The Wolf Border(93)



Over the following days, Rachel learns the extent of Lena’s illness, from Huib, who is privy to the Hall staff’s gossip. The diagnosis came late, by which point the endometrial cancer had metastasised throughout her system, into her bones. A radical surgery was performed, pelvic evisceration, removal of her organs and bowel, followed by plastication – still experimental, ultimately palliative, but designed to give her as much life as possible. Barbie doll treatment: controversial, perhaps not even ethical, and paid for privately by the Earl. Suddenly Sylvia’s reaction to the idea of sterilising the female pups, the intimate barbarity, makes sense.

The next time Rachel sees Michael, it is outside the Hall, getting into the utility vehicle. They are in plain view of each other – their eyes lock. She approaches, feeling she must say something, and he steps back out of the van, swinging the door closed. Tess, the ever-present lurcher, looks through the window inquisitively, tongue out. Michael squares himself and nods at her.

Mr Stott.

Mrs Caine. How’s the little one?

Since Charlie came along, Michael has used him as a way of seeming to greet her civilly, while avoiding pleasantries that actually include her. Still, it is progress of a sort.

Yes, he’s OK. Getting big. How is your wife?

He stares at her, assessing the question, not replying. He looks bleary-eyed, thinner; perhaps he has been cooking for himself, or missing meals; caring for the terminal patient is taking its toll. His hair is greasy at the roots; his cockerel chest has sunk. He seems now to inhabit his age: a man in his seventies, old enough to suffer under extra physical and mental burden. But he still has on a tie and jacket for going into the big house – the old ways of the estate prevail.

I don’t mean to pry, she says. It’s not my business.

It’s not.

I just wanted to say I was sorry –

She stops short. She does not want to offer pity, nor would he accept any from her. They are not friends. She will do him the courtesy of not simpering. The approach was ill-judged, and she can see he suspects her, thinks her nosy or callous.

Anyway, my best wishes, she says, and turns away.

I heard your brother was sick, Michael says. Heard he’d moved up here permanent. There’s a lot of bad business about.

She turns back. Now it is she who regards him cautiously, wondering whether he is genuine or goading her, quid pro quo. What has he heard about Lawrence? The whole sordid mess, or only an outline? No doubt he has his opinions about drug users, and they are unforgiving. Michael’s face is set like granite. She holds her own expression in abeyance. They are as guarded as each other.

He was ill, she says. He’s on the mend now.

That’s good. Nice fellow. And good to have some young folk moving in, cut up the pastures a bit.

This surprises her. She would not have thought him keen to have any more of her associates on his turf. But then, he has more to worry about than the march of liberals or a petty dispute with a colleague, even wolves. He makes a noise, halfway between a grunt and a sigh.

Lena’s putting up a fight. She’s making mine and her sister’s life a bloody nightmare. It is a bloody nightmare – all of it.

His voice is flat, and open. There is not much more to say; they both know it. He offers her his hand, willingly, for the first time, as if this is their true introduction, or they have agreed something. She takes it and they shake. The dog barks inside the van.

Good luck then.

And you.

He gets into the utility vehicle and starts the engine, pulls away, the tyres crunching gravel as he circles the drive. She stands for a moment, watching his departure. He is as ornery as he ever was, she is under no illusions. But the idea of him returning to a house of suffering, to a wife crippled by disease and exenteration, boluses of painkiller and colostomies, biding Macmillan nurses, would not be wished on anyone.

She continues towards the office. She passes Thomas Pennington, who is walking with the local bishop and Barnaby Stott in the gardens of the Hall, the three men engaged in reflective discussion. Thomas waves to her as she passes, a small, sombre acknowledgement. It occurs to her that they were all discussing Lena’s funeral. You are lucky, she tells herself, don’t forget it. In the blur of her new life, there are raised moments and memorable episodes – good and bad, she has been learning to fix what can be fixed, learning to accept what is broken. There is no other way.

*

Lawrence quits his job. He has savings, is paying half the mortgage in Leeds, but the house is to be sold. He will find work here in Cumbria, he tells Rachel, in one of the southern Lakeland practices. Or he will do something different for a while, reset his brain. She is nervous, but supports the decision. He needs a new chapter. He and Emily have managed several brief, polite phone calls to discuss matters, namely the divorce. He has not tried to win her back, though his recovery is going well, and he might have asserted such. Either he does not want a reunion, or he considers himself unworthy, the damage too great. It’s the right thing, he keeps saying, and perhaps it is. Binny always maintained there was a wrong dynamic to the marriage, though, in the end, Rachel has come to respect Emily – even to like her.

She watches her brother for danger signs. He seems to have built tight defences. He keeps going to the centre in Workington, calls Mitch and people from the support group from time to time, and is called by them. He reads around the subject – a book about impulse control, a book about attachment disorders, a book about neurons; all this is in order to understand the physiology of his problems. He eats well, does not drink, not even beer – those who think they can merely moderate vices usually fail, he tells her, get stuck in a cycle of binging and quitting, as he did, for years. He meditates, in his room, in the garden, cross-legged, his head held erect. And he walks. He has walked himself lean, looks like a man who has crossed deserts, who has lived on figs and goat’s milk. He looks both older and younger, like the scrawny boy he was and the bypassed man he might have become, under different circumstances. He offers to move out, repeatedly, but she tells him there is no hurry.

Sarah Hall's Books