The Way Out Read online

Page 13


  Outside, in Glenview Crescent, the day leaks away through a hole in the sky after another day of the sun failing to shine upon either a glen or a view for miles in any direction. Darkness slips in over the windowsills and falls to the floor, laying claim to the corners, gathering in the folds of the undrawn curtains. Traffic grinds past on the street outside. You hardly ever see a human being out walking in Glenview: everyone arrives and leaves by car. The whole estate is a machine.

  The News doesn’t get any better and concludes with a half-hearted report of inconsequential weather wobbling sideways across the country. I’m definitely hungry now. I lever myself out of the armchair and go to the kitchen. Nothing much in the cupboards so I look in the freezer. I have one of those chest freezers, takes up nearly half the kitchen but stores a month’s worth of food so I don’t have to go out to the shops if I don’t want to. It’s definitely curry night. Chicken tikka masala with pilau rice and naan bread, it’s all there in neat plastic wrappers. A few clicks and pings from the microwave and voila. Why anyone would want to bugger around with vegetables and raw meat when you can buy everything readymade, I will never understand.

  Julie was the opposite of Elaine around the house – no cooking or cleaning but that never bothered me. Also, she was quiet. Not like most of the women I’ve known, can’t bloody shut up for ten seconds some of them, drive a man mental with their constant yapyapyapping. Julie understood just being with someone, not talking shite all the time for the sake of it. I respected her for that. You’ve got to have respect in a relationship, or you may as well pack it in.

  Things started to go wrong when it seemed like Julie started to lose respect for me. I don’t understand how that happened, we didn’t talk about it, and it wasn’t anything she said. It was that look on her face, that look getting worse and worse until I couldn’t stand it anymore, until tonight when I got home. There are always limits, always a line to be crossed. That’s been hard to learn. I was always looking for the path of no resistance, without complications and it still pains me to think that maybe I’ve been wrong. Maybe that route doesn’t exist. But if I can think it, if I can almost smell it, then surely it has to? Otherwise, how could it even be in my head? As it was, me and Julie couldn’t go on that way and there was no way she was leaving. It’s not as if she gave me a choice.

  I mop up the last of the orange curry sauce with a bit of naan and try to concentrate on the happy memories, the good times. That’s what you’re supposed to do when you lose someone, isn’t it? But it just makes me feel worse and, to be honest, a little frisky. Not a good combination.

  Our sex life was always strong, right up to the end when I would open my eyes and catch her looking at me that way. Before that though, she was always up for it. And she never complained if I wasn’t in the mood.

  Elaine didn’t like it if I woke her up. She was a heavy sleeper so it didn’t happen very often but she was always unreasonably pissed off when it did. ‘What the fuck are you doing, Ian?’ she’d say, pushing me away, and I’d be left high and dry. I don’t know what her problem was. A less considerate husband would’ve raised objections about her always being too tired while she was conscious.

  I can admit I was a bit possessive with Julie. We never went out anywhere together. If she minded, she never said. Often when I got home she’d be waiting for me on the settee, dressed in one of her sexy outfits, the French maid or the nurse, and dinner would have to wait. She had this way of balancing her soft little toes on the top of my feet and pressing the whole length of herself against me so it felt like we were fused together, transforming our separate emptinesses into a single beautiful whole. Not some slushy romantic notion of greeting-card love but something elemental, molecular. We mirrored each other, became each other, to the point where notions like love and affection became outmoded, irrelevant. We took each other beyond all of that.

  I’ve got to stop thinking this way. I glance over at Julie again. She’s naked. I wish I could, just a quick one. But no, it wouldn’t be the same.

  I go over and sit down next to her on the floor. I stroke her hair then turn her over. Her face looks so innocent, so sweet, no trace of that smirk now on her lips. I hold her to me. Her body is limp, and so cold and so light. I lay her gently back down on the floor. The gash across her neck lets out a small gasp as her head touches the carpet. I inspect her other wounds, there are quite a few, over her chest and stomach, a real mess. But maybe…

  I take the stairs two at a time and throw myself onto the bedroom floor, stretch my arm under the bed and retrieve the box. Tears of relief blur the print on the box but I can still make out the redeeming words – comes complete with a full repair kit.

  The End of Everything

  The button is merciless future-blue and it stares, Cyclops-like, from the lid of the Armageddon Kettle. This is the Terminator of kitchen appliances. Relentless and malevolent, it ticks off the minutes to the end of the world and it absolutely. Will. Not. Stop.

  From my station in the maze of partitions and screens that make up the offices of SafeGuard Inc, my view of the kitchen area is partially obscured by a plastic fern, so I can’t be sure precisely who keeps pressing the button. Every time I pass, I turn it off but someone always switches it back on.

  As any broken-backed camel will tell you, there is always a final straw. For this world, that tipping point hangs suspended in the gleaming, pitiless eye of the Armageddon Kettle.

  I do what I can. There’s not much time.

  I reckon I’ve bought the world a few extra hours with my diligent disarming, but I can do no more without alerting my colleagues, including my boss, to the nature of my mission. Whatever they might make of it shouldn’t matter now the world is about to end, but I do need to keep this job. I need to be here. If I wasn’t, who would deal with the kettle?

  So I click and scroll my days through the company systems, following procedure. I answer the phone and do my best to sound efficient and reliable. Insurance seems especially pointless next to impending global annihilation, but in truth the whole concept has been bothering me for a while now. The plain fact is: shit happens. It will happen to everyone and there is no way of telling which particular pile has your name on it. One day a small, unthreatening portion, say the approximate size of a Hobnob, may roll into your life. Another day it could be a towering tsunami of effluent engulfs you, your family, your house, your dog and your car. The point is, no one gets to choose. And no one gets to stop it.

  ‘I’m really sorry to hear that, Mr Smith. If you can get your completed form to us as soon as possible, we’ll be able to process your claim.’

  What all the devastated Smiths really want to believe is that their premium is protection against disaster. More than a remedy, they seek prevention: health insurance to prevent cancer; car insurance to prevent crashes; house insurance to prevent weather.

  ‘But I paid all my instalments!’ wails the distraught Mr Smith. I picture him like King Canute, on the threshold of his home, brandishing his policy documents as the advancing brown flood water licks at his slippers. All I can do is read from the script presented by the company computers. I can’t deviate and say anything more helpful because, ‘Calls may be recorded for training purposes.’ Which really means, ‘Anything you say can and will be used in evidence against you.’

  Customers’ reactions to the events precipitating their claims are seldom in proportion to the size of the catastrophe. Some people can bear the loss of their life’s work with stoic calm; others break their hearts and cry like babies over ruined carpets. Carpets.

  The office carpet is bluish-grey, too indistinct to be either one or the other: a blue without conviction, unlike the intense sapphire of the button on the Armageddon Kettle. It glares defiantly at me as I approach, mug in hand. I flip the button up, turning it off and feel a small surge of victory as the blue light is extinguished, leaving a dull, cataract-glazed orb. I take a deep breath and relax just a little, roll my shoulders and circle my he
ad, listening to the muscles in my neck pop and snap like bubble wrap.

  No point worrying any more. Stuff like: is there a global capitalist conspiracy, does your neighbour secretly despise you, or is everyone looking at that weird lumpy freckle on the side of your nose? All of these things are now officially rendered meaningless. All of the things you always wanted to do – climb an Alp, learn to unicycle, dance the Argentine tango – don’t amount to much of anything when faced with the end of everything.

  Travelling to and from the office, I have searched the faces of the people I pass for any awareness of the coming apocalypse. Surely someone else must know what’s going on. It’s not fair, or remotely practical, for me to deal with this alone. That old man, surely he must realise, as he offers his wife another mint, that the story of their long days and nights together is about to come to a final full stop. The dour bus driver that huffs and grumps at his passengers, scolding them like naughty children; I bet he’d treat them more kindly if he knew he was overseeing their final journey. Or would he simply park his bus in the middle of the street, leave his baffled passengers behind and stride away, making a straight line of the streets to his home and family? Would he throw open the door that no longer needs painting, take his startled-but-pleased wife and puzzled-but-excited children in his arms and hold them, hold them close and breathe through their hair, kiss the tops of their heads and say, ‘I will never, ever, leave you.’

  Perhaps this happens on another route. On mine, the driver resolutely closes his eyes to the truth and shoves his bus through its gears.

  I phoned my mother to attempt some kind of goodbye. I felt I owed her that much. As usual, she knew something was up straight away. All I said was, ‘Hi Mum,’ and her voice ricocheted back.

  ‘What’s wrong?’

  ‘Nothing. Nothing’s wrong, really. I just phoned to say hi.’ Even my professional phone voice fails.

  ‘You may as well tell me. What is it this time?’

  The question wouldn’t be so dispiriting, even given her tone, if it wasn’t for the complete lack of follow through should I be optimistic enough to answer honestly. My mother invariably reacts with an exasperated, ‘Well, I don’t know what you expect me to do.’ Or one of her favourites: ‘It’s hardly the end of the world!’ It isn’t what mothers are supposed to say. Not only does, for example, your job suck, or your boyfriend leave, or your dad die, but now you’re an emotional incontinent, burdening those who never could do anything to help anyway. So, it’s not surprising that when it really is the end of the world, I decide, on balance, that Mother is best left in the dark.

  I might’ve told my dad. He may even have believed me, but he’s been gone for a year now. Broke his ankle falling off a ladder while putting up a satellite dish, had to go to hospital to have it set and contracted a super bug. ‘Necrotising fasciitis,’ they said. Fascist bacteria, well-organised and ruthless. I imagined an army of hate-filled bugs wearing colour-coordinated and disturbingly stylish uniforms holding rallies in my father’s leg, burning pyres of antibodies before marching on the internal organs, laying waste to everything in their path.

  I went back to the hospital the day after he died. I couldn’t help thinking about the dirt building up and worrying about the bug he may have unintentionally left behind. What if they didn’t clean properly after they’d taken his body away? Did they ever? Perhaps they’d miss a lurking death bug and it would get the next person to use that bed, like the one they missed before, the one that got my dad. But when I turned up with a selection of scouring pads and a bottle of bleach, they turned me away. A nurse presented me with a clear sandwich bag with everything that’d been in Dad’s pockets when he was admitted with his broken ankle – £1.28 in change, a screwdriver, a half-empty packet of Victory Vs and a pencil.

  So I took everything home and I cleaned there. But I never could get the place clean enough. It did help when Steve, my boyfriend, ex-boyfriend, moved out since he had been one of the main sources of mess. But still the dirt finds a way in. It’s a question of vigilance, of not letting your guard down. And hand cream. Lots of hand cream.

  ‘That’s the Keep Warm Function. You should leave that on.’ Scary Bob’s voice is so close it makes me jump, immediately locking the tension back into my shoulders. I didn’t hear him approach, but then nobody ever does.

  Scary Bob moves silent as swamp gas through the office and materialises at your side without warning. In his position as office manager this is especially useful for instilling a proper sense of fear in his subordinates. A person could be staring into space, picking their nose, updating their Facebook status and then realise Bob is right next to them, and what’s worse, they’ve no idea how long he’s been standing there, watching. Has he, in fact, been reading over their shoulder and is now intimately familiar with their online shopping habits? He never lets on. That’s where his real power lies – in the unknown. And he knows it.

  ‘But it wastes power. It just sits there and boils, over and over and over again. Is anyone really so busy they can’t wait for a kettle to boil? Are any of us really that important?’ I’m aware my voice has climbed an octave from its normal pitch and I know I shouldn’t say things like this, especially not to Scary Bob.

  ‘It’s a feature,’ he says and goes back to making his cup of tea, pedantically stirring in far too many clinking circles, like a tone-deaf child given the triangle to play in the school orchestra. When he finishes, he refills the kettle, presses the button down, gives me a warning look and glides silently away.

  So, it’s him. Bob of the Apocalypse. I should have known.

  But still, for now, the world fails to end. I close one eye and fix the other on the blue light, staring it out. The Armageddon Kettle stares back. It has all the time in the world. I wonder, is this really how it all ends? Not with a bang, or even a whimper, but a hollow click and a wet exhalation of steam.

  Don’t worry. I know what to do.

  I make my coffee and flip the button back up, saving the world one more time before heading back to my desk.

  Red Bus

  I’m picking at the dried curry sauce I just found in my left ear when I step off the pavement and almost get pulverised by a speeding red bus. It goes roaring past no more than an inch from my face, horn blaring, brakes hissing. It’s a number thirty-seven, innocently following its normal route, the driver clearly making no allowance for those of us with more on our minds, or in our ears, than that pedestrian preoccupation with life and death.

  I’m also on my normal route, on my way to catch my bus to work. Everything is superficially as normal and ordinary as it was a month ago while simultaneously being wholly unrecognisable. The curry in my ear, I should explain, is not normal at all. Or rather, the curry, in itself, as my home-made curries go, is perfectly normal (deep red and not to be taken lightly) but its location, caked around the inner folds of my left ear, is definitely unusual. It must’ve got in there last night and I mustn’t have washed my ears properly in the shower this morning. I can accept that much responsibility but it’s entirely his fault, how it got there in the first place. Were it not for him, I am reasonably confident I would not have anything remotely edible in either of my ears.

  This isn’t the sort of thing that happens when you have your life under control. This thought bothers me far more than the fact of the curry and sends a shot of something hot and fizzy along my nerves, a treacherous cocktail equal parts elation and dismay. I’ve fallen for the same damn stupid-arsed trick again, that one with the buzzer hidden in the handshake, and can’t help laughing despite being absolutely raging.

  I walk along to the crossing, press the button for the green man, like a sensible person, and try to piece together the sequence of events.

  Last night I was cooking when the phone rang. I jumped, the pot tipped, spilling curry on my hands. I then grabbed the phone, transferring curry to the receiver, and from the receiver to my ear. One mystery solved at least. Although I’m really not sure whet
her knowing exactly why I have curry in my ear makes the fact of it any less ludicrous. It wasn’t even him on the phone, just Damian-from-Interior-Life trying to sell me a new kitchen. Poor Damian. He won’t be trying that again in a hurry.

  He, him, Mr Wasn’t-even-on-the-horizon-a-month-ago-for-fucksake, did phone later. He came up to visit, stayed the night and he’ll still be there now, in my flat, in my bed where I left him, lying there with his hair all wild and his skin pale gold in the morning light as it filters through the curtains. That image, embedded in the humid atmosphere of last night’s sex sent me and my clothes to get dressed in the hall. I couldn’t trust myself to behave sensibly. I can’t trust myself either, it seems, not to be feeling this way. I’m almost skipping for christsakes, and this idiotic half-drunk smile keeps sneaking onto my face. I almost give myself a slap but decide that’s maybe not the right move if I’m trying for a less deranged look.

  Not that long ago, I was convinced I’d had enough. Love wasn’t worth the inevitable heartbreak when the balloon burst and all the promises and possibilities shredded down to a twisted hard knot. And the long nights spent picking at that knot, trying to understand how it got that way. It wasn’t so much that I’d lost heart, more that I’d worn mine out. I couldn’t go through all that again and I reasoned there was no real need to. I had friends and family for love and company, and it wouldn’t be that difficult to find sex, if I felt the need. Sayonara deep and meaningful. Your arse is out the window.

  So now what the fuck am I thinking? Stupid, stupid, stupid.

  ‘Look, do you want something or have you just come in here to insult me?’ The newsagent looks quite cross and I realise I must’ve said that last bit out loud.

  I mutter an apology and grab the first paper I see, thrust some coins at him, and hurry out of the shop. I am ridiculous.