Read Thirteen Steps Down Online
Authors: Ruth Rendell
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Crime, #Thrillers, #Psychological, #Suspense
Iceland spar, amethyst quartz, olivine schist, basalt, and lapis lazuli, in
the center of which lay a small round lace matlike a crocheted doily.
Shoshana's chair was of ebony inlaid all along the back and arms with
white and yellow crystals, but the chair provided for the client was the
Windsor type, plain wood, here and there stained with what looked like
blood but was probably tomato ketchup.
"Sit."
Nerissa knew the routine and obeyed. At Madam Shoshana's command
she laid her hands, manicured that morning, the nails lacquered a
slightly paler gold than the skin of her fingers, on the lace mat in the ring
of stones. Shoshana gazed at Nerissa's hands and let her eyes rove in
circles from crystal to crystal, rather like a cat following a moving spot of
light.
"Tell me which of the sacred stones you can feel drawn closer to your
fingers? Which two are gradually drawing toward you?"
It was a source of dismay to Nerissa that she could never feel, and
certainly not see, any of the crystals moving. She was always reproached
for this failure. Madam Shoshana seemed to imply it was due to some
insensitivity on her part or to lack of concentration. Certain she would
once more be found wanting, she said, "I think it's the dark blue one and
the pink one."
"Try again."
"The dark blue one and the green one."
Shoshana shook her head, more in sorrow than in anger. Some of her
clients she had known for years, but she never etreated them with any
more friendship or intimacy than she had done on their first visit. She
looked at Nerissa as if she hadnever seen her before.
"The basalt and the amethyst are in your Ring of Fate today."
Shoshana's voice sounded as if it came from a long wayoff and long in
the past. So might a mummy sound if it could speak. "Both are pushing
hard to break the energy barrier between themselves and your fingers.
You must relax and let them come. Relax now and bid them appraoch
you."
Many times before had Nenssa been through this routine. She tried to
let her hands go limp, but she was very aware of the white owl and the
gray-robed waxwork staring at her, she thought, accusingly. "Come,
come, come," she intoned. It suddenly occurred to her that this was
exactly what an arrogant former boyfriend used to whisper to her while
they were making love, and she bit her lip to stop herself giggling.
"Concentrate," said Shoshana sternly.
Nerissa thought how frightened she would be if she actually saw the
basalt and the amethyst move at her bidding. But only Madam Shoshana
could see that happening. She began to speak.
"Your fateful balance is badly out of truth. The stones speak of
confusion, doubt, and fear. They tell me of a dark man, his name
beginning with a D. He is your fate, for good or ill. His destiny is to live
by water ... You are pushing the stones away--ah, too late. They have
ceased to speak. You see how they shrink as the soul comes out of
them."
The stones looked the same to Nerissa but she knew that was due to
her spiritual blindness. Shoshana had told her so on previous occasions.
She was too worldly, the soothsayer had said, too preoccupied with her
own appearance, with possessions and with artifacts. She wasn't sure
what "artifacts" meant, and although she meant to look the word up she
always forgot.The stuffed birds and the wizard figure were all looking at
her with contempt. Nerissa cast her eyes down, humiliated.
The session was over. Her homework was to pay close attentionto the
man whose name began with a D and to waterwith creatures swimming
in it, though not fish. She stood upand felt in her bag for her wallet.
Madam Shoshana on her feetwas rather different from Madam Shoshana
sitting down. Shebecame more practical and businesslike, less aware of
the souland more of the pocket.
"Forty-five pounds, please, no euros and no credit cards,"she said, as if
the client had never been before.
Nerissa left and walked thoughtfully along Westbourne Grove. When
Madam Shoshana said that the dark man was her fate, her heart had
leapt for she was sure she must mean Darel Jones. But suppose she
hadn't, suppose she had meant Rodney Devereux?
She could have asked but she'd known it would have been useless.
Shoshana would only have said the stones told her no more and implied
that this was Nerissa's fault for obstructing them with her energy. As for
the water, immediately to mind came the Pacific Rim restaurant Rodney
loved and where he was always taking her, though Nerissa didn't like
watching the fish swimming about in the huge mirror-backed tanks and
tenminutes later eating one of them. She couldn't tell why it was different
from just buying fish at Harrods Food Hall and having it later, but
somehow it was.
Still, this must be what Shoshana had meant, speaking of it so soon
after mentioning the man with the initial D. Of courseshe had specifically
said not fish, but there were other things in those tanks, snails with
colored shells and little creeping things and a creature like a water
snake. Last time they'd been there she was afraid Rodney would eat the
snake and that made her queasy. She'd been on the point of saying to
him that she'd never go to Pacific Rim again, but for some reason she
hadn't. Now she'd have to go there. It was her fate.
Christie's first victim, as far as is known, was a young woman of Austrian
origin called Ruth Fuerst. She had been a nurse, but when Christie first
met her in 1943 was working in amunitions factory and as a part-time
prostitute. Whether he first met her while a policeman on the beat or in a
cafe or pub is a matter of doubt, but he claimed that she came to see him
in Rillington Place while Ethel Christie was at work in Osram's factory.
No one involved in the case could say if he ever visited her in the single
room she rented at 41 Oxford Gardens.
Mix looked up from the book, keeping his finger on thepage. What an
amazing thing! Although he had read everybook on Christie he could get
hold of, mainly from hunting through secondhand bookshops, none of
them had stated precisely where Ruth Fuerst had lived. But here it was,
a few houses along the street from the address Danila had given him. If
only it had been the same house, he thought with a stab of regret. If only
she had had the same room! He imagined going back there with her,
maybe screwing her in the very place .. Still, what he'd discovered made
going out with her quite an exciting experience rather than a chore.
He read on. "Christie killed Ruth Fuerst one day in the middle of
August. 'She undressed,' he said, 'and wanted me to have intercourse
with her.' " In his book 10 Rillington Place, which Mix had among the rest
of his library, Ludovic Kennedy,writing that their relationship developed
gradually, suggeststhat it was far more likely she had a straightforward
transactionwith him, prostitute and client, or granted her favors as
hisprice for not reporting her soliciting in his capacity as a
specialconstable.
"During sexual relations, he strangled her with a piece of rope. Then he
wrapped her leopard--skin coat round her"-a fur coat in August!--"took
her into the front room and placed her under the floorboards with the
rest of her clothes.
"That same evening, Ethel, who had been away in Sheffield with her
relations, arrived home with her brother Henry Waddington, who
intended to stay the night. Because they had only one bedroom and that
was occupied by Christie and Mrs.Christie, Henry Waddington slept in
the front room, a few feetaway from the temporarily interred body of Ruth
Fuerst ... "
Mix had to stop there. He was calling for Danila at eight and he meant
to leave early in order to stand outside and contemplate the house where
that first victim had lived. Number41 Oxford Gardens was on the other
side of Ladbroke Grove, rather shabby, much in need of painting and
general refurbishment. No doubt it would now be worth some enormous
sum, incredible to its wartime occupants if any of them were still alive. A
cat, rather like Otto but older and with a gray muzzle, came over the wall
and stopped when it saw Mix staring. Mix shooed it and made a face, but
it was streetwise and experienced. It gave him an inscrutable look and
strolled slowly into a clump of bushes.
Had Reggie ever stood where he was, then making up his mind, gone up
the path and rung the bell? There may have been other occasions when
he came here before that final fatal meeting. Hadn't the author of the
best-known book on Reggie suggested they had known each other for a
long time? Very probably all his relationships with his victims developed
gradually. It stood to reason he must sometimes have gone to their
places. After all, Ethel Christie was usually at home in Rillington Place
and he couldn't always just have met them in cafes and pubs.
Mix was growing more and more convinced that Reggie had visited
Gwendolen at St. Blaise House. When he first began renting the flat, she
had mentioned in passing her mother and father with whom she had
lived in those far-off days and she had also mentioned her mother's
death soon after the war. The father would have been working as a
professor, whatever that meant, certainly that he'd be away from home.
Mix could imagine Gwendolen letting Reggie in, taking him into the
kitchen for a cup of tea--snob that she was--while they talked about the
abortion, her need for it and his ability to perform the operation. Perhaps
she couldn't afford the fee Reggie asked, but Mix couldn't remember
reading anywhere that he evercharged ...
Approaching the house where Danila lived, at two minutes after eight,
he found her waiting for him just inside the frontgate. This didn't please
him, as it was too much of a sign of desperation. He would have
preferred her to keep him waiting,even if it had been half an hour. But
now she was with him, dressed up to the nines as his gran used to say,
in skin-tightleather trousers, a frilled shirt, and a fake leopard-skin
jacket. Just like Ruth Fuerst, he thought, and he wondered if Fuerst had
looked like this, skinny and dark and sharp-featured. He tried to recall if
he'd ever seen photographs of her. They walked up to Ladbroke Grove
and the Kensington Park Hotel.
He loved KPH, not because there was anything special about it but
because all those years ago Reggie had used it. It was historic. They
ought to have a sign up telling the clientele thatit had once been the local
of west London's most infamous killer. But when you had people
ignorant enough to pull down Rillington Place and destroy all signs of
that celebrated site,what could you expect?
"You're very quiet," said Danila, a vodka and blackcurrant in front of
her. "Kayleigh'd want to know if the cat had gotyour tongue."
It was an unpleasant reminder of Otto. "Who's Kayleigh?"
"The girl who does the evening shift at the spa. She's my friend." When
Mix made no reply, she said eagerly--or desperately?--" I had my fortune
told today."
Mix was going to say he'd no time for that and it was a load of rubbish
when he remembered reading how Nerissa patronized faith healers,
fortune-tellers, and had some guru. Besides, he half believed in ghosts
now, didn't he? "I reckon there maybe something in it. There's lots of
things we don't know, aren't there? I mean, some of them'll turn out to
be scientific all along."
"That's exactly what I say. Madam Shoshana at the spa does mine.
She's the boss but she's a soothsayer too, got all sorts of qualifications,
letters after her name and all."
"What did she say?"
"You mustn't laugh. My fate's bound up with a man whose name starts
with a C. And I thought, I wonder if it's achap who does the pedicures at
the spa. He's called Charlie, Charlie Owen."
Mix laughed. "It might be me."
"Your name begins with an M."
"Not my surname."
"Yeah, but that's an S."
"No, it's not. I ought to know. It's C, E, double L, I, N, I."
She stared into his face. "You're kidding."
"D'you want another drink?" he said.
On the way back to Oxford Gardens he bought two bottles ofCalifornia
white, cheap-offer bin ends, in the wine shop. They drank it on her bed
and afterward Mix didn't think he acquitted himself very well. But what
did it matter? They were both drunk and she wasn't the sort of girl for
whom you felt you had to put up a good performance. Outside her door,
the floor and the ceiling rocked like the waves of the sea, rising and
sinking and quivering. Heading for the stairs, clutching the banisters,he
stumbled and nearly came to his knees, his jacket falling forward over
his head. Adjusting it as best he could and starting down, he passed a
man coming up who stood back, unmistakably flinching at a blast from
his breath. Another tenant, his fuddled mind conjectured, Middle
Eastern chap, sallow face, black mustache, they all looked the same. He
didn't look back to see the Middle Eastern chap pick up a small white