Read Guns in the Gallery Online
Authors: Simon Brett
âLying's cool,' said the girl drowsily.
âDid you bring some of your recent artwork?' This was a suggestion Jude had made at a previous session. Fennel Whittaker was a talented artist. She had started at St Martin's College of Art, but had been forced to give up the course halfway through her second year. The cause had been a complete mental breakdown. She had suffered two before as a teenager, but the one at college had been the most severe.
In fact, she was lucky to be alive. Living at the time in a Pimlico flat her parents had bought, Fennel had made a suicide attempt, washing a great many painkillers down with the contents of a whisky bottle. She'd also cut her wrists, but fortunately missed the arteries. It was by pure chance that Chervil had dropped into the flat, found her sister unconscious and summoned her father. The incident had been followed by six months' hospitalization for Fennel in the most expensive private clinic the Whittakers' money could buy.
She had emerged on a strong regime of antidepressants, which did seem to improve her condition . . . so long as she took them. But Fennel Whittaker was still the victim of violent mood-swings and seemed to be permanently on the edge of another complete collapse.
In her manic phases, however, she produced a lot of art and, from what Jude had seen of the stuff, it was very good art. For that reason she had suggested that Fennel should bring along some examples of her recent work to their next session, in the hope that the paintings might offer some clues as to the the causes of her depression.
âIn the carrier by the sofa,' the girl replied lethargically.
Jude picked up the bag. âDo you mind if I have a look at them?'
âBe my guest.'
She shuffled out a handful of paintings. They were watercolours that had been done on ordinary copy paper which had curled a bit as they dried. But though the medium was a subtle one, there was little restraint in the images depicted. The predominant colours were dark, deep bruise blues, slate greys interrupted by splashes of arterial blood red. So violent were the brush strokes that at first Jude thought she was looking at abstracts. But closer scrutiny revealed that the paintings were representational.
Each picture showed the body of a woman, young, shapely, but twisted with pain. Their features were contorted as they struggled against restraints of chain and leather, the red gashes of their mouths screamed in silent agony. But a defiance in their posture and expressions diluted their bleakness. There was suffering there, but also a sense of indomitability. Tormented as they were, Fennel Whittaker's women would not give up anything without a fight.
âAnd these are recent works?'
âYes. All done since our last session.'
A week then. âYou've been busy.'
A shrug from the massage couch. âWhen I've got ideas I work quickly.' But the way she spoke was at odds with her words. She sounded apathetic, drained, only a husk of her personality remaining after the threshing storm of creativity that had swept through her body.
âWell, they're very good,' said Jude. âA lot of pain there.'
âYes,' Fennel agreed listlessly.
âDon't you get a charge from knowing that you're doing good work?'
âI do while I'm actually painting. I look at it and it feels right. Every brush stroke is exactly where it should be. I feel in control. Then I look at it a couple of days later and . . .' She ran out of words.
âAnd what?'
âAnd I think it's derivative crap. I can see the style I'm imitating and I'm just deeply aware of all the other artists who have done it better over the centuries, and all the artists who're even doing it better now.'
âHave you always had that kind of reaction against your work?'
âUsually.'
âAnd does it ever change?'
âHow do you mean?'
âDo you ever come round to thinking what you've done's rather good again? Do you recapture the feeling you had while you were actually painting it?'
Fennel Whittaker sighed. âHas happened. There's some stuff I did during my first year at art college . . . before I . . . you know . . . I felt pleased with it . . . and one of my tutors, Ingrid, who I really rated, she thought it was great. Yes, some of that's bloody good.'
âDoesn't knowing that cheer you up?'
âNo. It makes me feel worse, if anything.'
âWhy?
âBecause I look back and I think: God, the girl who did that had a lot of talent! Unlike the girl who's looking back at the stuff. Whatever it was I may once have had, I think I've lost it.'
âYou do know that a lot of creative artists suffer from bipolar tendencies?'
âYes. It doesn't help much to know that, though. Doesn't stop me thinking that my work's crap . . . along with everything else in my life.'
Jude was silent for a moment, trying to decide what therapies she should use for the rest of the session. For the time being, though, she reckoned talking was doing Fennel as much good as anything else would.
âIs there anything specific that's made you feel down at the moment?'
âThere's never anything specific. It's just . . . everything.'
âAre you sure about that?'
âWhat do you mean?'
âI know I've asked you this before, but are you sure there wasn't something in your past, something that happened that triggered the depression?'
âAnd as I've answered before, no. What are you hoping I'll say â that my father interfered with me when I was a child?'
âI wasn't suggesting that.'
âI know you weren't. Anyway, the answer to your question remains the same as when you last asked it. I think the depression is just something knotted into my DNA. A dodgy gene, like . . . I don't know . . . being born with red hair perhaps?'
âAnd there's nothing that's happened in the last few days that's got you particularly depressed?'
Fennel looked up, alert to a slight change in Jude's tone. âWhat makes you say that?'
âJust when we were at Butterwyke House and you and Chervil came in, it sounded as if you'd been having a row.'
âNot a row. It's just the way sisters are, always sniping at each other.'
âWhen Chervil was showing us round Walden, she seemed a little bitter about you.'
âWhat? Complaining I was monopolizing our parents' attention?'
âYes.'
âHuh. I don't know where she gets that from. If she genuinely thinks I'm going through what I go through simply to score points over her, then I wish she could have a couple of days of depression, so she knows what it feels like.'
âAnd she doesn't?'
âNo. Chervil's never had a negative thought in her whole life. Eternal Bloody Pollyanna. Chervil's fine. Never been any problems with her. She's always been our parents' golden girl. Always done everything right.'
âWhat about relationships?'
âShe's never lacked for male attention.'
âThat wasn't what I asked. Do her relationships last?'
âTill she gets bored with them, yes. Chervil never risks getting hurt. When a relationship is ending, she always sees to it that she's the dumper rather than the dumpee. And she never dumps a boyfriend till she's got another one lined up. Chervil hasn't spent more than a week without a boyfriend since she was fourteen.'
âWhereas you . . .?'
The bark of cynical laughter which greeted this enquiry was more eloquent than words would have been.
âMy sister's guiding principle is: love 'em and leave 'em. Chervil rather prides herself on being a
femme fatale
.'
âAnd what about her current relationship? With Giles Green.'
âOh, you heard about that. She seems quite keen at the moment. Early days, though. Let's see whether he's still on the scene in a couple of months.'
Jude was interested in this display of sibling rivalry. Chervil had said it was Fennel who monopolized their parents' attention. Fennel effectively described her sister as their favourite. Something to be explored at some point, perhaps. But not in this session, Jude decided.
âGoing back to your relationships, Fennel . . .?'
âHuh.' The girl let out a long, cynical sigh. âHow many ways do you know of saying the word “disaster”?'
When she had first got her laptop and started exploring its capacities, Carole Seddon had been very sniffy about Google. Sniffiness was in fact her default reaction to anything new. And there didn't seem something quite natural about being able to access information so easily. How much more civilized it was to consult her shelf of reference books when there was something she needed to check for
The Times
crossword. Everything she needed was there between hard covers:
The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, Roget's Thesaurus, Chambers' Biographical Dictionary, The Oxford Companion to English Literature
and
Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
. References to things she couldn't find in those volumes didn't deserve to be in any self-respecting crossword.
But the appeal of Google was insidious. And the speed with which it delivered information was undeniably impressive. Increasingly Carole was seduced by the simplicity of keying a word into a search engine rather than flicking back and forth through the pages of a book. Soon she was hooked. If anyone had asked her about her addiction (which nobody did), she would have justified it on the grounds that, now she had a grandchild, it was important to keep up with developments in information technology. But she knew that the excuse was really mere casuistry.
In fact Carole was spending more and more time online. When checking facts, one thing did so easily lead to another. The speed with which data could be sorted appealed to her filing cabinet mind. There seemed to be websites out there to deal with any query one might have. And though she kept piously reminding herself that the answers provided might not always be verifiably correct, the process remained intriguing.
Carole even â and this was something she would not have admitted under torture â used an online crossword dictionary to solve stubbornly intransigent clues in
The Times
crossword. You just had to fill in the letters you had got, put in full stops for the missing letters and, within seconds, all the words that fitted the sequence would appear. Using the device went against the very spirit of cruciverbalism, but then again it was seductively convenient.
There was no surprise, then, that on the Thursday, the day before the Cornelian Gallery's Private View, Carole Seddon found herself googling Denzil Willoughby.
Considering that she had never even heard his name a fortnight before, he had a remarkably large presence on the Internet. Spoilt for choice, she decided to start with his official website.
On occasion in her life Carole had begun sentences with the words âNow I'm as broad-minded as the next person . . .' And in Fethering that was probably true. Most residents of the village shared a comparable breadth of mind. But by the standards of the world at large, their gauge was not very broad. And certainly not broad enough to encompass some of the images on Denzil Willoughby's website.
Now Carole knew that the urges to reproduce and defecate were essential features of the human condition, but she'd never thought that either should have attention drawn to it. And certainly not in the flamboyant way that the artist highlighted them. Not only did he commit the cardinal sin of âshowing off', he compounded the felony by being vulgar.
Carole wondered whether Fethering was ready for Denzil Willoughby.
SEVEN
â
T
he history of art is the history of great talents being discovered in the most unlikely and humble places. And places don't come much more unlikely or humbler than the Cornelian Gallery in Fethering.'
A few people at the Private View found Giles Green's words amusing. Denzil Willoughby certainly did. The permanent sneer on his face transmuted effortlessly into a sneering smile. Gray Czesky, the ageing
enfant terrible
of nearby Smalting, also thought the remark warranted a snigger. So did Chervil Whittaker. From the adoring way she looked at Giles and drank in his words, every one of them was wonderful to her ears.
Her sister did not look as if she would ever be amused by anything, least of all if it came from Giles Green. Jude looked anxiously across the room, sensing Fennel's mood and wishing it could be appropriate just to go across and enfold the girl in her comforting arms. But she knew that wasn't the sort of thing to do at a Private View. She was also worried by the grim determination with which Fennel was drinking. Jude knew what medication the girl was on and she knew it didn't mix well with alcohol. That was, assuming Fennel was taking her medication. If she wasn't, the alcohol still wasn't going to improve her mood.
Ned and Sheena Whittaker seemed unaware of what their older daughter was doing. They had arrived separately â Fennel in a Mini, her parents in a Mercedes â but had hardly even greeted each other. Perhaps they'd had some kind of row, but Jude thought it more likely that Ned and Sheena just felt relaxed, their anxiety about their elder daughter's mental health allayed by being at a public event.
They laughed at Giles Green's words, but it was an uneasy laughter. Jude suddenly realized that the older Whittakers were in fact very shy. Their huge wealth had moved them into circles where they would never have dreamed of going, but they had never lost the gaucherie of their ordinariness. Social events, even as low-key as a Private View at the Cornelian Gallery, were still a strain for them.
The person who was disliking Giles's remarks most seemed to be his mother. Bonita Green didn't find the disparagement of her gallery at all funny. She had put a lot of work into building up her business and many of the people at the Private View were from her carefully nurtured local contacts. She didn't want them to hear the kind of things that her son was saying. Alienating her client base could undo the efforts of many years.