Authors: Tim Clare
As the ringing in her ears died down, it broke into bits. All the little fragments rang at different pitches, fading in and out.
Was this the madness, finally? Was her birthright coming to claim her?
Then she realised â the sounds came from inside the haystack.
They were rats.
An hour later, Delphine marched beneath a purpling sky with her electric torch, the ferret box and a cricket bat. The box had airholes drilled in it and hung from her shoulder by a leather strap.
The fields were northeast of Alderberen Hall, shielded from the sea by a narrow belt of trees. By the time she reached them, it was almost night. Capped with the last shafts of light, haystacks stood dark and massy and silent, like a herd of sleeping diplodocuses. She walked to the nearest and set the box down. She flipped the lid. Behind the ringing in her skull she could hear rustles, squeaks. She took out Lewis and Maxim, gripping them like stick grenades.
âCareful, Max,' she said, and kissed him on the head. She hurled him into the air. A black smudge arced through the sky and landed on top of the haystack. âCareful, Lewis.' She kissed Lewis, then flung him, too.
Delphine took the torch and the cricket bat. She swept the beam around the base of the stack, looking for runs. She found a hole and
put the torch down facing it. The squeaking grew louder. She lifted the bat.
Bodies poured from the hole. Screaming.
She hit them with the bat. She hit them again and again. Their stomachs burst. Some got away. The bat left pits in the earth. A rat writhed, slapping its tail in the dirt; she pounded it flat. When her arm got tired she switched to a two-handed grip.
They kept coming. She beat them and beat them. She felt as if she were watching herself. They died in ones and pairs, and she despised them for it.
When they stopped coming, she stood panting over a trench lined with bodies.
Max scampered out of the run, chirping. She dropped the bat and caught him round the haunches just as Lewis appeared. She made a grab for Lewis but he ducked back into the run. She called for him, waiting with her hand poised above the hole, and when he stuck his head out a second time she snatched him up.
Lewis had been bitten on his nose. His pale fur was dappled with dark flecks.
Delphine looked down at the bloody bat, the bright pool thrown by the torch, the corpses. The pain and fear and confusion had receded, leaving only a steady, pounding hate. There were plenty of haystacks left. The ferrets wriggled in her grip. Her muscles trembled.
She walked to the next haystick, kissed Lewis and Maxim on their warm, wet heads, and began again, a mantra forming to the rhythm of her swings:
Lansley, Lansley, Lansley
*
The Boys' Bumper Treasury Of War
(1934).
CHAPTER 16
GOOD AUTHORS TOO WHO ONCE KNEW BETTER WORDS
August 1935
D
elphine squatted at the edge of the lake, prodding the corpse with a twig. The afternoon was hot, fragments of sun glowing beneath the water like clinkers in a bucket.
The reeds hid a cracked terracotta bowl with steep edges. Inside, the frog's crisp, shrivelled body was like a seedpod. She blew gently and it shivered.
Off in the distance, in front of the house, guests were doing complicated calisthenics while Mr Propp sat in a lawnchair watching. Every so often he rang a bell and everyone had to freeze till he rang it again. It was like a game, except nobody was smiling. Professor Carmichael looked like he might cry.
Delphine drew her pocket knife from her sock and used it to saw a stick into pieces, then tied the pieces together with fishing line to make a miniature raft. She set the raft on the bank and added a layer of balled-up tissue paper, loosely secured with a couple more loops of fishing line. She swept the desiccated frog into her palm, then sat it in the middle of the tissue paper, like a deva on a lotus. She unscrewed the canister she had stolen from Mr Garforth's storeroom and drizzled paraffin onto the pyre. Droplets ran over the frog's dry flesh, beading on its back and lips.
She noticed a toad
*
watching from the sticky mud. She went over and picked it up; it was fat and wet and cool.
âNo civilians.' She carried it a short distance along the bank, one hand cupped over its head like a sunhat, feeling its soft, squat legs kick at the heel of her palm. She set it down on a little headland and it lolloped into the clear water with a plop. She sniffed her fingers. They smelt of gunpowder.
She returned to the frog and stood over it for a few moments. She weighed up various pronouncements but none felt appropriate. Eventually, she placed her palms together and said, in her head:
This court finds you guilty of adultery. The sentence is death by immolation
.
She picked up the raft by its corners and lowered it onto the water. It settled, then began to turn, very slowly. Across the frog's black body drops of paraffin winked like garnets.
Delphine wrapped some cotton wool round the end of a twig. She splashed on a little paraffin then struck a match and lit it. The cotton wool blackened and vanished, flames licking invisibly in the bright sun. She touched it to the funeral raft.
Nothing happened. Then the air above the frog's head warped and fluttered. The crumpled tissues transformed from lilies to black dahlias. She knelt to get a closer look. The frog tilted, its throne furling, compressing like bellows. When she shielded her eyes she could see a soft yellow outline. Something in the frog's head popped and hissed.
âViking, was he?'
Delphine turned. Lord Alderberen sat in his wooden wheelchair, squinting from beneath a wide-brimmed straw hat. He was wrapped in a camouflage-green double-breasted jacket and had a cream blanket spread over his knees.
âI used to burn things, y'know,' he said.
She stared at him, a coldness rising in her chest. His skin had a
bluish tint. His eyes were gluey and yellow. He was not looking quite at her face.
He frowned, blinked at his lap. Now she finally confronted him, Delphine was surprised at how brave she felt.
As he watched her, he nodded constantly. Some days, he brought it under control until it was the barest quiver. Sometimes, like now, it became a sequence of violent pecks, as if he were attempting to hammer in a nail with his chin. He gripped the hand rims of his wheelchair.
âRemind me of your name,' he said.
âDelphine, uh . . . '
âDelphina?'
âDelphine.'
âHmm.' He bobbed his head, yes, yes, as if he thought this exceptionally apt. He coughed. His eyes widened as he struggled to bring his palsy under control. âAnd, uh, how are you enjoying your stay at my house?'
âI hate it.' She threaded her fingers behind her back. âSir.'
Lord Alderberen put a fist to his mauve lips; his throat made a squelching noise.
She wiped her forehead. He was so frail and papery. She breathed in the sweet stink of burning paraffin. She wondered if she could push him into the lake; everyone would think it was an accident.
His eyes pinched. He tensed, then gasped and flopped back into his chair like a trance medium at the end of a séance. The process repeated. Sweating, he pulled a crimson hankie from his left breast pocket.
âAre you all right?'
âDying,' he said, dabbing at the folds of his throat. He caught sight of her expression and smiled. âNot now. Slowly.' He folded the handkerchief into triangles and tucked it back inside his pocket.
Delphine shot a couple of sly glances over her shoulder; a fine undertaker's thread of smoke rose from the raft. She began using the point of her toe to scuff an arc in the dirt. The sun was warm against the nape of her neck.
âI watch you, you know,' he said.
She looked up sharply. He had his head to one side and was rocking.
âCapering about the grounds. Up there in your barrel like the Rector of Stiffkey. Used to be Arthur's, that treehouse. Oh, don't look so surprised. I watch everybody. It's one of the perks of being ignored.' He paused for a moment and let the latest wave of convulsions subside. âMakes me smile. Seeing you so carefree. I missed out on all that.'
Delphine narrowed her eyes. Was he making fun of her? How could anyone think she was carefree? She scratched her scalp and looked away.
âYou'll be old one day. Then you'll understand. I'm expected to spend my twilight sipping quack medicines and sprinkling bonemeal round the aspidistras â busywork till I feel the tap from the bony finger.' Briefly, the nodding turned to a shaking of the head. âThey'll do it again, you know. Send another generation into the mincer.' He thumped the arm of his chair. âPerpetual improvement, my eye! Look at them!' He flapped an arm at the rich people doing jumping jacks on the lawn. âThat's not improvement! It's nigger-driving!'
He gazed at the old ice house across the lake, breathing through his nostrils, his purple lips pressed into a thin horizon. The bottoms of his eyes began to glisten. When he spoke again, his voice had dropped to a quavering murmur.
âI'm sick of all these Young Turks with schemes for changing the world. What I want is someone who'll stop it from changing.'
Gradually, he brought his breath under control. Delphine watched the veins around his throat flex and contract.
âWhy do you let us all live at your house?' she said.
âMy house, is it? Yes, I suppose I have a piece of paper that says as much.' He glanced at his hand. âWhen you're near the end, ideas like money and property start to seem rather silly.'
Delphine took a breath. She lowered her voice.
âYou're a Bolshevik, aren't you?'
Lord Alderberen let out a dry laugh that fell in three stages. âLiving here? In the Winter Palace?' He laughed again, did the exact same laugh.
She felt her face get hot. She had said something stupid and she did not understand what.
Lord Alderberen's drooping mauve face began to shudder. He clutched his wheelchair.
A strange pressure built in Delphine's gut and chest and behind her eyes. She had imagined confronting him so many times. She had pictured herself delivering the accusation before a roomful of witnesses, his blustering denial, his sobbing confession. Now she was finally alone with him, watching him shake and twist, she had to fight the urge to comfort him.
âAre you all r â '
âIt's almost time,' he said, giving himself over to the nodding, shutting his eyes. âI'm ready to leave this wretched body behind. I'll be going to a better place. I'll be with Mother.' He slumped forward in his chair.
âDelphine!'
She turned. It was Mother, dressed in tan hip-jacket and trousers. The dregs of a gin and bitters sparkled in her hand.
âYou should be studying,' she said, ânot pestering our host. I'm so sorry, Lord Alderberen.' Her voice dropped half an octave as she pivoted to address him. âApparently my daughter is such a prodigy she can read books half a mile away. Come along, Delphine.' Mother lifted her glass and rattled the ice, like Propp ringing his bell.
Delphine balled her right hand into a tight, sweaty fist. Mother began to walk away. She glanced back over her shoulder. â
Delphine
.'
She did not look Delphine in the eye. Delphine saw the hand come up and grip the back of Lansley's slimy head, the sun against mousy hair, the hungry way Mother kissed him, a pig gobbling slops. Her nostrils stung with the salty-acrid scent of cremated frog.
âDelphine.' Mother shot a smirk at her daughter. âCome, let's walk. I hardly get to see you these days. You can tell me what the Professor has been teaching you.'
Delphine held her ground.
âNow,' said Mother. âThis is not a negotiation.'
â____ off.'
Mother's smile hung in the air like gunsmoke. Her eyelids fluttered.
Lord Alderberen made a quiet, throaty noise, a trapdoor closing.
Delphine glowered into Mother's twitching hazel eyes. Very quietly, she said: âYou're drunk, Mummy. Go and play with Mr Lansley.'
Mother stood there a moment longer, looking as if she were about to say something. At last she closed her mouth, gave a little nod, turned and walked away. It was the queerest thing. Delphine watched her getting tinier and tinier, till she was only a speck.
*
Professor Carmichael had recently explained to her that a common cause of death for elderly toads was being eaten alive. He said that flesh-eating flies laid their eggs in the hollow of the toad's back and, being old, the toad was unable to dislodge them. When the eggs hatched, the young maggots ate through the toad's eyes and consumed the living brain. âWhich can't be much fun for the old boy,' he had concluded, popping a pear drop into his mouth. âPoor sod.'
CHAPTER 17
FALL
September 11th 1935
I
t was the day before the killing started.
Dr Lansley opened his black bag and screamed.
Everyone in the smoking room turned to stare at him. Delphine sat cross-legged on the carpet, her rucksack beside her, reading about the Frankish conquest of Italy in Volume V of Gibbon's
The History Of The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire
.
*
She did not look up.
Miss DeGroot paused in the act of sucking a date, gauzy green scarf wound round her throat. She coughed, quietly, into a handkerchief, hacked up something, wiped her lips. Her swagger stick lay on the floor beside her. She leant over the back of the leather sofa.
âFlorence,
â
what on earth's the matter?'
âIt's another one.' He lowered himself into a chair at the bridge table. His hands were trembling so violently he could barely slide a cigarillo from the tin.
âAnother what?'
âA rat, a bloody dead rat in my medical bag!'
From behind his copy of
The Times
, Professor Carmichael spluttered.
âSomething funny, Carmichael?'
âNo, nothing, nothing.' The Professor turned the page with a flourish. âJust a very droll caricature of Roosevelt.'
Lansley patted down his jacket for a light. Miss DeGroot stretched out on the sofa and popped another date into her mouth.
âPerhaps the cat likes you,' she said. âThey leave them as presents, you know.'
âWe haven't got a cat,' said Lansley. He put the cigarillo in his mouth. It was bent at a right angle. He tried to straighten it and it snapped clean in half. âDamn.'
âFlorence, language. There are children present.'
âIf you call me that one more time, I'll break this table over your head.'
âI thought doctors took an oath forbidding that sort of thing.'
Lansley tossed his broken cigarillo into the wastepaper basket. âIt's a doctor's duty to kill nasty little parasites.' He flipped open his cigarillo tin but it was empty. âDamn it.'
Miss DeGroot yawned loudly. âOh, for goodness' sake, help yourself to one of Ivan's. The box is over there on the shelf. I'm sure he won't mind.'
Dr Lansley glanced across the room. He snapped his fingers.
âI say, you, child. Look at me when I'm talking to you.'
Delphine sucked all her anger deep inside. She slipped the red ribbon bookmark between the pages and raised her head.
âFetch me the cigar box,' he said.
She put the book down, slid her hand into the mouth of her rucksack, and stood. She padded across to the shelf. The cigar box had a polished rosewood veneer; a bat was carved into the lid. She stood over it for a moment, her back to the room.
âCome on, come on!' Lansley clapped his hands.
Delphine turned and carried the closed box over to Lansley, placing it on the bridge table. He glared at her as she walked back to her spot on the rug.
Miss DeGroot plucked another date from the glass dish on the table next to her. She held it up and turned it, like the world.
âAre you looking forward to the symposium this weekend?' she said.
Lansley paused, licked his moustache. âAre you talking to me?'
âYes, dear.'
âWell, then you know the answer.'
âOh, Flo, you're such a pill.' The leather sofa croaked as Miss DeGroot leant back. âIt's going to be the party to end all parties.' She chuckled, then smothered it with a date.
Dr Lansley inhaled sharply. Delphine watched his opera-gloved fingers reach for the catch on the cigar box. They got within an inch, then paused.
âYou know,' said Lansley, âif Lazarus actually attended his own damn symposiums he'd see what a waste of time they are.'
Miss DeGroot pursed her lips, pushing the date out before sucking it back in. âYou always seem very happy, making eyes at Lord Wolfbrooke. Hoping he'll name a paper after you?'
âHe's the worst of all. Chuntering on about natural selection and “improving the stock”. You can tell he's spoiling for another war.'
âAren't you? I thought you said Britain needed more warriors and fewer stockbrokers.'
âAs a
deterrent
. Wolfie thinks war's like a social laxative â you take it and it purges all the bad elements from your system. I told him: you want to see who does best on the battlefield. It's the rats every time.'
He flipped the little silver latch and lifted the cigar-box lid.
And screamed.
Behind the pages of
The Times
, Professor Carmichael let out a series of stifled, snorting coughs.
âIt's a warning, I tell you.'
Delphine lay on her side in the gap between walls, eavesdropping. The hole was an inch from her eye.
She could barely believe it. After fruitless months of listening in on conversations about cricket scores and stomach pain, or requests for more fruit cake, finally she had
caught
them.
âCalm down, man,' said Lord Alderberen. He, Mr Propp and Dr Lansley sat facing each other, their chairs arranged in a triangle.
âI will not â ' began Lansley, then one of the others must have indicated he was shouting, because he continued, more quietly, âI will
not
calm down. I have watched men claw their own organs back into their rib cages. I am not given to hysterics.'
âPlease, please.' Propp's voice was deep and steady, like an idling motor. The dry
pop-pop
of lips puffing on a cigar.
âLook,' said Lord Alderberen, his consonants crisp, âall I'm saying is, if you look at it
rationally
â '
â
Three
in my medical bag,' hissed Lansley, stamping his calf-leather Oxford against the floor, âtwo in my coat pocket, one in my riding boots, one when I opened my
umbrella
. . . '
âI did not know you wear riding boots,' said Propp.
âI mean, for God's sake, I found one rolled up in my washcloth. In. My. Washcloth.'
There was a long silence, into which Propp exhaled,
hah
.
âI keep my room locked at all times,' Lansley said. âDon't you understand?' His two companions left a pause which indicated they did not. âThey're sending us a message. They want us to know that they can
get at us
.'
All three stopped to digest this. Delphine pinched her nostrils to stifle the beginnings of a sneeze.
âWell, why are they targeting you?' said Lord Alderberen. âWhy not me and Ivan?'
âI don't know.'
âThe only other people with keys to the rooms are Alice and Mrs Hagstrom. Surely you're not insinuating one of them is . . . Titus, they've worked for me for years.'
âI insinuate nothing. The facts speak for themselves. There is a traitor among us.'
Delphine's breathing quickened.
And she's closer than you think
.
âHmph.' Lord Alderberen sat back in his chair. âSounds jolly fishy to me.'
âMmm.' Propp sounded as if he had a pipe between his teeth. Delphine inhaled through her nostrils, thought she caught a whiff; it smelt like burning hair. âMaybe not so fish. Today I visited library. Prentice is missing.'
âDon't be silly,' said Alderberen, âit's just been miscatalogued.'
âNo,' said Propp. âI walked room twice. Book is gone.'
âWell, what if it is? Three-quarters of it is the purest fudge anyway. No wonder he published under a pseudonym. You'd have more chance jumping into pools at random than following . . . Oh. Oh my.'
âWhat?' Dr Lansley rose from his seat. âWhat's wrong? Are you all right, old man? Is it your heart again?'
âI'm fine. Sit down. I just had a thought . . . You don't think Kung was trying to . . . '
âYes,' said Propp. âI think exactly this.'
âBut how did he know?'
Mr Propp made a small, noncommittal noise. âYour father's library is world famous.'
âAlso,' said Lansley, âevidently he did not know. If he did, he'd still be alive.'
âStill,' said Alderberen, âhe knew enough. He knew to try, didn't he?' He let the innuendo hang.
âWell,' said Lansley, ânow he's gone. And the book's somewhere at the bottom of the ocean.'
The hairs on Delphine's neck prickled.
âThis I doubt,' said Propp. âThis I very much doubt. He would not risk damaging it.'
âIf he had it in the first place,' said Lansley.
She listened to the three men breathing. In her mind, she saw Daddy on the moonlit beach, retrieving a grey book from the sand.
Propp said: âYou are correct. We speculate.'
âIt's worse than that. It's scaremongering.' Lord Alderberen coughed up something wet. âA few dead mice and we're up on a chair clutching our petticoats.'
Lansley snorted. âMice don't fire shotguns.'
âWhat in blazes are you talking about?' said Alderberen.
âSomeone shot at me â twice.'
âOh, poppycock â that was just the wind.'
âThe wind doesn't blow a hole in the chapel ceiling!'
âWhat were you doing in chapel?' said Propp.
âThat's none of your damn business.'
âOh,' said Alderberen. âSo now you don't trust us, either? Come on, man. Pull yourself together.'
âThat's your solution, is it?' said Lansley. âStick our fingers in our ears and go la la la? If they're onto us, we're buggered.'
âAll right,' said Alderberen. âSupposing they are. Why on earth would they want us to know they've got an inside man? Why tip their hand like this?'
âTwo possibles,' said Propp. âOne, they feel very assured. Two, they feel very afraid. Either way, very careless. We may use.'
âThat's it.' Lord Alderberen's slippers settled on the floor. With a shuddering effort, he stood. âI'm going to talk to them. Face to face. Get this whole ugly knot untangled.'
Propp sighed. âNot wise.'
âHate to say it,' said Lansley, âbut I'm with the Fat Owl of the Remove on this one. Knots don't send death threats. They'll take you as a hostage, Stokeham or no.'
âWhy don't we pre-empt them?' said Lord Alderberen. âSay they can have her?'
Delphine shivered. Her nails dug into her palms.
âNo,' said Propp. âNot possible.'
Nobody said anything for a while. Lord Alderberen sat back down.
Propp said: âI will speak to them.' He rose.
âWhat?' said Lord Alderberen. âNow?'
âYes.'
âBut you just said it was a bad idea! What on earth will you say?'
Propp's voice dropped to a murmur, his accent thickening. âMy dearest friend, you must not worry. Wait here. I will speak to them.'
He walked slowly out of Delphine's view. She heard the door click shut.
Lansley spoke almost immediately. âHe's insane.'
âNo.' Lord Alderberen sounded like he was talking through his fingers. âVery sane. Also: very arrogant.'
âYou're even starting to sound like him.'
âWhat's that supposed to mean?'
âWhy has he got so much power over you?'
Lord Alderberen exhaled heavily. âDon't be absurd.'
âProve it, then. Overrule him. Tell them what happened. Say that Propp acted alone, without your authority. Give up the child.'
A freezing river poured down Delphine's back. She clamped a hand over her lips.
âAre you mad?'
âI think insanity's a very relative concept these days, don't you?'
âBut he'll never consent. And what if they don't accept our apology? What if handing her over isn't enough? Surely we should just keep mum.'
âNeither of those things need concern us unduly.'
âWhat on earth do you mean?'
Lansley drew a long breath. âWe'll give them Propp too.'
This time the silence held for what seemed like minutes. She listened to the sound of her own breaths, felt them hot and damp against her fingers.
When Lord Alderberen spoke, it was in a whisper.
âYou forget your place.'
She heard the catch in Lansley's throat as he inhaled.
âNo, my Lord. You forget yours.' He stood. As he continued, his voice rose. âQuite amazing, the things a man will tell his physician when he believes himself to be on the verge of death. The unburdening of the soul.' He began to walk around the room. âLike draining a boil.'
âIf you're threatening me . . . '
âI am
reminding
you. Did Arthur sacrifice himself for this, this . . . picayune stalemate?' The toes of Lansley's calf-leather shoes spun to face his master. âYou are the
last
of the Stokeham line in England. You have a responsibility to assume control of this house and not let some dusky, jumped-up goat farmer come wandering off the
steppe and use you as a foothold in his desperate scramble for significance. We were supposed to be gathering an elect for the new world. Now it's all star jumps and watering your many-petaled iris.'
âIt's a lotus, Lansley.'
âI don't care what bloody flower it is! That's precisely my bloody point! Once, we dreamed we could be nation-makers. Propp's turned us into bloody botanists.'
There was a pause.
âSo instead of kowtowing to Propp, I should kowtow to you?'
âLazarus. You know I have only your best interests at heart.'
âSpoken like a true Machiavellian.'
âDo you
want
to die?' Lansley was shouting now. âBecause you know that's going to happen, don't you? This isn't about negotiating any more. Propp is prepared to sacrifice all our lives out of pig-headed sentimentality.'
âNo! Right from the beginning, the whole
purpose
of the Society was to â'