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Authors: Christine Poulson

Stage Fright (21 page)

BOOK: Stage Fright
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There where the long street roars, hath been

The stillness of the central sea.

Although actually it's the other round: trees are growing where the sea used to roll. Ely was an island – the name comes from the eels that were the staple diet of the monks.'

‘Hence all those watery names, I suppose,' Joe said. ‘Waterbeach, Horningsea and the like. Cass…'

I waited, expecting him to go on. He didn't. I looked sideways at him. He was staring out into the distance.

‘What?' I said.

‘Have you ever wondered about how things might have worked out if you'd joined me in Denver?'

I had, of course, more often than I wanted to admit, especially when my second marriage broke up.

‘I did sometimes wonder if we should have tried it for a year or two longer, given things more of a chance.'

Joe sighed. ‘I knew you didn't want to go to the States. Or not to Denver anyway. You know how it was, I was too young and ambitious to compromise.'

‘Me, too.'

‘Guess you always wonder about the road not travelled. I'm kind of at another crossroads now.' He pulled his handkerchief through his fingers.

‘Tell me.'

‘It's Amy. She wants to make a clean break, get married again. You know, I took the job at Columbia because she complained that I wasn't spending enough time with her and the kids – and she was right. Then I found out that she'd been having an affair. It had been going on for a year or two.' He shook his head and bit his lip as if he still couldn't quite believe it. ‘We split up and now we're at different sides of the continent. Hell, there's even a four-hour time difference.'

‘God, that's difficult.'

‘Difficult! Yeah! Imagine sharing child custody over two thousand miles. And that's the problem. It's giving her the perfect excuse not to share.' I glanced down at his hands. He was pulling the handkerchief taut between his fingers. ‘She wants to marry this other guy and have the kids with her all the time. Visiting rights only for me. And I'm thinking, maybe I should let them go. Catch up with them later.'

‘What do you mean, catch up with them later?'

‘When they're older, old enough to decide if they want to live with me. You know what a lot of guys in my position would do? They'd find some cute postgrad, young enough to be their daughter. They'd start over; new wife, new family. People do it all the time in the States.'

‘They do it here, too,' I said.

He must have caught something in the tone of my voice, because his head shot up and he turned to look me in the face.

‘But you don't think it's a good idea?'

‘Getting married again? How could I possibly say? But with your boys: I'm sure, really sure, that you should do everything you can to be with them.'

‘Amy doesn't come right out and say it, but she thinks this guy will be a better father than I am to my own boys. He's the outdoor type, takes them camping, plays baseball with them.'

‘Good for him. No, really,' I said, as Joe grimaced. ‘It's good that he does that and that they like him. But he's not their father, you are. And they need you.'

‘I guess you're right. I hope you are.'

We sat gazing out over the water. A couple of geese rose slowly in the air and flew honking away. The sun went behind a cloud.

‘Grace needs her cardigan,' I said. ‘We'd better go back down.'

*   *   *

Joe speared a chip. ‘You and I, we were just kids really, weren't we?' he said. We were sitting at a wooden table only feet away from the river. It was around eight o'clock, and though it wasn't dark, the air seemed to be getting stiller and heavier. And the sky was a deeper blue. Iron lampposts with fluted columns and peeling white paint marked the edge of the towpath. Strings of coloured light bulbs – green, amber, cream and red – were slung between them and shed a soft light over the lawn and the weeping willows around it. There was a festive feeling that came from the proximity of the pleasure boats and water and the coloured lights.

We had almost worked our way through enormous plates of scampi and chips. I had fed Grace while we were waiting for the food and she was asleep in her push-chair. Our conversation had been wide-ranging, sixties pop music, academic life, politics – I wasn't surprised to learn that Joe was a Democrat – but now we were back to the old days.

‘That crummy apartment we had, that first winter. That wallpaper.' He laughed and shook his head. ‘We'd been living there for – how long? – before we realized that it was upside down.'

‘That was the least of it. I've never ever been so cold in my life.'

‘We had to heap our coats on the bed at night.'

‘That gas fire. My toes were burning while the back of my head froze.'

‘And it was so damp.'

‘Oh God, yes.'

‘Those were the days,' I said, laughing.

‘They really were,' Joe protested.

A boat came chugging up the river and moored beside us. Two swans with a couple of cygnets bobbed up and down in its wake.

‘None of those things seem to matter when you're young,' Joe said.

I was off on my own line of reminiscence. ‘Remember when I got that rash on my chest? You wouldn't believe it was chickenpox.'

‘I didn't think grown-ups could get it! Do you remember that wedding – where was it now? Yes, Jersey … paddling in my tuxedo…'

‘Yes…' I saw, not the event itself, but Melissa and myself poring over a photograph. I heard her saying, ‘Aren't you dying to know what he's like now? You are going to meet him, aren't you?' I put down my beer and rested my hand on the table. I had managed briefly to forget about my worries. Now it all came flooding back and I felt guilty for enjoying myself.

‘Hey, sweetheart … What's up? It isn't upsetting you, is it, this reminiscing?' Joe reached over and put his hand on mine.

‘No … it's not that…'

Joe's fingers closed round mine. His hand was warm and supple, a comfortable fit. I remembered that he'd always been good at holding hands. Some men grip your hand too slackly, others too tightly so you feel like a small child being towed along by daddy. With Joe I'd felt anchored and protected. I looked across the table at him. His face was growing indistinct in the gloom; the pinkish-orange glow from the lights smoothed out the lines on his face and made him look younger. I wondered if I looked younger too.

‘It's Melissa,' I told him. ‘Just a few days ago everything seemed to he going wonderfully well for her. Career going well, new baby, happy marriage – or so I thought – and now … well, who knows.'

Joe squeezed my hand.

I said, ‘It just makes life seem so uncertain. It makes me think of that image in medieval literature: the Wheel of Fortune. One moment you're at the top, the next moment…'

‘Can I clear those plates and get you some dessert?' said a woman's voice.

I gave a start. The waitress's footsteps had been muffled by the grass and we hadn't heard her coming up behind us. Joe released my hand and leaned back from the table.

‘Er, no thanks, I think I've had enough…' I mumbled.

‘Me, too.' Joe said. ‘But I'd like a coffee. Can I get an espresso?'

The waitress nodded and went off to get it, leaving Joe and me in a silence that wasn't comfortable.

Don't they say that every cell in our body is replaced every seven years? It was twice as long since the last time Joe and I had made love. Psychologically, too, the years had changed us into different people. And yet how different were we really? Weren't those young selves still buried deep inside the middle-aged people we had become? Like layers of geological sediment the years had covered them up but hadn't obliterated them. I remembered the erotic charge of hearing ‘My Funny Valentine' on the radio, the way it had propelled me into the past. I felt a pang of desire like a gentle punch low in the belly. My face grew warm. Stop it, I told myself, it's not as if the hand-holding
means
anything, Joe's just a very tactile person.

I angled my watch to catch the light.

‘Ought to be going soon, if I'm going to drop you off at Ely station to get home in time to watch Kevin's appeal on TV.'

It was too dark for Joe to see me blushing, but in any case he was gazing off over the water.

‘Joe?'

He looked at me. ‘Sorry,' he said, frowning. ‘What did you say just then?'

‘That we'll have to go soon.'

‘No, before that?'

‘That I didn't want any dessert?'

He shook his head impatiently. ‘Before the waitress came.'

‘Oh, um, yes, something about medieval literature and the Wheel of Fortune?'

‘Yes, yes, yes!' Joe thumped the fist of one hand into the palm of the other. ‘That's it! Yes! It's the tarot.'

‘What?'

‘The King of Cups. It's the name of a tarot card. And so is the Wheel of Fortune.
And
the Tower, now that I come to think of it. That must be why I almost remembered earlier on.' He started to laugh.

‘The tarot? That's the last thing I'd have expected you to know about.'

‘Oh, I had this wacky older girlfriend at Berkeley. Before I came over here. God, it must be well over twenty years ago. She used to read the cards. There were different suits: Cups and Coins and Swords and something else I can't recollect. They stand for different types of people. I was the Knight of Swords, I do remember that. Something to do with my colouring, I think.'

‘So what do they mean, these suits?'

‘Sorry. Can't tell you. I was never all that interested, to tell you the truth. I know how we can find out, though. It's bound to be on the net.'

*   *   *

The phone rang as I was coming in through the door. I was still lost in thought as I picked it up.

‘Hello. Is this Dr James?' It was an unfamiliar male voice. I could hear a subdued hubbub in the background as though the speaker were in a pub.

‘Yes.'

‘I am calling on behalf of Safe Homes Security. You have been selected for a free assessment—'

‘How did you get my name? I'm ex-directory.'

‘You are on our list of privileged clients. Now, I wonder if you are aware that the crime rate is rising in your area—'

I suddenly felt absolutely furious.

‘This is outrageous. You're trying to frighten me into buying something.'

The voice continued smoothly, ‘We are offering you an inspection, completely free—'

‘Look: I'm just not interested!' I slammed the phone down.

This kind of approach was unethical even by the standard of cold calling. Was there a code of conduct? If not there ought to be. I could at least complain to the company. I dialled 1471 only to be told that the caller had withheld their number. I went upstairs still seething. To ring on a Sunday evening, too. I looked at my watch to see how late it was. Oh, Lord, I was going to miss the news if I didn't hurry up.

I switched on the television. There was a platform with a long table set with microphones and a row of chairs behind it. After a moment or two Kevin came on to what I couldn't help thinking of as the stage. He was accompanied by Detective Sergeant Vickers and a female officer whom I didn't know. Someone came forward and pulled out a seat at the centre of the table. Kevin sat down and rested his clasped hands on the table. The concerned faces of the police, flash-bulbs going off, rows of journalists … it was so much like other occasions when I'd watched distraught relatives appeal for help that I almost felt that I had seen it before.

Detective Sergeant Vickers explained how long Melissa had been missing, described her car and gave the registration number.

Then it was Kevin's turn. He spoke in a low self-possessed tone that suggested reserves of emotion barely kept under control. He said how worried he was. How much he missed Melissa, and how much their baby daughter needed her. He spoke of the stress she had been under, rehearsing for the new production. He knew their life together hadn't been perfect, he could have been a better husband, but he did love her. If anyone had seen her, or if she herself was listening … He looked down at the table. He seemed too overcome to continue. The camera panned in close. There was a moment of suspense. He lifted his head and looked straight into the camera.

‘Melissa, if you can hear me…' his voice faltered. The policewoman put a hand on his arm. He swallowed and went on:

‘I don't want to believe – I can't believe – that any real harm has come to you. And I won't rest until you're home again with me and Agnes. I'll never stop looking for you.'

There was a moment or two of silence, then a barrage of questions. I heard fragments: ‘Any idea at all where…' ‘true that Belinda Roy…?' Vickers held up his hand and shook his head. Then the policewoman was helping Kevin to his feet and they were turning to go.

A number to call if you had information came up on the screen. I switched the TV off. Kevin wasn't at home, I knew. This had been recorded earlier and he had intended to go back to the theatre for the final dress rehearsal. He might be there until the early hours.

I went over to my computer and switched it on. It made its usual plangent twang and the screen lit up. As I sat in front of it watching the various icons appearing one by one, a hollow feeling developed in the pit of my stomach. Years and years ago, even before I'd met Joe, someone at university had told the tarot for me. I could remember virtually nothing about it except that she'd warned me about an unhappy love affair and a broken heart. That's probably pretty inevitable when you're eighteen, but it had left a shadow over me all the same. I'd steered well clear of any type of fortune-telling ever since. I felt sure there was going to be something sinister about this pseudonym.

BOOK: Stage Fright
9.01Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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