Authors: Clare Chambers
âThat awful case,' Mum murmured, moving in to get a closer look. âWhy can't they leave her alone?'
âSurely they're not allowed to publish a picture of her as
she is now,' said Penny. âWhat happens when she comes out?'
âShe'll never get out,' said Christian.
âI quite agree, Penny,' said Dad. âThese newspaper editors are completely irresponsible. It's just pandering to the public's morbid curiosity, with no thought for the future safety of the poor girl â woman, I should say.'
âWell, we're all gawping at it,' Christian pointed out. He leaned over Penny's shoulder. âMind you, she does look pretty evil,' he added. âIt's the eyes.'
âNo, it's the mouth,' I said. âShe's got a cruel mouth.' Although the photo was fuzzy, I found that looking at it through half-closed eyes brought it into sharper focus.
âI wonder if she's sorry for what she did,' said Penny. âShe doesn't look very contrite.'
âWell, I can assure you she is,' said Dad sharply, and we all stared at him.
âHow do you know?' Christian asked. âHave you met her?'
âYes,' he said, already regretting his indiscretion. There was no way we were going to let it go: our family never got caught up with anything interesting.
âWell?'
âWhen? How come?'
âWhat was she like?
Dad sighed, and Mum gave him a look that said,
you got yourself into it
.
âI shouldn't really have said anything,' he said at last, âbut I was driven to it by your inane remarks about evil eyes and cruel mouths.' Christian and I looked suitably humbled. âI've visited her a few times over the years. It started when I wrote a letter to the
Times
, criticising aspects of the trial. You might remember the brick incident â it was probably related.'
âI remember. It could have killed me,' said Christian, with a belated attack of indignation. âDidn't we ever follow it up?'
âI seem to recall a policeman came round and had a poke about in the bushes,' said Mum. âWe didn't really expect them to catch anyone.'
âAnyway,' I said, keen to get back to the main story.
âJanine's mother saw my letter and seemed to seize on me as a lone sympathetic voice. She asked me to go and visit Janine, and talk to her, so I did.'
âWhat was she like?' Penny wanted to know.
âI can't say she was
ordinary
, because she'd had such an odd upbringing, but she certainly didn't strike me as a monster. Her father left home when she was two, then five years later her mother met this Australian in the pub and married him almost immediately. He wanted to go back to Australia, so Janine's mother gave her and her older sister the choice: come to Australia with them or stay behind. Imagine giving a seven-year-old that choice. The girls decided to stay, so they were packed off to live with their father, who had remarried and had two more children by now. Then the father died horribly at work â I think he was crushed by a digger, or something appalling, anyway â and the stepmother brought them up for a while. But that didn't work terribly well, not surprisingly, so the mother, who had parted company from the Australian by now, came back home for a belated attempt at bringing up her own daughters. With disastrous results.'
âDid she ever explain why she killed the baby?' Penny wanted to know.
âThat had all come out during the trial,' Dad explained. âIt was partly rage and frustration at being left alone to look
after a baby while everyone else was out enjoying themselves. Claudia's mother, who lived in the same street, asked Janine's mother if she'd mind Claudia for the day, while she visited her husband. I think he was inside for something or other. So Janine's mother agreed, but she went out shopping and left the baby with the girls instead. Janine's sister, who was fifteen at the time, wasn't having any of that; she had arranged to meet her boyfriend at the cinema, so she went out as well. Which left poor Janine. The baby wouldn't stop crying. Janine was only eleven. She couldn't cope with the noise, and smothering her was the only way to shut her up. She had no normal feelings of love or sympathy for the child, whom she'd never met before, and no thought of the consequences. To Janine Claudia was just a nuisance, another obstacle between herself and her own pleasure.'
âWhy did she get such a harsh sentence?' Christian asked. âPlenty of people have got away with less for worse crimes than that.'
Dad shrugged. âBecause she was tried in an adult court. Because there's a mandatory life sentence for murder. Because of the way she behaved after the killing. To satisfy public outrage . . . lots of reasons.'
âWhat did she do that was so terrible?'
âShe didn't tell anyone what she'd done. She just hid the body in a wardrobe and went to the cinema. That was what really got people: that a young girl could be so heartless.'
âBut her mother and sister were as much to blame,' I said. âDidn't they get into trouble too?'
âThey certainly came in for a lot of abuse in the press. The sister came to stay here for a while, after the trial, because it wasn't safe at home. I don't suppose you remember her.'
âCindy,' I said, trying to resurrect some memory of her that wasn't related to cosmetics.
âYou said she was our au pair,' Christian protested.
âThat's right. Fancy your remembering,' said Mum.
I didn't say that if I'd known at the time she was the sister of a famous murderess I'd have made a point of remembering more.
âFirst Cindy, then that vicar-pervert guy, then Aunty Barbara,' said Christian. âWhat is this â open house for sociopaths?'
Grandpa Percy, who had been snoozing over his lemonade throughout this discussion, sat up sharply. âIs it time for me to go?' he said.
â
YOU SHOULDN'T SPEND
so much time hanging around with Christian and Penny,' Mum admonished me from time to time. âIt's not right. You should be mixing with people your own age.' It was their privacy that concerned her, rather than my exposure to their corrupting influence. To them she said, âDon't feel you have to entertain Esther. She has her own friends.' (This was an exaggeration: I had Dawn.) âYou go off and do your own thing.'
Christian took her very much at her word, as the following day he announced that he and Penny were going away to the Norfolk Broads for a week. There would be three other people in the party: two girls and a boy. The odd number was intended to reassure Mum and Dad that there would be no hanky-panky â a piece of flawed logic, to my mind, but it seemed to allay their suspicions. I knew Christian and Penny must have been having sex for ages, as Penny had confessed to me that she had lost her
virginity at the age of fifteen to a friend of her father, a fact I found deeply disturbing. If I was to emulate my mentor in every respect I would have to get a move on: I still hadn't even been kissed. I think Mum was won over by the fact that the canal boat belonged to the parents of one of the girls and therefore the holiday wouldn't cost anything. We hadn't been able to go away ourselves since Aunty Barbara's estrangement had put the caravan out of bounds.
The day before they were due to leave, Dad took Christian aside and told him to remember that Penny was somebody's daughter, and somebody's sister, and should be treated with respect, and he wasn't going to say any more, but he hoped Christian knew what he was driving at. Christian, showing unusual self-control, managed to keep a straight face for the duration of the interview, and replied that he had every respect for Penny and all her ancestors, and could he please go and finish packing.
I caught up with him in his room, where he was still chortling over it hours later. âIn the unlikely event that you ever get a boyfriend, don't ever introduce him to Dad,' he advised. He was folding T-shirts, shorts and trousers and stowing them in a zip-up sports bag. On the bed was a pile of discarded clothes.
âWon't you be wanting these?' I asked, picking up his swimming trunks and slinging them across to him.
âNo,' he said, chucking them back on the heap.
âAren't you allowed to swim in the Norfolk Broads?' I asked. To me, that would have made for a very frustrating boat trip.
âOh,' said Christian, nonplussed. âI don't know. Probably. Oh, give them here, then.' He didn't seem the least bit
grateful for my intervention, but carried on packing with his back to me.
While he and Penny were away I took the opportunity to ingratiate myself with Dawn again. Since Penny's arrival on the scene I had tended to neglect her, especially at weekends, when I had been in the habit of making myself available at home in case Christian and Penny decided to include me in any of their jaunts. I had deliberately engineered it so that although Penny and Dawn knew plenty about each other, they had never actually met. For reasons that I hadn't troubled to examine, I preferred not to let my friends cross-pollinate. Perhaps I sensed that I presented a different face to each of them, and to bring them together would involve me in a tricky collision of roles. Although I was not prepared to abandon my quest for all things civilised, in truth I did still enjoy many aspects of my pre-civilised life: prancing around to the Top Forty, Mrs Clubb's batter,
True Confessions!,
and hanging around the garages on the estate with Dawn, watching the gangs of boys squaring up.
This particular free weekend I arranged to meet Dawn in town. The plan was to spend the day according to our usual fashion: loitering in the precinct; trying out the make-up testers in Boots until the assistants shooed us away; checking out the ethnic jewellery in the indoor market and stalking any good-looking boys. The last of these schemes got no further than our imaginations: good-looking boys were a scarcity and those few who met our exacting criteria were invariably attached to good-looking girls.
By lunchtime Dawn and I had run through our usual repertoire and spent nearly all our limited funds in the pound store and the discount stalls in the indoor market. Now we
were sitting in Luigi's grill â the cheapest and least civilised café in the precinct â picking over our bargains and making two Cokes last an hour.
âDo you think these are real gold?' Dawn asked, fingering her ten-pence bangles. As if in reply a tiny piece flaked off against her nail. âBloody typical,' she grumbled. âI've a good mind to take it back.' Amongst her other lucky finds were a make-up compact containing pressed rectangles of eyeshadow and lipstick in various shades of bruise, and a travel toothbrush, which made me laugh because, like me, the furthest Dawn ever travelled was to school and back.
I had chosen vanilla joss-sticks, a floating candle, and a set of âSix Wives of Henry VIII' guest soaps. I thought it might be civilised to put one of these in the bathroom to replace the hairy slab of Camay next time visitors were expected.
The waitress at Luigi's was the most miserable woman alive, and her glowering presence in the doorway was a deterrent to all but the most determined customers. She had been over a couple of times to check the levels in our glasses, and give the table a wipe with her greasy cloth to encourage us to be on our way, not realising that in matters of thrift I was my mother's child, and unembarrassable.
Now she was back on sentry duty by the door, and Dawn was busy tearing one corner off all the sugar sachets in the dish, just to be petty, when the strangest thing happened. Dawn dug me in the ribs and said, âHey, isn't that your brother?'
I looked up and simultaneously saw and did not see Christian, outside the window, peering in at the display of cheesecakes and pastries, before moving off, out of sight. I
saw him, because he was there, but at the same time I didn't see him, because he was far away in Norfolk.
âIsn't he meant to be in Norfolk?' said Dawn, echoing my own thoughts.
âIt wasn't him,' I said. âIt just looked like him.'
âIt was him, I tell you,' Dawn insisted.
âI think I'd know my own brother,' I replied indignantly.
âWell, if it wasn't him it must have been his twin,' she retorted and, nettled by my intransigence, she raced to the doorway to call after him and prove me wrong. Old Cerberus must have thought she was doing a runner, because she stuck out her arm to bar the exit, and there followed a frank exchange of views between Dawn and the waitress, which was only halted by the intervention of Luigi himself, who told us to pay up and scram.
By the time we had extricated ourselves, Christian or his double had disappeared, of course, so the dispute couldn't be resolved. Our difference of opinion had only succeeded in souring the atmosphere, and as neither of us had the grace to climb down, and we had spent all our money, we decided to go our separate ways.
The journey home â a half-hour bus ride and a long walk â gave me ample time for reflection. I sat upstairs in a fog of exhaled smoke as the bus juddered its way out of town, through the suburban streets until it reached the semi-rural pick-your-own farms and scrubby common land that marked the boundaries of our âvillage'. The roads grew narrower, pavements disappeared, and overhanging branches clattered and clawed at the windows of the upper deck as I sat there, chewing it all over. What did Christian's presence outside Luigi's signify? Why wasn't he in Norfolk as he'd led us to believe? In spite of my denials, it had certainly been him
I'd seen, for what I had not admitted to Dawn was that, in the split second before he had turned away,
he
had recognised
me
. What really hurt was the sense of betrayal, of being lied to, and lumped in with Mum and Dad as people who are in the way, who have to be deceived. It was this feeling that had led me in turn to lie to Dawn, an additional source of bitterness. âI think I'd know my own brother,' I'd said, so confidently, even as events were proving, yet again, how little I really knew him.