Sun at Midnight (29 page)

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Authors: Rosie Thomas

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #General

BOOK: Sun at Midnight
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Uncle Henry Jerrold was his family now and the arrangements that were made were for Jimmy to travel back to England by ship, retracing the journey that he had made with her to New Zealand when he was a baby. He had been too small to remember anything about the first voyage, but on the way back the ship’s rolling in the glassy sea swell
and the regular beat of the engines had stirred the ghosts of memory in him.

He had heard plenty of stories about their journey, she told them over and over again, but those were about different things, not waves or the smell of salt water. The bandleader had played her choice of dance tunes every night, and during the day there had been deck games and fancy dress competitions. There had been a photograph, somewhere, of Jimmy as a little devil, with a tail and a fork and a pair of horns made from card and fastened to his head with a loop of elastic. She had dressed up as an angel, that time, with a sweep of white bedsheet and wire-framed wings fledged with a thousand white paper feathers. His father had made the wings. He was a mechanic and he was good with his hands. The photograph had disappeared when people came to clear up the house, after it all happened.

Jimmy travelled back to England on his own, under the care of the nursing sister who ran the ship’s infirmary. He had a little cabin near hers, low down in the ship where the engines thrummed and there were no porthole windows to look out on the waves. Uncle Henry was at Southampton to meet him. When the ship’s sister handed over her charge, with plain relief, his uncle formally shook his hand. It was the only time Jimmy could remember touching him.

It was a long train journey up to Northumberland. Jimmy had never seen such rain. At home it rained too, but that was rain that drummed and bounced and roared out of the waterspouts. It was rain with a purpose that started and then stopped. But in England it fell helplessly out of a smeared grey sky and there was no end to it. He leaned his head against the train window and stared out at the tiny fields and rounded hills crowned with trees that looked like black scribbles against the clouds. Uncle Henry sat next to him, silently reading a newspaper and smelling of wet wool.

Henry was her older brother.

‘A good old English snob and stuffed shirt,’ she had told Jimmy once, laughing, her mouth wide and lipsticked. ‘Not like us, eh?’ He had only wondered vaguely what the shirt was stuffed
with
.

He didn’t mind Uncle Henry’s silence. He didn’t want to talk to him either, so that suited them both. When he did speak, it was in a ridiculous voice, blaring and stifled at the same time. His lips didn’t move.

‘Wait here, James.’ A big old door, a stone-slabbed hallway, a cold and silent house. Aunt Eleanor and Uncle Henry had no children.

She said to him, once, when she had her bottle of wine on the table between them and they were talking, or rather she was talking and he was listening, because that was what they did, ‘One thing I’ve got that they haven’t, Jimmy, eh? I’ve got my big boy. I don’t need anything else in the world. Not your father, rot him, that’s for sure. Not family, either, except for you and me. We’re all we need. And a few bob in the bank, of course. That wouldn’t go amiss at all.’ She laughed and lit a cigarette, lipsticking the butt.

Life had a way of turning on you, he had discovered. They didn’t have each other any more, because his mother was dead. Uncle Henry and Aunt Eleanor had him now, even though he was the last thing they wanted.

Rooker thought about all this as he watched the penguins going about their business.

It wasn’t Richard Shoesmith’s fault that he looked and sounded like Uncle Henry Jerrold, but just to be in the same room with him brought back memories of the five years he had spent in Northumberland. Five years of rain and routine misery, during which Rooker had taken to a life of rebellion as if he had been born to it. As Annette Rooker née Jerrold’s son, he
had
been born to it. At first he was
just mute and the Jerrolds had taken his silence as insolence. They were expecting gratitude for rescuing him from the orphanage in Dunedin, but none was forthcoming. In time, he had taken up real insolence, defiance, truancy and petty thieving. He had been expelled from two schools.

‘You don’t care, do you? You don’t give a damn,’ Henry had once said, in a rare attempt at communication with the surly adolescent whose resentment curled through the house like smoke.

‘No,’ Jimmy said. It was the truth. What was there to care about?

On the day before his sixteenth birthday he finally walked out. He got a job packing boxes in a Tyneside factory and lodgings in a draughty house belonging to a thirty-year-old divorcée who liked to be kept warm at night. He never went back to the Jerrolds.

Rooker didn’t like recalling the past and this tide of memories was particularly unwelcome. If it weren’t for Richard Shoesmith’s accent, and all the associations that went with it, Henry Jerrold would never have entered his head and he could just be watching the penguins. Maybe if he had had a chance to meet the expedition leader before they all flew in to Kandahar he would have changed his plans and just travelled on somewhere else. But perhaps he wouldn’t, and maybe it didn’t particularly matter because he liked Kandahar otherwise, and Antarctica was harsh enough and immense enough to make even Rooker’s demons seem insignificant. He could ignore the man, most of the time. It was only when he had had a few drinks that the anger threatened to crack his reserve.

‘Hi,’ a voice said, breaking into his thoughts. Rooker turned to see Beverley Winston. ‘They’re cute, aren’t they, these little guys?’ she added. Penguins continued to bustle past their feet.

He didn’t think it was necessary to agree with the obvious. Beverley was standing close to him, their eyes almost on a level.

‘You don’t say much.’ Her smile was very bright. She had taken her hat off and her hair was cropped close so that he could see the bones of her skull. The nape of her neck was a long groove. Against so much whiteness she was like an ebony carving.

‘No.’

Beverley took a pack of cigarettes out of her pocket. Fumbling with her gloves, she took out two cigarettes and put one between Rooker’s lips. Their heads came close together as their hands cupped round the flame of her lighter. She stood back and inhaled deeply. A long way off, high up amongst the rocks, Rooker could see Sullavan and the others.

‘Quite a place,’ Beverley said. She kept her voice low but he could hear her perfectly, not just what she said but what she was suggesting. He had been amused by her effect on the other men, but now that it was turned on him alone he felt the full force of her allure.

‘What happens later?’ she asked.

‘What do you want to happen?’

She smiled at him. Her perfume was so intense it made his head swim. ‘I’m sure we can think of something.’

She finished her cigarette and extinguished it in the snow. Tidily, she dropped the butt into an empty film canister and snapped the lid.

‘Yes,’ he agreed. ‘Why not?’ It would be a straightforward transaction and the prospect was enticing.

She shot him another smile and strolled away to the water’s edge. Melting ice swished and rattled where the waves broke and the shingle was crusted with pitted slabs of it. Penguins surged in both directions.

Russell and Niki collaborated on a second big dinner. The hut interior was steamy with cooking fumes and condensation misted the windows. The guests had all taken showers in the narrow slit of communal bathroom, so there was no hot water left for washing-up. The gas cylinder that heated the water and powered the oven was now running low, ten days before schedule. There was one spare, but that would have to last until the next visit of the ship in January. The room was crammed with people and the cooks were sweating. The expedition members were ragged with the efforts of hospitality but the guests were clean and relaxed, looking forward to a good meal and the arrival of the helicopter the next day.

Lewis beamed. He was pleased with the operation of the base and with his brief tour of the science programme. In the morning he would look at Valentin’s glacier project and Arturo’s weather survey. Beverley had changed into jeans and a soft white sweater that showed the velvety scoops of her collarbone. She slid into her seat next to Rooker and put her hand on his arm when she asked him to pass her the salt. No one had said anything, but it was clear to everyone – except Lewis, who was too insulated to bother to take note – that it was a done deal.

‘Fuck me,’ Phil murmured. His jaw sagged with frank envy and awe.

‘I don’t think so.’ Alice laughed. She felt vaguely discomfited but wasn’t sure why.

The other men watched Beverley. Cutlery rattled and the atmosphere prickled with tension. Lewis talked about his ideas for the next science season. He planned to install a bigger dormitory block, better kitchen facilities, extra support personnel. Richard listened attentively, putting in answers where required. Rooker filled his glass whenever the bottle came within reach. It was a relief when the meal
finally ended. Lewis tapped his glass for silence and made one of his speeches. He thanked everyone for their work and the warmth of their welcome, and proposed a toast: ‘To next year. Antarctica.’

They echoed his words. Next year, Alice thought. Her once-loose fleece pants felt too tight round the middle. Not Antarctica, that’s for sure.

The generator shed was Rooker’s domain. He serviced and maintained the main generator and the back-up, and kept his tools racked along the wall. Washing lines criss-crossed the overhead space where the heat rose from the machinery. The only reason for any of the others to come in here was to collect or hang up laundry, and the lines were bare now except for a forlorn trio of unmatched socks.

Rooker leaned against the wall, listening to the steady diesel-powered chugging. After a few moments the door opened on to a slice of royal-blue sky. Beverley appeared, wrapped in her parka. They slid together without exchanging a word.

After the kiss ended Beverley put her hands on him. ‘This place. It’s so primitive. Makes you act primitive.’

He liked the way she was matter-of-fact about what she wanted; without dressing up her desires with wiles and pretences. He kissed her again, sliding his hands under the parka and her white sweater. Her skin was like satin. It was extraordinary after so much cold and rough work to feel smoothness and warmth that seemed ready to melt under his touch. Her hands tangled with his clothes, pulling them aside until greed swept through them both. Locked together, they stumbled back against the generator housing. The machine’s vibrations drummed through them. Rooker looked around and saw an old chair against the shed wall. He sat down, and guided Beverley astride him. She stood up for a
second, looking down at him with defiance that was almost a glare. She wriggled her jeans down round her hips. A second later they were connected. She dropped her head and he felt her lips and tongue against his neck, hot enough to burn his skin.

They rocked together, gently at first.

Rooker forgot everything.

He was arching his hips to push higher and harder when the door opened again, admitting the same section of sky. The outlined head and shoulders were unmistakable.

It was Uncle Henry, authoritarian intruder in a child’s lonely bedroom.

It was Richard Shoesmith, checking up.

Beverley gave a long sigh. She stood up, not in any great haste, and in one fluid movement hoisted and buckled her jeans. Rooker bundled his clothes approximately into place.

‘What’s this?’ Richard demanded. He was flustered by what he had discovered and was covering his embarrassment with fury.

Rooker stepped up to him. ‘What does it look like?’

Richard’s head gave a wobble of outrage that was much too familiar.

Rooker swung his fist and hit him. Richard went down in an untidy heap and lay there.

Beverley looked coolly at the body sprawled at her feet. ‘Oh dear,’ she said softly.

Rooker bent over him. ‘He’ll live.’

‘I think I’ll leave you to deal with the aftermath,’ she said unhurriedly. Her fingertips brushed the top of Rooker’s head. Her legs looked very long in the jeans as she slipped away.

CHAPTER ELEVEN

They all stood in a circle beside the resting Squirrel. Lewis shook hands and murmured a word to each of them. He moved in a bubble of importance so insulated from the concerns of others that he was the only person on the base who didn’t feel the after-effects of Beverley’s play for Rooker and Rooker’s assault on Richard. Everyone else was sharply aware of what had happened. There was no concealing drama on this scale in such a confined world.

To Alice, Lewis said, ‘I won’t forget. And give my best wishes to your mother.’

To Rooker, ‘Get in touch when you’re through here. I may have something for you.’

And to Richard, ‘You’re doing a fine job, you and the team. Now I’ve seen how tough living conditions are on the base we’ll be working on improving your budget.’ He gripped Richard’s hand in both of his, then stepped in for a statesmanlike embrace. At such close range he could hardly miss the damage to Richard’s jaw and he did an exaggerated double take. ‘Hey. What happened here?’

‘I took a fall on the ice.’

Lewis swung round to look at Arturo, whose eyes and
nose were now shaded in blotches of purple and yellow.

‘You people are accident prone, aren’t you? I wouldn’t want to be in your shoes, Doc.’

Jochen smiled obligingly.

The TV crew stowed their metal equipment cases in the helicopter. Andy and Mick were in their seats, waiting for the visitors to be ready.

Beverley came out of the hut in her white sweater and silvery fur gilet. She strolled across to the group, her expression unreadable behind her wrap-round sunglasses, and held out her hand to Richard. ‘Thank you,’ she said warmly. ‘Antarctica is a wonderful place.’ Then her attention turned immediately to making sure that all Lewis’s bags were safely aboard and that he was happy with the flight schedule.

Lewis rubbed his hands. ‘Let’s go. The dirty old world beckons. I’m sorry to be leaving and I envy you all for being able to stay right here.’

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