Authors: Deborah Challinor
âNothing. Nothing set him off. He just did it. What sets you off?'
âNothing,' Friday muttered, flicking shreds of tobacco onto the floor. âAnything.'
âBetter to abstain altogether, then, don't you think?'
Friday wanted to say no, I don't think that, but couldn't because she was rapidly running out of anything else she could think. âHow's Aria getting on with the books?'
âWhy don't you ask her yourself?'
âWe're not talking.'
âOh, honestly, Friday. She's only a few feet down the hall. Go and knock on her door.'
âWhy should I?
She
left
me.
'
âFor a damned good reason. Have you apologised?'
âNo.'
âWhy not? You embarrassed her, too, you know.'
In angry, sulky silence Friday shoved tobacco into her pipe hard enough to break the stem. Made of clay and decorated with a pattern of flowers and leaves, it cracked with a very audible, almost musical âping'.
âGod, now look what you made me do! This is my favourite pipe!'
âI didn't make you do anything! That's the trouble with you, Friday. Nothing's ever your fault, is it? Well, I've got news for you. One way or another everything that happens to us is our own fault, which is why you'll end up a lonely old woman if you don't change your ways. Take it from someone who knows.'
âWell, I'm not like you.'
Elizabeth laughed. âYou're exactly like me.'
Bella's next note came on a Sunday evening, while Friday was working, so she didn't see it until she'd finished at midnight.
18 November 1832
Friday Woolfe,
You will no doubt consider this a most unexpected Request, but I believe we established a Rapport of sorts during our last meeting. My time is very near, I cannot tolerate the notion of being attended by Louisa and Becky and I do not wish to Die alone. Also, I have a personal matter I wish to discuss with you.
I would be grateful if you could come to my house at your soonest convenience. You will appreciate the urgency of this Request. Thank you.
BS
The handwriting was terrible: messy, letters written on top of other letters, and the whole message on a distinct slant down the sheet of paper. Had Bella been mashed? And the request itself! How utterly bloody strange, Friday thought, both oddly moved and a little repulsed. Who ever would have imagined it? Once, she would've been delighted to see Bella die, but now . . . well, things had changed. For so long she'd been their detested enemy, but lately, for Friday at least, she'd turned into a real, if vastly flawed, person.
God, what to do? She needed advice.
The following morning Sarah told her to let the bitch drown in her own poisonous blood, shunned and alone, which would be no more than she deserved. Harrie thought Friday should at least visit: Bella had, after all, been penitent about Rachel.
One for, and one against. That wasn't much help.
Friday returned to the Siren's Arms, sat at her dressing table debating whether or not to have a drink, decided it would be unwise, and finally summoned the courage to knock on Aria's door.
No one answered.
âShe's over next door with Mrs H,' Ivy said, on her way past with an armful of dirty linen.
Friday trotted over to the brothel: Aria was indeed in Mrs H's office.
âCan I talk to you, please?' Friday asked stiffly.
âI'll leave you two alone,' Elizabeth said happily, and bustled out.
âWell?' Aria's muscled arms were crossed and her features expressionless.
Faced with such a frosty reception, Friday suddenly didn't feel like talking to her any more. âWell, what?'
âHave you come to apologise?'
âWhat for?'
âIf you do not know, I am not going to tell you.'
âFine. I'll go then.'
âGood.'
Friday marched across the room and yanked open the door. In the hallway Elizabeth barked, âGet back in there. Neither of you are going anywhere till you've sorted yourselves out.'
Friday shut the door again and stood staring at the knob. Then she turned. âI'm sorry, Aria. I'm
truly
very sorry.'
Aria's hands dropped to her lap and her face softened. âThank you. I accept your apology.'
âI've missed you.'
âI have missed you, too. But . . .'
âI know,' Friday said. Aria wouldn't be coming back.
âThere has not been enough change,' she said.
Friday nodded, because there hadn't. She took Bella's latest letter from her pocket and dropped it on the desk. Aria read it.
âYou will not go?'
âI don't know.'
âIt may be a trick. She is evil. If she truly is close to death, she may plan to take you with her.'
âWhy the hell would she do that?' Though, now that Aria had mentioned it, it did sound like the sort of thing Bella might do. Friday shivered slightly.
âShe may be in love with you.'
âBollocks. She hates my guts.'
âThat would also be a good reason.'
Friday said nothing.
âDo you trust her?'
â'Course I don't.'
âThen do not go.'
âWhat about the personal matter?' Friday pointed at the letter. âI can't sort out a personal matter for her if she's killed me, can I?'
âThat may also be a ruse. What is there to stop Becky and Louisa seeing to it? They work for her.'
âBecause she doesn't trust them as far as she can spit. And they're useless.'
âDo not go, Friday.'
It was now one for, two against.
âAll right, I won't.' Friday grinned. âBut at least we're talking again.'
Friday thought about what Aria had said, and Sarah, but Harrie had also been right. She recalled, too, the hollow loneliness in Bella's
voice when she'd talked about her ten years living as a woman, years overflowing with financial and material success but bereft of company and love, the two things she'd wanted, and needed, most: things Friday had desired so desperately herself, until she'd met Aria.
And she decided she couldn't let Bella die alone.
Without telling anyone where she was going, she set off for north Cumberland Street just after one o'clock that afternoon. When she arrived it seemed she (or someone) was expected as the dogs were nowhere to be seen. Warily, just in case they were hiding, she slipped through the tall front gates and hurried down the carriageway to the rear of the house.
She heard them before she saw them, barking the moment they smelt her, secured on long chains beside the carriage house. Giving them a wide berth, she stepped onto the verandah and banged on the glass of the French doors.
Louisa appeared immediately and let her in. âTrust you to upset them.'
âIsn't that what they're for?'
âAlways the smartarse. Hurry up, she hasn't got much time left.'
Louisa led her straight past the stairs.
âAren't we going up to her room?'
âShe's down here now. Wouldn't use the po,
had
to go out to the bog but couldn't manage the bloody stairs, so we brought her down. Doesn't matter now, of course, the reeking old tart.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âYou'll see.'
Louisa opened a door and stood back.
Friday went into the gloomy room and nearly gagged. The stink was
shocking
, like a vat of stale piss at the alum works. She looked back at a smirking Louisa. âAll right, you can go now.'
Louisa shrugged and disappeared.
Friday ventured closer to the big bed. Bella was flat on her back, her eyes open, apparently staring at the ceiling. Her face was little
more than a mask of dry skin dusted with clots of white powder stretched over a skull, and she was without her wig, kohl and rouge. Friday thought she'd seen better-looking corpses.
âIs that you, Friday?' Bella croaked.
âYes. I got your letter.'
âI can hardly see you. My sight's nearly gone.'
Friday didn't know what to say. Somehow this seemed the most awful thing of all. Bella blind â the woman who'd seen and taken advantage of everything. âIt smells terrible in here.'
âI know, but I'm not having those two harpies cleaning me.'
Friday wondered why, if she hated them so much, she hadn't got rid of them. She opened the door and bellowed,
âLouisa! Becky! Come here!'
Reluctantly, they shuffled into the hall.
âGet some clean bed linen, soap, towels, and a bowl of hot water.'
âWhat for?' Becky grumbled.
âWhat the fuck do you think? I'm cleaning up your mistress, you useless pair of sluts.'
They stared at her as though she were mad, then wandered off.
âAnd bloody hurry up!'
In the room, Bella was coughing her guts up. As Friday watched, a big blob of something red and grey flew out of her mouth straight up into the air, then fell onto her chin with a splat. Lifting Bella into a sitting position, she propped her up with pillows and wiped her face with a cloth. Beneath the white powder an angry red rash marked her jaw, chin and neck.
Outside, the dogs erupted in a fit of wild barking again, then abruptly ceased.
âDo I need to get a doctor?'
âNo point,' Bella gasped. âWon't be long now.'
âWhat's this?' Friday touched Bella's bony jaw. Smooth as a baby's bum. âYou've got a rash. Or is it a burn?'
âHow should I know?'
âAre you still taking the hair off? You stupid tart. What does it matter now?'
âIt will always matter.'
Becky arrived carrying a bowl of water, her tongue poking out as she concentrated on not spilling it, which she did anyway. Louisa followed, bearing a towel, soap and clean sheets.
âThanks,' Friday said tersely. âDon't come in unless I call, all right?'
Louisa shrugged, but as she and Becky went out, the door was left very slightly, and deliberately, ajar.
Friday drew the bedclothes off Bella, almost vomiting at the smell, and lifted her â which she could have done with one arm â into a chair, then stripped the bed. Hauling back the heavy drapes and opening the window, she threw the reeking, soggy and yellow-stained sheets outside. The mattress was also soiled, but she couldn't do much about that. She spread a rug from a chaise over the worst of the mess, then put on the fresh linen.
âWill I bathe you?' she asked.
âNo. I'll do it,' Bella said. âDon't look.'
So Friday didn't. She wandered around fiddling with things as she listened to Bella weakly trying to clean herself. At least the smell in the room had improved. Opening the window had helped.
âI need to lie down,' Bella said.
âHave you got a clean shift?'
âIn the drawers.'
Once she'd struggled into it, Friday put her back in bed. She lay for some minutes, breathing shallowly, eyes closed.
âThank you,' she said eventually.
âWelcome.'
âI won't see nightfall.'
âYou might,' Friday said, though she very much doubted it. She drew a chair closer to the bedside and sat down.
Bella opened her eyes. âI won't and I don't want to. I've had enough.'
She extended her hand across the bedcover, her expensive gemset rings hanging loose on her skeletal fingers.
Friday looked at the paper-thin skin, the warts creeping across the palm and up the skinny blue-veined wrist, and suppressed a shudder. Then she took it in her own. Bella closed her eyes again.
They sat like that for ages, the only sound the rasp of Bella's breath labouring in and out of her lungs. Friday wondered if she was dying now.
Eventually Bella's eyelids fluttered. âTop drawer, by the bed, some papers.'
Friday looked. âTied with a red ribbon?'
âMy will.'
Shite. âIs this the personal matter?'
Bella nodded.
Bloody hell, Friday thought. How the hell did this happen? She didn't want to be dragged into all this.
âI want you to send it to my mother in Liverpool. I'm leaving everything I have to her.'
âCan't Becky or Louisa do that?'
Bella demonstrated her opinion of that notion by screwing up her face, straining until her deathly white skin turned a deep shade of puce, then forcing out a single, strangled fart.
âNo?'
âI don't trust them,' Bella panted, exhausted by her efforts. âThey think I owe them. She'd never get it.'
âSo all I have to do is put it in the post?'
âAs soon as I'm dead. Request that it be sent on the first ship to Liverpool.' Bella paused, her breathing slowing again and becoming more and more shallow until Friday thought that maybe
this
was it. Then: âOne more thing. Make sure I'm buried as a woman. That's all I ask.'
Friday waited, but nothing else came. She tucked the papers, which were addressed to Mrs Ansilla Leary, into her bodice and settled down to wait, her hand over Bella's. The clock on the mantle above the fireplace said half past two.
At ten past three, Bella said, reasonably clearly, âIf I could have my life over, I'd do some things differently. But not others.'
By a quarter to four Friday's arse was completely numb. Bella's hands were ice cold and her hoarse breathing had been replaced by a wet rattling sound. Friday had heard it before and knew it wouldn't be long. Bella's mouth had fallen open, revealing shrunken gums bereft of back teeth. Her sharp nose jutted out of her face like a fin and, in her illness, her Adam's apple was glaringly prominent. Friday rummaged in a drawer, found a pretty silk scarf and arranged it around her throat.
At half past four, Bella took a deep breath, rattled it out, was utterly still for over a minute, then took in another breath followed by nothing at all. Friday watched her for some time, then fetched a hand glass and held it to her mouth: no misting, nothing. She'd gone.