Authors: Wendy Perriam
He crept up the last lap of the staircase, paused on the tiny landing outside Susie's room. The door was half ajar, the light uncertain, coming only from a low-voltage bedside lamp. Someone was sitting on the floorâa womanâbending over with her back to him; a woman in a nightdress, a woman he had seen and touched before, a woman he had lain with. He could see only her silhouette, a shadowy silhouette, but â¦
âSusie â¦' he whispered. He closed his eyes, saw her as he had seen her back in April, spread-eagled naked on his office floor. He had taken her there simply to sober her up. She was too young and innocent to be left at that sordid party, in the clutches of a ruffian high on drink and drugs. All he had planned for her was a cup of coffee washed down with some vocational advice. She had told him she was out of work, and he knew influential people who could fix her up as a receptionist in a smart, high-status office.
He had been launching into the benefits of job security and staff pension schemes, when she yawned full-frontally and started taking off her blouse. He stopped in mid-sentenceâstared at the full, high, pushy, blatant breasts. He had never meant to touch them. They simply reached towards him, filled his space and vision, got in the way when he tried to pour the coffee. His hands were trembling as he passed the cup, half its contents slopped into the saucer.
âTa,' she said. âI'm boiling.'
âShall I ⦠er ⦠open a window?'
âNo fear! I loathe fresh air.'
He made every effort to return to luncheon vouchers, BUPA cover, pension funds. She was wriggling out of her skirt, a skimpy thing with a. gaping broken zip. He looked away, tried to count the leaves on his astounded rubber plant, glanced back again, made sure. Noâhe hadn't been mistakenâshe wasn't wearing panties.
Nothing might have happened if he hadn't seen her bush. Not fairish, like her scalp hair, but dark and thick and exuberant, tangling between her thighs. Anne's crop was sparse and threadbare, concealed beneath waist-high knickers the colour of blancmange. Anne did it as a
duty
, lying on her back and staring at the ceiling. Susie had flopped on the floor and was lying on her front. Years ago, he had always done it that way. You had to be stiffer, but it was always more exciting. Buttocks over buttocks, crushing breasts against the carpet.
He had grabbed his cup of coffee, burnt his tongue in drinking it. All right, he had touched her once, but only for a second and even then, he had tried to keep on talking, provide her with some guidance, tell her sex was solemn and God-given and must never be debased. He still had all his clothes on. Her hands were reaching through them, unzipping him, refuting him. He forced his scalded mouth to return to matters of employment. âAlways check the perks against the salary, my dear. In fact you should really try and â¦'
She wasn't concentrating. âYou're big,' she murmured. âI like them big.' Measuring with her hands.
After that, he forgot about her future and invested in the present. He tried to take it slowly, do sound preparatory work. He believed in exacting standards, in the bedroom
and
the boardroom, and this had somehow become both at once. He was still urging her to relax and savour the transcendental dimension, when his body contradicted him and swerved shamefully off scheduleâa tiny twitch and dribble instead of thunder and encore. He had lain there, limp and sticky, listening to Susie's sudden switched-off silence. They were still in contactâjust. He tried to stiffen again inside her. He could do that in his twenties, when he had first met Anne. But he wasnât in his twenties. He was a greying, leaking, rapidly shrinking bungler, a laughing stock, a write-off.
âI'm ⦠er ⦠sorry, Susan.' he stuttered. âWe should never have ⦠It was quite unwarranted of me to â¦'
She shrugged him off, snatched up the small portable radio he kept in the office for checking on the Stock Exchange reports, slammed the lavatory door on him, rammed the bolt. He knocked, hovered, kept explaining and apologising, as much to himself as to the deaf unheeding door. His only answer was the wisecracks of some disc jockey on Capital Radio and the blare of punk rock. When she came out, she still had nothing on. He could see her nipples greedy and erect, the bush a dark blaze on her milk-pale body. He should never have kissed her down there. It had made him come too quickly. He took a step towards her. âIt won't happen again, that I promise you. Next time, I'll â¦'
There had never been a next time. In fact, she had blackmailed him for touching her at all. âIf you don't give me that job, I'll tell your wife what happened.'
He shuddered. If she could threaten a thing like that, then she might well pursue him over the pregnancy. The last thing he needed in his life was the faintest breath of any extra scandal. If the newspapers got hold of it, then â¦
He steadied himself a moment against the bannisters. He had been backing down the stairs, away from Susie's room and was now shivering on the lower landing. The December night was freezing. He remembered standing there one Sunday morning in the summer, scorching with heat and lust on that same attic staircase, when everyone else was out, creeping into Susie's room, fingering her tee-shirts, sniffing at her panties, kissing the rumpled hollow in her unmade, teasing bed. When she returned later, giggly and dishevelled with the boys, he had shouted at her for trampling mud into the drawing-room. It was the only way he could cool himself, like throwing a bucket of water over a rutting dog.
Had she sneaked back to make him dog again, trap him and accuse him? He clenched his fists, took one step up. The light was still shining from her room. She had probably gone to sleep with the bedside lamp left on, the heater switched to âhigh', wasting money, squandering electricity. It was time he bawled her out again. He heaved back up the stairs, barged into her room. The walls were no longer solid, but billowing and swaying like washing on a line, bed and chair blundering towards him. He tried to fend them off, made a grab for Susie's hair. If she thought she could outwit him, then she'd better damned well realise â¦
âMatthew, what's the matter?'
He froze. The voice was wrong. Susie never spoke like that. Her voice was shriller, gigglier, less polished and controlled. The hair between the fingers was limp and brown and scraggy, not long and thick and gold. It was his wife who was sitting there, dressed in the chaste rebuffing Victorian-style nightdress she always wore in winter. She was surrounded by Christmas wrappingsâsheets of coloured paper bright with holly and robins, fancy ribbon, gold and silver bows. On the bed was a pile of presents already wrapped and tagged; at her feet, the toys and toiletries still waiting for their transformationâthings she had bought in rushed and hungry lunch-hours and then ticked off her list. She had turned the attic into her private Christmas workshop, so as not to disrupt or untidy the rest of the house. There were stacks of cards waiting on the table, boxes of crackers, rolls of paper-chains. He had taught her himself to treat Christmas as a full-scale operation, almost a military campaign, tackle it with the same efficiency and verve she brought to her job, yet not let it interfere with those vital office tasks. She had taken him at his word, and there she was at three o'clock in the morning, wrapping, sticking, labelling, to save precious working time.
She struggled up to greet him. âWhat's wrong, darling? You look awful.'
He forced his mind to focus. What did she mean, âawful'? Old, feeble, ludicrous? He smoothed his hair, ordered the floor to stop trembling underneath him. He didn't want her pity. âN ⦠Nothing. Couldn't sleep, that's all.'
âNor could I. Thought I'd get on with this lot. I didn't wake you, did I?'
âNo.' It was never she who woke him, only Edward Ainsley tapping on his skull; only Susie shouting obscene erotic words through the bolted lavatory door.
Anne was hiding something under a piece of wrapping-paperâhis own present, he suspectedâsomething he wouldn't want or already had. And yet it seemed ridiculously precious, because she had gone out and chosen it, proved she cared. Even now, she was trying to conceal it, so it would still be a surprise for him. She looked older, somehow, slighter; her hair fading from glossy raven to speckled thrush, her neck thin and frail like crumpled tissue paper. If she was old, then
he
must be, as well. His wife was only a reflection of himself. He had grabbed her young and turned her into his duplicate, teaching her his order and his methods, so that she could run the house and family as well and efficiently as he ruled his business and the world. Even when the children were born, she had hardly let out a whimper. She'd had three of them at home, and he had sat downstairs listening to the stoic silence grit and flinch around him.
âBrave,' the midwife had called her. He had shrugged it off at the time. Women were built to have babies and of course they should be brave. Yet, the memory of his own mother had always nudged and scarred him. Women could die in childbirth. Susie could die and he would be called a murderer. Anne could die, or simply disappear. Even tonight, he might have found her gone. He stood at the door, with his back firmly placed in front of it, as if blocking her escape.
I love you, Anne ⦠He couldn't get the words out. It had been too long since he had used them. (Had he
ever
used them? If so, they had aborted on his tongue.) Instead, he knelt beside her, picked up the present she was wrapping, a tome on larger British mammals.
âI'll do that.' It was a declaration of support and devotion.
âNo, really, Matthew, I'm just filling in time, that's all. Let's go back to bed.'
Matthew smoothed out a piece of gift-wrap. Anything to stop his hands from trembling. If he returned to the bedroom, Edward Ainsley might be lying there in wait for him, huge cavern mouth bawling through the silence.
âI'd like to help. Please.' He stared at the picture of the earth's surface on the cover of an atlas. It was pitted like Edward's face in close-up. He couldn't escape that face. At first, it had kept its distance in the newspapers. Now it thrust into every gap and crack of his existence. He saw it in mirrors, blurred behind his own face, or staring from his plate at mealtimes when he cut, not into veal escalopes, but into Ainsley's tanned and flattened features. And yet the flesh-and-blood face he had seen only onceâglowering in his office.
Edward could be anywhere by now, even the other end of England. He might have leapfrogged his lawyers and gone in search of Lyn himself, tracked him down, talked him round, got him on his own side, lured him with a bribe. It wouldn't take much. Lyn didn't need vast sums when he had no responsibilities and had even left his wife. Or had he? Jennifer might well be in the plot herself, her so-called separation from her husband just another lie to put him off the scent. The three of them could ruin him togetherâplan some new and fatal onslaught on his ⦠He snatched up the Sellotape, ripped a piece off in his teeth.
He had no more
time
, for Christ's sake. Things were closing in on him. He had tried to stall, plead illness and overwork, had been to his own solicitor and told him half the story, keeping quiet about his suspect tax affairs. Josef Suzman was bald, fat, Jewish, shamelessly expensive and extremely sound. He had agreed to play for time and told Ainsley's lawyers that his client would co-operate, given a reasonable breathing-space in which to produce the documents. Displaying his usual skills in persuasion and prevarication, Suzman managed to extend the deadline from a week to a month.
But now the month was upâor all but half a night of it. Would there be one of Suzman's letters in the morning, impeccably typed on that heavy cream-laid paper, with the ingratiating phrases now hardening into warnings?
Both
sets of solicitors now threatening ultimatums? If he could beg just another week or so, then Christmas would close the courts for a merciful fortnight. But after that, what then? He would still have to produce the facts and figures, or risk a court appearance which could be still more damaging.
Matthew swore. He had made a mess of the parcel, one end botched and bulky, the other crumpled. He would have to start again. It was Charles's present and Charles deserved better from a father. He tore the paper off, punched his fist through fatuous robins and damned-fool Father Christmases.
ââ
Matthew
â¦' Anne was hovering over him.
âWhat?' He shook her off. âWell, what?' He hated it when she looked at him like that, a mixture of pity and resentment, even fear.
âTell me what's wrong. Please.'
âWhat d'you mean, ââWhat's wrong?'' You know perfectly well this Ainsley thing is â¦'
âIt's not just that, though, is it?'
He didn't answer. He had tried to conceal how ill and strange he'd felt these last few weeks, the nightmares which besieged him even when awake, as every day ticked nearer and nearer the deadline with the lawyers. He had fobbed her off with facile explanationsâhe was overworking, wasn't sleeping well. But he could see that she was watching him, silently, alarmedly. He himself had trained her to be observant. He had also taught her to be loyal, discreet, supportive. It would be a relief to have support, share the burden with her. Even now, she was trying to comfort him. She obviously couldn't suspect him over Susie. Thank Christ!
âLook, Matthew, Jim was telling me the Edward business needn't be as bad as it appears. I know your foreign contracts have been hit, but sales over here have really leapt ahead.'
âWhat's the use of sales without any royalties?' She didn't know half of it.
âYou don't lose
all
the royalties, darling, and you'll make up your other losses if the sales go on increasing. Jim said a legal action can actually help a book, whip up so much free publicity, it stays on the bestseller list long beyond its natural span. Even non-readers feel they have to buy it, when it's caused so much furore. So you could still end up on top, even if you have to share the spoils.'