The Dying of the Light: A Mystery (6 page)

BOOK: The Dying of the Light: A Mystery
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‘I gather that Mr Anderson is endeavouring to persuade you to alienate your estate in his favour, Mrs Hargreaves.’

‘Mavis.’

There was a silence.

‘Mavis,’ Rosemary conceded.

‘Now then, what was that about Mr A?’

‘I just said that it sounds as if he’s trying to get his hands on your money,’ said Rosemary.

Mavis Hargreaves giggled.

‘Well, you know men.’

‘I shouldn’t take anything for granted.’

‘Oh I didn’t mean
you
, dear! I wouldn’t dream of …’

‘Anything Mr Anderson may say, I mean,’ Rosemary explained stiffly.

‘Don’t you worry about that! I wouldn’t trust our Mr A as far as I could kick him out of bed.’

‘After all, Hilary Bryant made her money over to him shortly before she died, and much good we saw of it.’

Mavis Hargreaves nodded.

‘Keep them chasing the carrot at the end of the rainbow, that’s what I always say.’

She placed a plump white finger on Rosemary’s knee, which instantly twitched aside.

‘It’s your friend you should be worried about, by the sound of it.’

Rosemary bit her lip.

‘I’m sure there’s no truth in that.’

‘Mr A seems to think there is.’

‘What does it matter what he thinks?’ demanded Rosemary shortly.

There was a creak of hinges at the far end of the room, then Dorothy’s voice.

‘Rose?’

She was on her feet in a moment.

‘Coming, Dot!’

The room was in almost complete darkness by now. Rosemary made her way slowly towards the door, her one thought to help her friend face up to the terrible news which had just been broken to her, and very likely in the most casually brutal fashion. She must get Dorothy out of there, she thought, away from the inquisitive Mrs Hargreaves and all the others, up to her room, where she could go to pieces without making a spectacle of herself.

‘I can’t find the light switch,’ Dorothy called faintly from somewhere near by.

‘Never mind, I’m nearly there.’

A few moments later they were in each other’s arms, and Rosemary had guided her friend to the sofa beside the door. They sat in silence for some time, holding hands.

‘I know, Dot,’ Rosemary said at last.

‘The news, you mean?’

Dorothy’s face was just a blur, but her voice sounded strangely calm. Rosemary nodded, then realized that she was invisible too.

‘Yes,’ she said. ‘When I was upstairs, I overheard Dr Morel talking to …’

She sat there in silence, despising herself for her selfish weakness in breaking down at the very moment when her friend was more than ever in need of her strength and support.

‘I don’t know what to say, Dot,’ she added lamely, when she could trust herself to speak.

‘I know,’ Dorothy murmured. ‘It’s like a miracle.’

As a child, Rosemary had an uncle whom her mother pronounced ‘common’, just about the worst failing in her book. Murdering someone didn’t necessarily lower you socially, but the said uncle’s tendency to bark ‘Eh?’ when he failed to hear, understand or approve of a statement made to him she regarded as an unforgivable lapse of taste. The young Rosemary’s attempts to imitate this shameful trait had been ruthlessly repressed, but she could not now prevent herself emitting the vulgar vowel, such was her astonishment.

‘Just think!’ Dorothy went on. ‘There you were telling me how vital it was for me to get away from here before I became the next victim. And now, as if by magic, that’s what’s going to happen! Miss Davis took me to Mr Anderson’s office. Dr Morel was there. He told me that the tests I had showed that I needed to go into hospital straight away …’

She broke off. Rosemary squeezed her hand. Dorothy gave a little laugh.

‘So there we are! Isn’t it wonderful?’

Rosemary finally understood, among many other mysteries, why Dorothy had pretended to be unable to locate the light switch. She too was grateful for the darkness, which reduced all the intolerable complexities of what they were suffering to a mere exchange of dialogue characteristic of the parts which they had elected to play. She had created these parts herself in an attempt to make a fictional virtue of the factual necessity for Dorothy to return to hospital. The idea of the alphabet murderer had been a feeble contrivance, stolen – as Dorothy had not scrupled to point out – from a half-remembered whodunnit, but it was the best she had been able to do in the time at her disposal, still numb with the shock of what she had overheard Morel and Anderson saying.

Dorothy, for her part, had evidently decided to accept it in the spirit in which it had been offered. She did not really believe that her life was in imminent danger, of course, but was pretending to do so in order to spare both of them the pain and confusion that would otherwise be unleashed. It was a supremely civilized piece of behaviour. Neither was taken in by the other’s act, but each would play her role to the end.

‘Wonderful,’ echoed Rosemary.

But Dorothy had not exhausted her capacity to surprise.

‘For me, yes. But what about you, Rose?’

‘What about me?’

Dorothy withdrew her hand.

‘Oh, I know what you must be thinking!’ she exclaimed. ‘ “It’s all very well for Dot, but what about the rest of us?” And it’s true, Rose.
I
’ll be safe enough, but you will still be here, in his …’

She laughed.

‘… or her power.’

The breeziness of her tone quite disconcerted Rosemary. For a moment she felt a shiver of apprehension, as though something uncanny was afoot, something she had not planned and did not understand. It was quite in order that Dorothy should wish to appear calm and collected. What was disturbing was that at moments Rosemary had a distinct sense that she really
was
. Ever since learning that she might have to go to hospital, Dorothy had been on the verge of a tearful collapse at the mere idea, yet now the worst had occurred she seemed immune, floating above it all, as though it were a matter of no personal concern to her at all.

‘His or whose power?’ she murmured vaguely.

Dorothy gave a snort of impatience.

‘The murderer’s, of course!’

The door swung open and all the lights came on.

‘Murderer?’ cried Mr Anderson. ‘What murderer?’

He stood over the two women, nosing his tumbler of whisky. As Rosemary’s eyes adjusted to the glare, she made out Miss Davis circling round from the other side. She was holding a tall stemmed glass filled with layers of different-coloured liquids – tawny, green, red, blue and yellow – topped by a miniature umbrella.

‘You’ll get fucking murdered, if you don’t watch out,’ she said.

Ignoring her, Rosemary looked at Anderson.

‘We were discussing a book.’

‘A book?’ Anderson replied.

He raised his eyebrows and then frowned, sipping his drink.

‘I dimly recall that among the amenities available to residents under the former regime was a selection of trashy whodunnits and mawkish romances such as might be expected to appeal to persons of low taste and declining faculties, but they’ve long since gone the way of everything else round here that isn’t nailed down. Might I therefore ask to which book you allude, Miss Travis?’

Rosemary waved airily.

‘Oh, one Dorothy read years ago, during a wet weekend in Wales. She was just describing the plot to me.’

Miss Davis lifted the paper umbrella from her drink. Her lips englobed the maraschino cherry impaled on the stick below.

‘Liar,’ she said.

‘Now, now,’ murmured Anderson. ‘Don’t let’s spoil the party.’

He took a gulp of whisky.

‘Nevertheless,’ he continued, ‘given that Mrs Davenport cannot always be relied upon to recall with any accuracy what she had for breakfast, it does at first sight seem hard to believe that she should be waxing lyrical, still less logical, about some shilling shocker she once read in Rhyl.’

‘Pwllheli,’ Dorothy put in.

‘Bless you, dear!’ murmured Rosemary.

Miss Davis sucked at the upper layer of her cocktail.

‘Lying bitch,’ she said.

Anderson fixed Rosemary and Dorothy with a penetrating stare.

‘I put it to you, ladies, that so far from discussing a whodunnit, you were in fact concocting one.’

‘Well?’ said Rosemary. ‘And what of it?’

Anderson glanced at Miss Davis.

‘Did you hear that, Letty?’

‘I did, William. I did indeed.’

‘Miss Travis wishes to know what of it.’

‘Impertinent cunt. Do you want me to take steps?’

‘Not at present, I think. After all, we must make due allowance for the situation in which the two ladies find themselves. Parting is such sweet sorrow, and so on.
Partir, c’est mourir un peu
– or, in Mrs Davenport’s case, a lot. Let us therefore endeavour to rise above petty considerations and address her question.’

He turned back to Rosemary and Dorothy.

‘I realize that time can hang pretty heavy round here, especially so, paradoxically enough, for those with very little left. Nor has it escaped my attention that your favourite way of passing it has been to work up elaborate scenarios of imaginary mayhem featuring those who have left us feet first as the victims, the dwindling band of survivors as the suspects, and your good selves as the intrepid sleuths. Hitherto I have had no particular reason to take exception to this, but the case is now altered. If an outsider were to witness an exchange such as the one which Letty and I just overheard, the resulting disruption to the life of our little community would be quite intolerable. I must therefore ask you, Mrs Davenport, to put these tall tales of dark deeds at Eventide Lodge very firmly out of your mind.’

He turned to the other residents.

‘I should explain that from tomorrow dear Dorothy will be with us no more. Despite my objections, to say nothing of her own stated preferences, the powers that be have decreed that she is to be transferred to hospital, there to undergo a course of treatment which according to Dr Morel is not only hideously painful and degrading but completely pointless when the carcinomata are, in his memorable phrase, “sprouting like fungi on a dead tree.” ’

‘Stop!’ cried Rosemary, getting to her feet. ‘I won’t have you talking like that! I won’t stand for it!’

With a howl of fury, Miss Davis flung her glass at Rosemary. It shattered against the wall a few inches away. Miss Davis advanced, screaming obscenities, her spittle flying into Rosemary’s face.

‘Easy, Letty!’ warned Anderson, grasping her arm. ‘Let’s leave Mrs Davenport with fond memories of the old place, eh?’

Miss Davis’s body went limp. She breathed in and out deeply several times.

‘Of course, William,’ she said eventually. ‘Whatever you say.’

Ignoring Rosemary and Dorothy, she flounced out of the room, singing merrily.

‘And that’s why I mean what I say when I sing, O bugger the flowers that bloom in the spring. Tra-la-lala-la-ha! Tra-la-lala-la-haaaaaaa!!!!! Bugger the flowers of spring!’

Anderson inspected the rainbow of liqueurs splashed across the wall.

‘Drambuie, Green Chartreuse, Cherry Brandy, Blue Curaçao, Advocaat,’ he murmured, shaking his head sadly. ‘Poor Letitia! She suffers so greatly.’

He glanced pointedly at Rosemary.

‘One more outburst like that from you, Miss Travis, and you’ll be spending the rest of the week in bed with Mr Channing.’

He drained the rest of the whisky from his glass.

‘Life is one thing, ladies, and art quite another. Far from being a story which alternately excites and consoles, life is an endless slurry of computer print-out, a pie chart of statistical trends in which you, I fear, have been allotted the slimmest of slices. Always remember, however, that even that might be taken from you.’

Favouring them both with a smile, he walked out.

CHAPTER 5

The light outside seemed to have faded completely, yet when the fluorescent ceiling strip suddenly died the darkness turned out to be hollow. There was still an afterglow of radiance, too faint to compete with the synthetic glare but enough, once their eyes had widened to take it in, for Rosemary and Dorothy to make out, if not everything, then quite as much as they had any real need or wish to see.

‘That’s better,’ murmured Dorothy.

The bed springs squeaked as she snuggled down.

‘Much,’ Rosemary replied from her chair by the window.

Each was aware of the other as a vague, benevolent presence in the dimness, barely visible but very definitely there. The electricity on the first floor was switched off at nine thirty every night, except when Anderson and his sister were too drunk to remember, but this abrupt transition had never felt so welcome before.

Dorothy’s room was ugly enough in itself, its proportions mutilated by the partition, the original features badly dilapidated and the new ones scruffily utilitarian, but tonight its charmlessness was intensified almost unbearably by their shared, unspoken knowledge that it would never again be Dorothy’s room. This was the last time they would sit there in the darkness, adding yet more strands and complications to the murderous web of intrigue they had woven around themselves. Next day the room would be locked, like those of the residents who had died.

Under the pitiless glare of the neon light these facts had been impossible to evade or ignore, but the darkness arrived as a balm, waiving the imperatives of space and time. In that dimensionless obscurity there was only here and now, an endless present and everything within reach.

‘Aren’t you going to drink your cocoa?’ Rosemary suggested gently.

‘Not yet.’

‘It’ll get cold.’

‘It already is. All those people. Still, it was nice, wasn’t it?’

Rosemary said nothing. The phrase seemed so far from the mark, so grossly inadequate to the situation, that she might have suspected Dorothy of irony if she hadn’t known that her friend was literal-minded to a fault. Whatever else it might have been, the incident certainly hadn’t been
nice
. It had been bizarre, embarrassing, unpleasant, sad, and finally rather moving. But Rosemary’s most vivid impression, both at the time and now, was of utter astonishment that it had ever taken place.

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