Philip Courtney drew his breath in sharply and looked around in wonder.
âIt's beautiful,' he breathed.
âYes,' I replied. âAnd so was Della.'
He sank on to one of the settees.
âTell me about her,' he begged. âPlease.'
So I did. I told him about her inimitable style, her sense of fun, her wicked wit and her irresistible personality. I also told him about her fierce loyalty, her dignity, her unflagging respect for others and her intolerance of ignorance. I didn't tell him I had also detected a deep vein of sadness in Della. You could see it in her eyes at unguarded moments. Or late at night, when the party was almost over and fatigue was kicking in. I didn't tell him about that. I had no reason to make this man suffer more than he already was.
There were a couple of black and white studio photos of Della in heavy dark wooden frames on the mantelpiece. I reached them down and handed them over to her brother. It was a while before he could bring himself to look at them. He listened to me talk, darting quick glances at the photos and then jerking his gaze away, his features contorted with pain. When I finished speaking, he dropped his head and finally made the connection. He looked into the eyes of the sultry beauty who stared unflinchingly back at him. Did he see a thirties-style diva, pouting for the camera? Or did he see the younger brother he had shared a childhood with?
He answered my unspoken question by handing me a large brown envelope. I tipped out a dozen photos, family snaps from the early seventies. A laughing couple in a huge garden with two boys. The older, thin and serious-looking. The younger, posing for the camera, the sun bouncing off his halo of cascading curls. There were birthday parties, recording the stages in lives that no one could have predicted would end in the way they had. There was a school photo. The older boy, still solemn, aged about ten. The younger, about five, with an irresistible grin revealing a gummy gap where his front teeth would have been if the Tooth Fairy had delayed her arrival for a few more weeks.
I looked up and saw that Philip Courtney was crying. I envied him. I made tea in Della's spotless kitchen, handling her bone-china mugs with infinite care. Philip sipped, hiccupped and wiped his eyes and nose on a white linen hanky. It had been years since I had seen one of them. My father used to use them. My mum would accumulate a week's worth and then boil them on the stove in a pot she kept for the exclusive purpose â I'm glad to say. I swallowed bile with my tea.
Philip took a deep shuddering breath.
âAbout the â er â arrangementsâ¦' he murmured, gazing at his hands as they kneaded the hanky like a child with a security blanket. He told me that the results of the post-mortem showed that Della had died from septicaemia, which in turn had led to massive organ failure. He'd been informed that her body could now be released.
He looked up at me at last, his eyes pleading. For a hideous instant my focus shifted and Della's eyes, almost identical, were superimposed over those of her brother as she lay in that bed and pleaded with me to end her life. I clamped my own eyes tight shut. When I opened them again, it was Philip Courtney's eyes that met them.
âI want to invite her friends,' he said in a hoarse whisper. âBut I don't knowâ¦'
Here at last was a Courtney I could help. I suggested he get some posters together. I would distribute them around the clubs, pubs and cafés Della used to frequent. He said it would be no problem. 'I could scan in a photo too,' he said with pathetic eagerness.
His eyes welled up again as he picked up the photo frames and hugged them to his chest.
âThis is so kind of you,' he breathed.
I shrugged. I couldn't stop Della dying. And I couldn't help her to die either. But at least I could ensure all the people who loved her had the chance to give her the best damn funeral south London had ever seen.
We left together. Philip said he would carry on paying the rent on Della's flat for the time being â until he had the stomach to dispose of her belongings. She had left no will â died intestate as they say. I smirked as I imagined the puns Della would have come up with about that. In theory, everything she owned now belonged to him. He wanted to be sure he enacted what would have been her will as far as possible. I would help him of course. As far as possible.
27
I WAS ABOUT
to push my bike through my front door when Ali appeared. He must have been waiting for me.
âJen. Come,' he demanded and turned on his heel, knowing I would follow him as he went into Nick and Robin's.
I bit back a sarcastic âHi, Ali. Fine, thanks, and how are you?' I knew from literal experience the futility of banging your head against a brick wall.
We went into the kitchen, where Robin was sitting at the table, hunched over the laptop and sucking the end of his plait.
âJen. Jen,' Robin blathered. âCome and take a look at this. It's unbelievable.'
I sat down on the wooden bench next to him. Ali took up position standing behind us.
âOK,' Robin said, flicking his plait back over his shoulder. I dodged as it whistled past my nose. âSo as you know, I was going in to check out the Net, to see if I could come up with anything useful about Koi Korner. You see, that's how you use the Internet. You don't really know what you're looking for, but you search through looking for connections you might not haveâ'
âSpare me the IT consultancy, Robin,' I interrupted. âJust get to the point.'
âOK. Ahem. Right.' Robin wriggled on the bench. âSo I went into a search engine and entered “Koi”. See?'
As he spoke, his fingers tapped the keys and the screen illustrated his words. Lists and brief descriptions of websites that included the word âkoi' in their title appeared.
âOK,' Robin said, floating the cursor arrow down the screen. âAs you can see, this lot all look fishy â but only in the literal sense.' He tittered. I clenched my teeth. âSo,' Robin continued, âI thought an outfit like Koi Korner would be bound to have a website, but it's not there, right? So â bit of lateral thinking here, which after all is what net surfing is all about. What you do isâ¦'
âRo-binâ¦' I warned.
âOh. Right. OK. So I thought, how about initials? What if they decided they don't want to hobnob with the usual koi polloiâ¦'
I stifled a groan. From behind me I could hear the grinding of teeth as Ali sent out waves of restrained energy.
ââ¦so I typed in KK. OKK-KKK K-KK.'
âRobin!' I snapped.
This time he jumped. I clamped my feet on the floor as the bench tilted. His fingers hit the keys again. The screen dissolved and was replaced by another.
Who'd have thought there would be so many? There was KKE â Kidz Klubz England, promoting good spelling practice obviously not a priority for them; KKF â Kirk, Knapsford and Fitch, insurance brokers; KK Ingram â some guy who had a web page devoted to his poems⦠Robin scrolled down through the endless lists. I was losing patience.
âLook. Is this going anywhere, Robin? Cos if not, I've got plentyâ¦'
Ali cut me off with a restraining hand on my shoulder.
âOK, OK, go on then,' I sighed.
I looked at Robin. A few weeks ago, he would have boasted that he hardly ever touched anything that wasn't natural. Now here he was, his fingers welded to the keyboard, his eyes riveted to the screen. Maybe we'd been right to be wary of this stuff. Maybe it did have the power to reach out and suck you in. On the other hand, if it had the power to
confer
power â in the form of knowledge â we couldn't reject it outright. But so far there seemed to be precious little of that.
Robin continued scrolling, past Kinky Kettles and Kick KFC, and then it was there. At the bottom of the screen, the little arrow hovered and pointed at another K. Robin clicked and it was highlighted. KKK â the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan.
I sucked in my breath sharply.
Robin nodded. No jokes or puns now. âDo you want to see?' he whispered. âYou'll need a strong stomachâ¦'
âI don't know,' I replied, turning to look at Ali. âMy reactions have been a bit hard to predict recentlyâ¦'
Ali locked eyes with me for a long moment. Then he broke the connection and focused back on the screen.
âOK.' I turned back. âLet's go in.'
So we did. And there it was. The unashamed gateway to the white Christian revivalist movement. The guys with the white sheets, pointy hats and burning crosses. The guys behind the lynchings and the fire-bombings, the hatred and the terror. And here was their website.
âShit,' Robin breathed, shaking his head. âFreedom of speech is a double-edged sword when it allows the likes of these maniacs to promote their evil.'
The website consisted of four pages. The first was headed
THE KNIGHTS
America's oldest, largest, most professional white rights party
. Just in case you hadn't got the message by now, there were a couple of pithy slogans: âIt's time for whites to stick together.' âBringing back the dream.'
You could click to give your opinion on a supposed news item about a black church who allegedly vandalised their own premises; or you could watch an internet TV show called
This is the Klan;
or subscribe to the
White Patriot
. You could also âvisit' their gift shop, where you could buy T-shirts, hats, flags, cards, earrings, key chains, books, videos etc.
The second page offered other ways to get involved â including the invocation to pray. Just who did these people think they were praying to? I've never been big on organised religion, but could anyone tell me which god it was that approved of this vileness? You could click again for nation-wide immigration-office phone numbers if you had the urge to report anyone you suspected of being an illegal immigrant.
There was a strangled groan behind me. Ali ran to the sink, turned the cold tap on full and stuck his head under the flow.
Robin and I looked at each other.
âKeep going,' I said.
He wiped his brow on his sleeve and moved the cursor down. Page 3 was a poster advertising the 16th Annual White Christian Heritage, Culture and Craft Festival in the town square in Pulaski, Tennessee â âthe birthplace of the Klan'. Somehow the fact that it was in the town square â official, accepted and respectable â seemed the most shocking aspect. This all-day event boasted that it was the only festival in America celebrating white Christian culture. The unique nature of the celebration was clearly a source of pride for them. For us it provided the only smidgen of relief. There would be crafts, food, educational displays, speeches, raffles, games, clowns, a cake walk and a whole lot more! âFun for all the family', they promised. Holy shit.
âAt least that couldn't happen here,' Robin murmured.
âNot yet,' I replied. âCarry on.'
The final page had the single virtue of being short. You could copy and paste their âcool banner' to add a link to their site. Cold water dripped down my back as Ali leaned over and punched the laptop's âoff' button.
âOy!' Robin howled. âYou're not supposed to switch off without shutting down properly first.'
He turned to glare at Ali, but then shrank as he met Ali's smouldering gaze.
âOK. OK. Let's cool it,' I soothed. âWhat does this actually mean for us? Does this prove beyond doubt a link between this bunch of nutters and Koi Korner? I mean, it's just initials isn't it? It could be a coincidence.'
âGaia doesn't believe inâ¦' Robin spouted.
âI know, I know,' I interrupted. âBut if they are related, then what's the connection between them and Stan? It has to be more than the programme his production company was making if Koi Korner is in the pictureâ¦'
Water was still pouring from Ali's hair and face.
âDella,' he said, with his usual word economy.
âYeah,' I said. âThat's right. How does Della fit in?'
A thought hit me so hard it knocked the breath out of me. I saw Della in that bed. I saw the urgency in her eyes. âNarth-tee thcuh,' she had said. I'd tried so hard to interpret the meaning. And was so triumphant when I thought I had. Like a warped game of Chinese whispers, I had thought of Della's famed vanity and had heard ânasty scar'. But what if' ânasty' was actually something else? âNazi', for instance. And could âscar' be wrong too? Could it be âscum'?
I stood up from the bench and walked to the window. The garden was beginning to bloom. Splashes of colour dotted the flowerbeds. Shiny tight leaves were unfurling on the rose bush.
I turned back to face the others. âThe Scene,' I murmured. âThe answer has to be somewhere on the Scene.'
28
ALI AND I
left together. As I opened the front door, I stopped and sniffed the air.
âAli â can youâ¦?'
I didn't get the chance to finish the sentence. Ali pushed me aside and ran out on to the path. There was an unmistakable stench of burning.
âKeys. Quick,' he gasped, thrusting his open hand at me.
I pulled them from my jeans pocket. I ran back inside, past a bemused Robin, through the kitchen and into the back garden. Pulling aside the filthy tarpaulin that covered our tools, and sending a thousand disgruntled woodlice scuttling for cover, I yanked the coiled hose back through the kitchen door. Robin was still on the bench watching me, his jaw slack round the end of his plait.
âFasten this on the tap,' I yelled. âQuick!'
Robin leapt to his feet and took the nozzle from me as Ali ran back in from the front. He grabbed the other end of the hose and together we hauled it through the flat. My front door was open. Orange flames danced in the hallway behind it. Water trickled from the end of the hose, then shot out in a torrent as the jet forced its way through the kinks. We aimed at the base of the fire. The flames shrank and died as they were replaced by clouds of dense smoke.