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Authors: Frances Fyfield

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Remembering, too, how Johnny had got that scar.
So frightened of the lady dentist, they’d tried a general anaesthetic to deal with his teeth, with Cannon waiting for him
in the outer room because he wouldn’t have gone at all otherwise – any more than he could stay unconscious for more than a
few minutes, whatever they did. But it had been long enough for the boiling-hot handpiece she had left hooked inside his lip
to burn through the flesh, so that he woke screaming. Both of them staggering out of there, fighting like rats, two undersized
urchins on the run. Back home to hugging in bed. She hadn’t meant any harm, of course, but they blew down her door anyway.
That was the day they became lovers: they owed
her
that. Even the first painful buggery had been provoked by pain.

Nobody knows you, Johnny, except me. Don’t cry, please don’t cry
. He lit a cigarette. These were things he should tell Sarah. Make her understand that Johnny did keep his promises.

The talent of capturing likeness was a frightening gift. This was not Johnny now, but Johnny in a few years’ time when the
good looks would be gone, the apoplectic colour of his skin higher and the brown eyes ever more hooded. Finally the mouth,
large and wide like Cannon’s own, the only real point of resemblance, with fleshier lips drawn back into a rictus of a smile
to show chipped, uneven teeth, stained dark. A shadowed face, hurt and lonely and cruel. Puzzled. Quickly, before any element
of pity could enter the equation, Cannon inked in three of the teeth to make them blacker and added an additional crease to
the forehead to indicate pain. He stood back from his
handiwork. ‘I must remember what an
ugly
bastard you are,’ he muttered.

The
plip
of drops into the chair had ceased. Condensation, not rain, dripping from the skylight, rotting the beams. The light from
the roof would be the only sign of his existence here, apart from his anonymous comings and goings in a street largely devoted
to shops and offices. The end of both the dripping sound and the whisper of brushstrokes across the paper left a vacuum of
silence. He stood and stretched; wished, for a fleeting moment, that he had Sarah Fortune’s flexible limbs. Then froze.

There was someone downstairs.

Rotten steps led up to the attic, with a notice at the base of the steep, narrow flight informing the unwary of the fact.
Sarah had secured this place, hadn’t she? Made an offer subject to planning permission, written the necessary letters on headed
paper to make her sex anonymous, secured a respite from further viewers; he forgot the details. She had spared him those.

But downstairs there were indeed the slight vibrations of movement. A trio of voices, climbing upwards. Cannon turned out
the light and braced himself across the door. If anyone were to touch it, they would feel the warmth and know he was there.
The drip from the skylight resumed with the resonance of a drumbeat.

There was no timbre of anxiety in the conversation he could hear from the room below, the words of which he could not decipher.
He heard only the rhythm of it, the pauses and the hesitations. The high
voice of a woman, announcing exclamations of surprise or disgust; the low voice of a man and the more youthful treble of a
second male, murmuring apologies. They came out on to the landing. There was laughter, and one voice, the woman’s, was incredulous.
‘Someone’s actually offered to
buy
? Amazing.’

‘There’s a large attic.’ The apologetic one with the servile voice. ‘Can you see? Don’t …’

‘More than I want.’ The woman again, her feet on the stairs, coming on regardless with a light, swift step, until she was
on the other side of the door.


Don’t
.’ The apologetic voice was becoming shrill, ‘Don’t go up there; the beams are rotten, it isn’t safe, come
back
.’

Unlike his brother, Cannon had always admired the insatiable curiosity of women; he had always venerated women, even when
he was preserved from them, but this particular example was one he automatically detested. The woman pushed at the door; he
leaned the whole of his weight to the other side. ‘Locked,’ she said. The tread of the top stair creaked ominously.

‘Come down,’ the man shouted again.

She ignored him, paused, and shoved.

Cannon could imagine her, palms pressed to the door, touching his own skin through the panel, their foreheads and mouths separated
by the mere thickness of wood. He imagined himself knocking a little hole through, so she might catch sight of a single eye,
see him poking something through into hers. For a moment, he could understand Johnnyboy’s congenital,
intense
hatred
of women. Thought again of making another hole and sticking his prick through it. That way, surely, she wouldn’t come back.
They were both evil thoughts, which shamed him into a blush even as he contemplated them. He suppressed a desire to giggle,
stuffed his fingers into his mouth. They went away, the men rebuking the woman, who was angry with them both, and they with
her. Raised voices floated down the stairs. ‘You will
insist
on seeing everything. When will you ever
listen
?’

‘There was somebody there, I’m sure of it.’

‘That isn’t possible. It’s dangerous.’

‘I’ll complain.’

‘No, get
him
to complain. There’s no point in us complaining; don’t want it anyway.’


When will you evah lissen
,’ Cannon mimicked, ‘
you silly moo
?’ opening the door a crack as the voices faded away. The woman had left a faint trace of perfume: she must have reeked of
it – all the better to disguise the smells of human life, turpentine, paint, the harsh soap from his hands.

For a whole minute Cannon felt instantly jolly, until the life went out of him and he dropped into the damp armchair like
a doll. He lolled in it and picked at the frayed upholstery on the arm. It begged to be picked at; no wonder Sarah did it.
However could he go on living like this? He was better in prison – my God, there were aspects of it he had positively enjoyed.
He entered one of those temporary phases when he told himself that Johnnyboy would get bored with the game, long before his
own deadline for
winning or losing it, just like he did with the houses he left to rot when they ceased to be fun.

Oh, Lord, they had had fun. What else was there to do but wait for the time to pass? Sell the picture and give him back the
money?
No
. The baby would need it; Julie would need it. Nor could he
bear
to hand it over to that – that –
Philistine
.

Cannon looked at the face in his drawing and saw again that they no longer remotely resembled each other, but Johnnyboy had
already entered the room. Johnnyboy had the cunning he had never inherited and, in the same breath, Cannon felt the familiarity
of fear.

The people had been sent to tease. Johnnyboy had always been better at games, better at everything. Probably knew where his
brother was, in the way he always seemed to know.

There was not really anywhere to hide. From a ghost. A legend he no longer quite knew. From his own heart and the lure of
destruction. From his own nature. From a world where he still did not understand the rules.

5

Today I shall need an onion for the stew and another bottle of wine
, William wrote on the margin of a set of notes.
Other than that, life is dandy. Why did Cannon bring me that painting to look after? Why am I so surprised that someone likes
me
?

Sarah, where are you? It’s too late for shopping. Perhaps you’re working. He
must
stop writing in the margin of notes, as if that were the only paper he had; but he was, after all, surrounded by them. They
were always to hand. William perfected the notes he had scribbled during the day in the evening, late afternoon or early morning;
sometimes, such as now, at dawn, as if the very labour of it might encourage the sun to rise and the dreams to end. The notes
were a record of expertise, a database for his credibility; he pored over them, wondering how he could have done things better.
He did not just
need
the respect of his professional peers: he craved it. His papers in the international journals provided something of the kind.
He was always looking for something fresh to write, but apart from that he yearned to describe his profession as a series
of refinements and surprises; otherwise it all became pointless. Technique could always be perfected. William knew that the
pursuit of excellence and knowledge (how pompous that sounded) was the only thing that could give him dignity.

In the early days of semi-idealism he had not been like this. He thought now that his was a route for a frustrated artist,
or mechanic, rather than a medical man; someone who might have been equally happy tinkering round with cars, fire engines,
trains, cameras and the other kind of bridges. Painting had been a passion until he recognized his own lack of vision. He
could never make himself concentrate on the whole, only the part. Writing things down wasn’t bad, but despite strenuous efforts
he was not unduly talented at that either. Like the painting, it was the details that bogged him down in pedantry while the
concepts evaded him. So he had to be an excellent dentist. That was all he could do.

And yet he wanted to write about the individuals and how temperament was such a feature in treatment; the mystery of the human
response, which varied as widely as the colour of their eyes. Maybe colour and physical type were the keys to it all. Perhaps
the pain threshold was dictated by the thickness of the hair, while the size of the feet governed tolerance of anaesthesia
– perhaps it was as simple as that. This was too large and wide a theme: he wanted
something both factual and anthropological to enhance his self-esteem. All right, then: he wanted to write about how trauma
changed attitude; still too fanciful and vague. What was required in his dull circles was articles on new techniques in root-canal
therapy, implantology, rather than anything with a personal touch, but in this particular dawn he wanted to write about how
a terrified patient became the opposite of his former self; changed from unwilling to willing, from afraid to positively enthusiastic.
He wanted to write a paper about Cannon out of sheer affection for him.

This is achieved by extreme measures
, William wrote on a fresh sheet of paper while glancing at the large bundle of Cannon’s notes.
First, allow the patient to develop a truly terrible set of teeth which he comes to loathe. They have made him socially anathema;
disfigured him. Then get fate to make them worse. Incarcerate the patient. By this time, he will no longer care and may become
very co-operative indeed … Encourage a suicide attempt. This often leads prison authorities to allow special treatments not
normally contemplated

He sat back in his chair and tried to reconstruct Cannon’s history from his very clear memory of the remainder of Cannon’s
front teeth. Tetracycline was a useful antibiotic for adults, no longer given to children who had yet to develop their secondary
teeth because of its pernicious side-effects. Cannon had been unable to remember why he had ingested so much of the stuff:
both he and his brother were sickly, he said, not subject to the best of medical or
parental care from a single father with other things on his mind. At that age tetracycline made the new teeth emerge a ghastly
brown shade; healthy at heart, maybe, but uneven, misshapen, with the appearance of dirty decay. The larger the teeth, the
less attractive. A tetracycline smile was not a pretty sight. And there had been delayed, inadequate treatment of caries,
an impatient dentist (I
bit
her, Cannon had said. I bit her so hard she refused to treat either of us again). Some phobias were more reasonable than
others.

The other way of getting a patient to become co-operative is to ensure that a dental appointment is a high spot in an otherwise
boring life. Ergo, it really does help if your patient is in prison at the time
. His stomach rumbled. He moved into the kitchen, poured cereal, the bachelor’s standby food, into a bowl and added milk.
He waited for the flakes to become a soggy mess and ate absentmindedly. The stomach continued to growl.

It also helps if the patient regards sedation by Diconal as the best time he’s had for ages. It is as well to prolong such
treatment if you have any curiosity about the fellow at all. He may tell you things while under the influence which he might
not otherwise reveal. Nor might you wish to know
.

He knew what he might write next, if this mood of frivolity prevailed: a book of Diconal poetry, a slim volume admittedly,
in which he would put into rhyme all those disjointed, sometimes revelatory things that people happened to say under the magical
influence of deep sedation. Like that poor boy, Andrew, with
his broken front teeth, two to be extracted, two to be saved and crowned. Tetracycline would not harm him; Diconal would obliterate
any memory of what William had done, as well as any memory of what he had said. Not that Andrew’s lisping, fretful replies
could be said to be significant. He moaned about not wanting to lose his job.

Cannon, under sedation, was rather more amusing and infinitely varied. Cannon growled. He could not keep his hands still:
they conducted an orchestra with minute movements, or made tiny little motions resembling an artist with a brush, which were,
in their way, endearingly vulnerable. He repeated the name of Julie in a high, sing-song voice and the name of Johnnyboy in
a low hum, apparently aping the music from the radio in the surgery. On the day William had asked, Do you have any children,
Mr Smith? he had moaned in his sleep about how he longed for a child and feared he could never achieve it. Then he sang that
his twin brother wanted to kill his soul. When his mouth was not full, he chanted as if he was in the playground, something
that sounded like a skipping rhyme.
Johnnyboy, Johnnyboy, dirty fangs, Johnnyboy, la, la, la
. He mimicked the radio.

William reminded himself to ask Cannon more about his next of kin and cursed himself for not having asked before. A
twin
brother. They might have the same teeth. There would not be too many left with the ugly distinction of brown tetracyline
fangs. The very thought stunned him; he closed his eyes to savour it. He was tired; concentration, even in
excitement, slipped. Sleep had been punctuated by the same old nightmares, the children, and Isabella’s skull beneath her
flawless skin. Isabella, rampaging through the waiting room with those two in tow, hacking to pieces the paintings on the
walls. The recurrence of the image was so vivid, even now that he was awake and noisily ingesting his bowl of cereal, that
William stumbled downstairs to check. He tripped on the bottom step, swore and catapulted himself into the room. All was safe,
and there on the wall the picture Cannon had brought. To be exact, the third picture Cannon had brought.

There was only ever Johnny and me; everyone hated us. Afraid of our teeth
.

Cannon had thought that he was paying for his extensive treatment of beautifully crowned front teeth by bringing along, every
second visit, a sketch or a small watercolour, executed with cheap materials in prison. Cannon was not paying for it at all:
sleight of hand with the forms, a conspiracy with a prison doctor, Sarah, and officials frightened into fits by the prospect
of another suicide attempt. They had paid for it. All the same, it had moved William that Cannon came armed with gifts; but,
then, the attitude of the prison patients, the existence of whom Isabella so deplored, had always surprised him. Since his
first practice, which had had a prison on the doorstep, he had always included prison patients and he had volunteered to continue
at the same discounted rate long after Isabella had got him out of there.
Why
? she had shrieked. You could treat princesses and you treat
them. Why
? Because it was a chance to make a
difference
. And because they were churlish and pathetically grateful by turn.

Cannon had been practically dragged into the surgery, his guard agog at the poshness of it all and his charge gibbering with
fear and white with pain; abscesses from broken, untreated teeth; suicide risk. William gave them both a large shot of whisky
for starters. Promised Cannon he would not feel a thing and almost made him believe. Not quite. Until he became utterly passive.

The very first sketch Cannon had brought him was slightly macabre. William moved down the corridor towards the door to where
it sheltered in a corner. It was a pencil sketch of his own hands, caught in the act of making busy explanations. They were
sketched as if they had been held in front of Cannon’s face, in front of Cannon’s mesmerized, terrified eyes, watching every
movement, as William, after stroking the jaw, rubbing the numbing ointment in the gum, talked incessantly while he worked,
getting the needle in there while Cannon was still hypnotized by fear and the constant stream of words. Cannon, sweating with
relief, when William said, We are going to do nothing today, but you see, you had an injection without realizing, didn’t you?
Then explaining, with dramatic use of hands, pointing, illustrating, finger-wagging, cupping, expansive, what he was going
to have to do after the massive dose of antibiotics had worked. You’ll feel better tomorrow after they begin to take effect,
and next time we’ll
put you to sleep, promise – the hands folded at last in an attitude of prayer alongside his face. William was accustomed to
using his hands to explain; the language of gesture was less specific than words, suited him better.

And the patient had recorded exactly what he had seen in movement, and made it still. Cannon captured William’s elegant hands,
palms outwards, fingers fully spanned like birds in flight, anatomically correct, unmistakably his own hands down to the last
crease, but looking as if they were born to bless, caress and heal. The sketch of the hands thrilled him still, made him proud.
You gotta take care of those hands
, Cannon had said. William wanted to go back to sleep. He did not want to write or to think. The light crept through his windows
and revealed the clean paint, and the extra-clean mark where yesterday’s boy had steadied himself against the wall. William’s
stomach continued to grumble. The milk had been too cold. It did not seem much to complain about.

Seven thirty and the phone buzzed. He ignored it, listened form a distance as the message recited briefly the services he
could offer, implants, cosmetics, enamel facing, crowns and a whole new life, addressing the unwary in cheerful tones he scarcely
recognized as his own before inviting them to leave a message saying they were going to cancel. Or whatever they were going
to say at this godforsaken hour of day when the light still awaited arrival. He waited to hear if it were Sarah – she owed
him explanations – but it was a man,
pleading a business meeting. William did not have the faintest idea who it was. Identification of this voice required consultation
of the damn notes. Maybe one of those who promised to return but never did. He moved on, tummy growling, vaguely upset, to
look at the second of Cannon’s drawings and the third. In his dreams, these were the first the children destroyed: his hands.

The second hung in pride of place in the bathroom, in case it should otherwise cause offence. It was of a slim, heavy-breasted
girl-child perched on the end of a high bed without frills. She sat on the very edge, supported by her arms, looking at her
feet, which were both just on the ground. One foot was raised from the heel, for particular inspection of the toes; she was
nervous but amused, eyes fixated by the foot rather than by the audience. The room had all the appearance of an institution,
a hospital ward or a lecture theatre of the old sort, bare, apart from the lights in metal shades hanging above her and the
surgical green of the walls behind. Her skin was dark, the sheet, covering the bed on which she sat, white. She was an object
for inspection rather than seduction. William could imagine students standing in front of her in a circle outside the picture,
waiting for a description of her history, her times, her disease, while she, quite simply, waited on life to continue.

The phone burred again. By this time he was in the waiting room with the fancy sofas and the coffee machine, and the message
was muted. He was looking at Cannon’s glorious loan of yesterday. Then
found he could not look at it. Hurried upstairs to the flatlet where he lived in his miniature space, so that Isabella could
live in relative splendour with some rich paramour, whose name by choice he could not remember, for as long as she kept her
nerve and her face. And her teeth.
Her teeth
.

He brushed his own. Rigorous attention to detail; like hell. Should have given her disclosing fluid, make her teeth brilliant
blue to show where the plaque lingered, tell her a thing or two, get the message across. Those teeth had bitten him, more
than once, in a playful bite on the shoulder which hurt like a series of minor pinpricks. Isabella nibbling and saying,
More … But … when are you going to earn more money, William? We need more
.

BOOK: Staring At The Light
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