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Authors: Gee Williams

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Desire Line (44 page)

BOOK: Desire Line
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‘You knew Sara was in Rhyl?'

‘We did.' She shook the red hair and swept it back from her face till the skin stretched. ‘It's a long story. Tomiko actually
saw
her. As did Jay and then Neil but with Tomiko it made everything worse afterwards. So— I could have texted, I could have phoned but for some stupid reason, I stayed fixated on writing— and the
next
day there was Mum's picture on the news. Missing. Dad had got it up straight away, policeman you know. And so I'd put things in the letter Tomiko took that were already lies by then. Pretending. Because, honestly, I'd felt her die.'

Anyone would pity Eurwen for what was to come next. Constant reruns of ‘Oxford historian's last, etc' activated even Renate Desmond, her old headteacher, among the other sympathisers. But for the daughter of a dead mother it was already a case of the words crossed out, the calls not made. That text. She'd calculated less than ten characters could've turned Sara aside from her walk. Then six. Am OK – E

‘I never managed fewer.'

‘But nobody saw what happened! She
could've
been alive all this time. There's not a single recorded sighting of her on November 17
th
—'

Like Josh, even stricken she was alert. ‘Where did you get that from?'

‘I've been reading up.'

She pursed her lips, dismissive, as always, of every POV not her own. ‘Then don't.
They
told themselves she'll be back, it will mend.' She expanded on the damaging consequences of Josh never quite getting going again with Meg– keeping Sara's spot open? Gramps Geoffrey hanging on to Tackley Close like a limpet, finally letting only to single women. No children, no pets. ‘It had to stay pristine!' Fleur's way of mourning had been to search the faces in Sara's Oxford on a regular march that started at the Taylorian Institute, skirted the Radcliffe Camera, kissed the pavement outside All Souls, then took a sharp left and over Magdalen Bridge and so down to St Clement's College. Where she'd eat her sandwich under the Thomasina Mulberry Tree. I knew it well. I must've gone with her dozens of times, unaware we were on a mission. And it was Fleur's grief brought Eurwen to a stop.

I said, ‘You mustn't feel guilty because—' Convincing her was my feeble aim. But she was disagreeing before I could finish. My intentions may be exactly as my name promised— Proper, Dutiful, Well-Motivated or whatever— but the strategy? Impractical. I didn't have the materials and they weren't making any more.

‘Why mustn't I? She killed herself thanks to me. People always say, oh it was years ago— you were somebody else then. Henri says that.
I
wasn't, not in the essentials. I feel the same person I am now, went away with Tomiko because he'd do anything for me. And I was wanting— such
a lot
. Instead of wanting others. It's no more complicated than that. Dad tried. Talk to your mother, he said. I can't do it but she loves
you
. She'll come round. Then home you go and back to school for her sake if not your own. Give it another year. As if! He couldn't cope. I couldn't have coped in his position. I was so—' another lost ending. ‘Then he started saying we would have to invite her up and sort things out. But I told him if she comes here I'll run— again. He was
furious
.'

Yet he hadn't invited her. She'd arrived. By which time Eurwen was pregnant and fled with my father. ‘Did Josh ever hit you?'

‘What?
Of course not!
Where did that come from?'

‘No idea. Sorry.'

‘I remember his telling me it was time to grow up. And I did— just too late. I loved her back, though.' She searched inwards, shaking her head. ‘She was— I see now she was as good as she was able to be. No one knew what was going wrong for her. But it was
bad
and it started before Dad left and it wasn't getting better. No one could help. You think they didn't try? And yet she was a sort of celebrity.'

‘She still is.'

‘Yes. But you had to experience it in real time. Do you know, even Henri and her sister, they were followers? If Mum had questioned them herself instead of sending Fleur I— mm-m, they'd have given me up. And as for all the rest—' More past movies were playing behind her eyes. ‘Usually they'd be older than me, undergrads. They'd make their first approach, awestruck, in the Marks and Spencer's queue or Blackwell's. Once I remember I'd been to her talk at her old college and we went afterwards and ate cherries in Headington Hill Park, throwing cherries to the squirrels. And this man came and just sat down by us. Almost touching, you know? There was vacant bench too, but no, which made it— disturbing. His manner was off-key, she could see I didn't like it. Very casually she got up and gave me a tug and the instant we were out of earshot she said— you'll have heard this, ‘I do not love thee Doctor Fell/ Why I don't I cannot tell.' It was brilliant. Spot on! Then we got the giggles just as three girls, really pretty girls, recognised
Sara Meredith
. Oh, they were
majorly
into the book, into Thomasina, into
her
. She listened to them and then, ‘Thank-you for that,' she said. ‘And your timing. My daughter and I were just sharing a joke at male expense.' She could always say the right thing to the Thomasina groupies. Even when a nuisance.'

‘She didn't like being respected for her book?'

Eurwen gave the question more thought than it seemed to merit. ‘It's odd but now if you press me I'd say she
didn't
care for it— totally not. And she became more uncomfortable as time went on. '

‘Why? Why would she?'

‘I don't know! She hadn't written anything else for years by then. Maybe that was—' but the wasted attempt was soon over. ‘
I don't know
. We never talked about
history
. She was very guarded – I realise now – and she gave less and less away. Of course she had to be quite
clever about the drinking so only Gramps and Dad and I suspected.'

‘And Fleur.'

That made her pause. ‘And Fleur told you?'
Not exactly.
‘That's a surprise— you see, Sara Meredith was special. It was as if you had to use other standards for her— another reason why my running off wouldn't matter, I thought. I couldn't take the books and Oxford and history and reading and the people next door popping round to tell us about more bloody books they'd been reading. Hated the lot. And poor Fleur— ‘Darling, when you're older you'll appreciate all this.' Wasn't happening for me Fleur! And still it's not. I'm more Dad. And there's
more
terrible luck. He and she, they
fell
in love, literally. They had to let themselves go— for each other.'

‘I think so.'

‘When I was small she used to describe how they'd met, how it happened because I liked hearing. But it was a sick joke played on them. Love? They hardly spoke the same language. Nature never meant them to be together. Then there was the drink! Don't ask me about that. No one seemed know why, not Geoffrey, not even that therapist he came up with to treat her ‘depression'. Dad jumped ship— to Rhyl. She was never going there.
'
(Saying But she did! would put me on the wrong side.)
‘
And
I was
odious
— if I really wanted to hurt her I'd let fly at Thomasina. How nobody could be that wonderful. Always seemed to work, my telling Mum her precious Thomasina was a fairy story, that I'd like to dig the Peerless Girl up and give her a kicking. Henri reminds me of it now and then, if required.' No wavering— she was steely again which was something to be grateful for.

It sounded a warning though. The Henri-and-Me chat might be overdue and whatever I'd come down here for it wasn't that. As an adult I could see how Henri Fortun had cultivated a part of Eurwen's character, her one strip of weakness based on guilt, for her own gain. Of course my existence isn't appreciated. Not just because the first Sunday she was invited to tea on Pryorsfield's terrace, I kicked a football straight at her head and our relationship has gone downhill since. ‘You're alike, you and Sara,' I said quickly. ‘Though you're actually more—' I never got to tell her what.

‘I looked too much like my mother!' she almost spat. ‘That was our problem. She kept seeing herself as everyone did and it was so far from the truth. The Rhyl me was much closer.'

I couldn't win this. ‘And when did you find out about—?' I tapped my own chest.

‘Mm-m. Well, I met Tomiko at the start of the summer. We'd go to Jay and Neil's and one night we stayed on. My decision. That would've been a few days before she arrived. Everyone assumed I must have known I was pregnant by then because it made a great alibi. Tragic but understandable— yes? Even
Tomiko!
He wanted to be completely responsible.'

‘So— you weren't?'

She laughed as if it was nothing. ‘No! You're as bad as he is. I mean look at his
art—
' she made it sound like a vice, ‘—mania more like. For years, nothing but pictures of the water. Because of her. Sato Tomiko has to take it all on himself!'

Thinking of anything but what I was saying, I told her, ‘He's given that name away. It's somebody else now. So I'm not sure what we're meant to call him.'
*

‘Oh-h for God's sake!
'

Mama Rotti
had finally shut up. I was aware of the crackle from inside the woodburner and some appliance humming in the next room. Eurwen seemed to have run down as well— she'd put all the available information she thought she had out for me. And unless you bring it up, I realised, she won't add anything. Less tired, Yori,

less in thrall to the goddess, you'd have picked her up on the one new thing you'd learned tonight. Instead— Time for you to clear the air and do her some good, I decided.

—so Sara came to find her daughter or wait for her return. But Josh's house proved too much. She cooked food for him to come home to— she mentions that, though never any cleaning. Meantime, he almost convinced her you were safe and they'd get you back. In her imagination— when she drank— she could see a new life stretched out. When she didn't, it disappeared again. Meanwhile they went for walks like the old days. They talked. Not allowed when only one of you thinks they love. He might've murdered her by giving her hope and then seeming to take it away. But she was in the wrong too. If he's what she wanted she should have tried harder. There's never nothing to do— instead of going out to kill yourself, I mean. Can't we agree on that? I've come to get her story straight and let us both off. Josh too—

‘Do you still have the scarf?' I asked. I'm reporting my idiotic change of subject because it turned out Smart Bet. I had been about to make another mistake.

She was into her own thoughts, like me. ‘Mm? What? What scarf?'

‘Blue-green, a big silk square. With a decoration at the edges. You used to wear it when I was small.'

She frowned. ‘Dad must have bought it for me, I think? That was years ago.' Irritation now. ‘
No
, not any more. It's long gone. Yori, you really should come back to Oxford.' But the mood had lightened. ‘All that
past
blowing in the streets!'

Being mocked was a thrill when it hinged on her knowledge of me— and I might still have told her I was putting together ‘Sara in Rhyl.' But she hadn't read the journals, or the scarf would mean something. Of course she
hadn't read them
, dolt!
Josh, having sense and being a father, would see them as not suitable for a teenage girl struggling with sex, loss, birth. For Eurwen all the courses of adult life had come along on one platter. And by she was old enough and due some re-education— I thought of the bitter morning on the beach, the chrysanthemums successfully launched but the electricity still discharging over my head— Eurwen was about to take off. She and Josh had had less contact than Tomiko and me ever since. ‘Rhyl's got a past,' I defended it.

But she brooded on about Oxford as if I hadn't spoken, how she'd never want to live in the city again, how it changes but it doesn't, not really, because it thinks it shouldn't have to. Her words were hypnotic, reminding me of sleep. I had to keep blinking and then the floor's colours crept and overshot the joints, off-white curdled into adjacent indigo. Next thing, the plaster walls started to pulsate, as did Eurwen herself with that hair rippling at every movement. Her voice seemed to fill a room stretched corridor-thin and getting thinner and the only fixed point was the cabinet I'd rejected in a lifeless Pryorsfield—
Decide what you're keeping Yori. I know! But it's all yours. There's a mountain of furniture and the ceramics— and I can't count how many pictures. Fleur said you had a favourite. You must have that, if nothing else—
She'd known it was more valuable than everything else put together, of course she had. But to show gratitude now was an admission of the lack before. Pleading thirst I heaved myself up and out into what I assumed was a kitchen. It was and vast. Bigger than the living room— a former canteen? Never meant to be part of dwelling, its refit with composites and steel appliances wasn't at war with a gravel-pit pedigree. And it was where she actually lived, you could see by the chaos. The tops were crammed with packets and cartons and it wouldn't be for human consumption, in fact I recognised the catfood – still loyal to her usual brand – and the net of misshapen horse carrots spilling from a cupboard reminded me of cake and Jay. There was a refectory table long enough to seat an entire workforce at but catering seemed to have given way to her office. Against the far wall a workstation held every gadget, old and new and even then there was room for more chairs around the Pryorsfield elm coffer, a pony bridle thrown down on lid. And other-than-Eurwen's possessions were all over. Two raincoats for instance on the back of the outside door. A waxed fedora you could easily imagine topping red hair. Its companion bucket hat had Henri's blunt face hovering in space under it, an illusion convincing as the Animal Farm sign. And Sara Meredith stepping out.

BOOK: Desire Line
5.43Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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