“We’re sorry,” Angus said, then walked briskly through my library. Noah followed, ducking at the door. He had mud on his boots and I didn’t mind. I was looking at his father’s long runner’s legs.

Noah stroked a coachwood shelf, as if checking on my housekeeping while covertly identifying a rainforest timber. He was the greenie. He was also the classics genius. He had, at the age of fourteen, come home drunk and vomited in his bed. Never having met him, I had lived with him for years and years.

I found them shuffling on my durrie, the sort of pale delicate rug only childless people have. They did not know what to do with their bodies. So I chose the Nelson Case Study day bed and sat on one end. Then Noah sat opposite on a Gustav Axel Berg whose eighty-year-old bentwood torqued beneath his weight.

Finally, Angus chose the other end of the day bed. Even from that distance the beautiful creature smelled musty and unwashed.

The stolen blue cube was sitting in the middle of the magazine table. Noah clearly followed my gaze. He was his father’s son. He picked up the cube.

“May I smoke?” he asked.

“Of course.”

He produced a pouch of tobacco, balanced Carl’s toy on one knee.

Poor boys I thought—their dear eyes, great dark pools of hurt, more like each other than like their father—low brows, a terrible silent mental concentration. On what I did not know. But they carried Matthew’s beauty, their sinew, bone, the square set of their shoulders, that same lovely nose.

“I’ll fetch an ashtray.”

I thought, when I give it to him I’ll take the cube away, I don’t know why, but by the time I returned he’d tucked it deep between his legs.

“We have never really met,” I said to his brother.

“No, not really.”

“But you are Angus?”

“Yes.”

“I’m the troubled child,” Noah said, and placed Carl’s cube back on the table. “I’m Noah. And you are Catherine Gehrig. I Googled you.”

Silence.

“Can I have a drink?” asked Noah.

I knew Matthew did not wish me to give him alcohol.

“Do you have any beer?”

“Just some red wine, and a little whisky.”

“Whisky,” he said, and held my gaze.

I looked to his older brother. He shook his head. “I’m the designated driver.”

When I first met his father, Noah had been in trouble for making a joke about a gay camel. He was just a little boy. He had thought it was funny, that a camel might be gay. The school had different opinions.

“Weird, huh?” I called as I poured the whisky in the kitchen. The “huh” sounding so old, so fake.

“What?”

I fetched a glass of water and delivered this together with the whisky. Angus was standing in front of the framed photograph of the stables.

“It’s strange, us three, here all together,” I said as the child drank his whisky straight. “I’m sorry if this is awful for you.”

“Did you like it there?” Angus asked, gazing at the photograph. He was being an adult, smelling like a teenage boy.

I stood beside him. “I don’t think you did.”

He produced his Frankenpod or Space Onion or whatever. “Have you ever Googled it? Would you like to see?”

Of course I did not wish to look. “All right,” I said.

Angus sat on the day bed, with me on his left side. We crouched over the gadget, not quite touching, and there it was, the stables seen from space, the line of cliff, the trees, the grey roof in the shade.

It was nighttime now in Suffolk, but the daylight image was no less disturbing for being captured in the past. The satellite had spied on us during the summer of the drought, the brown grass, the dying tree. I could make out the Norton Commando so the pair of us were there, alive together, unaware.

“We must have been inside,” I said, and then I was embarrassed to imagine what they thought: all that stinky sex. “Did you feel I stole your father from you?”

“Let’s face it,” Noah said. “You did.”

There was some unspoken current of conversation between them.

“No, it wasn’t you,” Angus said, but I must have existed everywhere around them.

Noah left the room and—don’t ask me why—I snatched Carl’s cube and sat it on the shelf behind me.

When he returned with the whisky bottle, he spoke directly to his older brother. “We were going to tell the truth. That’s what we agreed.”

My heart sank.

Noah’s mouth, like his father’s, was an instrument of infinite nuance. He was staring at the shelf above my head, and although he was almost certainly amused, I had no idea what he was thinking.

Then Angus removed the framed photograph from the wall. I have never liked people fiddling with my things but I forgot that when I saw how sad and grimy my walls had become.

“This is yours now,” Angus said.

I was so tense I thought he meant my photograph and I was outraged that he should have assumed the power to give me what was mine.

“Do you mean this?”

“The stables, yes. It’s yours.”

My heart did leap at that, but of course they were boys and they knew a great deal less than I did. Matthew and I had talked about his will. He had wished to maintain our secrets after death and if I had been hurt by that, it had not been for long.

“You’re very sweet. I wish it was.”

Noah picked up the whisky bottle and we all watched while it surrendered the last four drops.

“It is yours.” Noah had that slightly off-putting confidence young public schoolboys bring to the workplace. I wanted to say, I saw your father’s will, you brat. He signed it in 2006 and I can promise you that Catherine Gehrig does not even have a walk-on part.

“Dad couldn’t leave it to you, of course,” Angus said.

“No, of course not.” He was pushing all my buttons all at once. For thirteen years I had been made invisible by this family even while I was subsumed by them, their maths problems and their vomiting. I didn’t mind. I really didn’t mind.

“He left it to us.”

“Quite right,” I said, my bitterness a secret, even from myself.

“He could hardly write your name in his will.”

Well, he could, I thought, although I would never have asked him to. “It would have looked a little odd to your mother.” I smiled as best I could.

“We’ve talked about it, Noah and I. And as we are the new owners we have decided you shall have it as long as you live.”

There were too many emotions in the room, but the two young men were keeping themselves together, both of them with their big hands upon their knees.

“It’s called a peppercorn rent. We have brought the lease for you to sign. You pay one peppercorn a year, that’s it.”

“We brought the Mini here, to give to you.”

“Really? Did you do all this on your own?”

“A friend of Dad’s. He helped us think about the lease.”

“This would be Mr. Croft?”

“He has been very nice to us.”

Вы читаете The Chemistry of Tears
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