Authors: Janet Davey
âThat's right. There'll be plenty of them,' said Geoff. âThe forecast's good.'
Peter and Geoff began to pick up the bags. They went to and from the car. Dilys watched them from the front window as they went up and down the short garden path. When the removal was complete the whole family ended up in the narrow hall with the door shut again. Proper hospitality demanded this.
âYou look after that cut of yours,' Dilys said.
âI'm all right, Gran,' Jo said automatically. âDon't worry about me.'
They didn't take long to leave, once they had made up their minds to go. The claustrophobic goodbyes and kind intentions in the small hallway became airborne when the door was opened.
Jo got in the car next to Peter. The kids were strapped in the back. Geoff and Dilys stood by the gate to see them off. This was how things used to be. They hadn't made much progress. Geoff waved. He always put a lot into a wave and Jo always felt sad when she saw it.
KNEES WERE WHAT
you noticed, and hands, when you sat next to someone in a car. Jo had spent time looking at them only a few days ago. Felpo had to concentrate on the road, but she enjoyed sitting next to him. It never felt as if they were locked up together. This morning, in Peter's passenger seat, it was easier to stare out, rely on steady speed through the moving landscape. He had changed his car. The old one had been smaller and less plush. She did her best to be lulled, but travelling eastwards, stopping fitfully through the outer London suburbs, with the sun shining brilliantly through the glass, she had to make an effort. She looked vaguely at the houses as they peeled back, then, with more attention, at those beside the traffic lights, fated to be examined a thousand times a day. Home improvement was the only drama, windows flung open, rooms exposed like stage sets, ladders propped against walls, skips wedged against garages. Other upheavals stayed hidden.
They drew level with another family. Jo looked at them. Four heads under a low roof, the dad with his arms wrapped round the steering wheel for comfort, the mum offering none, two kids in the back, already in a trance. So they also must have appeared â no one speaking.
The road broadened into a dual carriageway. She stretched her legs, relaxed into the seat. Peter shifted slightly next to her. Speed calmed them. There would be an end to this journey. There was flat built-over land to the north, no sign of the Thames, flat bitty countryside to the south, no sign of the Downs. The traffic ahead coalesced again, channelled into a single lane. The temporary signs had an air of permanence. They were back to stopping and starting, watching brake lights, breathing in exhaust fumes through the open windows. Peter would say something soon. Free Recovery, Jo read silently, Await Rescue. Excuses formed like bubbles, overblown, then popped before she'd caught them. She had no excuses.
âYour grandparents seem well,' he said.
âYes. They're fine, I think,' she said.
âOlder, of course. But in pretty good shape,' he said.
This wasn't what she had expected. He fell silent again. More minutes passed.
âWould you ever have bothered to find out where she was?' he said.
So, that was how he'd begin. The pleasantries hadn't continued. She had guessed the tone, though not the exact words.
âWhat kind of question is that?' she said.
âIt's a question.'
âYes, then I would have bothered, as you say.'
âWhen?'
âI don't know. I told you it was no kind of question.'
She could have stopped all this by initiating what he would consider to be a grown-up conversation about Ella's welfare. She could stop it now.
âShe'll be all right. I'll talk to her,' she said.
âI should bloody well think so.'
âI just said I would.'
âThat's not the point, though, is it?'
Jo didn't reply.
âWhat are you going to say to her, then?' he said.
âI don't know. In advance.'
âYou must have some idea.'
âI can't rehearse conversations like that.'
âWhy not?'
âWe live together.'
âWhat's that supposed to mean?'
âWe're used to each other. I'll know what to say when I see her. Her face.'
âPity it didn't work before.'
âWhat?'
âThis understanding between you, based on living together.'
Jo knew she had asked for that. She said nothing. He saw in her replies a travesty of calm rationality. She knew they were based on inattention. Because his own way of talking was functional he assumed everyone else's was. She should have stuck to particular points.
Checking up on what Ella was doing every minute of the day was impossible. Peter didn't understand. He'd left when Ella had been a real child, only reaching as far as his chest. Life had been different. Jo tried to keep track of where Ella was, as if accompanying her daughter in her mind would ward off trouble, but this was superstition. Mothers weren't meant to be guardian angels. Whenever she tried to follow her daughter mentally, she failed to get past the first five minutes. She didn't know where to put herself. Whether to be a shadow tagging along behind, or to be herself, pretending to be Ella. It was simpler to keep Ella at the back of her mind, then, when she wasn't where she had said she'd be, or too much time had elapsed, to trouble herself with inflammatory images. The car spinning off the road, the hands round the throat, the tide coming in too fast. This was what passed for concern, love even. It was the way mothers thought.
Since Friday, she had lost the will to think.
The traffic from the opposite carriageway was cutting across on the diagonal. A lorry swayed past them, a looming shape blocking the light. Jo flinched.
âWhat did you do that for?' asked Peter.
âI didn't mean to. I thought the lorry was going to hit us,' she said.
In a moment they would be through the road-works. There it was â Free Recovery At An End. The oncoming cars were safe back on their own side. Peter put on speed again, but the trick didn't work a second time.
âSo this fellow's gone for good, has he? He won't be living with you.' Peter paused between the words in the wrong places. He was embarrassed.
âI wouldn't have thought so. I don't know,' she said.
âSo you might still see him?'
âProbably not,' she said.
âWhat does it depend on?'
âI don't know. Whether he's around or not, for a start. He won't be. I don't expect he will be.'
âYou could decide not to see him. Couldn't you? Or is that beyond you?'
Jo said nothing.
âHave you gone stupid or something?'
âThat sort of thing.'
She undid her seat belt.
âWhat are you doing?' he said.
âNothing.'
âI thought you were going to jump out.'
âThe family failing. No. I couldn't breathe.'
She snapped the fastening shut again.
âHe's violent,' he said.
âHe isn't. Once. That was all.'
âThat's enough, isn't it?'
âYes. Yes it is.'
âYou're contradicting yourself.'
âYes. It happens.'
âI need something more positive than this from you.'
âOK,' she said.
âThe kids are in the back,' he said.
âI realise.'
âSo, I'm being careful what I say. Don't take advantage of that.'
Their children were entirely silent. Annie either asleep or listening in that intent way that small children do. The dissonance repels and attracts them. The uneven speech and threadbare intervals. They're able to reproduce them perfectly themselves in later life. Rob would be trying not to hear, trusting that at some point the conversation would end, convinced his own adult life would be saner. Jo hoped for his sake it would be. She didn't turn round to look at him.
âYou were frightened when it happened. Admit it. You ran away from him. Back to Geoff and Dilys,' Peter said.
âThanks. It was a mistake. I didn't think about what I was doing.'
âAnd you are doing now?'
âNo. I don't know. I've already said I don't know.'
Only once she had said, as though isolated cases had immunity. She guessed, though she couldn't be sure, that there was a difference between the piling up of fear and its sudden impact. It had been so quick. There had been no time to adjust. She had said so few words to Felpo â but that moment had been her chance. It could have gone either way. People said that sometimes. Either way. She should have laughed as if she meant it. He'd have seen it too. They would both have laughed. They could be laughing now. She should have been angry. I-can't-believe-what's-happening. Yelling, running all the words together. They were quite similar, laughing and shouting. They required energy and noise. She hadn't managed either response. She and Felpo hadn't been used to falling out. Those patterns in which, after five minutes' injection of new material, she says what she said last time and he says what he said last time â the familiar pitching which ends more often in faintly nauseous sleep than in plunging over the side â they hadn't even begun to form, they were years away. They had been too close to be of use to each other.
Peter had hit her once. He'd grabbed her right hand and held it tight while he slapped her arm. That was well before Tara. It had happened near the beginning of their marriage. She couldn't remember what the row had been about but she could remember exactly where she had been standing. Next to the bath in the bathroom of their old house. There had been a lot of wet washing hanging over a rack. Surely the row couldn't have been about washing? Perhaps she had shrunk something or the colours had run. She had hit him back.
âWhat do you want to do when we get there?' Peter said.
His voice was different. He was trying. She would try too.
âI don't mind.'
She hesitated. âThere' had no meaning. It had vanished. She had always liked getting home after being away, carrying on with the present after a shot of something different which was already the past. Now she had to concentrate to remind herself what home was.
For a while they were silent.
âHave you been on holiday yet? You went to Spain in September last year, didn't you?' she asked.
He didn't reply straight away. âI thought we were talking about making arrangements,' he said.
âSorry. Yes, we were. What are the choices?'
He took his eyes off the road for a second and looked at her. You don't have to look at someone's face if you're driving and up till now he hadn't. He looked ahead again.
âI think it would be best if I took Rob and Annie home with me,' he said. âThen dropped you off with all your stuff and made sure everything was all right.'
âWhat do you mean, all my stuff?'
âAll your bags. In the boot.'
âOh, them. Yes. I'd forgotten about them.'
Jo could see them cluttering up the pavement, but nothing behind them. An infinite stretch of paving, without a house in sight.
âYou've worked it all out then?' she said. âWhat we should do?'
âIt was a suggestion. You don't have to agree. There's no need to be touchy.'
âI just wondered what was the point of asking, if you've worked it all out.'
He didn't reply.
âWas it witches who had to choose their own punishment?' she said. âThey could say whether they preferred to be burned or drowned? I'm sure I've read that somewhere.'
âI don't know. It was a test, wasn't it? Is that what you're thinking of?'
âCould be,' she said.
âIf they stuck the witch in water and she survived, it showed she was a witch. If she drowned, they knew she must have been normal,' he said. âNo, that can't be it.'
It seemed likely enough, Jo thought.
âWhat made you think of that?' he said.
âI was thinking about choices. I thought we were talking about them.'
He seemed to take a slow breath.
âIs your back hurting?' she asked.
âNo, it's fine. Why?'
âYou used to get backache from driving.'
âTension, probably,' he said.
âWhat did you mean, make sure everything's all right?' she said.
âIt's obvious, isn't it?'
âIs it?'
âFor God's sake, Jo.'
âLeave her alone, Dad,' Rob said, suddenly. âMum, do you want to stop? We can stop. Or we can go back to Gran's.'
âChrist Almighty,' said Peter. âWhat is all this? Believe me, we are not going back anywhere.'
Jo could only see the surface of the road. Her feet were pulled along it. She was on the train again, but too close to the rails. There was no floor but the train was moving, the metal passing suavely on both sides, the wooden sleepers flicking by underneath her.
âMum. Are you OK?' The voice came from very far away.
She took a deep breath and closed her eyes. When she opened them, the road was outside again.
âIt's all right, Rob,' she said. âWe'll go on.'
Having parked the car, Peter came up to the flat with her, Rob and Annie tagged behind. When they got to the small landing at the top of the stairs Jo realised that the place was banal and empty, at peace with itself. She noticed Peter's fists relax as soon as he got inside. He hesitated, listening, but there was nothing to hear but the household sounds of the kitchen clock and the fridge working hard in the heat. Perhaps he'd expected blood on the walls. He seemed to be staring at them. Two of her drawings, dog-eared at the corners, were pinned next to the calendar. One was of a pair of glass candlesticks standing one behind the other, the second of the stairs rising up through the shop. Peter asked if Ella had done them and Rob said, no, they were Mum's. Peter said they were interesting; she should do more of that sort of thing. Jo shook her head.