Taking Lives (10 page)

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Authors: Michael Pye

BOOK: Taking Lives
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So it was going to be a lucky morning, calm as milk. At least she could engage with what I said.

It was not always like this. I had got into the messy habit of loving her totally and always being wary, both in parallel, alert for the moment when the pain in her head came back and temper broke up talk and words flew out sharply and the pain was present in the room like some wrecked ex-rival who now felt entitled to demand kind and polite attention.

I lay down beside her. I felt at home there, but I knew I couldn’t touch her because touch was one feeling too many for her.

She’d go for a walk. I’d go for a walk. We’d manage, somehow.

That same day, according to Mrs Arkenhout’s diary, which she gave to the police, Hart went home.

I can’t imagine he decided where he was going. He’d have taken trains, got off too soon, waited for the next train all along the line - in hamlets, in art deco stations all grey and yellow and tiled, and on bleakly open halts. He liked coffee. I can guess he drank coffee, then another coffee.

He reached the town where he grew up. It’s a half-hour’s walk from the station to the Arkenhouts’ house, so he must have arrived at about four in the afternoon: the time when the domestic world would be drawing Mrs Arkenhout again, time to get dinner ready, to finish the ironing, to water the garden, to be at all costs ready.

He didn’t need to find the way. He’d be halfway there before he even looked about. The houses were like a set of bright toys from a model railway, as clean, matched, coloured and artificial, and this fanatic neatness stood on land that was just as artificial, stolen from the sea. It was all so engineered and unlikely: a clean frame for growing up.

I know he remembered getting on his bicycle and riding over green polder land and still being always in sight between the flat, rectangular fields, behind the tall trunks of poplars. I know this because he told me, but he said it all happened in England. He rode down to the dunes and the sea, stripped off so nobody would know him by his clothes. He would walk about a soft, hilly sandscape, thinking he was alone for a moment, and a head, two known heads would appear over the next dune and trap him again in himself. Already, he didn’t just want to be alone. He wanted to be someone else.

When he could see the house, anyone in the house could see him. The garden still had that awkward quality: a garden was required by the unwritten civic rulebook, but not loved.

Out here, there couldn’t be any question about it. He was Martin Arkenhout again, the child demanded by his parents’ marriage, proof there was nothing defective about them. He was Martin when he played here, schemed here, did homework, tried to get off with girls. The place remembered him and took him back: as if he could ever get away.

He must have been shocked by all this: the ease with which he slipped back past all the identities he had stolen, into the one he had so effortfully escaped.

He was a few hundred metres from the house and there were only three more buildings before the road gave up at a gate. For the moment, he might still be visiting the Boerrigters, or the Fields, if they never did manage to go home to the Malvern Hills, their dream of heights. Once he’d passed all their houses, he could only be Martin Arkenhout going home.

I suppose he was just trying on the possibility of going back. After all, he didn’t have the history for it any more.

To fill in Martin Arkenhout he’d have to write himself a kind of novel to fill in the past ten years. Martin slouches through college. Martin drops out and gets back on the tracks. Martin in plaid trousers, smoking dope, dreams of fulfilment and applies, when the dope wears off, to a bank, a firm of accountants, a cultural foundation. College stops, so Martin stops reading. Martin gets a job like a railway train that’s carrying him somewhere someone else has decided. Martin lives with a girl in an apartment in Utrecht because they can’t afford Amsterdam; hey, Mum, look at me, I’m a commuter. Martin’s girl has an abortion. Martin leaves his girl. Martin fucks up. Martin takes Prozac. Martin would not have been good as Martin.

He’d burned this house down in his head, buried it in sand.

He stopped in the lane. He couldn’t afford to be seen, to start more people asking questions, but he could hardly be more conspicuous: a stick figure against flat land.

He saw his mother at a window. She couldn’t truly see his face, of course. She’d see a tall stick of a man out walking, an outline against a sky pale with heat; like a picture, she could make up the meaning later.

Mrs Arkenhout let the newly washed curtains twitch into place; I can see her doing it.

There was a man out there walking along the road. He was coming this way, but he’d stopped short. You had to keep an eye out nowadays, neighbours looking after neighbours. But perhaps he was going to see the Boerrigters. Perhaps he was just going for a walk now the sun was less ferocious.

Then again, perhaps it really was Martin. She told herself not to think this; it wasn’t useful or proper. She suspected herself now of conjuring him back because it seemed even more impossible that he’d gone, so abruptly, so meanly: a statistic from some southern state she’d always imagined as hot, dangerous, not very clean.

The man didn’t turn at the Boerrigters. He had nowhere left to go except their house. If he came, he might kiss her or he might kill her. He might tell her things she didn’t want to know.

She must call the police; that was the proper, citizenly thing to do. But they already thought her peculiar, even mad: a woman who sees visions.

Out on the road, the man kicked a stone about for a moment, stood aside for a passing car that must have been lost, and then stretched hugely.

Mrs Arkenhout pulled the lace curtains shut. She watched him in the mirror above the fire until he walked briskly away. She put all this in her diary.

My father wanted coffee while the movers worked, but he truly wanted the coffee he could make for himself. This pale, milky stuff in a cafe cup had been an insult at first; now it was the perfect reason for leaving England. He drank it and didn’t need to say a word.

We could watch the house through the plate-glass window of the cafe. Old oak chairs came out, then cheap sofas. There was a big, obvious brass bed and even a hatstand. The men strained under the heavy stuff of a life. I didn’t like to ask what he was taking with him because that would tell me what objects - a table where I used to write, my mother’s boxes from her dressing table, mugs we each used - were being abandoned.

‘You’ve got everything you need in Portugal? Already?’

He said, ‘I bought Portuguese things.’

‘I don’t see why you want to leave all your life in London. I don’t get it.’

‘I’m going because I can go.’

‘You could always have gone back. But you didn’t.’

He said, ‘I can go back now.’

He left the sense of a story on the air, something he was not going to tell, but he didn’t make sense. I’d always imagined him as some kind of hero, a man who got away from the endless rule of the dictator Salazar; and it hardly mattered if he was really chasing work instead of liberty, since he had the courage to go.

But he could have gone back when Portugal turned into a democracy in the 1970s. Instead, he waited tables and he stayed in London.

He said, ‘Don’t ask questions.’

‘Fine,’ I said.

He stood up suddenly, went for change and pulled his trouser pocket inside out with a rain of little coins. He scrambled to pick them up, then set a pile on the table to pay for the coffees; he didn’t need to ask the price after so many years.

I said, ‘Is there anything I can do?’

He glared at me, and he stiffened his back and walked to the house. I’d have known he was scared if he had been anyone but my father.

He went inside to check they’d taken everything, he said. I stood on the pavement and watched the last pallets and pieces of felt packed in the back of the van until one of the movers snapped out some sarcasm, and I walked back to the Underground station.

I had grown so safe I was boxed. I didn’t even know how little I knew. I had become ordinarily English, busied myself with career and marriage and I never saw any need to help pull my father into his adopted country. I had always assumed my father was naturalized and settled like me.

I went to my mother’s grave, a marble rectangle topped with marble chips, under a tangle of old trees. I didn’t know quite what to do. I knelt and brushed the seeds and leaves away, cleared some bird droppings from the marble letters. I felt I should be able to explain things.

I said out loud: ‘He’s gone.’ The words were stifled by the soft, cold air.

It was decided, by a consensus not by any colleagues with names and faces, in one of those discreet Museum committees for which I did not quite qualify, that I should go to Holland and find Christopher Hart. He would not refuse to see me if I arrived suddenly in town, he might not be quite clear what I wanted, but it would be wise not to give him any notice, just in case.

I packed methodically, Anna keeping out of the way: trousers folded over sweaters so they held their creases; jackets inside out, the sleeve seams exposed and rough; shoes in their sleeves.

Anna said, ‘You must have something to eat.’

I couldn’t think about anything except going, and Anna knew it. ‘Or some coffee?’ she said. Each of us hated to have the other distracted.

She said, ‘I wish I could come with you. We could go to Leiden together. I love the gardens in Leiden.’

She didn’t mean it. She was letting me go as she always did, entirely concerned with me but not holding me.

‘I’ll only be a couple of days,’ I said. ‘I left the hotel number for you, and the flight numbers.’

I tugged the zip around the garment bag. I held her for a moment, her warmth and my warmth making a kind, closed zone, like lovers.

‘I don’t think Fred is very well,’ she said, meaning the cat, a chequerboard veteran who had been feisty in his time. ‘I’ll take him to the vet.’

We both knew this was something we always did together.

‘You’ll need a taxi,’ Anna said. ‘I’ll book a taxi.’

‘I could drink some coffee,’ I said.

Anna led me by the hand into the kitchen. She’d put out cereal and yoghurt, of course; she would feed me if she could. She had already made coffee. It had not been a good night; I could tell from the marks under her eyes. I was overwhelmed by her kindness for the moment, and the sheer peculiarity of her: fine, sharp-faced, the memorable legs that were perfect and too short all at once, like a sample.

‘The taxi’s coming,’ she said. She didn’t like goodbyes.

The next day, according to the police file, Sergeant Visser decided to find Christopher Hart. He pulled the hotel registration forms and the computer records. He found one Christopher Hart, British passport, registered at a cheap hotel on Rozengracht. Since Hart had checked in the night before, his passport was still with the hotel clerk, who handed it to the police for copying.

So they had a picture of Christopher Hart they could show to the Arkenhouts.

When the sergeant went to the hotel, scenting a crime but still unable to name it, Hart had already left. It seems he’d come back from a morning coffee, morning paper, morning walk, climbed the stairs and found the clerk waiting for him. I can see the man now: his shoulders tense with righteousness.

‘The police came. Wanted to see your passport.’

Arkenhout said, ‘They didn’t say why?’

‘They never say anything. If there’s any trouble, maybe you’d better find another hotel. In fact, I think you’d better find another hotel.’

He said, ‘Yes.’

He didn’t know what else to say. He’d never been the one the police came after; his name was always on the body left behind. He just knew he couldn’t be found, not yet.

I suppose he packed his bag, collected his passport, settled the bill, that the clerk stared at Hart’s credit card as though there had to be some conspiracy coded in the hologram and was distinctly put out when authorization came chattering down the line.

‘You want a cab?’ the clerk said. ‘To the airport?’

‘No.’

‘I thought you’d want to get away.’

He said, ‘Why should I?’

The clerk remembered everything he said for the police, down to: ‘Have a nice day.’

He was out on the streets, no fixed abode, no fixed name, known as Martin Arkenhout and as Christopher Hart, which was at least one name too many. The police file says nothing about the next twenty-four hours.

But imagine: this man lived by forms, address, occupation, nationality, write in the squares, sign below, all anybody notices. He once talked to me about Tinkerbelle, the machines that capture every transatlantic phone call, more in an hour than anyone could transcribe and read in a working lifetime; he said the point was that nothing went unobserved. Your every move is conditional. And all these years, he had used that fact, tricked with forms and cards and passes and papers, and the bureaucratic reflex they produced; he was shocked to discover the bureaucrats could use the papers, too.

He had never truly had to bluff before, because there had been nobody to challenge him; he took a new name and he immediately moved on. But now he had to be perfectly Christopher Hart, whoever that was: professor, scholar, writer, and whatever else. He owed the dead man a kind of debt, and all because of one stupid answer to one sudden question on a tram.

Also, he had to act a character. He couldn’t just continue himself under another name.

He couldn’t get his head around this notion. He said - he said it about another time, but I’m sure he meant this time - he saw the city like filing boxes, people shut away by firm and occupation, going deliberately from one place to another by arrangement. Even the loungers in the sun were tourists, day trippers, time wasters deliberately aware of their designated gap in the organized day; they knew their place.

He had become the anomaly, expecting to be singled out. He couldn’t stand at a tram stop with conviction; no destination. There was no particular reason for him to be in any street at any time. Passers-by, the ones with even the slightest purpose, had the advantage: a net of obligations and appointments and habits and other people’s expectations to hold them in place. But he’d done his peculiar work, stolen a life; and now he was too fraught to live it.

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