Authors: Lisa Jewell
You’re alive and Belinda’s dead! Ha! Something’s gone wrong—something’s gone wrong—up there”—she pointed at the ceiling—“with Him. Up there. He’s made a mistake.
That’s what it is. Why else would He take away everyone—
Gregor, Bill, Belinda—and leave you? Why would He leave you, Anabella?
“God,” she said, addressing the ceiling, her voice quavering like the Shakespearean actress she’d always dreamed of being, “God—you have fucked up. You have fucked up. . . .” She held out her hands in exasperation as she boomed at the Creator, and then pulled herself from the sofa and stalked from the room, stifling a sob as she went.
Ana had overlooked this tirade—it was nothing new—and instead she’d concocted filmic, romantic vignettes of Bee, draped all over a well-lit bed, her pale, bloodless arms trailing onto the floor, her green eyes staring glassily at the ceiling, a puddle of pills next to the bed. She’d prodded at her subconscious for some emotion, a sense of grief, but it wasn’t there. She’d felt shocked, but not sad.
It was ludicrous, Bee being dead. People like Bee didn’t die. Glamorous, beautiful, successful, rich, popular people didn’t take a load of drugs and die alone and not get found until four days later. That was what happened to sad losers, to people with nothing and no one, to people like Ana, in fact. How could Bee be dead? Why would a woman who had everything throw it all away? It made no sense at all.
Ana spent the rest of the evening going through all the possible explanations in her head, trying to give her sister’s death some sort of structure, but it wasn’t until a couple of hours later, lying in bed listening to the unnerving sounds of her mother downstairs being her mother and coping with her grief in ways at which Ana could only guess, that a sense of loss finally hit her.
She was never going to see Bee again.
She may not have seen Bee for the last twelve years, but she’d always sat on the emotional nest egg of the knowledge that she could if she wanted to. That she could go to the train station, buy a ticket to London, and
see Bee.
Whenever she wanted. But she never had wanted to. And although Bee was practically a stranger to Ana, she was still her sibling, the only person in the whole world who could ever have possibly understood the things that Ana went through living with her mother, and now she was gone and Ana was totally alone.
It took a long time for Ana to get to sleep that night, and when she finally did, her dreams were sad and hollow.
four
When Ana came down for breakfast that morning, her mother had been standing at the foot of the stairs with a letter in one hand and a bowl of cereal in the other.
“Now,” she began as if the conversation had already been going for some time, “sit down. Eat this. And hurry up. I’ve got plans for you—things for you to do.” Ana had felt a nervous nausea rising in her gut. She hadn’t seen her mother this animated in months.
Gay turned and went upstairs. As Ana munched, she heard her mother banging and clanking about in what sounded like the attic. Ana could hear her mother talking to herself as well, and then moments later she came clattering down the stairs. Her hair was all dusty and extra touseled. She was smiling.
And
it was a Thursday and she was wearing her Wednesday cardigan. Something very, very strange was going on.
“The last time I used this was 1963. For my honeymoon.” She got a faraway, wistful look in her eye and then plonked a suitcase on the breakfast table, right in front of Ana. It was small. And musty smelling. And it was fashioned from a woolly tartan fabric in bright red and bottle green. It was disgusting. “Anyway, Anabella,” Gay said whisking the cereal bowl away from under Ana’s nose and dropping it noisily in the sink, “there’s no time for sitting around today. You’ve got things to do.” She said this as a parent might tell a child that they had candies in their handbag.
“Mum. D’you mind telling me what the hell you’re going on about?”
“I received a letter this morning”—Gay tossed it on the table in front of her—“a letter from Bee’s landlord. Her lease has just expired, and if her possessions are not removed by tomorrow morning, he intends to dispose of them. So.
There’s a train in just over an hour. Mr. Arif will meet you outside her flat at one-thirty. He says you can stay in the flat overnight. I’ve organized for a moving company to bring her things back. They’ll be there at nine-thirty tomorrow morning. I’ve spoken to that Mr. Arnott Brown person, Bee’s lawyer thingy—well, I thought since you were going to be there, you may as well kill all these birds with one stone—
and he’ll be expecting you at midday tomorrow. Here’s his address. Your return train is at four-thirty and you’ll be back here by about seven tomorrow evening. Here’s some money”—she dropped a comically large bundle of notes onto the table—“and here’s the address.” Ana scanned the letter briefly, looked at the pile of strange, inexplicable things in front of her and then at her mother. This was utterly ridiculous. How could her mother expect her just to wake up one morning, pack a suitcase, and go to London, of all places? On her own. She’d get lost. She’d never find Bee’s flat in the whole of London. She’d end up in Brixton or Toxteth or something and get mugged. Someone would steal all her money and her suitcase, and she’d be wandering the streets of London with only the clothes on her back. And people would laugh at her. All those cool, hard-nosed London types. Ana’s heart started to race under her pajamas. This was madness.
She strode into the living room and addressed her mother’s back. “But why can’t we get the moving men to pack away Bee’s things?” she asked desperately, knowing already that it was futile.
“I am not allowing a bunch of grubby, overweight buffoons to go rifling through my darling dead daughter’s personal things with their big, dirty fingers. How could you even consider such a thing. I mean—her
lingerie,
for God’s sake, and all her female bits and pieces. Absolutely not. Go and pack. Immediately.”
So Ana had. And here she was. In London. On her own.
And she hadn’t gotten lost and she hadn’t been mugged and, in fact, she was feeling almost excited to be there.
Ana called downstairs to the porter, who locked up for her and gave her directions to the nearest supermarket. She bought herself a chicken salad sandwich and a can of Coke and asked the Indian guy stacking shelves for some cardboard boxes. He gave her a huge flattened stack of them and she bought herself a roll of parcel tape and lugged everything back to Bickenhall Mansions.
It was dazzlingly bright out in the street, but back in the overcast gloom of Bee’s flat, it may as well have been a late November afternoon. Ana picked up Mr. Arif’s inventory and leafed through it while she nibbled on her sandwich.
Black plastic ladle w/green
slight melting on
1x
1x handle
handle
White plastic toilet brush in
1x
good condition
stand
Three-seater sofa
slight fraying around
1x upholstered in “Normandy
legs, small burn on
Rose” design fabric
left arm
It went on in this tedious, painstaking manner for twelve pages. Ana sighed and put it down.
She looked around the flat for a moment, threw away the crusts of her chicken salad sandwich, gulped down her Coke, and then began the peculiar task of sifting through the debris of her enigmatic older sister’s life. She started in the bathroom, figuring that the least of the work would need to be done in there. She made up a small cardboard box and began placing Bee’s things in it, very slowly, item by item, making a mental inventory of her own as she went, hoping that by piecing together all these disparate, insignificant bits and pieces, somehow, miraculously, a fully rounded picture would emerge and she would come to know her sister and why she died.
1x box of Tampax Super
4 left
transparent plastic Oral B
1x
very good condition
toothbrush
1x interspace toothbrush
green
1x tube smoker’s toothpaste
squeezed in middle
1x bottle Listerine mouthwash
nearly full
1x Boots own-brand dental floss
open
OK!
magazine—Pasty Palmer
1x
dated 7 January ‘00
on cover
Hello!
magazine—Ronan
1x
dated 8 June ‘00
Keating on cover
1x large chrome ashtray
full
3x houseplants
dead
1x box matches
Pizza Express
Vasco and Piero’s
1x box matches
Pavilion
Titanic Bar and
1x box matches
Grill
1x box pessaries (for thrush)
half full
1x pessary applicator
1x tube Vagisil
used
1x Jolene Creme Bleach
1x box mixed fabric Band-Aids
half empty
Ana failed to find any clues to her sister’s state of mind among these objects—all they told her was that Bee was a woman who liked to read trashy magazines on the toilet, signifying prolonged, possibly masculine-style bowel movements (which Ana found quite disturbing, as she’d never really thought of Bee—in much the same way as the Queen and Claudia Schiffer—as the going-to-the-toilet type), and that she was very conscious of oral hygiene, although not so concerned, it would appear, with other aspects of her physical health—as indicated by the presence of a full ashtray on the side of the bath. She didn’t have a green thumb, and suffered from thrush, unwanted facial hair, and somewhat heavy periods. She was also, it seemed, not a big believer in rinsing out the bath after use, as demonstrated by a small cluster of curly black hairs clinging to the grimy tidemark that ringed the bath.
Ana stared at them for a while. Bee’s pubes. Bits of Bee. A sudden and painful reminder of why Ana was there. Bee was dead. Her sister was dead. And nobody could tell her why.
All the evidence pointed to suicide but, for whatever reasons, a tragic accident seemed somehow the more palatable option. When Bee went to bed that Friday night, had it occurred to her that she wouldn’t wake up the next morning? When she brushed her teeth that night, had she known that she’d never see her reflection again? Had she moved around the flat before she went to her bedroom, saying good-bye to things because she knew she was going, or was it just another Friday night, a late night, too much to drink, staggering around trying to get ready for bed, reaching for the sleeping pills when she couldn’t get off, grabbing the painkillers when her hangover kicked in, not thinking what she was doing?
Maybe she was here now, a soul in limbo, watching Ana packing away her things and wondering what the fuck she was doing. Ana often had this really strange thought when was doing. Ana often had this really strange thought when famous people died untimely deaths—the thought that they didn’t
know
that they were dead, that no one had told them.
She imagined Diana on that Sunday morning in 1997, coming down for breakfast and reading the headlines, switching on the TV and seeing pictures of the mangled Mercedes in the underpass, the photos of Henri Paul, the shots of her and Dodi leaving the Paris Ritz and thinking no, no, no, and . . .
Ana sighed and got to her feet. She really was a very morbid, very weird person sometimes. And she really did think all sorts of peculiar thoughts.
She moved to the kitchen, and into a second box, or in some cases, into the bin, went the following: copy of
How pristine, untouched, signed with a
to Eat
by
handwritten inscription saying
“
To my
1x Nigela
best friend, who sometimes needs
Lawson
reminding, with love from Lol
”
glass bowl
1x
green fur in places
of lemons
chrome
cocktail
2x shakers—
sticky residue at bottom of both
one smal ,
one large
bottle of
1x
nearly empty
Jose Cuervo
1x bottle of triple sec
nearly empty
1x bottle of Absolut vodka
nearly full
1x bottle of Bombay Sapphire gin
unopened
1x bottle of Tabasco sauce
half full
1x bottle of Worcestershire sauce
two-thirds full
1x bottle of tonic water
unopened
1x bottle of soda water
nearly empty
1x packet Coco Pops
half full
1x jar silverskin onions
two left
1x jar gherkins
five left
book cal ed
101 Classic
dog-
1x
Cocktails
eared
—
stained
1x box Twinings Earl Grey teabags
twelve left
1x jar brown sugar
very hard
1x espresso machine
a bit dirty
1x blue ceramic jar of real coffee
type unknown
1x loaf of unsliced brown bread
very hard
1x pink lip-shaped ceramic ashtray
full
In Fridge
4x bottles champagne
various brands
1x jar gherkins
unopened
1x jar mixed nuts
unopened
packet Sainsbury’s Normandy
1x
half used
butter
various brands and
12x bottles nail polish
colors
large box of Charbonnel et
1x
only two missing
Walker chocolates
tub Tesco’s brand cottage
with garlic and
1x cheese
chives
liter cartons Libby’s tomato
green fur around
3x juice