Authors: Celia Brayfield
Unexpectedly, humour like a sip of champagne bubbled up and tickled the back of Stephanie's nose. She actually chuckled. âI know,' she murmured. âIt gets too much. I can hear myself saying the same things every day, all these useless words piling up. I just want to scream, but what good would it do?' Her disturbed feelings, added to the fatigue created by her hours of work in the morning sun, were now generating a silly weakness. Waking and sleeping, anxiety had been chewing her nerves for weeks. âAnd you feel like you're being a burden to people. You're not asking for their sympathy exactly, but they feel they have to say something kind.'
âIn the end, I took the Noël Coward line. “Nevair apologise and nevair explain.”â With the ballpoint as a cigarette holder, she did The Master very well.
âI'll remember that.'
They climbed into their vehicles and drove in convoy to Church Vale. Stephanie was not surprised to find that the dead Lada belonged to Gemma. In the actor's garden, under the dismissive eyes of Derek and Dave, Ms Lieberman laboured with a will and the planting was finished in half an hour.
âThere,' she said, wiping her hands down her thighs. âAll done. I feel better about being such a durr now. Look, I've got to get back, I promised Topaz I'd do stocktaking â but come see us again, huh? Not just if you need something â let's face it, we haven't got much â but if you'd like company or something. I know you're busy, but come anyway, huh?' And she ducked into the wretched Lada and rattled away.
That night, when she was alone with her sleeping son, Stephanie's thoughts turned back to Gemma Lieberman, and raised the question of the crime for which her husband was in jail. The distinction interested her beyond the scope of gossip. At that point in the history of the region, husbands from Westwick did not go to jail. It was one of the particular attractions of the neighbourhood for Stephanie, whose father had also gone to jail, if only for a ridiculously ineffectual attempt at fraud and only for six months.
âMr Fuller, this is always a sensitive conversation.' The doctor looked as if someone had stopped in the middle of pulling his entrails out through his nose. He was hanging his head and kicking invisible fluff balls off the mirror-polished floor of the twelfth-floor corridor outside the Intensive Care Unit in Helford Hospital with his mirror-polished shoes. âTo combat your wife's infection we could give her antibiotics intravenously as I believe we've done before.' He twitched the patient's file into his eyeline as if to refresh his memory. âWhich might very well be successful, although she is a little weaker now. And we have seen some of the drug-resistant strains here this year. Or, our alternative is to not intervene. Then nature will take its course and we can allow Mary-Sue to slip away from us.'
His wife's name was Mairi-Sui, but Rod felt it would be mean to correct the man when he was doing his best. Furthermore, at that exact moment, the moment he had been expecting any time over the last six months, his mind was void of words.
âIt's always a very, very difficult decision to make with a PVS patient,' the doctor continued in an earnest tone which did not really camouflage his own opinion that the decision was in fact very easy. âI would never say that miracles don't happen. If you asked me, though, I would have to say that they haven't happened in my experience of these patients so far.'
Rod found some words. âCan you give me a moment?'
âOf course. Take all the time you need. I'll be on the ward another half an hour.'
At the far, far end of the corridor, where four red seating units were grouped alongside a dying
dieffenbachia,
Sweetheart was restlessly flicking her fingers, waiting. Rod wished he was a child of five, with someone he considered wise to make decisions for him. He made the long trek down the glassy floor towards her. The hospital had a special atmosphere, the air was hot and thick but its smell was dry, as if chemically desiccated. Sweetheart looked at him and he knew that she knew. He wondered if she ought to know, and what he had given away in his manner. This was a burden that he could hardly bear, let alone share with his child, delightfully precocious as she was.
âIt's pneumonia again.' He sat down beside her, the person he lived for who he now had to exclude from the most vital part of his life for her own protection. This was not a child's decision. He had to make it by himself.
âMight Mummy die this time?' she asked, playing along so well that it cracked him up and he lost the words again for a while. He nodded his head. She put her hand in his and it was like holding a tiny bird.
âI've got to go back and see the doctor again,' he said when he could get the sentence out. âI'll be back in a minute.'
In the sister's office, the doctor tried to put a good professional facade on his satisfaction. âIt's a very peaceful thing,' he said; keeping half an eye on the monitor screen while he keyed in some characters. Was there a code for death, one of those medical references framed to hide the facts from ordinary people, a string of numbers to signify the end of a life? Look, with a spot I damn him. With a slash and a sub-code for the circumstances â /DOA, dead on arrival; /DDR, during resuscitation; /DSI, secondary infection; / DMA, death by mutual agreement? âI'll ask the nurse to make her tidy and then you can sit with her for a while. Do you know where the telephone is, if there's anyone you need to call? I'm afraid we can't allow mobiles in the hospital, they interfere with some of our equipment.'
He knew very well where the telephone was. He had spent much time there. Mairi-Sui's parents were the other side of the world, with five other children, three of them male. His own mother had never approved of their marriage. They were already getting his classes covered at The Cedars. Gemma would cancel his private clients. âBe strong, honeybuns,' she enjoined him gently. âLike you have a choice, I know. Do you want me to come up and fetch Sweetheart?'
âI don't know.' Did he have to be alone while his wife died? The weight of his daughter's body, the touch of her warm limbs, young and dense with life, was unbelievably comforting to him, but he never dared hold her for long except when friends were about to witness. Was it right to take comfort from a child? Did he already lean on her too much?
âYou could ask her what she wants to do.' Gemma prompted. âMaybe it's too heavy for her. I don't know. She's a good kid.'
âShe sees people die on ER every week. This is her mother. I don't know.'
âOn ER, when people die, what happens with their family?'
âUsually they get a great screaming entrance and then they're kept out of the way by the nice curly-haired nurse while speccy Doctor Mark does the flat-iron thing. If you see it. Quite often they cut to another story.'
âOK. I can't believe I asked that. Are we really sitting here on the phone trying to get the protocol for dying from a TV show?'
âI don't know, I don't know. I can't believe I answered you either.'
âWhat's your gut tell you? What feels right?'
âNothing feels right, Gemma. What would feel right is having Mairi-Sui back with us. Nothing's felt right since â¦'
This was like his fog dream, when a shapeless fear smothered him and he ran in every direction without seeing where he was going, running into a wall whichever way he went, and each time he ran a little, less far, so the walls where getting closer and closer but he could never see them because of the fog, even when he could put out his hands and touch the walls from standing still.
A drink would feel right now, a real drink, maybe vodka. No vodka: he had made a rule for himself to stick with wine. Crossing to spirits was the great divide, crossing Jordan the wrong way. Who could be a serious drunk if all they did was get sloppy on wine every now and then? Self-deception, the first sign of alcoholism. No vodka, no wine.
âOK, OK.' At the end of the phone, Gemma was slurping her tea. âSo â if Mairi-Sui could speak still, what would she want?'
âI don't know. Nothing ever happened in our lives until this, you know. I don't know what pain would do to her. She wouldn't want her to suffer, she never wanted anyone to suffer.'
âWhat would Sweetheart want?'
That was simple. âTo be with me.'
âWell, then â isn't that your answer?'
âI don't know.'
âWon't you feel better if she's with you?'
âYes, but this isn't about how
I'm
going to feel, is it? I can't lay this trauma on her because it'll make me feel better. This is about what's best for Sweetheart. Or least bad, anyway.'
âOK, then, how about this. I'll decide for you. Keep her with you. Then she can't turn round to you later on and accuse you of keeping her away. It's too bad you'll have to feel better. You can't win this one; being a parent means always having to say you're sorry. And I'll close up here and come and sit outside and impersonate your mother if she was a good person and if Sweetheart gets upset or anything I can take her home. How about that?'
The fog was clearing. He did not want vodka. Maybe wine, maybe he could reconsider that, when it was over. Rod scrubbed his scalp with his free hand. âThat would be good, Gemma. Can you do that?'
âOf course I can. Hospitals, I've been there. I know hospitals. I can close up Gaia, nobody ever comes in anyway and if they do, they'll come back. Topaz'll be here in a couple of hours anyway. Tell me what ward you're on.'
With all the tubes and monitors, Mairi-Sui looked like one piece of equipment linked up to all the others, and a broken down, ill-designed machine at that. The nurses had disconnected most of the apparatus, which made her seem more human, but the real Mairi-Sui had vanished long ago. While most of his mind quaked with distress, a reasoning voice babbled on, calling his attention to the bloomless, parchment skin, the stringy joints, the sunken throat which aroused no memory at all of the pulsing creamy hollows he had once kissed.
They had smeared balm on her lips to keep them moist, not very accurately. He remembered her sitting at a mirror with her lip-brush, the poise of her wrist, the tip of the brush pecking at the petal skin. The body was not yet wasted but it seemed halfway into another existence. She could still breathe for herself, but it was just a function, harsh and mindless, nothing like the easy breath of life.
The humming of the waterbed was eerie. Sweetheart had the CD player, the same which pumped out aerobic mixes for the clients. They talked about putting on something she liked, a hard choice because Mairi-Sui had loved Meatloaf, which seemed wrong, and the old R & B songs, which were going to make them cry. She had just finished a run of
Carousel,
but that was dangerous too; for a while every musical she had danced in that they could think of had sad songs in it. When Gemma arrived she found them sitting either side of the bed, holding the cold hands under the blanket, listening to âLuck Be A Lady Tonight'.
âWelcome.' In the doorway of Grove House, Chester Pike balanced on his neat little feet beneath his eighteenth-century fanlight. âWelcome, welcome. Good to see you, Allie, my dear. Ted. Welcome. Come along through.' Soon his guests would be announced by a porter thirty floors down and admitted by a manservant. Only two more years. Or maybe less. Things were moving in that department.
âSo pleased you could come.' Lauren wafted her house-keeper towards them with two misted flutes of champagne. Twice a year the Parsons were invited to Grove House. At Christmas, when the Pikes gave two parties, A list and B list, the Parsons came to the A-list party, not because either Lauren or Chester considered that they deserved to but because they lived close enough to observe all the arrivals and departures and therefore knew that two parties were held and would know to which they were bidden. In the summer, usually late in the summer because the Pike's impulse to entertain them was not strong, they were asked to dinner. âChester's so hard to pin down these days,' Lauren would say to Allie. âTwice a week in St Louis. I hardly see him myself. I've told him we can't live like this. But I'll get a day out of him, I promise.'
Ted fed himself some salted almonds from a silver dish and took a short stroll up the edge of the blue Chinese carpet. No kicking back or hanging out
chez
Chester, let alone partying down. Every detail of an event at the Pikes was choreographed, as if they followed the prescriptions of some secret social manual. Their affairs were so regimented they could have been staged from a military entertaining handbook. Tonight was a Summer Casual Dinner Grade II: four courses, catered, but served by the housekeeper, with Lauren in floor-length black linen and a plain gold link necklace. Grade I would have been five courses, served by the staff, short silk and diamonds.
Guests never saw the manual, so you had to guess your grade in advance. Allie, trussed in strapless white silk splattered with red roses, had over-estimated. Ted was glad he had held out against her in the matter of a black tie. Of such bitter little victories was marital satisfaction made nowadays.
âHurmph.' Chester cleared his throat for conversation and took up a position in front of his eighteenth-century limewood fire-surround carved with swags of fruit and dead game birds. âHurmph, hah. Oak Hill progressing, yes?'
âPlanning consent was granted yesterday,' Ted confirmed with pride. âI got the word, informally. Old contact on the committee. We'll get the papers next week.' Fifteen years ago, Ted had let the planning committee chair, then merely the deputy surveyor for the county, in on a deal with a rambling, rotting mansion at the end of Riverview Drive, now undergoing its second facelift as a complex of luxury apartments with stunning river views. It was, he felt, one of the smartest things he had ever done.