Read Little Bits of Baby Online
Authors: Patrick Gale
âMarcus,' he said.
She hurried to meet him and held him close, his face against her neck.
âStrange,' she murmured, rocking him slightly. âI was just learning it.'
Peter pulled away from her and walked upstairs. She followed him to their room where they lay fully clothed in a smell of soap and clean sheets. He held her closely from behind. When she woke, cold in darkness, hours later, she found that their sleep had been like death and neither had moved.
Thirty
Candida was lying in wait. She had fed Perdita then taken her car and driven it fast to the South side of Clapham Common. Still with no particular plan in mind, she had walked to Faber's front door and peered in through the window. There was music playing and she slid out of sight when she saw Robin crouching on the floor in a corner. She edged around the window and peered in again. He seemed to be in some sort of trance. Perhaps Faber had given him dope; most artists were hopelessly outdated and still smoked things. There was no sign of Faber. She watched until the music stopped and Robin suddenly stood up and began turning off lights. She hurried back to her car and waited, breathless, for what seemed like ten minutes.
At last he was leaving the studio. Through a gap in the threadbare hedge she saw him shut and lock the door. He came out onto the pavement and began to walk away from her. She started the engine and cruised forward until she was just behind him then she pressed a button that caused the kerbside window to wind down.
âPsst!'
He walked on. Those long, long hands thrust deep in his trouser pockets.
âPsst!'
Now he turned. He frowned then saw who it was.
âCandy!'
âDobbin! You want a ride?' She had drawn alongside and he was already opening the door. Fool.
âI wasn't really going anywhere,' he said, âBut sitting inside was driving me mad so I thought I'd kill time by walking. Let's just drive. Where were you off to?'
âI came to look for you,' she said, glancing in the mirror then pulling out into the evening traffic. On hurrying back to the car she had dabbed on some scent but her hand had shaken with excitement and the car's interior reeked richly of the stuff.
âWhat a bit of luck,' he said. âNice car.'
âDo you like it?' she smiled, pleased.
âVery. Where did you get it?'
âHamburg. Our fifth anniversary.'
âSexy. Can I have a go?'
âWhat? Drive it?'
âYes.'
âWhy ever not? Hang on.'
She pulled over, opened her door and walked round to his side while he climbed carefully over the gearstick. Without thinking, she had taken out the ignition keys. âHere,' she said, handing them over before fastening her seat-belt. âAre you insured or anything?'
He started the engine and pulled them gently out from the kerb.
âNot really,' he said âBut it's all right. If a policeman stops us, you're a star. Let's just drive round and round the common.'
âIf you like.'
She let him drive her three times around the common then she made him stop and change places once more.
âOh. Do I have to?'
âYes.'
He relinquished the driving seat, walked round to the other side and, before long, she was kidnapping him.
âWhere are we going?' he asked.
âI'm not sure,' she answered. âSouth and fast.'
He didn't seem to mind at first, lying back on the soft leather and playing with the radio, then some way beyond Blackheath he grew restless.
âFaber'll be back soon,' he said.
âI thought you said he was out for the evening,' she replied, pressing her accelerator foot gently towards the horizontal.
âI did. He was. But he should be back by now.'
She pulled off into a sort of lay-by picnic area with some trees. They were alone there. The only light came from a distant street lamp and the headlamps of rapidly passing cars. She flicked off the radio and drew a breath.
âDob.'
âRobin.'
âRobin, listen. I made a mistake.'
âHow do you mean?'
âKiss me?'
â
What
?'
âKiss me.'
âAll right.' He kissed her, softly but on the cheek, then sat back. âCan we go home now?'
âProperly,' she said, âDamn you.'
âNo.'
âPlease.'
âNo!'
She hated him for his chuckle. She turned aside and pretended to cry a little.
âRobin, this is so degrading but I want you so much,' she muttered.
âDon't cry,' he said. âPlease don't cry,' he patted her shoulder and she found she wasn't pretending anymore. âYou know I like you very much. We're childhood friends, remember? Oldest friends.'
She spun round and slapped him savagely on the cheek. A car flew by just at that moment so she saw the surprise in his eyes.
âDon't,' he said.
âWhich?' she asked slapping him again, âCry or hit you?' She slapped him a third time, much harder. He raised his hands to push her away but she grabbed his wrists and found herself the stronger. He was fresh out of hospital after all. âKiss me,' she said, âHold me.'
âCandida.' His voice was maddeningly calm. âI really don't want to.'
Again there was that mockery in his voice. With a snort of pure frustration she let go of his wrists, put the palm of her hand in his face and shoved his head hard against the window. He cried out, so, clutching his hair to pull him forward, she did it again. He said nothing this time. She had knocked him out.
âHell,' she said, bluntly and lowered his head onto her lap. His eyes were shut. She had drawn blood. She felt its wetness on her hand then realised that it was her own where he had bitten her. With her other hand she reached to the back of his head and found only a swelling bruise. Quickly she undid some buttons on his shirt and slipped her hand inside to find his heart. Only when she felt it pump beneath her touch did she see the appalling pleasure of her action and pulled her hand away, almost ripping the shirt in her haste. She heaved him back onto his seat then pulled a lever to make it recline like a dentist's chair. She saw he had not fastened his seat-belt and did it for him. Then she started the engine again, waited for a gap in the traffic and executed a swift U-turn towards London.
Just over eight years ago he had broken into her bathroom while she was taking a bath. Summer term or no, it was bitterly cold and wet. She had been revising solidly for six hours and was trying to soak away the stiffness in her neck and spine and to deaden the painful chill the library draughts had brought to her feet. The electric fire was plugged in and waiting on an old bentwood chair. When she got out she would crouch before it to dry her hair. The two other girls who rented the canal cottage with her were away for the weekend. She had locked the bathroom door nonetheless; a compulsive action, making the relaxation more complete. When she heard him shouting her name downstairs she realised he must have climbed in through the garden window with a broken catch.
âUp here,' she shouted.
âWhere?'
âBathroom.'
She heard him thump up the tiny stairs and along the corridor.
âI've got to see you.'
âI'll be out in a second.'
âI've got to see you now. Let me in.'
âI can't. I'm in the bath.'
At the first terrible thud as he ran against the door she had heard herself give a pathetically inadequate shriek of âDon't!' but the wood was old and damp, like most of the house, and he had burst in on the second.
Nakedness was common between them â they often shared a bed for companionship â but she still clutched up a towel, frightened at his uncharacteristic violence.
âYou've stolen him,' he shouted. âBitch!'
âWhat? No! I didn't. Look. Don't be silly,' she stood, wrapping the towel about her, cross because she hadn't washed her hair yet. âWhat's he been telling you?'
âYou've stolen him. He was mine. You knew it. I
loved
him, Candida. I still do.'
The most frightening thing had been his tears. They had known each other for over a decade and she had never seen him cry. His weeping was womanly, wild, without shame. It was with a lung-defying moan, like a child in a tantrum, that he seized the electric fire and threw it at the bathwater. Then everything happened at farcical speed. She screamed and jumped. Her leg struck the airborne fire and knocked it back onto the floor, out of danger's way. Then, still shuddering with grief, he ran forward, snatched the fire up and jumped into the bathwater with it.
There was a thick cloud of steam and a smell like burning dust. Robin had fallen silent in an instant. She had darted on the flex and, with no thought to her own safety, tugged the plug from the wall. Furling her towel about her hands, she pulled him from the bath, letting him flop on the bathroom floor. Only then, seeing him lie there, soaked and white as death, had she panicked and run in a dressing-gown to the cottage next door where there was a telephone. An ambulance was called, with the police who seemed to feel they should come too. Dressed by the time they arrived, Candida was forced to greet them in deepest embarrassment. After making the emergency call she had sprinted back to the bathroom to find a small flood, a bad smell and no Robin. A search was put out, without success, and rather than leave it to the police, she had elected to call the Maitlands with the strange bad news.
She had half hoped, on calling them, that it would turn out that he had run away home to Clapham. He might, she dared hope, even answer the phone and laugh at her. It was only when he hadn't and when, weeks later, a postcard from his parents let her know that Robin was safe and well and living in an island monastery, that she had accepted Jake's persistent requests that she take him to bed and accept his hand in marriage. When Robin had burst into her bathroom she had been innocent of his charges except, perhaps, in her failure to inform him of Jake's recent, embarrassing overtures. In marrying their mutual friend, however, she knew she was assuming a share of blame.
By the time she pulled up outside Faber's studio, Robin was snoring heavily.
âRobin?' She said, trying to wake him. âDob? We're there. We're home.' He mumbled, and stirred slightly. She left him to wake up and went to find Faber. There were lights on but the artist took a long time to come to the door. He was obviously surprised to see her.
âCandida!'
âFaber, hello. It's Robin.'
âWhat's happened?' He was galvanised by concern. It made her sick.
âNothing. He's all right. I've got him in the car. I picked him up to give him a lift and, well, we had to stop suddenly and he hadn't done up his seat-belt properly and he hit his head.'
âJesus!'
âNo, honestly â¦' she touched his arm and they hurried out to the car. âHe was knocked out for a bit and â¦' she tugged on his sleeve to slow him for a moment, âand I'm afraid it may have brought on a sort of funny turn. He went very strange and panicky, as though I was attacking him.' He looked at her questioningly. âAndrea's told me all about Whelm,' she explained. âPoor Dob.'
âI'll put him to bed,' Faber said. They stood by the car a moment, watching Robin who had fallen fast asleep again. âYou're not meant to let concussion patients sleep at first,' Faber went on, âbut if he's snoring I don't think he can be sleeping heavily. Do you mind giving me a hand?'
âOf course not.'
Between them they walked Robin into the house and laid him on a sofa. Candida suspected he was wide awake and enjoying himself immensely. Faber covered him with a sky-blue blanket up to his chin, then the two of them stood and watched him a moment.
âWhere's Iras?' she asked.
âAt a friend's. I should be going round to fetch her.'
âShall I stay with him while you go?' she offered.
âOh. Could you?'
âOf course.' She touched his arm.
âThat would be sweet.' He stopped and rubbed his forehead. âWhat am I saying?'
âFaber? Are you OK?'
âYes. Not really. I'm just a bit tired. I'm talking nonsense. I've already rung Dodie's and they're hanging onto Iras for the night. Sorry, Candida.'
âDon't worry.' She pecked his cheek. âI must go,' she said.
He barely registered her touch. Infected with the same, oddly suspended state, she found herself sitting down instead of leaving. Just as she had re-run through her mind the images of Robin's terrifying disappearance, so she now saw herself kicking Jake again and again. He was staring up at her. âCunt!'
âFaber, there wasn't a crash,' she said. âI didn't have to stop suddenly. I hit him and somehow I knocked him out. I lost control. I'm awfully sorry. I'm a stupid coward and I'm sorry. It's these pills you see.'
âWhat?' He had looked up suddenly.
âEr ⦠My doctor gives me pills for a sort of, well, for a hormone problem and they make my temper short if I take too many.' He said nothing. He had already turned back to Robin. âFaber, are you all right?'
Robin snored softly.
âMmm?' asked Faber. âOh. Not really.'
âWell â¦'
He came to himself with a jerk.
âNo. I'm fine. I'm just tired.' Again he rubbed his head. âOf course you hit him. I knew that.' He looked back at Robin briefly and chuckled.
âHow?'
âBump's on the back of his head, not the front.'
âOh.'
âHe must have pushed you pretty far. I know how maddening he can be. He doesn't know his own strength. He can be very cruel.'
âFaber? I love him
so
much!'
âI know. We all do.'
âI don't want him to hate me.'
âDon't be a fool.' He smiled kindly. âYou're his oldest friend, his childhood friend.'