‘Swish swish,’ the wipers whispered.
I felt an impulse to hug her. ‘Mm. I know the feeling.’ I loosened Bertie Bean from around my neck. ‘I’ve been crying inside all day.’
‘I used to be a kind-hearted person …’ Her voice was wobbling between bravura and embarrassment.
Swish swish. The droplets smeared across the windscreen. I thought I caught the glint of a tear in her eye but it might have been just a trick of the light.
‘You’re still … I mean, you’re wonderful as you are, Eustachia. You’re already a goddess!’
‘Do you really mean it?’
‘Of course. A goddess of mercy.’ My voice sounded more tinny and insincere than I felt.
She looked at me out of the corner of her eye. There were black streaks where the mascara had run into the wrinkles. ‘My doctor put me on benzos, you know,’ she said.
‘I was on Prozac.’
Taunting memories crowded in on me as I said the ‘p’ word. You think you’re over it, but you’re not. Just look at you. You’re a bloody mess. Swish swish.
Red tail lights smeared and blurred in front of us. She drove nervously, her foot hovering over the brake.
‘I started to put on weight. My memory started to go. The doctor wanted me to come off them, she said I was getting too dependent. She said I had to learn to control my impulses. But you see, I can’t. I’m an emotional person. Those pastry things your mother makes, for example …’
‘Mm. Slotki. By the way, how did you feel after you’d eaten them?’
‘Since you ask, I felt absolutely awful!’
Oh God! I remembered the nausea and the feeling of choking the first time I tasted them. So maybe it had not just been my paranoid imagination. Maybe this was part of Inna’s plan to get her hands on the flat.
‘Totally suicidal!’ she moaned. ‘Like all my self-control melted away in one mouthful.’
‘They made me feel strange too, but it was more physical. I think they don’t agree with me.’
‘Funny you should say that — my speech therapist had an allergy to anything with nuts in it.’
‘Mm. Your speech therapist?’ I let this sink in. Could an allergy be hereditary?
Once we were past Islington the traffic eased and the rain petered out. We were moving more quickly now, Mrs Penny biting her lower lip with concentration as she worked up and down through the gears, her left foot pressing hard on the clutch. In a few minutes we would be home.
I seized the opportunity to ask the question that had been nudging itself to the front of my mind. ‘What happened to Mr Penny, Eustachia?’
She let out a sudden moan and, uncontrolled, the car lurched forward. I grabbed the wheel to avoid a cyclist on the near side.
‘That lying, cheating, heartless bastard! He told me I’d let myself go and I wasn’t the woman he’d married. Then I discovered he was having an affair behind my back all the time with a younger woman. He didn’t want me to look different; he just wanted me out of the way.’
A tear drop glistened on her cheek momentarily. She wobbled as we passed another cyclist and I laid my hand over hers on the steering wheel, searching my repertoire of Bard wisdom.
‘Sigh no more, lady, sigh no more, men were deceivers ever. One foot in sea, and one on shore, to one thing constant never.’
‘Oh, that’s so true.’ A small smile lit her profile. She glanced at me sideways. ‘Is it poetry?’
‘Shakespeare. The best.’
‘I bet you’re not like that, are you, Berthold? Always chasing after what you can’t have?’
‘Me? No, not at all.’
After all, I had not chased after Violet. I had let her skip away with her suitcase across the station forecourt. I felt a stab of pain remembering, and also a slight twinge of relief. Whatever had possessed me to imagine that love could blossom between Violet and myself? She was young enough to be my daughter. Bertie Bean had saved me from making an utter prat of myself. I pulled him tighter around me.
‘So what did you do, Eustachia?’
‘What could I do? I went back to my speech therapist. She’d retired by then but she was like a fairy godmother to me, and I asked her advice. She told me to dump him. Best thing I ever did — dumping him.’
‘So now you live alone?’
‘Just me and Monty.’
‘Monty?’
‘Monty the Mongrel. He came from a client, an old lady I was rehousing whose husband had fought with Montgomery at El Alamein. Would you believe it? He was a war hero, and they wouldn’t let her take the dog into the new place, told her to have him put down. Heartless, the rules we have to work by. She told them she’d sooner keep the dog and live on the street. So I took him in.’
‘That was kind.’ The words sounded banal, but they came from my heart, which pulsed with revelation. I was in the car of a genuinely good person, someone who went around rescuing stray dogs, and people.
‘Best thing I ever did since dumping my ex. Only problem is the fleas. Well, here we are!’
She slammed on the brakes and pulled up the handbrake. We were outside Madeley Court. Through the leaves of the cherry trees I could see that the light in my flat was on, twinkling bright like a beacon. With any luck, globalki would be in the oven.
‘Thank you so much, Eustachia. You saved me. You really did. I’d reached rock bottom and you rescued me. Like a stray mongrel.’ I opened the car door and paused, glancing down at her ankles. The flea bites took on a new significance now; they were the stigmata of human kindness. ‘Won’t you come in for a minute? I’m sure my mother would love to see you.’
She locked the car and we walked side by side through the grove. Lights were on inside the Romanian tents — torches, or candles maybe. A sound of voices talking quietly. A baby murmuring in its sleep. I reached for her hand and gave it a squeeze.
We stood close together in the lift, our hands still touching in a companionable way. Her flowery perfume filled the metal cubicle, blotting out the smell of pee. As we passed along the walkway, I glanced at the next-door flat. It was in darkness. I shivered, but Eustachia was standing so close behind me I could feel the radiant warmth of her body through my jacket.
She murmured, ‘Sounds like your mum’s got a visitor.’
My ears pricked up. What was all that shrieking and yelling? At first I thought Flossie must have escaped and gone on the rampage, but as I fitted my key in the lock, I heard that there were two voices, a shrill soprano screech and a deeper baritone bellow. I couldn’t understand what they were shouting, which, I soon realised, was because they were not shouting in English but in Romanian. Or Ukrainian. Or something. I was filled with apprehension, but Eustachia bristled with professional resolve. ‘Old people are so vulnerable nowadays, even in their own homes.’
I opened the door. Inna was standing in the living room, her eyes wide, a kitchen knife in her hand. A man was facing her with his back towards me — a stocky, short-haired man with square hands and shoulders. In fact, if I had to put a name to him, I would have called him Lookerchunky. He was squeezed into a pair of too-tight, silver-grey trousers; a spare tyre bulged against the midriff of his dark grey shirt, which had darker circles of sweat under the armpits. A silver jacket to match the trousers hung over the back of a chair.
‘Hello,’ I said. ‘Hello, Mother!’ I rolled my eyes and flapped my hands discreetly to signal that she must act in mother-mode for the benefit of Eustachia standing behind me. ‘What’s going on?’