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Authors: Lisa O'Donnell

BOOK: The Death of Bees
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Nelly is the one I worry for, always crying through the nighttime, like you did when your brother died. Poor David, such a young man. Climbing in Milngavie. Not even that old and in his fifties. The wife followed soon after. Cancer.

They've asked me to see Nelly's headmaster Monday, they want me to pose as an uncle. She's been skipping school apparently. Marnie agrees the pretense is necessary but I'm worried about the consequences. What if someone were to recognize me? I could get into a lot of trouble. A lot of trouble.

Nelly

I
sleep as sound as a pound most nights, but last night, what a racket there was, a lot of shouting and jeering on our doorstep. I couldn't make out what they were yelling, I really couldn't; drunks no doubt. At first I wondered if the truth had been discovered, I wondered if they were coming to incarcerate us for our wrongdoings, but no, they were simply disturbers of the peace, people with no regard for the slumber of others. I ought to have called the police but one didn't want to waken Lennie.

The next morning when I woke (and a little later than I intended) I found Lennie painting at his fence and his door. He's such a meticulous man but I can't deny the smell pained me somewhat, but if it needs doing it needs doing and there's nothing more to be said. Cleanliness is next to godliness after all and we all have to be clean, don't we.

Marnie

L
ennie's been getting shit recently from the locals. Truth is he's always getting shit but last night there was some abuse in the early hours and then someone spray-painted his door and his fence. He just got up next morning and painted over it and even though he knew that I'd seen it he never mentioned it to me and so I said nothing about it either. I don't have a clue what Nelly made of it, probably what she wanted to. She's over at Lennie's all the time these days. She lives there and creeps in through the back almost every day and eats his food, sleeps in his spare room, and plays her violin. He loves it of course, having someone to take care of and for obvious reasons Nelly loves it too.

I suppose it's hard taking care of yourself at her age. You try not to think about it and pretend you're like everyone else who's twelve, but deep down you know you're not. You're alone. You need to heat your own home and pay your own bills, wash your own clothes and dry your own tears. No wonder she seeks this old granddad with his house smelling of baked bread. Lennie loves her like a granddaughter. She needs that, affection, warmth and not in a house smelling of bleach and death. The other day I actually chastised myself for leaving Gene in the house for a week before burying him, it was like a postscript to self. Bury people immediately.

Lennie's starting to suspect something and so is his stupid dog. He's always sniffing about the flower beds. I caught him the other day frantically flinging dirt between his paws, he actually pulled up Gene's arm, just like that, and I totally shat myself. Fortunately no one was around and I was able to replant the arm. I gave Lennie's dog a well-earned kick up the arse for that. He gave a wee yelp and Lennie appeared from his kitchen holding a dish towel. I don't think he saw.

“All right, Marnie?”

“Bobby's digging at the lavender. Lennie, can you call him?”

Despite a boot in the hole I find the little shit sniffing about the shed where Izzy is, but then Lennie calls him and he trots off. Disappears through Lennie's French windows.

“Dinner at five, Marnie?”

I nod, I love his dinners, but still, I might have to kill his dog.

Lennie

I
went to the school posing as Uncle Leonard. There I met some woman with bad teeth. Mrs. MacLeod. Lots of ethnic jewelry. Wood and turquoise all over the place. She wears that patchouli oil and smelled like a bloody church. She was all smiles of course and very keen to support the girls on their “educational journey.” The shite they talk in schools these days, it beggars belief. We discussed Nelly's truancy of course, which I assured her wouldn't happen again. She can't be missing school. Absolutely not. School is the one thing these girls have got going for them. Anyway we agreed on one week of detention for Nelly, which I felt badly for afterward but if it keeps her in school then it has to be done. She's also to report to this Mrs. MacLeod every morning. She won't like that much, but what can you do? If she doesn't stay in school it'll be the Social Work Department turning up at the door wanting to know the reason why and not this Mrs. MacLeod. No one will want to talk to Uncle Leonard then, that's for sure.

We talked about Marnie next. She was especially keen in this respect. She even went to the trouble of showing me Marnie's school work. All As and A pluses. Can't say I wasn't shocked. I haven't seen the girl study once, come to think about it I've never seen her so much as hold a book, just that bony wee arse of hers running to catch buses or jumping into the back of an ice cream van. The teacher said Marnie has an attitude problem and I'm thinking who the bloody hell cares. With grades like that she can be an armed robber. I don't know why the woman should give two hoots about the girl's temperament, but it's all very different in the schools today. Personality, cultural diversity, they even teach Gaelic, though I can't see what bloody use they'll have for it, not a great deal of Gaelic spoken in Scotland these days. They should be making them learn Spanish and French, German even, world languages, exciting them to participate in real causes, world causes, to confidently travel abroad and be able to ask for a bacon butty in Peru, but that's Scotland for you, always waddling about in the muds of yesterday, a parliament prioritizing a language spoken in places without work opportunities, wee islands where they raise cows and marry their relatives. I don't know. You can bring the horse to the water, Joseph, but you can't make it drink. Anyway the teacher then asked where the parental scum are and I tell her they're on holiday, then she wanted to know how I was related to the family and I told her I was the mother's uncle through marriage, twice removed. She seemed to accept it. There was lots of smiling.

It was an hour before she let me go, I had to sign something to say we'd had our “conference,” the “conference” being a meet and greet in a musty old classroom smelling of felt-tips. Did I mention they're not using blackboards anymore? They use “whiteboards” now and they scribble on them with these big thick markers. Must cost a bloody fortune in pens.

On my way out I got a chance to wander the corridors. School smells never change, do they? Disinfectant and gym shoes is the stink they're possessed of, but no chalk smells, shame. I saw the fourth-year art display, a lot of jugs with apples, a pair of ballet slippers with a rose, and a nice tapestry of a ladybug. To tell the truth I was glad to get out of the place and when I did I saw this huge poster of a carving knife with a cross through it.
NO WEAPONS
, it said. Then another, like a traffic sign:
NO DRUGS ON SCHOOL PREMISES
, with a picture of pills and needles and a cigarette burning. Honest to God, it would make your head spin off its shoulders.

I wonder about these kids. Take that Kim for instance. She's gay and not even eighteen and has freedoms I could only dream of. I could never have told my parents I was gay at eighteen, they'd have died of shame, it was information trickled toward them and over many years. As for her schoolteachers, she's in a gay support group and they meet after PE.

Marnie is obviously someone of importance in their little pack, all of them attracted to the damage they share and the pains they've known. Urban living has certainly hardened them. The neglect and the poverty, it steals so much from children, forcing them to snatch whatever's offered them—and how they grab at the things put upon them by strangers, the unnatural comforts and abhorrent cruelties.

I'd like to take Marnie and Nelly far from here, but they don't even own a passport, it's like they're stuck on this irascible road until Marnie turns sixteen, but then what? A legal entitlement to a life on welfare. It's not to be leaned on, nor aspired to, there is more to them than that and if God grants me the time to make amends for an unfortunate boy set upon by me, I hope to show them.

Nelly

I
curl up in a ball and scream. Mr. Domble doesn't know what to do with me and fetches the nurse. I silently fold the agony inside. They fetch Marnie. I grab for her, pulling at her shoulders, stretching at her V-neck. She grabs for my hands and pushes them away. She tells me to calm down. I feel a sop and a baby. I try to forget about them in the garden, really I do, but I can't, they live always in my head and so vividly. I see Izzy over Marnie's shoulder and I see Gene. I want to scream, but Marnie's eyes forbid it. She pulls me to my feet and we are allowed to go home.

“Lennie is asking questions,” I tell her.

She ignores me and it fills me with fear.

“Lennie wishes to know their whereabouts,” I persist. “But how can I tell him when he is teaching me Chopin?”

“You keep throwing fits like that then everyone is going to find out,” she barks.

Our life is a calamity and I feel so damn angry these days. Perhaps on account of the things that cannot be ignored, deeds forced upon me by others. Oh damn Marnie, damn her to hell with her temper. I am thoroughly pained.

Marnie

S
he'd had a fit in the library and I had to take her home. She looked a right tit. She almost pulled my jersey off. I lifted her from the floor and nervously wiped her dress down. It was dusty. Mrs. MacLeod let us leave early.

Walking out of the school I held her hand. I couldn't help it. I hate her when she's like this but I feel other things too. She was shaking like a leaf and deep down I wanted to hug it all away, but the very thought made me feel uncomfortable and I was shamed by it.

When I look up at the voices yelling from the school windows and I see Nelly's classmates and they're shouting out “Freak” and “Weirdo,” I am full of rage. I try to remember faces and plan to beat the offenders to a pulp. She is my sister and they have no right. When we get to Lennie's house I put her on the sofa. I tell Lennie she's had a fit at school. I explain to him she is prone to fits and he just accepts it, not a single question from him and I am so grateful. It's exhausting reaching for answers all the time. Nelly falls asleep and I go back to school. It feels safer there. I can't deal with her when she's like this, and when she wakes up I know I'll have nothing to say to her. It's like that right now.

Lennie

N
elly bled all over the sofa. Thank God I had the plastic covering over it. Marnie had gone back to school and so I had to get the tampons on my own. I thought of going to the chemist, but they know me in there and so I went to the supermarket and hid them under a box of cornflakes. Once Nelly had calmed down, and realized she wasn't going to drop dead, she was like a bloody budgie. Why was she bleeding? Why did her tummy hurt? How long does it last? I could have screamed. How the hell did she get to twelve, almost thirteen and not know any of this? My sisters couldn't wait to grow up, stuffing tissue down their bras at eleven years old and utterly jubilant when the bleeding came. I gave Nelly the tampons when I got back but it was obvious she didn't know how to use them. I didn't know what to say. I don't know how to use them either and so I made her some Ovaltine and gave her a chocolate digestive.

Of course the hardest part was having to tell her about cocks and vaginas, obviously I didn't use those particular words, but when it came to STDs and abortions I got straight to the point, especially for a girl blooming so rapidly and so beautifully. I suppose I didn't have to tell her about abortions, but in my thinking the sooner she knows about the consequences of premarital sex the better. Perhaps I should speak to Marnie about cocks and vaginas too, what a lady should and shouldn't be doing with them. She doesn't know either.

Marnie

I
couldn't find it. Izzy made it. A photo album. She'd found all our family pictures, what there was of them and fixed them into a black binder with glue and sticky tape. I remember her putting it together, like a scrapbook. She kept waving baby snaps at me. There was one picture in particular taken in a park. Nelly was maybe a year old. Izzy was holding her close to her chest and Nelly was laughing and pointing at something in the distance. I was sort of pulling away from them and trying to run toward whatever Nelly was looking at beyond the camera, a slide we wanted to slip down maybe or a swing we wanted to play on. Gene was holding the camera.

I had a vague memory of this photo being in Izzy's hand, I remember Izzy drinking tea over it and looking sad, as if she didn't want to see it, but couldn't help looking at it. There was something about that picture and when I came into the room she hid it.

Their room was freezing. We had kept their bedroom window open to rid ourselves of Gene's smell and never closed it. Once inside I hugged myself, it was Baltic. In my head I kept seeing them, I could almost feel them, and I knew they weren't there, but I couldn't help thinking of them in the room. I remembered Gene sitting up in bed smoking a fag and holding a paper. He was watching Izzy from the corner of his eye changing out of jeans and into skirts, out of trainers and into shoes, attaching bobbles to her hair and spraying perfume on her wrists. And Nelly, next to Gene, a father and daughter side by side reading and that's all. Gene reaching for a mug of tea and slurping it dry. Nelly nibbling at a biscuit and letting the crumbs fall between the pages of her book. I'm at the end of the bed, picking at a scab formed after a fall. Izzy gives me shit for it, but I tell her to
fuck off
, it's just a knee. It feels like a loving time, a better time and it should comfort me, but it doesn't, it makes me ill inside and queasy. I pull back to the chill of the room and to their cast-iron frame, a rusting skeleton where they'd once slept, their mattress gone and dumped in the nighttime, a festering stain inking its fabric. We burned it a few days later in a nearby alleyway.

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