Read The Burying Beetle Online

Authors: Ann Kelley

Tags: #Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)

The Burying Beetle (11 page)

Mum and I were the only foreigners on that bit of coast, apart from a Polish woman who looked after the cottages. We didn’t see much of her, because she suffered from malaria and had fevers.

Being there was like time standing still, a paradise on earth. The sun shone every day. We ate bananas, fish, and curries. Fishermen came to the door with parrotfish and lobsters. Dhows with white sails passed on the horizon. There was a reef a mile out and sometimes we walked out to it at low tide to look at the starfish and sea cucumbers, and gather shells. We only picked up the empty shells of course, but we saw loads of live shellfish. There were huge clams tucked in among the coral. When the tide came in, all the little white crabs – they were almost see-through – made a rush for the little waves, and then changed their minds and ran back to the beach. They live in holes in the sand and if you chased them they would sometimes go into another crab’s hole and be chased out again. I used to watch them for hours. We found lots of tiny red coral pieces on the beach. They have holes in and we made them into necklaces and bracelets. They were a bit scratchy but very pretty.

Sometimes when we had to go into town to shop, we went into Barclay’s Bank to get cool. It was the only place apart from the cinema that had air conditioning. I saw my first ever film in Mombasa – it was
Dr Doolittle
. The grown-ups kept making noise and the children had to keep shushing them so they could concentrate on the film. It was like a huge party going on with people drinking beer and laughing and talking. I thought all cinemas would be like that and was quite surprised and disappointed when I went to a cinema in England.

The only thing I didn’t like was going past Mombasa meat market. Yuk – the smell of warm meat. I always held my nose as we drove by.

There was an elderly man staying at one of the other cottages for the whole winter. He walked around in his pyjama bottoms because of the heat. He said he was ‘happy with this view and sixpence’. He and Mum used to sit together in the evenings and drink gin and tonic and laugh.

I would love to go back to Africa.

Eugene rang the bell this morning and when I went to the door he had a letter for me. It’s from the hang-glider man. He’s still in hospital. He says he’s very grateful to me for calling for help. Someone must have told him.

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

Note: I have just rescued a bumblebee. It was trapped inside the downstairs room, buzzing about sounding very worried. I managed to get it onto an aquilegia head and put it outside onto a potted pelagonium. It must have thought it had died and gone to Heaven.

WHEN
I
WAS
born I had to have an operation straight away almost, and I nearly died. The Australian surgeon said to Mum and Daddy, ‘Your baby nearly went to Heaven.’

Mum said my babyhood was a Total Nightmare.

Luckily I don’t remember anything about it. I know I had a dummy and Grandma kept trying to take it away from me. But I don’t really remember, it’s just that Mum told me that later.

My right-hand thumb is the one I still sometimes suck
– only when I’m really, really tired – but I’m actually left-handed. Which is strange. Maybe I write with my left hand because my other hand was always stuck to my mouth. My handwriting is crap.

Mum thinks children should have all the comfort they can get, whether it’s a dummy or a thumb to suck, or a cuddly blanket, whatever. She said she wasn’t allowed to breastfeed me because I was too weak to suck at first. I was fed through a tube that went up my nose and down my throat. Luckily, I don’t remember that either. She tried to breastfeed me, but I just couldn’t suck enough milk to keep me alive. I think she probably feels guilty about it.

Mothers feel guilty about everything, even when they aren’t, she says, and if you’re a mother You Can’t Win.

I think the first thing that I remember about being alive was Grandpop throwing me in the air and catching me. Flying. I was flying and safe. Scared and happy at the same time.

Mum says I need more men in my life. She does, she means.

She used to smoke but gave it up when she was pregnant with me. She’s recently started again, even though Grandpop died of cancer. Daddy’s never smoked. I wish Mum wouldn’t. She says it’s her Only Vice these days, and she doesn’t do it in the house because she doesn’t want to expose me to passive smoking. Actually, I think she drinks too much, too. And she keeps crying. I’ve seen her in the garden, pretending to dig or something, but her face is all puckered up.

I never did that thing some children do when their parents split up – hope they’ll get back together. It never occurred to me. I just thought that was what fathers did – pissed off when they’d had enough, or when things got tough, or when they met someone younger. Most of my friends have stepfathers, or their mums live with a partner who is not the father of their children. We’re not so very different. Except Mum hasn’t got a partner.

When we live in St Ives she will be able to go out more. I could make friends too, maybe. And when I go to school there I’ll definitely make friends. Anyway, I just live for the day. Make the most of every moment in case it’s the last.

Note: We are making shell curtains to hang over open doors to stop butterflies and flies and bees coming in.

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

Note
: We saw a little baby badger last night. (Perhaps if I open the kitchen door and keep the light on, it will still come, won’t be frightened and I can take a photo of it.) Its mother or father came first, about ten o’clock

it was nearly dark

ate the bits of bread, and went. I put out the cats’ leftovers in case he/she came back looking for something more substantial. Almost immediately, this baby arrived. It was so sweet – no stripes yet, just the salt and pepper bristles. I hope it comes back tonight. I’ll put out some of the cat food that the cats won’t eat. They’ll only eat the food in sachets these days. God, they’re fussy. I suppose they get enough protein from free-range mouse, anyway.

I
HAVE
BEEN examining Rambo’s eyes very closely, using Mr Writer’s magnifier. (I’d forgotten about it. I must take it out in the garden.) They are like prehistoric amber – the pale yellow sort with tiny black fish embedded. So there’s all this liquid amber, sliding, and the elliptical black iris swimming and changing shape. When he comes in from the dark his eyes are totally
black and bottomless.

He sees ghosts, unfortunately. It upsets him. When I pick him up he looks over my shoulder at the corner of the room and is worried by his visions. Mind you, he’s worried by everything. Poor Rambo is a nervous wreck. He’s fine if you’re sitting down or prone on the sofa. But if you walk towards him when he’s eating, or if you stand up, he’ll run away as if you’re going to hurt him. And no one in our family has ever hurt him. He’s neurotic. I wonder if he sees people ghosts, or cat ghosts? Maybe he sees Grandpop and Grandma. I really think that when we die we end up in another universe, running alongside this one, and some people cross over sometimes and see each other over space or time, like when you’re in a car on a motorway and you see the cars coming towards you on the other side of the barrier.

A dog swam from the rocks below the house today. He had a woman with him who threw something into the sea for him to fetch. He was a good swimmer.

I don’t fancy swimming from the rocks
– even though the water is calm and clear. I know it’s cold. I’m not good at cold.

Even on a lovely evening like it is now, it’s cold here after the sun goes behind the cliff. If we were on the beach that faces west, we could be watching the sun going down. There would be children playing and people lighting barbecues, and gulls creeping close to take anything worth eating from plastic bags. Families having fun.

Oh! There’s a dolphin! I just saw a dolphin. And another. Three of them. Heading towards St Ives, going past the headland. Big dolphins. And a little one. A whole crowd of dolphins. I can see without the bins, but I’ve found them and now I see there are at least six of them I think.

‘Mum! Dolphins!’

We stand like idiots, watching the dolphins, mesmerised by them, crying, almost. How wonderful that such huge creatures live in our sea. They survive all the pollution and fishing nets and jet-skis and motorboat propellers and there they are, leaping up and playing and fishing off our beach.

They go off around the headland towards St Ives, and I suggest to Mum that we follow them, so we do. She takes the heavy binoculars and I take my lightweight ones. I go as fast as I can along the garden path, out the gate and along the coast path. She runs ahead. I’m out of breath as I reach her, standing on the cliff edge looking down at the dolphins who have moved across the next beach now, Carbis Bay, headed towards Porthminster and St Ives. I wonder if anyone on the beach can see them. They don’t appear to be looking in their direction. We have a great view because we are so high. There are six, I think, and they have white bellies, which you can see when they come right out of the water.

We’ve seen dolphins! It’s like a visitation – like seeing the badgers. I feel honoured to have witnessed the wild animals. We are so lucky. I didn’t take any photographs. Things always look so separated from the photographer through the lens, Daddy says. Anyway, I didn’t even think about it.

We watch until they’re out of sight – in fact they dive and don’t resurface as they get closer to St Ives. We walk back slowly, bird-watching as we go – cormorants and herring gulls and a pair of stonechats. Stonechats love to get on a high point – a rock or the highest twig of a bush – and sing. There are butterflies, very tiny, grey blue, and a lovely smell of summer, the yellow gorse – which is more like coconut oil than Ambre Solaire. It is very lovely here – so wild and unspoilt, considering it is so close to such a busy holiday town.

‘I’m glad we came here,’ I tell Mum.

‘Good, darling, I’m glad you’re glad.’

I feel happy. Happiness is an odd feeling. Like being opened up inside. As if I have been surgically opened to my heart, which is singing. I hope, if, and when, I get someone’s heart, that that person’s heart has felt such happiness. I suppose it’s what they call joy. A pure, clean, lovely sensation, as if I am in love with the world. Which I suppose I am, at this very moment in time. Make the most of every moment. Well, we are, I am.

Peregrine Cottage feels suddenly like home, whatever home is. It’s a strange business, feeling at home somewhere. I never did really feel at home at our last house, where we moved after Daddy and Mum split up. He stayed on in Camden Town while we moved to Chalk Farm, so I could carry on at the same hospital and school. The Chalk Farm house was OK. I just never felt it was my real home. Naturally, I wanted to be in the house where I had grown up, with Daddy. And I never did go back to school, anyway.

I always felt at home in Grandpop’s house, with Grandma’s cooking smells and the sound of chickens in the garden. I suppose that’s where I felt most safe, even though it wasn’t my real home. The sound of the kettle whistling. My white cockerel. My den in the old coal shed. I had an old mat, a blanket, a blunt kitchen knife, my cowboy hat and gun, and my herd of wild horses, and Thunderhead, of course.

Grandma paid me for collecting caterpillars from her cabbages. Drowned caterpillars stink of rotten cabbages. I have never eaten cabbage since.

I keep having dreams about trying to get home – an unspecified place, but I’m lost in a strange city, unable to catch a train, without money or passport or a map. Sometimes I can’t speak the language or read the street signs. The bus never comes, I miss the train, I’m never able to get home. Why do I keep having this dream? No dream books here, unfortunately. Maybe I’ll be a psychologist when I grow up. I’d love to be psychoanalysed. It must be wonderful to talk about yourself all the time and have someone listen to what you say. Of course, you’d have to pay someone to do that.

We don’t get many visitors, as we haven’t made any friends here yet. But we do get Jehovah’s Witnesses. Always the same two, a young man and a slightly younger woman – in their early twenties, I think. Very serious, smartly dressed, she always wears a longish dark skirt. They knock at the door and Mum says, ‘I can’t spare the time to talk to you now. You’ll have to make an appointment to see me.’

She sounds angry.

‘Why don’t you want to talk to them, Mum?’ I ask after they leave.

‘They don’t believe in blood transfusions, Gussie. If you had been born the child of a Jehovah’s Witness, you wouldn’t be alive.’

I wonder why they believe that. I think we should invite them in and ask them, but Mum is adamant. She doesn’t want to get into an argument.

She always takes one of their leaflets, though. It’s called the
Lighthouse
or something. She uses them as cat-food mats when we run out of
Independent
s. Last time they came, we were just on our way out and we walked up with them from the house. There were four more of them standing by the railway line, all in black, like a funeral party, looking over the beach, standing on the very edge.

Mum told them, ‘It’s Not Safe – people throw their garden rubbish over the edge and it looks more solid than it is.’

Afterwards, when we were in the car, we were hysterical, laughing at the possible headlines in the newspaper if they had all gone over the cliff: ‘A Wailing of Witnesses’; ‘Jumping Jehovahs’;  ‘Wipe-out of Witnesses’.

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