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The Darkening Page 4


  Nicholas felt his throat twist and tighten. His wide eyes stung.

  She looked so small. This was how he had found her the afternoon of the crash: sprawled as if exhausted, painfully arched, eyes open to nothing.

  Then her eyes rolled towards his. Just for a moment. It was a look that could mean a million things or nothing. A look as empty as a dusty glass found forgotten on a window sill. Then she was back up the invisible ladder, floating, sanding, about to die again, and again, and again.

  Nicholas stayed until midnight, watching her fall and die, until his eyes were so red and his throat so wretched he could hardly see or breathe. He willed his heart to burst and fail, but it kept squeezing, disconnected from his grief. Then he closed the bathroom door, locked the flat, and drove very slowly away.

  He stayed in bed for three days.

  The third and last person he told about his visions worked out of a small shop off High Street in between a discount luggage store and a bakery. A hinged shingle proclaimed ‘Madam Sydel — Readings, Seeings’.

  She was a wizened lady, brown and twisted as the trunk of some hardy Mediterranean tree, her wildly dyed hair sown with glazed beads. When she reached under her scalp and scratched purposefully, Nicholas realised it was a wig. Still scratching, she led him into a parlour lined with tasselled silks and smelling of incense and burnt hair. She sat him down and took his hand.

  He jumped straight into business: ‘I see ghosts.’

  ‘Oh? How much do you charge?’

  Nicholas went home, picked up the phone, and bought his airline ticket out of Britain.

  The day before he stepped in the cab for Heathrow, he had woken to a rain as light as steam drifting from the sky. By mid-morning, when he reached the cemetery in Newham, the sun was having a tug-of-war with the clouds and was creating small diamonds on the roses and willows.

  Nicholas sat heavily beside Cate’s grave.

  He looked at her headstone and a felt a swirl of guilt. It was black and angular and Cate would have hated it. ‘Like something by Albert Speer,’ she’d have said. Her parents had done the choosing. Nicholas remembered the typed, formally worded letter asking him for nine thousand pounds for the funeral, grave lease and a ‘lovely service where the council plants spring and summer flowers on the grave’. He read the gold-lettered epitaph for the hundredth time.

  In God’s loving arms.

  Was it true? There was no sense of her here. No feeling that she lay below him. No feeling that she watched from above. The air was cool for summer, and, with the rain drying, felt empty and fleeting. Was she trapped in the silent playback going on and on in the echoing little bathroom in Ealing? Was she gone completely, the spark in her brain extinguished and her with it?

  In God’s loving arms.

  ‘I’m going,’ he whispered.

  He waited. For a sign. For a whisper of wind. For anything that said she heard him and wanted him to stay.

  The willows held themselves silent. A car with a sports muffler rutted past on the North Boundary Road. Nothing.

  Nicholas got to his feet and left.

  Three days later, a hemisphere away, he lay on his little sister’s childhood bed, listening to rain crash down in an endless, dark wave.

  And now he was home.

  But home with what? A ring wedding him to a dead woman. A few thousand pounds. A couple of niceish Ben Sherman shirts.

  Seventeen years. Nothing.

  And his mother, what had happened there? No new man. Same house. Twenty new teapots. Nothing.

  Rain. Faces. The dead. Trees.

  DANG DONG.

  The doorbell: a bakelite mechanical thing that rang two tuneless notes, one as you pressed in the smooth worn button, the other as you released it.

  Nicholas blinked and picked up his watch from the pink bedside table. It was nearly two in the morning.

  DANG DONG.

  ‘Mum?’ he called.

  He swung his legs out of bed, sat up.

  DANG DONG.

  ‘Coming!’

  As he passed his mother’s bedroom door, he heard hefty snores befitting a circus strong man.

  ‘Why don’t I get it?’ he suggested to no one.

  Down the hall. By old habit his fingers found and clicked the switch for the outside light. He swung open the front door.

  Two police officers in slicks waited on the stoop. One was big and dark-haired and stood closest to do the talking. The other, bigger and with fair hair, waited behind, ready to bend the cast-iron handrail or uproot a tree to prevent escape.

  ‘Good evening, sir,’ said the dark-haired officer. Nicholas dubbed him ‘Fossey’ in his mind. ‘Sorry to disturb your sleep. We’re going door to door seeking information about a young boy who’s gone missing.’

  On cue, gorilla-man behind held up a laminated colour photocopy of a blond seven year old beaming at the camera. Nicholas jolted.

  It’s Tristram. But Tristram’s been dead twenty-five years.

  He leaned in to look more closely.

  The photograph was recent. In the background was an LCD TV. The boy wore a Spiderman 3 T-shirt. Nevertheless, he looked eerily similar to Nicholas’s childhood friend.

  Who was murdered, Nicholas reminded himself.

  His heart was pumping hard. He shook his head. ‘No.’

  But the officers had seen the frisson of recognition. They exchanged a glance, then returned their steady gazes to Nicholas.

  ‘Are you sure, sir?’ asked Fossey.

  ‘Yep. Really. I just got in from overseas tonight.’

  ‘Tonight, sir? What time was that?’

  ‘Half past ten or so.’

  Nicholas licked his lips. The police weren’t moving.

  ‘Did you come straight home, sir?’

  ‘Yep.’

  ‘Did you stop anywhere?’ asked gorilla-man.

  Yes, thought Nicholas. The woods. He’d stopped at the woods, amazed to see them still as potent and thick as ever. He’d walked halfway to their edge. Had been drawn to them. But why? He couldn’t explain that to himself, let alone the police. Randomly scoping out dark woods in the middle of the rainy night when a boy happens to go missing? God, you’re acting like a guilty man! They don’t need to know that. Snap out of it!

  ‘No.’

  Officer Fossey reached for his notebook. Gorilla-man’s right hand casually slipped down to hang straight beside his leg, closer to his service pistol.

  ‘What’s your name, sir?’

  ‘Nicholas Close. Look-’

  The officer wrote in his notebook, asked, ‘C–L-O-S-E?’

  ‘What’s going on, Nicky?’ Katharine arrived silently behind her son, fumbling with her dressing gown’s sash.

  The policemen exchanged a glance.

  ‘A young boy has been reported missing, ma’am.’

  Silverback held the picture up for Katharine.

  ‘Oh dear.’ Nicholas, who knew her voice so well, could just detect a quiver. ‘Local boy?’

  ‘Yes, ma’am. This gentleman told us he returned from overseas tonight?’

  Nicholas saw his mother’s eyes narrow just the slightest margin.

  ‘My son. That’s right.’

  ‘What time did he arrive?’

  ‘Just after eleven thirty. His flight touched down at nine fifty, which means he made excellent time getting through customs, hiring a car and getting home here.’ Her words came clipped and fast, the shake replaced by something harder. ‘We talked in our kitchen till quarter past twelve and both went to bed, and it certainly is tragic that a boy’s got himself lost in this rain but I’m not sure I quite understand where this is going.’

  The two big men shifted back an almost imperceptible amount. Nicholas sagged a little. He was in his mid-thirties and still needed his mother to keep him out of trouble.

  ‘Ma’am, we’re just asking questions,’ said Fossey.

  ‘I do understand that. Have you got any more?’

  The officers exchang
ed a glance.

  ‘No, ma’am. Catherine with a C?’

  ‘With a K and two As. Best of luck, Constables. I hope and pray the young lad turns up safe.’

  Fossey led Silverback into the rain.

  Katharine shut the door. She wrapped her arms around herself. ‘I just hate the fact that if you’re a man you’re automatically a potential sex fiend. Women do it too, you know.’

  Nicholas nodded. He felt awfully tired, but sleep seemed a huge ocean away. As they started back down the hall, he saw veins like purple worms crawling on her ankles.

  ‘What woke you up, Mum?’

  Katharine looked at him, opened her mouth to lie. But she hesitated. And in that moment, Nicholas saw again the tally of years on his mother’s face.

  We’re getting old.

  ‘I had a bad dream. About you when you were small. You and your friend up the road.’

  ‘Tristram Boye. Did you see how much that boy. .’

  She nodded. ‘Only in the dream, it was you. .’

  Her voice trailed off to nothing.

  Who died.

  The rumble of the rain was as solid as the darkness outside. He kissed her cheek. It felt dry and thin as paper.

  ‘I’m sure they’ll find him,’ he said.

  They returned to their beds.

  The police did find the child, three days later.

  During the first two days, they had searched public toilets and overgrown railway sidings and mossy culverts, but the deluge had made the hunt difficult. A team of police divers sat ready to strap themselves to cables and search the river and storm-water drains through which water thundered like rapids, but the task was deemed too dangerous. A group of State Emergency Service volunteers waited in the Tallong High School hall to start their search of the Carmichael Road woods, but the rain kept falling, heavy as theatre curtains, so they stayed indoors drinking instant coffee from Styrofoam cups and playing Trivial Pursuit. The low sea of dark cloud seemed immoveable in the bloated sky.

  The boy’s mother was named Mrs Thomas — an ineloquent woman, though by all accounts a gifted tyre-fitter and a regular at the local Uniting Church. She appeared on the evening news, begging through a tight throat for anyone who had seen her boy to help. But in the end, the boy, whose name was Dylan (the press showed unusual good taste in making no sport of the child’s mother unwittingly naming him after that doomed alcoholic), had been beyond help for all of those three days. His body was found hooked in mangrove trees some six kilometres downriver from Tallong. A squad of high school rowers — who trained come rain, hail or shine and would win the state championship ribbon this year, GO TERRACE! — caught sight of Dylan’s red tracksuit pants bobbing in the shoreline shadows. A police spokesman said the boy’s throat had been cut. There were no clear signs of sexual assault; however, time in the water made that difficult to confirm. They wished to question a man of Middle Eastern appearance seen in the vicinity of a nearby bus station three nights ago.

  Nicholas and Katharine muddled around the house, keeping out of each other’s way. When the television news reported the discovery of Dylan’s body, they watched silently from the sofa. Neither needed to remark how eerily like 1982 this was, when Tristram’s body was found three suburbs from Tallong in a cleared housing block, one pale leg poking out from under a pile of demolished timber, tree roots and tin. His throat, like Dylan’s, had been slit wide.

  Nicholas switched off the television.

  Outside, the rain was finally easing.

  ‘I’ll make some tea,’ Katharine said quietly.

  3

  OCTOBER 1982

  It was the afternoon of a very bad day.

  At ten years, Nicholas was slight, with a hint of the tight wiriness he’d keep as a man. His thin legs swung slow arcs through the dull, hot afternoon air, avoiding carefully the dry, severe edges of the sword grass that tissed discontentedly in the weak breeze. He walked along the narrow, gravel path that divided lengthways the long, grassy strip that sat uneasily beside Carmichael Road. The straps of his school port ate into his shoulders, and the sun dug at his eyes from a sky that was the light, hard blue of Roman glass.

  He was sweating lightly, but the sharp sunlight was okay with him. It helped bake away the memories of the day’s shame, allowed room for idle imaginings that he was a Desert Rat of Tobruk, or a skulking Arab — someone brown and fearless who squinted at shimmering dunes for signs of determined but doomed Jerries.

  There was no hurry to get home. Suzette was in bed with the mumps so she would be even more of a bore. Mum would be peeling vegetables with sharp strokes or attacking school uniforms with the iron and wondering how a boy could eat so many biscuits and stay so thin. His friend Tristram had remained at school for trumpet practice, so there would be no visiting his place to play Battleship or Demolition Derby. No, there was no hurry.

  It was nearing four o’clock and the heat was rotten — stinking hot, his mum would describe it — and in this limbo between school finishing and knock-off time, it seemed no one but Nicholas was on Tallong’s streets. No cars broke the snaky heat haze wriggling above the black tar. Weatherboard and fibro houses shrugged against the bashing sunlight under red or green corrugated iron. Opposite them, to his right, were the woods.

  The woods. Hectares so thick with rainforest scrub and scribbly gums and trumpet vine and lantana that, from here on Carmichael Road, he couldn’t see more than ten metres into their interior. Certainly on some council map they must have a proper name, but he called them ‘the woods’ because his mother called them that, and so did Tristram’s parents and Tristram’s older brother, Gavin, and Mrs Ferguson the fruit lady. Nicholas knew, from looking at his father’s old street directory, that the woods stretched all the way from here on Carmichael Road back to the looping brown river — maybe a kilometre and a half, though he’d never gone in even a third of that. They were simply too scary, though he could never admit that to Tris. Even now, outside them, Nicholas felt how deep they were, as if he were walking past a bottomless lake of shadowy water rather than a forest. Last week he’d found a book in the school library called Space with a chapter about main sequence stars and dying supergiants and fading white dwarfs. . and black holes. Things so dense and with so much gravity that they drew light even from far away, and anything too close to them was trapped by their gravity and sucked into oblivion.

  He found he was staring at the dark trunks, and pulled his eyes away and concentrated on the baked gravel at his feet.

  He always slowed here, about halfway along his three-kilometre walk home from school. People dropped things on the path, and he was good at finding them. Lesser finds included a marble, tweezers, half a yo-yo, the ripcord from an SSP racer, a torn two-dollar note, and a pencil with its red paint shaved off just below the rubber and the name ‘Hill’ written there in ballpoint pen. Once, he picked up a pair of rusted pliers — snubby, alligator-nosed things that he took into the garage and cleaned carefully with machine oil he found in a white can under Dad’s old bench. When the jaws opened and closed easily, he hung them on a nail next to Dad’s other tools. It made him happy and sad at the same time, so he left them there.

  Nicholas knew his mother preferred that he and Suzette walk the long way home through the prim, geranium-gardened backstreets rather than past the woods. ‘Why?’ he’d ask. ‘Don’t be difficult,’ she’d reply, and a crisp silence would hang there like uncollected washing. On most days, he respected her wishes. But on days like today, when Suzette wasn’t with him, he’d come home along Carmichael Road. The lure of strange jetsam was too strong.

  He shifted his narrow shoulders. His school port was heavier today, weighted with a damp towel and wet swimming togs. I got in the pool anyway, he told himself encouragingly. But that thought wobbled on the top edge of the slippery dip back to this morning and its awful shame. He found his bottom lip tightening and his eyes getting stingy. He grew angry with himself. Crybaby, he said. Sook. He tried to think about somet
hing else — about the new space shuttle or the Mitchell-Hedges crystal skull or why Rommel lost, but it was too late: his thoughts tumbled down that slick slide into dark and unhappy waters.

  Around eleven that morning, all the kids in his class had lined up under pandanus palms outside the school swimming-pool changing rooms, clasping swimming togs in plastic bags in hands or cloth duffels over shoulders. Nicholas was near the front of the queue because it was alphabetical and his surname started with C. He was trying so hard — as he tried every swimming lesson — to shrink, to become invisible, to attract no attention. He looked hopefully around for something — anything! — to get him out of this, but saw none. He was dreading the inevitable words that came next.

  Miss Aspinall, with a voice like bells and a body like a medicine ball, called, ‘Okay, everyone. Sit down.’

  Nicholas and his classmates sat.

  ‘Shoes off.’

  The light grunting and groaning of piglets as boys and girls reached at their feet.

  The smell of chlorine bit and the chug of the filter was loud as he pulled off his left shoe, left sock, right shoe. . he looked around, and slowly, carefully. . right sock. . and there it was.

  A pale toe the size of his second smallest, only not aligned with the others, growing out the top of his foot and lying atop the other five like some showboat seal above a striated beach.

  He’d become quite good at covering his foot with his bag as soon as the sock was off. He was good at hiding. Perhaps, if no one looked. .

  A silvery tinkle-trundle of a coin dropped and rolling.

  ‘Oh!’

  The twenty-cent piece rolled past Eric Daniels, looped in a lazy, diminishing circle, and tingled to a stop right in front of Nicholas. He looked up just as Ursula Gazelle stooped over him to pick up her dropped money. He was frozen, horrified and powerless, as Ursula’s eyes slid from her coin to his shoes to his foot. . to his showboat-seal freak sixth toe.