Authors: Catriona McPherson
Tags: #catrina mcpherson, #catrina macpherson, #catriona macpherson, #katrina mcpherson, #katrina macpherson, #mystery, #mystery novel, #mystery fiction, #tokyo, #japan, #scotland
“Just a ⦠a wee something,” Keiko said.
“Have a cheesy biscuit,” said Mrs. Poole over her shoulder, as she went back to the kitchen. “Have a Twiglet.”
Keiko sat back down, alternately sipping and nibbling. Murray went back to his perch. Malcolm heaved himself up and came towards the table, bent over with a sigh, and swiped a glass up off the tray. He raised the glass to Keiko and emptied it into his mouth.
“Time to carve,” he said, “and make the gravy,” and started moving towards the kitchen.
Murray tucked his feet up and wrapped his arms around his legs. “Thanks for coming,” he said.
“Of course,” said Keiko. “Thanks for asking me.”
“I didn't. I wouldn't,” Murray said. “But I'll take care of you now you're here.” She smiled uncertainly at him. He shuffled closer to her and set his chin on his knees. “So,” he said. “What can you tell me about tea
now
? Have you been doing your homework?”
Keiko laughed and bent her head. She had indeed spent a good few hours scouring websites and explaining it to herself in the bathroom mirror.
“First of all,” she told him, “you must appreciate that the tea ceremony is not really about drinking tea ⦔
She was still laying out specks of detail when Mrs. Poole put her head round the door to summon them to lunch.
Rich smells were wafting from the kitchen and Keiko stopped dead in the dining room doorway, making Murray walk into her back. He steadied himself with a hand on her shoulder then left it resting there.
“It's not ⦔ she began, then swallowed and started again. “I meanâhave you made milk and stomach soup?”
Malcolm looked back at her for a moment before understanding spread over him. “Oh, tripe!” he said. “No, tripe's not really a Sunday lunch kind ofâ”
“God almighty, Malcolm,” said Murray, moving his hand down around Keiko's shoulder to hold the top of her arm. “Jesus Christ!”
Keiko went to her seat with her head bowed, but when Mrs. Poole set a wide plate of dough-coloured liquid down in front of her, she could not help herself turning to check.
“Cream of mushroom,” Malcolm said, and she looked quickly down again, shaking out her napkin.
When Keiko and Murray were halfway through their soup, Malcolm placed his hands flat on the table and got to his feet, taking his empty plate away. After a moment the door swung wide and he came back in, carrying a dish at shoulder height, gazing at it as he paced towards the table and set it down. On it lay a squat roll of meat, bulging between laced strings, one end sliced thickly and fanned out in glistening slabs. Waves of steam curled off it, rising to settle on the glass droplets of the centre light, turning them misty. Murray left and came back with a tray of vegetable dishes and then slid into his seat to wait in silence with the women until Malcolm returned from a second trip. He put a long, shallow jug down at Keiko's side and waved his hand over it, scooping billows of steam towards her face.
“Gravy,” he said and padded around the table to his chair. Keiko nodded towards the plate of meat.
“What is it?” she asked.
“Loin,” said Malcolm. “I boned and rolled it myself. Listen to this.” He picked up a spoon and tapped the meat three times. It made a spitting, rattling sound like a well-wrapped parcel. Malcolm beamed and tapped it again. “Crackling, see? Crisp as anything. Mind and don't pour your gravy on it.” He slid a knife under one of the slices and lifted it towards to Keiko's plate, stretching right across the table, his face bunching between his shoulders, holding the slice of meat steady on the blade with one pudgy finger.
Keiko thanked him.
“
Crackling
's another word for
skin
,” Murray said. “You don't have to eat it. You don't have to eat any of it if you don't want to.”
Keiko looked at Mrs. Poole and Malcolm, then back at Murray again. “It all looks lovely,” she said.
Mrs. Poole served herself with meat and gravy, potatoes and vegetables, and began to eat staring straight ahead. Murray, working with the delicacy of a watchmaker, excised the rim of fat and crackling from his one thin slice of meat. Malcolm, just as intent, loaded potato onto the back of his full fork and ran it round the edge of plate like a shovel until it was soused in gravy, then he lifted it to his mouth with his eyes shining.
When lunch was over, Murray took Keiko out into the back garden. She picked her way around its edge and looked at the last of the flowers in the neat strips of earth, feeling one cheek almost tingle under his gaze. Mrs. Poole, standing at the sink in the kitchen, watched her until the window steamed over and then bent her head to the full basin and began to work at the dishes with firm scouring strokes.
“What are these called?” Keiko asked, pointing to a cluster of pale fleshy-leafed plants with seed heads floating above them. Murray shrugged.
Malcolm opened the back door and stepped down onto the path. Leaning against the wall, he bunched his arms up in front of his face with his hands cupped and a second later a puff of smoke flared.
“It's a sedum,” he said, taking a skinny cigar from his mouth and nodding towards the plant. He must have been watching them, seen her pointing. The sweet smoke drifted just as far as Keiko before it dispersed, and she leaned forward slightly to catch more of it. “Butterflies love them,” Malcolm added.
Keiko turned to share her smile with Murray, but he waved a hand in front of his face to blow the smoke away. Her smile faded.
“Dad used to be driven demented with the caterpillars in his lettuce,” Malcolm went on, “but he loved the butterflies so much he wouldn't rip out the sedum.”
“He sounds like a lovely man when you speak about him,” Keiko said.
Murray turned right round and looked over the fence into the garden next door.
“Of course, it's no problem now,” said Malcolm. “We don't grow any veg now.” He pointed towards a patch of grass that Keiko could see was greener than the rest.
“Your father was the gardener, then?” she said. “You're not? Even though you know the names?”
In the kitchen, Mrs. Poole had wiped a clear patch in the misted window and was watching the three of them, stuffing a cloth into a wineglass and screwing it round.
“Malcolm's a butcher,” said Murray, turning back at last. “That just about sums it up as far as Malcolm goes. Not much of a one for lettuce, really.”
Malcolm said nothing. His little cigar stuck out of his face like a teaspoon in a bowl of pudding.
What am I doing here,
Keiko asked herself,
when none of them really wants me? Murray is not himself when he's with them. I cannot eat enough to please Malcolm. And as for her
â¦
“I'm a terrible guest,” said Keiko, looking up at the kitchen window. “I should be helping your mother.” She turned from both of them and walked away.
Mrs. Poole, grinding away at the glass, flinched and looked down as Keiko entered the kitchen. Then cradling the glass carefully in her hands, she turned away to let the broken pieces fall into the pedal bin, throwing the cloth and its danger of tiny shards in after it.
fourteen
Tuesday, 29
October
Dr. Bryant pursed his
mouth in time with his breathing as he read, making his pale moustache bristle. Keiko looked away to his over-stuffed bookshelves, every volume well-worn and topped with a coxcomb of markers. At exactly head-height opposite the chair where she sat, where every visitor to the office must sit, was his own PhD thesis,
Undergraduate networks and their effect on employment choices
, and two editions of the book it eventually became:
In with the in-crowd: student networks and the workplace
. He cleared his throat and she turned in time to see him suck the ends of his moustache back down with a wetted bottom lip.
“Food,” he said. “You're quite settled on that then? It's going to be rather a straitjacket down the line.”
“I think passions run high around it,” said Keiko. If he knew she was thinking of Pamela Shand and her dairy crusade he would swallow his moustache. “Investment. Engagement. And since I'm keen to have the subjects return several times, I need to interest them.”
“The perennial problem,” he said, lying back in his chair. “The undergraduates do get sick of spending lunchtime in the lab andâas I'm sure you'll appreciateâthe staff projects come first.” Keiko inclined her head. “Of course, there was a time the typical Japanese student would have funding to pay subjects as part of their award, and nothing says it like cash as far as the first years go. They would let you drill into their skulls for the price of a pint. Still, I'm sure you'll sort something out.” He bared his teeth at her.
“Yes, indeed, I'm most hopeful,” Keiko replied.
_____
“I hate him,” she said to Fancy, kneeling in front of the washing machine to haul out wet clothes. “His moustache looks like biscuits.”
“How?” Fancy asked. “Round and crumbly? Choc chips in it?”
But Keiko wouldn't smile. She peered inside the machine to check it was empty and slammed the door.
“Does he keep it in a packet in his desk drawer?” Fancy persisted.
“Bampot!” Keiko said. “No, just the colour. And his trousers are too loose and his shirts are too fitted.”
“Oh yuk, yeah, I hate that,” said Fancy. “So it looks like they're falling down?”
“And you can see the shape of his stomach between his hip-bonesâ” Fancy had paled. “Sorry, sorry!”
“No, it's okay, just that that's one of my worst bits, that pelvic girdle,” Fancy said. “Pelvic!
Girdle
!” She shuddered. “Anyway,
bampot
? Where are you learning these words? Is it Murray?”
“Oh no,” said Keiko. “Murray is even stricter than you. He's got big plans for me.”
“What does that mean?”
“He wouldn't tell me. It's starting tomorrow night, but that's all I know.”
“So who taught you
bampot
then?”
“Wee boys on the bus. But what am I going to do if I can't get any subjects?” she said, shoving the basket along the floor to the dryer. “My pilot's ready to run, but my whole idea needs me to have the same people over and over, and it won't work any other way.”
“How come?” said Fancy.
“Oh, knowledge units as artifacts in the construction of blah, blah, blah,” said Keiko, then seeing that Fancy was really listening, she tried again. “I test their judgements on a set of questions. I report the results of the test back to themâwho believed what, how many people rejected what kind of thingâand then I run the test again to see if hearing the results of the first one changes what they think. Does that make sense?”
“Cool,” said Fancy. “You're totally messing with their heads.”
Keiko stopped stuffing clothes into the dryer. “
Do not tumble dry
,” she read from a label. She scrabbled about inside the drum, pulled out another bundle and shook it. “I could get around having different people every time if I profiled every time before and after the test, but it's still not going to show the long-term changes and it would make the sessions twice as long, so I would need to pay them more and I don't have any money to pay them anyway.” She found another label and read it. “
Do not wring. Do not tumble
. Well, how am I supposed to dry it then?” she shouted.
“That's nothing,” said Fancy. “I had this black and white stripey dress once, that said
wash dark colours separately
. Do they have to know what it's about?”
“Sorry?” said Keiko.
“The people who do your experiments. Do they need to know what it's all about? Because if not ⦔
“No, they
mustn't
know what it's about. That's why researchers always use first-year students, before they learn anything.” Keiko finished loading the dryer and stood up with her wet bundle of leftovers at arm's length.
“Well, what's the problem then?” said Fancy. Keiko shook her head and waited. “You're looking for a bunch of people who don't know anything?” said Fancy. “God's sake, Keeks, open your eyes! Look out the window. You're smack in the middle of Know-Nothing Central.”
“Painchton people?” said Keiko. Her heart had leapt, but it just as quickly sank again. “I don't think so.”
“Why not?”
Because they are secretive
, she thought.
They hide things and don't answer questions.
But she couldn't say that to Fancy, whose face clouded more than anyone's when questions were asked and would never admit it.
“It's about food,” she said, at last. “And the people here don't seem ⦠normal about food.”
“Normal? How?”
“Well, Malcolm and his crackling and Mrs. Sangster with her ham. Mrs. McLuskie said she'd give me a jar of goose fat.”
“You noony!” said Fancy. “Course they're normal. They're just not Japanese.”
Keiko considered being offended but the relief at the possibility of having subjects won in the end. She threw her armload of laundry up in the air and caught it again. “Do you really think they would do it?” she said. “I suppose some of them would, wouldn't they. I know
you
would.”
“I don't want to,” said Fancy.
“The experiments aren't physical,” Keiko said.
“I know,” said Fancy. “But I don't want to be one of your guinea pigs because I want to know what it's all about. That Dr. Biscuit-tash is no bloody use and you'll need
someone
to talk to.” She dipped her head slightly. “I'll concentrate dead hard.”
Keiko threw down her bundle onto the table and seized Fancy's arms in her damp hands, making her yelp at the cold. “You really want to help? You can proofread my stimuli, check my English. You can look over my experimental design.”
“I wouldn't understand
that
,” Fancy protested, but Keiko puffed in scorn.
“You understood it already. In two minutes,” she said. “You, with your eagle eyes to find the logical flaws on laundry-care labels. It'll be a skoosh for you.”
“Okay,” said Fancy. “But
a skoosh
? First thing, if I'm in charge of your English, is you have to stop listening to little boys on buses, right?” Fancy walked over to the window and peered down. “And there's posts down there to put up a drying rope. Just ask Mrs. Poole for the key.”
_____
So when Keiko heard the shop awning being rolled up at the end of the afternoon, she trotted downstairs and popped her head out of the street door to see Murray in shirtsleeves unhooking the pole from the winding mechanism.
“Hi,” she called. Murray turned suddenly and Keiko ducked away as the brass hook on the pole swung towards her.
“Christ, sorry!” Murray said leaning the pole against the window and reaching out to her. “Are you okay?”
“Don't kill me yet,” said Keiko. “I haven't even asked my cheeky favour.”
“Well, whatever it is, the answer's yes,” Murray said.
Mrs. Poole came outside. “Murray? What are you doing leaving that up against the glass? Oh. Hello.” She stopped with the pole in her hands and nodded towards Keiko. Murray let his hand drop from her shoulder.
“I have two favours to ask you, Mrs. Poole,” said Keiko. Malcolm appeared in the doorway. “From all of you, one of them.”
“Come away in, then,” Mrs. Poole said, but she stayed where she was, with the pole held in both hands in front of her chest so that Murray and Keiko had to squeeze past her in the doorway.
“Two favours,” said Keiko again. “The first is that you would all consent to act as subjects in my experiments.” She waited. “Just answering questions for ten minutes.”
Murray looked at his feet. Malcolm, who had moved back behind the counter, sprayed cleaning liquid onto its marble surface and, ripping a swathe from a roll of paper towel, began to wipe it in slow careful strokes.
“Psychological experiments?” asked Mrs. Poole.
“Well, yes, but nothing personal, you understand, the same questions for everyone.” Malcolm sprayed the scales and wiped them, the numbers jumbling on the display as the weight of his hand crossed back and forth.
“What is it you're wanting to find out, then?” asked Mrs. Poole. Murray shifted.
“I'm testing your response to various scenarios,” said Keiko, her happy mood dissolving.
“Like those inkblots,” said Malcolm.
“Nothing so intrusive,” Keiko said. “Nothing so revealing.”
“I don't mind,” said Malcolm, looking at his mother.
“No,” said Mrs. Poole. “I'm sorry, dear, but I don't think it would be a very good idea.”
“And besides,” said Keiko. “It's anonymous. All the responses are logged with just a number. Complete anonymity guaranteed. No one would ever knowâme includedâwhat you'd written.”
She had never thought of Mrs. Poole as wearing cosmetics, but now she saw the lipstick and rouge jump out as the colour behind them drained away from the woman's face.
“Mum?” said Malcolm.
Mrs. Poole attempted a smile. “You're a city person, Keiko,” she said. “And it's different in a big city, but in a wee place like this, there's no such thing as anonymity.”
“Mum, you've got totally the wrong end of the stick here,” Malcolm said. “It's nothing to do with ⦠anything. It's made-up things.”
“It's very easy,” said Mrs. Poole, “when you live so close, to ⦠encroach.”
“I wouldn't dream of encroaching,” said Keiko, rising up a little. “Malcolm is right, Mrs. Poole. I have no interest in anything personal.”
“Malcolm was telling me you'd been asking Murray who lived in the flat before you,” said Mrs. Poole.
Keiko did not take her eyes away from the woman, but she got the impression that both boys had become very still.
“What's the other favour?” Malcolm asked.
Keiko smiled her relief. “Ah yes, I wanted to ask if I may hang my washing in the yard on a rope. Is there a key to the back door?”
Malcolm crumpled up his handful of blue paper towel and turned away, scraping it over his hands. Murray glanced at his mother.
“Something wrong with the tumbler?” asked Mrs. Poole.
“Oh no, no. Most generous and very handy. But for a few things, delicate things that can't be put in it?”
“But would you want your delicate things hanging out in the yard?” asked Mrs. Poole, flicking a look at Murray.
“Delicate fabric, I mean,” said Keiko, blushing. “Rayon dresses, and woollen, not ⦔
“They should have thought to give you a rack,” Malcolm said.
“Of course, these houses all had dollies,” said Mrs. Poole in a louder voice. “In the kitchens. And I could never see the sense in it. Always taking things down and putting them up again if you were cooking. Malcolm's right, a handy wee rack over the bath is the easiest thing. I have a spare one, dear. I'll pop it up to you.” And with this series of informative little remarks and jabs of kindness, she drove Keiko out of the shop and closed the door.
It wasn't until she was standing outside that she remembered the smell in the kitchen. She should have asked for the plumbing work to be done. That would have got Mrs. Poole down from her high horse. But she did not go back in.
_____
The phone was ringing when she got back upstairs.
“Right,” said Fancy over the line. “Pet wants to know whether it's one by one up at your place or if she can just take questionnaires to the Guild with her and dish them out and if so when. And Kenny said to her to say to me to say to you that he'll do the golf club and the bowling club, and I'll give Vi a note to ask if the teachers will do it, which is another nine, so that's nearly a hundred before you've put up a single poster. Ta-da!”
“Are you sure no one minds?” said Keiko. “Mrs. McMaster and Mr. Imperiolo?”
“They're gagging for it,” said Fancy. “You have to make your own fun in Painchton, Keiko. Nothing ever happens here.”