Watching Edie
Watching Edie
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Author(s): Way, Camilla
ISBN No.: 9781101991657
Pages: 304
Year: 201708
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 22.08
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

***This excerpt is from an advance uncorrected copy proof*** Copyright © 2016 Camilla Way AFTER Outside my kitchen window the long afternoon empties of light. I look at London stretched out far below, my dripping hands held poised above the sink. The doorbell rings, one long high peal; the broken intercom vibrates. The view from up here, it''s incredible, as if you''re flying. Deptford and Greenwich, New Cross and Erith, then the river, and beyond that there''s the Gherkin, over there the Shard. From my top-floor flat here on Telegraph Hill, you can see forever and as usual it calms me, soothes me: how big it is, how small I am, how far from where I used to be. The doorbell rings more urgently--whoever it is putting their finger on the buzzer and holding it there. The night hovers.


At first I used to see Heather everywhere. Connor too, of course. From the corner of my eye I''d catch a glimpse of one or the other of them, and there''d be that sharp, cold lurch that would leave me sick and shaken long after I''d realized that it had been an illusion; just a stranger with similar hair or the same way of walking. Whenever it happened I''d go somewhere busy and lose myself among the crowds, roaming the southeast London streets until I''d reassured myself that all that was very far away and long ago. A small West Midlands town a million miles from here. And the doorbell rings and rings as I''d always known it would one day. I live on the top floor of a large, ugly Victorian building, and there are lots of us squashed in here side by side, in our small, drafty little flats. Housing Association, most of us.


And when I wedge my door open with a shoe and go down to answer the bell, past four floors of white doors marked with brass letters, the early-evening sounds seep from beneath each one: a baby crying, a telly''s laughter, a couple arguing: the lives of strangers. I''m entirely unprepared for what''s waiting for me beyond the heavy, wide front door and when I open it the world seems to tilt and I have to grip the doorframe to stop myself from falling. Because there she is, standing on my doorstep, staring back at me. There, after all this time, is Heather. And I have imagined this, dreamed of this, dreaded this, so many hundreds of times for so many years that the reality is both entirely surreal and anticlimactic. I see and hear life continuing on this ordinary London street on this ordinary afternoon--cars and people passing, children playing down the street, a dog barking--as if from far away, and as I stare into her face the sour taste of fear creeps around the back of my tongue. I open my mouth, but no words come and we stand in silence for a while, two thirty-three-year-old versions of the girls we''d once been. It''s she who speaks first.


"Hello, Edie," she says. And then she does the unthinkable. She steps across the threshold (my heart jumping as she looms so suddenly close), wraps me in her arms, and hugs me. I stand there rigid, enclosed, as memories slam into me: the wiry feel of her hair as it brushes against my cheek, that weird fried-onions smell her clothes always had, her tall, heavy presence. My mind is empty. I am only my heart knocking in my throat, and now she''s following me into the hallway--no, no, no, this is just one of your dreams--and up the stairs, past all the other doors with their brass letters and their chipped paint, and we''re at the top and I''m watching my hand as it pushes open my door and we''re here inside my kitchen--no, no, no, no, no--and we''re sitting down at my table, and I''m staring into the face I''d once hoped never to see again for the rest of my life. Neither of us speaks at first and I''m suddenly filled with longing for my quiet, solitary life within these three cramped rooms of just moments before. The tap drips, the seconds pass, the browning tendrils of my spider plant shiver on the windowsill.


I get up so I don''t have to look at her, and I turn away and grip the work surface. With my back to her like this, I finally manage to speak. "How''d you find me, then?" I ask, and when she doesn''t answer I look back and see that she''s gazing around the room, peering across the hallway to the narrow lounge with its fold-down bed. "Hmm?" she says vaguely. "Oh." She looks at me. "Your mum. Still lives in your old place, doesn''t she?" And I nod, although I hadn''t known, because Mum and I haven''t spoken in years and in that instant I''m back there, in the old Fremton house.


We''re in the kitchen, the strip light flickering, the blackness outside making mirrors of the windows. I''m crying and telling Mum everything, every single thing about what happened that night, as if telling her might stop the screaming in my head, clear the pictures from my mind. I tell her about Heather and Connor and what they did, but it''s as if I''m telling her about some horror film or a nightmare I''ve had. I listen to myself say the words and I can''t believe that what I''m saying is true. I don''t stop talking until I''ve told her every last detail, and when I''ve finished, I reach for her, but Mum''s body is rigid and her face gray with shock. She backs away from me, and never, never again in my life do I want someone to look at me the way she does then. When she finally speaks she spits out her words like stones. "Go to bed, Edith," she says.


"And don''t ever talk to me about this again. Do you hear me? I never want to hear about this again." She turns her back, staring at the window and I see her pinched, awful face reflected in the glass. The next morning I get up before dawn, take some money from her purse, and catch the train to my uncle Geoff''s in Erith, and I never go back there again. I''m stunned by what Heather has told me: that my mother had my address to give her amazes me. My uncle never knew what caused the rift between us and always hoped that we would one day reconcile, so the fact that he passed it on to her is no surprise. But that Mum had actually written it down and kept it safe somewhere is a revelation. I feel exhaustion roll over me in waves, but still I force myself to ask, "What do you want, Heather? Why have you come here now?" Because I always knew, really, that this moment would come.


Hadn''t I dreamed about it night after night, woken in the small hours sick with the fear of it, looked over my shoulder certain it was approaching, out there somewhere, getting steadily closer? She doesn''t answer at first. On the table in front of her, she''s put her bag: a black woolen knitted thing with a chipped plastic button. Clinging to the wool are bits of fluff, crumbs, and lots of little ginger hairs; cats'' hairs, maybe. Her small hazel eyes peer at me beneath sparse pale lashes; she wears no makeup except for an incongruous smear of bright pink lipstick that looks as if it should be on someone else''s face. In the silence a woman''s voice drifts up to us from the street, "Terry . Terry . Terrrrrrr-eeeeeee . ," and we listen to it dwindle and die, and at that moment the darkness over London pounces, that sad, final instant where daylight vanishes, the electric lights of the city suddenly strong, and I hear a faint tremor of hurt and reproach in Heather''s voice as she says, "Nothing.


I don''t want anything. I just wanted to see you again." I try to make sense of this, my mind confusedly grasping at various possible explanations, but then she starts to speak again, and she says--with loneliness like an open wound, so raw and familiar that I have to turn my eyes from it--"You were my best friend." "Yes," I whisper. And because I have no idea what else to do, I get up and put the kettle on and I make some tea while Heather talks, for all the world as though this were an ordinary visit--two old friends catching up: how she lives in Birmingham now ("we moved not long after you left"), the newsagent''s where she works part-time. As she talks I take in little glances. Such an ordinary-looking woman. A little on the large size, her chubby hands folded in front of her on the table, her soft Welsh accent, her shoulder-length hair, her eager smile.


"Do you still live with your mum and dad?" I ask, for something to say, falling in with the game she''s playing, if that''s what this is. And she nods. Yes, I think--it would be hard, even now, to imagine her coping without them. She was never stupid, Heather, not backward or anything like that--in fact, she''d always done well at school. But despite her cleverness, there''d always been an inexplicable something missing somehow, an innocence that made her vulnerable, too easily led astray. I sit down in the chair next to her. "Heather," I say quickly, before I lose my nerve, "Heather, what do you want?" But instead of answering she reaches over and taking me by surprise, gently pulls a strand of my hair between her fingers. "Still so pretty, Edie," she says dreamily.


"You haven''t changed a bit." And I can''t help it: I flinch so obviously that I have to get to my feet, cluttering the tea things together in the sink, her eyes boring into my back. "Can I see your flat?" she asks, and when I nod she goes and stands at the door to my tiny living room. I follow her, and together we look in at the cramped, dusty mess, the fold-down bed, the rail of clothes, the crappy, secondhand telly. "It''s lovely," she says in a hushed voice. "You''re so lucky." And I have to stifle a sudden desire to laugh. If you had asked me at sixteen what sort of person I would become, what sort of life my future self might lead, I would never have pictured this.


It occurs to me that she must have found her way to London by herself, and then made her way through the city to get here, and I''m both impressed and horrified by this. The thought hit.


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