Is There Anything You Want? (9 page)

Read Is There Anything You Want? Online

Authors: Margaret Forster

BOOK: Is There Anything You Want?
9.03Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

THERE WAS NO
one watching, but Mrs Hibbert turned away abruptly from the glass door opening into her porch as though she were trying to hide. She screwed the beastly letter up, then passed it from hand to hand before throwing it into the waste-paper basket in her kitchen. She stood and looked at the offending little ball, lying in the corner of the otherwise empty basket. Ten seconds later, she bent down and took it out and, smoothing the paper as best she could, reread the letter. Her face burned. She was
mortified.
She wished the letter had arrived the day before, on a hospital day when, doing her job as a Friend of St Mary's, she would have soon got things in proportion and laughed it off, whereas today she would have to struggle to do so. She was always tired on Fridays – it took more out of her than she ever let anyone realise, being on her feet for four hours in that hospital. But now she badly needed to be busy, to get over the nasty letter, and so she was glad she had Dot to take shopping.

She took the crumpled paper to the table and told herself to be sensible. It was not a nasty letter at all, merely an official one. It declined her offer to help in the Mental Health Research charity shop, saying that the charity's policy was not to employ people over 70 because it was felt the standing required was too wearing for them. Such nonsense! Those women sat most of the time. She'd seen them. There were two chairs behind the counter where one went to pay and they sat on them. Some of them didn't even
stand up to take the money, they were so lazy. And rude. As for not employing people over 70, that was ridiculous – there was hardly anyone working there
under
70. Lucy Binns was probably only around 50, true, but Adelaide Priest was definitely either 70 already or just about to be, and as for Mrs Jarrett, she was indisputably nearer 80. Why was she being told this lie about age? She peered at the signature again. Barbara Bell. She didn't know any Barbara Bell, or a Barbara, or even a Bell. It said ‘coordinator' in brackets beside the name, whatever that meant. Probably someone in head office, not anyone local. Her own letter offering her services had been passed on. She wondered how many people would have read it. Would anyone in the shop itself have seen it? Had any of those women there read it and thought, oh heavens, here is that bossy Mrs Hibbert showing off? It made her shudder. She wished passionately that she had not put that bit in about having time now that she was no longer a magistrate. (And if she hadn't said that, it occurred to her, no one would have known her age and she somehow doubted if it would have been asked for.)

Suddenly, screwing the wretched letter up yet again, Mrs Hibbert dropped it this time into the bin where she put potato peelings and used tea-bags and other such waste. She would not now be tempted to take it out again. For a moment, she thought about writing back to Barbara Bell, thanking her for her communication and then, just in a casual fashion, throwing doubt on the age of certain women who already worked in the shop. She wouldn't, of course. She was not small-minded or malicious. She had her pride. Determined to be busy, she pulled out the cutlery drawer and emptied the contents on to the kitchen table with a curiously satisfying clash of metal. The drawer had long needed tidying. As she sorted out the fish knives from the steak knives (neither used since her husband died) she decided she would most likely have been terribly bored working in that pathetic shop. And, she remembered, it had an odd smell, rather unpleasant, fusty. It was alleged that all the clothes they received were either washed or dry-cleaned before being put out for sale, but Mrs Hibbert doubted this. It was one of the things she would have been
interested in establishing as true or not. That, and how prices were decided on, because, frankly, it seemed to her that the pricing policy was entirely haphazard. The books, for example: she had found three copies of Monica Dickens's
One Pair of Hands
on the shelves, all priced differently and yet all in paperback and all in the same condition. She had felt obliged to point this out to Mrs Jarrett, who was on duty that day. She'd shown her the pencilled-in prices:
70p, 75p,
£1.10. And what had been that silly woman's reaction? She'd laughed. She'd said how funny, and that it didn't matter, and that Mrs Hibbert could have any of the three for the lowest price, for 70
p
. As if the price was the important thing and not the discrepancies! And in any case she'd read all of Monica Dickens's books years ago. What Mrs Jarrett had failed to understand was how foolish, dishonest even, it made the shop and therefore the charity itself look. How would someone feel if they'd bought the £1.10 copy and then later on saw the other copies so much cheaper? Cheated, that's what.

She had the cutlery all lined up on the table and now she cleaned the compartments of the box she kept it in. Placing the knives and forks and spoons back in the compartments pleased her. She liked order; confusion and muddle irritated her. She had so longed to sort out the manifest confusion in that charity shop. Some charity shops, she'd observed with approval, had the clothes colour-co-ordinated, but not this one. This one, the one to which she had offered assistance, had everything jumbled up with the only distinction one of separating men's and women's and children's clothes. In fact, the
look
of the shop was what upset her most. A mess. It unsettled her. Her hands always itched to start reorganising it. Take the window for a start (and it
was
the start, after all). A large, plain, open-style shop window, crying out for an attractive display. And what did people looking into it see? A scruffy pile of jig-saw boxes in the centre, some shoes next to them on one side and three hideous vases on the other, one containing dusty ears of corn and the others empty. Otherwise a great void. Yet inside the shop she'd noticed a beautiful, almost complete, set of blue willow-pattern china which could have been displayed with great effect on one of the pristine lace table-cloths
draped at the back of the shop over a chair. Nobody had any
idea
, and it grieved her.

She knew she was getting in a state over nothing and that she must control herself. Dot would be waiting. She could not let her down, especially this week when the poor woman would have been worried to death by that daughter of hers. Mrs Hibbert had spotted her going into the clinic but had managed to make sure Sarah didn't see her. She'd been with that ghastly boyfriend of hers. He'd been half carrying her along. It was a dreadful thing to say, but Mrs Hibbert suspected there was not much wrong with Sarah Nicholson. Women who attended Mr Wallis's Thursday clinic did not always have something wrong with them. She knew they'd often just been sent by GPs for reassurance if they were the neurotic type, and Dot's daughter was certainly that. But Dot wouldn't have it. She didn't see how Sarah manipulated her. She was such a foolish girl, always had been, and she caused her mother endless anxiety. She could not help having cancer (if indeed she did have it, which was by no means yet proven) but she undoubtedly could have helped taking up with Mike Allen, a married man with three children, all young. However, best not to mention to Dot her feelings about that man. Maybe Dot guessed she did not approve of him – she was aware that she tightened her lips when he was mentioned and that her expression probably betrayed her – but she would never
say
anything.

Her coat on, she picked her car keys off the hook behind the door. She must have another key made for the garden shed so that this girl who was coming to help could get into it for tools if she was out, not that she intended to be until she'd trained her. It would take some doing – the child clearly had no idea what to do in a garden, but she'd seemed nice-natured and was eager for the job (yes, for the money, Mrs Hibbert knew that) and she'd been the only person to answer the advert in the post office. It had taken Mrs Hibbert a long time to face up to the fact that she had to have more help in the garden – she hated the thought – but though she had Martin Yates for the heavy work she. needed someone to help her weed, now that her arthritis increasingly troubled her. She didn't want her beautiful
garden to fall into the same state as Dot's. She didn't blame Dot, none of the neglect was Dot's fault, it was all Adam's. Once he'd become crippled himself he should have organised help, but he had been too stubborn (always expecting to get better) and too mean to see to it. How Dot had stayed married to that man Mrs Hibbert could not imagine. He was a bully and a tyrant, whereas her Francis had been a gentleman, and a truly gentle man.

If Dot was not ready and waiting she would be annoyed. Being annoyed with Dot was something she had to struggle with continually – Dot
was
annoying, and the most annoying thing about her was how she let Adam take advantage of her. On the occasions when she was not standing outside on Fridays at the agreed time, it was always because Adam had demanded attention just as she was putting her coat on. Dot would whisper as an excuse that he had needed help to get to the bathroom and this enraged Mrs Hibbert. Adam claimed he couldn't walk without assistance but why in that case did he not use sticks or crutches? Anyone sensible, and wanting to be independent, and eager to spare his wife would do so. Dot was tiny and fragile, under 5 feet tall and weighing a mere 7 stone, whereas he was huge and heavy. Leaning on her shoulder he was in danger of fracturing it with his immense weight. ‘Get him crutches,' Mrs Hibbert had told Dot, but Dot said that when she had suggested this to Adam he had been furious and had shouted that resorting to crutches would signify the end and he was not ready for that yet. He had had his bed moved downstairs so that he had only a few steps to get either to the bathroom or the kitchen, but whenever he wanted to move at all he summoned Dot. The rest of the time he lolled in their living-room watching television with the sound very loud even though he had a deaf aid and could hear perfectly well with it when he wanted to. It was an awful life for Dot.

She knew, or rather guessed, that people found her friendship with Dorothy Nicholson a little odd. Partly, it was a matter of class, and matters of class were still alive and well in their part of the world. Mrs Hibbert, in local terms, came from a well-off, once landowning family. She had been educated privately and
spoke without a trace of the regional accent. Dot, on the other hand, was a tenant farmer's daughter, a tenant of the Lawsons in the old days. As a girl, Mary Lawson (as Mrs Hibbert then was) had been in the habit of going to the farm to collect eggs and it was Dot who took her to the shed and picked the eggs out for her. She was such a tiny, thin scrap of a girl, and so eager to please, and she'd always seemed to admire Mary, regularly marvelling at how tall she was and how nice her nails were (Dot's were bitten) and how pretty her dresses (Dot was dressed in awful hand-me-downs which drowned her, with her older sisters being so much bigger). They became not exactly friends – the gulf in social status was too great – but pleasant acquaintances. When Mary Lawson returned as Mrs Hibbert after her years down south (though ‘south' had been still north, in effect) Dot was about the only person who had bothered to welcome her. At the time Mrs Hibbert came back, Dot had been married to Adam Nicholson for fifteen years and had a 5-year-old daughter. Mrs Hibbert had felt even more protective than she had done years ago when they were both children.

She drove the mile or so to Dot's house reflecting that this shopping trip to the out-of-town supermarket must be the one bright spot in her friend's life. Heaven knew, there was nothing very thrilling about going shopping, or not this sort of mundane shopping, but it meant Dot got away from Adam and had a ride in a car (the Nicholsons no longer had a car) and had someone to talk to. It pleased Mrs Hibbert to think she was providing such a treat, but it did
not
please her when Dot took advantage. Taking advantage meant not being ready and waiting. In Dot's place she would have positioned herself at a window ten minutes before the friend was due, her coat already on, key in her pocket, shopping list in hand, and she would have been out of her front door the moment she saw the car turn the corner. But Dot was never ready. Sometimes, like today, Mrs Hibbert had to peep the horn, and still no sign of her. Well, she was most certainly not going to get out of her car and go up those steps and ring the doorbell. It was bad enough being obliged to turn the engine off. She peeped once more, and looked at the clock. She would wait two more minutes and then she was just
going to drive off. But then, as she was checking her watch against the car clock, the front door opened. Dot stood there, smiling and waving and mouthing something. She did not, Mrs Hibbert noted, have her coat on. She disappeared back into the house leaving the door open and then a minute later reappeared pulling her coat on as she closed the door. Half-way down the six rather steep steps, she stopped. Exasperated, Mrs Hibbert lowered her car window and shouted, ‘Dot! Do come on! I haven't all day!' But Dot had retreated back up to her door and was taking her coat off again. Furiously, Mrs Hibbert watched as Dot struggled to remove the apron she had just remembered she'd left on and tried to shove it through the narrow slit of the letter-box. Oh, as if it mattered! But apparently it did, because Dot would not give up until the yellow spotted material had finally been disposed of. She trotted to the car, pink-faced and breathing heavily. ‘Sorry, Mary,' she whispered, ‘it was just that as I was getting ready Adam wanted . . .' ‘I don't want to know what Adam wanted,' Mrs Hibbert snapped. ‘I have no interest in the matter, or anything to do with him, as you very well know. You are quite aware, Dot, of how absurd I think it is that you let yourself be a slave to that inconsiderate man. Now, get in and settle down.'

Dot settled. She was so small she could hardly see through the windscreen and kept stretching her neck up like a tortoise. Mrs Hibbert cleared her throat, ashamed at having spoken so sharply and only hoped Dot understood that it really was Adam she was annoyed with. She badly wanted to say something sympathetic, or to apologise, but did neither. She would try to show Dot by her actions that she hadn't meant to sound so angry, for after all, actions spoke louder than words (an aphorism of which she was particularly fond). She drove confidently on, feeling not quite so guilty having decided this, negotiating roundabouts with aplomb and gathering speed once the dual carriageway was reached. It was only 3 miles along it to all the big supermarkets, a hideous collection of them, all more or less next to each other. There were plenty of shops in their small town but almost everyone made a weekly trip out here because of course everything was cheaper and the variety of goods much
greater. Mrs Hibbert didn't need to save money and she had no desire for a wider choice, but she liked the outing, though she would never have admitted this – she was going for Dot's sake, no other reason. Adam kept her very short of housekeeping money and wanted every wretched penny accounted for. He regarded his wife as disorganised, scatty, impressionable and hopeless at knowing what was value for money. Mrs Hibbert had been bound to admit that there was some truth in this. She had seen Dot forget to buy essential items like soap powder or toilet rolls and come away from the shop with a pound of grapes long past their best (‘Reduced!') or expensive frozen chocolate eclairs which would rightly infuriate Adam. She loved cream cakes and was always ‘fancying' them.

Other books

Hitler's Daughter by Jackie French
The Ravi Lancers by John Masters
Hook's Pan by Marie Hall
Crossroads by Belva Plain