He cried out. Or tried to, for as he gulped in air it seemed to draw darkness into his lungs, darkness that swelled and poured into his heart and brain. There was a moment in which he knew nothing, as if he"d become darkness and silence and the memory of suffering. Then the car was rattling on, the darkness was sweeping over him and by, and the nose of the car banged open the doors and plunged out into the night.
As the car swung onto the length of track outside the Ghost Train, Stone caught sight of the gap between the stalls where he had thought he"d seen the stallholders. A welling moonlight showed him that between the stalls stood a pile of sacks, nodding and gesticulating in the wind. Then the seat beside him emerged from the shadow, and he looked down.
Next to him on the seat was a shrunken hooded figure. It wore a faded jacket and trousers striped and patched in various colours, indistinguishable in the receding moonlight. The head almost reached his shoulder. Its arms hung slack at its sides, and its feet drummed laxly on the metal beneath the seat. Shrinking away, Stone reached for the front of the car to pull himself to his feet, and the figure"s head fell back.
Stone closed his eyes. When he opened them he saw within the hood an oval of white cloth upon which--black crosses for eyes, a barred crescent for a mouth--a grinning face was st.i.tched.
As he had suddenly realised that the car hadn"t halted nor even slowed before plunging down the incline back into the Ghost Train, Stone did not immediately notice that the figure had taken his hand. ------------------------------------116 ------------------------------------117
Call First
It was the other porters who made Ned determined to know who answered the phone in the old man"s house. the phone in the old man"s house.
Not that he hadn"t wanted to know before. He"d felt it was his right almost as soon as the whole thing had begun, months ago. He"d been sitting behind his desk in the library entrance, waiting for someone to try to take a bag into the library so he could shout after them that they couldn"t, when the reference librarian ushered the old man up to Ned"s desk and said "Let this gentleman use your phone." Maybe he hadn"t meant every time the old man came to the library, but then he should have said so. The old man used to talk to the librarian and tell him things about books even he didn"t know, which was why he let him phone. All Ned could do was feel resentful. People weren"t supposed to use his phone, and even he wasn"t allowed to phone outside the building. And it wasn"t as if the old man"s calls were interesting. Ned wouldn"t have minded if they"d been worth hearing.
"I"m coming home now." That was all he ever said; then he"d put down the receiver and hurry away. It was the way he said it that made Ned wonder. There was no feeling behind the words, they sounded as if he were saying them only because he had to, perhaps wishing he needn"t. Ned knew people talked like that: his parents did in church and most of the time at home. He wondered if the old man was calling his wife, because he wore a ring on his wedding-finger, although in the claw where a stone should be was what looked like a piece of yellow fingernail. But Ned didn"t think it could be his wife; each day the old man came he left the library at the same time, so why would he bother to phone?
Then there was the way the old man looked at Ned when he phoned: as if he didn"t matter and couldn"t understand, the way most of the porters looked at him. That was the look that swelled up inside Ned one day and made him persuade one of the other porters to take charge of his desk while Ned waited to listen in on the old man"s call. The girl who always smiled at Ned was on the switchboard, and they listened together. They heard the ------------------------------------118 phone in the house ringing then lifted, and the old man"s call and his receiver going down: nothing else, not even breathing apart from the old man"s. "Who do you think it is?" the girl said, but Ned thought she"d laugh if he said he didn"t know. He shrugged extravagantly and left.
Now he was determined. The next time the old man came to the library Ned phoned his house, having read what the old man dialled. When the ringing began its pulse sounded deliberately slow, and Ned felt the pumping of his blood rushing ahead. Seven trills and the phone in the house opened with a violent click. Ned held his breath, but all he could hear was his blood thumping in his ears. "h.e.l.lo," he said and after a silence, clearing his throat, "h.e.l.lo!" Perhaps it was one of those answering machines people in films used in the office. He felt foolish and uneasy greeting the wide silent metal ear, and put down the receiver. He was in bed and falling asleep before he wondered why the old man should tell an answering machine that he was coming home.
The following day, in the bar where all the porters went at lunchtime, Ned told them about the silently listening phone. "He"s weird, that old man," he said, but now the others had finished joking with him they no longer seemed interested, and he had to make a grab for the conversation. "He reads weird books," he said. "All about witches and magic. Real ones, not stories."
"Now tell us something we didn"t know," someone said, and the conversation turned its back on Ned. His attention began to wander, he lost his hold on what was being said, he had to smile and nod as usual when they looked at him, and he was thinking: they"re looking at me like the old man does. I"ll show them. I"ll go in his house and see who"s there. Maybe I"ll take something that"ll show I"ve been there. Then they"ll have to listen.
But next day at lunchtime, when he arrived at the address he"d seen on the old man"s library card, Ned felt more like knocking at the front door and running away. The house was menacingly big, the end house of a street whose other windows were brightly bricked up. Exposed foundations like broken teeth protruded from the mud that surrounded the street, while the mud was walled in by a five-storey crescent of flats that looked as if it had been designed in sections to be fitted together by a two-year-old. Ned tried to keep the house between him and the flats, even though they were hundreds of yards away, as he peered in the windows.
All he could see through the grimy front window was bare floorboards; when he coaxed himself to look through the side window, the same. He dreaded being caught by the old man, even though he"d seen him sitting behind a pile of books ten minutes ago. It had taken Ned that long to walk here; ------------------------------------119 the old man couldn"t walk so fast, and there wasn"t a bus he could catch. At last he dodged round the back and peered into the kitchen: a few plates in the sink, some tins of food, an old cooker. n.o.body to be seen. He returned to the front, wondering what to do. Maybe he"d knock after all. He took hold of the bar of the knocker, trying to think what he"d say, and the door opened.
The hall leading back to the kitchen was long and dim. Ned stood shuffling indecisively on the step. He would have to decide soon, for his lunchhour was dwindling. It was like one of the empty houses he"d used to play in with the other children, daring each other to go up the tottering stairs. Even the things in the kitchen didn"t make it seem lived in. He"d show them all. He went in. Acknowledging a vague idea that the old man"s companion was out, he closed the door to hear if they returned.
On his right was the front room; on his left, past the stairs and the phone, another of the bare rooms he"d seen. He tiptoed upstairs. The stairs creaked and swayed a little, perhaps unused to anyone of Ned"s weight. He reached the landing, breathing heavily, feeling dust chafe his throat. Stairs led up to a closed attic door, but he looked in the rooms off the landing.
Two of the doors which he opened stealthily showed him nothing but boards and flurries of floating dust. The landing in front of the third looked cleaner, as if the door were often opened. He pulled it towards him, holding it up all the way so it didn"t sc.r.a.pe the floor, and went in.
Most of it didn"t seem to make sense. There was a single bed with faded sheets. Against the walls were tables and piles of old books. Even some of the books looked disused. There were black candles and racks of small cardboard boxes. On one of the tables lay a single book. Ned padded across the fragments of carpet and opened the book in a thin path of sunlight through the shutters.
Inside the sagging covers was a page which Ned slowly realised had been ripped from the Bible. It was the story of Lazarus. Scribbles that might be letters filled the margins, and at the bottom of the page: "people. 491." Suddenly inspired, Ned turned to that page in the book. It showed a drawing of a corpse sitting up in his coffin, but the book was all in the language they sometimes used in church: Latin. He thought of asking one of the librarians what it meant. Then he remembered that he needed proof he"d been in the house. He stuffed the page from the Bible into his pocket.
As he crept swiftly downstairs, something was troubling him. He reached the hall and thought he knew what it was. He still didn"t know who lived in the house with the old man. If they lived in the back perhaps there would be signs in the kitchen. Though if it was his wife, Ned thought as he hurried ------------------------------------120 down the hall, she couldn"t be like Ned"s mother, who would never have left torn strips of wallpaper hanging at shoulder height from both walls. He"d reached the kitchen door when he realised what had been bothering him. When he"d emerged from the bedroom, the attic door had been open.
He looked back involuntarily, and saw a woman walking away from him down the hall.
He was behind the closed kitchen door before he had time to feel fear. That came only when he saw that the back door was nailed rustily shut. Then he controlled himself. She was only a woman, she couldn"t do much if she found him. He opened the door minutely. The hall was empty.
Halfway down the hall he had to slip into the side room, heart punching his chest, for she"d appeared again from between the stairs and the front door. He felt the beginnings of anger and recklessness, and they grew faster when he opened the door and had to flinch back as he saw her hand pa.s.sing. The fingers looked famished, the colour of old lard, with long yellow cracked nails. There was no nail on her wedding-finger, which wore a plain ring. She was returning from the direction of the kitchen, which was why Ned hadn"t expected her.
Through the opening of the door he heard her padding upstairs. She sounded barefoot. He waited until he couldn"t hear her, then edged out into the hall. The door began to swing open behind him with a faint creak, and he drew it stealthily closed. He paced towards the front door. If he hadn"t seen her shadow creeping down the stairs he would have come face to face with her.
He"d retreated to the kitchen, and was near to panic, when he realised she knew he was in the house. She was playing a game with him. At once he was furious. She was only an old woman, her body beneath the long white dress was sure to be as thin as her hands, she could only shout when she saw him, she couldn"t stop him leaving. In a minute he"d be late for work. He threw open the kitchen door and swaggered down the hall.
The sight of her lifting the phone receiver broke his stride for a moment. Perhaps she was phoning the police. He hadn"t done anything, she could have her Bible page back. But she laid the receiver beside the phone. Why? Was she making sure the old man couldn"t ring?
As she unbent from stooping to the phone she grasped two uprights of the banisters to support herself. They gave a loud splintering creak and bent together. Ned halted, confused. He was still struggling to react when she turned towards him, and he saw her face. Part of it was still on the bone.
He didn"t back away until she began to advance on him, her nails tearing ------------------------------------121 new strips from both walls. All he could see was her eyes, unsupported by flesh. His mind was backing away faster than he was, but it had come up against a terrible insight. He even knew why she"d made sure the old man couldn"t interrupt until she"d finished. His calls weren"t like speaking to an answering machine at all. They were exactly like switching off a burglar alarm. ------------------------------------122 ------------------------------------123
Heading Home
Somewhere above you can hear your wife and the young man talking. You strain yourself upwards, your muscles trembling like water, and manage to shift your unsteady balance onto the next stair. strain yourself upwards, your muscles trembling like water, and manage to shift your unsteady balance onto the next stair.
They must think he finished you. They haven"t even bothered to close the cellar door, and it"s the trickle of flickering light through the crack that you"re striving towards. Anyone else but you would be dead. He must have dragged you from the laboratory and thrown you down the stairs into the cellar, where you regained consciousness on the dusty stone. Your left cheek still feels like a rigid plate slipped into your flesh where it struck the floor. You rest on the stair you"ve reached and listen.
They"re silent now. It must be night, since they"ve lit the hall lamp whose flame is peeking into the cellar. They can"t intend to leave the house until tomorrow, if at all. You can only guess what they"re doing now, alone in the house. Your numb lips crack again as you grin. Let them enjoy themselves while they can.
He didn"t leave you many muscles you can use; it was a thorough job. No wonder they feel safe. Now you have to concentrate yourself in those muscles that still function. Swaying, you manage to raise yourself momentarily to a position where you can grip the next higher stair. You clench on your advantage. Then, pushing with muscles you"d almost forgotten you had, you manage to lever yourself one step higher.
You manoeuvre yourself until you"re sitting upright. There"s less risk that way of losing your balance for a moment and rolling all the way down to the cellar floor, where you began climbing hours ago. Then you rest. Only six more stairs.
You wonder again how they met. Of course you should have known that it was going on, but your work was your life and you couldn"t spare the time to watch over the woman you"d married. You should have realised that when she went to the village she would meet people and mightn"t be as silent as at ------------------------------------124 home. But her room might have been as far from yours as the village is from the house: you gave little thought to the people in either.
Not that you blame yourself. When you met her--in the town where you attended the University--you"d thought she understood how important your work was. It wasn"t as if you"d intended to trick her. It was only when she tried to seduce you from your work, both for her own gratification and because she was afraid of it, that you barred her from your companionship by silence.
You can hear the voices again. They"re on the upper floor. You don"t know whether they"re celebrating or comforting each other as guilt settles on them. It doesn"t matter. So long as he didn"t close the laboratory door when he returned from the cellar. If it"s closed you"ll never be able to open it. And if you can"t get into the laboratory he"s killed you after all. You raise yourself, your muscles shuddering with the effort, your cheeks chafing against the wooden stair. You won"t relax until you can see the laboratory door.
You"re reaching for the top stair when you slip. Your chin comes down on it and slides back. You grip the stair with your jaws, feeling splinters lodge between your teeth. Your neck sc.r.a.pes the lower stair, but it has lost all feeling save an ache fading slowly into dullness. Only your jaws are preventing you from falling back where you started, and they"re throbbing as if nails are being driven into the hinges with measured strokes. You close them tighter, pounding with pain, then you overbalance yourself onto the top stair. You teeter for a moment, then you"re secure.
But you don"t rest yet. You edge yourself forward and sit up so that you can peer out of the cellar. The outline of the laboratory door billows slightly as the lamp flickers. It occurs to you that they"ve lit the lamp because she"s terrified of you, lying dead beyond the main staircase as she thinks. You laugh silently. You can afford to. When the flame steadies you can see darkness gaping for inches around the laboratory door.
You listen to their voices upstairs, and rest. You know he"s a butcher, because he once helped one of the servants to carry the meat from the village. In any case, you could have told his profession from what he has done to you. You"re still astonished that she should have taken up with him. From the little you knew of the village people you were delighted that they avoided your house.
You remember the day the new priest came to see you. You could tell he"d heard all the wildest village tales about your experiments. You were surprised he didn"t try to ward you off with a cross. When he found you could argue his theology into a corner he left, a twitch pulling his smile awry. He"d tried ------------------------------------125 to persuade you both to attend church, but your wife sat silent throughout. It had been then that you decided to trust her to go to the village. As you paid off the servants you told yourself she would be less likely to talk. You grin fiercely. If you"d been as accurate in your experiments you would be dead.
Upstairs they"re still talking. You rock forward and try to wedge yourself between the cellar door and its frame. With your limited control it"s difficult, and you find yourself leaning in the crack without any purchase on the wood. Your weight hasn"t moved the door, which is heavier than you have ever before had cause to realise. Eventually you manage to wedge yourself in the crack, gripping the frame with all your strength. The door rests on you, and you nudge your weight clumsily against it.
It creaks away from you a little, then swings back, crushing you. It has always hung unevenly and persisted in standing ajar; it never troubled you before. Now the strength he left you, even focused like light through a burning-gla.s.s, seems unequal to shifting the door. Trapped in the crack, you relax for a moment. Then, as if to take it unawares, you close your grip on the frame and shove against the door, pushing yourself forward as it swings away.
It comes back, answering the force of your shove, and you aren"t clear. But you"re still falling into the hall, and as the door chops into the frame you fall on your back, beyond the sweep of the door. You"re free of the cellar, but on your back you"re helpless. The slowing door can move more than you can. All the muscles you"ve been using can only work aimlessly and loll in the air. You"re laid out on the hall floor like a laboratory subject, beneath the steadying flame.
Then you hear the butcher call to your wife "I"ll see!" and start downstairs.
You begin to twitch all the muscles on your right side frantically. You roll a little towards that side, then your wild twitching rocks you back. The flame shakes above you, making your shadow play the cruel trick of achieving the movement you"re struggling for. He"s at the halfway landing now. You work your right side again and hold your muscles still as you begin to turn that way. Suddenly you"ve swung over your point of equilibrium and are lying on your right side. You strain your aching muscles to inch you forward, but the laboratory is several feet away, and you"re by no means moving in a straight line. His footsteps resound. Then you hear your wife"s terrified voice, entreating him back. There"s a long pondering silence. Then he hurries back upstairs.
You don"t let yourself rest until you"re inside the laboratory, although by then your ache feels like a cold stiff surface within your flesh and your ------------------------------------126 mouth tastes like a dusty hole in stone. Once beyond the door you sit still, gazing about. Moonlight is spread from the window to the door. Your gaze seeks the bench where you were working when he found you. He hasn"t cleared up any of the material which your convulsions threw to the floor. Glinting on the floor you can see a needle, and nearby the surgical thread which you never had occasion to use. You relax to prepare for your last concerted effort, and remember.
You recall the day you perfected the solution. As soon as you"d quaffed it you felt your brain achieve a piercing alertness, become precisely and continually aware of the messages of each nerve and preside over them, making minute adjustments at the first hint of danger. You knew this was what you"d worked for, but you couldn"t prove it to yourself until the day you felt the stirrings of cancer. Then your brain seemed to condense into a keen strand of energy that stretched down and seared the cancer out. That was proof. You were immortal.
Not that some of the research you"d had to carry out wasn"t unpleasant. It had taken you a great deal of furtive expenditure at the mortuaries to discover that some of the extracts you needed for the solution had to be taken from the living brain. The villagers thought the children had drowned, for their clothes were found on the river-bank. Medical progress, you told yourself, has always involved suffering.
Perhaps your wife suspected something of this stage of your work, or perhaps she and the butcher had simply decided to rid themselves of you. In any case, you were working at your bench, trying to synthesise your discovery, when you heard him enter. He must have rushed at you, for before you could turn you felt a blazing slash gape in the back of your neck. Then you awoke on the cellar floor.
You edge yourself forward across the laboratory. Your greatest exertion is past, but this is the most exacting part. When you"re nearly touching your p.r.o.ne body you have to turn round. You move yourself with your jaws and steer with your tongue. It"s difficult, but less so than tonguing yourself upright on your neck to rest on the stairs. Then you fit yourself to your shoulders, groping with your mind to feel the nerves linking again.
Now you"ll have to hold yourself unflinching or you"ll roll apart. With your mind you can do it. Gingerly, so as not to part yourself, you stretch out your arm for the surgical needle and thread. ------------------------------------127
In the Bag
The boy boy "so face struggled within the plastic bag. The bag laboured like a dying heart as the boy panted frantically, as if suffocated by the thickening mist of his own breath. His eyes were grey blank holes, full of fog beneath the plastic. As his mouth gaped desperately the bag closed on his face, tight and moist, giving him the appearance of a wrapped fish, not quite dead. "so face struggled within the plastic bag. The bag laboured like a dying heart as the boy panted frantically, as if suffocated by the thickening mist of his own breath. His eyes were grey blank holes, full of fog beneath the plastic. As his mouth gaped desperately the bag closed on his face, tight and moist, giving him the appearance of a wrapped fish, not quite dead.
It wasn"t his son"s face. Clarke shook his head violently to clear it of the notion as he hurried towards the a.s.sembly hall. It might have been, but Peter had had enough sense and strength to rip the bag with a stone before trying to pull it off. He"d had more strength than. ... Clarke shook his head hurriedly and strode into the hall. He didn"t propose to let himself be distracted. Peter had survived, but that was no thanks to the culprit.
The a.s.sembled school clattered to its feet and hushed. Clarke strode down the side aisle to the sound of belated clatters from the folding seats, like the last drops of rain after a downpour. Somewhere amid the muted chorus of nervous coughs, someone was rustling plastic. They wouldn"t dare breathe when he"d finished with them. Five strides took him onto the stage. He nodded curtly to the teaching staff and faced the school.
"Someone put a plastic bag over a boy"s head today," he said. "I had thought all of you understood that you come here to learn to be men. I had thought that even those of you who do not shine academically had learned to distinguish right from wrong. Apparently I was mistaken. Very well. If you behave like children, you must expect to be treated like children."
The school stirred;, the sound included the crackling of plastic. Behind him Clarke heard some of the teachers sit forward, growing tense. Let them protest if they liked. So long as this was his school its discipline would be his.
"You will all stand in silence until the culprit owns up."
Tiers of heads stretched before him, growing taller as they receded, on the ground of their green uniforms. Towards the middle he could see Peter"s head. He"d forgotten to excuse the boy from a.s.sembly, but it was too late now. In any case, the boy looked less annoyed by the oversight than embarra.s.sed ------------------------------------128 by his father"s behaviour. Did he think Clarke was treating the school thus simply because Peter was his son? Not at all; three years ago Clarke had used the same method when someone had dropped a firework in a boy"s duffel hood. Though the culprit had not come forward, Clarke had had the satisfaction of knowing he had been punished among the rest.
The heads were billiard b.a.l.l.s, arranged on baize. Here and there one swayed uneasily then hurriedly steadied as Clarke"s gaze seized it. A whole row shifted restlessly, one after another. Plastic crackled softly, jarring Clarke from his thoughts.
"It seems that the culprit is not a man but a coward," he said. "Very well. Someone must have seen what he did and who he is. No man will protect a coward from his just deserts. Don"t worry that your fellows may look down on you for betraying him. If they do not admire you for behaving like a man, they are not men."
The ranks of heads swayed gently, hypnotically. One of them must have seen what had happened to Peter: someone running softly behind him as he crossed the playing-field, dragging the bag over his head, twisting it tight about his neck, and stretching it into a knot at the back. ... Plastic rustled secretly, deep in the hall, somewhere near Peter. Was the culprit taunting Clarke? He grew cold with fury. He scrutinised the faces, searching for the unease which those closest to the sound must feel; but all the faces were defiantly bland, including Peter"s. So they refused to help him even so meagrely. Very well.
"No doubt some of you think this is an easy way to avoid your lessons," he said. "I think so, too. Instead, from tomorrow you will all a.s.semble here when school is over and stand in silence for an hour. This will continue until the culprit is found. Please be sure to tell your parents tonight. You are dismissed."
He strode to his office without a backward glance; his demeanour commanded his staff to carry on his discipline. But he had not reached his office when he began to feel dissatisfied. He was grasping the door handle when he realised what was wrong. Peter must still feel himself doubly a victim.
A cla.s.s came trooping along the corridor, protesting loudly, hastily silent. "Henry Clegg," he said. "Go to IIIA and tell Peter Clarke to come to my office immediately."
He searched the faces of the pa.s.sing boys for furtiveness. Then he noticed that although he"d turned the handle and was pushing, the door refused to move. Within, he heard a flurried crackling rustle. He threw his weight against the door, and it fell open. Paper rose from his desk and sank back ------------------------------------129 limply. He closed the window, which he"d left ajar; mist was inching towards it, across the playing-field. He must have heard a draught fumbling with his papers.
A few minutes later Peter knocked and entered. He stood before Clarke"s desk, clearly unsure how to address his father. Really, Clarke thought, the boy should call him sir at school; there was no reason why Peter should show him less respect than any other pupil.
"You understand I didn"t mean that you should stay after school, Peter," he said. "I hope that won"t cause embarra.s.sment between you and your friends. But you must realise that I cannot make an exception of them, too."
For an unguarded moment he felt as though he were justifying himself to his own son. "Very well," Peter said. "Father."
Clarke nodded for him to return to his lesson, but the boy stood struggling to speak. "What is it?" Clarke said. "You can speak freely to me."
"One of the other boys ... asked Mr Elland if you were ... right to give the detention, and Mr Elland said he didn"t think you were."
"Thank you, Peter. I shall speak to Mr Elland later. But for now, you had better return to his cla.s.s."
He gazed at the boy, and then at the closed door. He would have liked to see Peter proud of his action, but the boy looked self-conscious and rather disturbed. Perhaps he would discuss the matter with him at home, though that broke his own rule that school affairs should be raised with Peter only in school. He had enough self-discipline not to break his own rules without excellent reason.
Self-discipline must be discussed with Elland later. Clarke sat at his desk to draft a letter to the parents. Laxity in the wearing of school uniform. A fitting sense of pride. The school as a community. Loyalty, a virtue we must foster at all costs. The present decline in standards.
But the rustle of paper distracted him. He"d righted the wrong he had done Peter, he would deal with Elland later; yet he was dissatisfied. With what? The paper prompted him, rustling. There was no use pretending. He must remember what the sound reminded him of.
It reminded him of the sound the plastic bag had made once he"d put it over Derek"s head.
His mind writhed aside, distracting him with memories that were more worthy of his attention. They were difficult enough to remember--painful indeed. Sometimes it had seemed that his whole life had been contrived to force him to remember.
Whenever he had sat an examination someone had constantly rustled ------------------------------------130 paper behind him. n.o.body else had heard it; after one examination, when he"d tackled the boy who had been sitting behind him, the others had defended the accused. Realising that the sound was in himself, in the effect of stress on his senses, Clarke had gone to examinations prepared to hear it; he"d battled to ignore it, and had pa.s.sed. He"d known he must; that was only justice.
Then there had been the school play; that had been the worst incident, the most embarra.s.sing. He had produced the play from his own pared-down script, determined to make an impression in his first teaching post. But Macbeth had stalked onto the heath to a sound from the wings as of someone"s straining to blow up a balloon, wheezing and panting faintly. Clarke had pursued the sound through the wings, finding only a timidly bewildered boy with a thunder-sheet. Nevertheless, the headmaster had applauded rapidly and lengthily at the curtain. Eventually, since he himself hadn"t been blamed, Clarke ceased cross-examining his pupils.
Since then his career had done him more than justice. Sitting at his desk now, he relaxed; he couldn"t remember when he"d felt so much at ease with his memories. Of course there had been later disturbing incidents. One spring evening he had been sitting on a park bench with Edna, courting her, and had glanced away from the calm green sunset to see an inflated plastic bag caught among branches. The bag had seemed to pant violently in its struggles with the breeze; then it had begun to nod sluggishly. He"d run across the lawn in panic, but before he reached the bag, it had been s.n.a.t.c.hed away, to retreat nodding into the darkness between the trees. For a moment, vaguely amid his panic, it had made him think of the unidentified boy who had appeared beside him in a cla.s.s photograph, face blurred into a grey blob. Edna had asked him no questions, and he"d been grateful to forget the incident. But the panic still lay in his memory, now he looked.
It was like the panic he"d felt while awaiting Peter"s birth. That had been late in the marriage; there might have been complications. Clarke had waited, trying to slow his breath, holding himself back; panic had been waiting just ahead. If there were any justice, Edna at least would survive. He"d heard someone approaching swiftly beyond the bend in the hospital corridor: a purposeful crackling rustle--a nurse. He had felt pinned down by panic; he"d known that the sound was bearing death towards him. But the nurse must have turned aside beyond the bend. Instead, a doctor had appeared to call him in to see his wife and son. For the only time in his life, Clarke had rushed away to be sick with relief.
As if he had vomited out what haunted him, the panic had never seized ------------------------------------131 him again. But Derek remained deep in his mind, waiting. Each time his thoughts brushed the memory they shrank away; each time it seemed more shameful and horrible. He had never been able to look at it directly.
But why not? He had looked at all these memories without flinching. He had dealt with Peter, later he would deal with Elland. He felt una.s.sailably right, incapable of wrong. He would not be doing himself justice if he did not take his chance.
He sat forward, as if to interview his memory. He coaxed his mind towards it, trying to relax, rea.s.suring himself. There was nothing to fear, he was wholly secure. He must trust his sense of innate Tightness; not to remember would be to betray it. He braced himself, closing his eyes. At the age of ten, he had killed another boy.
He and Derek had been playing at the end of the street, near the disused railway line. They weren"t supposed to be there, but their parents rarely checked. The summer sun had been trying to shake off trails of soot that rose from the factory chimneys. The boys had been playing at s.p.a.cemen, inspired by the cover of a magazine crumpled among the rubble. They"d found a plastic bag.
Clarke had worn it first. It had hung against his ears like blankets when he breathed; his ears had been full of his breathing, the bag had grown stuffily hot and misty at once, clinging to his face. Then Derek had s.n.a.t.c.hed it for himself.
Clarke hadn"t liked him really, hadn"t counted him as much of a friend. Derek was sly, he grabbed other people"s toys, he played vindictive tricks on others then whined if they turned on him. When he did wrong he tried to pa.s.s the blame to someone else--but that day Clarke had had n.o.body else to play with. They"d wanted to play s.p.a.cemen chasing Martians over the waste ground of the moon, but Derek"s helmet had kept flying off. Clarke had pulled it tight at the back of Derek"s neck, to tie a careful knot.
They ran until Derek fell down. He"d lain kicking on the rubble, pulling at the bag, at his neck. The bag had ballooned, then had fastened on his face like grey skin, again and again. His fingernails had squeaked faintly on the plastic; he"d sounded as though he were trying to cough. When Clarke had stooped to help him he"d kicked out blindly and viciously. Dismayed by the sight, infuriated by the rebuff, Clarke had run away. Realising that he didn"t know where he was running to he"d panicked and had hidden in the outside toilet for hours, long after the woman"s screams had gone by, and the ambulance.
Though n.o.body had known he and Derek had been together--since Derek"s sister and her boyfriend were supposed to have kept the boy with ------------------------------------132 them in the park--Clarke had waited, on the edge of panic, for Derek"s father to knock at the front door. But the next day his mother had told him Derek had had an accident; he"d been warned never to play with plastic bags, and that was all. It wasn"t enough, he"d decided years later, while watching a fight; too many of his cla.s.smates" parents weren"t enough for their children; he"d known then what his career was to be. By then he had been able to relax, except for the depths of his mind.