A Terrible Kindness(76)



‘No.’ The door opens and Martin’s head reappears. ‘And that’s a third condition. No judgements.’

‘Of course not,’ he says, disappointed that Martin would think he even needed to ask.

Once the door slams, the sudden and complete silence feels almost hostile. William pulls the duvet over his head, but knows within seconds he won’t be able to sleep again. He flicks it back and stares at the quarter-paned sash window. What’s happening at home now? What’s Gloria doing? What conversations is she having with Robert and Howard?

To remind himself why he’s doing this, he imagines Gloria with a family that has nothing to do with him. His stomach pitches him out of bed and he makes it to the bathroom just in time to hurl last night’s chicken pie across the cracked sink.





51




It’s dark by the time William finishes telling Martin. The windows and curtains of the sitting room are still open. The budding horse chestnuts on Jesus Green glow a coppery gold under the street lamps.

Martin tilts the teapot over his mug for a last brown dribble, drains it in one gulp and stands. ‘Did you get the lyrics copied?’

William nods to the piano against the wall. ‘Over there, in the folder.’

‘Good. We need three more ring binders, can you get them from Smith’s tomorrow?’ He reaches in his back pocket and puts two pound notes on the table. ‘I’ll go straight to rehearsal from work, so you need to sort yourself out with food and meet me there.’ He closes the window, draws the curtains, takes their mugs to the kitchen, and then walks back through the living room. ‘Goodnight, William.’

‘Is that it?’

Martin pauses near the door and looks at William, his eyes unusually fierce. ‘Yes, that’s it,’ he says eventually and leaves.

William doesn’t move. The creak of Martin’s footsteps on the floorboards stops after only a few minutes. He wants Gloria, pictures her waiting for him in bed, her cotton nightie soft and pretty against her skin, brushed auburn hair dark on the white pillow. He closes his eyes. What would peace even feel like? he wonders. Can he remember ever feeling it?

Yes. And there he is, back in his mother’s kitchen after a nap, watching her take biscuits out of the oven.

? ? ?

‘Good evening, gentlemen.’ Martin’s eyes dart from one man to another; comfortable, authoritative. One copy of the lyrics that William had copied for him yesterday sits neatly on his broad lap. ‘I hope the week has been kind to you.’ The chairs are in a circle. He and Martin set out fifteen; four are empty. The men smile or nod; one waves a raggedy arm. ‘This is William, an old friend from my chorister days. He’s going to help us for a few weeks.’

William nods with a quick smile, looking at no one in particular. He’s very uncomfortable, in part because of the company, but also because he’s worked so hard during his adolescent and adult life to ignore the past he shares with Martin. To be so casually introduced in this way seems somehow brazen, like a violation.

‘So.’ Martin lays the music under his chair. ‘Let’s warm up with some laa-ing, shall we?’ He checks the square clock on the wall. ‘Jenny should be here any minute, but we can manage this bit without her. Everyone up.’ Martin stands and there’s a rumble and shriek of chair legs.

The narrow windows that run around the top of the church hall are slightly ajar, but still, the smell of the men is bitter and musty. William decides not to try and identify the individual odours. They all seem to be wearing coats, though some of their clothes are so tattered and layered, it’s hard to identify what the items originally were. Martin, as usual, is in baggy cords and an open-necked shirt.

‘Remember, breathe from here,’ Martin says, his paw of a hand over his stomach. Some men adjust their posture, some don’t. He sings them their note, bottom D.

This is the first time William has heard Martin’s adult singing voice. They all knew, as choristers, that however exquisite their voices, there was no guarantee they’d be anything special later on, but Phillip always said their discipline and training would stand them in good stead to make the best of what they were landed with. William’s not at all surprised, though, that Martin is a lush, resonant bass.

He leads them up and down their scales and arpeggios. William is impressed. The overall sound is pleasing, albeit a bit gritty. He does his old trick of differentiating the voices, and this makes him notice individual faces, dissolves his sense that they are one, messy whole. He notices the delicate bone structure of the tenor opposite, his wire-wool hair roughly brushed and parted. He sees the wide-open mouth of the man to his left, with a front tooth missing.

‘William, can you give the files out, please?’ Martin points to a lopsided table in the corner and the pile of A4 ring binders, with ‘Midnight Choir’ written on the spines. They slither and slide in his arms as he walks round the circle. The men take the folders in both hands, two feet flat on the ground, sit up straight.

‘Number three then, to finish the warm-up. William, you’re going to have to play piano. Do you mind? I don’t know what’s happened to Jenny.’

He hasn’t touched a piano since he left Cambridge. Walking across the hall, he wishes that Martin had warned him he might be called on to play, but then the door opens and a woman William guesses to be in her forties runs in.

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