Tideline
TIDELINE
Penny Hancock grew up in south-east London and then travelled extensively as a language teacher. She now lives in Cambridge with her husband and three children. This is her first novel.
First published in Great Britain in 2011 by Simon & Schuster UK Ltd
A CBS COMPANY
Copyright © Penny Hancock, 2011
This book is copyright under the Berne Convention.
No reproduction without permission.
All rights reserved.
The right of Penny Hancock to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.
Simon & Schuster UK Ltd
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222 Gray’s Inn Road
London WC1X 8HB
www.simonandschuster.co.uk
Simon & Schuster Australia, Sydney
Simon & Schuster India, New Delhi
A CIP catalogue copy for this book is available from the British Library.
Hardback ISBN: 978-1-84983-768-2
Trade paperback ISBN: 978-0-85720-627-5
E-book ISBN: 978-0-85720-629-9
Typeset by Hewer Text UK Ltd, Edinburgh
Printed and bound in Great Britain by
CPI Mackays, Chatham ME5 8TD
For Pauline and Peter
CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
CHAPTER THIRTY
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE
CHAPTER FORTY
CHAPTER FORTY-ONE
CHAPTER ONE
Friday
Sonia
He comes to me when the chatter of school children along the alley has died away. Later, drinkers will troop the other way towards the pub, the evening riverbus will make its last journey westwards to town, rattling chains and making the pontoon groan. But this is a silent time, almost as if the river and I are waiting.
He comes to the door in the courtyard wall.
‘Sorry,’ he says, twisting awkwardly about, such a graceful body but he doesn’t yet know what to do with it. ‘It’s just, at the party, your husband mentioned about that album.’
I stare past him. Early February, the light in the sky loosening. I smell brewery yeast drift on the breeze from downriver. Bitter Seville oranges from the marmalade I’m making in the kitchen. Along with the bubble of the preserving pan behind me, I hear Cat Stevens singing ‘Wild World’ on the radio. Time flips and catches in a tangle in my head.
I look into his face.
‘Come in,’ I say, ‘Of course. Remind me . . .’
‘It’s by Tim Buckley. You can’t get hold of it any more, not even on the internet. He said he had a copy on vinyl. D’you remember? I’ll record it and bring it back.’
‘No problem.’ I speak as if I were his age rather than my own. ‘Cool!’ Then cringe inside. I can hear Kit. ‘Oh God, Mum, don’t try and speak as if you were sixteen. It’s sad.’
He comes in. He steps through the door in the wall. The wisteria’s a black steel scribble like the barbed wire they loop along the top of prison fences. He follows me across the courtyard and over the threshold into the hall. As well as the oranges there’s the smell of the wax floor polish that Judy uses. He comes into the kitchen. Goes to the window, looks at the river. Then turns and faces me. I won’t deny it, the thought flits across my mind that perhaps he’s come because he finds me attractive. Young boys and older women, you do hear of such things. But I pull myself together.
‘I was just going to have a drink,’ I say, turning down the flame under the marmalade which is bubbling ferociously now and must have reached setting point. ‘Have something.’
I never usually drink before six, but I wave bottles recklessly at him, vodka – I know teenagers love vodka – Greg’s beer, I even hold up a bottle of red wine we laid down, years ago, waiting for it to mature so we can open it on Kit’s twenty-first birthday.
He shrugs. ‘OK,’ he says. ‘If you’re opening something.’
‘What would you like though,’ I insist. ‘Go on, say.’
‘Red wine then.’
The thing with boys of this age is they do speak but you have to ease them into it. I know that from Kit’s friends who tramped in and out, day and night, for several years before she left. Those boys were all spots and hair over their eyes and big feet. Silent except for the pleases and thank yous drummed into them by their parents. You had to tease and mention bands to get them to talk. Jez is different. With Jez, I don’t have to try. He’s easy to be with. For a teenager he’s quite unself-conscious. It must be to do, I think, with his living in France. Or maybe it’s because we feel we know each other, though we’ve barely spoken before.
He moves from the window and sits at the kitchen table, one foot crossed over the other long leg, the huge sole of his trainer almost in my face. These children today, these boy-men, did not exist quite like this when I was young. They’ve evolved since then. With their well-mixed genes, they’re more adapted to the modern world. Taller and broader. Softer. Gentler.
‘This is a wicked house. Right by the river. I wouldn’t sell it.’
He drinks half his wine in one mouthful. ‘Though it must be worth quite a bit.’
‘Oh, well, I’ve no idea what this house is worth,’ I say. ‘It was in the family. My parents stayed here for years, all their married life virtually. I inherited it when my father died.’
‘Cool.’ His wine’s gone in one more gulp. I refill his glass.
‘This is the kind of place I want to live,’ he says. ‘On the Thames, a pub to the right, the market there. You’ve got everything. Music shops. Venues. Why d’you want to move?’
‘I’m not going anywhere,’ I assure him.
‘But your husband, at the party, he . . .’
‘I’ll never leave the River House!’
This comes out more curtly than I intend. But I’m hearing things I don’t like. Greg thinks we should move, yes, but we haven’t agreed to it. ‘I never would. I never could,’ I say, more softly.
He nods.
‘I didn’t want to leave this area either. But Mum says London – Greenwich especially – is bad for my asthma. It’s one of the reasons we went to Paris.’
His dark fringe has fallen across one eye. He flicks it back, and looks at me from under long, perfectly formed black eyebrows. I notice his sinuous neck with its smooth Adam’s apple. There’s a triangular dip where his throat descends towards his sternum. His skin has a sheen on it that I’d like to touch. He’s of adult proportions yet everything about him is glossy and new.
I want to tell
him that I have to stay in the River House to be near Seb. Somewhere in the river’s swell, in its daily ebb and flow, he’s still there, a flash of multicoloured oil on its surface. A ripple, a bubble, a shooosh, and he’s back. I’ve never told anyone this. It’s something few people would understand, and, to use a cliché, so much water’s gone under the bridge since then. A whole lifetime. I’m convinced Jez would get it. But I let the moment pass. Something prevents me from telling him. It’s something that’s so close up, I can’t get it into focus. Instead, I say, ‘Living in Paris. That must be exciting?’
‘It’s OK. But I miss my mates and the band. I’m coming back soon anyway. Been looking at colleges. Music courses and stuff.’
‘Your aunt said.’
‘Helen?’
‘Yes.’
A flicker of irritation that he calls her Helen. At the intimacy of it. Which is silly. No one calls their aunts ‘Aunty’ any more. What did I expect?
‘Found anywhere you want to apply to?’
He pulls a face and I can see he doesn’t want to have this conversation, the one where the adults ask what you’re going to do. He’s too alive for this kind of talk. Even though I’m thinking, I could help you. Drama, music, they’re my areas.
‘Everyone says, “Oooh Paris,” but it’s rubbish, a city where you have no mates. I prefer London. It’s like no one gets it when I say that.’
‘I get it,’ I say.
I’m aware of the marmalade slowly setting on the stove. I should fetch the funnel and pour it into jars, but I’m unable to move from my chair, from his line of vision.
‘You can nip up and get the album if you like,’ I say. ‘It’s in the music room right at the top of the stairs.’
‘The room where the keyboard is?’
Of course. He came here once before, I remember now, with Helen and Barney, one or two years ago. It was summer. His voice an octave higher, pink cheeks. A girl glued to him. Alicia. I barely registered him then.
He doesn’t move.
‘You still doing stuff with those actors and all that?’ he asks. ‘It’s sick.’
‘What?’
When he grins, his mouth is wider than I’d realized. I have to clutch the edge of the chair to ensure I maintain my composure.
‘Sick. Cool. All those actors you meet. All those TV people. What’s your job again?’
I train voices, I tell him. He wants to know what that means, what it involves. I try to explain how the voice can emphasize meaning when words are inadequate. On the other hand it can contradict what’s actually said. This is useful for actors of course, but for real life, too.
As I speak he listens in a particular way. I find this more disconcerting than anything. He listens the way Seb used to, eyes half closed. Reluctant to admit his interest. A half smile on his lips.
The bottle of wine is almost empty. The marmalade must have solidified in the pan.
‘I guess you know some famous people. Any rock stars? Any guitarists?’
‘No rock stars as such. But I know some . . . useful people. People who are always looking for new talent.’
He leans towards me a little, and his eyes widen. Brighten.
I’ve found what drives him.
‘I want to be a professional guitarist one day,’ he says. ‘It’s my passion.’
‘Well, when you get the album, you could bring one of Greg’s guitars down. There’s quite a selection up there.’
‘I ought to go,’ he says.
Of course he must go. He’s a fifteen-year-old boy. On his way to meet his girlfriend, before he gets the train from St Pancras back to Paris tomorrow morning.
‘She makes me meet her in the foot tunnel exactly halfway between south and north London.’
‘Makes you?’
‘We–ell,’ he looks at me and all of a sudden he’s just an embarrassed teenage boy after all.
‘We measured the halfway point,’ he says, ‘by counting the paving slabs. We were going to count the white bricks but there were too many.’
‘How old is she?’ I ask.
‘Alicia? She’s fifteen.’
Fifteen. So. She’ll have no idea that nothing will ever be like this again.
‘I’ll go and get that album,’ he says, stumbling a little. The wine has gone straight to his head, he’s what Kit would call a lightweight.
‘Have one more drink. I’ll pour it while you go up. Go on. Go up.’
I listen to his footsteps taking the stairs two at a time and open another bottle. Something cheap this time, but Jez won’t notice. I fill his glass, and I add a little whisky. A cloud shifts over the river and a last sliver of sunlight slides across the table. For a second the glasses, the bottles and the fruit bowl are suspended in a rich amber glow.
I remember the marmalade again, but do nothing about it.
The phone rings, and I pick it up without thinking. It’s Greg. He launches straight in as if we’ve already been talking.
‘I’ve spoken to Burnett Shaws.’
‘Who?’
‘The estate agents. I want them to do an evaluation. It doesn’t tie us to anything. But I want to know figures, ballpark, it’ll help me choose what to view out here.’
I can’t speak. Jez has come back into the kitchen with Greg’s acoustic guitar. He bumps into the table as he sits and the guitar reverberates.
‘What’s that?’ Greg asks. ‘Have you got someone there?’
‘No. Nobody. But I’m not talking about this now. You know where I stand. You can’t make arrangements over my head.’
‘If we could have a sensible discussion about it I wouldn’t have to.’
I bite my lip. It’s always Greg’s last weapon, accusing me of irrationality.
I want to protest but he’s put the phone down.
‘Couldn’t find the album,’ Jez says. ‘But I spotted this guitar. Can I give it a go before I leave?’ His voice soothes away the tension aroused in me by Greg.
‘Of course. Of course you can.’ Nothing feels more right at this moment.
The next hour is my favourite this evening. Before the drink renders him incapable of leaving – even should he want to. We sit and talk and he plays. He tells me about Tim Buckley. How for him playing music was ‘just like talking’.
‘It’s like that for me too,’ Jez says. ‘You teach people to express themselves with their voices. I play the guitar for the same reason.’
He’s good. I knew he’d be good. He plays something classical, John Williams maybe, something that ripples and lilts like water. The guitar’s an extension of him, the music flows through his body from his soul. His fingers barely seem to move as he plucks the strings. His black hair falls over his face. When the drink begins to take effect and he can’t play any more, he rests the guitar on the floor, the fingerboard against his thigh.
He tells me again how he loves my house. The river right outside. The smells! The light. The sounds. Listen! And we sit and identify the sounds I’ve come to take for granted. The intermittent gush of waves against the wall, the clank and thumps from the old coaling pier, the throb of helicopters. Urban music, Jez calls it.
‘I want this kind of life,’ he says. ‘Music, wine, a house on the Thames.’
I, too, am a little drunk by now. I never want this evening to end.
‘It’s OK you know, Seb. You don’t have to go.’
‘Jez,’ he says.
‘What?’
‘My name. Jez, not Seb.’
It’s late when at last he stands up, and almost topples. Grabs the chair.
‘Shall I stay and keep you company?’ he slurs, and I almost blush.
‘I think,’ I say, in my grown-up mother’s voice, ‘it might be better if you got some sleep.’
He’s passed out almost before I can get him onto the old iron bed in the music room. I focus on his socks as I lie him down. There’s a hole in the big toe of the right one and I think of a darning thing my mother had that was the shape of
a mushroom and how she used to sit and mend our socks in the evenings, and I wonder whether anywhere in the world a darning mushroom still exists. What an odd thought to have as I roll the socks off his feet, then tug his arms out of the sleeves of his hoodie.
I wonder if I should remove the jeans that hang so loose around his narrow pelvis, the muscles sloping in a golden triangle towards the buttons of his flies. He’d be more comfortable when he woke. But I don’t want to humiliate him. So I leave them. I fill a glass of water in the shower room and place it on the bedside table so that he’ll know, if he wakes before I expect him to, that I am caring for him.
Before I go out of the room I bend over and pass my nose from the top of his head with its whiff of shampoo, to his neck, where I can detect his own male scent, of cedar, salt. He wears a black horn-shaped thing through one earlobe. His hair lies in liquid curls against his collarbone. I lift it gently so I may press my nose into the delicate, pale area beneath his ear. Here, I stop.
On his neck, beneath his hairline is the unmistakable red mark of a love bite. A hickey, Kit would call it. Bloody specks spread out from an angry central lesion. Alicia? Sucking his flesh into her mouth until the capillaries burst and bleed. A red sore on his flawless skin. And suddenly I’m staring at a livid red gash left by a rope as it dug its teeth into another buttermilk throat. For a few minutes I cannot look away.
At last I bend over and kiss the wound gently. ‘It’s OK,’ I whisper. ‘I’ll keep you safe, I promise.’
Then I pull the duvet over him, tuck it in a little at the edge, and go quietly out of the room.
CHAPTER TWO
Saturday
Sonia
Living by the Thames you get used to its sounds and secrets. The lifeboats that race up and down, trailing wake behind them. You get used to the number of bodies dredged from its depths. The way it flows one way, no return, though it fills and empties twice daily. To move away from it leaves you severed from the essence of things.
My time with Greg and Kit in the country was a dead time. I longed for the city, for its grime and anonymity. Away from London, I often woke at night, convinced that the river still flowed down below me. I would take a while to orientate myself, even after we’d been there many years. To register that I was a grown woman with a husband and a child, out of town. Then reality snapped into place, and acres of loss opened within me.