Eden Read online




  Contents

  Now

  July 1988

  September 1987

  July 1988

  August 1987

  July 1988

  August 1987

  July 1988

  September 1987

  July 1988

  October 1987

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  November 1987

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  November 1987

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  December 1987

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  April 1988

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  June 1988

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  July 1988

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  July 1988

  August 1988

  July 1988

  August 1988

  July 1988

  August 1988

  July 1988

  August 1988

  July 1988

  August 1988

  July 1988

  Now

  For the wallflowers

  NOW

  I STILL dream of Eden. Not the burnt, broken shell it is now, nor even the sweating, stifling coffin it became that last summer, when it was shrouded in dust sheets, awaiting burial like a corpse. No, the Eden in my mind is the one from my childhood when my entire world was contained within its cool, granite walls and high hedges, and my imagination played out on its velvet lawns and in the creeping dampness of the woods.

  The slightest, strangest thing will open up a chink in my veneer: the curve in a flock-papered wall; the plastic taint of squash from a child’s beaker; a nettle sting on a grazed knee. And then through this crack the memories swarm, teeming from unfathomed depths into my consciousness, like the swift surge of ants across a careless drip of jam. I remember the faded roses on the drawing room carpet under my always-bare feet, and the bright rhomboids of light from the leaded windows that cast their own tessellation on the black and white check of the hallway tiles. I remember the sound of Bea’s breath, the comfort of its steady rise and fall as she lay in the narrow wooden bed next to mine.

  Then these clear-as-yesterday sensations are joined by other fleeting glimpses in time, thirteen-year-old Bea reading, stretched across a princess bed in a turret, locked away from our world and immersed in another, or sixteen-year-old Bea holding court in the back room of a smoky pub, its carpet sticky with spilt lager and Coke and patterned with the fallen ash from her cigarettes, or almost-adult Bea’s laughter spilling out through the trees like bright butterflies as sweet-sixteen-year-old me runs down the path to the boathouse to meet her. An unceasing parade of Kodak moments surround me – a swirling dustbowl of memory that lifts me up and sends me soaring. Like Icarus seeking the sun, I fly so high that the trees become the odd, spongy miniatures from a toy train set, the house a shrunken version of itself rendered in painted plastic, and the creek a sliver of foil stuck down with a brush and glue.

  Then I see them: Bea and a boy, my boy – Tom – or one I want for my own. Their brown-limbed bodies are close, too close. Their fingers are touching, now, their lips. A hot hand rests on a sand-spackled back. I hear a sound, his, of pleasure; then my own, of disgust. Bea could have had anyone. So why him? Why Tom?

  And I begin to fall – a giddy, stomach-swirling tumble down towards the water. It is a fall I cannot possibly survive. I hit the surface, and my breath is knocked from my body, but I don’t sink. Instead I’m thrown, gasping, onto the shore of the “now” me: the writer, her fingers poised mid-sentence above a keyboard; the mother kneeling at the refrigerator door, milk carton in hand; the wife wrapped around the familiar curve of her husband’s spine in a bedroom twenty-something years and two hundred and more miles away from Eden.

  I wait for my heart to slow and my breathing to even out into a tick-tock rhythm, like a clock counting out a life in hours and minutes. And then I begin the game. Not an I-spy or a who-am-I or any of the charades that Bea and I would conjure up and convolute to fill a rainy afternoon or dark winter morning, but a darker game, filled with the danger and deliciousness of truth or dare. It is a game of “what ifs” and “if onlys”. If I could turn back time; if I could have been different – looked different; if I had said this and not said that. Would there have been a different ending? Would Eden still stand? Would Bea still be alive?

  But the game is pointless. For I can’t change what has been. Only what I take from it. Besides, paradise is not lost in a single day. Eden didn’t fall in the furnace of that afternoon, nor because of the match struck a year before by a single kiss. A kiss that at the time meant everything, meant the world – or at least the end of mine – but which I know now was worth less than nothing. The truth is that the decay had crept in to Eden long ago. Only I, rose-tinted, and blinded by hope, didn’t see the flames already crackling beneath my feet. The tinder set for every loss, every argument between me and Bea, every “wish you weren’t here”; kindling stacked on high over months and years, until Eden’s very foundations were a dessicated, precarious heap, waiting for a single Lucifer to be dropped.

  JULY 1988

  “EVANGELINE?”

  The sound of my name wrenches me from the paradise inside my head – the moss-ridden lawn between my toes, the clink of glasses of cream soda, their ice-cream hats melting in the summer heat. I am back to the cold, hard corners of the classroom, and the whispers of twenty pinafore-clad girls with polished accents and shinier hair.

  “Sir?”

  I wait for Mr Winters to repeat his demand for Pythagoras’ theorem or Occam’s razor or a verse of “Kubla Khan”. But then I see he’s not alone. At his side is Miss Crane, the school secretary, a pinched woman in glasses with the perpetual scent of breath mints and witch hazel. My stomach lurches with fear and possibility, because I’m not being summoned to give an answer, but to see the headmistress.

  I stand quickly and my chair clatters to the ground. As I stoop to right it, I feel the pink heat of embarrassment bloom across my cheeks and the prick of salt in the corners of my eyes. I bite my lip – a trick Bea taught me as a way to stop the tears coming – but I bite too hard and, as I walk past the stares and the sniggers, I taste the metallic tang of blood.

  The headmistress, Mrs Buttle, is a hard-faced woman with a tight, grey perm and lips like leather, and her office is the setting for only two scenes: punishment or devastation. But I can see by the depth and direction of creases in her high brow that it is pity, not anger that furrows it now.

  “Sit down, Evie.” Her voice is low, grave, and coloured with the tone of a command, not a question, so I do as I am told.

  Silence hangs heavy, like the drape of the velvet curtains, but my head – fuelled by a diet of too many novels and an unhealthy interest in the news – buzzes with possibilities: maybe Uncle John has had a heart attack. Not a fatal one, but one that means he will have to return to Eden and be nursed by his devoted-again wife. Or perhaps it is Aunt Julia who is sick. Perhaps she has cancer – not so bad that she will die – but just bad enough that he cannot leave her. He will realize he still loves her, and call off the divorce and the house sale.

  But this isn’t about Uncle John, or Aunt Julia.

  “It’s Beatrice,” Miss Buttle says. Then, as if I may be confused or slow-witted she adds: “Your cousin?”

  I feel my chest contract, my throat tighten. I clutch at straws: maybe she’s been cast in a film and had to leave uni after just a year. Or she’s been offered a part on Broadway. Yes, that’s it. And she’s asked me to go with her. I will finally escape from th
is school on a hill with its Dettol- and deodorant-reeking dorms and peeling paint to a world where the streets are, if not paved with gold, then at least lit with pink neon. Our anger and our disappointment in each other is gone and we’ve remembered who we love best and who we need more than anyone. We’ll go to America, and then back to Eden, to those endless summers of before, where the wide world was the creek and centre stage was just the two of us.

  But I’m wrong. Bea is going nowhere.

  “There’s been an accident; I’m so sorry. Bea … Bea is dead.”

  And in a single sentence my world falls apart.

  The words come in waves, a strange hollow ring to them as if spoken into a glass then tipped over me, soaking me, penetrating my clothes, my skin, my soul.

  “There was a fire,” she says. “At her hall.”

  “House,” I hear myself correct. “She lives in a house now.” Then another correction, unspoken this time: “lived”. I close my eyes and wish for the sudden jolt and flood of relief that comes with waking from a bad dream. But there’s none. When I open my eyes again, I’m still in the headmistress’s office with the smell of custard creams on a tea plate turning my stomach. And my cousin is still dead.

  “She was asleep, they think. So she wouldn’t have felt anything.”

  I taste the bitterness of bile at the back of my mouth and have to suppress the sudden urge to vomit. This is a lie. And I’m transported. I’m no longer caught in the claustrophobia of this dull room, this suffocating situation, but in the stifling heat of a bedroom ablaze. I’m no longer Evie, I’m her, I’m Bea, my body consumed by flames, smoke filling my lungs so that I can’t scream, can’t breathe. I feel the chair give way beneath me; hear a crack, then a cry. And then there is a sickening swirl of colour. Lurid oranges and reds devour a peacock blue dress, a pair of silver shoes, the pale fawn of a paperback, until everything is black.

  As small children, our greatest fear was waking up with the house on fire. It ranked above being eaten by a giant or torn apart by wolves; a pain terrible and complete. And she would have felt it all.

  SEPTEMBER 1987

  SHE STANDS at the crossing on the high road, her impatience swelling like the fast-moving tide of the crowds around her. Cars slow as the lights change and the pedestrians scurry across the sticky tarmac like beetles. But Bea doesn’t bustle. Bea walks slowly, savouring each footfall, each revved engine and burst of exhaust fumes, taking in the thick, hot human soup that surrounds her as she reaches New Cross Station.

  This sound, this smell, this feeling is what she has been waiting for. All those long days in stuffy, panelled classrooms reading Coleridge and cutting culottes from an out-of-date pattern; all those long nights in narrow beds in cold dormitories, or running back across dew-damp lawns from some townie’s Ford Escort, her face still stinging from his semblance of stubble, the taste of Silk Cut already stale on her lips. They’d all been building up to this moment – to London, to drama school. A week in and she has not tired of it yet. She still sees beauty in the oil patterns in rain-filled gutters and promise in every open doorway.

  She’d spent so many hours wishing herself elsewhere. Even at Eden – especially at Eden. At that earthly paradise that Evie so adored she had wasted hours, days willing herself here. “I need to find myself,” she’d once said. But even that was a lie, a regurgitation of something she’d heard on a screen at the Lux. She didn’t need to find herself; God, you could find anything, anyone in Eden; it was so small, so contained. What she wanted was to be lost, to lose herself in crowds, in life itself. There was a big world out there, one without curfews and cousins, and she wanted to walk in it. To live in it, love in it.

  She’d tired of schoolboys with their skintight jeans and studied hairdos. Oh, she’d let them believe she was theirs, for a week, for a night, sucking up their promises and their pathetic adoration, like a thirsty man will drink dirty water. “Do you love me?” she would ask. “Am I beautiful?” And when they said “yes” – for they always did – it would be like a rush of blood to the head and she would feel satisfied for a few dizzying seconds. But it didn’t last. She would wake wanting again, needing more praise, more promises. She’d sought out boys that were hard to get, knowing that their affection would mean more once won. Then, that last summer, she’d realized what was right under her nose: Tom; Evie’s Tom. And Bea had seduced him with a string bikini, beer, and pouts and pleadings.

  She’d been sorry afterwards and had left a letter for Evie to say it was a mistake. But Evie would forgive her; she always did. Anyway, it was over now. She’d left them behind like the detritus of summer – lollipop wrappers and empty bottles and the deserted ice-cream stand. And here, in this breathless, beating city she will find him. The person who will end all that pathetic need, all that fooling around and flirting. She will meet an astonishing boy who will be all things at once: Superman and Lex Luthor – the dashing hero and the complicated, angry poet. And he will make her complete.

  She’s missed the train into town and must wait for the next one. So she walks to the end of the platform, stands at its tip looking west into the very heart of the city. The metallic tracks gleam amber in the afternoon sun, snaking away from her with all the promise of the yellow brick road and Dick Whittington’s streets paved with gold. Like a butterfly unfurling its wings after a chrysalis winter, she spreads her arms and tips her head back, so that the heat and light can fall full on her face.

  She’s aware then of a sound behind her; no, not a sound, a presence. She opens her eyes, turns her head to see who’s there, who is watching her. Of course they’re watching. Someone always is.

  Then she smiles, for there is not one but two boys – men, even – staring at her. They’re not together but she recognizes both of them. She has seen them before around the theatre or in the student bar maybe. One of them leans against a pillar. His arms are tan and lithe, his hair curling round his ears. The other stands a few metres behind him: a paler, ghost-like version of the same. Thin, ethereal almost. Maybe it’s one of them, she thinks. Maybe he is the one. And she smiles again: a knowing, goading thing. Then turns back to her reverie, to the yellow road of train tracks.

  I am Dorothy, she thinks. I am Dorothy and this is my Oz.

  JULY 1988

  BEA USED to say that if grief was pie, I’d had a bellyful. A slice for no daddy, or one that wasn’t worth keeping. A slice for the mother who died when I was only three from a cancer that grew quickly, so that in two months she’d gone from dancing barefoot on the lawn to being buried in the earth in the village churchyard, leaving me at her childhood home with a handful of costume jewellery and even fewer memories. Another for the beloved grandparents – my guardians – who followed her into the salt-heavy soil when I was ten, orphaning me into the care of an uncle and aunt whose lives were bound to London. So that I was sent scuttling after Bea to boarding school in Berkshire, and Eden became no more than a holiday home. A fourth slice for the affair that cleaved my almost-family in two and meant that Eden would have to be sold soon to pay for the divorce. Four fat pieces of pie that should have filled me to the brim. And they would have done, but for Bea. Because whenever I was sad, whenever I remembered what I’d lost, Bea would take me by the hand and pull me into her bedroom, or down to the creek, whispering secrets and giggling with possibility.

  Until she didn’t; and now she never would again. Her death was the final flourish – the rotten cherry on top.

  The funeral is in the village down river from Eden. I know from lines of overheard conversations between the wobble-armed women cutting crusts off sandwiches in the pantry, from the misplaced confidences of Aunt Julia’s sister – Call-Me-Cassie – that my aunt had wanted the funeral near their old house in London, so Bea could lie in the grounds of a grand, show-off church, under a neatly clipped lawn, next to the double-barrelled offspring of Lords or at least hedge-fund managers. But Uncle John has made his one last stand before the decree absolute, and said that Bea’s
home was always here no matter what Julia might imagine. And so she is coming to Calenick: to the same unpretentious, practical chapel where we buried my mother and grandparents; the same overgrown graveyard that Bea and I sat in on long, hot Saturdays, sucking Popsicles as we leant on headstones, making up stories about the dead. She will be placed near the same lychgate she kissed Jimmy Fenton under, promising him the world and for ever, and giving him only a feel of her bra strap and a wink on Christmas Eve from the back pew. She came to the graveyard then against Aunt Julia’s wishes, just as she’s doing now. And she will lie among the undistinguished Trelawneys, Penryns, Cardews instead of the Cadogans or Heath-Watsons of Highgate.

  The church is full, its narrow, carved-oak pews packed with Bea’s university friends in theatrical hats and wild make-up. The locals are here too, duller in their drab suits and meagre lives, but still clamouring to pay their respects to the girl from the big house. That or pick up gossip. Mrs Polmear from the post office, the Rapsey twins – Joyce and Edna – still living together at the age of fifty-seven, Eddie Maynard from the garage who gave her toffees and bonbons from the pockets of his overall. Dotted among them are the boys who’d been with her, or wanted to: Jimmy, Eddie’s son Luke who worked the petrol pump in stained jeans and an oil-smeared smile, Billy Westcott from the Lugger.

  I have a sudden memory of Bea as a child – seven or eight maybe, so I could have been no more than six. We’re sat outside the post office, waiting for Grandpa to collect his pension and the racing results from Mrs Polmear, when Bea is struck by the conviction that the shining fragments of mica in the hot pavement are diamonds. She is going to mine them and then make necklaces for us both. She picks away at them, working methodically, determination in her frown and bitten lip, until she releases them from their tar setting and realizes they are no more than dull shards of glass. As disappointing as this motley crew of almost-rans.

  But two boys from the list are missing. Two real jewels.