"...iculous," said Parminder thickly, her face hidden behind a tissue she had pulled out from her sleeve. "...Mary...most important..."
"You would have been one of the very first people Barry called," said Tessa sadly, and, to her horror, she burst into tears too.
"Minda, I'm so sorry," she sobbed, "but I was having to deal with Colin and all the rest of them."
"Don't be silly," said Parminder, gulping as she dabbed at her thin face. "We're being silly."
No, we're not. Oh, let go for once, Parminder...
But the doctor squared her thin shoulders, blew her nose and sat up straight again.
"Did Vikram tell you?" asked Tessa timidly, tweaking a handful of tissues from the box on Parminder's desk.
"No," said Parminder. "Howard Mollison. In the deli."
"Oh God, Minda, I'm so sorry."
"Don't be silly. It's fine."
Crying had made Parminder feel slightly better; friendlier towards Tessa, who was wiping her own plain, kind face. This was a relief, for now that Barry was gone, Tessa was Parminder's only real friend in Pagford. (She always said "in Pagford" to herself, pretending that somewhere beyond the little town she had a hundred loyal friends. She never quite admitted to herself that these consisted only of the memories of her gang of schoolmates back in Birmingham, from whom the tide of life had long since separated her; and the medical colleagues with whom she had studied and trained, who still sent Christmas cards, but who never came to see her, and whom she never visited.) "How's Colin?"
Tessa moaned.
"Oh, Minda...Oh God. He says he's going to run for Barry's seat on the Parish Council."
The pronounced vertical furrow between Parminder's thick, dark brows deepened.
"Can you imagine Colin running for election?" Tessa asked, her sodden tissues crumpled tightly in her fist. "Coping with the likes of Aubrey Fawley and Howard Mollison? Trying to fill Barry's shoes, telling himself he's got to win the battle for Barry - all the responsibility -"
"Colin copes with a lot of responsibility at work," said Parminder.
"Barely," said Tessa, without thinking. She felt instantly disloyal and started to cry again. It was so strange; she had entered the surgery thinking that she would offer comfort to Parminder, but instead here she was, pouring out her own troubles instead. "You know what Colin's like, he takes everything to heart so much, he takes everything so personally..."
"He copes very well, you know, all things considered," said Parminder.
"Oh, I know he does," said Tessa wearily. The fight seemed to go out of her. "I know."
Colin was almost the only person towards whom stern, self-contained Parminder showed ready compassion. In return, Colin would never hear a word against her; he was her dogged champion in Pagford; "An excellent GP," he would snap at anyone who dared to criticize her in his hearing. "Best I've ever had." Parminder did not have many defenders; she was unpopular with the Pagford old guard, having a reputation for being grudging with antibiotics and repeat prescriptions.
"If Howard Mollison gets his way, there won't be an election at all," said Parminder.
"What d'you mean?"
"He's sent round an email. It came in half an hour ago."
Parminder turned to her computer monitor, typed in a password, and brought up her inbox. She angled the monitor so that Tessa could read Howard's message. The first paragraph expressed regret at Barry's death. The next suggested that, in view of the fact that a year of Barry's term had already expired, co-opting a replacement might be preferable to going through the onerous process of a full election.
"He's lined someone up already," said Parminder. "He's trying to crowbar in some crony before anyone can stop him. I wouldn't be surprised if it was Miles."
"Oh, surely not," said Tessa instantly. "Miles was at the hospital with Barry...no, he was very upset by it -"
"You're so damn naive, Tessa," said Parminder, and Tessa was shocked by the savagery in her friend's voice. "You don't understand what Howard Mollison's like. He's a vile man, vile. You didn't hear him when he found out that Barry had written to the paper about the Fields. You don't know what he's trying to do with the methadone clinic. You wait. You'll see."
Her hand was trembling so much that it took her a few attempts to close down Mollison's email.
"You'll see," she repeated. "All right, we'd better get on, Laura needs to go in a minute. I'll check your blood pressure first."
Parminder was doing Tessa a favor, seeing her late like this, after school. The practice nurse, who lived in Yarvil, was going to drop off Tessa's blood sample to the hospital lab on her way home. Feeling nervous and oddly vulnerable, Tessa rolled up the sleeve of the old green cardigan. The doctor wound the Velcro cuff around her upper arm. At close quarters, Parminder's strong resemblance to her second daughter was revealed, for their different builds (Parminder being wiry, and Sukhvinder buxom) became indiscernible, and the similarity of their facial features emerged: the hawkish nose, the wide mouth with its full lower lip, and the large, round, dark eyes. The cuff tightened painfully around Tessa's flabby upper arm, while Parminder watched the gauge.
"One sixty-five over eighty-eight," said Parminder, frowning. "That's high, Tessa; too high."
Deft and skillful in all her movements, she stripped the wrapping from a sterile syringe, straightened out Tessa's pale, mole-strewn arm and slid the needle into the crook.
"I'm taking Stuart into Yarvil tomorrow night," Tessa said, looking up at the ceiling. "To get him a suit for the funeral. I can't stand the scene there'll be, if he tries to go in jeans. Colin'll go berserk."
She was trying to divert her own thoughts from the dark, mysterious liquid flowing up into the little plastic tube. She was afraid that it would betray her; that she had not been as good as she should have been; that all the chocolate bars and muffins she had eaten would show up as traitorous glucose.
Then she thought bitterly that it would be much easier to resist chocolate if her life were less stressful. Given that she spent nearly all her time trying to help other people, it was hard to see muffins as so very naughty. As she watched Parminder labeling vials of her blood, she found herself hoping, though her husband and friend might think it heresy, that Howard Mollison would triumph, and prevent an election happening at all.
V.
Simon Price left the printworks on the stroke of five every day without fail. He had put in his hours, and that was that; home was waiting, clean and cool, high on the hill, a world away from the perpetual clank and whir of the Yarvil plant. To linger in the factory after clocking-off time (though now a manager, Simon had never ceased to think in the terms of his apprenticeship) would constitute a fatal admission that your home life was lacking or, worse, that you were trying to brownnose senior management.
Today, though, Simon needed to make a detour before going home. He met up with the gum-chewing forklift driver in the car park, and together they drove through the darkening streets, with the boy giving directions, into the Fields, actually passing the house in which Simon had grown up. He had not been past the place for years; his mother was dead, and he had not seen his father since he was fourteen and did not know where he was. It unsettled and depressed Simon to see his old home with one window boarded over and the grass ankle-deep. His late mother had been house proud.
The youth told Simon to park at the end of Foley Road, then got out, leaving Simon behind, and headed toward a house of particularly squalid appearance. From what Simon could see by the light of the nearest street lamp, it seemed to have a pile of filth heaped beneath a downstairs window. It was only now that Simon asked himself how sensible it had been to come and pick up the stolen computer in his own car. These days, surely, they would have CCTV on the estate, to keep an eye on all the little thugs and hoodies. He glanced around, but he could not see any cameras; nobody seemed to be looking at him except a fat woman who was openly staring through one of the small, square institutional-looking windows. Simon scowled at her, but she continued to watch him as she smoked her cigarette, so he screened his face with his hand, glaring through the windscreen.
His passenger was already emerging from the house, straddling a little as he walked back towards the car, carrying the boxed computer. Behind him, in the doorway of the house he had left, Simon saw an adolescent girl with a small boy at her feet, who stepped out of sight as he watched, dragging the child with her.
Simon turned the key in the ignition, revving the engine as the gum chewer came nearer.
"Careful," said Simon, leaning across to unlock the passenger door. "Just put it down here."
The boy set the box down on the still-warm passenger seat. Simon had intended to open it and check that it was what he had paid for, but a growing sense of his own imprudence overrode the desire. He contented himself with giving the box a shove: it was too heavy to move easily; he wanted to get going.
"You all right if I leave you here?" he called loudly to the boy, as if he was already speeding away from him in the car.
"Can you give us a lift up to the Crannock Hotel?
"Sorry, mate, I'm going the other way," said Simon. "Cheers."
Simon accelerated. In his rearview mirror he saw the boy standing there, looking outraged; saw his lips form the words "fuck you!" But Simon didn't care. If he cleared out quickly, he might avoid his number plate being captured on one of those grainy black and white films they played back on the news.
He reached the bypass ten minutes later, but even after he had left Yarvil behind, quitted the dual carriageway and driven up the hill toward the ruined abbey, he was ruffled and tense, and experienced none of the satisfaction that was usually his when he crested the peak in the evenings and caught the first glimpse of his own house, far across the hollow where Pagford lay, a tiny white handkerchief on the opposite hillside.
Though she had been home barely ten minutes, Ruth already had dinner on and was laying the table when Simon carried the computer inside; they kept early hours in Hilltop House, as was Simon's preference. Ruth's exclamations of excitement at the sight of the box irritated her husband. She did not understand what he had been through; she never understood that there were risks involved in getting stuff cheap. For her part, Ruth sensed at once that Simon was in one of the tightly wound moods that often presaged an explosion, and coped the only way she knew how: by jabbering brightly about her day, in the hope that the mood would dissolve once he had food inside him, and as long as nothing else happened to irritate him.
Promptly at six o'clock, by which time Simon had unboxed the computer and discovered that there was no instruction manual, the family sat down to eat.
Andrew could tell that his mother was on edge, because she was making random conversation with a familiar, artificially cheery note in her voice. She seemed to think, despite years of contrary experience, that if she made the atmosphere polite enough, his father would not dare shatter it. Andrew helped himself to shepherd's pie (made by Ruth, and defrosted on work nights) and avoided eye contact with Simon. He had more interesting things to think about than his parents. Gaia Bawden had said "hi" to him when he had come face-to-face with her outside the biology lab; said it automatically and casually, but had not looked at him once all lesson.
Andrew wished he knew more about girls; he had never got to know one well enough to fathom how their minds worked. The yawning gap in his knowledge had not mattered much until Gaia had walked onto the school bus for the first time, and provoked in him a laser-sharp interest focused on her as an individual; a quite different feeling to the wide and impersonal fascination that had been intensifying in him over several years, concerned with the sprouting of breasts and the appearance of bra straps through white school shirts, and his slightly squeamish interest in what menstruation actually entailed.
Fats had girl cousins who sometimes came to visit. Once, going into the Walls' bathroom right after the prettiest of them had used it, Andrew had found a transparent Lil-Lets wrapper lying beside the bathroom bin. This actual, physical evidence that a girl in his vicinity was having a period there and then was, to thirteen-year-old Andrew, akin to the sighting of a rare comet. He had had enough sense not to tell Fats what he had seen or found or how exciting a discovery it had been. Instead he had picked up the wrapper between his fingernails, dropped it quickly into the bin, then washed his hands more vigorously than he had ever washed them in his life.
Andrew spent a lot of time staring at Gaia's Facebook page on his laptop. It was almost more intimidating than she was in person. He spent hours poring over photographs of the people that she had left behind in the capital. She came from a different world: she had black friends, Asian friends, friends with names he could never have pronounced. There was a photograph of her in a swimsuit that was burned into his brain, and another of her, leaning up against a filthily good-looking coffee-skinned boy. He had no spots, and actual stubble. By a process of careful examination of all her messages, Andrew had concluded that this was an eighteen-year-old called Marco de Luca. Andrew stared at Marco and Gaia's communications with the concentration of a code breaker, unable to decide whether they indicated a continuing relationship or not.
His Facebook browsing was often tinged with anxiety, because Simon, whose understanding of how the Internet worked was limited, and who instinctively mistrusted it as the only area of his sons' life where they were freer and more at ease than he, would sometimes erupt unexpectedly into their bedrooms to check what they were viewing. Simon claimed that he was making sure that they were not running up huge bills, but Andrew knew it to be one more manifestation of his father's need to exert control, and the cursor hovered constantly over the box that would shut the page whenever he was perusing Gaia's details online.
Ruth was still rattling from topic to topic, in a fruitless attempt to make Simon produce more than surly monosyllables.
"Ooooh," she said suddenly. "I forgot: I spoke to Shirley today, Simon, about you maybe standing for the Parish Council."
The words hit Andrew like a punch.
"You're standing for the council?" he blurted.
Simon slowly raised his eyebrows. One of the muscles in his jaw was twitching.
"Is that a problem?" he asked, in a voice that throbbed with aggression.
"No," lied Andrew.
You've got to be fucking joking. You? Standing for election? Oh fuck, no.
"It sounds like you've got a problem with it," said Simon, still staring straight into Andrew's eyes.
"No," said Andrew again, dropping his gaze to his shepherd's pie.
"What's wrong with me standing for the council?" Simon continued. He was not about to let it go. He wanted to vent his tension in a cathartic outburst of rage.
"Nothing's wrong. I was surprised, that's all."
"Should I have consulted you first?" said Simon.
"No."
"Oh, thank you," said Simon. His lower jaw was protruding, as it often did when he was working up to losing control. "Have you found a job yet, you skiving, sponging little shit?"
"No."
Simon glared at Andrew, not eating, but holding a cooling forkful of shepherd's pie in midair. Andrew switched his attention back to his food, determined not to offer further provocation. The air pressure within the kitchen seemed to have increased. Paul's knife rattled against his plate.
"Shirley says," Ruth piped up again, her voice high-pitched, determined to pretend all was well until this became impossible, "That it'll be on the council website, Simon. About how you put your name forward."
Simon did not respond.
Her last, best attempt thwarted, Ruth fell silent too. She was afraid that she might know what was at the root of Simon's bad mood. Anxiety gnawed at her; she was a worrier, she always had been; she couldn't help it. She knew that it drove Simon mad when she begged him for reassurance. She must not say anything.
"Si?"
"What?"
"It's all right, isn't it? About the computer?"
She was a dreadful actress. She tried to make her voice casual and calm, but it was brittle and high-pitched.
This was not the first time stolen goods had entered their home. Simon had found a way of fiddling the electricity meter too, and did small jobs on the side, at the printworks, for cash. All of it gave her little pains in the stomach, kept her awake at night; but Simon was contemptuous of people who did not dare take the shortcuts (and part of what she had loved about him, from the beginning, was that this rough and wild boy, who was contemptuous, rude and aggressive to nearly everyone, had taken the trouble to attract her; that he, who was so difficult to please, had selected her, alone, as worthy).
"What are you talking about?" Simon asked quietly. The full focus of his attention shifted from Andrew to Ruth, and was expressed by the same unblinking, venomous stare.
"Well, there won't be any...any trouble about it, will there?"
Simon was seized with a brutal urge to punish her for intuiting his own fears and for stoking them with her anxiety.
"Yeah, well, I wasn't going to say anything," he said, speaking slowly, giving himself time to make up a story; "but there was a bit of trouble when they were nicked, as it turns out." Andrew and Paul paused in their eating and stared. "Some security guard got beaten up. I didn't know anything about it till it was too late. I only hope there's no comeback."
Ruth could barely breathe. She could not believe the evenness of his tone, the calmness with which he spoke of violent robbery. This explained his mood when he had come home; this explained everything.
"That's why it's essential nobody mentions we've got it," said Simon.
He subjected each of them to a fierce glare, to impress the dangers on them by sheer force of personality.
"We won't," Ruth breathed.
Her rapid imagination was already showing her the police at the door; the computer examined; Simon arrested, wrongly accused of aggravated assault - jailed.
"Did you hear Dad?" she said to her sons, in a voice barely louder than a whisper. "You mustn't tell anybody we've got a new computer."
"It should be all right," said Simon. "It should be fine. As long as everyone keeps their traps shut."
He turned his attention back to his shepherd's pie. Ruth's eyes flittered from Simon to her sons and back again. Paul was pushing food around his plate, silent, frightened.
But Andrew had not believed a word his father said.
You're a lying fucking bastard. You just like scaring her.
When the meal was finished, Simon got up and said, "Well, let's see whether the bloody thing works, at least. You," he pointed at Paul, "go and get it out of the box and put it carefully - carefully - on the stand. You," he pointed at Andrew, "you do computing, don't you? You can tell me what to do."
Simon led the way into the sitting room. Andrew knew that he was trying to catch them out, that he wanted them to mess up: Paul, who was small and nervous, might drop the computer, and he, Andrew, was sure to blunder. Behind them in the kitchen, Ruth was clattering around, clearing away the dinner things. She, at least, was out of the immediate line of fire.