Provender Gleed (30 page)

Read Provender Gleed Online

Authors: James Lovegrove

Tags: #Thriller

BOOK: Provender Gleed
7.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

'We've no idea how quickly they'll get here.'

'If they hear my name, pretty quickly.'

'They might think it's a hoax call.'

'I didn't think of that. Still, it's our best chance.'

'But if Damien gets back from the library before the police arrive...'

Provender nodded. 'Then you just have to jump.'

'Are you joking?'

'Nope. Deadly serious.'

'I can't jump that distance. We already established that.'

'Why not? You could if we were on the ground.'

'Maybe. But we're not on the ground. If we were it wouldn't matter, I could jump and miss. Here, I can't.'

'But you won't miss. You'll make it.'

'Says who?'

'Says me. Is, a moment ago you promised me I'd get across that table safely. Lo and behold I did. Now I'm making you the same promise. You
will
jump across. You
will
reach this side. And I'll be here to catch you. Just do it.'

There was complete earnestness in his face and voice. He believed implicitly what he was saying. He was trying to make her believe it implicitly too.

To her surprise, Is found herself clambering up onto the parapet.

The building swooped away beneath her. Her entire body went numb. Her head became as empty as a balloon.

She lurched back down onto the balcony and stood there clutching the parapet and trying not to vomit. She wasn't scared of heights, but that meant nothing when you were teetering five hundred feet above the earth, contemplating a six-foot jump onto a foot-wide concrete wall. Then, the natural terror of falling took hold and overrode all else. It wasn't even a tussle between instinct and logic. There simply was no logic in what Provender was encouraging her to do.

'Is,' he said, 'get up there again and jump.'

'Fuck off, rich boy. You do it, if it's so easy.'

'Just spring forward. Throw yourself. I'll be here. I'll grab you, cushion your landing.'

'You won't cushion my landing because I'll be landing right fucking down there and unless you plan to be standing under me like a one-man firemen's blanket...'

'Do you want to be there when Damien gets home?'

'I don't have a choice, do I.'

'Yes, you do, and it's jump.'

Is thought of Damien coming home and finding her alone in the flat. She could undo her 'time-bomb', that wasn't a problem, but there would be no getting around the fact that Provender had absconded. That was something she could not undo, and there was just no predicting how Damien would react. The lump on her cheek was testament to that, not to mention the way her left eye was starting to puff shut.

She heaved herself, trembling, back up onto the parapet. There, she clutched the side of the building, shuffled her feet forward till the tips of her toes were at the parapet's outermost edge, and waited for an upsurge of courage.

And waited.

And waited.

Courage didn't seem to want to arrive. Every nerve in her was telling her to step back. Every cell in her recoiled from the drop in front of her.

If she leapt, for a moment she would be in flight between the balconies, nothing below her, greedy gravity eager to gets its hands on her and drag her down.

She could not see herself doing it.

Then she was doing it.

She did not know how or why. She had no idea what impelled her. All at once, obeying some subconscious command, she crouched, tensed her legs, put everything she had into it, and sprang.

There was no sense of transition. No notion of flight. One moment she was on Damien's balcony, the next she was on Mrs Philcox's.

Or
almost
on Mrs Philcox's.

One foot scraped the parapet. Then the lip of the parapet jarred into her knee. Then she was sliding, flailing, tumbling. She knew she had failed. She was going to fall.

Then Provender had her. His arms were around her torso, his hands scrabbling for purchase, finding it in her clothing, in the strap of her shoulder-bag. She dangled, clinging onto him, he clinging onto her, and then she began kicking against the parapet, pushing herself up against it with her toes, mad, panicked, desperate to get onto the balcony, not caring what it took, screaming, yelling, clawing, fighting, and Provender hauled backwards, and the parapet was under her belly and then the balcony was beneath her and Provender was spreadeagled next to her, and Is caressed the solidity of the balcony's concrete floor, loved it like she had loved nothing before.

A long time later, still sprawled flat out, Is said, 'Did you honestly believe I'd manage it?'

'Not for a second,' Provender replied.

'You absolute fucking bastard.'

'I know.'

'When all this is over, I'm going to kill you. You know that, don't you?'

Provender grinned. 'It will be a sweet death.'

She punched him. It was the least he deserved.

41

 

Lunch was done and Arthur took his leave. Threading his way through the house, he got a little lost. He was still not totally familiar with the layout - really, the place was a maze - but with time and a few further visits he would, he felt, have it solved.

He emerged into one of the drawing rooms, expecting it to be an entrance hall. There he came upon his aunt, Cynthia, who was sitting with several string-bound stacks of post in front of her. She looked - and it was hardly surprising - desolate.

'Arthur?'

'I know all about it,' Arthur said, going over to her. 'I am so, so sorry.'

She made a vague gesture of acknowledgement which turned into a trembling caress of her forehead. 'Birthday cards,' she said, indicating the letters. 'For Provender. Most arrived today. From well-wishers out there. You do know it's his birthday?'

'He mentioned it the other night.'

'Twenty-five. Not a special age, like twenty-one or forty. Not a milestone. But still, a quarter of a century.'

Arthur laid a hand on Cynthia's shoulder.

His own mother he loved. She was outspoken, forthright in her feelings, handsome in a rough-hewn Hebridean way, and she had defended him throughout his boyhood against the taunts and jibes that were frequently flung at him, while also encouraging him to stand up for himself (it had not been easy, growing up a Gleed in a small island community). For all that, she was not a woman like Cynthia Gleed. Arthur was in awe of his aunt. She was glamorous, ethereal, saintly, compassionate, forgiving... In a word, perfect. The kind of mother every son should have. The kind of son he, in furtive, wistful moments, wished
he
had had.

His heart went out to her now, and at the same time he inwardly damned Provender for any and all of the distress he had caused Cynthia over the years, the long litany of upsets and disappointments he had brought to this fine, upstanding, blameless woman.

'If there's anything I can do to help...'

Cynthia patted his hand. 'Thank you, Arthur, no. I can't think of anything.'

'If you like, I could go back to the Chapel with you. We could pray together.' Arthur had never prayed for anything in his life, but for Cynthia he would. Happily.

'No need, Arthur. That's kind, but it's all under control. I know what I have to do.'

'Oh. Well. If you're sure...'

She nodded, sure.

'I'll be getting back to town, then,' Arthur said. 'We're having a full-dress run-through this afternoon. Clear up a few snags that happened last night. The director said it isn't necessary, but I wasn't completely happy with the performance, and when a Gleed's not completely happy there's no rest until he or she is. Isn't that right?'

'I agree,' said Cynthia, with definiteness.

'Anything and everything must be done to bring about the right conclusion.'

'Absolutely.'

She seemed cheered, and all through the drive back to London Arthur was pleased to think he had brought her comfort with his words. A better son than her own son, he opined. Far more deserving of her maternal affections than Provender would ever be.

42

 

Winifred Philcox was surprised to see her son Barry standing on her balcony, tapping on the window. He hadn't rung to tell her he was visiting. Come to think of it, he hadn't called in ages, and she couldn't remember when he had last dropped round. A month ago? A year? Time was strange, wasn't it. Sometimes it shot by and sometimes it didn't seem to pass at all.

Winifred made her way to the window as fast as her trick hip would allow. She signalled to Barry that she would need his help sliding it open. Oh, and look. Barry had brought his girlfriend with him. Andrea, Angela, something like that. Winifred had met her twice previously. They hadn't got on. Not good enough for Barry, that was the trouble. Barry was a prize and that Andrea/Angela girl simply didn't deserve him.

Still, Winifred was impeccably polite as she greeted them. She told them to come in, come in. She went to hug Barry and he seemed startled, but he returned the hug. Winifred then held out her hand to Andrea/Angela and said it was nice to see her again.

'I'm sorry,' she added, 'you'll have to remind me. Is it Andrea or Angela?'

'Neither,' said the girl. 'Don't you recognise me, Mrs Philcox?'

'Of course I do,' Winifred said with a sniff. 'You're Barry's Andrea. Or Angela.'

'No, I'm Is. I used to live next door, sort of. With Damien.'

'Don't be daft. You're Andrea or Angela. I remember that Is. She looked nothing like you. Lovely girl, though.' Winifred turned to Barry. 'Now then, young man, why have I seen so little of you lately?'

'Erm... Because I've been holed up in an ashram in the Himalayas for the past decade, pondering on
koan
s?'

Andrea/Angela hissed at him sharply, which Winifred chose not to comment on. Really, though, a girl should never backchat her man like that. No wonder she had that big bruise on her cheek and that swollen eye. Probably asked for it.

'Mrs Philcox,' Andrea/Angela said, 'actually we haven't got time to stop and talk. Could we use your phone?'

Winifred turned round again. 'All right, I've been very patient with you, young lady, but even I have my limits. I was speaking to my son and I'll thank you not to interrupt. When and if you want to ask me something, you can jolly well wait until the right moment arises. Otherwise keep yourself to yourself.' She clucked her tongue, uttered a little snarl, and shook her head. Honestly!

'As a matter of fact, er, Mum,' said Barry, 'we do rather need to use the phone.'

'Go on then,' Winifred said, somewhat irritably. That girl had put her in a bad mood. Completely ruined what should have been a happy reunion. It hadn't escaped Winifred's notice that Barry appeared not to have shaved for three days. The blame for this clearly lay with Andrea/Angela. She was a bad influence on him in so many ways. He used to be such a clean and tidy lad.

'Dead,' Barry said, with his ear to the phone receiver. 'No dial tone. Nothing.'

'Are you sure, Prov-- Barry?' said Andrea/Angela.

'If Barry says it's dead, it's dead,' said Winifred. 'Is it really, Barry?'

'As a dodo. When did you last pay your bill, Ma?'

'I don't know. Can't remember. I'm sure it was recently.'

'Well, I'm afraid you've been cut off.'

A light dawned in Winifred's head. 'That'll be why you haven't rung in a while. I bet you've been trying and trying to get through.'

'Yes. Quite. That's it.'

'Payphone, then,' said Andrea/Angela. 'That's our best chance.'

Barry agreed, and together the two of them made for the door.

'You're going?' said Winifred, not even trying to hide her dismay. 'Already?'

'I'm sorry, we have to,' Barry said. 'It's been great to see you. I'll call again soon, I promise.'

'You won't even stay for a cup of tea?'

'We'd love to but we just can't. Next time.'

'Well, take care then. Look after yourself.'

'Thanks. I fully intend to.'

 

It might be argued that Mrs Philcox, mild senile dementia notwithstanding, was not in fact wrong to mistake Provender for her own son. After all, Family members were in some sense members of everyone's family. People knew them as well as, and sometimes better than, their own kin. And people often preferred them, or the idea of them, to their own kin.

Certainly Barry's visit, brief though it was, left Mrs Philcox with a warm glow of happiness that lasted the remainder of the day. Her son, whom it so happened she had not seen in nearly four years, still loved her. Her son, who in fact couldn't stand the sight of her any more, still cared.

43

 

Anxiety dogged their steps as they headed along the corridor towards the lift bank. It seemed that at any moment Damien might appear. He might be riding a lift up to this floor right now. The lift car would stop, the door would roll open, he would step out - and there would be Provender and Is straight in front of him, not where they were supposed to be, and with nowhere to hide.

Reaching the lift bank, Is stabbed the call button urgently. Nothing appeared to happen, but the lifts in this block, as in all of them, were notoriously sluggish and sometimes simply refused point-blank to work, for reasons no repairmen could fathom. If lifts had souls, the ones in Needle Grove were as downtrodden and surly as those of long-abused slaves. They bore a grudge about their lives of constant hard labour and all the times they had been pissed in and shat in and the fact that the legal minimum of maintenance work was done to keep them going. They resented their own existences, and it showed.

Is couldn't bear to be out here in the corridor, exposed, waiting for a lift to deign to come. She tried the button a couple more times, then jerked her thumb towards a nearby access door and said, 'The stairs.'

44

 

'May I be of assistance?'

The voice was mildly accented and polite but with an undertow of quiet warning. It belonged to an Asian man - Chinese, Milner thought - with a soft round face, hair that had receded to the crown, and eyes that were deep-set and yellowed and, at this moment, wary.

Other books

A Cry of Angels by Jeff Fields
A New World: Awakening by John O'Brien
Community of Women by Lawrence Block
Locomotion by Jacqueline Woodson
Fludd: A Novel by Hilary Mantel
Safe in His Arms by Renae Kaye
Moons of Jupiter by Alice Munro
City of Dreams by Swerling, Beverly