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Authors: Ruth Rendell

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Only then did Cosette catch on. “Do you mean you’d come with me, Elizabeth?” There was something touching in the way she spoke, that she who conferred so much love and largesse should also be shy, be fearful of intruding, be inordinately grateful that I would spare the time to give her my company. “That would be very kind of you.” Her face took on the look it wore when she was making plans of generosity, a mischievousness, an almost youthful anticipation. “We could take him some nice wine. Or Madeira—should we take him a bottle of Madeira?”

I did my best to persuade her that it would look very odd indeed to take presents of wine to someone with whom she might never be on more than a business footing, someone in any case who would be offering her a glass of lemonade, since Cosette herself rarely drank. She looked doubtful. It went against the grain with her not to be giving; instead to be, as she saw it, taking. But in fact she was to give and take nothing, beyond that lemonade, for the magazine never came into being. The libretto woman disappeared to South America and Ivor went off with Fay. Of course he intended to come back, as Fay also intended. Because Cosette was kind and generous, because she never lost her temper or sulked, because she seemed endlessly forgiving, people who were not very percipient thought her gullible. They thought her foolish and ripe to be deceived.

Ivor told her he was going to Northampton to see his mother who was ill. Fay just went without a word. I believe they borrowed a room in Putney that belonged to someone they knew who had gone away on holiday. Cosette, taking Auntie out for a drive, saw them lying in each other’s arms in Richmond Park. She showed a side of her character that I had not suspected if I call it vindictiveness. But if I call it something else, not spite, not revenge, but a horror of being betrayed, then I had always known of it.

She had her man from Golders Green come in—

Jimmy, the faithful handyman who had done all these odd jobs for her in Wellgarth Avenue and now came to Archangel Place—to change the locks and have new keys cut. However, if she didn’t change her phone number this was because she hardly ever answered the phone herself. I used to think that if she got anything out of having a houseful of freeloaders, it was that there was always someone to answer the phone, an operation she very much flinched from. Mervyn, whom I had never suspected of having a particular dislike for Ivor, took intense pleasure in telling him when he phoned that Cosette had given orders he wasn’t to be admitted. Cosette was horrified when she heard about this, but by then Mervyn, and Gary too, had had enormous fun telling Ivor that Cosette “knew all about him,” had “an important friend at Scotland Yard,” and was at that moment “with her solicitor.” Ivor, supposedly, took this to mean that among other things his deception about his family origins had been rumbled, though in fact none of us then suspected he was not as much a Sitwell as the late Sir Osbert himself, whose funeral the year before he claimed to have been invited to.

But before all this happened Cosette and I went to Walter Admetus’s house, having arranged to meet Ivor there. We went in the big, old, dusty navy-blue Volvo, which gobbled up petrol and which it was Gary’s job, never performed, to clean in lieu of rent. Its interior was like an extension of the House of Stairs, being full of Cosette-style clutter, full and half-full and empty cigarette packets, bottles and sprays of Joy, boxes of pink tissues, new novels with torn dust jackets, shoes to be worn for driving and shoes to be put on after driving, and all those parcels to be taken somewhere that never got there, laundry and dry cleaning, and things to be sewn and things to be mended. I felt excited and my excitement communicated itself to Cosette, who took it for anxiety that she shouldn’t be gulled or lured into parting foolishly with her money.

“When I’m in danger of not being prudent,” she said gravely, “I think of Douglas. I remember how he worked hard to make all this money for me and it does restrain me.” It was the first time for many months I had heard her mention him.

Elegant-appearing Georgian houses can be just as messy inside as anywhere else, a fact that was new to me then. Fifteen Archangel Place, though untidy, was not squalid, thanks to the efforts of Perpetua. Walter Admetus’s house was. It looked as if it had never been cleaned and it smelled. The upholstery on the furniture was greasy, or rather encrusted with some kind of sticky deposit, the accumulation of years, to which animal hairs adhered, in places as thickly as the pile on a fur. The smell was of fried onions or sweat—which smell much the same—of clogged sink waste pipes and of old dog and sick cat, though we saw neither animal while we were there. Even Cosette, the least fussy of women, hesitated a little before sitting down on the spot indicated, a stained, hairy sofa cushion on which a blowfly crawled.

Walter Admetus is the only man I have ever known actually to introduce his girlfriend as his mistress. He was a courtly person, with a small, pointed, and prominent beard, the kind of beard that turns up and sticks out, and she was very prettily dressed in early Laura Ashley with shiny hair and a pink hair ribbon. It was a mystery how people could come out of that place and yet be so spruce and groomed.

“Admetus,” he said, holding out his hand and close to clicking his heels. He behaved like some German or Scandinavian aristocrat, though he is as English as I am. “May I introduce my mistress, Eva Faulkner?”

I was wearing the cameo brooch Cosette had given me for my twenty-first birthday, the one with the head of a girl on it that looks like Bell. I found myself fidgeting with this brooch as I sat rigidly on the sticky filthy velvet of my chair seat, watching Cosette hand over the bottle of red Graves she must have secreted in one of her always huge handbags. It had occurred to me for the first time that Bell simply might not appear, most probably wouldn’t appear, might not be at home, and even if she was in was only a lodger here, not a friend. I wondered what I should do. Walter Admetus took the bottle with extravagant expressions of gratitude. His manners were at any rate a far cry from those of Ivor. He insisted on pouring glasses of the wine immediately, although it was very much the sort of stuff to be uncorked in advance, stood about at room temperature, and served with food.

“I’m afraid I haven’t anything for you and your daughter to eat,” he said.

Cosette winced. I said quickly that I wasn’t her daughter. Admetus made things worse by saying with extreme cloying courtesy that no doubt Cosette wished I were. Cosette’s face was fixed in that gentle, dreamy smile she could hold for several minutes without relaxing her mouth or blinking her eyes. There seemed absolutely nothing to say. We had arrived rather late, so by now Ivor was very late. The sun poured through the dirty windows, making bars of dull yellow light in which dust motes swarmed like insects. It fell on Eva Faulkner like a purposely directed spotlight and she sat silent and bored, reminding me of the description in
Antony and Cleopatra
of Octavia as a statue, not a breather. I began to realize that I had made a mistake in not telling Cosette that I expected Admetus’s lodger to be Bell, for how could I now ask Admetus about her without revealing my duplicity?

I also began to doubt once more. What had I really to go on? A description that I had perhaps distorted in my own mind to suit my wishes and a name I had no real reason to connect with Bell. Cosette had begun a conversation, stilted and very much of the small talk kind, on the amenities of the neighborhood. Rigid in her sunbath, Eva Faulkner made no replies, gave no sign of having heard, but it seemed just the kind of exchange of pleasantries to appeal to Admetus, who responded with a positive eulogy of the backwoods of Notting Hill, so that you wondered why he didn’t immediately move there. His beard wagged and his eyebrows worked up and down and his hands waved like fans. I began to feel angry, we had been there three-quarters of an hour, and I was about to say to Cosette we shouldn’t wait, it was hopeless, Ivor wasn’t coming, when I heard the front door open and Ivor’s voice.

It was disquieting to observe Cosette’s reaction to the sound of Ivor’s voice in those days. Her expression would become one of resignation, even of stoicism. I couldn’t distinguish the words, nor did I speculate as to whom he might be speaking or, come to that, how he happened to possess a key to this house. I was only wondering if he would break the apparent rule of a lifetime and apologize.

The door to the room opened and he came in with Bell. Typical of him was the way he pushed his way in first and left her to follow.

I don’t know if she recognized me, remembered me, or if Ivor, who immediately began telling us how he had encountered her in the street outside, had already told her who would be there when they reached the house. I could have asked but I didn’t, I never did. She looked at me and said very calmly, “Hello, Lizzie,” as if we had last seen each other the day before.

She was all in black—like James’s Milly Theale. I never saw her in any but dark or dull or muted shades except the time I made her put on the dress of “wasted” red like the one the girl wears in the Bronzino painting. This was before the antique-clothes cult, before the knitted-cotton revolution, before long skirts. Bell’s clothes had probably been bought at a jumble sale, the long, narrow, black wool skirt with box pleats front and back, the man’s black cotton shirt, its sleeves rolled up, its waist defined by a black knitted scarf tied round and round, the rope of black and brown wooden beads. Her fine, thin ankles, the long shaft of the Achilles tendons, just showed below the hem of the skirt. Her feet, brown and long-toed, were in Greek rope sandals. It looked as if she had tied her hair on top of her head with a bit of picture cord. Tendrils of it hung alongside her cheeks and down the long straight nape of her neck, hair that was the color of pale unvarnished wood, but leaving the high smooth forehead bare. She held her head aloft, poised as she always did, as if balancing on it a heavy vessel full of liquid.

A great deal of marveling now took place on the part of Cosette, Admetus, and Ivor—though not of Eva Faulkner, who apparently took all such coincidences as a matter of course—that Bell and I already knew each other. Once Admetus had gone through the elaborate process of introducing Bell to Cosette, only he called it “having the honor to present,” Ivor began praising Bell’s beauty in her presence, walking round her, his head on one side, pointing out with a curved index finger each exceptional feature, as if she were an item on sale in a slave market.

“Look at that chin, look at those dear little ears like shells, and that skin. Have you ever seen such a carriage? A plumb line could pass through her from the crown of her head to the soles of her feet.”

The pointing finger just brushed Bell’s neck. She didn’t recoil. She said quite slowly, almost casually, but absolutely without amusement, “Take your hand off me, you ugly bastard.”

She was frank and open, you see. Honest, they said, she always spoke her mind. Cosette gasped. Admetus gave a nervous titter. To my extreme pleasure I saw that Ivor had gone quite white. Bell said to me, “Come up and see where I live.”

I didn’t hesitate. I left the room with her. Therefore I never knew what actually happened at the tripartite discussion among Cosette, Ivor, and Admetus. I know only that Cosette never handed over any money for the founding of the magazine and Ivor was soon to depart, though we went on seeing Admetus. He became a friend and visitor to the House of Stairs, and for a little while, after Eva had left him, I even wondered if he might become Ivor’s successor with Cosette. That was before Marcus of course, that was before the coming of Marcus put all other men, any other man, out of the question.

So I went upstairs with Bell and she showed me the little room where she lived, where she had been living ever since she sold the house she inherited from Silas Sanger’s father. There was very little in it apart from the bed and a table and a chair, for Bell, then and perhaps now too, has no feeling for domestic comforts or for the appearance of her home. But Silas’s paintings were there, canvases stacked against the walls.

“I take them with me wherever I go,” she said. “He was a really shitty painter, but that doesn’t mean a thing. One day there’s a chance he’ll be recognized and then I’ll have an exhibition and sell them for huge sums.”

She spoke to me as if we were old friends. She spoke of Silas without emotion, coolly, practically, as if she were a gallery owner and he a painter she had discovered and invested in. I was awed, remembering the dead man, the blood on the floor and on her.

“Did you stay long with Felicity?” I asked her.

“Two months, one week, and two days,” she said.

“Then I went and lived in the house the old man left until I sold it.”

Another question. I asked her a lot of questions that afternoon, though none of the ones I ought to have asked, none of the vital questions. “What do you do? I mean for a living. What do you work at?”

“I don’t.” She looked pleased to be able to say that. “I don’t work at all and I never shall. I’m
never
going to work.”

“Then you’re rich?”

Her eyes opened wide. They are sea gray, her eyes, and very large and clear. “I’m not, I’m not rich. But I hate working. I’ve got just enough to exist on without working if I live in a hole like this.” She had a way of dismissing subjects when she had had enough of them, turning her head quickly from side to side, lifting her shoulders, changing on to a new topic. “Who’s that shit I came in with? I’ve seen him here before.”

“He’s a man who lives with my friend you were introduced to.”

“That’s a relief. I thought maybe he lived with you.” Too bad if he did. It hadn’t stopped her calling him a shit. “What a turd,” she said. “Isn’t he a bit young for her?”

“A bit stupid for her,” I said. “A bit ugly and selfish and bloody. I don’t know about young,” and, untruthfully, “I never thought of that.”

She laughed. “I shall have to see what I can find out about him.”

It was the first time I’d heard her laugh, and it was a surprisingly deep, rich, gurgling sound. Her pale face glowed and she was beautiful. I found her exciting in a disturbing way, a soul-shaking way, without knowing in the least what I wanted of her. That we should be friends? That we should meet and talk and be together? And what did she want? Not of me, but of life? I know now, of course I do, I have known for a long time, but I didn’t know then. It mystified me, later on it did, it puzzled me that someone young and beautiful and healthy and intelligent should be content to live in that mean little room in that dirty house, she and all her sparse worldly goods contained in a space twelve feet by twelve, with no job, no career, no prospects, no apparent aims. She was a childless widow of twenty-seven, skilled at nothing, trained for nothing, but more beautiful than any model whose photograph graced magazine covers, who dressed in rags, who—I discovered this awhile later—had no lover and scarcely a friend.

BOOK: The House of Stairs
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