Read Juggling the Stars Online
Authors: Tim Parks
Morris lifted himself on his elbow and licked dry lips. Have to buy some Lip Balm in this heat. By the sea as well. The salt really did it to you.
âSo then there was just me and my dad.'
After a few moments' pause, not knowing what to say, she said. 'Funny you losing your mother and me my father.'
And she said: âI'd very much like to meet your dad. I do hope he comes over. He must be very brave, going on after a disaster like that.'
What was he supposed to do? Morris thought. Kill himself? Dad? In the end he got up in the mornings went out to work at seven thirty, lunch at the canteen, came home, snatched tea and off to darts at the pub till closing time, the same as always. What could it possibly matter to him whether Mother was there or not? If anything it was an obstacle out of the way.
The only one who truly missed Mother was Morris.
âHe despised me,' Morris announced unwisely.
âCosa, Morri?'
âDad. He was always saying I wasn't a real man because I didn't go out to work at sixteen.' Why not let the girl hear? âAnd then because I spent so much time reading. He had this obsession about real men and work and women. He's always saying how socialist he is and then wants everybody to go and break their backs from dawn till dusk for some capitalist coronary candidate (the one who killed Mother for example), as if â¦'
But when you said it like that it didn't mean anything at all. He didn't seem to be getting anywhere near explaining it. And not with the tapes either. The thing eluded you. As if the problem was somewhere else altogether.
She didn't know what to say of course, though you could hardly blame her for that. You could hardly expect your kidnap victim to provide you with comfort and intelligent conversation after all, could you? To settle all your little personality niggles. No one else ever had for heaven's sake, so why expect it now. But Morris suddenly found he was near to tears.
When he didn't speak for some moments she said, âA bit like me and Mamma really, her wanting me to study all the time when it's obviously useless. Only with you it was the opposite.' And then she said, âMorri, don't be upset,' and she slid a slim naked arm round his shoulders so that their warm skins came together in the heat and she kissed him with tongue and lips on the corner of his mouth. Morris tasted salt.
âOh Morri,' she whispered, âI am so glad I don't have to do any more exams!'
The problem with having to watch her all the time was that it left him with very few free moments to himself. And there was so much to do! So when she said she felt too hot and needed another swim, Morris declined to join her- he didn't like to go in the water too often, he said, delicate skin - and he sent her off on her own, promising to watch.
Then as soon as she was splashing away into the mêlée of the others at the water's edge, he took the nail scissors out of her beach bag and set to work on a copy of
Panorama
, searching out the right words, snipping them out and dropping them into a fold between two pages. Not such an easy task. He couldn't find âwrapped', dammit. Nor âholdall', nor âzipped', nor 'luggage rack'. He'd have to buy some different kinds of mags. Or glue together single letters maybe? But that would take forever. Patience was the watchword though. Absolutely. He mustn't write a single syllable in his own hand. Not just because of the handwriting, but this verbal hodge-podge would cover up any oddities in his Italian as well. Borrow a typewriter somewhere in the reception of some hotel to write the address perhaps. Tell them it was something for work and he didn't have to handwrite it. Bobo's address, not the Trevisans', to cut out the danger of police intervention. He would have to get hold of a Verona telephone directory for that (or perhaps suggest to Massimina that they write the lad a goodwill postcard) and then he'd have to go to the station, or at least phone, for the times of the Milan-Palermo Espresso. No, go to the station was better where he could actually see the times written. No hurry though. He absolutely mustn't hurry or rush or frenzy. Time wasn't against him in any particular way. They had enough money for much more than a month at the rate they were spending. This afternoon he would pick up the Verona
Arena
from one of the central newsagents (or the station perhaps, two birds with one stone). They should have received his first communication yesterday and have it in the papers today.
KIDNAP OR PRACTICAL JOKE? FEAR MOUNTS FOR FATE OFÂ
MASSIMINA
. Crap like that. But he had to know where they were up to. In fact it was rather in his favour if they were under the impression it was a regular kidnap. They'd bring in the special kidnap squads the papers were always crowing about and start checking up on all the millions of underground groups who were into this kind of thing, or people who might be enemies of the Trevisans and whose businesses were in financial difficulty and so on and so forth, never realizing they were up against a true master this time, an individual amongst individuals. They'd be searching every abandoned house around Verona (he'd done the right thing posting the letter there, in the city), because you didn't look for kidnap victims in hotels, however cheap, did you? And he hadn't really âkidnapped' her anyway. Deny the letter - which they could never pin on him - and what did they have against him? A single lie to police and parents. Nothing. Disappear and they'd never bother following him for that.
âMorri, ti présento Sandra. Ma che cosa stai facendo conâ¦
?'
âWhat?' He was suddenly shivering despite the tremendous heat. He savaged the scissors into the page he'd been so carefully cutting. âJust trying to remember how we used to make patterns when we were kids, but I can't get the hang of it.'
âMorrees, Sandra; Sandra, Morrees.'
Morris was on his feet now, sweat dribbling down his back, between his buttocks. Who the hell was this woman? Tall, sandy-haired with horse teeth sticking out a mile and a prominent aristocratic nose. His hand extended automatically and he hoped the smile he felt creasing his face was the charming one. God, you let the girl out of your sight for two minutes and she was already making friends with half the beach. Unless it was somebody she knew from â¦
âPiacere,'
he got out. Her hand was wet from the sea, his own sticky with sweat. He tried to be aloof and shy looking; that generally turned people off.
âScusi se sembro un po'...'
Massimina burst out laughing. âShe's English, Morri. That's why I asked her to come over and meet you. She's English!'
âHow do you do,' Morris said, brusquely now. 'I'm afraid I hadn't understood.'
The woman had asked Massimina the way to the showers apparently. (Why did everybody have to ask the stupid girl things? Nobody ever asked Morris anything.) So Massimina had taken her across the beach and they'd shared the same hundred lire piece standing under the same shower with Massimina telling her everything about Morris and how English he was, staying hidden and white under the sunshade like a mole, while everybody else basked. And then she'd invited her over to meet him - because a holiday was for meeting people and having fun, wasn't it? And Morris would be happy to be able to talk English with a real English person.
âFrom Barnet - or Hadley actually - near London you know.'
The gold belt, Morris thought. Half the Conservative Cabinet taking their dogs for walks, or having their servants do it for them when it rained.
âl was brought up in South Ken myself.' Believe that â¦
Sandra had a blue bikini over no breasts at all and rather too much bum. Her suntan was golden brown, artificially so, Morris thought (but perhaps it was only envy), and her way of moving was coquettish. Age around twenty-four, much older than Massimina. And showing it. Pore problems around the lower part of the nose. She sat down on Morris's towel and began to say how much she adored the heat. She switched from English to an awfully broken Italian for the sake of Massimina. âVengo in Italia ogni anno.' It sounded like âano', but Massimina didn't laugh.
Morris tried to relax. What could they say to each other that could be damaging? Tourists didn't read the local news, even if their Italian was good enough, and that didn't seem to be the case with poor Sandra. In fact it might be better to have Massimina tied up in a painstaking conversation with an Englishwoman, rather than wandering free amongst all those Italians. Consider it a stroke of luck.
âHow long have you been in Italy then?' he asked.
âMyself? Not too long,' the toothy woman said. âWe drove down from Venice this morning in fact,' and she began to talk about how much she adored the sunshine and citadels of
La Serenissima
, the sparkling water â¦
âPer me e stato meraviglioso!'
Morris saw an opportunity. 'I'm just going to go and get today's papers,' he interrupted. âI'll leave you two to chat.' He picked up the copy of P
anorama
, holding it carefully so that the cuttings wouldn't fall out, and hoped this exit would be sufficiently abrupt to discourage the girl.
âBring us some ice-creams, will you, Morri,' Massimina seemed proof against any offence. âWhat flavour do you want, Sandra?'
âZabaglione,' Miss Hadley called after him, half pronouncing the âg.'
Morris laboured across the burning sand. The beach wheeled around him alive with cries, radios, balls being hurled, twitching oily bodies to step across. He watched two boys in sandy swimming trunks slithering about with a football, a girl on her stomach with tiny blond hairs on the soft skin of her arms. Tomorrow he must buy some sunglasses and just relax, soaking it all up, watching it all. Why couldn't he ever relax?
He reached the steps to the road and slipped on his sandals. The weather was too hot. Far too hot to think straight. He would just dash to the nearest big newsagent pick up an
Arena
(if they had one) and a
Corriere délia Sera
, check out the
Arena
, throw it away and take the
Corriere
back to the beach with some ice-creams. He couldn't leave Massimina for long. Then drag her away from the other woman as soon as possible and off to lunch. With any luck he might persuade her to buy some fish today, seeing they were by the sea.
Morris threaded his way across the busy seafront drive and scurried towards the centre in a gritty heat. He would have liked to take it easy and drink a long slow beer on his own, but there was no time for that. He had to try three newsagents before he came across a solitary copy of the Verona
Arena.
Out in the street again he was just preparing to open it and turn to the local section when his eye caught a small headline at the bottom of the front page.
MISSING GIRL'S CLOTHES FOUND.
He was puzzled.
The red tracksuit of Massimina Trevisan, missing from her Quinzano home since last Friday afternoon, was found yesterday morning in a public waste bin at Vicenza railway station. Franco Galeardo, who has cleaned the bins in the station for more than ten years, said: âI saw the thing was still in perfect condition and decided to hold on to it. I showed it to my wife, thinking we could wash it and use it for my daughter and then she told me she'd heard on local radio the police were after a girl in a red tracksuit, so I phoned them directly.'
After some hours police technicians were able to declare that hairs on the tracksuit corresponded with those found in Massimina's room.
Inside:
AGONY OF FAMILY THAT WAITS
.
Morris crossed the street, walked directly into a bar and ordered a double Scotch on ice. He straddled a stool. She'd thrown the thing away! In a public bin of all places. Without even telling him. (Thank God she hadn't left it in the hotel!) And if there were some of
his
hairs on that tracksuit too? A single blond hair. Had he leaned his head against her at any moment that first day? Or could they tell just from dandruff? He must have sprinkled a couple of flakes over her. We all had scraps of each other all over us. It was inevitable.
He downed his drink in one and turned to the inside pages, scanning the columns quickly.
⦠no blood, but police fear worst â¦
And the letter? There was nothing about his letter. The post had let him down there obviously. Three days and it hadn't arrived. The next one would have to go Express. Unless they were keeping it from the press for some reason.
Morris caught a glimpse of himself in the mirror between bottles of alcohol. His face was flushed with the heat and the drink, not to mention the worry, his hair ratty and unkempt after his dip in the sea. Just his luck. Of all the bins she had to leave it in, it had to be the one emptied by a cheap scrounger on the lookout for second-hand clothes. (And for his daughter of all people! If Morris ever had children, he'd give them the best, for Christ's sake. Why bring them into the world otherwise? Why had Dad brought
him
into the world?) He stood up and left the bar in a blinding temper.
âYou're just jealous. He wasn't interested in me at all. He â¦'
'I'm not having dinner with them.'
âBut for days you've been asking me to go out to a restaurant and now the first day I agree, you refuse to go. Oh come on Morri!'
âNot with them!Â
If we go out, let's go alone.' His life had definitely become a farce. A real kidnap with the blindfolds, tent in the middle of the room and revolver always in your hand would at least give you the pleasure of knowing who was the boss. And it occurred to Morris that had his father ever taken part in a kidnap, that was most certainly the way he would have done it and he would quite definitely call Morris a pansy for having gone about it in this way.
She rubbed lotion into his burnt back (her fault) in the cheap room full of flies and he knew she would be smiling merrily under that silly chic perm with the big curl dropping over her plucked eyebrow. Because she honestly thought he
was
jealous. There was no limit to female vanity. Now that she'd had her hair done and bought some clothes she thought she was Venus, dragging him round the shops all afternoon like that for perfumes and make-up. (âMamma never let me buy the make-up I wanted. I had to share it with my sisters.') And only two days before she'd been happy at the prospect of spending the whole month of June, not to mention July and probably August, sweating like a little pig in that red tracksuit.