Read Thirteen Steps Down Online
Authors: Ruth Rendell
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Crime, #Thrillers, #Psychological, #Suspense
another murder but it went wrong? Would he come back to the place
where it went wrong?"
"He might," Steph said rather dubiously, and then, "Look, is this really
happening? That funny old place you live in, is it haunted or what?"
"Funny old place" was right, but Mix didn't much like someone else
calling it that. It seemed an insult to his beautiful flat. "I reckon I may
have seen--something," he said carefully.
"What sort of something?" Ed was agog.
The more sensitive and perhaps intuitive Steph read the expression on
Mix's face. "He doesn't want to talk about it, Ed. I mean, would you? You
know what Ed said, Mix. You need help."
"Do I?"
"Look, I'll tell you what I'll do. I'll let you have a loan of this and you can
drive the thing away with it if it comes again." She unfastened the Gothic
cross of purple and black stones thathung round her neck from a silver
chain. "Here, you have it."
"Oh, no, I might lose it!"
"Not the end of the world if you do. It only cost me fifteen quid. And my
mum says I shouldn't wear it, she says it's what's the word, Ed?"
"Blasphemous," said Ed.
"That's it, blasphemous. My mum knows a medium and she said it
would work. If I needed it. She said any cross would work."
Mix studied the cross. He thought it ugly, the stones so obviously glass,
the silver so evidently nickel. But it was a cross and as such might do
the trick. If he threw it at Reggie or evenif he only held it up in front of
him, the ghost might melt away like a spiral of smoke or a genie going
back into a bottle.
Gwendolen had found a plastic bone in her bedroom. At first she couldn't
think what it was doing there or where it had come from and then she
remembered Olive's little dog playing with it. She offered it to Otto, who
shrank away with an expression of contempt on his face, as if repelled by
the smell of dog. The bone wrapped up in a sheet of newspaper and put
inside the washing machine for safekeeping, she waited for Olive to
phone and complain about her loss.
With the diminishing of her income, Gwendolen had become very
careful with money and disliked spending it on unnecessary phone calls.
If Olive wanted her animal's toy, let her phone or come around and fetch
it. But the days went by and there was no call and no visit. Gwendolen
used the washing machine only when she had accumulated a stack of
dirty laundry. When this happened she nearly washed the bone and the
newspaper, stuffing the clothes in before she noticed. There were a
number of small Asian-run shops as well as the bigger grocers in
Ladbroke Grove and Westbourne Grove where she did her shopping,
carefully comparing prices--every single penny piece counted--before
making up her mind. To reach any of them she had to pass the block of
flats where Olive lived. Putting on her good black silk coat with the tiny
covered buttons, now some thirty years old, and an all round straw hat
because the day looked warm, she set off with the bone in the bottom of
her shopping trolley. This was covered in Black Watch tartan and, being
only nine years old, quite smart still.
Dropping in on Olive, she rang her bell in the lobby. No answer. Nor did
the porter get an answer when she asked him to phone Mrs. Fordyce in
11C. He thought he had seen her go out. Gwendolen was extremely
annoyed. It was feckless leaving your rubbish in other people's houses
and then giving no sign of the social solecism you had committed. She
was tempted to drop the bone in its wrapping into the nearest litter bin
but a niggling doubt about the validity of doing that stopped her. It might
amount to stealing.
After reading, Gwendolen liked shopping best of what she did. Not
because of what she bought or the layout of the shops or the friendliness
of staff but solely on the grounds of comparing prices and saving money.
She was no fool and she knew very well that the amounts she saved on a
tin of gravy powder here and a piece of Cheddar cheese there would
never amount to more than, say, twenty pence a day. But she
acknowledged to herself that it was a game she played and one that
made trekking all the way over to the Portobello Road market or up to
Sainsbury's a pleasure rather than a chore. Besides, crossing Ladbroke
Grove, if she followed a certain route, took her past the house where, all
those years ago, Dr. Reeves had had his surgery. By now the pain had
gone from her memories of him and only a rather delightful nostalgia
remained, that and a new hope, brought about by the announcement in
the Telegraph.
Just after the war the Chawcers had thought of going to Dr. Odess. The
first symptoms of Mrs. Chawcer's illness had showed themselves about
that time. But Colville Square was rather a long walk away, while Dr.
Reeves was in Ladbroke Grove and reached by simply taking Cambridge
Gardens. It wasn't till the trial and all the publicity in the newspapers
that Gwendolen discovered Dr. Odess had been Christie's doctor and had
attended him and his wife for years.
She was tempted to go up to the market this morning. The sun was
shining and flowers were out everywhere. The council had hung baskets
of geraniums on all the lampposts. I wonder what that costs, thought
Gwendolen. Sometimes when she went to the market for her vegetables,
her cooking apples, and her bananas--the only fruit Gwendolen ever ate
were bananas and stewed apple--she was able to save a lot and
sometimes have forty pence more than she expected in her purse at the
end of the day. She stopped outside the four-story house with basement
and with steep stairs climbing to the front door, where Stephen Reeves
had practiced. It was run-down now, its paint peeling, a pane in a front
bay window broken and patched up with a plastic Tesco bag and tape.
Inside there had been the waiting room where she had sat and waited
for prescriptions for her mother. In those days doctors had no lights and
bells to signify they were ready to receive the next patient, often no
receptionist or nurse on the premises. Dr. Reeves used to come to the
waiting room himself, call out the patient's name, and hold the door open
for him or her to pass through. Gwendolen never minded how long she
had to wait for the prescription to be handed to her for he would do this
himself and might come two or three times into the waiting room to
receive the next patient before he did so. She knew he only did this so
that he could catch glimpses of her and she have sight of him. He always
smiled and the smile for her was different from those directed at others,
warmer, wider, and somehow more conspiratorial.
It was as if they shared a secret, as indeed they did-their love for each
other. She hadn't minded having to leave the surgeryon her own. He
would be at St. Blaise House in a day or two and then they would be
alone, having tea and talking, talking, talking. To all intents and
purposes they were alone in the house. Bertha, the last maid, was long
gone, and by this time domestic workers wanted higher wages than the
Chawcers could afford. Mrs. Chawcer was asleep, or certainly immobile,
upstairs. The professor might be home by five but seldom before,
threading his way on the old bicycle through the increasing traffic on the
Marylebone Road into the complexities of Bayswater and Notting Hill. It
was very quiet in St. Blaise House in the fifties while Stephen Reeves and
Gwendolen sat side by side and talked and whispered, putting the world
right, laughing a little, their hands and knees very close, their eyes
meeting. Because of these sessions and the intimacy that had grown up
between them, because he had once said he was awfully fond of her, she
considered herself irrevocably bound to him. In her mind it was an untildeath-us-do-part agreement.
For a long time she had been bitter against him, seeing him as
treacherous, a man who had jilted her. If he had never said he loved her
in so many words, actions spoke louder. Later on, she had looked at the
situation more rationally, understanding that he had no doubt been
entangled with this Eileen before he had met her, or before he had got to
know her, and had perhaps been threatened with an action for breach of
promise. Or her father or brother had threatened him with a horsewhip.
Such things happened, she knew from her reading. Dueling, of course,
was illegal and long since gone out of fashion. But he must have been
inescapably entangled with the woman, so what could he do but marry
her? As for her, Gwendolen, she too was tied to him, as good as his wife.
It was interesting, she thought as she pushed her trolley along
Westbourne Grove, the number of people she had heardof lately who,
widowed or losing their wives in old age, came back to their past and
married the sweetheart of their youth. Queenie "Winthrop's sister was
such a one and so was a certain member of the St. Blaise Residents'
Association, a Mrs. Coburn-French. Of course, Gwendolen was a realist
and had to face the fact that women lost their husbands more often than
men lost their wives. But sometimes women were the first to die. Look at
her father. Not that he had married any long-lost sweetheart, but Mr.
Iqbal from the Hyderabad Emporium had done just that, meeting outside
the mosque in "Willesden a lady he had known from the same village in
India fifty years before.
And now Eileen was dead ...
Stephen Reeves was a widower now. Would he come backfor her? If she
had married someone else and that someone had died, she would look
for him. The bond between them must be as fixed and enduring for him
as it was for her. Perhaps she should take steps to find him ... ? He
might be shy, he might even feel guilty about what he had done and be
afraid to face her. Men were such cowards, that was a well-known fact.
Look how squeamish the professor had been about taking on any of the
tending of her mother when she was so ill.
It was half a century since last she had seen Stephen, or it soon would
be. There were ways of finding people these days, much easier and surer
ways than when she was young. You didi t somehow with a computer.
You used this computer and got into something called the "net" or the
"web" and it would tell you. There were places--there was one in
Ladbroke Grove called Internet cafes. For a long time Gwendolen had
thought that meant a place to have coffee in and eat cakes, but Olive,
laughing stupidly, had set her right. If she went to such a place would
she be able to find Stephen Reeves after fifty years?
She thought about all this as she walked home with her shopping. After
he had told her she was a nice girl and he was fond of her, she sat up in
her bedroom and practiced writing her name as it would soon be.
Gwendolen Reeves or G. L. Reeves, she would sign herself, but on
invitation cards she would be Mrs. Stephen Reeves. Mrs. Stephen Reeves
at home and Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Reeves thank you for your kind
invitation but regretthey cannot accept ... As it turned out, these last had
been reserved for Eileen. That need not trouble her now, for Eileen was
dead. Somehow she knew it hadn't been a happy marriage, in spite of
that "beloved wife." He had to put it like that, everyone did, it was the
convention. Possibly, when he and Eileen quarreled, as no doubt they
often did, he told her he should never have married her.
"I should have married Gwendolen," he would have said.
“She was my first love."
Gwendolen had never expressed her feelings to him. It wouldn't have
been right for a woman to do that then but things seemed to be different
now. He might not know how she felt, he might never have known.
Somehow she must manageto tell him and then everything would come
right.
Chapter 7
He had read Christie's Victims before but a long time ago, six or seven
years ago when he began collecting his Reggie library. Of course he
remembered it. But it was still fascinating to retrace his steps through
the Notting Hill of those days and through the life of one of the most
famous serial killers ofall time.
"John Reginald Halliday Christie came to live in London in1938," Mix
read while eating his breakfast,
and with him came his wife, Ethel. He was a curious man.There must be
something strange, not to say appalling, about any necrophile. Not only is
the idea of necrophilia repugnant to everyone, but in order to indulge his
desire, the sufferer from this aberration must, unless he has unlikely
accessto a morgue, first kill his victims.
Looking at it from the perspective of the twenty-first century,Christie's
marriage was not a happy one. Five years after their wedding, Ethel left
him and went to live in Sheffield. Their separation lasted for several years
until Christie wrote to her, asking her to return to him. After their reunion,
she was often away staying with her relatives in the north. Christie had
been a cinema operative, a mill-worker and a postman, in connection with