The Glass House Read online
Page 7
Rita puts a sandwich on his plate and, leaning over him, cuts off the crusts. ‘It’s not a competition, Teddy,’ she says gently. Although it strikes her that while they may be close rambling about outside, in the house the siblings are like forest plants, competing for their mother’s warmth and light.
‘I thought of it first,’ says Hera, staking her claim.
‘No, you picked them in sneaky secret.’ Teddy goes to kick her shin under the table but misses, his leg too short. He slides a slice of cheese out from his sandwich and licks off the piccalilli instead. A moment passes. Rita wonders how she might cheer him up, and is about to suggest digging out the Meccano set when Teddy says, ‘Mummy needs flowers because Mummy’s unwell again?’
‘She’s …’ It’s much harder to lie to Teddy than to Marge. ‘… feeling a bit under the weather.’ She gives him a reassuring squeeze of the shoulder.
‘That’s code, Teddy,’ Hera says unhelpfully, reaching across to swipe his crusts. ‘You know what for.’ She glances at Rita, and, with a mouthful of bread, protests, ‘I’m not going to lie to him!’
Teddy’s bottom lip puckers and he reddens with the strain of not blubbing like a baby in front of his sister. ‘But I want Mummy to get better.’
‘She will in time, Teddy.’
Teddy looks at her blankly. Rita remembers she had no concept of time as a child either. Good things happened in a flash. Boring things went on for ever. And time didn’t solve anything, like grown-ups promised. It just made you older.
‘Come here, you.’ Rita pulls Teddy on to her lap and hugs him tight. He smells of pickle, soil and damp wool.
I love these kids, she thinks, with a physical force, like a sharp kick in the stomach, that takes her aback. She quickly checks herself. In a year or two, Teddy will be sent away to board, like his father was (Walter had once told her drily he’d hated every minute of it), and she’ll be forgotten by all of them, just a large hazy figure at the edges of family photographs. She knows this is the nanny’s lot, the loving of someone else’s children followed by the unacknowledged grief when the job ends. But she also knows that none of her charges has meant nearly as much to her as Teddy and Hera. And she’ll never forget the exact weight and feel of Teddy on her lap, the way he moulds and settles into her contours. Or the day, when Jeannie was locked up at The Lawns, Teddy turned to her and said, ‘Will you be my mummy now?’ and she’d longed to say yes.
‘She doesn’t want to see us, does she, Big Rita?’ Teddy’s voice is still clotted with bravely fought tears. ‘She’s too ill.’
Rita knows he’s thinking about The Lawns, his mother vanishing again. She can’t bear it. ‘Follow me. Both of you. Upstairs.’
Rita doesn’t knock in case Jeannie asks them to go away. Hera and Teddy shuffle in behind her, hanging back, unsure of their welcome. Or which mother they might find today.
Rita places a tray on the bed – milk, sandwiches, a cold toasted teacake – then sweeps open the curtains, making a circus big top of dust motes rotate in the centre of the room. She starts to talk, softly, filling the stale silence. There are barn owls in the eaves and a really noisy resident woodpecker in the garden, and Teddy’s spotted slow-worms in the log pile. Rita chatters over her shoulder, tugging open the stiff window so the sweet smell of leaves and earth pours into the room. In the distance, sheep drift through the woodland, like clouds. She pushes back the ivy, and bees whirl up in excitement. Rita flaps them away, safely into the sky.
Jeannie slowly emerges from the burrow of bedding. Despite sleeping all the time she looks shattered. Her eyes are vague and torpid, the skin underneath desiccated and blue-tinged. Rita spots the small bag of the dead baby’s things poking out from under her pillow, and her heart sinks.
‘Mummy!’ Teddy launches himself on to the bed. Jeannie’s fingers twirl in his hair, and she bends down to him, smiling weakly, indulgently. ‘Why, hello, my little soldier.’
Rita beckons Hera, who hovers in the doorway. Holding aloft the little jam jar of wildflowers, already starting to wilt, Hera perches gingerly on the side of the bed, not daring to edge into the intimacy of its centre. Rita shoots a smile. Jeannie hasn’t noticed the flowers yet. She will.
Jeannie cups a yawn in her hand. ‘Any more phone calls, Rita?’ Rita shakes her head. Jeannie’s face falls. Notice the flowers, thinks Rita. Notice Hera.
‘I … I brought you something, Mother.’ Hera rests the jam jar on the tray and watches her mother carefully, sideways from under her jagged fringe.
‘Hera went out into the forest and picked them this morning.’ Rita wills Jeannie to admire them. ‘Just for you, Jeannie.’
‘They’re so beautiful,’ Jeannie says, with an ache in her voice, like their beauty hurts her. Rita smiles as Jeannie reaches out and touches a flower. But it immediately shatters over the sheet, the petals like scattered Parma violets. ‘Oh,’ says Jeannie. ‘Oh.’
Rita winces. They stare in stunned silence at the bald broken flower, then at the fat tears rolling silently down Jeannie’s cheeks, splashing on to the snowy sheet.
‘It always goes wrong when I try to make you happy,’ says Hera.
12
Sylvie
I shake the pregnancy-test stick again. No, like the other two, it’s not changing its mind. The line is solid and laser-blue. Sitting at the kitchen table, staring at it in woozy disbelief, I become aware of a strange crackling energy in my body, as if the test’s confirmation has connected a dangerous circuit buried inside me with a violent, ugly jolt.
‘Shit,’ I mumble, under my breath, through my clamped hand, and glance out at the balcony where Annie’s pacing, our cordless phone pressed to her ear. Her face is puffed from crying. I can just hear her saying, ‘I don’t know …’ Elliot. It must be him on the line. And whatever he’s saying, I don’t like it. ‘No. I … I can’t promise … sorry,’ Annie says.
A savage heat sweeps through me. I leap up and thread through the balcony door, opening my hand for the phone. To my relief, she hands it to me without protest and vanishes back into the apartment. A moment later, I hear her bedroom door slam.
The phone in my shaking hand is hot. A grenade. And I realize I’m probably not the kind of mother – reassuring, liberal and practical – I’d always imagined I’d be in such a situation. Because I want to murder the boy. Shake my fists at the summer sky. Why my daughter?
I take a breath. ‘Hello?’ Do. Not. Freak. ‘This is Sylvie, Annie’s mum speaking.’
‘Helen Latham.’ A posh voice. Slightly shrill. ‘Elliot’s mother.’
For a moment I can’t speak at all. I see the hatch opening on the boat opposite. Everything slows.
‘I’d like to finish my conversation with your daughter,’ Helen says crisply, undaunted. ‘Can you put her back on the line, please?’
‘Better that you talk to me,’ I say, collecting myself, squaring up to her. ‘My daughter’s too upset right now.’
‘Oh, Elliot’s distraught,’ Helen says quickly, with an edge.
‘I’d rather you didn’t speak to my daughter directly.’ It’s taking an enormous effort to be polite. The boatman sits on his deck and starts strumming his guitar. A Radiohead riff.
‘Look, Vicky …’
‘Sylvie.’ The heron, statuesque, watches me from the bank. The spores of green light the canal throws up seem to mix with the guitar notes. And everything is swaying. I feel dizzy. Jesus. My life is a disaster. It’s unspooling. I need my mother back.
Helen clears her throat. ‘I want this matter sorted out as soon as possible.’
‘She’s not had any time to process it,’ I say, after a beat, trying to contain myself. Matter?
‘Is money a problem?’
‘What? No.’ So Helen’s one of those wealthy London women used to buying her way out of problems. Anger starts to rumble through me, dark and unfocused, its meaning murky but its power abdominally felt. I grip the cool metal balustrade with one hand, squeeze it.
‘Can I remind you that an innocent young man’s future is at stake?’
‘Not that innocent.’ My voice trembles.
‘Elliot’s only twenty-one. He’s trying to make his way in the world. If Annie was imagining … well, to put it nicely, he’s in no position to be a father.’
‘Annie’s eighteen and has a Cambridge offer.’
‘Cambridge?’ Satisfyingly, she can’t hide her surprise. ‘Well,’ she says, making a minor mental adjustment, ‘we’re on the same page then, aren’t we? I’ll call back after the weekend. When she’s booked her appointment.’
There’s a click and the line goes dead. Damn it. ‘Bitch!’ I shout, more loudly than intended. I screw up my eyes and cover them with my sticky palms.
‘You all right up there?’
I remove my hands and there’s the man on his deck, leaning over his guitar, looking up at me. My body floods with heat. ‘I … No. Yes, of course,’ I call back, then flee into the apartment.
‘Annie?’ The bathroom door is closed. I talk through it. ‘Elliot’s mother should never have phoned. Whatever she said, ignore it. Hey, you okay in there? Can I come in, sweetie?’ Annie doesn’t answer. I push open the door. The bathroom is empty. The pregnancy-test boxes are scattered around the sink. My heart skips a beat. I run to Annie’s bedroom, clock the rummaged mess on her bed, the trail of underwear from the chest of drawers, and feel it, like a drop in altitude, a rush of blood. Annie’s gone.
13
Rita
4.45 a.m. Rita’s mind is busy as a hive. The iron bed wobbles precariously as she sits up and reaches for her dressing-gown, which, in the dim light, looks like a person hanging from the back of her door. There’s no point lying in bed any longer, trying and failing to fall back to sleep, thinking about Jeannie, the children, and the perils of that forest pressed up against the garden wall. And, as Walter might tersely point out, she’s not paid to think. Her job is to keep them all safe. And to do that she needs to map this place. Get a grip on it. Master it. Since she’s got this rare hour to herself, now would be the perfect time.
Downstairs, the house creaks and murmurs, like an elderly lady settling into a chair. She tiptoes across the kitchen’s chilly tiles, swiping a biscuit from the side, and opens the back door. The sky is still bloody in the east, as if aglow from a distant forest fire.
Pushing this unsettling association from her mind, she tugs on the men’s boots that Marge took from the woodshed – a good fit, annoyingly – and tightens her dressing-gown’s cord, its pressure on her waist reassuring.
The broken paving of the garden path rocks under her feet. The trees click with birdsong. Near the gate, she pauses at the swell of a huge hydrangea, glowing fish-belly white in its late summer flush, and glances back at the house. The tiny ferns growing in the mortar wave at her, like babies’ hands. Foxcote looks cosy and safe from here. Beyond the wall, not really. She lifts the gate’s latch, then freezes.
She wants to do this, pin the forest to her mind, like a butterfly on a board, so that it’s no longer a malign mass outside her window. To shrink its scale until it feels no more threatening than the clumps of plastic trees in Teddy’s Hornby train set. She wonders if it’ll ever be possible. Standing there, alone, she realizes her fear of it is carved into her bones, the very crook of her pelvis. It goes way beyond Marge’s list. Or concern about the children.
When Rita was growing up, Nan would never talk directly about the car accident that killed Rita’s parents – it’d be like staring into the noon sun – but she’d say woods were places where ‘bad men’ lurked. And ‘worse’. (Never specified.) She didn’t own a car, never would: ‘coffins on wheels’. She wanted Rita indoors. Immobile. Safe on the settee.
What she never said was this: Do you remember, Rita, how your parents, Poppy and Keith, loved the open road and the outdoors, the woods and the mountains, and sleeping under the stars, and stirring baked beans in a battered billy-can, and the spit and crackle of a camp fire?
But suddenly Rita does remember. A memory dislodges: she’s sitting on the beam of her father’s shoulders, the light beer-coloured through the leaves. She’s not sure where they were, or when, if it was the weekend of the accident. But she can feel his heft and hold – she has no fear of falling, not with his giant’s hands on her ankles – and she can hear his laughter, booming under a roof of leaves.
She shuts the gate behind her.
*
The moon jumps between branches. She disturbs slumbering sheep. She can sense other presences too: a crunching under hoof; the chirring of insects. An unseen owl hoots. The sound hangs in the air, round as a smoke ring.
She hesitates, then takes the path that curls past the tree stump and the pyramid-stacked log pile – yes, definitely lethal – and decides to loop the house, the route the kids seem to take. She’s soon distracted by a deer. Then, stage-left, a fox blazes, carrying a rabbit in its jaws. She stops to admire some moths on a gigantic fallen tree. Toadstools. She bends down, hands on her knees, frowning: are these the dreaded death caps?
Something else snags her eye. Persil-white. Out of place. She picks it up, curiously. A baby’s bootie. Still puffed into the stub of a tiny foot. Recently dropped. It’s an odd thing to find in such dense woodland – no pram would make it here. And it reminds her of the other booties – ornately laced, never worn – that Jeannie treasures. She hooks it on a low-hanging branch, as she used to stick lost kids’ gloves on London railings.
She keeps walking. But the path has gone. And it’s dimmer, the trees’ canopies having locked over her head, like brollies on a crowded London street. Roots rise up from the ground and wrap around boulders, or dangle from branches. With no warning, a hollow cleaves open beneath her feet, and she grabs at the bracken to halt her fall.
Recovering herself, she kneels down against the huge trunk of an old oak, folding her dressing-gown around her, like wings, and taking out her custard cream. She’s glad the kids can’t see her. How they’d giggle at her lostness. Still. The biscuit helps.
But there’s something at her back. She cocks her head. A noise. Twigs cracking. Footsteps? She tenses, remembering what Marge said about oddballs and fugitives being attracted to the forest. The weirdo called Fingers. Not daring to twist around, she pushes back against the tree trunk and its tourniquet of thick itchy ivy, and tucks in the sides of her dressing-gown, wishing it wasn’t such an unnatural Germolene-pink. The footsteps stop.
It’s not her own fast breathing she can hear now. It’s someone else’s. Fear twists with defiance. She’s not survived car crashes and house fires and Fred saying, ‘No man on earth is going to want you now, Rita,’ to meet a sticky end out here. She walks her hand through the scuff of fallen leaves towards a large stick. Another footstep. Her heart slams. Her fingers twitch. She’s ready.
14
Hera
The forest bursts into life outside my cracked window. I don’t need an alarm clock at Foxcote. En route to the bathroom, I see Big Rita’s bedroom door is ajar and peep in. A rumpled bed; a pile of novels on the bedside table, a blouse hanging on the back of the chair. But no Big Rita. Where is she? I think of the French nanny who bolted back to Paris one night, without saying goodbye. The mother’s help did the same. I nibble the skin around my fingernail, ripping it down to the raw bit that tastes like knives.
But Rita wouldn’t desert her terrarium, would she? Or leave without making her bed first. Also, she doesn’t have anywhere to go. No family. No home. This is one of the best things about her. I pull open her desk drawer to check she’s not taken the photos of her dead parents and feel a bounce inside when I see them, smiling like they’re going to live for ever. There’s a notebook too. I pick it up and flick through. ‘Sunday: Jeannie still feeling under the weather. Ate three rounds of Marmite toast.’ An entry for every day we’ve been here. Why is she taking notes on Mother like she’s a patient?
I shut the drawer, worried: is Mother sicker than I thought? I go t
o check on her. Her bedroom is dark, and a bit stale, like night breath. But at least in sleep Mother doesn’t look like someone who’d start sobbing just because a wildflower shattered.
I sit quietly on the chair beside her bed, grateful she’s here, her room only three doorknobs down from mine. At least Daddy’s not around to cart her back to The Lawns. No Don either. I managed to swipe his letter from the doormat yesterday before anyone noticed, recognizing his bold loopy handwriting from postcards he’s sent over the years. I fed it, unopened, into the camp fire I made in the woods. The envelope corner caught in the embers and made the most perfect leap of vein-blue flame.
I watch Mother and try to remember what she was like before she lost his baby, and herself. It’s difficult. Like trying to remember someone who moved away ages ago. But I do know that when I left for school in the morning, I always looked forward to coming home. I didn’t dread it like I’ve done this last year. And if Mother was in a different room she was still tangibly around, a presence, bustling and busy, light on her feet. Now the more I’m around her, the more I miss her. She makes a different noise walking up the stairs.
Everyone was drawn to her then. They didn’t cross the street to avoid her. If she was on the front steps clipping the wisteria for a vase, a neighbour would pop up, wanting to chat, peering over her shoulder into our hallway, hoping to work their way inside for a good poke about and a slice of my mother’s famous toffee flan that smiled inside your mouth. If that failed, they’d take the back route: I knew I was invited to other girls’ houses just so their mothers could meet mine. Maybe get a seat at one of my parents’ famous dinner parties.
I loved those, the laughter and chatter and chink of glasses, the orange noses of cigarettes moving about the dark garden. It was my job to stab the foil-covered grapefruit halves with Cheddar cheese and pineapple chunks on sticks and take guests’ coats as they came in. After that I’d settle on the staircase, forehead pressed against the banisters, and enjoy seeing things I wasn’t meant to see. Snooty Mrs Pickering crying, facing the wall, dabbing her mascara, then gliding back into the party, cocktail in hand, smiling like she was having the best evening of her life. The woman from the big house on Regent’s Park, switching my mother’s seating placements so she sat next to Don at dinner. I’d tell Mother all this the next day and she’d erupt with laughter, cracking the greenish clay of the Avon face mask she liked to use the morning after a party. ‘No secrets, Hera,’ I remember her saying, with a wink. ‘You can tell me anything.’ And I’d puff with happiness. Like it was us against the world.