That fear here -
Dogs barking -
Near.
You drive from Merseyside back to Wakefield -
The motorways quiet -
Everywhere dead.
She is sat on the stair. She is waiting for you. She has brought cold Chinese food and warm alcohol. She hears you on the stairs. She looks up. She is wet. She smiles.
‘Thought you might be hungry,’ she says.
‘I am,’ you lie and open the door -
The telephone ringing, the branches tapping.
Chapter 24
Breathing hard and spitting blood, running blind -
But here it is again, his car:
Let it get within six foot and then BJ off again -
Wind, rain, his voice:
Over a fence and on to wasteland, tripping and falling on to ground on other side, bleeding and crying and praying, stumble across wasteland and into a playground, into playground and scrambling over another fence, over fence and into some allotments, drip blood through vegetable patches and over a wall and into a small street of terraces, down street and right into another street of terraces, turn left then right again -
BJ turn off street and down side of a quiet little house -
Into their back garden:
A shed, black in rain at bottom of garden.
Door isn’t locked, just kept shut with a brick.
BJ go inside and sit down on a pile of old newspapers beside a spade and a lawnmower, a wheelbarrow and a trowel.
BJ wait -
Wait for it to get dark -
But it’s always dark.
BJ sit and BJ wait in dark, endless dark, and BJ cry -
Cry -
Cry for cuts on hands and cuts on legs, cuts on face and cuts in hair -
For mud on trousers and mud on shoes, on jacket and on shirt -
For mess -
For fucking mess BJ in -
Not only BJ:
BJ cry for mum -
Cry for mum and all other people BJ either loved or fucked or both -
Or ones BJ simply just fucked over:
For Barry Gannon and Bill Shaw -
Even Eddie Dunford and Paula Garland -
But most of all BJ cry for Grace and Clare:
Here in some nice little person’s shed in a nice little garden in Preston at half-past ten in morning on a wet Friday -
Friday 21 November 1975 -
BJ crying and crying, over and over, finally crying -
Knuckles red and fingers blue, biting hands and cuffs of shirt, wishing BJ could stop -
Wishing it all would fucking stop -
Stop and rewind -
That dead be living, living never dead:
BJ take photograph out of pocket:
But it isn’t her, it really isn’t her, and BJ screw it up and hide it deep inside BJ’s jacket, and BJ close eyes to make it stop and go away -
But when BJ close eyes, BJ see her body again -
Her body on a stretcher, wind raising bloody sheet:
BJ open red eyes and BJ steal a glance through dirty wet window at nice little garden and nice little house with its nice little curtains and its nice little ornaments on nice little windowsill, even nice little flap for cat and nice little table for birds -
Birds with their wings, their little angel wings that raise them high -
BJ pull up BJ’s shirt and with dirty wet fingers, BJ search among shoulder blades and back bones, search for stumps -
Stumps of wings -
But BJ cannot find them.
BJ pull down dirty star shirt and BJ think about BJ’s mother and nice little house with nice little garden that never was; Clare and her kids and nice little house with nice little garden they never had and never will -
BJ wait in endless dark and BJ cry.
It is Friday 21 November 1975:
North of England -
Clare is dead.
It’s dark when BJ open shed door -
There are still no lights on in house so BJ walk down side and back out on to street.
BJ jog down to end of street and peer round corner:
BJ weave through side streets and terraces, wishing it would stop raining for just one single fucking minute.
BJ come to playing fields where on far side behind houses there is a dual-carriageway.
BJ start to cross playing fields. BJ see them: