Her Fearful Symmetry (6 page)

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Authors: Audrey Niffenegger

Tags: #prose_contemporary

BOOK: Her Fearful Symmetry
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I regret to inform you of the death of your aunt, Elspeth Alice Noblin. Though she never met you, she was interested in your welfare. Last September, knowing that her illness would soon result in her death, she made a new will. I am enclosing a copy of this document. You are her residuary legatees; that is, she has bequeathed to you her entire estate, with the exception of a few minor bequests to friends and charities. You will receive this inheritance when you reach the age of twenty-one.
The bequest is given to you with the following conditions:
1) Ms. Noblin owned an apartment in London, in Vautravers Mews, Highgate, N6. It borders Highgate Cemetery in Highgate Village, a very lovely part of London indeed. She bequeathed this apartment to you on the condition that you both live in it for one year before you may sell it.
2) The entire bequest is given on the condition that no part of it shall be used to benefit Ms. Noblin’s sister, Edwina, or Edwina’s husband, Jack (your parents). Also, Edwina and Jack Poole are forbidden to set foot in the flat or inspect its contents.
Please let me know if you care to accept Ms. Noblin’s estate on these terms. I am always available to answer any questions you may have in regard to this matter.
Ms. Noblin’s executor is Robert Fanshaw. He will be your neighbour if you accept your aunt’s bequest as he lives in the flat just below hers. Mr. Fanshaw can also assist you in matters pertaining to the estate.
Regards,
Xavier Roche
Roche, Elderidge, Potts & Lefley LLP-Solicitors
54D Hampstead High Street
Hampstead, London, NW3 1QA

 

Julia and Valentina exchanged looks. Julia flipped to the next page. The handwriting was disturbingly similar to Edie’s.
Dear Julia and Valentina,
Hello. I was hoping to meet you both someday, but now that won’t happen. You might wonder why I am leaving all my flotsam and jetsam to you and not to your mother. The best reason I can give is that I feel rather hopeful about you. I wonder what you might make of it all. I thought it might be interesting, even fun.
Your mother and I have been estranged for the last twenty-one years. She can tell you about that if she wants to. You may think that the conditions of my will are a bit harsh; I’m afraid you will just have to decide for yourselves whether to accept on these terms. I am not trying to create discord in your family. I’m trying to protect my own history. A bad thing about dying is that I’ve started to feel as though I’m being erased. Another bad thing is that I won’t get to find out what happens next.
I hope you will accept. It gives me great pleasure to think of the two of you living here. I don’t know if this makes a difference, but the flat is large and full of amusing books, and London is an amazing place to live (though rather expensive, I’m afraid). Your mother tells me you have dropped out of college but that you are autodidacts; if so, you may enjoy living here very much.
I wish you happiness, whatever you may choose to do.
With love,

 

Elspeth Noblin

 

There were more sheets of paper, but Julia put the sheaf down and began pacing around the living room. Valentina perched on the back of an armchair and watched Julia orbiting the coffee table, the sofa, then winging off to circle the dining room table a few times.
London,
thought Valentina. The thought was large and dark, the word was like a giant black dog. Julia stopped, turned and grinned at Valentina.

 

“It’s like a fairy tale.”
“Or a horror movie,” said Valentina. “We’re, like, the ingénues.”
Julia nodded, resumed pacing. “First, get rid of the parents. Then, lure the unsuspecting heroines to the spooky old mansion-”
“It’s only a flat.”
“Whatever. Then-”
“Serial killers.”
“White slavery.”
“Or it’s like, you know, Henry James.”
“I don’t think people die of consumption any more.”
“They do in the Third World.”
“Yeah, well, the UK has socialised medicine.”
Valentina said, “Mom and Dad won’t like it.”
“No,” said Julia. She ran her fingers across the dining-room table and discovered a bunch of crumbs. She went into the kitchen, moistened a washcloth and wiped the table.
Valentina said, “What happens if we don’t accept?”
“I don’t know. I’m sure it says in the letter somewhere.” Julia paused. “You can’t seriously be thinking about not accepting? This is totally what we’ve been waiting for.”
“What’s that, sweetie?” Edie stood squinting at them from the archway between the living room and the hallway. Her hair was mussed and she had a generally crumpled aspect. Her cheeks were very pink, as though someone had pinched them.
Julia said, “We got a letter.” Valentina scooped it off the side table and brought it to her mother. Edie looked at the return address and said, “I can’t possibly deal with this before I’ve had my coffee.” Valentina went to pour her a cup. Edie said, “Julia, go wake up your dad.”
“Um…”
“Tell him I said so.”
Julia bounded down the hall. Valentina heard her shrieking “Dad-deeeeeeee” as she opened their parents’ bedroom door.
Nice,
Valentina thought.
Why not just use an ice pick?
Edie went hunting for her reading glasses. By the time Jack lumbered into the dining room she had read the first few pages of the letter and was making her way through the will.
Jack Poole had once been handsome, in a corn-fed, college-athlete sort of way. His black hair now had a sumptuous grey streak. He wore it longer than the other guys at the bank. He was quite tall and towered over his petite wife and daughters. The years had coarsened his features and thickened his waistline. Jack wore suits so much of his waking life that on the weekends he liked to be slovenly. At the moment he was wearing an ancient maroon bathrobe and a splitting, enormous pair of sheepskin slippers.
“Fee, fi, fo, fum,” Jack said. This was an old joke, the rest of it lost in the mists of the twins’ earliest childhood. It meant,
Get me some coffee or I will eat you.
Julia poured a cup for her father and set it before him. “Okay,” he said. “I’m up. Where’s the fire?”
“It’s Elspeth,” said Edie. “She’s not just leaving it to them, she’s prying them away from us.”
“Say what?” Jack held out his hand and Edie put part of the letter into it. They sat next to each other, reading.
“Vindictive bitch,” Jack said, without much emotion or surprise. Julia and Valentina sat down at the table and watched their parents.
Who are these people? What happened? Why did Aunt Elspeth hate them? Why do they hate her?
The twins widened their eyes at each other.
We’ll find out.
Jack finished reading and groped in his bathrobe pocket for his cigarettes and lighter. He put them on the table but did not light one; he glanced at Valentina, who frowned. Jack put his hand over the pack to reassure himself that it was there. Valentina took her inhaler from her sweatshirt pocket, set it on the table and smiled at her father.
Edie looked up at Valentina. “If you don’t accept, most of it goes to charity,” she said. The twins wondered how much of their conversation she had overheard. Edie was reading a codicil of the will. It instructed someone named Robert Fanshaw to remove all personal papers from the flat, including diaries, letters and photographs, and bequeathed these papers to him. Edie wondered who this Robert person was, that her sister had made him custodian of all their history.
But the main thing is she’s arranged for the papers to not be in the flat when the twins arrive.
That was the thing Edie had most feared, the intersection of the twins and whatever Elspeth had left in the way of evidence.
Jack put the letter from Elspeth on the table. He sat back in his chair and looked at his wife. Edie held the will at arm’s length and scowled at it, rereading.
You don’t seem all that surprised, darling,
thought Jack. Julia and Valentina were watching Edie read. Julia looked rapt, Valentina anxious. Jack sighed. Although he had been trying to push his daughters out of the ranch house and into the real world, the world he had in mind was college, preferably an Ivy League college on a full scholarship. The twins’ SAT scores were almost perfect, though their grades were wildly uneven and by now their transcripts would give any director of admissions pause. He imagined Julia and Valentina safely ensconced at Harvard or Yale, or even at Sarah Lawrence; heck, Bennington would be okay. Valentina glanced at him and smiled, raised her nearly invisible eyebrows just slightly. Jack thought about Elspeth as he had last seen her, weeping in line at the airport.
You don’t remember her, girls. You have no idea what she was capable of.
Jack had been relieved when Elspeth died.
I didn’t realise you had any more tricks up your sleeve, Miss Noblin.
He had never failed to underestimate her. He stood up, scooped his cigarettes and lighter into his palm and headed for the den. He shut the door, leaned against it and lit up.
At least you’re dead.
He inhaled smoke and let it stream through his nostrils slowly.
One Noblin sister is the most anyone should have to cope with in a lifetime.
He considered that he had ended up with the right sister, after all, and was thankful. He stood smoking, and thought about other ways things might have turned out. By the time Jack reentered the dining room he felt steadier, almost cheerful.
Wonderful substance, nicotine.

 

Edie was sitting very straight in her chair; the twins each leaned forward, elbows on the table, chins in hands, Valentina listing sideways as Julia said, “But we never met her; why would she leave us anything? Why not you?”
Edie regarded them silently as Jack sat down in his chair. Julia said, “How come you never took us to London?”
“I did,” Edie replied. “We went to London when you were four months old. You met your grandmother, who died later that year, and you met Elspeth.”
“We did? You did?”
Edie got up and walked down the hall to her bedroom. She disappeared for a few minutes. Valentina said, “Did you go too, Daddy?”
“No,” said Jack. “I wasn’t too popular over there then.”
“Oh.”
Why not?
Edie came back holding two American passports. She handed one to Valentina and the other to Julia. They opened the passports, stared at themselves.
It’s weird to see new baby pictures.
The stamps said HEATHROW AIRPORT, 27 APRIL, 1984 and O’HARE INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT, JUNE 30, 1984. They traded and compared the photos. Without the names it was impossible to tell which twin was in each photo.
We look like potatoes with eyes,
Julia thought.
The twins laid the passports on the table and looked at Edie. Edie’s heart beat fast.
You have no idea. Don’t ask. It’s none of your business. Just let me be. Let me be.
She stared back at them, poker-faced. “Why didn’t she leave it to you, Mom?” asked Valentina.
Edie glanced at Jack. “I don’t know,” she said. “You’d have to ask her.”
Jack said, “Your mother doesn’t want to talk about it.” He gathered the papers that were strewn across the table into a stack, tapped the bottom of the stack against the table to align it and handed it to Julia. He stood up. “What’s for breakfast?”
“Pancakes,” said Valentina. They all stood, all tried to segue into the normal Saturday-morning routine. Edie poured herself more coffee and steadied the cup with two hands as she drank it.
She’s frightened,
Valentina thought, and was frightened herself. Julia walked down the hall doing a little dance, holding the will over her head as though she were fording a rising river. She went into their bedroom and closed the door. Then she began jumping in place on the thick carpeting, her fists pounding the air over her head, shouting silently,
Yes! Yes! Yes!

 

That night the twins lay in Julia’s bed, facing each other. Valentina’s bed was rumpled but unused. Their feet were touching. The twins smelled faintly of sea kelp and something sweet; they were trying out a new body lotion. They could hear the settling noises their house made in the night. Their bedroom was dimly illuminated by the blue Hanukkah lights they had strung around the wrought-iron headboards of their beds.
Julia opened her eyes and saw that Valentina was staring at her. “Hey, Mouse.”
Valentina whispered, “I’m afraid.”
“I know.”
“Aren’t you?”
“No.”
Valentina closed her eyes.
Of course not.
“It’ll be great, Mouse. We’ll have our own apartment, we won’t have to work, at least for a while; we can do whatever we want. It’s, like, total freedom, you know?”
“Total freedom to do what, exactly?”
Julia shifted onto her back.
Oh God, Mouse, don’t be such a mouse.
“I’ll be there. You’ll be there. What else do we need?”
“I thought we were going back to college. You promised.”
“We’ll go to college in London.”
“But that’s a year from now.”
Julia didn’t answer. Valentina stared into Julia’s ear. In the semi-dark it was like a little mysterious tunnel that led into Julia’s brain.
If I were tiny I would crawl in there and tell you what to do and you would think it was your own idea.
Julia said, “It’s only for a year. If we don’t like it we’ll sell it and come back.”
Valentina was silent.
After a while Julia took her hand, interlaced their fingers. “We’ve got to prepare. We don’t want to be like those dumb Americans who go to Europe and only eat at McDonald’s and speak English real loud instead of the local language.”
“But they speak English in England.”

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