Read Thirteen Steps Down Online
Authors: Ruth Rendell
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Crime, #Thrillers, #Psychological, #Suspense
cars. She'd be wearing a wonderful see-through dress and her own
diamonds andhe'd be in a tuxedo, beautifully fitting his new slim figure.
Mixhad never thought much about marriage, beyond knowing hed idn't
want it, or not yet, not till he was approaching forty maybe. But now ... If
he played his cards right, why shouldn't he marry Nerissa? If he was
going to get married one day, whowould suit him better than her and suit
him now?
A letter was decided upon. Though it was many years since she had
written a letter and as long since she had received one, Gwendolen
believed she wrote well. Any piece of prose sheproduced would be a joy to
read and kindle in the heart of the recipient a sensation of the good days
gone by when people could spell, wrote good English without
grammatical errors,and knew how to construct a sentence. A missive she
had been sent by some company purporting to supply her with gas had
contained the sentence, "You will of received our communication."
Of course she had replied in stinging words about the undoubted and
rapid failure of any business unwise enough to employ illiterates, but
had had no answer.
Now she was writing to Stephen Reeves and finding the task difficult.
For the first time in her life she wished she had a television set so that
she could have seen his programs about a country doctor. What a
surprise it would have been to see his name come up on the screen! If
she had known the series wasto be transmitted she could have stood
outside the television shop in Westbourne Grove and watched it through
the window. As things were, she couldn't write to him as she would have
liked to, that she had seen his programs and enjoyed them. "Watching
your stories brought to life on the small screen inspired-no, prompted, no,
encouraged?-impelled me to write toyou after so many years. Although in
some doubt as to the author'sidentity, I acquainted myself with your
website which--it wouldmake him see that she had moved with the
times if she mentioned the website. Then Gwendolen remembered that
ofcourse she hadn't seen the series, she hadn't got television, and she
must start again.
Hearing from an acquaintance that you had ventured into the realm of
television, I was moved to--the young man in the Internetcafe would
surely count as an acquaintance. She was anxious not to begin by telling
untruths. I was moved to renew oldfriendship--was that too forward?
Most people would say fiftyyears was a long break in any friendship--I
was moved to get intouch with you. She would have to say why. She
would have tosay she wanted to see him. Gwendolen screwed up her fifth
effortand sat disconsolate. It might be best to concentrate withoutpen
and paper and resolve on her words before starting towrite them down.
A serious young man, Darel Jones was handling his move to a
Docklands flat with tender care for his parents. Through school and
university and his postgraduate studies, he had lived at home and now,
at the age of twenty-eight, with a new and much better paid job, it was
time to leave. Knowing he must do so before he was thirty, he had been
careful once he came of age to do his own washing and ironing, eat out
four times aweek, visit his girlfriends' places rather than bring them
home for the night, and generally be independent. Thus he trod a fine
line, for his mother would willingly and happily have done everything for
him, welcomed girls, and forced herself not to apply the double standard,
inwardly congratulating him on his choice while condemning them for
their unchastity. He had spent at least two evenings a week with his
parents, taken them out, gone to the cinema with them, been charming
to their friends, and scrupulously thanked his mother for performing
small services for him. Now he was leaving, to live at the other end of
London on his own.
Neither parent had uttered a word of objection but on the eve of his
move, the new furniture installed, his clothes in twosuitcases in the hall
waiting to be put into his car, he saw a tear trickle down his mother's
cheek.
"Come on, Mum. Cheer up. Suppose I'd been going to Australia like
your chum Mrs. What'sher name's son."
"I didn't say a word," said Sheila Jones defensively."Tears speak louder."
"What'll you be like when he gets married?" Her husband passed his
handkerchief, a move he had made on an average once a week during
their thirty-year marriage.
"I hope he will. I know I'm going to love his wife."
Darel wasn't so sure. "That's a long way off," he said. "Look, I want you
both to say you'll come over to dinner on Saturday. I'll be straight by
then."
Sheila began to cheer up. "Tom and Hazel want us all to going next door
for a drink this evening to say good-bye. I said wewould. Nerissa will be
there."
Darel considered, but not for long. "You go," he said. "You can say goodbye for me."
"Oh, we wouldn't go without you. There'd be no point. Besides,we'd
miss our last few precious hours with you."
If she hadn't said that model would be there he might have agreed.
Nerissa Nash--why couldn't she have kept her father's interesting
surname?--was very beautiful, any man would admit that, and according
to his father, a nice girl. But Darel was wary of the whole celebrity world.
He knew of it only from what he read in the newspapers. Since his
preferred reading was usually the Financial Times, this wasn't much of a
guide, but certain emotive words suggestive of that world aroused his
distaste:club, fashion, star, public appearance, designer, and of course
"celebrity" itself were among them. Someone belonging in that so-called
elite must be empty-headed, ignorant,tasteless, and shallow. Such
people were heading for empty,unhappy lives, failed relationships,
dysfunctional families, alienatedchildren, and a desperate unwilliness to
grow old.
What a prig you are, he often told himself, always resolving to be less
censorious. The fact remained that he had no wish to extend his
acquaintance with Nerissa Nash beyond replying "Good evening" to her
"Hi" and raising his hand in a modifiedwave if he saw her at a distance.
Chapter 9
It wasn't until the doorbell rang that Mix remembered Danila was coming
round. He had forgotten to buy any cheap wine and now he'd have to give
her that rather nice Merlot he'd bought for his own private consumption
on Sundaynight. Spending the evening at home, as he thought alone, he
had been enthralled in Chapter 3 of Christie's Victims, reading of
Muriel Bady, a 31-year-old woman, living in Putney and employed at the
Ultra Radio Works in Park Royal. On leaving the police for no known
reason, Christie had also gone to work there. He and she became friends,
insofar as Christie was capable of friendship, and on several occasions
she and her fiance and Christie with Mrs. Christie all went out together.
Muriel Bady suffered from chronic rhinitis and Christie claimed to be able
to cure her with the aid of an inhalation device of his own invention. When
his wife had gone away, once more to have a holiday with her brother in
Sheffield, he invited Muriel around, gave her a cup of tea and showed her
what he said was the device. However, though it contained Friar's
Balsam, it also, unbeknown to Muriel, admitted a tube attached at the
other end to a gas outlet ...
It had been at this point that Mix was summoned to answer the door.
Old Chawcer had seen no need for an entry phone or even a separate
doorbell for the top flat, so on the rare occasions when someone called on
him, he had to go all the way down the fifty-two stairs and come all the
way up again. Old Chawcer never answered the door unless she was
expecting a guest, an even less usual event in the evenings, so he was
prettysure she wouldn't let Danila in. For, by the time he had set foot on
the top tread of the tiled staircase, he had remembered who this caller
must be.
The bell rang twice more before he got there. He needn't have worried
about the wine because she had brought two bottleswith her, one of
Riesling and one of gin. This ought to have pleased him but it didn't. In
his view, women shouldn't contribute to the evening's entertainment, no
self-respecting woman would, she'd expect the man to pay. Danila's mass
ofd ark hair was bigger and wilder than ever--ridiculous, he thought, it
caused her little pinched face to look tiny. Her next move made matters
even worse. Having set the bottles downon the hall table, she threw her
arms round Mix's neck and kissed him.
"I'm ever so glad to see you. I've been looking forwardto this."
He said nothing but led her up the stairs. Outside Miss Chawcer's
bedroom sat Otto, engaged in an all-over wash.
"Oh, what a sweet kitty!" Danila's shriek made Otto start to his feet and
arch his back. "Is she yours? Isn't she a darling!"She made the mistake
of putting out a hand toward Otto'shead. He drew back, hissed and
lashed at her before running upstairs. "Oh, I frightened her!"
"Come on," said Mix.
On the landing outside his front door she asked why it was so dark and
said the stained glass window gave her the creeps, but his anger was
softened to a mild irritation by her admiration of his flat. She walked
round his living room, passing the portrait of Nerissa Nash with just a
glance at it and then at him, but adoring everything else. Oh, the window
blinds! Oh, the cushions,the furniture, the ornaments, the lamp shades!
The amazing TN! That lovely gray marble statue of a girl. Who was she?
"Some goddess. Psyche, they called her, when I bought her," he said. He
poured them each a stiff gin with tonic from his fridge and ice from the
freezer. He hadn't a lemon. "You like the apartment, then?"
"It's great. What you must think of my grotty place!"
"I've taken a lot of trouble to get it this way."
"I'm sure. Why d'you read about awful murders when you've got a lovely
place like this?" She had picked up his book,left face-downwards on the
arm of the gray silk sofa. "Yuck, it's horrible. 'She was unconscious and
while he strangled her he raped her,' " she read aloud.
"Give that to me." Mix snatched the book from her. "Now you've lost my
place."
"I'm sorry. It was just that I ... "
"All right, never mind. Bring your drink in the bedroom."
They would have to go through all that shrieking and gasping stuff all
over again when she saw the furniture and the pictures. Might as well get
it over with so that they could getdown to what was the reason for her
coming at all. He refilledhis glass while she wandered around the
bedroom in the samesort of ecstasy as she'd shown in the living room. He
sipped his drink. It was that good Bombay gin in the blue bottle she'd
brought, he had to grant her that. He strolled back, pretending
astonishment to see her dressed as she had been two minutes before.
"I reckoned you'd be starkers by now."
"Mix." She came up to him. "Mix, do we always have to start doing it the
minute I come? Can't we talk for a bit?"
He was surprised. She was showing initiative for the first time, as if she
had some sort of right to an opinion on the order of events. He could see
what it was. In her eyes he was her boyfriend now and she was starting
to take him for granted. Soon she'd be telling him what to do, not asking
him.
"Talk about what?" he said.
"I don't know. Things. You getting the furniture for thisplace, your job,
mine, your lovely cat."
"It's not my fucking cat!" he almost yelled.
"There's no need to shout."
She took her clothes off but not the way Mix would have preferred, not
like a stripper giving a titillating performance. Danila undressed as she
would when she was alone, placing her outer garments over the back of a
chair, turning her back onhim to take off thong and tights. How he hated
tights. And didn't she know wearing a G-string with them was a joke?
She, left her bra till last, ashamed of her tiny breasts. He thought, I won't
see her again, I'll find some other way of getting to know Nerissa.
She went to the bed but he stopped her. "Wait a minute."He wasn't
going to do it on top of his ivory satin quilt; he lifted it off and folded it.
"All right," he said.
The look she gave him was subservient but with something in it too of
bewilderment. He took off his shoes and trousers but kept his shirt on
and his socks. A man didn't have to stripoff, that was the woman's role.
A simmering anger against her, a cold rage he couldn't quite account for,
stopped him taking any trouble and what happened could have been
called rape, only she didn't resist. He rolled away from her to finish his
drink.
Five minutes later she was walking round the flat again. He heard her
say, "Why d'you have her up there?"
There was no doubt as to what she meant. But "You mean Nerissa
Nash?" he said, to make assurance absolutely sure.
"You fancy her or something?"
Mix got up. Somewhere in him was a prudish streak, legacy perhaps of