| CRIME
FICTION 
Little Face
To be published by Hodder & Stoughton in Spring 2006.
Chapter One
Friday September 26, 2003
I am outside. Not far from the front door, not yet, but I am out
and I am alone. When I woke up this morning, I didn't think today
would be the day. It didn't feel right, or rather I didn't. Vivienne's
phone call persuaded me. 'Believe me, you'll never be ready,' she
said. 'You have to take the plunge.' And she's right, I do. I have
to do this.
I walk across the cobbled yard and down the mud and gravel path,
carrying only my handbag. I feel light and strange. The trees look
as if they are knitted from bright wools: reds and browns and the
occasional green. The sky is the colour of wet slate. This is not
the same ordinary world that I used to walk around in. Everything
is more vivid, as if the physical backdrop I once took for granted
is clamouring for my attention.
My car is parked at the far end of the path, in front of the gate
that separates The Elms from the main road. I am not supposed to
drive. 'Nonsense.' Vivienne dismissed this piece of medical advice
with a loud tut. 'It's not far. If you followed all the silly rules
these days, you'd be terrified to do anything!'
I do feel, physically, ready to drive. I have recovered very well
from the operation. This could be thanks to the hypericum that I
prescribed for myself, or maybe it's mind over matter: I need to
be strong, therefore I am.
I turn the key in the ignition and press my right foot down hard
on the gas pedal. The car splutters awake. I turn on to the road
and watch my speed rise steadily. 'Nought to sixty in half an hour,'
my dad used to joke, when the Volvo was still his and Mum's. I will
drive this car until it falls to pieces. It reminds me of my parents
far more than any photograph or item of clothing ever could.
I wind down the window, inhale some of the fresh air that hits
me in the face and think that it will take many more horror stories
of gridlock before people stop associating cars with freedom. As
I hurtle along the almost empty road past fields and farms, I feel
more powerful than I am. It is a welcome illusion.
I do not allow myself to think of Florence, of the growing distance
between us.
After four miles or so of open countryside, the road that I am
driving on becomes the main street of Spilling, the nearest small
town. There is a market in the middle and long rows of squat Elizabethan
buildings with pastel-coloured fronts on either side. Some of these
are shops. Others, I imagine, are the homes of old, rich snobs,
bi-focalled bores who witter on endlessly about Spilling's historical
heritage. This is probably unfair of me. Vivienne very definitely
does not live in Spilling, even though it is her nearest town. When
asked where she lives, she says simply 'The Elms', as if her house
is a well-known municipality.
Waiting at lights, I rummage in my bag for the directions she gave
me. Left at the mini-roundabout, then first right, and look out
for the sign. I see it eventually: 'Waterfront' - thick, white,
italic letters on a navy blue background. I turn into the drive,
follow it round the square, domed building and park in the large
car park at the back.
The lobby smells of lilies. I notice that there is a tall, rectangular
vase of them on almost every flat surface. The carpet - navy blue
with pink roses - is expensive, the sort that will not look dirty
even when it is. People with sports bags walk back and forth, some
sweaty, some freshly showered.
At reception, I meet a young girl with blonde, spiky hair who is
keen to help me. She wears a badge that says 'Kerilee'. I am glad
that I chose the name Florence for my daughter, a real name with
a history, rather than something that sounds as if it has been made
up by a fifteen-year-old pop star's marketing team. I was worried
that David or Vivienne would veto it, but luckily they both liked
it too.
'My name is Alice Fancourt,' I say. 'I'm a new member.' I hand
over the envelope that contains my details. It strikes me as funny
that Kerilee has no idea of the significance of this day for me.
The meaning of our encounter is completely different in our two
minds.
'Oh! You're Vivienne's daughter-in-law. You've just had a baby!
Couple of weeks ago, wasn't it?'
'That's right.' Membership of Waterfront is my present from Vivienne,
or rather my reward for producing a grandchild. I think it costs
about a thousand pounds a year. Vivienne is one of the few people
who is as generous as she is rich.
'How is Florence?' asks Kerilee. 'Vivienne's absolutely besotted
with her! It'll be lovely for Felix to have a little sister, won't
it?'
It is odd to hear Florence referred to in this way. In my mind
she is always first - my first, the first. But she is David's second
child.
Felix is well known at Waterfront. He spends almost as much time
here as at school, taking part in junior golf tournaments, swimming
lessons and Cheeky Chimps play days while Vivienne divides her time
between the gym, the pool, the beauty salon and the bar. The arrangement
seems to suit them both.
'So, are you recovered?' Kerilee asks. 'Vivienne told us all about
the birth. Sounds like you had quite a time of it!'
I am slightly taken aback. 'Yes, it was pretty horrendous. But
Florence was fine, which is all that matters, really.' Suddenly
I miss my daughter terribly. What am I doing at the reception desk
of a health club when I could be getting to know my tiny, beautiful
girl? 'This is the first time we've been apart,' I blurt out. 'It's
the first time I've been out of the house since getting back from
hospital. It feels really strange.' I wouldn't normally confide
my feelings in a total stranger, but since Kerilee already knows
the details of Florence's birth, I decide that it can do no harm.
'Big day, then,' she says. 'Vivienne said you might be a bit wobbly.'
'She did?' Vivienne thinks of everything.
'Yes. She said to take you to the bar before we do anything else,
and give you a large cocktail.'
I laugh. 'I have to drive home, unfortunately. Though Vivienne...'
'...thinks the more tipsy you are, the more carefully you drive,'
Kerilee completes my sentence and we both giggle. 'So, let's get
you on to our system, shall we?' She turns to the computer screen
in front of her, fingers poised above the keyboard. 'Alice Fancourt.
Address? The Elms, right?' She looks impressed. Most local people
know Vivienne's home by name even if they do not know its owner.
The Elms was the last home of the Blantyres, a famous Spilling family
with royal connections, until the last Blantyre died and Vivienne's
father bought the property in the nineteen forties.
'Yes,' I say. 'At the moment it's The Elms.' I picture my flat
in Streatham Hill, where I lived until David and I got married.
An objective observer would have called it dark and boxy, but I
loved it. It was my cosy den, a secret hideaway where no-one could
get to me, especially not my more threatening and obsessive patients.
After my parents died, it was the one place where I felt I could
be myself and express all my loneliness and grief without there
being anyone around to judge me. My flat accepted me for the damaged
person that I was in a way the outside world seemed unwilling to.
The Elms is too grand to be cosy. The bed David and I share resembles
something you might see in a French palace with red rope around
it. It is enormous. Four people would fit in it, or possibly five
if they were all thin. Vivienne calls it God-size. 'Double beds
are for gerbils,' she says. Florence has a spacious nursery with
antique furniture, a window seat and a hand-carved rocking horse
that was Vivienne's when she was a child. Felix has two rooms: his
bedroom, and a long thin playroom in the attic, where his toys,
books and bears live.
The views from the top floor of the house are breathtaking. On
a clear day you can see as far as Culver Ridge on one side and the
church tower at Silsford on the other. The garden is so big that
it has been divided into several different gardens, some wild, some
tamed, all ideal for pram walks on a warm day.
David cannot see any reason to move. When I suggest it, he says
'What about your practice? Have you really got the energy to start
from scratch again?'
I haven't told anyone, but gloom settles on me like a fog when
I contemplate resuming my practice, in Spilling, London or anywhere.
I see the world in a different way now, and I can't pretend that
I don't.
'I'll just get Ross, our membership advisor, to give you a tour
of the facilities.' Kerilee's voice brings me back to the present.
'Then if you want to, you can have a swim, or use the gym...'
'It's a bit soon for that,' I say, one hand on my stomach. 'I've
only been out of hospital a week. But I'd love to look round and
then maybe have that cocktail.'
Ross is a short South African man with dyed blond hair, muscly
legs and an orange tan. He shows me a large gym with a polished
wooden floor that contains every sort of machine imaginable. People
in lycra sportswear are running, walking, cycling and even rowing,
by the look of it, on these sleek black and silver contraptions.
Many of them are wearing ear-plugs and staring up at the row of
televisions suspended from the ceiling, watching daytime chat shows
as their limbs pound the metal and rubber. I begin to realise why
Vivienne looks so good for her age.
Ross shows me the twenty-five metre aqua-marine swimming pool with
its stone surround and roman steps at both ends, and, beside it,
an area ringed by marble pillars that turns out to be the jacuzzi.
On the other side of the pool there is a sauna with a sweet, piney
smell, and a steam room, the glass door of which is cloudy with
heat. A sudden drumming sound startles me and I look up to see rain
hitting the domed glass ceiling.
I inspect the ladies' changing room while Ross waits outside. Like
everything else at Waterfront, it transcends the merely functional.
There is a thick plum-coloured carpet everywhere apart from in the
toilets and showers. On each surface there seems to be a pile of
something tempting: fluffy white bath sheets, complementary bathrobes
emblazoned with the Waterfront logo, hand creams, shampoos and conditioners,
body lotions. The walls are lined with numbered wooden lockers.
Some are open a fraction and have keys dangling from them; others,
the ones without keys, are shut.
I circle the room until I find Vivienne's, number 131, chosen because
Felix's birthday is the thirteenth of January and because it occupies
an enviable position, close both to the showers and to the door
marked 'swimming pool'. Vivienne is the only member of Waterfront
who has her own dedicated locker that no-one else is allowed to
use. They keep the key for her behind reception. 'It saves me carting
all my possessions in and out every day like a refugee,' she says.
Ross is waiting for me in the corridor by the towel bin when I
emerge from the changing room. 'All satisfactory?' he says.
'Very.' Everything is exactly as Vivienne described it. I wait
for Ross to tell me that I too will have my own locker, but he doesn't.
I am slightly disappointed.
He marches me round Chalfont's, the health club's smart restaurant,
and a cheerful, noisy, mock-American café bar called Chompers
which I know Vivienne loathes. Then we go to the members' bar, where
Ross hands me over to Tara. I have decided to be bold and have a
cocktail after all, which is fortunate because Tara has already
prepared one for me, a fattening concoction of cream and Kahlua.
Vivienne, it turns out, has ordered it in advance.
I am not allowed to pay for my drink, which is no surprise. 'You're
a lucky girl,' says Tara. Presumably she means because I am Vivienne's
daughter-in-law. I wonder if she knows about Laura, who was not
quite so lucky.
I gulp down my cocktail quickly, trying to look calm and carefree.
In actual fact, I am probably the least relaxed person in the building,
so keen am I to get home, back to The Elms and Florence. I realise
that, deep down, I have been itching to return from the second I
left. Now that I have seen everything Waterfront has to offer, I
am free to go. I have done what I set out to do.
Outside, the rain has stopped. I break the speed limit on the way
home, alcohol buzzing through my veins. I feel brave and rebellious,
briefly. Then I worry that I will drive past Cheryl, my midwife,
who will gasp with disapproval to see me speeding along in a clapped-out
Volvo only a fortnight after my daughter's birth.
My eagerness to see Florence again is like a physical craving.
I accelerate towards traffic lights that are on amber instead of
braking as I normally would. I feel as if I have left behind one
of my limbs or a vital organ.
I am almost panting with anticipation as I pull into the driveway.
I park the car and run up the path to the house, ignoring the pain
in my lower abdomen. The front door is ajar. 'David?' I call out.
There is no reply. I wonder if he has taken Florence out in her
pram.
I walk through the hall to the living room. 'David?' I shout again,
louder this time. I hear a creaking of floorboards above my head
and a muffled groan, the sound of David waking from a nap. I hurry
upstairs to our bedroom, where I find him upright in bed, yawning.
'I'm sleeping when the baby sleeps, like Miriam Stoppard said I
should,' he jokes. He has been so happy since Florence was born,
almost a different person. For years I have wished that David would
talk to me more about how he's feeling. Now any such talk seems
unnecessary. His joy is obvious from his sudden new energy, the
eagerness in his eyes and voice.
David has been doing the night feeds. He has read in a book that
one of the advantages of bottle-feeding is that it gives dads the
opportunity to bond with their babies. This is a novelty for him.
By the time Felix was born, David and Laura had already separated.
Florence is David's second chance. He hasn't said so, but I know
he is determined to make everything perfect this time. He has even
taken a whole month off work. He needs to prove to himself that
being a bad father is not hereditary. 'How was Waterfront?' he asks.
'Fine. Tell you in a sec.' I turn my back on him, leave the room
and walk on tiptoes along the wide landing towards Florence's nursery.
'Alice, careful not to wake her up,' David whispers after me.
'I'll just have a little look. I'll be quiet, I promise.'
I hear her breathing through the door. It is a sound that I adore:
high-pitched, fast, snuffly - a louder noise than you might think
a tiny baby could make. I push open the door and see her funny cot
that I am still not quite used to. It has wheels and cloth sides
and is apparently French. David and Vivienne spotted it in a shop
window in Silsford and bought it as a surprise for me.
The curtains are closed. I look down into the cot and at first
all I see is a baby-shaped lump. After a few seconds, I can see
a bit more clearly. Oh God. Time slows, unbearably. My heart pounds
and I feel sick. I taste the creamy cocktail in my mouth again,
mixed with bile. I stare and stare, feeling as if I am falling forward.
I am floating, detached from my surroundings, with nothing firm
to grip on to. This is no nightmare. Or rather, reality is the nightmare.
I promised David I would be quiet. I open my mouth and begin to
scream.
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