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Authors: Rachel Cusk

The Country Life (36 page)

BOOK: The Country Life
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‘No,' he said, nodding. ‘My friend has. He speaks Spanish.'

‘Oh.'

‘Would you agree,' he enlarged, after a lengthy pause, ‘that tourists have a … detrimental effect on the local … communities?'

‘It depends,' I said.

‘So you don't agree.'

‘It depends on the extent of the tourism, and the type of tourist who goes to a place,' I said. Even as the words were
coming from my mouth I had a sense of their futility. I felt as if I were chewing dry bread.

‘My friend thinks it does. He says all the locals want to do is get their hands on your money.'

‘Because they have so little in comparison?' I hazarded.

‘That's right!' Mr Trimmer seemed genuinely pleased by my reply. I had evidently confirmed his friend's opinion, elevating it to the status of a theory.

‘But tourism itself can bring money,' I added cautiously. ‘So it's not entirely a bad thing.'

Mr Trimmer's enthusiasm was abruptly snuffed out. His eyebrows drew together, creasing his forehead; an alarming expression, as if someone were pressing hard on either side of his face. I noticed that, while I had drunk half my glass, he had barely skimmed his.

‘How long have you worked for the Maddens?' I said, feeling that a change of subject was required.

‘Five years, about,' muttered Mr Trimmer. His expression had modulated to one of resistance, like a child at whose lips a medicine spoon is probing.

‘And do you like it there?'

He did not reply at all to this. I glanced at my watch, and saw to my dismay that barely half an hour had passed.

‘Madden,' he said suddenly. ‘Mad-den. Mad 'un. Get it?'

‘Oh yes!' I trilled.

‘Are you mad?'

‘I beg your pardon?'

‘Women say they are. Axe you?'

‘Certainly not.'

‘That's all right, then.' Another long pause. ‘Her, his missus, she's a bad one.'

‘Axe you talking about Mrs Madden?'

‘Mrs Mad 'un.' He nodded. ‘I don't like her.'

‘Why not?'

I was resolved at any moment to put a stop to this bizarre
conversation; but I could not resist letting Mr Trimmer run on, just to see what he would say. It is hard to convey how alien his manner of speech was to me. I could barely understand what he was saying; not because of his accent, although it was strong, but because his words and the sequence of his ideas, punctuating in addition vast lagoons of silence, did not conform to any pattern I recognized. It struck me that perhaps he didn't talk very much. He was embarked now on another great pause, his mouth and eyebrows labouring as if with the effort of giving birth to a fully formed sound.

‘She's a
shagger
,' he pronounced finally.

‘A
what
?'

‘I know. I've seen her. I see everything that happens. Not just that business.'

‘What business?'

‘That's what gave him the heebie-jeebies.' He tapped the side of his head. ‘He doesn't know it all, though. If he did …' His fingers uncurled by his temples to form what I took to be a gun. He gave me an idiotic grin.

‘What business?' I repeated.

‘Nothing to do with you,' Mr Trimmer curtly replied. ‘You don't need to worry yourself. It's married business.'

I had by this time finished my drink. Mr Trimmer was halfway through his. I wondered if he would offer me another, or whether I would have to wait until he finished.

‘What do you mean, the heebie-jeebies?' I persisted, hoping that he would be more forthcoming on the subject of Mr Madden.

Mr Trimmer shook his head.

‘He's mental,' he said presently. ‘He's going to hurt his self one of those days.'

‘How?'

‘Walk into one of his own traps, won't he? I nearly done it enough times. Came near enough yourself, and all.'

‘In the top field?'

He nodded.

‘I thought the step was broken?'

Mr Trimmer swelled silently.

‘You mean it was supposed to be?'

He folded his arms over his chest.

‘Why? To discourage people from using the footpath?'

‘
Some
people,' he finally pronounced. ‘
Some
people.'

‘Who?'

‘You're nosy.' He tapped his nose and nodded at me. ‘You.'

‘Not nosy. Curious. So,' I recapped, ‘Mr Madden sabotages his own footpaths to keep
some
people off them. It doesn't make any sense. Surely if someone got hurt, they would go to the police and he'd get into trouble?'

‘Police come up.' He gave me a crafty grin. ‘They don't find anything, though.'

‘Why not?'

‘Because I fixed it!'

He burst out laughing; a terrible, preternatural sound, which made heads turn towards us.

‘So,' I patiently resumed, ‘Mr Madden breaks things and you fix them before anybody can get hurt.'

‘That's so.' He nodded and tapped his head again.

With the excitement of these discoveries I was becoming thirsty. Mr Trimmer had inched his way down his own glass, which now stood almost empty. I curled my fingers significantly around mine, in the hope that he would take the hint. He didn't.

‘But why,' I said, clearing my dry throat, ‘why don't you talk to him about it? It seems a bit of a waste of your time, after all.'

Even as I said it, I knew that I had taken a wrong turning; and I was rewarded with what could not have been less than five minutes of impenetrable silence. I fidgeted impatiently with my glass while Mr Trimmer absorbed my mistake. I was
becoming exhausted with the effort of extracting information from the dark and tortuous passages of his mind, but I was not about to give up. I felt myself to be apprehending something of great significance. Who was Mr Madden protecting himself from? And was there a genuine reason for his doing so, or merely the fact that he was, as Mr Trimmer had put it, ‘mental'? I wondered if the creature and his undercover band of lobbyists had anything to do with it. It seemed unlikely that it was they whom Mr Madden feared. What threat could they possibly present to him? I remembered the nooses nailed to the creature's wall, and felt a dark qualm of fear. Presently I realized that Mr Trimmer was staring at me and I gave him an encouraging smile.

‘What you saw was nothing,' he immediately announced.

Horribly, I saw that this was the way to coax from him what he knew.

‘You mean the broken step?' I smiled again, this time more broadly.

‘That's it.' He nodded. ‘There's guns.'

‘Guns?' My smile slipped and I hoisted it back, shifting my knee out from under the table and putting it into full view for good measure. ‘Where?'

‘All over. Everywhere.' He fixed his eyes on my knee as he spoke, as if he were reading from it. ‘Some have been there so long he forgot about 'em. I have to watch him. He'll get his self shot up one of these days.'

‘But how?'

‘Walk in front of 'em.'

‘You mean they're loaded?'

He looked at me cross-eyed and made a strange motion with his hands, as if he were threading a needle.

‘Trip wires,' he said finally. ‘Learned it in the army, he did.'

I sat, dumbfounded, for some time. Mr Trimmer was staring reproachfully at our empty glasses. He shook his head and
sighed. Then he looked at his watch, his eyebrows shooting up in an unconvincing expression of surprise when he saw what it said.

‘Better be going,' he said finally.

He stood up abruptly and began walking towards the door. I had no choice but to follow him. The inside of the pub was now penumbral, as the evening outside had faded to the point at which electric light seems to deepen rather than illuminate the darkness. Mr Trimmer opened the door and went out into the dusky High Street; but before I could go after him, I heard a familiar voice emerge from the shadows.

‘
Hello
,' it said. ‘Fancy meeting you here!'

I turned and saw the creature, slumped in a chair at a table in the corner by the door. It smiled at me delightedly.

‘Hello,' I said.

‘Out with Mr Trimmer, are we? Wonders will never cease.'

‘I can't stop. He's taking me home.'

‘I'd watch yourself, dear. He can get a bit frisky when he's had a drink.'

‘I think I've found out what happened to Geoff.'

‘Really?' The creature raised a sarcastic eyebrow. ‘I wasn't aware of any – how shall I put it? –
ambiguity
in the matter. Has Mr Trimmer been sweet-talking you? I didn't think the oaf had it in him.'

‘It's not what you think. I'll come and see you tomorrow.'

‘As you like.' The creature shrugged. ‘You know where to find me.'

‘Goodbye.'

It raised its skinny arm in a salute.

‘Toodle-pip!'

Outside, Mr Trimmer was sitting motionless in the Land Rover. He started the engine when he saw me. My thoughts in turmoil, I barely noticed the fact that he drove considerably more slowly on our return than he had on the voyage out. Indeed, so distracted was I by all that I had learned during the
evening that when a few minutes later the Land Rover ground to a halt in the darkness, it took me some time to realize that we were not sitting outside the house but lodged in the shadows at the bottom of the drive. I turned to Mr Trimmer, my arms and mouth open to form a protest, and at this invitation he lunged at me across the seat, chest-first like a diver, and flung his body against my own in an artless collision.

‘Oh, baby!' he cried, squirming against me. ‘Oh, baby!'

So utterly shocked was I by this turn of events that his wet, inert lips managed to make contact with my own before I succeeded in placing my hands on his straining chest and throwing him off. Disgustedly, I wiped my mouth with the back of my hand.

‘
Mr Trimmer!
' I said.

I put my hand on the door, intending to get out and run, but then Mr Trimmer turned the key and started the engine again. He did not look particularly abject. In fact, he looked angry. His lower lip jutted out. From the side, with his eyes flat against his head and his pouting lip, he resembled a fish. He put the Land Rover into gear and accelerated up the drive so quickly that the wheels spun noisily on the gravel. He shrieked to a halt outside the house and sat, his hands gripping the steering wheel, staring straight ahead. He began to mutter to himself, although I could not make out what he was saying.

‘I'm sorry,' I said anxiously. ‘I had a lovely evening.' Still he did not respond. ‘Well, goodbye.'

I got out of the Land Rover and carefully shut the door. I could not prevent myself, as I walked slowly across the drive, from glancing over my shoulder to see if he was looking at me. His dysfunctional glare burned at me through the windscreen in the gloom. As soon as I had made it around the corner and through the gate, I began to run. The night was moonlit, and I found my way up the path easily. At the cottage door, I could still hear the grumble of the engine idling. I stood there, waiting to hear him leave, my heart thudding in my chest. The minutes
dragged on. I wondered what on earth he was doing. Finally, I heard the distant grinding of gears, and the noise of the engine grew momentarily louder and then faded into the silence. I went into the cottage and made straight for the cupboard in the kitchen where I had put the gin.

Chapter Twenty-One

‘Stella!
…
Stella!
‘

I opened my eyes. The movement generated a wave of pain which gathered momentum as it rolled up my forehead.

‘
Stella!
Are you there?'

Sunlight poured onto my face through the bedroom window. Dimly I remembered that I had forgotten to draw the curtains the night before. My body was heavy and lifeless on the bed, like a great anchor to which my bobbing head was attached.

‘Are you there?'

Slowly, the vast and far-flung continents of thought, perception and memory, shrouded in the receding mist of sleep, were drawn together into the bright pinprick of consciousness. I bolted up in bed and looked at my watch. It was ten o'clock. I had overslept. Pamela's voice asserted itself, reconstituted in my mind. She must be downstairs, come to find out where I had got to. I threw back the covers and ran to the top of the stairs in my nightdress.

‘Stella?'

What happened next could only have been the noisy activity of a few seconds, but for me it possessed the heightened
deliberation, the glassy silence, of a dream. I reached the top of the stairs. I looked down the well and saw Pamela's upturned face at the bottom. I opened my mouth to speak, took a step forward, and flew. As I fell, I was struck by how impassive Pamela's expression was, watching me; and even before my back had made its first, brutal contact with the stairs, I had registered the embarrassment of my accident, regretted the foolishness of my facial expression as I had it, considered the social difficulty it would present, and decided on the exertions necessary to the re-establishment of normality in the wake of my unforgivable violation of it. I bumped once, twice, three times, before sliding, stiff and prone as a board, to Pamela's feet; where I lay for some time, gazing up at her, without moving. I was waiting, as one would wait for examination results or a salary, to be informed of the exact quantity of pain my tumble had earned me; quite a lot, I thought, judging by the sound I had made as I hit each of the steps. I tried to prolong that moment of anticipatory numbness; but too soon, a symphonic swell of agony, powerful beyond all my imaginings, rose up in a great chorus from the back of my body.

‘Are you all right?' said Pamela sharply.

‘I don't know. Shit.' It was unlike me to swear, but the word seemed to offer some appeasement to the pain. ‘That really hurt,' I added helplessly.

BOOK: The Country Life
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