After You'd Gone (29 page)

Read After You'd Gone Online

Authors: Maggie O'farrell

Tags: #Contemporary, #Sagas, #Fiction, #Romance

But then the creature seemed to shrug inside its skin, its back bristling up into dinosaur spines, and it started to edge around the room, low to the ground. It looked at them again, opened its red maw of a mouth and began to emit a horrible, yowling cry.
'What's wrong with it?' Ben asked anxiously, ducking down to peer at it, under the table. 'Is it in pain?'
Ann put her hands over her ears. The noise seemed to enter the sides of her head like knives. 'How should I know?' She caught sight of the cat-biscuit box on the table again, and said, 'Maybe it's hungry.' She shuddered. The noise was a hideous cross between miaowing and weeping. She'd never heard anything like it, didn't know cats were capable of a noise like that. 'Ben, it's horrible, horrible. Can't you get it to stop?'
Ben tried to get hold of it, or tried to stroke it, addressing it in low, soothing tones, but it wouldn't let him get anywhere near it. The ululating howl went on and on. Ann couldn't stand

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it any longer. She pushed her way through the kitchen door to go back into the sitting room and, as she did so, the cat shot out with her, grazing her legs with the fur of its flank, sprinting across the floorboards of the sitting room and disappearing up the stairs.
They waited, Ann in the doorway, Ben standing by the table. The noise had stopped. All Ann could hear was Ben breathing and that monotonous grind of traffic you seemed to be able to hear everywhere in London. They stood together in this sudden calm, side by side, barely moving. Then Ann thought about the light that was still burning in the room above their heads, and realised they were both afraid to go upstairs.

 

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Alice staggers through the door with three bags of shopping, kicking the door shut behind her. She transfers all the bags to one hand and bends to pick up the post with the other. On the way to the kitchen she looks through it idly. A letter for John. A shiny envelope addressed to 'The Occupier' telling them to 'Play and Win Today!' and a postcard for John in sloping black handwriting. She knows even as she starts to read it that she shouldn't be reading it but something goads her on until she's finished. Then she goes back to the beginning and reads it again. Then she reads it again and again and again, after which she puts the shopping down on the table, switches on the kettle, still holding the postcard, sits down, places it squarely in front of her and reads it again: 'Dear John,' it begins, 'It was, as always, great to see you last weekend. Thanks for coming over. I only wish I could see you more often, but you seem so busy these days. Thanks also for sharing with me your dilemma. My only wish is for your happiness, and I know that you cannot be happy in the long term with someone who isn't Jewish. If you want to have affairs with a few non-Jewish girls, it is no concern of mine. But if you marry this girl, or live with her as if you are married, I will no longer be able to think of you as my son. I know your mother would have felt the same. Fondest love, Dad.'

 

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Alice sits for a long time with the card on the table before her. She reaches into the carrier-bags for an apple, which she rolls between her palms, staring at the card for so long that the black letters blur into tiny black dots that jump about like ants. Then she looks away and presses the cool green skin of the apple to her forehead. With her fingertips, she turns the card over: on the other side is a picture of Brighton pier in a distinctively seventies tint, with a violently turquoise sky and lurid orange windbreakers on the beach. She wonders if Daniel Friedmann chose this view deliberately or whether it was the first card that came to hand.
Then she gets up and roots in her bag for her address book, walks over to the phone and dials a number. 'Rachel? Hi, it's me. Listen, I can't talk now, but can I come and stay? . . . No, it's not that . . . Kind of . . . I know . . . Look, I'll tell you all about it later . . . Yes . . . No . . . I just don't know at the moment . . . It won't be for long, I promise . . . No, I know that . . . Thanks . . . See you in a bit.'
She hangs up, goes through the living room and up the stairs. On the landing she pauses, as if she's lost her way, but then she goes into the bedroom and pulls a bag down from the cupboard.
John has been anxious - over-anxious, in her opinion - that she should make as many changes to the house as she needs to make it feel like her home as well as his. He keeps telling her to move whatever she wants, paint rooms, and insisted that they go shopping last weekend to buy furniture for her. She hadn't really thought it necessary - John's house seems amorphous to her; fluid, comfortable, normal. There is nothing that grates on her, nothing that feels alien. But, to keep him happy, they had driven furiously from second-hand shop to second-hand shop, cramming the car and, when no more would fit, strapping on to the roof-rack a chest of drawers, an armchair with a sagging
seat and a piled brown cover, a bookcase, another bookcase, a small bedside table. At the cheval mirror, she had tried to persuade him to stop. 'Might come in handy, though,' he'd said, raising his eyebrows at her, 'somewhere in the bedroom. Don't you think?' Alice had burst out laughing. The shop-owner had a fit of coughing.
She pulls open her chest of drawers. It had taken them three goes to get it up the stairs. John's friend Sam had come round in the end to help. Alice had stood on the landing as the two men swore and shunted and cursed as they heaved it up, step by step.
Into her bag she shoves a jumble of whatever comes into her vision - underwear, shirts, a pair of jeans. She can't think logically. She leaves her new chest, bookcases and table and goes into the bathroom, where she sweeps all her things into ,one of the bag's side pockets. She stands a moment looking at the axolotl hanging as usual in its tank; it gazes back at her morosely, then she clatters down the stairs. If she is really going to leave tonight, she needs to be gone before John gets back: if she sees him, it will be impossible to walk through that door.
It's only when she sits down on the tube that she bursts into tears.

 

John returns at about nine. The house is dark. He fumbles for the hall light as he wipes his feet and shakes the rain out of his hair.
'Alice!' he calls. No answer. 'Alice?' He listens for her
answering voice. Nothing. Was she going out tonight? He tries to remember if she said anything about it this morning, but doesn't recall her mentioning it. The answerphone is on but there are no messages. In the living room he sits down, kicks off his shoes and yawns. He feels a little disgruntled and
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wishes she was in. He was looking forward to seeing her and bought a bottle of wine on the way home. Was this what life was like before he met her? Returning home, tired, to a cold and empty house? Although she's only been living here permanently for a week, he has become rather hooked to the surge of pleasure he gets from coming back to find her curled up in the bedroom reading, or talking to the axolotl while running a bath, or watering the seedlings she's planted in an old sink just outside the back door. He goes into the kitchen, sees some bags of shopping on the table and is puzzled. She must have been in and gone out again. When he reaches for the kettle to boil water for some tea, he finds it full of still hot water.
He wanders upstairs to the bathroom, fills the basin with water and splashes it repeatedly over his face. As he is humming to himself and lathering his hands with some fancy-smelling soap that Alice has put there, he stops dead. Her toothbrush has gone. His own toothbrush lolls on its own in the mug. He hurriedly rinses his hands and wipes them on his trousers, darting paranoid glances around the room. Don't be silly, he tells himself, she'll have left it somewhere in the house. But her moisturiser has gone, her hairbrush has gone, her towel has gone.
John rushes across the landing and wrenches open the chest of drawers they bought a few days ago from a junk shop on the Holloway Road. Has anything been taken from here? It's hard to tell. There are still loads of clothes here, all neatly folded one on top of the other. He spins round to the bed. All her books are still stacked up on her side. It's OK. She's just out somewhere. And taken all her make-up and her toothbrush with her? But she hasn't gone. She can't have gone. It is then that he sees the top of the cupboard behind him, reflected in the mirror above the bed. There is a large space where she had previously stored her rucksack, the one that had been all round the world
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with her, she'd told him proudly. He flops down on to the bed.
\Vhy, why, why has she gone? He racks his brain to think of anything out of the ordinary that happened that morning. Did he say anything to upset her? They had had breakfast together, like they did most mornings, and she kissed him goodbye before she left for the tube. Nothing awful in that. They had talked about going to the Czech Republic in the summer after she had seen a picture of Prague on the back of a cereal packet. Had he said anything outrageous enough to make her want to leave him?
A note. She must have left a note. Maybe she had had to go away unexpectedly and had been unable to contact him. Maybe one of her family was ill or something. She would never have just left without saying anything, would she? He bolts down the stairs and scours the living room for a piece of paper with her handwriting on it. Nothing. He goes through to the kitchen and searches desperately through the shopping. Perhaps she left a note in there avocados, pasta, aubergines, yoghurt. Nothing more. It is then that he sees something on the table. He snatches it up and for a moment he is so hyped up that he can't read it. It's a postcard from his father. vVhy is he sending him a postcard? He never sends him postcards. Ever. He is just about to fling it aside and continue the search for the missing Alice when he catches sight of the words 'non-Jewish'. His heart closes in dread and he reads it through rapidly, his eyes darting across the closely spaced words, one hand clamped to his forehead. For a few moments afterwards he can only stare at it blinking. How could his father be so cruel, not only to him but to Alice? He must have known that there was a strong chance that she would read this.
He lowers himself into a chair and tears the card in two with deliberate precision. He then tears the two halves into 'two equal parts, and tears those two halves into two and continues
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in this way until he has a small heap of black, white and shiny seventies Brighton sky-coloured confetti.
He must think about this logically. He now knows why she's gone but the question is where would she have gone to? Out of everyone she knows, who would she have run to? She'll have most likely taken her address book with her, otherwise he could have gone through her friends alphabetically. Who might she call after reading this? Her family! Her sisters! Of course. He starts up and reaches for the phone. 'Raikes,' he mutters, 'Raikes of North Berwick.'
Directory Enquiries gives him the number, which he scribbles on the back of his hand with the biro he has tied to the phone. He is just about to punch in the number when he receives a warning nudge from his common sense. What is he going to say to them? Hi, it's John. You don't know this yet but your daughter has moved in with me. Yes, it's great news, isn't it? Anyway, she's gone missing. I think she's left me. You wouldn't happen to know where she is, would you? No? Oh well, never mind. I'm sure she'll turn up.
John replaces the receiver. She must be somewhere in London. She's due at work tomorrow, after all. For a split second - and a split second only, as he prides himself later - he entertains the notion that she's gone back to Jason. Don't be ridiculous, John. Get a grip.
He paces up and down the living room, as if searching for clues, but all he can think is, Alice has left me, Alice has left me. Is this what happens in a crisis? Your brain offers up only the most mundane information. Who, who, who is she with?
It is only after he has done his fifth circuit of the room that it hits him. Rachel. Who else? All he has to do now is remember her surname and he can get her number from the phone book. Rachel . . . Rachel . . . Rachel . . . who? It's no use. Alice has probably never even mentioned her surname.

 

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He knows she lives somewhere in south London, Greenwich, maybe, but has no idea where exactly. He quells an irrational urge to get in the car and drive through the streets looking for her, and hurls himself despairingly on to the sofa, gazing at the phone. Ring me, Alice. Go on. Pick up the phone, wherever you are, and dial this number. Don't do this to me.
Suddenly he sits up, revitalised with an idea. The last redial button. Surely she would phone whoever she was going to before she set out? Thank God for technology. His hand trembles slightly as he presses the button and he clamps the receiver to his ear, as if desperate not to miss a sound. The other end rings once, twice, three times before he hears the unmistakable click and hiss of an answering-machine. Damn, damn, damn. Then he hears, 'Hi, this is Rachel's machine. I can't come to the phone right now but leave me a message and I might call you back.' Brilliant! He knew it, he knew that's who she'd call. He clears his throat nervously. Whoever' s side Rachel was on, it certainly wouldn't be his. 'Hi Rachel, it's John here. I was wondering if you had heard anything from Alice tonight. Could you please give me a call on . . . '

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