his fist. The water had brought new color to his cheeks. His hair was plastered to his
head like a brown-blond skullcap. He'd let it grow, he thought, as long as Whitehead
didn't object; get it styled perhaps. But there was more pressing business now; the
removal of the condemned mustache. He wasn't particularly hirsute. The mustache had taken
him several weeks to grow, and he'd had to tolerate the usual run of witless remarks
while he was doing it. But if the boss man wanted him barefaced, who was he to argue?
Whitehead's opinion on the matter had sounded more like an order than a suggestion.
Despite the well-supplied cabinet in the bathroom (everything from aspirin to
crab-killing preparations), there were no scissors, and he had to soap the hairs
thoroughly to soften them and then go at them directly with the razor. The blade
protested, and so did his skin, but stroke by stroke his upper lip came back into view,
the hard-earned mustache hitting the sink in a slop of suds, only to be sucked away down
the drain. It took him half an hour to do the job to his satisfaction. He nicked himself
in two or three places, and sealed the cuts as best he could with spit.
By the time he'd finished the steam had cleared from the bathroom, and only patches
of mist marred his reflection. He looked at his face in the mirror. His naked upper lip
was pink and vulnerable, and the groove at its center curiously overperfect in its
formation, but his sudden nudity wasn't such a bad sight.
Content, he sluiced the remains of his mustache from the sides of the sink, wrapped a
towel about his middle and sauntered back into the bedroom. In the centrally heated
warmth of the house, he was practically dry: no need for toweling. Weariness and hunger
fought in him as he sat on the edge of the bed. There was food downstairs for him, or so
Toy had said. Well, maybe he'd just lie back on this virginal sheet, head on the scented
pillow, and close his eyes for half an hour, then get up and wander down to eat supper.
He slung off the towel and lay on the bed, half-pulling the duvet over him, and in the
act of doing so, fell asleep. There were no dreams; or if there were he slept too
securely to remember them.
It was morning in moments.
13
If he had forgotten the geography of the house from his brief tour the previous
night, it took only a sense of smell to lead him back to the kitchen. Bacon was frying,
fresh coffee was being perked. At the stove stood a redhaired woman. She turned from her
work and nodded.
"You must be Martin," she said; her voice carried a faint Irish inflection. "You're
up late." He looked at the clock on the wall. It was a few minutes past seven.
"You've got a fine morning to start." The back door was open; he crossed the expanse
of the kitchen to survey the day. It was fine; another clear sky. Frost sugared the lawn.
In the misted distance he could see what looked like tennis courts, and beyond them, a
stand of trees.
"I'm Pearl, by the way," the woman announced. "I cook for Mr. Whitehead. Hungry, are
you?" "I am now I'm down here." "We believe in breakfast here. Something to set you up
for the day." She was busy transferring bacon from the frying pan on the stove to the
oven. The work surface beside the hob was littered with food: tomatoes, sausages, slices
of black pudding. "There's coffee on the side there. Help yourself." The percolator
burped and fizzed as he poured himself a mug of coffee, the same dark but fragrant roast
he'd tasted the night before.
"You'll have to get used to using the kitchen when I'm not here. I don't live in. I
just come and go." "Who cooks for Mr. Whitehead when you're away?" "He likes to do it
himself on occasion. But you'll have to put in a hand." "I can scarcely boil water."
"You'll learn." She turned to look at him, egg in hand. She was older than he'd at first
thought: maybe fifty.
"Don't fret yourself about it," she said. "How hungry?" "Ravenous." "I left a cold
spread out last night." "I fell asleep." She broke one egg into the frying pan, and then
a second, as she said, "Mr. Whitehead doesn't have fancy tastes, except for his
strawberries. He won't be expecting souffles, don't worry. Most of the stuff's in the
freezer next door: all you have to do is unwrap it and put it in the microwave." Marty
scanned the kitchen, taking in all the equipment: food processor, microwave oven,
electric carving knife. Behind him, mounted on the wall, was a row of television screens.
He hadn't noticed them last night. Before he could inquire about them, however, Pearl was
offering further gastronomic details. "He often gets hungry in the middle of the night,
or so Nick used to say. He keeps such funny hours, you see." "Who's Nick?" "Your
predecessor. He left just before Christmas. I quite liked him; but Bill said he got a
little light-fingered." "I see." She shrugged. "Still, you can't tell, can you? I mean,
he-" She halted in midsentence, quietly cursing her tongue, and covered her embarrassment
by coaxing the eggs out of the pan and onto the plate to join the food she'd already
assembled there. Marty finished her thought out loud for her.
"He didn't look like a thief; is that what you were going to say?" "I didn't mean it
like that," she insisted, transferring the plate from stove to table. "Careful, the
plate's hot." Her face had gone the color of her hair.
"It's all right," Marty told her.
"I liked Nick," she reiterated. "Really I did. I've broken one of the eggs. I'm
sorry." Marty looked down at the full plate. One of the yolks had indeed broken and was
pooling around a fried tomato.
"Looks fine to me," he said with genuine appetite, and set to eating. Pearl refilled
his mug, found a cup for herself, filled that, and sat down with him.
"Bill speaks very highly of you," she said.
"I wasn't sure he'd taken to me at first." "Oh, yes," she said, "very much. Partly
because of your boxing, of course. He used to be a professional boxer himself." "Really?"
"I thought he'd have told you. This is thirty years ago. Before he worked for Mr.
Whitehead. You want some toast?" "If there's some going." She got up and cut two slices
of white bread, then slipped them into the toaster. She hesitated a moment before
returning to the table. "I really am sorry," she said.
"About the egg?" "About mentioning Nick and thieving-" "I asked," Marty replied.
"Besides, you've every right to be cautious. I'm an ex-con. Not even ex, really. I could
go back if I put a foot wrong"-he loathed saying this, as if the mere speaking of the
words made the possibility more real-"but I'm not going to let Mr. Toy down. Or myself.
OK?" She nodded, clearly relieved that nothing had been soured between them, and sat down
again to finish her coffee. "You're not like Nick," she said, "I can tell that already."
"Was he odd?" Marty said. "Glass eye or something?" "Well, he wasn't-" She seemed to
regret this fresh line of conversation before it was begun. "It's no matter," she said,
dismissing it.
"No. Go on." "Well, for what it's worth, I think he had debts." Marty tried not to
register anything but the mildest interest. But something must have showed in his eyes, a
flicker of panic perhaps. Pearl frowned.
"What sort of debts?" he asked, lightly.
The toast popped up, claiming Pearl's attention. She crossed to fetch the slices and
brought them back to the table. "Excuse fingers," she said.
"Thanks." "I don't know how much he owed." "No, I don't mean how big, I meant . . .
where did they come from?" Was he making this sound like an idle inquiry, he wondered, or
=14= |