Quarter Past Two on a Wednesday Afternoon (31 page)

BOOK: Quarter Past Two on a Wednesday Afternoon
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Chapter Nineteen

Spring 1995

In her last year at school, Anna spent hours in the art rooms. She liked the quiet concentration, the smell of dust and acrylic paint, the sense of working for something other than exams. In addition to double periods twice each week, she was drawn there at odd times when she had a free lesson, to work on her project, browse through art books or stare out of the window. It didn’t feel quite like school, somehow, up there on the top floor where two rooms took up the whole of what had once been an attic. High windows were set into the eaves, and beams running across were used to hang mobiles or textile work. The art department was the domain of Mr Greaves and his younger colleague, Alys Hardcastle. Mr Greaves – Jim, to the sixth form – was a painter first, teacher second, and it was no secret that he preferred his A-Level groups to the raucous younger classes with their wide extremes of talent and ineptitude, compliance and bolshiness. Five years ago he had taught Rose; he was one of the few teachers Rose and Anna had in common. Rose liked him, mainly because he didn’t so much teach as guide, encourage and understand.

It was seeing Rose’s A-Level exhibition that had made Anna in turn choose art. Unlike Rose, she didn’t have any particular ambition, even though the department was very successful with its sixth form in particular.

For her special study, Rose had chosen two Viennese painters, Gustav Klimt and Egon Schiele. She filled notebooks with sketches and designs, commentaries and interpretations: her books were beautiful in their own right. She made fabric collages in homage to Klimt, using machine and hand embroidery; her drawings from life class imitated those of Schiele: graceless, graceful, knowing, with sinewy bodies, expressive hands, and eyes sometimes blank and sometimes boldly challenging.

Rose’s other project was all about mirrors. She painted a new and more complex version of her own portrait, endlessly refracted. She surrounded an oval mirror with a huge question mark, so that the viewer saw his or her own image framed and interrogated. She made collages from mirrors she bought in charity shops and smashed into splinters; the face of the onlooker was reduced to fragments and glimpses. In her own version of a Magritte painting,
The Son of Man
, in which a man looking into a mirror sees his own back view instead of a reflection, she substituted herself, seen as a smooth sweep of dark hair. In the series that grew from this, the girl saw herself reflected as a baby, a mask, a blank, a skull, a wizened old woman, a grimacing gargoyle. In one there was no reflection at all, only a calm, featureless sea with a strip of light at the horizon that was almost blinding. She titled the project
Selves
; it was specially commended by the examiners, who praised its boldness and innovation.

Five years later, when Anna’s turn came, she chose Charles Rennie Mackintosh, led perhaps by Rose’s interest in the early twentieth century and Art Nouveau. She knew she wasn’t stretching herself as she produced notebooks lovingly lettered in the distinctive Mackintosh style, copied chairs from the Willow Tea Rooms, drew furniture designs of her own. It was beautiful and stylish, but remote from her. ‘Why did you choose this?’ Jim Greaves asked her; she said something about liking the linearity, the cleanness, and how startlingly modern the Mackintosh designs must have looked in their own time. More of herself went into her other project, in mixed media, which she called
Missing
. Mr Greaves never said a word to her about Rose; she knew he didn’t need to. She made collages of torn paper, cut paper, showing fragments of possessions: an address book, a mascara wand, a key, a handwritten note, layering and layering them. She made a lino-cut of a single footprint and formed patterns with it, overlapping, heading off the edge of the paper. She took photographs, asking friends to pose; she did a whole series of paintings, back views of teenage girls walking or running away, full of details suggestive of railway stations, motorway services, lay-bys, ferry terminals. She made a mosaic of tiny faces, with the letters of the word
MISSING
placed randomly among them; another collage was made from bus and train tickets.

Her favourite was a painting she called
Shore
, on a tall, narrow piece of Daler board that emphasized its long perspective. A low tide lapped at the left-hand edge; footprints, sharply delineated in the foreground, walked along wet sand above the tideline; far in the distance the person leaving the prints was a tiny, undistinguishable figure, grey in the haze of a sea-mist. Jim Greaves preferred the pastel drawing of Rose’s bedroom, empty of its occupant, waiting; it reminded him of Mary Cassat, he said. He liked the composition, the fall of light, the purples and greens smudged into the shadows.

Anna threw herself into this work at the expense of her other subjects. It was better than talking, better than explaining. There was no direct reference to Rose in either words or images. In her commentary, she wrote only in general terms.
People go missing. People are missed.

After the examiners came, there was a Friday evening viewing for the students’ families and friends, with wine and canapés, before the exhibition opened to the rest of the school. Anna didn’t invite her parents, and her mother was reproachful and hurt when she read about it in the local paper.

Anna’s mobile rang late in the evening, past eleven. She was getting ready for bed, deciding what to wear for work tomorrow.

‘It’s Michael. Michael Sullivan.’

‘Yes?’ She clutched the phone, and the room revolved around her.

‘Look, there are things I can tell you.’ He seemed to be speaking in a deliberately low voice, as if someone else were present, someone he didn’t want to overhear. ‘But – can we meet? I can’t do it on the phone. Are you still in Sevenoaks?’

‘No, in Essex. But I work in London.’

‘Is there any chance you could come down to Plymouth?’

‘I could get the train,’ Anna said, wondering why she was agreeing; but yes, of course she’d go. She would do whatever he said, go anywhere, for one morsel of information.

‘Is Saturday any good?’

‘Yes, I’ll come. I’ll look up trains.’

‘Send me a text message, and I’ll meet you at the station.’

‘OK. I’ll do that.’

Michael gave her his mobile phone number; then he added, ‘You might want to bring an overnight bag. It’s a long way.’

When she rang off her heart was racing; she felt dizzy. What did he have to tell her that couldn’t be told over the phone? And the overnight bag? It was possible to get to Plymouth and back in a day, surely. His suggestion sounded dubious, as if he planned to lure her off somewhere. But, in a face-to-face meeting, she could press him, look for clues in his expressions and body language. Whatever he planned to tell her, she would find out more, and more. She plugged in her laptop and looked up trains, finding one that would get her to Plymouth for half-past twelve.

It was no use trying to sleep. She tried, gave up, went down to the cold kitchen and made herself coffee. Saturday was an interminable distance away. It was a screen, a curtain that would soon be swept aside. When she got to the other side, she would have something to fill the twenty-year void. More practically and immediately, she would have to convey this change of plan to Ruth, who was expecting to spend Saturday wallpapering her mother’s bedroom, with Anna as assistant.

She phoned from the office next morning. ‘Ruth, I’m really sorry but I won’t be able to make Saturday after all.’

‘What, are you working again?’

‘No, but I’ve said I’ll meet someone.’ It sounded feeble, a fobbing-off; and, after all, she’d agreed to do the decorating as part of their arrangement.

‘Oh.’ Ruth sounded put out now.

‘Look, I know Sunday’s no good for you, but I’ll get on with the wallpapering then, OK?’

‘Have you done it before?’

‘Er, no.’

‘Well, it’s not that easy when you start, especially on your own. I’d rather you didn’t. It’ll have to wait.’

‘I really am sorry—’

‘It’s a man you’re meeting, isn’t it?’ Ruth broke in.

Anna hesitated. ‘Yes. An – old acquaintance.’ She was reluctant to explain; it might turn out to be nothing more than another disappointment, another dead end. She was about to say, ‘It’s not what you think,’ but Ruth spoke first.

‘I hope you know what you’re doing, Anna.’

Yes, Anna thought; me too. But she had to do this, and there was no one she could tell: not Ruth, not Bethan, certainly not Martin or her parents.

On Thursday, in her lunch break, Anna went to the flat to collect a pair of old boots she wanted for walking in the fields, and a few other items of clothing. Letting herself in, she heard a voice, a female voice laughing; she froze in the doorway, her key still in the lock, her instinct to back off quickly, but Martin had already seen her and was rising from the armchair. A sleek blonde woman sat on the sofa.

‘Anna? I wasn’t expecting you.’ He came towards her, holding her gaze; she moved aside so that the armchair was between them.

‘No, well. It’s only a flying visit.’ Her voice came out a little hysterically. This was the stuff of cliché, wasn’t it, of soap opera – walking in on Martin with another woman? She could only think that it hadn’t taken him long.

Martin made an awkward gesture. ‘Er … you haven’t met Lenka, have you? Lenka, Anna.’

The woman stood, smiling, extending a hand to Anna. ‘Anna, hello. We’ve spoken on the phone, I think.’ She spoke charmingly, with a Russian or Polish accent which, yes, Anna remembered hearing before. Lenka had left messages for Martin or asked for him to call her back; she was a financial analyst, whatever that meant. Her hand was cool, her grasp firm and assured.

‘We’re having a quick catch-up before a meeting at the Barbican this afternoon.’ Martin indicated the coffee table strewn with papers, his laptop open. Lenka’s dark jacket was over the back of the sofa; she was slim, almost skinny, dressed in a tailored white blouse tucked into a charcoal skirt, hair swept smoothly back into a comb. She was about Anna’s age, and the kind of impeccably groomed woman who made her feel gauche.

‘Right. Well, I won’t get in your way.’ Anna went through to the bedroom, and found her old boots in the back of the wardrobe. She couldn’t imagine Lenka wearing clumpy boots; sheer tights and high-heeled court shoes were more her style. Unable to remember what else she’d come for, Anna grabbed, at random, two sweaters, underwear and several pairs of socks, which she stowed in the holdall she’d brought for the purpose.

Martin was trying to pretend this was normal. ‘What are you doing for lunch, Anna? We’ve just grabbed a sandwich. Can I get you something – coffee, fruit juice?’ He stood in the bedroom doorway, and she noticed that he was wearing the indigo tie she particularly liked, one they’d chosen together on a short break in Florence. But she didn’t want to look at him.

Lenka was putting her papers in order, slipping a folder into her briefcase.

‘Thanks, no, I’m in a hurry. See you later. Nice to meet you, Lenka.’

Three lies.

Martin followed her out of the door and into the communal hallway; he turned her to face him, hands on her shoulders. ‘Anna! When are you coming back? I need to know.’

She twisted herself away. ‘I don’t know. Does it matter?’

‘Course it bloody matters!’

‘I’ll ring you some time. When you’re not so busy.’ She flicked her eyes in the direction of the open door.

‘For God’s sake! Don’t be stupid—’

But she was already halfway down the stairs; she heard him go back in, the door closing behind him. Heading down Hatton Garden, she wondered what he’d tell Lenka; then she remembered, too late, that she’d intended to collect her favourite earrings, silver and jet, a present from Martin last birthday. She hesitated, feeling the loss of them, then walked on. She couldn’t go back now without losing face.

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