Read Thirteen Steps Down Online
Authors: Ruth Rendell
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Crime, #Thrillers, #Psychological, #Suspense
so familiar a part of their lives that they called it affectionately "the
Grove." In their rented rooms and flats they grew cannabis in cupboards
with ultraviolet light inside. They dressed in cheesecloth and the concept
of the Global Village was born.
Miss Chawcer knew nothing of this. It flowed over her. She was born in
St. Blaise House, had no brothers or sisters and was educated at home
by Professor Chawcer, who had a chair of philology at London University.
When she was a little over thirty her mother died. From the first the
professor had been against her taking any sort of job, and what the
professor was against invariably didn't happen, just as what he was in
favor of did. Someone had to look after him. The maid had left to get
married and Gwendolen was a natural to take her place.
It was a strange life she led but a safe one, as any life must be that is
without fear or hope or passion or love or change or anxiety about
money. The house was very large, on three floors, innumerable rooms
opening out of square hallways or long passages, with a great grand
staircase consisting of four flights. When it seemed certain Gwendolen
would never marry, her father had three rooms on the top floor converted
into a selfcontained flat for her, with its own hallway, two rooms, and
akitchen. The lack of a bathroom had nothing to do with her
disinclination to move in. "What was the point of being up there when
her father was always down in the drawing room and always, it seemed,
hungry for his meals or thirsty for a cup of tea? Her unwillingness to go
up to the top floor started at that point. She only went up there if she
had lost something and had exhausted all other places where it might be.
Nothing had been painted in the rest of the house and no other rooms
had been modernized. Electricity had been installed, but not everywhere,
and the place had been rewired in the eighties because the existing
wiring was dangerous. But where the old cables had been taken out and
the new ones inserted, the walls had been plastered up over the holes
but no redecoration had been done. Gwendolen said herself she wasn't
much of a cleaner. Cleaning bored her. She was happiest when sitting
about and reading. She had read thousands of books, seeing no point in
doing anything else unless you had to. When she shopped for food, she
kept to the old shops as long as she could, and on the departure of the
grocer and the butcher and the fishmonger, she went to the new
supermarkets without registering that the change had affected her. She
liked her food well enough and had made few changes to her diet since
she was a young girl, except that with no one to cook for her she barely
ate hot meals.
Every afternoon, after lunch, she lay down and rested, reading herself
to sleep. She had a radio but no television. The house was full of books,
learned works and ancient novels, old bound copies of the National
Geographic
and
Punch,
encyclopediaslong
obsolete,
dictionaries
published in 1906, such collections as The Bedside Esquire and The
Mammoth Book of Thrillers,Ghosts and Mysteries. She had read most of
them and some she had reread. She had acquaintances she had met
through the St. Blaise and Latimer Residents' Association, and they
called themselves her friends. Such relationships are difficult for an only
child who has never been to school. She had been away on holidays with
the professor, even to foreign countries, and thanks to him she spoke
good French and Italian, though with no chance of using either except for
reading Montaigne and D'Annunzio, but she had never had a boyfriend.
While she had visited the theater and the cinema, she had never been to
a smart restaurant or a club or a dance or a party. She sometimes said
to herself that, like Wordsworth's Lucy, "she dwelt among the untrodden
ways," but it was said rather with relief than unhappiness.
The professor lived on into extreme old age, finally dying at the age of
ninety-four. For the past few years of his life he had been incontinent
and unable to walk, but his brain remained powerful and his demands
undiminished. With the occasional assistance of a district nurse, even
more occasionally that of a paid carer, Gwendolen looked after him. She
never complained. She never showed signs of weariness. She changed his
incontinence pads and stripped his bed, thinking only while she did so of
getting through it as fast as possible so that she could get back to her
book. His meals were brought and the tray later removed in the same
spirit. He had brought her up apparently with no other purpose than
that she should housekeepf or him while he was middle-aged, care for
him when he was old, and read to keep herself out of mischief.
There had been moments in his life when he had looked at her with a
cool unbiased eye and had acknowledged to himself that she was goodlooking. He had never seen any other reason for a man to fall in love and
marry, or at least wish to marry, than that the woman he chose was
beautiful. Intellect, wit, charm, kindliness, a particular talent or warmth
of heart, none of these played any part in his choice nor, as far as he
knew, in the choice made by other intelligent men. He had married a
woman for her looks alone and when he saw those looks in his daughter
he became apprehensive. A man might see them too and take her away
from him. None did. How could such a man have met her when he
invited no one to the house except the doctor, and she went nowhere
without her father's being aware of it and watching her with an eagle
eye?
But at last he died. He left her comfortably off and he left her the house,
now in the eighties a dilapidated mansion half buried among new
mewses and closes, small factories, local authority housing, corner
shops, debased terraces, and streetwidening schemes. She was at that
time a tall thin woman of sixty-six, whose belle epoque profile was
growing nutcracker like, her fine Grecian nose pointing markedly toward
a jutting chin. Her skin, which had been very fine and white with a
delicate flush on the high cheekbones, was a mass of wrinkles. Such
skin is sometimes compared to the peel of an apple that has been left
lying too long in a warm room. Her blue eyes hadfaded to pastel gray and
her once-fair hair, though still copious, was quite white.
The two elderly women who called themselves her friends, who had red
fingernails and tinted hair and dressed in an approximation of current
fashion, sometimes said that Miss Chawcer was Victorian in her clothes.
This showed only how much they had forgotten of their own youth, for
some of Gwendolen's wardrobe could have been placed in 1936 and some
in 1953. Many of her coats and dresses were of these vintages and would
have fetched a fortune in the shops of Notting Hill Gate where such
things were much prized, like the 1953 clothes she had bought for Dr.
Reeves. But he went away and married someone else. They had been
good in their day and were so carefully looked after that they never wore
out. Gwendolen Chawcer was a living anachronism.
She had cared for the house less well. To do her justice, she had
determined a year or two after the professor died that it should be
thoroughly redecorated and even in places refitted. But she was always
rather slow in making decisions and by thet ime she reached the point of
looking for a builder, she found she was unable to afford it. Because she
had never paid National Insurance and no one had ever made
contributions for her, the pension she received was very small. The
money her father had left paid annually a diminishing return.
One of her friends, Olive Fordyce, suggested she take a tenant for part
of the top floor. At first Gwendolen was appalled but after a time she
gradually came around to the idea, but she would never have taken any
action herself. It was Mrs. Fordyce who found Michael Cellini's
advertisement in the Evening Standard, who arranged an interview and
who sent him round to St. Blaise House.
Gwendolen, the Italian speaker, always addressed him as Mr. Chellini
but he, the grandson of an Italian prisoner of war, had always
pronounced it Sellini. She refused to change: she knew what was correct
and what was not if he didn't. He would have preferred that they should
be Mix and Gwen, as he lived in a world in which everyone was on firstname terms, and he had suggested it.
"I think not, Mr. Cellini," was all she had said.
It would probably have killed her to be called by her given name, and as
for Gwen, only Olive Fordyce, much to Gwendolen's distaste, used that
diminutive. She called him, not her tenant, or even "the man who rents
the flat," but her lodger." When he mentioned her, which was seldom, he
called her "the old bat who owns the place" but on the whole they got on
well, largely because the house was so big and they rarely met. Of
course, it was early days. He had been there only a fortnight.
At one of their very occasional meetings he had told her he, was an
engineer. To Miss Chawcer an engineer was a man who built dams and
bridges in distant lands, but Mr. Cellini explained that his job was
servicing workout equipment. She had to ask him what that meant and,
not being very articulate, he was obliged to tell her she could view similar
machines in the sports department of any large London store. The only
London store she ever went to was Harrods and when next there she
made her way to view the exercise equipment. She entered a world she
didn't understand. She could see no motive for setting foot on any of
these devices and scarcely believed what Cellini had told her. Could he
have been, to use a rare exampleof the professor's inverted-commassurrounded slang, "pulling her leg"?
Every so often, but not very often, Gwendolen went around the house
with a feather duster and a carpet sweeper. She pushed this implement
halfheartedly and never emptied its dust container. The vacuum cleaner,
bought in 1951, had broken down twenty years before and never been
repaired. It sat in the basement among old rolls of carpet, the leaf from a
dining table, flattened cardboard boxes, a gramophone from the thirties,
a stringless violin of unknown provenance, and a basket off the bicycle
the professor had once used to ride to Bloomsbury and back. The carpet
sweeper deposited dirt as regularly as it picked it up. By the time she
reached her own bedroom, dragging the sweeper up the stairs behind
her, Gwendolen had grown bored with the whole thing and wanted to get
back to whatever she happened to be reading, Balzac all over again or
Trollope. She couldn't be bothered to take the carpet sweeper back
downstairs so she left it in a corner of her bedroom with the dirty duster
draped over its handle; sometimes it would remain there for weeks.
Later that day, at about four, she was expecting Olive Fordyce and her
niece for tea. The niece she had never met, but Olive said it would be
cruel never to let her see where Gwendolen lived, she was "absolutely
mad about" old houses. Just to spend an hour in St. Blaise House would
make her ecstatic. Gwendolen wasn't doing anything special, apart from
rereading LePere Goriot. She'd go out in a minute and buy a swiss roll
from the Indian shop on the corner and maybe a packet of custard
creams.
The days when that wouldn't have been good enough were long gone.
Years had passed since she had baked or cooked anything more than,
say, a scrambled egg, but once every cake eaten in this house, every pie
and flapjack and eclair, had been made by her. She particularly
remembered a certain swiss roll, the pale creamy-yellow sponge, the
raspberry jam, the subtle dusting of powdered sugar. The professor
wouldn't tolerate bought cakes. And tea was the favorite meal of all three
of them. Tea was what you asked people to partake of if you asked them
at all. When Mrs. Chawcer was so ill, was slowly and painfully dying, her
doctor on his regular visits was always asked to stay to tea. Her mother
upstairs in bed and the professor giving a lecture somewhere, Gwendolen
found herself alone with Dr. Reeves.
Falling in love with him and he with her, she convinced herself, were
the most important events of her life. He was younger than she was but
not much, not enough, Gwendolen thought, for her mother to put him
beyond the pale on grounds of age. Mrs. Chawcer disapproved of
marriages in which the man was more than two years younger than the
woman. In appearance Dr. Reeves was boyish with dark curly hair, dark
but fiery eyes and an enthusiastic expression. Though thin, he ate
enormously of Gwendolen's scones with Cornish cream and homemade
strawberry jam, Dundee cake and flapjacks, while she picked delicately
at a Marie biscuit. Men didn't like seeing a girl guzzle, Mrs. Chawcer
said--had almost stopped saying now her daughter was over thirty.
Before tea, between mouthfuls and afterward, Dr. Reeves talked. About