Read Thirteen Steps Down Online
Authors: Ruth Rendell
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Crime, #Thrillers, #Psychological, #Suspense
"That's good. " Nerissa trod warily. "And the son? He's stil lliving at
home?"
"Darel?" her dad said. "Such a nice well-mannered boy. He's still at
home, but Sheila told me he's buying a flat in Docklands. Time to move
on, he says."
Nerissa was unsure whether this was good news for her or bad. While
she was having dinner with her parents, she always hoped Darel Jones
would come to the door to beg a couple of teabags or return a borrowed
book. He never had, though accordingto her mother, they and the
Joneses were always "in and out of each other's houses." She thought of
him next door, watching television with his parents or maybe out
somewhere with another girl. The latter was more likely for a very
handsome and charming young man of twenty-eight. She sighed and
then smiled to stop her parents noticing.
Guilt seldom troubled Gwendolen. To her mind she led, and had always
led, a blameless life of absolute integrity. Entering a tenant's flat in his
absence and exploring it seemed to her a landlord's right and if she
enjoyed it, so much the better. The only drawback was her need to rest
and take deep breaths between flights.
What a lot he drank! An empty gin bottle and one which had contained
vodka and four wine bottles had been put into the recycling box since
she was last up here. It was evident he didn't eat much at home, the
fridge was again nearly empty and smelling of antiseptic. A large leatherbound book lay on the coffee table. Because she could hardly pass a
book without opening it, Gwendolen opened this one. Nothing but
photographs of a black girl in very short skirts or swimming costumes.
Perhaps this was what they meant by pornography; she had never really
known.
A copy of the previous day's Daily Telegraph was beside the book.
Gwendolen rather liked the Telegraph and would have bought it herself if
it hadn't been so ruinously expensive. It puzzled her that Cellini had
bought it. One of those tabloids was surely more his mark, and she
wouldn't have been surprised to learn that he had been given this copy.
Ed had seen an article in it about fitness machines, which especially
singled out Fiterama for mention, and passed it on to Mix.
Just as she couldn't pass a book without opening it, so Gwendolen
found it impossible to see the printed word without reading it. Some of it,
that is. Ignoring the fitness machine article, she read the front page, then
the next page, managing fairly well but wishing she had her magnifying
glass with her. When she reached the births, marriages, and deaths,
she laid the paper down and went to the door to listen. He hardly ever
came back in the middle of the day, but it was as well to be careful. How
tidy everything was! It amused her to think that of the two of them he
with his cleanliness and fussy ways would be called an old woman while
everyone saw her as cultivated and urbane, more like a man really.
She wasn't much interested in marriages and births, she never had
been, but she ran her eye-pushed and strained her eye really-down the
deaths column. People no longer had any stamina and many younger
than herself died every day. Anderson, Arbuthnot, Beresford, Brewster,
Brown, Carstairs--she had once known a Mrs. Carstairs who lived down
the road, but it wasn't her, she was called Diana, not Madeleine. Davis,
Edwards, Egan, Fitch, Graham, Kureishi. There were three Nolans, very
odd that, it wasn't a common name. Palmer, Pritchard, Rawlings, Reeves-Reeves!
How extraordinary and what a coincidence. This was thefirst time she
had looked at the Telegraph for months and what should she find but the
announcement of his wife's death. For it certainly was his wife.
On 15 June, at home, Eileen Margaret, aged 78, beloved wife
of Dr. Stephen Reeves of Woodstock, Oxon. Funeral 21 June
at St. Bede's Church, Woodstock. No flowers. Donations to
cancer research.
This small print was terribly hard to read but there was no doubt about
it. Would he notice if she cut it out of the paper? Possibly, but what
could he do about it if he did? Now to find the scissors. Her own might be
in the bathroom cabinet or the oven--seldom used, it made a useful
cupboard--or somewhere in the bookshelves, but an old woman like him
would keep his in a neatly arranged drawer along with such gadgets as
potatopeelers and bottle openers. He would be sure to have several of
those.
Gwendolen poked about in Mix's kitchen, paying particular attention to
the microwave, whose function was a puzzle to her. Did toast come out of
it or music? It might even be a very small washing machine. She found
the scissors exactly where she thought they would be and cut out the
announcement of his wife's death. Downstairs she would be able to study
it at leisure with the aid of her magnifying glass.
She was only just in time. As she was descending the bottom flight he
let himself in by the front door.
"Good evening, Mr. Cellini."
"Hiya," said Mix, thinking about her getting pregnant and going for help
to Reggie. "How are you doing? All right?"
When he phoned the spa the girl called Danila told him Madam
Shoshana agreed to his servicing the machines. Perhap she would like to
come along some time and bring one of his contracts with him. Mix
concocted on his computer a contract with Mix Maintenance as its
headline--he was ratherproud of that--and printed out two copies.
Instead of being modified by the passage of time, his fear increased as
the days went by. He had never seen the figure on the stairs again,
though he fancied sometimes that he heard noises that shouldn't have
been there, footsteps in the long passage, a curious rustling sound like
someone taking crushed paper out of bags or stuffing it into them, once a
strain of music, though that might have come from the street. By night
he had to screw up his courage in order to let himself in. And those
stairs he had always hated were worse.
Reaching St. Blaise House, he forced himself to put his key into the lock
and enter the hall, the dim light coming on. Try not to think about it, he
told himself as he began to mount, think about Nerissa and about getting
fit, the way she'd like you to be--why not get yourself an exercise bike?
Fiterama will let you have it at cost. Go for walks, lift weights. He was
always telling clients what marvelous physical benefit they'd get from
using the machines. Tell yourself, he thought. And try to be glad about
these stairs. Going up them is good exercise too.
Like a kind of therapy, this worked until he came to the landing below
the tiled flight. Feeble light, filtered through tree branches and foliage
and the grime on the glass, seeped through the Isabella window and
touched him with spots ofcolor as he walked up. It lay on the top floor
like a pattern donein smudged chalks and quite still on this windless
night. Two long black passages stretched away from the landing,
emptyand silent, all the doors closed. He switched on the light once
more, staring fearfully down the left-hand passage as the cat appeared
from out of a door which came open and closed of its own accord. He saw
its green eyes glinting as it walked in unconcerned fashion toward him,
hissed as it passed him and made for the stairs.
Who or what had opened the door? He plunged into his flat, fumbling
for the lightswitch but at last turning it on. The sudden brightness made
him let out his breath in a long, relieved sigh. He'd heard of cats learning
to open doors, though these in the flat had knobs, not handles. It might
be different out there. Going to look was out of the question. The door in
question must have a handle, and Otto, who was clever if evil, had
learned to stand on his hind legs and apply to it the pressure of his clawy
paw. Who had closed it? Doors close of their own accord, he told himself.
It happens all the time.
A cheerful film on television, a not-so-old Hollywood musical, a mug of
hot chocolate with a drop of whiskey in it, and three Maryland cookies
finished the job of reassurance. Still, once he started on his fitness
regimen, all that sort of eating and drinking would have to stop. It was
warm in the flat but not too hot, 27 degrees. That was the kind of
temperature he liked. Warmth, sweet filling food, a thick soft mattress,
lazing around, doing nothing--why were all the nice things bad for you?
The cat and its eyes were banished for the duration of the musical.
Above his head, outside his front door, he could hear no sound, and
when the television was off the silence was disturbed only by the sighing
of traffic on the Westway. He feltbetter. He congratulated himself on hiswhat was the word?-resilience. But in bed, with the bedside lamp off, he
thought ofthe cat and the door again and, although there could be
nothingto see, kept his eyes shut against the darkness.
Chapter 6
The next morning he woke up to awareness that he had been frightened
the night before and for a moment he had to think why. But fear and the
memory of fear began to fade when he saw the sunshine and heard
children playing in the garden next door to the guinea fowl man. Otto
must have opened the door himself and it must have shut behind him of
its own volition. He got up, had a shower and, telling himself it was a
good start to a workout program, set off for a walk. But before starting he
went rather cautiously along the passage toward the door of the room the
cat must have come out of. Sure enough, the doors down here had
handles. He left, unreasonably relieved, more as if he'd just had a
wonderful piece of news instead of only finding out what he already knew
was true.
Now for a walk. Blow the cobwebs away in more senses than one, let
unlight and energy into his life. There was a big Catholic church near the
convent and, about to march on pastit, he stopped for a moment to
watch the people going in to mass. A lot of people, more than he'd have
thought likely. A kind of regret came into his mind and a wistfulness.
Those people wouldn't have his problems, his doubts and fears. They had
their religion, they had something to turn to, something or someone to
bring them comfort. If they saw a ghost or heard footsteps and doors
closing, they'd call out the name of their god or utter the appropriate
curse. In stories, that usually worked. He had had religion when he was
small and his grandmother was alive to take him to church. But that was
long ago and it was all gone now. He'd not thought about it since and
didn't believe in any of it. If he went in there and along with them asked
someone up in the sky for help, he'd feel such a fool, he'd be
embarrassed. Much the same went for asking their vicar--their priest?
Mix couldn't imagine how he'd explain to the man or what the man
would answer. It was beyond him.
On Monday and Tuesday he was busy at work and for once was relieved
he had work to do. There was a new treadmill coming to a ground-floor
flat in Bayswater that he had to set up and demonstrate. Half a dozen
steps on that and he was breathless, in spite of his walks. Then all the
calls for help with brokendown equipment to answer, e-mails,
complaining or demanding. On the second evening he managed a visit to
Shoshana's Spa and Health Club, where he told Danila he was making
a survey and a servicing plan. This was to put her off the scent. Because
he was really looking for Nerissa. He was on the point of asking Danila
about her, which were her days for coming to the club, was she a regular
visitor, that kind of thing, but he decided it would sound funny. It would
sound as if his contracting to look after the club's machines was no more
than a ploy to meet the famous model--as indeed it was. He handed over
acopy of his contract and left.
On Wednesday evening he went to the Coronet cinema with Ed and
Steph and afterward to the Sun in Splendour for a drink. When the men
each had a gin and tonic in front of them and Steph a vodka and
blackcurrant, he asked her what he'dbeen planning, in fact rehearsing,
saying to her all day. The elaborate, hedging-of-bets, covert way of asking
a simple questiongot lost and he came out with a few simple words.
"Do you believe in ghosts, Steph?"
She didn't laugh or scoff. "There's more things in heaven and earth ... "
she began but couldn't remember the rest. "I think, like, if there's been
an awful thing like a murder in aplace, the dead person or the killer-well,
they may come backand revisit the scene of the crime. It's their energy,"
she wenton vaguely, "it kind of hangs around and makes the person well,
materialize."
Just what he thought. He was going to ask her about the mysterious
opening and shutting of that door, but then he rememberedthe cat had
done it. "Would it have to be the scene of the crime? I mean, where
someone died? Could it be a placewhere another crime was committed?"
"She's not an expert, Mix," Ed said. "She's not a medium."
Mix took no notice. "Suppose it was a murderer who'd tried to do