Read The Water's Lovely Online

Authors: Ruth Rendell

The Water's Lovely (35 page)

BOOK: The Water's Lovely
5.32Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

‘I was just saying to myself,' he said, ‘Fowler, I was saying, what's she up to, out all this time? Been to see lover-boy?'

‘No, I haven't, and it's no business of yours.'

‘I've always understood that one's family was one's business, even in these degenerative days. If I clear up this mess, will you cut my hair?'

She was looking for ways to get out of the trap he was setting for her. If she were to clean him up and
somehow keep him clean, maybe pay him a little, would he withdraw his threat? Once she was married to Barry it wouldn't much matter what Fowler did. Of course, marriage wasn't what it had been in their parents' day, the permanency, the tie that binds, but it still carried a fair amount of security … She sent Fowler off to shower and wash his hair. A man wouldn't leave his wife because she turned out to have a brother who was a dosser but a fiancé might leave his fiancée. Fowler really wasn't bad-looking when he was cleaned up. If his hair was no longer golden and curly it was quite a pleasant straw colour. She sat him down in a chair, spread towels on the floor and began cutting.

‘Are you going out with him this evening?'

‘What's that to you?'

‘You know what, Marion. I won't be here, anyway. I've got an engagement with a skip in Highbury but I could come back on, say, Wednesday.'

Filthy again by then, she thought. ‘I could give you a bit,' she said. ‘I mean, say, twenty pounds a week.'

‘I remember', said Fowler, reminiscing, ‘our dad telling me that when he was young twenty quid a week was a fortune. The height of a girl's ambition was a handsome husband and a thousand a year. Can't imagine, can you? It's nothing now, couple of drinks and a packet of fags.'

‘I'd throw in a new pair of jeans and one of those army greatcoats.'

‘I don't want a greatcoat,' said Fowler. ‘I want this flat.'

‘I expect you'd like a big white wedding,' said Barry. ‘No reason why not. I can afford it.'

‘No, darling, I don't think so. It'd take so long to organise. Actually, I just want to be your wife as soon as possible.'

‘Do you, kitten? Camden Register Office, then, and we'll be off to India. How about three weeks' time? I reckon it has to be three weeks.'

He returned to his perusal of
The World Scanner's Guide to the Asian Subcontinent
.

‘Will you fix up the wedding, then?'

‘Of course I will, kitten. I'll pop over there this afternoon.'

‘And it'll be just us?'

‘We'll have to have witnesses. How about that brother of yours? And maybe an old colleague of mine.'

‘From the Civil Service?'

‘That's right,' said Barry, his mouth twitching rather in the manner of Mr Hussein and his sons. What was so funny about the things she said she couldn't imagine.

Mr Hussein came to the engagement party and brought one of his sons with him, Khwaja, the tallest and best-looking one, accompanied by a glamorous wife in gold lamé shalwar-kameez. Marion, in her Indian gown, felt quite equal to her. She had hoped for the chance to crow over Irene Litton but Irene stayed away, though Edmund and Heather were there. Barry appeared to have no relatives or none whom he wanted to invite but by far the majority of guests were former colleagues of his in the Civil Service, all now retired. Marion thought them the dullest bunch of men she had ever come across. She smiled and simpered when Barry introduced her as his ‘lovely bride-to-be' but soon skipped away with the excuse that she had to ‘see to the refreshments'.

These were in the hands of caterers, all Pakistanis, and the food was splendid Mogul delicacies, Barry's favourite, covering two long buffet tables. She picked up a plate of samosas and handed them to Heather and Edmund.

‘When's the wedding, Marion?' said Edmund.

‘In two weeks' time. We're going to India on our honeymoon next day. That's the best part of a wedding, don't you think? You didn't have a honeymoon, did you?'

‘We're starting ours a month after you,' said Heather.

‘Are you going abroad?'

‘I don't know. Ed is planning a secret destination.'

Marion smiled tightly. If everyone was going to look at her like that, with suppressed amusement, she'd be seriously angry. And this woman had no business to look at anyone like anything, not after what she'd done. Drowned someone! Well, Edmund would know, the whole world would know, once that sister-in-law of his had run out of cash. Marion trotted off to greet Joyce and Duncan Crosbie. Every time the doorbell rang she feared it might be Fowler. She hadn't invited him, of course she hadn't, but somehow he had found out about the party and though he said he had a date with a couple of men he called job seekers in a pub in Harlesden, she couldn't rely on his not turning up here. Maybe she'd take some of this food home for him. There was so much of it, leftovers were bound to be abundant. A bottle of wine too wouldn't be missed. She realised, uneasily, what lengths she was going to to keep him sweet.

Another glance in Heather Litton's direction reminded her of the tape. Since she began her extortionate demands she had carried it with her everywhere she went. It wasn't safe to leave it in the flat with Fowler about. It was in the pretty little jewelled handbag which was yet another gift of Barry's and she had left it lying on a chair, on an arm of which one of the dull colleagues was sitting. With a sweet smile, Marion retrieved the bag, and imagining her feelings if someone
had robbed her of the tape, quickly checked. No one had. She hooked the bag strap over her shoulder to be on the safe side and advanced in a hostessy way on Edmund and Heather once more. They were talking to Joyce and Duncan Crosbie. Marion took Edmund's arm and smiled up into his face.

‘You and I were very close once, weren't we, Edmund? You used to walk me home from your mother's. She – and not only she – had high hopes we might have a future together. But it was not to be and here we are with completely different people. No doubt it's all for the best.'

Joyce flicked her eyes up and down Marion's Indian dress. ‘How's your father these days, Marion?'

Marion made her escape with the excuse that guests' glasses needed refilling.

Heather and Edmund left the party early to call next door on his mother. Irene was entirely dressed in black, hung with handmade strings of jet and onyx.

‘The noise from next door has been fearful. I had always supposed that if one's house was detached, one could hear nothing from the next house, but I find I was mistaken. Surely it isn't necessary to have the windows open at the end of October. Was
she
there?'

‘If you mean Marion, Mother, since it was her engagement party, inevitably she was.'

‘You know, I consider your going to it, not to mention my own sister and her husband, a betrayal of me personally.'

‘That's a pity,' said Edmund, ‘but nothing can be done about it now.'

Heather had said nothing, believing that any comments on the party and the party guests would be unwelcome. At last she asked Irene how she was and felt the choice of enquiry had been tactful as her
mother-in-law launched into a litany of ailments: backache, exhaustion, pins and needles in the legs, numbness on waking (if indeed she had slept), persistent cough and general malaise.

‘I find it much easier to be tough with her now.' Edmund put his arm round Heather as they walked down the street. ‘And the result is I feel guilty. I'm so sorry for her but I daren't show it. She spends hours at that window, watching the comings and goings next door and fermenting hatreds. If Barry Fenix had to get married, why couldn't he marry her instead of Marion? They're both obnoxious but my ma is marginally less awful.'

‘I don't understand why anyone marries anyone except you,' said Heather. ‘You weren't really close to her, were you?'

‘What do you think?'

‘Ed, what are we going to do about Issy? She's never been over to see us in our flat. We haven't been asked to Clapham. I've phoned her but she's only once phoned me and that was from work.'

‘Andrew,' said Edmund as they went into the station at Finchley Road and Frognal.

‘Yes, of course Andrew. She doesn't say but I know that's why. He'll divide me from her. That's what he wants.'

‘Is it making you unhappy?'

‘Well, put it like this. You make me so happy, much happier than I've ever been in all my life. So that's all right. This thing with Issy, that's a kind of secondary unhappiness. It's always there and I'd like it to stop but I reason that although she's crazy about him now, she'll have to get over it. He can't last. He's so awful and she's bound to see that sooner or later. One day she'll sort of – I don't know …'

‘The scales will fall from her eyes, as your mum might say.'

‘That's right. And she'll give him the boot and we'll be like we were before.'

‘Darling, I hope I'm not unreasonable but I can't say I find your aunt's boyfriend entirely congenial. At least he's not living upstairs, though I suppose that will be the next step.'

‘I don't think so.' Ismay wanted to sound warm and accommodating but she found it impossible. Her voice was low and despondent. ‘Pamela lives with my mother and she doesn't like the idea of anyone else being there.' She made a renewed effort to be strong. ‘You haven't met my mother yet.'

‘No, I haven't, have I?' Andrew lit a cigarette. The smoke caught at Ismay's throat but she knew that if she allowed herself to cough he would accuse her of putting it on. ‘Do I have to?' He said it in the tone of a man willing to do anything to please but she knew what the result would be if she said, ‘Yes, you do.' Things would be said that were so hurtful that she couldn't contemplate them at this stage of her life, this crux.

Marion Melville had phoned ten minutes before he came in and asked for four hundred pounds. ‘Only two more weeks,' she had said brightly, ‘and then you can have a break. I'll be away on my honeymoon. Clapham Common station on Saturday morning?'

‘No, I don't think so,' Ismay said. ‘I'll come up to you this time. There's a café in West End Lane called Ayesha's. Do you know it?'

‘It's at the bottom of Barry's street,' said Marion.

‘Possibly. I'll see you there at eleven.'

How it could it be, she thought as she put the phone down, that she could be so positive, so strong and in
control, with other people, yet so feeble with Andrew. She was like two different people, two souls in one body. He would take her away from Pamela now as he had separated her from Heather. The time would come, and it wasn't far off, when he would ask her not to go upstairs and see her mother. And she would comply. Because she couldn't lose him.

The four hundred pounds would be for Marion's wedding dress. Barry had offered to pay but her pride wouldn't allow that. He'd be paying for everything
after
they were married, she told him. Something dignified, she had in mind, but suited to her type. Not white but possibly pale pink, one of those ankle-length skirts that were all over frills and lace and bows. When Barry drove her home after the party Fowler was nowhere to be seen but on the kitchen counter she found a note with ‘I want the flat' on it in large print. She tore it up and went to bed.

She and Barry were spending most of every day together now. He wanted it and not letting him out of her sight except at night made her feel safer, for as the wedding approached she found herself acutely aware of how unlikely it was that someone like her should marry someone like Barry. Barry who was rich and had a house as big as Mrs Pringle's and a Mercedes-Benz, and she who lived by her wits. It wasn't like Marion to be nervous and even less like her to be afflicted with low self-esteem, but on the previous evening he had told her his wife (to herself Marion referred to her as his first wife) had had a lot of family money, all of which she had left to him. And this man was marrying
her
. Nothing could go wrong now, could it?

Fowler professed to be hurt that she hadn't asked him to the party and now didn't want him at her
wedding. ‘You've got to admit I clean up all right,' he said, though he was dirty again by this time and had put gel he had found in a bin on his nice clean hair. ‘When we were little you promised we'd live together when we were grown up. That was when you had that Wendy house in the garden and you used to ask me to tea. Well, Penguin bars and Lemsip. I sometimes think it was drinking all that Lemsip that started me on those substances.'

‘I haven't got a Wendy house now.'

‘No, you've got a flat,' said Fowler.

She had to make an excuse to Barry for not coming round to his place on Saturday till midday. She told him she had a fitting for her wedding dress. Men didn't know about these things. He wouldn't be able to tell the difference between a skirt from Dorothy Perkins and one from Chloé. Still, it might even be Chloé when she'd got that four hundred pounds.

Extremely devious herself, she wondered what was prompting Ismay to come all the way up here for their meeting. Clapham was about as far again in the opposite direction from central London as West End Lane. Could it be a trap? But of what sort? It was possible – remotely possible – that Ismay could have told the police and one of them would be with her, in plain clothes of course, sitting at a nearby table. But if she had done that she would have to be prepared for certain dire consequences. If they failed for some reason to listen to the tape, no one could prevent her coming out with what was on it. And she would, right there in public in Ayesha's. Even then nothing could be done to her. She'd take the greatest care to check the place over before she entered into any transaction. In fact, this time she might suggest she and Ismay took a walk to some open space, even Hampstead Heath, before
the money was handed over. If only all this weren't happening quite so near to Barry's house …

BOOK: The Water's Lovely
5.32Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Liar's Moon by Heather Graham
Forever Beach by Shelley Noble
Self-Defense by Jonathan Kellerman
You Never Met My Father by Graeme Sparkes
Her Best Friend's Brother by Nicolette Lyons
The Night Before Thirty by Tajuana Butler
Catching Caitlin by Amy Isan
One in Every Crowd by Ivan E. Coyote
JL04 - Mortal Sin by Paul Levine