he said to me, his voice petulant, â
Hannah
's been keeping me abreast of Soul-Life business. She tells me there are problems.'
Hannah smirked over her shoulder at me as she left the room. I took a deep breath and gritted my teeth. Yes, the IRS were demanding access to the accounts; and yes, some families had started actions to reclaim their children, but I'd been deliberately keeping all this from Adam in what must surely be his last days. What was the sense of agitating him now? I didn't want him going to his death thinking Soul-Life was in collapse.
âIt's nothing,' I said. âJust details. Obadiah's dealing with everything.' I took his hand and soothed it in my own. âNothing for you to worry about. Sleep now, or would you like some tea?'
âHannah is bringing me tea.'
He began to mumble the story I hated, about how she was the first of his followers and how very faithful she had always been to him. I couldn't stand to hear it and thought-hummed to try and block his words.
She came in with mugs on a tray, two mugs only â and I don't think the second one was meant for me. My impulse was to get out of there and scream, but I only smiled at her and said, âThat's very kind, Hannah, thank you. Our Father is very tired; you can leave us now.'
She kept her face quite even but I saw the way her eyes flared and her lips tightened against her snaggled teeth.
âCan we continue our conversation tomorrow?' she asked Adam, and he nodded and smiled. She grasped her thumb, lowered her eyes, and left us.
âHannah shouldn't worry you,' I said.
â
You
should not keep things from me.'
I scalded my tongue on the hot tea. It was the sedative blend we usually give the novices, excellent for smoothing objections from the mind. Drink too much and you lose all track. It gives a lovely blankness â well, you know that, Dodie. I helped Adam drink his and then he closed his eyes. He looked so done in, so old and finished that my irritation flowed away. I put my head against his chest and he stroked my hair.
âStella . . .' I began.
He shushed me. âShe's free,' he said, âshe is at one with the Universal Soul, we should rejoice.' But I couldn't think of anything but the awful crunch and the drip, drip, drip of urine down her leg. I pushed my face against him and, while he smoothed my hair, I wept.
â
After the journey back home, Adam had expressed disappointment at how ordinary Seth was, how lacking in special spirituality. What could I say? Adam was tired and in pain and I think it would have been hard for him to be delighted by any mortal at that point. Did he expect light to be flooding from his son's head, or prophesies spilling from his tongue? Seth
is
just an ordinary boy; very charming I think, very handsome. But he is only flesh and blood.
It was Hannah's decision that Seth and Adam should be kept apart until Seth had been rushed through the Process, after which he could be returned, triumphantly transformed, and revealed to all the Brethren as the son of Adam.
But I wouldn't let her have it all her own way. And one day I pulled myself far enough out of my torpor to go and find Seth, to see for myself how he was faring. I waited till I knew Hannah was occupied, and then I intercepted him on his way out of the dining room after the meal he thought was breakfast.
(Do you realize, Dodie, how we play with time during the Process, so that you might be eating breakfast at bedtime and
going for a brief ânight's' sleep â perhaps half an hour â at noon? Warping time and confusing biorhythms is a powerful method of disorientation, and it does no physical harm. It's necessary to break down the personality before building it up again: the drugs and the repetitive meditations, the scant diet, the interruption of normal patterns of behaviour â all part of the Process. On you, of course, it didn't work. On nine people out of ten, it's successful, but, as we say, for every nine sheep there is a goat.)
I took Seth into a side room to be alone with him. I can't describe to you how deeply strange it was for me to be addressing this version of Adam â younger than I'd ever known him. On the journey home I'd been too much in shock to really take him in. He's so like Adam physically, but with the trace and flutter of Stella about him too. At first I felt almost shy in his presence, but quickly I became concerned. His pupils were like pinpricks and he was slurring his words â the dosage of narcotic must have been too high â or perhaps it was the combination of drugs; I don't know what concoction Hannah was giving him.