Authors: Lesley Glaister
âIs she ill?' I asked, but it just repeated the words faster and faster until our fingers couldn't keep up and the glass spun right off the table. Stella shrieked, jumped up, upsetting the tray, and went for the light. There was a weird cold thickness in the room. You could feel the presence.
âGo!' I shouted. âGo back!' I flapped my arms and I could feel it there like silk tangling about them, and then my arms were free and it was gone and we could breathe.
Holding hands, we went into the kitchen. I poured milk into a pan. Everything looked frightening, even the toaster with its snarl of burnt crumbs, even the cottage-shaped tea cosy, the windows like gone-out eyes.
âLet's not do it any more,' I said.
âBut it was Mum.' Stella's voice was tiny.
âShall we ring Aunt Regina?' I said.
Stella nodded and the milk hissed in a frothy tongue over the edge of the pan.
We stood together in the hall with the gloomy stairs looming above us.
Derek answered. âEverything all right with you girls?'
âWe're fine,' I said, filling my voice with brightness.
âStella eating?'
âYes,' I said, and it was true she'd settled into eating a
little bit more and she was actually sipping at her milk and treacle as I spoke.
âFunny thing, I was going to ring you tomorrow. We thought we'd come down for Easter. How does that sound?'
âFine,' I said. âLovely. Yes, do come.'
âHow's the weather?' he said. âCan't make up its mind here.'
âSame here,' I said. âCan I speak to Auntie?'
âShe's taken herself out, this evening.'
âWhere?'
âRushcraft. I'll get her to phone you later, shall I?'
âOr tomorrow,' I said. âHow is she?'
âBlooming,' he said. âQuite the spring in her step. I'll get her to call you back, shall I?'
âSounds like she's all right,' I said to Stella after I hung up. âMaybe the . . . Hursa . . . is wrong.'
âMaybe,' she said, âbut still.'
I lay awake in my bed and even Cat Stevens looked spooky, the way he kept his eyes on my face. I closed mine, but I was still aware of the gigantic face. I got up, took him down, rolled him up and shoved him under the bed. I kept the door open for the light and so I could hear Bogart come in. I listened to my transistor quietly. âDesperado' was playing, which I found hard to listen to, the voice so desolate. And then I heard Bogart. He was humming when he went into the bathroom. I waited until he'd gone to bed before I crept in.
âHi ho,' he said. âThis is a turn up.' I snuggled into his arms and it felt so safe to be hugged tightly against living skin and flesh and warmth.
âWe back on then?' he said.
âIf you want,' I said.
âShall I use a johnny?'
I sighed. It wasn't really sex I wanted, but warmth, but it was hard to get the one without the other. I saw that it was one of those deals you have to make in life and so I made it.
â
Stella was disgruntled that I was back with Bogart.
âIf you get pregnant again you might die,' she reminded me.
âI can't get pregnant,' I said, âand anyway he's using rubbers.'
âI know,' she said. âI saw one floating in the toilet.'
âSorry.'
âI'll tell Aunt Regina,' she said, but I knew she never would.
Bogart had told me that his father was a rich banker â wanker, he said â the son of an earl. He'd grown up in Derbyshire in a huge place near Sheffield and gone to Eton. His mum had died when he was six, and he'd spent his holidays riding and boating and visiting cousins in Devon. He was the only child and would eventually inherit the family fortune, he said, which is one reason why he didn't work.
âWhy do you get the social screw then?' I asked. The brown envelopes, addressed to Mr A. Robertson, had begun to arrive soon after he moved in. âCan't your dad send you money?'
âDad and I . . .' His face hardened. âWe don't speak. Bastard. I won't ask for a penny from him, won't give him the satisfaction. No, I'll wait, me. I'll wait till he's gone then I'll be quids in. You should see the place, Mel, we can have a commune â Celia, Bruce, Marion, Stella â and we can have a barrel-load of kids all rolling about under the apple trees.'
He would often paint this picture of how the future would be. It made him more exciting, sexier, that he was rich and posh and that he was a rebel too. His dad had expected him to follow him into the bank. âCan you imagine me in a collar and tie?' he'd say, and mime being hanged.
âCan we go and have a look?' I said.
But he refused.
âJust from the gate?'
But he shook his head. âI'm not setting foot within a mile of the place,' he said, ânot till he's six foot under.'
At night I'd sometimes get Bogart to tell me stories of his childhood. His cousins Hugh and Perry and their ponies, the adventures they'd have boating out to islands with a tent. It reminded me sometimes of
Swallows and Amazons
, sometimes of the Famous Five. After making love and feeling so falsely adult it was comforting to snuggle childishly under his arm and fall asleep listening to his tales.
â
Bogart went on Good Friday and I opened the doors and windows to let out the smell of smoke. It was a breezy spring day with sweetness flying in the air and I noticed that the daffodils in the garden had bothered to come up, even though nobody cared. We'd done nothing in the garden since Mum died.
Derek's first words when he and Aunt Regina arrived were, âI'll get the mower onto that,' nodding at the waving, dandelion-starred lawn. They'd brought eggs from their own hens, and Easter eggs too, which Aunt Regina had made herself in fancy moulds. It felt normal in a comforting way, though not normal at all for us, for Stella to be out in the garden helping Derek with the weeding while Aunt Regina and I made a simnel cake. She gave me the ingredients for the marzipan and I watched her as she creamed butter and sugar, the muscles glimmering through the fat at the top of her arms.
âHow are you coping with your grief?' she asked, pausing with the sieve in the air to give me a meaningful look while a fine veil of flour floated down.
âFine,' I said.
âHas Dad been in touch much?'
I lied and said yes. He was still sending money but he hardly ever rang us.
âAnd how are
you
?' I said.
âFine,' she said. âMaybe a wee bit' â she tapped the sieve on the bowl edge and started to fold in the flour with a lovely scooping action of her wrist â âout of sorts. My age,' she explained.
âSeen the doctor?'
She shook her head. âThat looks gorgeous.' She smiled at the ball of marzipan. âCould you zest me those lemons now? No need for any doctor. It's just the change.'
âBut you could still . . .'
âOh, I'll soldier on.'
Derek came into the kitchen, bits of grass snarled up in his curly grey beard, and to my horror he patted Aunt Regina on her bottom. Stella pulled a face at me from behind him and I stifled a giggle in my lemony hand.
âI had a really strange dream last night,' I said. âI dreamed Mum came into my room.' I looked at Stella. âAnd she said to tell you' â I pointed at Aunt Regina â âthat you should go and see the doctor.'
âI wonder why she didn't come and see me?' Aunt Regina said. She sounded quite put out.
âWell, I dreamed the Prime Minister turned out to be a dog,' Derek said, and guffawed into the sink.
When they left on Easter Monday afternoon, Derek slipped us each a pound and said how welcome we'd be to visit, and to ring in an emergency any time of night or day. I hugged Aunt Regina tight as she made me promise to make Stella eat.
âI will,' I promised, âif you do what Mum said and go to the doctor's.'
âYou wee fusspot!' She shook her head. âI will, if you promise to look after yourself.'
âPromises, promises,' Derek said. âCan I have a go? Will you two promise' â he smiled between Stella and me â âto laugh at least once a day?'
âWe'll try,' I said.
We stood and waved as they drove away, then I went in to phone Bogart and tell him to come back home.
â
It was at Bawdsey on a mellow trip one hot afternoon that Bogart first met Jesus. The mud was drying on my calves into itchy lettering, a kind of script; I don't know what the language was. Somehow, I must have gone off the path, searching maybe, or just enjoying the warm suck of the mud. I found Bogart sitting cross-legged in the long grass, his face a blaze of bliss. He pointed to the sky and said, âHe came to me.'
I sat down beside him and examined my legs. âWhat language is this?' I said.
He only glanced. âHe bade me wait,' he said.
âWho?'
âOur Lord. Melanie.' He turned to me and his eyes had gone golden as a lion's. âI have seen the light. I have seen Jesus. And he has bade me wait.'
âFor what?'
âDon't know,' he admitted. We waited there for the rest of the afternoon. The thing about the acid was the way it stretched the surface and changed the way I saw things. One time I felt like an animal, my sense of smell sharp as a dog's and I snuffled and wagged along the street, feeling a tail, real as my hand, feeling the blood pound in my veins and the air go in and out of me of its own accord. I knew then for absolute certain that our physical bodies are pets for our souls, and we must look after them as kindly as we would tend a pet, and that not only did we have souls but so did rabbits and snails and trees and all the babies that never got to be.
I wandered off and played for a while with a black dog, chasing and laughing (and the dog was laughing) and then it started to wear off, which leaves you with a strange emptiness, as if the elastic that holds your mind together has lost its snap. I found Bogart again and he hadn't moved a muscle. A frown in the sky had obscured the sun and the hairs on my arms hissed and swayed.
I got hold of his hand and tried to pull him up, but he seemed to have grown into the ground.
âI've got to wait,' he repeated.
âI've got to go,' I said. But it was another age and the sun had oozed its yellow juice between the stones before I could get him to budge.
âWhat did he say again?' I said.
âTo wait.'
âYeah,' I said, âbut that could be for days or weeks. He probably means wait for another sign or something.'
He looked at me, eyes spinning in opposite directions. And then he stood, tottered unsteadily for a minute. âFucking foot's gone to sleep,' he said, stamping so that the ground shook.
The sign, when it came, was on the anniversary of Mum's death. Neither Stella nor I referred to the date, but Aunt Regina phoned and made us acknowledge it. She said that she and Derek would be coming to see us for a week and to keep strong and had we kept our promises, because she'd kept hers.
âYou went to the doctor?' I said, bracing myself. âWhat did he say?'
âThere's nothing amiss,' she said, âbut we've become friends. Kindred spirits.'
âGood,' I said.
âOr soulmates,' she continued. âBetween you and me, Derek is finding it all rather trying. Nose out of joint sort of thing.'
âAnyway, you'll be coming to see us,' I said. She gave me the likely date and I wrote it on my hand.
That evening, for the first time in months, we had a seance. It was in the hope of attracting Mum, of course, or someone who'd act as go-between. Bogart was in the garden snoozing on a deckchair. The Bible lay on the table; he'd taken to searching it for clues. Since Jesus first spoke to him he'd been waiting for another sign, searching the sky, the television and the post, taking regular doses of acid to keep his mind open â but to no avail.
Stella arranged the Scrabble letters while I lit the candles. I'd cried earlier, privately, and then I'd removed a school picture of me from a frame and, by trimming the edges off, got a picture of Mum in there. I sat her on the table by the letters and polished the special glass with a silky petticoat.
âIs anyone there?' said Stella and we waited and, as usual, at first there was nothing.
âIs anyone there?' Stella repeated, and at last, the glass began to tremble.
âWhat's your name?' I asked.
The glass hesitated and seemed to change its mind several times, before eventually it went to H.
âMaybe Hursa?' Stella whispered.
âIs our mother with you?' I asked.
The glass began to move more certainty now. C â A â L â L â A â L â A â N, it spelled.
âAlan?' Stella said. âWho's Alan? We don't know an Alan,' she told Hursa. C â A â L â L â A â L â A â N, it said again, and, whatever we asked, that's all it would spell.
I was getting bored. âShall we give it up?' I said, talking to Stella, not the spirit.
At that moment Bogart came in. He opened the door and stood in the doorway.
âPiss off,' Stella said.
âWhat you doing?'
âCommuning with the spirits,' I said, frostily. He came in and watched. I could feel the shape of him in the doorway behind me and I waited for him to start teasing, but he just said, âGo on then.'
âNothing's happening,' Stella said. âIt just keeps saying, Call Alan.'
He was silent for a moment, then: âWhat did you say?'
âCall Alan,' I said. âIt's getting on my wick.'
âChrist,' he breathed. âJesus Christ.'
âWhat?' Stella and I said together.
âThat's me,' he said.
We stared at him in the flickering light. â
Alan?
' I said. Of course Bogart wasn't his real name and early on I'd plagued him to know it, and the letters that came to the house said Mr A. Robertson, but I'd forgotten lately: he was just Bogart to me. My arm was aching from holding it in position over the glass.