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The voice was so faint that Rory wasn't sure he'd identified it. The invisibility of the caller made him feel as if the failure of one sense had robbed him of another. The sight of the pale boxy room didn't improve matters, nor did Sabyasachi's professionally expectant face. Rory tried closing his eyes, but not for long. 'Wherever other people don't,' he retorted while his lids sprang open as if he were fleeing a nightmare.
'Can't you say where, Rory?' It was indeed his brother, who appeared to think he could help by adding 'Your thing with the tins, didn't you get that from someone working in a supermarket?'
Rory was distracted by the notion that straining his ears had brought him more than Hugh. 'I'm taking all the blame,' he said.
'But didn't you say putting tins on the shelves was a kind of art too?'
Rory couldn't judge whether Hugh aimed to make his brother's work more accessible and populist or was hoping for some kind of acknowledgment. 'That's the truth,' he said.
'Then do you think a' Hugh seemed distracted, perhaps by an ill-defined sound. 'Do you think your things you've been talking about could be about the family?'
'You'll have to tell me how.' This was meant to dismiss the idea rather than invite an explanation, and Rory didn't wait for one. 'Are you at work?'
'No, at the house. Why?'
'I thought someone was calling you.'
'Weren't they saying our name at your end?'
Rory felt bound to say to Sabyasachi 'In case you're wondering, we're brothers.'
'Nothing wrong with family. Hugh, how are you saying Rory's work is about them? Is that including you?'
'I a' Hugh faltered, perhaps from embarra.s.sment. 'I'm at Frugo,' he admitted, 'and our cousin looks after old people and the other one does publishing.'
'Tins and age and books,' the presenter said. 'Well, Rory, it sounds as if you secretly care about something.'
Rory didn't want to claim this as a reason to appreciate his work. 'Are you still hearing that, Hugh?'
'I can't,' Sabyasachi said. 'Have you any more insights for us, Hugh?'
'He's always been artistic.' Hugh's voice had begun to fall short of its intentions before he said 'Rory, I think I still can.'
'We'll need to say goodbye if you've got a crossed line.'
'Hold on,' Rory said and cupped his hands over the headphones. 'Do you want me to come and see you, Hugh?'
'No, you stay there. It's publicity.'
'When I'm done, I mean. You don't sound quite right to me.'
'Nothing's up at all. You ought to find out what they've done to your thing with the tins.'
'If you aren't talking about his work there are callers who want to.'
'I'll come and visit soon and we can go out for a meal or a drink,' Hugh said and was gone.
'Hugh there from Huddersfield speaking up for the family, and now we have Alf from Netherthong. What's your point, Alf?'
Rory watched more than heard Sabyasachi say all this. If there was another voice in the headphones, it sounded buried deep. Only the presenter's expectant look told Rory the caller had finished. 'What did he say?' he was reduced to asking.
Sabyasachi gazed at him before murmuring or mouthing 'You had to get your brother to come to your defence.'
'That's b.o.l.l.o.c.ks. I didn't know he was ringing up.'
Sabyasachi patted the air again as if cuffing a child, which left Rory's senses feeling even less reliable. 'Thanks, Alf, and now it's Daphne from Heckmondwike.'
Any voice was so muted that Rory couldn't even identify it as female. Perhaps he was hearing less than a voice inside his head a nothing but the echo of his name. When he grew aware of the presenter's waiting gaze he had no idea how loud he demanded 'What is it this time?'
'You don't seem to want to hear anything you don't like.'
'You're saying that or she is?' When Sabyasachi raised his eyebrows and his upturned hands Rory said 'It's b.o.l.l.o.c.ks either way.'
The presenter used both hands to tamp the air down. 'Be as lively as you like, but can you keep an eye on the language?'
The prospect of being restricted still further made Rory's brain feel shrunken. He s.n.a.t.c.hed off the headphones but refrained from slamming them on the ledge in front of him. 'I talk how I talk, like I work how I work.'
'Daphne says that's almost a poem. Maybe you should try your hand at that.'
'Everyone should. Everyone's an artist. You just need to open up your senses.'
Sabyasachi touched his left headphone, apparently to indicate that he was reciting the call. 'In that case why do we need you.'
'You don't,' Rory said and walked out of the studio.
'A final bit of controversy there from concept artist Rory Lucas,' Sabyasachi said through the speaker above the receptionist, who gave Rory a pink smile bordering on straight-lipped. 'Yo Yorkshire! This is the Sabya Show every weekday afternoon on Moorland Radio. My next guest will be Prue Walker, great-grandmother and founder of Wrinkles Against Racism . . .'
As Rory left the concrete building, which was so featureless it might almost have been designed to deny perception any hold, he saw the Frugo supermarket across the business park. If Hugh had been at work Rory could have looked in on him. Perhaps he'd found a girl at last, hence his reluctance to be visited. Unlike Rory, he hadn't discovered that he didn't need them.
Six lanes of traffic were racing back and forth across the moor under a blue sky and flocks of giant clouds. Rory climbed into the aR tSeVe rYwh eRe van and drove onto the motorway, where drivers peered at the letters stencilled on the sides and rear doors of the vehicle before signifying comprehension with an enlightened grin or an aggravated scowl. As he headed west, sunlight flooded across slopes aglow with heather, and someone else might have fancied it was celebrating his approach. Once the motorway began a protracted descent into a valley he saw Can Do on the horizon.
It looked dully familiar. It never had before, and he tried to see it from the viewpoint of a new spectator. At this distance the jagged ma.s.s against the stately clouds resembled the ruins of a castle or of some less identifiable building. Closer, colours formed within the outline, eventually betraying that the bulk was constructed from thousands of tins. The viewer would experience a shift of perspective, having grasped that to be separately visible at that distance the tins must be unusually large. They were the biggest cans of paint Rory could find, and he'd lost count of the number of times he'd loaded the van before driving up on the moor to paint every tin the colour of its contents and glue it into place. He'd done his best to see that the arrangement was completely random, but perhaps that was an impossible task. There was an inadvertent pattern, so simple a child could have produced it. Wasn't childlike desirable? Weren't those the perceptions he believed everybody should recapture? Childish was the word that occurred to him just now, perhaps because he felt dispirited by his introversion. He was driving out of the valley, past a herd of sluggish trucks, before he observed that someone had sprayed paint over his work.
Wasn't this a kind of life? The trouble was that when he drove off the motorway, along the road that pa.s.sed by Can Do, his mind felt as distanced as ever. He parked as close as the road would take him and stepped down from the van. The turf and especially the heather must be springy underfoot, but the sight of the graffiti was dulling his senses. The scrawl didn't even include words, let alone any meaningful image or use of colour. It was the kind of random anonymous doodling that showed up on derelict buildings, a ma.s.s of drooling pallid purple loops. Didn't they add to the enigma that Can Do presented to any distant spectator? Might this enliven a few minds? He turned to shade his eyes and peer at the traffic coursing up and down the landscape, but it was pointless to look for signs of interest. He felt as if the graffiti had infected his work with their meaninglessness, unless they were a kind of comment. Perhaps they demonstrated how uninspired and uninspiring his work was, and not just this example. Should he revert to being uninspired in a way that pleased the public? Once he might have painted the landscape, until he'd seen that paintings were as redundant as photographs, pathetic samples of reality if not attempted subst.i.tutes for it. Nevertheless he was surveying the moor in case it could entice his perceptions out of the dark undefined place into which they seemed to have sunk, when he thought he heard his name.
He'd turned his mobile phone off at Moorland Radio, and it was still dormant. n.o.body was hiding behind Can Do, though more graffiti were. They weren't even visible to traffic, which added to their meaninglessness. He was standing in the shadow of the discoloured piles of metal when the voice repeated 'Rory Lucas.'
Was it just in his head? It seemed m.u.f.fled enough. As he dodged around the cans, darkness sped across the moor towards him, flattening the heather and the gra.s.s. A wind must be up, although he couldn't feel it. His senses had flinched inwards, away from the voice and its implications. His imagination must be playing tricks. He'd stimulated it too much.
A glossy crow sailed up from the undergrowth at the edge of the road and flew straight at him. He was wondering how it could fail to see him a if it took him for part of Can Do a when he realised that it was a plastic bag. Ordinarily he would have appreciated the visual pun, but just now it disturbed him. Was he smoking too much skunk to keep his senses primed? He'd never known the effects to linger the next day. He didn't enjoy hallucinating unless he'd set out to achieve it, still less the useless experience of hearing voices. As the airborne litter subsided in the clutches of a patch of heather he tried to hear the voice again, to prove he could produce it and silence it at will. The effort shrank his consciousness until he lost all awareness of his surroundings, but he wasn't certain that he heard his name in his head. Then he grasped what he was doing a attempting to rouse a hallucination before he had to drive. The notion dismayed him as much as the idea that the voice was lying in wait to take him off guard, and he fled to the van as another flood of shadow rushed towards it. He was glad Hugh hadn't wanted him to visit. He would feel safer at home.
SIX.
Ellen felt as if she were being scrutinised not just by Mrs Stevens but by the framed photograph on the desk. She was about to favour it with a remark when she heard sounds overhead: a heavy thud followed by a cry. The proprietor of the Peacebrook Home didn't react, and n.o.body seemed to have gone to the aid of the injured, even once the cry was repeated with additional anguish. 'Should I go and see what's happened, do you think?' Ellen was driven to ask.
'There'll be no need for that, thank you.'
Mrs Stevens sat back in her generous leather chair, and the lower reaches of her sleeveless blouse bulged as though celebrating her last meal or many of them. Her small face was set in plushy flesh that underlined her diminutive chin with a larger version, while her pale arms were so plump they hardly seemed defined. Ellen had been reflecting that at least she was slimmer by comparison, but now she was worried about whoever had fallen. The cry came again, and she was on the way to standing up despite the proprietor's reply when she heard an exaggerated voice that she guessed was a nurse's. 'Have you knocked your table over again, Thora? There it is for you. We'll have to see about getting it screwed to the floor, won't we? Why don't you come down and sit with the others now. Your quiz show that you like is on soon.'
He sounded as smug as Mrs Stevens had settled into looking. If Ellen had turned the situation into a test, she had no idea how she'd fared. As she sank back onto the chair its creak made her feel yet more examined. 'Sorry,' she said sooner than she'd planned to speak.
'Ah,' Mrs Stevens said, perhaps with satisfaction. 'What for?'
'I wasn't meaning to imply n.o.body was dealing with it.' When Mrs Stevens only gazed at her Ellen said 'I suppose I did, but I was wrong.'
'Nothing wrong with being conscientious.'
'I'm that, I hope. I'd look after your residents the way I'd look after any of my family.'
'Do they need it?'
'My family?' The proprietor's question seemed both irrelevant and oddly ominous. 'They're fine,' Ellen said. 'My parents are forever travelling and my cousins are all working.'
'If more people cared for their families there'd be less need for us.'
Since she was resting her fingers on top of the photograph, Ellen wondered if she had the couple a a young white man arm in arm with a young black woman a in mind. 'Yours?' she said.
'Why, do you see a problem?'
'I hope not. No, of course not. Certainly there shouldn't be.' Ellen thought she was saying too much and then not enough as the proprietor's gaze failed to change. 'They're your children, are they?' she said, which earned no response. 'Adopted?' she tried saying.
'Why are you asking that?'
'I don't mean both. It needn't be either.' Ellen felt as if she were strewing her words in her path. 'I don't even know why I said it. Forget I spoke.'
Mrs Stevens turned the photograph away from Ellen. 'They're my son and his partner.'
'Of course, I should have known.'
'Why should you?'
'Tell me if I'm trying too hard,' Ellen said and worked on a laugh. 'I just want to make sure you don't get the wrong impression.'
'You are.'
'Well then, I'll stop.'
'And I will,' Mrs Stevens said, caressing the top of the frame. 'I'm afraid you aren't suitable for the post.'
Ellen's face felt puffed up with dismay. 'Because of what I just said? I'm sorry if I was clumsy, but surely I wasn't rude.'
'How much more of my time are you proposing to waste, Miss Lomax? I'm surprised you attended the interview.'
'I don't believe in letting people down.'
Mrs Stevens shook her head as if Ellen's remark were an insect to be driven off, and her lower chin quivered while the smaller one stayed unsympathetically firm. 'Just in taking them for fools,' she said.
'I really don't think that's fair. How have I done it to you?'
The question appeared to topple the proprietor. Without taking her gaze from Ellen, she leaned sideways out of her chair. Her face seemed to swell or sag in that direction as she reached down for a newspaper, which she brandished like a warning to a dog. It was the Knowsley Globe, a local weekly. 'Seen enough?' she said.
'I haven't. If there's something I a'
Mrs Stevens leafed through the paper so vehemently that Ellen was surprised the pages didn't tear. Not much less than halfway through she turned it towards Ellen with such eagerness that it left several pages behind. 'Here you are,' she said in a kind of triumph.
Ellen saw the photograph first, such as it was. She'd hidden her face from the photographer outside the town hall because Muriel's comment had made her feel worse than plain, but she looked as if she had been trying to conceal her ident.i.ty. How fat a face was her fat hand not quite able to cover up? The headline beside them s.n.a.t.c.hed her gaze away. TRIBUNAL UPHOLDS DISMISSAL OF CARE HOME WORKER, it said.
The report insisted that the panel had convicted Ellen Lomax of racist att.i.tudes and intolerance of disability and bullying a vulnerable elderly witness. Having parted her thick lips with her outsize tongue, she managed to mumble 'It isn't true.'
'We've always found it reliable.'
'How can they print this when I haven't even been told?'
Mrs Stevens tidied the newspaper and folded her arms. 'I don't think they have to ask your permission to publish the news.'
'Not the paper, the tribunal. They haven't told me anything.'
'Dear me, someone has been thoughtless.'
'Yes, the paper. How could they put in all that and not interview me?'
'Perhaps they tried.' When Ellen uttered something like a laugh Mrs Stevens said 'Our son works for them. You'll have to excuse me now. I've an applicant to see in a few minutes.'
Ellen worked her stiff lips until she was able to say 'You never were going to give me a chance, were you?'
'I wanted to see how far you'd take it so I can advise my colleagues in the business.'
Ellen rose to her feet at a speed that she tried to find more dignified than ponderous. As she plodded out of the room she felt weighed down by the proprietor's gaze, but as she closed the door she found that Mrs Stevens had crouched forwards, face drooping as she pencilled comments on an application letter. Ellen was tramping along the hall when a voice above her said 'Are you the new girl?'
A woman was clinging to the banister two-handed while she lumbered downstairs. Although she was mostly enveloped in a voluminous long-sleeved floral dress, Ellen saw that her legs were twice as wide as her feet. 'I'm sorry, I'm not,' she said. 'I won't be working here.'
'Didn't you like our home?'
As disappointment shaped her mouth it threatened to infect Ellen's. 'So long as you do,' she said and had to turn away.
'I wish you wouldn't go. You're a jolly sort, I can tell. Some of these thin ones are a bit grim.' The old lady took a step that trembled the stairs and said 'Us fatties ought to stick together.'
She only meant that Ellen was less scrawny than whoever she found lacking in humour, but Ellen felt as if a memory that she preferred not to revive were lying in wait for her. 'Sorry, I'm not welcome,' she mumbled and was on her way to the front door when she caught sight of herself in a mirror across the lounge. Several seated residents turned to watch as she leaned through the doorway. She looked smaller than a child, but her head was swelling out of proportion, pumping up her cheeks so that they dwarfed the rest of her face. The expansion had spread lower than her shoulders before she recoiled, to be addressed by Mrs Stevens along the hall. 'Wrong door, Miss Lomax. n.o.body wants you in there.'
'I hope you find a suitable replacement,' Ellen said with the remains of her dignity and let herself out of the house.