The Illuminations (13 page)

Read The Illuminations Online

Authors: Andrew O'Hagan

Tags: #Adult, #Afghanistan, #British, #Family Saga, #Fiction, #Historical, #Military, #Scotland

‘They have to go,’ she said. ‘It’s the war.’ The boy put down his cup and adopted a serious expression, which caused him to blush again and look worried.
‘Mrs Quirk, I said something today and I shouldn’t have said that in front of you. I’m sorry.’
‘What’s that, dear?’
‘I said about the news. That a soldier from around here had died in Afghanistan. It was on the radio in the van. And I shouldn’t have said that, Mrs Quirk. I listened to the report again. I’m sure it’s nothing to do with you because they always contact the families first.’
‘The men have to show courage,’ she said. ‘And go and fight for their country.’
‘Mrs Quirk—’
‘That’s what Harry said. And he was right. You take it on the chin and that’s true, son. You have to stand up and be counted. You’re all the man you’ll ever be. And when you get the call, that’s you.’
‘I’m daft sometimes. And it’s been bugging me since yesterday …’
He looked a little bit like some of the photographers she used to know. They were always out on the streets, those guys. They wanted to get away from studios and portraiture, all that stuff, lights and props, airbrushing. They were always young and confident. ‘You work for the Council?’
‘That’s right.’ He was a nice-looking man. He looked like
the photographer Roger Mayne. She remembered seeing him in Manchester with Harry one time, this thin-faced, serious man with a lock of dark hair falling over his brow and these pictures he’d taken of children in London.
‘Those were fine pictures,’ she said.
‘They said the soldier who died was part of a big operation to do with a dam. I wrote it down.’ He took a note from his pocket and read from it. ‘The Kajaki dam. They said it was a big job to bring electricity to the Afghan people.’
‘I thought I was an old hand,’ she said. ‘Then I met Harry and all the younger ones. I’d been away from it for a while, looking after them in Glasgow. Then I came to Blackpool and met Harry. He changed the way the pictures looked. He showed me how to bring out the light, the eyes, the background, you know, and he taught everybody.’
‘Are you talking about your husband, Mrs Quirk?’
‘Harry. You remember him?’
The boy took his cup to the sink and ran it under the tap while Anne talked about them, the Young Meteors, the group of photographers surrounding Harry at Manchester in the 1960s. It did occur to Anne that the boy might be too young but he seemed part of it, the men who worked for
Picture Post
and for Kodak and … maybe she was boring him.
‘I’m really sorry, Mrs Quirk,’ he said. ‘I didn’t mean to upset you and I should watch my mouth.’
‘You’re okay.’
He stared at her. It took him a moment. Then he stroked her hand and said he met a lot of elderly people because of his work for the council. His eyes were young. ‘I hope that wasn’t your Luke,’ he said. ‘My brother said they would definitely come
round and tell the family ages before it was on the radio.’ He stood up and picked up his keys from the breakfast bar. Anne hoped he would stay because she wanted to talk about what to do with the stuff that was still down in the darkroom. It was nice to take pictures of children, she thought: they were only small for a short period of time and then it was over, wasn’t it?
Maureen noticed it had gone quiet next door during the time she was on the phone to Alice. She didn’t feel guilty but she hated to think it troubled Anne. It wasn’t as if Maureen didn’t have a family of her own: they were a full-time job, three grown kids and grandchildren into the bargain, and she only phoned Alice to make sure she understood everything that was happening. Since the rabbit, some people, some neighbours, had said that Anne’s daughter was too absent. But Maureen understood families and she wasn’t afraid to use the phone to try and help. It was late in the conversation that she turned to the day before.
‘Have you heard from anybody?’
‘Should I have?’
‘Not especially, no.’ Maureen pursed her lips and gathered herself. ‘That nurse was in again this week,’ she said. ‘Yesterday. They like to get your mother talking about her childhood and all sorts.’
‘All sorts is right,’ Alice said.
‘The illness makes her confused.’
‘She’s always been confused when it comes to the past. The fact is, Maureen, my mother’s always had issues with her memory. That’s what makes this so …’
‘Heartbreaking.’
‘Sad, yes. It’s sad. Sad for us. Because it’s now too late for my mother ever to face anything. If I was being unkind, I’d say that her illness has caught up with her character.’ Maureen sometimes
felt a twinge at the idea that the criticism coming from Alice was general, as if Anne’s daughter was making comments about all mothers when she spoke about Anne and her problems. ‘Now she’s fantasising about a rabbit,’ added Alice, ‘but she was always fantasising about something. We’re used to it.’
‘The rabbit comes and goes.’
Alice responded with clarity. The people on TV, thought Maureen, are seldom so clear. ‘We’re used to my mother having relationships that keep us out. It’s one of her things. At least, it’s one of her things with me.’
‘You’re a mother yourself,’ Maureen said.
Alice swallowed hard and let the implication fade. She had never been the mother she wanted to be – it wasn’t allowed. And now she had to depend on the next-door neighbour to keep her informed about what was happening in her own family. It was pitiable, really. Anne had failed as a mother on nearly every front, but fantasy would carry her all the way. Everybody, including Alice’s own son Luke, would pity the sad life of sacrifice she had framed so perfectly for their eyes. Alice knew better. But why did that knowledge feel like a curse?
‘Mother seems to have told you a lot,’ she said.
‘That’s what it’s for, the Memory Club.’
‘And she spoke about Harry?’
‘Oh, yes. A lot about Harry.’
Alice felt that people kept her out of having information until she didn’t want it any more. ‘Well, thank you for phoning, Maureen. I really appreciate you taking the trouble.’
‘It’s no bother,’ Maureen said. They paused. The call hadn’t gone well, but Alice didn’t want to appear angry.
‘I pray for them at morning Mass,’ she said. It was clear that
Alice needed to take strength at the mention of Harry.
‘Were you his child, Alice?’
‘Yes,’ she said. ‘He got her pregnant.’
Each wanted to hang up, but they kept hoping for something more, a clever development in the conversation that would turn it into something nice. Maureen said her father was the person she missed all the time. ‘We used to run away to Glasgow together when I was wee,’ she said. ‘Just me and him and we had the whole day to ourselves. He used to take me to the perfume counter at Arnotts. We’d buy soap. And on the way back …’ She paused and Alice felt kindly towards her. ‘I always wished the train belonged to us and that we’d never have to get off.’
‘I had none of that,’ Alice said.
‘He called me Mog.’
‘I don’t think my father even remembered our names.’
‘Whose names?’
‘Ours,’ Alice said. She spoke reluctantly, feeling that she had gone far enough with Maureen. There was such yearning in Alice’s voice, as if she wished more than anything for things to be certain, but she knew they couldn’t be. ‘I’m not sure,’ she said.
ALWAYS
It was only a fraction of the stuff from Atholl Gardens, but the linen was washed and ironed, laid out and tied with blue ribbon, looking like old stories that had yet to be told. Over the TV set Anne draped an Edwardian tablecloth that had come from Canada
after the death of her mother. She placed the ceramic rabbit on top of the tablecloth to hold it down and then she glanced at him while she moved between the bundles, unfolding the material and holding it up and tutting.
Jane, Jessie. Wait a minute. There was Grace. And Anna. Nobody came to the house in Glasgow once they were gone. It was just me up there. Before Luke was born I would build a fire because the pipes were frozen. My fingers used to get cold and they were stained with developer most of the time. I went to the camera club, that’s right. I used to massage that stuff into my fingers to stop the irritation. Camphor ice.
She didn’t notice her neighbour enter but didn’t flinch when she saw her. ‘Good heavens,’ Maureen said, stepping over the bundles. ‘Did you decide to have a wee spring clean?’
‘Stuff from the aunt-hill,’ Anne said.
‘I thought I heard a man’s voice earlier.’
Anne seemed distracted. ‘We were talking about camera work. I had to come back from New York and I didn’t want to come back, Maureen. I wanted to take pictures.’
‘You were very good.’
‘It’s in there somewhere.’ She pointed to the bathroom. ‘A lot of negatives and things like that.’ All of a sudden she seemed upset. She lifted a pillowcase and dabbed her eyes with it. ‘But Jessie used to read to them all in their beds at night,’ she said.
‘Who did she read to?’
‘The aunts.’
‘And could you get away sometimes and see Harry?’
‘I drove a car then.’
‘Oh, I wish I could drive,’ Maureen said. ‘I never took the test, you know. We took the train. My dad loved trains and we were
always on them. Away days, they called them. I was an only child. He used to squeeze my hand and say I was his favourite person. Just like that.’
‘I had a nice father, too,’ Anne said.
‘We were lucky.’
Anne looked up as if she suddenly appreciated Maureen. ‘I’ve always had good neighbours,’ she said.
Maureen put her to bed and then went to bring a cup of tea from next door. She placed a sleeping pill on the saucer, to see if it didn’t relax her, but it turned out Anne was fast asleep when she got back so she just took it herself. She felt Anne was on her own, really. She had all these people and all these stories but it didn’t amount to much. You have to be ready to put the past behind you and learn to rely on yourself.
That’s what I did, thought Maureen. I never needed a man to make me into somebody. No way. I could stand on my own two feet. But her mind changed as she handled the cold linen. She didn’t want to admit it, but she understood how it sometimes took another person to turn you into your better self. And that’s what happened with her and Anne. In the old lady’s company she felt more like the person she ought to have been. Anne’s interests touched Maureen, revealing a bit of her to herself. Maureen had just finished the audiobook of
Wuthering Heights
and she thought of it as she looked at Anne lying asleep. She couldn’t imagine unquiet slumbers for a woman with that kind of nature and all this linen.
Maureen lifted a nice glass from the trolley and poured herself a whisky before coming back and sitting by the bed. It sometimes confused Anne to hear Luke’s letters, but Maureen wanted nonetheless to read them to her in a good, clear voice, capturing the
words he’d written down. With the glass balanced on her knee, she took out a folded letter from the pocket of her cardigan.
I told all the boys to write letters so I better write one myself, eh? This is the one and only Captain Campbell here of the 1st Royal Western Fusiliers writing to you from the roasting desert.
As she read aloud the clock was ticking and the whisky tasted of smoke. The letter was full of news.
So that’s it, really. We’re in Camp Bastion and getting ready to push off. I’m not allowed to tell you where we’re going but it’s a good one. I’ve got the usual team here, Flannigan, Dooley and young Lennox, who spend all day playing ping-pong and slagging each other off. The major is here too and is doing his best for us, so if anything happens to me you’ll know it’s just bad luck. Main thing is I’m thinking of you. Keep smiling, Luke.
Maureen finished the letter and put it away. It said a lot for a young man that he could write a letter like that. Just to let the people at home know he loved them, just to do the right thing when it’s dangerous and he knows they must be worried with all the stuff they see on television. She poured another whisky and walked to the window. Half the things her own family said they probably didn’t mean. They were all right, really. You have to forgive people if you want to get along, yet it wasn’t the future she had expected with her children. She’d thought it would be holidays abroad and big dinners by the pool with all the women asking her opinion.
The darkness outside made a mirror of the window and the room looked back at itself as Maureen sat sleeping on the sofa
with the tumbler in her hand and the linen stacked beside her. She opened her eyes with a start and found the siren was sounding. She got up slowly and went over to wash the tumbler and place it on the dish-rack before going into the bedroom. ‘In the name of God,’ said Anne.
‘It’s the fire alarm,’ Maureen said. She unhooked Anne’s dressing-gown from the back of the door and brought it to her. ‘We’ll have to go into the courtyard and be counted.’

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