Read The Five Gates of Hell Online
Authors: Rupert Thomson
âI don't know,' Mr Garbett said. âSome people.'
He dabbed at one eye with the corner of a handkerchief. For a moment Jed thought he was crying, mourning the passing of the radios, but then he realised: it was just Mr Garbett's eye leaking, like it always did.
âYou know that tape recorder?' Jed said. âWell, I need a longer wire
for the mike, maybe about,' and he screwed his face up, thinking, âabout fifty feet long. And I need a smaller mike too. That other one, it's too, I don't know, too clumsy.'
âThe wire's no problem,' Mr Garbett said. âI'm getting some in this week. The mike could take a bit longer.'
Jed dropped into the store at least once a week after that and sometimes he let Mr Garbett take him into the back room and open his jeans and turn him into that slow ink. The memory of the radios was like a sore place on his body that he only felt when he was in a certain position; he had to press it every now and then so he didn't forget. By the end of the month he had the wire and the mike. His mother had found a new man, an embalmer called Adrian who wore grey shoes. The time had come.
He waited until she went to work one morning, then he took out the wire and the new mike from their hiding-place inside the air-conditioning in his bedroom. The mike was particularly satisfying; it was round and white, the size of a button, and the top was a minute copper grille that looked like a fly's eye. He ran the wire under his carpet and out into the corridor. So far, so good. The next part was tricky, though. The carpet in the corridor had been secured at the edges with tacks, and he had to prise the tacks loose before he could conceal the wire beneath. It took him almost an hour to run the wire from his bedroom door to his mother's, and most of that time he held his breath, praying that nothing brought her home early. When he opened the door to her room he came to a standstill. The dressing-table peopled by tiny potent bottles, the wall-lights designed to resemble candles (fake wax drips, flame-shaped bulbs), the double bed fringed with satin dust-ruffles: it gave him the feeling that he was standing in a shrine, that even his presence was sacrilege. He closed his eyes and summoned up the ghosts of his radios. He saw the dawn that came up behind the dial in one, he lingered on the sweeping ocean-liner curves of another. He remembered their names, and heard their voices. He muttered stations to himself like incantations, like curses: Moscow, Brussels, Helsinki. âHilversum,' he muttered, âReykjavik,' and he saw his radios in the garbage dump, he saw their cases crushed and shattered, their innards ripped out, spilled on the ground, their voices silenced for ever, and when he opened his eyes his mother's room seemed to shrink in the face of his new resolve. Tiny bright explosions pocked the precious air, as if something white-hot had burned holes right through reality. The furniture looked charred at the
edges. He noticed the clock beside her bed. Almost eleven-thirty. She sometimes came home for lunch. He had better get on.
He levered up the tacks that held her pale-green carpet flush to the wall and tucked the wire underneath, then he knocked the tacks back into the same holes. It took him twenty minutes to reach the bed. There was really only one place for the mike. He pulled the bed away from the wall and fastened the mike to the back of the headboard with a strip of insulating tape. He pushed the bed against the wall and stood back. After examining the bed from all angles to make sure the wire was invisible, he returned to his room. All set. Now for the trial run. He switched the tape recorder to RECORD and ran back up the corridor to his mother's room. He stood beside her stack of frilly pillows and thought for a moment.
âTesting, testing.' He nodded to himself. That's what they said. But what else? He couldn't remember. âI hope this works.' He paused, and then fiercely, âIt'd better.'
Back in his own room he wound the tape back and switched to PLAY. Nothing for long seconds, then a rustling, like leaves, then his voice, wrapped up, as if he was talking through cloth. His voice, though. It had worked. He switched the tape recorder off and sat on the floor, his thighs pulled tight against his chest, his chin on his knees.
His mother didn't come home for lunch.
He left the mike taped to the back of the headboard for two weeks. During that time the embalmer came round four times. The first time there was an argument in the bedroom. The embalmer was trying to smooth things over, restore things to normal. But he could only do that with dead bodies, apparently. Something was thrown, something broke. Jed couldn't guess what it was. Probably that blue vase by the window. There was a silence, and then tears. His mother's. It was interesting, but it wasn't what he wanted. The second time nothing happened at all. They just went to sleep. The third time a plane went over right at the crucial moment and ruined everything. He almost gave up. Almost. The fourth time he was in the hall when they came in the front door. It was midnight, and they were both drunk.
âWhat the
hell
are you doing up?' His mother was wearing a red dress that was stained dark with wine or sweat. She looked the way a rose petal looks when you crush it between finger and thumb. The embalmer hung back, awkward at being observed. White shoes tonight. Pretty fancy. Jed didn't say anything. He just backed into his room and closed the door.
First there was rustling. That would be them kissing, undressing. At least a minute of that. Then five creaks, one after the other, very brisk. The bed, presumably. Then a whimper (his mother) and a grunt (the embalmer). Then voices. Hers first, âOh Adrian,' then his, âMuriel,' then hers again, âOh God.' God was three syllables. And then a creak. Not the bed this time. A human creak. The embalmer coming. Bit quick, that. Then, about a minute later, a low flapping rumble followed by a whine as the embalmer, Adrian, began to snore. It was better than he could've expected. It was perfect.
The next day he went to see Mr Garbett and asked whether he could get a copy made. Mr Garbett said he'd take care of it. Jed didn't tell Mr Garbett not to listen to it, and he knew, when Mr Garbett handed the duplicate and the original back a week later, that he had. It didn't matter. Jed doubted whether he'd ever see Mr Garbett again. His days of junk were over.
That night he waited in his room with the tape recorder primed. He looked at his watch. It was six-thirty. She usually got home at around seven. He sat on the edge of his bed and wedged a Lemon Sherbet Bomb in his cheek and turned his head to the street. It had been another hot day. Through the window he could hear the hiss of sprinklers watering small lawns. It wasn't often you could hear the sprinklers. Maybe there was a strike at the airport or something.
It was almost nine when he heard the key turn in the lock. He'd been waiting so long, his heart jumped at the sound. Then he froze. She wasn't alone. He could hear a man's voice. Pop's.
He opened his door and stood in the hall.
âYou could at least offer me a cup of coffee,' he heard Pop saying. âI've been waiting two hours.'
âNobody asked you to wait, did they?' She was trying to close the door on him, but he was stronger.
âMuriel.' Pop was pleading now. âOne cup of coffee.'
She weakened. âAll right. One cup of coffee and that's it.'
Pop stepped into the light. He'd greased his hair back and he was wearing a clean shirt, but it was no good.
âOne cup,' he said, and winked at Jed. He was like one of those salesmen who stick their feet in the door.
Don't you see? Jed wanted to shout. It's no good.
âYour mother and I,' Pop said, âwe're just going to have a little talk.' That wink again. A smirk.
IT'S NO GOOD.
When Pop moved towards the kitchen, he trailed this smell behind him, ashes or rust, old worn-down things, things you normally throw out. Jed was sure his mother could smell it too. Though she had different names for it, of course. She called it weakness, failure, regret.
He went and sat in his room while they had their âlittle talk'. He heard the shouting, he heard a plate break. The smell was everywhere, you wanted to hold your nose. No amount of violence or repentance could freshen the air.
And he realised, with a slight shock, that Pop didn't count any more. Pop was just another Adrian. A noise, a pair of feet, an inadequacy. He felt sorry for Pop, but in a distant way, as you might feel sorry for someone on TV. He wanted Pop out of the house, even more than his mother did.
An hour later the kitchen door opened. Jed opened his own door a crack, and listened.
âA second chance, that's all I'm asking.'
âWhat do you think this is, some stupid game?'
The house shook as the front door banged against the inside wall. Through his window Jed saw Pop stamping off up Mackerel Street, clouding the air with empty threats.
He found his mother standing in the kitchen. Her face had the polished look of a trophy. It was a game, whatever she said, and it looked as if she'd won again. He returned to his room and, leaving the door ajar, turned the tape recorder on. Top volume. And waited.
The tape had only reached the creaking stage when she came and stood in the doorway. âWhat's this you're playing?' she asked, light, yet tense, as if she had already guessed.
Jed watched the transparent wheels spin round, one eager, empty, one slow and burdened with knowledge. He watched the slim brown tape unwind, unwind.
When the whimpering began, he looked up into his mother's face. He saw the light shrink in her eyes then, without seeming to move, she unleashed herself, the air a blur of red nails and flailing hands, she was hissing and muttering, she seemed to have eight arms, like that statue that he'd seen in Mr Garbett's store, which Mr Garbett said had come from India. She caught him twice with open-handed blows that made his head buzz like a jam jar of flies, and one of her nails tore the skin at the corner of his mouth, as if he ought to be smiling. He didn't try to back away, he just wrapped his head in his hands and when the beating stopped he slowly took his hands away and peered up at her. She was panting and her arms were fastened against her sides and her
hair had come unpinned and hung in tangled strands across her eyes. She looked more natural now than ever before. She looked like a witch. He wanted her to hold him now, he wanted to burn with her, but he knew it wouldn't happen. And so it was like TV again. Everything was like TV.
âHow could you do that?' she was saying in a strange, flat voice. âHow could you do a thing like that?'
Easy.
âYou threw my radios away.'
The embalmer began to snore.
Lunging at the tape recorder, she snatched up the spool and tore the tape to shreds. When she tired of that she threw it down and stamped on the top of the tape recorder. Then she bent down and picked the tape recorder up and hurled it against the wall. It dropped to the carpet and the casing came away, fractured in two places. There was a dent in the wall where it had hit.
Jed watched all this impassively, as if he could change channels any time he pleased. He didn't care what she did. The tape recorder had already served its purpose, and he had wrapped his spare copy of the tape in industrial plastic, then he'd locked it inside an old metal toolbox, and he'd buried the toolbox halfway up the garden on the right, next to the fence. There was nothing she could do to hurt him. He felt one side of his mouth grinning where she had cut him. He watched her turn to him and scrape the hair back out of her eyes.
âYou won't do that again,' she said.
He said, âI don't need to.'
âWhat d'you mean?'
âI've got a copy of that tape,' he said, âand if you ever touch any of my stuff again, I'll send it to Pop.' He paused; it didn't sound enough. âAnd the neighbours,' he said. âAnd that shop where you work.'
Her eyes were blank now, and her cheeks hung, slack and looped, from the bones of her face. She turned and walked out of the room. He heard her bedroom door click quietly shut.
His first taste of revenge. Sweet.
A light rain was falling on the city, so light it sounded like rats. Jed turned into the alleyway that ran behind the school and stopped to wipe the flecks off his spectacles. Looking up again, through clear glass now, he saw four figures arranged in front of him. Their stillness had an urgency to it and he knew right away that it was him they'd been waiting for.
Three of them perched high on dark-green garbage dumpsters. He knew their names: José PS Mendoza, Scraper O'Malley and Tip Stubbs. The fourth leaned his shoulderblades against the wall, hands folded on his chest. He wore a black leather coat and a moustache. It was Vasco Gorelli. Known as Gorilla, though never to his face. He'd had the moustache since he was ten.
Near silence.
Only the light rain scurrying across the rooftops, and the tss-tss-tss of PS Mendoza's headphones.
It was strange. Normally you couldn't talk to Vasco, you couldn't even get close to him. You had to wait for a summons or an audience. He was like a sort of pope. He had lieutenants â O'Malley, Stubbs, Mendoza â then he had a whole string of runners: Thomas Baby Vail, Slim Jimmy Chung, Cramps Crenshaw and Tip's younger brother, a deaf-mute known as Silence. When you saw Vasco walk down the street you saw the petals of a flower and suddenly a flower seemed strong, a flower seemed dangerous. A small gang, but tight. A flower that closed up for the night. A furled umbrella. And when the rain came, which it did sometimes, one snap, a flick, and the gang sprang open, kept him dry. That was how it worked.
So why the sudden interest?
Jed was used to isolation. His face was like some kind of cul-de-sac. It said NO THROUGH ROAD to most people. Confronted with him, they always turned round, backed away. He wasn't wounded exactly. No, not wounded; not any more. It had planted the seeds of scorn in
him. It had bred a curious arrogance. You don't know what you're missing, he would think. If only you knew.