16

 
 

The working men’s club had been demolished and burnt. There was a bonfire scar where the skittles alley had been. Clouds of ink approached from the north-west and hard, steady rain reached the village. Mist rose from leaf mulch on the ground, lending the garden a primeval air. The weeping willow became a woolly mammoth in Ellis’s mind’s eye. Chrissie stood beside him at the open front door and watched the storm.

Summoned to the attic by the rain, Denny O’Rourke stopped on the stairs and watched his children lean against each other in the doorway. He smiled to himself and retreated silently back into the dining room, deciding that the buckets in the attic could move themselves tonight. He didn’t care. His children were united under his roof and, tomorrow, his daughter was taking him on holiday. Nothing else mattered to him.

 

 

Ellis waved them off and as he returned inside he decided to decorate Mafi’s bedroom, as a surprise for his dad. He worked to the rhythm of continuous rain, distracted occasionally by the thought that he should visit Tim Wickham.

Mafi’s wardrobe was plain and worthless and too big for the room. Ellis took a crowbar to it, and as the wardrobe disintegrated the mighty black beam which ran through the middle of the bedroom wall reappeared. He had forgotten it was there. On the floor was a paper horseshoe, curled and yellowed by age. The wall around the far end of the beam was crumbling. He picked at it with a knife, dislodging as little masonry as possible so that a quick painting job didn’t turn into a big plastering job. He filled the hole and delicately swept the paintbrush over it so as not to dislodge the spongy, patched-up surface.

 

 

There were never mornings like these on the coast. A freezing mist rose from the fields at Longspring. Ellis bent down to open the gate to the herdsman’s cottage, and by the time he had closed it Tim Wickham was standing on the garden path and Chloe was in the doorway, her stony face half covered by her fingers, which played piano on her cheekbones. Ellis didn’t know she had returned to Tim and now he didn’t know what to say to him.

“I’m sorry …” was what came out.

When Ellis stepped forward, Tim pushed out the palm of his hand in a “keep out” gesture.

“I said I’m sorry …” Ellis reasoned.

“Your trouble,” Tim said flatly, “is that you’ve never been in love.”

“We’re only eighteen …” Ellis’s reply was half-hearted. He hadn’t come here to make a case for himself. He shrugged his shoulders, apologised one more time and walked away. Tim called after him.

“You know when we tried to take your dad’s letters?”

Ellis turned and nodded.

“I could have unlocked that drawer. You know why I didn’t? Because they’re none of your fucking business, that’s why. You think the world is your private playground because you’ve got no mummy. She’s my wife! Not everything is here for your amusement. You were my mate and you just fucked off. You didn’t even ask me to come with you.”

“Are you bollocking me for leaving the village or for sleeping with your wife?” Ellis asked defiantly.

“For being you,” Tim answered.

 

 

Treasure Island seemed barely large enough to perch on. Ellis hated being a giant in a place that use to fit him so well. He emerged from the woods on to the bridleway that led to the lane and stopped to admire the chimney tops and cat-slide roof of the cottage. A stick rattled across the frozen hoof marks and landed at his feet. He turned and saw Tim sitting on the stump of a tree, breathless from running. Tim walked towards Ellis and smiled. For a moment, it was the smile of the boy at the milk vat on a summer morning. Then, for the third time in his life, and the second with Tim, Ellis felt the sensation of his legs buckling, the sky flooding into his line of sight and a sharp pain stinging his skull. The ground was hard and cold. The ridges of the hoof marks dug into the back of his head. Tim stood over him, his right fist still clenched tight.

“That was original of you,” Ellis muttered. “Do it a third time and you get to keep my nose.”

“You didn’t even ask me to come with you,” Tim spat.

“You’d have said no,” Ellis yelled. “You were in love!”

 

 

It might have been the ringing in his ears, but the cottage seemed lifeless. It was the half-hour after sunset, when a little daylight remained trapped in the rooms, light which illuminates but doesn’t shine. Ellis walked from room to room and the air was leaden with Denny’s absence. Without his dad there, the cottage had no meaning. In Mafi’s bedroom, Ellis stared at the great beam. In comparison to his father’s perfectionism, the faint-hearted repair Ellis had made to the crumbling wall was intolerable. He stared at the wall, seemingly unblemished but deeply flawed, and it stared back at him. He grabbed a chisel from the tool box and began to chip through his own paintwork into the crumbling masonry, which fell apart so readily it seemed that the rot had been supporting itself. An hour later, there was a hole in the wall four feet long and two feet high.

The beam was damp and rotten, in defiance of its enormous mass. Ellis poked his head in and looked along the beam into the guts of the building, where it was too dark to see. The muted sound of water sitting in pipes and the cold, still atmosphere told him that he was looking into an open space similar to the attics. Then came the sound of a single, faint, high-pitched drip.

He began to walk, mentally tracing the beam’s path through the insides of the cottage, behind the walls of the stairwell, under the steps on the landing corridor and into his dad’s bedroom where he pulled the bed away and found himself looking at the small black door to the spider well.

“Had to be …” The words trickled out of him.

In a swift but controlled movement, he lunged forward, opened the door, flicked the light switch and retreated to the centre of the room. The light hadn’t worked and he found himself staring at a square of blackness inside the well. He got the torch from downstairs. He lined himself up with the black doorway and attempted to step forward but merely flinched. He cursed himself, held his breath, crouched down and forced himself through the doorway. Inside, he remained on his haunches and stared at the darkness. His heartbeat quickened and his arms began to tremble.

“This is ridiculous, Ellis,” he muttered.

He turned on the torch. Layers of triangular webs, worn like grey cloaks, adorned the well. In the centre of the well was an impressive crown post and the beam from Mafi’s bedroom formed the horizontal section of it, jointed to a vertical post-beam as great and impressive as itself. Ellis shone the light on the mortised timber plate at the centre of the crown post. This was where the moisture was greatest, as if the pressure of the conjoining timbers was squeezing water from the wood, flakes of which came away easily in his hand.

Then came the same single, delicate, high-pitched drip he had heard earlier. Through the cobweb curtain, on the floor, he could make out what seemed to be a small piece of rusty metal. He directed the torch at the object but the torch-beam was smothered by the webs, and so was his path into the well. Many times since he had left home he had wanted to slow time down but now he wanted to reverse it. He wanted to go back to the start again, to the day they moved into the cottage, to the first time they opened this miniature black door. He wanted to step inside it and greet the spiders. He wanted to live happily with them.

Did I choose to be scared? he asked himself. Did I allow myself to be? Could I just as easily have chosen not to be afraid?

If he could go back in time now, he would not be scared. He would go to his dad when he was still young and ask all about the past and not allow the silence to build, layer upon layer, year after year.

Another drip. Ellis went down on to his knees and, for the first time in his life, willingly touched the webs. He let the revulsion sweep through him and it immediately seeped out of him and there was no fear or revulsion left. He parted the layers of silk with one hand and with the other he aimed the torch at where the sound had come from and saw the tin mouse Chrissie gave him on his ninth birthday, the grey tin mouse with red plastic wheels and a shiny black tail that he had let fall to the floor, like a spoilt little boy. He waited for another droplet of rainwater to fall and saw it bounce off the rusty mouse and make its brittle sliver of sound. He crawled through the silk curtain and the webs fell shut behind him. He picked the mouse up and held it.

All the while, you’ve been sitting here watching the rain come in, trying to tell us.

He was in the corner of the spider well now, tucked into the pit which, as a child, he had stared into from the attic above. Ellis put the tin mouse in his pocket and switched off the torch. Light from Mafi’s bedroom seeped into the well through the hole that Ellis had chiselled. As it did so, the hulking black shape of the beam revealed itself again in the feeble light. Ellis watched it process in front of his eyes, a submarine in the depths, a shadow amongst shadows. Had his father perhaps pulled his bed away every night and opened the little black door and placed his sadness in this well? Was the indistinct shadow in front of him the tumour of set-aside grief that had gathered here?

 

 

Denny called Ellis his “hero”. His act of heroism had been to discover the rotten beam and its minuscule, inexorable slipping movement that had created tears in the roof for years, silently and relentlessly. And, as if uncomfortable with keeping the truth from a hero, Denny decided to show his son a photograph. In it, Denny was young and wore a suit at an official dinner of some kind.

“You handsome devil,” Ellis muttered, as he studied the other man in the photograph. Denny and the man were shaking hands. The man was extremely tall. Ellis had never seen a man tower over his dad. Around them, people were applauding and smiling. The tall man was old-fashioned and immaculate in appearance, with distinct, tight waves of greying hair. Ellis stared at the man for some time, even though he had recognised Hedley instantly.

“The frog-man …” he whispered.

“I’m not proud of deceit, dear boy. I’m sorry.”

Ellis handed the photo back. “I wouldn’t sweat. There’s deceit and there’s deceit. I’m really touched.”

And for a moment that was wonderful and unbearable to Denny O’Rourke, his son looked him in the eye.

“And very hungry,” Ellis added, to break the spell.

He made a sandwich. And as he did so, his heart basked in the warmth of knowing that his dad had been watching over him all the time.

“Hedley was the senior partner before me. I took over from him when he retired,” Denny said.

“When was that?”

“Fifteen years ago. Hedley retired to the coast. You happened to land on his doorstep.”

“I thought he was after my gonads,” Ellis said.

 

 

Standing at the kitchen door, Denny caught sight of a tawny owl and followed it out of the garden and into the woods, forgetting that he had a glass of Scotch in his hand. The moonlight was strong and blue and willing to share secrets. The owl was gone. Denny watched the silvern light skitter on the streams surrounding Treasure Island. He stepped across the water on to the island. He lit a cigarette and sat on the ground. All around him the water trickled and glistened. Medway, Rother, Panama and Mississippi. Children give names to places and then grow out of them, but all the different names remain, piled one on another like layers of paint on the walls of an old house that people have loved.

Denny sipped his Scotch. It tasted good against the outside air. It was time to set sail again. If he didn’t, he would fade. He would grow old in an empty house, waiting for his children to fill the cottage with grandchildren, only to discover that they fill it merely a few times each year and leave it emptier in comparison. The notion that he might leave the cottage felt surprisingly real to him, possibly because an insurance company and a builder had, with apparent ease and relative speed, put an end to a problem that had agitated him for a decade. He would have found it difficult to leave with the roof still confounding him.

If he could bring himself to move on, there were great treasures awaiting him. He sensed this. He would buy a small house with a small cottage garden, and free up money for travel. He would revisit the places he saw as a young seaman and he would go to new countries too. And to many of these places, if life could be exactly as he wanted it to be, he would take his son.

 

 

When Denny went to view houses, Ellis stayed behind and took photographs of the village. With the onset of winter the quality of light at the beginning and end of the day grew more and more beautiful to him and he began to recognise its behaviour. From the woods on the hill, the four hundred acres of Longspring Farm looked small and vulnerable amidst the vast and ever-increasing acreage of Dale Farm and Westfield Farm. Ellis composed a photograph of the village cradled in the valley, carefully excluding the widening main road beneath him. He placed dead centre of picture the twin silos at Westfield that rose above the horizon. Then, he waited for the light to change. He had a smoke and daydreamed of being a photographer and wished he hadn’t screwed things up with Milek. He looked through the viewfinder again and stepped away in confusion. He double-checked to make sure he wasn’t hallucinating, but he wasn’t. The silos at Westfield Farm had disappeared.

The concrete track to Haynes’s farm at Westfield was a long, laborious walk. It felt like prairie land to Ellis and he didn’t like it. He and Tim had watched enormous mounds of uprooted hedgerow being burnt all over Haynes’s land when they were boys.

The silos lay dismantled in sections, in the shadow of a newly constructed grain store. The store was a massive portal-framed building, clad in reinforced steel with ventilation ducts like a shark’s gills and docking bays for the huge tractors that would ship in the grain. Ellis stepped inside and tested the echo. He looked out through the colossal steel doors at the fallen silos and could hardly accept they were no longer a part of the sky.

The hamlet of Charcott was an hour’s walk from Westfield across the land. Ellis had been there only a few times in his life. He wandered up there now and, with the trees bare, the village was laid out vividly from the small community on the hill and it pleased Ellis to find a fresh view of his homeland, even now. Charcott was no more than a single row of terraced cottages, a phone box and a furniture maker’s workshop. In the middle of the terrace was a one-room pub called the Heron and lying star-shaped on the ground outside it was Des Payne, stupefied by a lunchtime drinking session. Unable to wake him, Ellis sat him up against the pub wall and watched over him. Theirs was the first generation of boys to grow up in the village with no work awaiting them when they became young men. They could either wander away, as Ellis had, or wander around, like Des. Tim Wickham had got the only job going.

 

 

Denny got in from work and sat down with a cup of tea and a pile of house particulars. The phone rang.

“Is Ellis there?”

“Hello, Jed. No, he’s not.”

Denny and Jed had never met but they spoke often and liked each other.

“Can I ask you something Jed?”

“Sure, Mr O. Fire away.”

“Has my son had many girlfriends? Relationships, I mean. Good ones?”

Jed hesitated. “You’ve caught me off guard there.”

“You’ll tell me if it’s none of my business.”

“Well, he’s definitely not gay, and there’s a few females in this town who could testify to that, if you know what I’m saying.”

“I think I can crack your code.”

“But, relationship … I don’t know. Ellis seems happier not getting too involved.”

“I fear I haven’t offered my son much guidance on the subject of love.”

“I shouldn’t sweat,” Jed said. “It’s not like sons are really into accepting guidance from their dads anyhow. But, you know, if you’re brought up by a single man you’re not going to know much about men and women being together, are you?”

Denny wandered into the orchard for a smoke. He laughed at himself. There was nothing as frightening as a young person shooting from the hip. Change was trickling into his life whether he liked it or not. His wife’s death had always felt to him the most recent event in his life but, lately, for the first time in fifteen years, it seemed a long way away. The years that had passed since she left were finally amounting to distance.

The phone rang again and Denny heard the pips of a call box and then his son’s voice.

“If I invited you to come up to the Heron for a pint, would you consider it A, a genuine offer or B, an unsubtle attempt to get a lift home?”

“I’ll have a Guinness. Unless this is C, an unsubtle effort to get me to come and buy you a drink because you’re out of cash, in which case you’ll have to wait for me.”

“I’ve got cash.”

“I’m on my way.”

Denny found his drink waiting for him. “That,” he said with measure, after his first sip, “is a decent pint of Guinness.”

“Didn’t know you drank the stuff,” Ellis said, offering his dad a smoke.

“You should go to Ireland and try the real thing,” Denny said.

“So should you,” Ellis replied.

“I’ve been. A Guinness in Ireland is a pleasure indeed. Might take you there myself. I’ll add it to my list.”

“When did you go to Ireland?”

“In my youth, a number of times.”

“First I’ve heard of it,” Ellis said.

“You don’t know the half of it,” Denny said, and sipped again.

When their glasses were empty, they took Des Paine home.

 

 

Denny O’Rourke gazed at the snowdrops on the front lawn whilst the estate agent showed the cottage to a couple from Chiswick. The couple were in their early thirties, had two young children and hoped to have a third. They said the cottage was beautiful. They understood it must be a wrench to leave. Denny listened politely and smiled his handsome, disarming smile, oblivious of its qualities. He found himself picturing the wife from Chiswick naked. This was not something he usually did. But he was doing it now. They made love and she was sweet and warm. Embarrassed, he went into the dining room, under the pretext of having to record something on the radio.

“It’s difficult for him,” Ellis explained.

Ellis had made a point of never using the fact that he had no mother for his own advantage. But now, consumed by the urge to touch this lovely older woman, he bent the rule by leaning forward and touching her forearm, as he added, “His wife died, you see.”

And by not saying “my mum died” he felt he hadn’t cheated too blatantly. The woman’s eyes shone pale blue in sympathy.

The estate agent called at two o’clock with an offer. Denny rejected it and said that if they offered the asking price the cottage was theirs. At three o’clock, the agent rang and said he’d never sold a house so easily. Denny suggested he reduced his fee to reflect the fact. The agent laughed nervously.

“You said it would take months!” Ellis protested.

“I thought it would.”

They drank a little that evening.

“Strangest thing happened today,” Denny admitted, when the bottle was empty, “with the woman buying the house …”

“Yeah?”

“Came into the dining room and kissed me.” Denny was as shocked now as he had been then. “Kissed me on the cheek, squeezed my hand and said, ‘Do take care.’”

Ellis was appalled. “Lucky sod! I fancied her rotten. I was thinking all manner of unsavoury things about her.”

This alarmed Denny. If he was going to start having fantasies about naked women in his retirement that was one thing, but he didn’t expect to be fantasising about the same women as his son.

 

 

Gary Bird opened the door to Ellis, revealing that he had grown to twice Ellis’s width and weight. His neck was as thick as his head. He looked at Ellis blankly.

Ellis gave in. “Hello, Gary.”

Gary seemed not to be breathing.

“It’s me, Ellis.”

Gary raised his eyebrows in an unusual display of animation. “I know it is.”

“Oh. Right. Long time no talk.” Ellis struggled on.

“Seven years,” Gary mumbled.

“Quite a long time considering we live …” Ellis faltered, gesturing weakly to the cottage opposite. “I was a bit of a git to you as a kid.” This was not the conversation Ellis had planned. “You probably think I still am.”

“I wouldn’t know.”

“Anyway! That’s not the point.”

“What is?” Gary asked.

“I don’t know if you’re in work right now but we need someone to help us pack and shift furniture all week.”

“Right.”

“You interested?”

“Yup.” Gary remained lifeless.

“Oh, good.”

“Two pound fifty an hour,” Gary gushed.

“Fine. See you eight thirty.”

“Nine,” Gary muttered darkly.

“By the way, feel free to apologise for breaking my nose and smashing my brain into my arsehole seven years ago,” Ellis said brightly, curious as to how Gary would react. He reacted by gently shutting the door.

 

 

Ellis woke to the sound of blackbirds fighting in the trees. After a week of working too relentlessly to think of time running out, and distracted by the bet he and Denny had made on whether or not Gary Bird would ever smile, the hollowness of his bedroom stripped bare reminded Ellis that today was the day.

“But we only just got here,” he whispered.

The words floated upwards to the attic hatch and dislodged it. Soon after, he saw the first spider poke its head out.

“I thought you’d make an appearance.” Ellis smiled.

The spider smiled back. It looked over its shoulder, nodded encouragingly, and another spider appeared.

“Hello,” said the second spider.

Ellis smiled at this spider too. The spiders launched themselves down on to the blanket that Ellis lay under, the strands of silk catching in the orange glow of first light as they twisted.

“Are you feeling sad?” one of the spiders asked.

Ellis welled up. “A little.” He shut his eyes and felt the bridge of his nose and the back of his eyes burn with a threat of tears. “I’ll miss you,” he whispered.

When he opened his eyes again, there was a sea of spiders at the hatch and a mist of them descending on drag lines to the floor. They gathered around Ellis, tens of thousands of them. Enough, it seemed, to lift Ellis up and carry him away.

“Ellis,” said one of the spiders, “we’ve watched you grow up and we’re very proud of you.”

Ellis smiled. “Thank you. Please look after yourselves when the new people move in. It’s going to be a dangerous time.”

“Goodbye, Ellis,” they called out.

Ellis shut his eyes and allowed them time to disappear so that when he moved he wouldn’t harm any of them.

“Goodbye,” he whispered.

 

 

He regretted his shyness with people when it came to taking photographs. He had photographed the village from every angle but he had not found the courage to approach people for their portraits. Tomorrow would be too late. Tomorrow, he would be an outsider. Year by year, with no photographs to sustain them, the people would fade from his mind’s eye without putting up a fight.

The family from Chiswick pulled up in the lane two hours early. Ellis and Denny peered out from Mafi’s bedroom window as if they were under attack. After watching his son march down the driveway and invite the family in, Denny O’Rourke bent down to check himself in the three-way mirror of Mafi’s dressing table and found himself staring at a blank wall.

When the moment of leaving came, Ellis defied his own resolution and went into every room of the cottage and tried to recall and wrap up all the years in his heart. It proved a futile and panic-stricken measure. His dad was waiting for him at the foot of the stairs and saw the distress on his son’s face. He held Ellis’s shoulders rigidly and steadied him.

“Come on,” he murmured, “let’s not mess it up now.”

He forced a smile and Ellis did the same. They marched out of the cottage into the courtyard, where the young couple were trying to keep out of the way.

“Time’s not a problem,” the woman said. “We’ll leave you alone for a few minutes and wait down by the lane.”

“Nonsense!” Denny O’Rourke laughed, more loudly than he’d meant to. “We’re not like that.”

He handed the keys to the husband. “It’s all yours.”

The woman moved forward to embrace Denny but he thrust out a hand to parry her move and they shook hands formally. Ellis stole a glimpse of the shape of the woman’s body as she turned and watched Denny walk away to his car. He shook the husband’s hand.

“I hope you’re very happy here,” he said, as sensibly as he could.

He turned his back on the husband and smiled his most endearing, most vulnerable, most motherless smile at the wife and, hijacking the sympathy she felt for his dad, embraced her.

“Look after your father,” she whispered.

Ellis sighed in her ear, feigned the onset of tears, and rested one hand lightly across the top of her buttocks.

“I will,” he whispered, and stroked her bottom once.

He marched away to the car. Denny was reversing down the drive before Ellis had shut the door. They pulled out into the lane and paused for a moment. Denny took a deep breath and turned to his son.

“Ready?” he asked him.

Ellis nodded. “Ready for everything.”

As they pulled away, Gary Bird emerged from his parents’ house and headed up the lane, without acknowledging the O’Rourkes. Ellis leant out of the window and called across to him.

“If you had smiled at me just once in the last week I’d have won the sodding ten pounds and split it with you, you miserable git!”

He pulled his head back inside and grinned at his dad.

“Let’s get out of here,” he said.

“Let’s,” his dad agreed.

And they were gone.

 

 

They went to a place where the night sky was orange and there were no stars. But it was available, and cheap to rent, and it was only for a short time, until Denny found the perfect place. The rented house sat in a large, directionless sprawl of modern houses on the edge of the town, which had no edge to it. A line of old walnut trees ran along the bottom of the garden and in the middle of them was a wooden gate leading into the last remaining field, a handkerchief-sized relic of open country. Tunnel vision, selective hearing and an optimistic disposition could give the false impression of being back in the village. Beyond the field, the houses and roads began again. One relentless hour northwards, they became London.

Within a month the walnut trees were green and their large leathery leaves fluttered in the breeze and their percussive sound veiled the drone of the motorway. Denny and Ellis looked at the orange glow that hid the stars from them and, for the first time, Ellis saw doubt impoverish his dad’s features.

“I think I might have made a mistake, dear boy.”

“The moment you find a place you love, you’ll feel differently.”

“I’m sure you’re right …” Denny said unconvincingly.

Chrissie arrived with a parcel for her dad.

“They’re not presents, they’re homework,” she told him.

Beneath the brown wrapping paper, Denny O’Rourke found The Times Atlas of the World and books entitled The Art of Independent Travel, Great Train Journeys of the World, Fodor’s Guide to New Zealand and a Jiffy’s Container Shipping brochure, in which were listed cargo ships that offered berths for civilians.

“How marvellous!” he said.

“Inspired idea,” Ellis muttered to his sister.

She winked at him proudly.

Denny positioned a table and chair at the kitchen window, facing the walnut trees. He set the atlas and travel books out on it, along with a pencil and notebook. He opened the window to a refreshing breeze, played his music a little louder than the sound of the road, and began to read.

Ellis spent the spring preoccupied by the number of months that were amassing since he’d had sex. He could think of no one in his current routine who would want to sleep with him. The suburbs seemed to drain away the potential for romance or lust, and for anything else for that matter. He was bored. What he really wanted and needed was to work for Milek but that would mean asking for Chrissie’s help and, right now, he didn’t want to ask her for anything. Something had changed between the two of them. The tenderness had gone from her, unable to cohabit with her ambition. She was businesslike in all things and injected competitiveness into situations where none need exist. Ellis hoped it was a temporary change in her and that things would return to how they used to be, but in the meantime he was bewildered by her need to belittle him.

 

 

Denny had viewed four small houses in four different villages but none of them was right. The villages were too enclosed and the houses lightless. He missed the cottage. He missed the way in which his village had allowed the sky in, right up to the doorstep. He loathed the suburbs that surrounded him. He sat in the living room and the afternoon clouded over without his noticing. He rocked gently back and forth, his arms folded across his stomach. He took the phone up to his bedroom and shut the door before calling the doctor and making an appointment for the next day. He went to bed soon after eight o’clock. Ellis brought him in a glass of water and put it beside his bed.

“I’ve never done this before,” Ellis said.

“What’s that?”

“Looked after you when you’re ill.”

“I’m not ill, just a little off-colour.” Denny smiled to back up his claim.

Ellis retreated to the door. “What sort of off-colour?”

“Just a tummy ache, that’s all.”