The Fowler Family Business (25 page)

Read The Fowler Family Business Online

Authors: Jonathan Meades

It was, inevitably, Alf and Alf and Alf who told her that there was scrumpy in Kent after she had mentioned its primacy in her old life. They drank, all right, but they shared the sweet-tooth gene – Sambuca with a Malibu top, cassis and Bailey’s. They didn’t drink scrumpy because of who them that did were: the DSS cases in Sheerness, the no-hoper headbangers in Chatham’s mean terraces. They were, though, generous and unproscriptive people. They fixed to take her to Lazaretto Farm where they had heard the pokiest stuff was made. It was a Saturday afternoon. Alf drove because Alf was banned and Alf was over the limit, could hardly stand, snored in the other front seat. They drove through avenues of hop poles. The malevolent cranes on Grain across the water dwarfed the patched farm buildings that she would come to know so well. They drove across marshes where water was differentiated from land only by the hulks’ slithy ribs that protruded from its tidal mud. They drove along a causeway past the site of the disappeared lazaretto, a circular artificial island in the glutinous estuary separated from the land by a convict-dug canal: the turf was fervently green and rodent-cropped by the teeth of more rabbits than she had ever seen, they bobbed like balls of cotton and she felt ever so content.

Because Uncle Father Roy was a priest without convictions for driving offences the Archdiocese of Southwark had appointed him Chaplain to the M2 and the M20. He administered extreme unction to bodies broken in scrap sculptures in the fog, to concertinaed victims of unforeseen tailbacks, to somersaulters and hard-shoulder strays. But because he was now so fat that he had his own climate and each of his chins its own postcode, he and his 58-inch waist wouldn’t fit into the rusty ten-year-old Punto that went with the job. He had to be chauffeured to death sites in big cars (Dennis Wendy Taxis Maidstone Ltd: a rosary was slung from the rear-view mirror). So as soon as Teresa passed her driving test she was able, whenever she wanted, to make her own way to Lazaretto Farm. She was never stuck for scrumpy. Nor for its distillate. Rowan and Annick were self-proclaiming antinomians, renegade industrial chemists, veterans of a thousand trips, former commercial synthesisers of LSD. They had stashed the profits, paid their debt to society (Winson Green, Holloway), sold up on Exmoor after their release and had relocated to Kentish isolation in the belief that this was a county whose police force was too overworked in the Crime Belt that extends from Chislehurst to Thanet to concern itself with a couple of myopic hippies making sheep cheese and cider. An incorrect belief, it turned out. Idle rozzers are always keen for easy prey. They tend to visit on the flimsiest of pretexts, they love a Christmas box in July. And because they were prone to watch the causeway to Lazaretto Farm from a copse beside the rutted field where races were held every Sunday in the stock-car season Rowan and Annick suggested that if Teresa slake her addiction at the farm she stay the night. The eyes in the copse knew precisely the point where the farm’s property ended and the public road (and over-the-limit arrest opportunities) began.

She had never stayed in anyone else’s house. She had never, as a child, been allowed to sleep over. She was astonished by the teenagers Hardin and Owsley; by their treatment of their parents as friends, by their effusive demonstrations of affection, by their disrespectful obstinacy, by their sexual candour.

In this house where she would eventually lose her sight she first lost her sense of clock time. She would stumble along the unlit corridors, bumping into teetering bookshelves and pictureless frames slumped against the walls, the legless tables, the collapsing settles. She would wake Saffron, the youngest child, and offer to take her walking on the marshes. Saffron would look at her alarm clock whose hands were grinning cats and tell Teresa that it was half past three in the morning and that she wanted to get back to sleep. An hour later Teresa, having returned meanwhile to a scrumpy barrel, is again in Saffron’s room, oblivious of her last visit and eager to read the girl a bedtime story.

When she had gained her secretarial qualification Rowan and Annick invited her to work at Lazaretto Farm. She milked ewes, forked manure, baited eel traps, hauled them filled with writhing silver life from vernal leets in the morning, skinned them, skinned rabbits, bottled damsons, picked apples, made the mash to make the scrumpy to sell to jacks from Chatham, to pongos from Brompton Barracks. She marvelled at the tidal mud’ banks rendered edible-looking by the setting sun. She composed a morbid litany of the names of the saltings and the creeks to make her spine alive: The Shade, Slaughterhouse Point, Ham Ooze, Bedlam’s Bottom, Deadman’s Island. And all the while she was drinking, drinking, staring at the sky to tell her mother there how much she loved this close-knit chaotic family and their wandering friends who arrived without warning, careless toking folk who believed in karma and hand-painted vans.

She returned to the clergy house often enough to keep Uncle Father Roy warm with her bloated body, with bottles of applejack which burned so much he needed more. When she was paid she was paid a pittance most of which Uncle Father Roy took for household contributions. That left her short but she never went with a lad for money, never went with one for love or fun, never went with one at all.

When Rowan and Annick couldn’t afford to pay her at all she would find work as a secretary. Never for long. It was the people. They were chatty, lippy, prying. She could tell that they thought her a queer one. They exploited her diligence by giving her as much of their work as they dared so she had to stay late and all that was to be said for that was that she didn’t have to partake in the communal ritual of the after-office drink: drinking was what she did alone, with her mother and her dreams.

It was during such a period, whilst temping in the claims department of a freight haulage company, that the initial sign of optic atrophy manifested itself. One Thursday lunch-time she walked across the office to look down into the yard where the liveried artics were loaded. They had changed colour. These must, she initially assumed, be vehicles that she hadn’t seen before, part of an auxiliary fleet. Then she realised that the company logo and name were blurred. Had she not known that the marginally inclined capital letters spelled
GIBSON & MILLS
she would not have been able to distinguish the name.

There can be no doubt that the multiple vitamin deficiencies she suffered as a result of alcohol’s ruseful ability to persuade the body that it is being fed, as well as drugged, contributed to the onset of the condition known, because it is observed in populations whose diet is reliant on cassava, as ‘West Indian amblyopia’ or ‘Jamaican amblyopia’. That lunch-time when she looked at the soft-edged, chromatically amended lorries she barely nibbled her peanut-butter sandwich.

The drizzle she saw was fine, relentless, perpendicular, yet the asphalt yard didn’t turn from matt to gloss, nor did the lorries’ paintwork gleam.

Chapter Twenty

Henry Fowler was shocked by Teresa Sullivan’s story, by her willingness to tell it to a stranger in such detail, with such dispassion, as if it had all happened to someone else, someone unknown.

Had she invented the pitiful creature who shared her name? Was this humiliating biography a nightmare fomented by her sensory lack? A masochistic compensation? Are the blind not blessed with heightened imaginative faculties just as they are with increased senses of smell and touch? If they make such efficient smoke alarms and masseurs maybe they are also consummate fantasists. But could Uncle Father Roy have been dreamed up?

He was shocked, too, that he should pay such keen attention to the way she bulged within and without his mother’s wedding dress.

The stays were stretched. The upper bodice’s hooks didn’t reach their eyes. Her pudgy arms were distended by the puffed sleeves’ tight cuffs. Neck folds lapped over elaborate stitching. He feared the dress might burst. It pulled at the seams to reveal margins of material that had not been exposed to light since the garment was made and whose hue was denser. Her grubby, once-white brassière’s frayed back was exposed. Her spine’s course was obscured by a rolling landscape of fat.

She curtsied. She twirled clumsily. Like a navvy executing a
ronde de jambe
: he immediately regretted his ignobility of thought. She was giving herself such enjoyment that she displayed a hefty grace. This was for her, not for him. He wasn’t meant to be watching, wasn’t meant to be torturing himself with invented remembrance of his mother’s proud day and repining at this betrayal of her sacred garment. He was ashamed that the eyes he cast over the figure in the dress in the stale, dead bedroom were the eyes of a man observing a woman. Such eyes consume dance, and dance is the precursor of love. Henry was worried by himself. He feared too that she might detect his mute fascination, that his intentions might be misunderstood by Jane. The bitch was slumped against a pile of blankets, moistening them with her viscous slobber, but her eyes were open and she was watching Henry. Miss Sullivan stomped about. Was she essaying ballroom steps?

‘Do I look ath lubbely ath your mump did?’

He said: ‘Of course you do.’

She stood facing the drawn curtains as a sighted woman might a mirror. She wriggled, she plucked at the sleeves, smoothed the material across her buttocks and thighs, turned to scrutinise the profile.

‘I can see that he’th gone neeb lettib out.’

‘I suppose so … Yes.’

How, he wondered, could he so recklessly dishonour his mother? He was touched by the ingenuous presumption of suggesting it should be altered. Inside the near-dropsical body that demanded the garment’s expansion was a near-child. Her wish to possess, uninfected by covetousness, was an expression of delight. It was an adventure prompted by want. This is what Henry told himself. He was fascinated by his slight act of altruism, by his readiness to put himself out during such difficult days. He wondered why he should have acceded to her request. There but for the grace of … He pitied her for her use of
see
even if it was merely figurative, unconsidered habit. Her blindness was unqualified. She couldn’t see the disparity between her body and the dress that bandaged it. She couldn’t see Henry.

He asked: ‘What do you imagine I look like?’

She giggled and replied, clumsily coquettish: ‘Tall, dar, hanthobe.’

‘Two out of three.’

‘Wish two?’

‘Ah-ha!’

She turned towards him, all the better to scrutinise him.

She inclines her head, tilts it from side to side. Her movements are founded in forgotten gestural memory. She cannot see. She cannot see that Henry Fowler’s erection is outside his trousers, that the thick vermicular creature from the deep is polished mauve for her, that it’s emitting a leucous dribble. Only he knows how long it has been there, beyond his button flies, proud of the formerly containing black twill tailored in Kidderminster.

She cannot see, but she can sense the change in his breathing, the systolic pounding, the tension. She knows. She knows. The way she reaches out, searches for it: he might be seven years old again in his flannel shorts, tempting fate in a game of blind man’s buff with Stanley in the blindfold.

‘You’re a nauthy one Mithtar Fowler. He feelth like a right prettyith fellow.’

Her left hand was coarsely vigorous. He was reminded of the way milkmaids practise on cows. Her right hand held to her gobbling mouth a cold faggot from the fridge.

He ejaculated on the straining belly of his mother’s wedding dress. His mother was dead, she didn’t feel a thing.

The stains were, immediately, someone else’s, they belonged to the past, to a past as distant as that in which he had smelled Ben’s sweat-ringed squash shirt when he put it in the washing machine and had convinced himself that it must be OK because the boy, the future champion, was his son and he was a fertile father doting on his son’s pubescent secretions.

Teresa insisted that she had to get home. Even though, she said, she hadn’t shared his bed for years Uncle Father Roy fretted if she wasn’t there. Bad things happen to the blind at night, she didn’t want to cause him any worry, not with his heart.

It was the least Henry could do to take her, it was the gentlemanly thing to do. And, besides, he loved driving through the long suburbs at night, as hermetic in his locked car as his people in the safety of their bolted homes – what triumphs of cocooned privacy, what fertile groves for the pursuit of lives free of collective imperatives, for individuality and discreet hobbies. Here was the lamplit core of England’s happiness.

Then there came a swath of inhospitable countryside: commons, fenced fields, bungalow smallholdings, scars of raw chalk, horses, coppices, water tanks in silhouette, a motorway whose roar alerted her to its proximity before he saw its chains of red-and-white light.

Some while after they had crossed it, on the edge of a straggling village where they waited at a junction for a gap in traffic, she asked him if he could hear a noise. He cocked his head. From somewhere in the night came a repetitive lowing groan. A far-off creature in terrible pain?

‘Thas the paper mill. Know tha’ noise anyfwhere.’

‘Oh …’ He laughed: ‘That’s all right then.’

‘You look oppsit the gatesh.’

The mill entrance was marked by a presently lowered barrier and a brick hut at a gap in a line of poplars. On the other side of the road a multiply gabled late-Victorian house stood beyond a car park where a signboard was under-lit from such an angle that it was glaringly illegible.

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