The Death of Bees (2 page)

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Authors: Lisa O'Donnell

BOOK: The Death of Bees
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There's other stuff of course, like the rabid chitchat and usually about something totally random. I remember when Steve Irwin died, the reptile guy, for about a month it was the only thing she'd talk about. Steve Irwin's widow, his daughter, and of course stingrays. Where stingrays live. What stingrays look like. How to get poisoned by a stingray. You want to thump her when she gets like that.

I prefer the Harry obsession, it's quieter. When Nelly's reading, nothing exists, not even me, I love it when she's reading, I like not existing, even for an hour. I think the Harry Potter thing reminds her of Nana Lou. She read a couple of the books to her when she took care of us that time but those days are well over. We're on our own now. Izzy and Gene are dead and no one can know what we've done with them. We'd get separated for sure, they'd put me in a home and God knows what they'd do to Nelly. Anyway I'll be sixteen in a year. They can't touch me then. I could have a baby at sixteen and get married, I'm considered an adult and legally able to take care of both of us.

I suppose I've always taken care of us really. I was changing nappies at five years old and shopping at seven, cleaning and doing laundry as soon as I knew my way to the launderette and pushing Nelly about in her wee buggy when I was six. They used to call me wee Maw around the towers, that's how useless Gene and Izzy were. They just never showed up for anything and it was always left to me and left to Nelly when she got old enough. They were never there for us, they were absent, at least now we know where they are.

Nelly

G
ood God, Mother, you scared the dickens out of me.”

She kissed my forehead and went to the garden.

“Where the devil do you think you're going? It's freezing out.”

“I'm fine, hen. Just need some air.”

“Well, at least take a cardigan. You'll catch your death out there.”

Marnie

I
zzy's reaction to Gene's death was totally unexpected. She wouldn't let us call an ambulance and lay there cuddling his dead body, stroking his hair and kissing at his cheeks like she really loved him. It made me sick watching her like that.

The next day when I woke to silence I thought she might have left in the night and done a runner like she always does. Instead I found Nelly in the kitchen sucking on cornflakes and Coke. When I asked where Izzy was she nodded toward the garden. I only had a T-shirt on and it was freezing outside so I grabbed a cardigan. We have a pervert living next door and the less he sees the better, but Izzy wasn't in the garden and the shed door was open so I make a barefoot run and that's where I found her, or where Nelly must have found her before returning to her fizzy cereal. Izzy had hung herself.

When I went back to the house Nelly was still eating. I told her Izzy was dead.

“Well, that's torn it,” she said.

I explained what would happen to us if Welfare found out. She nodded. I told her we had to bury them in the garden.

“You think that's wise?” she said.

“Course it's wise, ya fucking balloon.”

Before we buried them I checked their belongings for money. Gene had half a tab and some receipts. I don't know why he kept receipts. He also had a banker's card with his PIN, 4321, written on a label stuck to the inside of his wallet. Seriously.

Izzy had a handful of change and some fags, a telephone number, some sleeping pills, and some jellies, or benzos. I kept the fags and tossed the pills, but then I thought I might make money from the pills so I fished them back out of the trash and sold them on. I also kept her purse. I was there when she bought it. Calvin Clone. She also had forty quid. Thank God. We would have starved otherwise 'cause there was fuck all in Gene's account.

Nelly

M
arnie makes me do things I don't care for. Says all kinds of ghastly things. Dead, buried, over, but must she go on? Beastly girl.

Marnie

G
etting Gene off the bed and into the garden was a living nightmare. His face was swollen, as if someone had beaten the crap out of him, and he was sticky, like he was leaking venom. It was coming out his eyes, his nose, and his mouth. And the smell, I was gagging.

We decided to wrap him in the sheet he was lying on, we couldn't stomach the idea of touching him again, but it was soaked right through with this syrupy fluid and so we had to get another sheet and that did mean touching him again. Rubber gloves would have been useful, but we didn't have any. All we had were woolen ones, so we used them instead.

Gene's flesh was literally falling off him and ripping like paper in some places. Every time we moved him he made a noise, like a fart, except wet and by the time we'd reached the top of the stairs we'd had enough and couldn't bear to hold him any longer. At one point his arm escaped, limp as a rope, Nelly tried to cover it, but she accidentally caught his hand and his fingernail came away and got stuck in the knit of her glove. She boked then and couldn't take it anymore. Neither could I, so we mutually agreed to push him off the top landing and let him roll to the bottom. It was the worst thing we could have done. He burst at the seams, body fluid everywhere, on the carpet, on the walls, a swamp of poison.

“You beastly, beastly man,” says Nelly.

We had to get a wheelbarrow in the end, stole it from the next-door neighbor, then we spooned Gene off the floor and took him out back.

Izzy was already in the shed, her eyes sinking into her head and her tongue hanging out, but still, she didn't look half as bad as Gene, more bloated and less green, a sort of damp blue color. When Nelly saw Izzy she burst into tears, then she threw up, I mean really threw up. I was on autopilot. I wanted them buried and gone. I didn't have time for tears, I knew we had a job to do and mostly I was wishing we'd got rid of them sooner and, to be honest, I don't know why we didn't.

We spent all night digging, the ground was practically frozen. It was tough to get the earth to move. We also realized there wouldn't be enough room for both of them in the grave, we'd forgotten about the earth we had to put back in the hole to actually bury them and since Gene was the smelliest of the two we decided he was to be buried first and Izzy we squashed into the coal bunker knowing she'd decompose but be accessible for the pouring of disinfectant when necessary. But a week later we had to scoop her into a bin bag and shove her under the shed because she was leaking across the cement.

Last thing we did was pour bleach over them; a lame attempt to disguise the stink they'd left behind, though Nelly insisted the cold would be enough to keep the stench at bay. Then we went inside to purge what remained of Gene from the stairs, but no matter how we scrubbed we couldn't remove his stain, though we scoured until the color left the carpet and the skin on our knuckles burned blood. That's when we decided to pull the carpet up and got a knife and ripped every inch of it from the stairs. But even with the carpet in the bin the scent of their death remained in the house.

When all was done we covered Izzy with two sacks of coal and planted lavender on top of Gene, not out of sentiment you understand, but to better hide what was buried in the earth. The saleswoman at the Garden Centre said lavender grows fastest and has a strong smell but worried about the weather being so cold, suggested we wait till spring. She said we only needed a few bushes, but they were so small we bought more. We needed to cover the grave. She also said that lavender attracts bees and not to plant it next to a door. Then she went on about how the honeybees were becoming extinct and how sad it was for the environment. Nelly was freaked by that and talked of nothing else for about a week. Eventually I had to tell her to shut the fuck up about the bees, which I felt bad about afterward, but she was really getting on my nerves and was constantly asking questions I didn't know the answers to. I mean I was making up all kinds of shit at first, the bees have migrated, the bees are evolving into another species, but then it got too hard and my answers were scaring her, I might have said something about global warming coupled with a nonsensical end-of-the-world theory, I don't know. She just makes you feel like you have to know the answer to every fucking question she has. In the end she gets me in a corner, goes right up to my face, not even asking anymore but demanding an answer, so I gave her one.

“I don't know a fucking thing about the honeybees, so stop asking,” I say.

She stopped then, hasn't mentioned the bees since, not one word, but I know she still thinks about them.

Nelly

M
y father, a loathsome, malignant type of a fellow, sat me on his lap in the nighttime. Said he loved me.

Later I find him spent, stagnant, unclean, crumpled on an unmade bed. I find my pillow by his head and good golly Marnie had pushed it over his face.

And a good ruddy riddance to you, Eugene Doyle.

Marnie

I
love my friends. What is real to them is real to me. We don't care what people think either and we've been holding hands since our primary school teacher told us it was the safest way to cross the road. We've been hanging together “that” long and there's nothing we don't know about each other, maybe there's a few things, but mostly we tell each other everything.

Susie lives with her granny. Her mum's in a loony bin. Susie's going to be an actress one day, she's brilliant at acting. Goes to the drama club with all the squares, not deliberately of course, she got caught smoking in the cloakroom before Christmas and instead of getting detention she was sent to drama club once a week for a month, now Susie's in the school play,
Oliver Twist
. She's Nancy, has tons of songs to sing. Kimbo and I said we'd help with costumes and stuff, but only so we can hear Susie sing. It's a pretty cool musical.

Miss Fraser (failed actress in vintage clothing) wants Susie to go to drama school. She's already spoken to Susie's granny about it, but her granny wasn't having any of it.

“Actress, that'll be fucking right,” she says. “You're cutting folks' hair. It's a job for life, hen.”

“S'not up to you!” Susie told her.

Her granny slapped her for that. “Don't you contradict me. Fucking madam,” she says.

Susie was fuming for days, says her granny can go fuck herself, not to her face obviously, just to show us how serious she is about acting. She's even stopped smoking, only does it when she's drunk, says it's bad for the voice; so is coffee, apparently.

Izzy told me one time Susie's mum was a nympho. Would fuck a stick in the ground. It's a shame for Susie; her mum left when Susie was really small. Truth is Susie hardly remembers her, but loves her like she's in the next room. Sometimes Susie gets scared she'll end up in a loony bin too, like it runs in the family or something, and gets really depressed about it, but with all the support she's getting from her mates and from the drama teacher you can see the confidence in her growing by the day and she's starting to seriously think about life beyond Maryhill and a life away from her mad granny, who shoplifts by the way.

Kimbo's totally different from Susie. Everyone's scared of her 'cause she's bipolar, she got diagnosed last year. Her parents, dope-smoking fiends, didn't want her taking medication, if you can believe it, and insisted on therapy to help her handle her emotions, but when she threw a chair through the window of the school common room it became necessary. She's put on a lot of weight recently, nasty side effect of the antipsychotics she's taking, but apart from that they're working really well, although this one time she did go off them. She said she was feeling better and stopped taking them, but you can't do that, turns you into a psycho if you do that. She wasn't hospitalized or anything but she couldn't leave the house for a month. Susie and I prefer medicated Kimbo, everyone does, she's like Santa when she's doped, and always laughing and giving you stuff. I feel bad she's fat 'cause it's not like she's tall enough to carry it and of course she's totally deluded about it and wears clothes that are way too small for her. Before Xmas she got a belly button ring and it took the guy three stabs to make the hole, but she still doesn't get it and it's not like her parents are going to say anything, they worship her. Kimbo's maybe one of the few teenagers on the planet who actually likes her mum and dad. I don't blame her. Greg and Kate are brilliant; always knock before entering and when Kimbo tells them to “fuck off” then that's exactly what they do. If you go to Kimbo's around dinnertime her mum always makes you eat with them. It's usually McDonald's. Greg and Kate love McDonald's, although there was this one time I went round and they were having macaroni and cheese with tomatoes on top. Kate made it for Greg's birthday, he's mad for it apparently. She put a flag in the middle of it. He likes flags. I'd visit them every day if I could, but they live in the penthouse and I'm scared of the elevator. Also they like to walk around butt naked and sit with their bare arses on sofas and kitchen chairs. It's like Kimbo doesn't even notice anymore. Anyway that's how I know Kimbo and Susie. We lived in the same block. We were on the third floor, Susie on the first, and Kimbo was on the top.

When Susie and I moved from the blocks Kimbo transferred to the same school as us, that's how close we are. Izzy hated it in the towers and was glad to be rehoused. They moved us to Maryhill on Hazelhurst Road, newest housing estate on the block. I can still remember the smell when we got here, paint and putty, but I don't go round Kimbo's anymore. It's dangerous and not because of the refugees they've housed there but because of the wee radges who don't like the refugees there. Glaswegians are very territorial, even in a shit hole like Sighthill. It never occurs to them the accents around them belong to doctors and nurses, teachers and lawyers, educated people forced out of nice homes in beautiful lands only to be stored in tower blocks in the northeast of Glasgow. I mean seriously. Imagine losing everything you are and everyone you know, to have survived rape, starvation, and homelessness, to have escaped death at the hands of genocidal maniacs only to end up in a moldy housing estate. Now we have immigrants with university degrees and doctorates prostituting themselves, selling drugs and doing whatever they must to survive the hell we call asylum. I suppose the real heroes are the ones who come here and endure the food stamps, the local abuse, the secondhand clothing, and the poor housing, not to mention the mountains of paperwork needed to be acknowledged in a country that doesn't even know your language; but the others, the ones who turn to crime to survive, who form gangs to protect themselves from the daft arseholes who battered them senseless when they first came here, they fight a new enemy and with the same stealth that drove them from their countries in the first place.

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