The Fallen Curtain

The Fallen Curtain Read Free Page B

Book: The Fallen Curtain Read Free
Author: Ruth Rendell
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hell’s he playing at?
    When I find him I’ll—I’ll kill him.
    He shivered. The blood was throbbing in his head. He broke a stick off a bush and began thrashing about with it, enraged, shouting into the dark silence, “Barry, Barry, come out! Come out at once, d’you hear me?” He doesn’t want me, he doesn’t care about me, no one will ever want me….
    Then he heard a giggle from a treetop above him, and suddenly there was a crackling of twigs, a slithering sound. Not quite above him—over there. In the giggle, he thought, there was a note of jeering. But where, where? Down by the water’s edge. He’d been up in the tree that almost overhung the pond. There was a thud as small feet bounced on to the ground, and again that maddening, gleeful giggle. For a moment the Man stood still. His hands clenched as on a frail neck, and he held them pressed together, crushing out life. Run, Barry, run…. Run, Richard, to Plumtree Grove and Brenda, to home and mother, who knows what dreadful evenings are.
    The Man thrust his way through the bushes, making for the pond. The boy would be away by now, but not far away. And his legs were long enough and strong enough to outrun him, his hands strong enough to ensure there would be no future of doubt and fear and curtained memory.
    But he was nowhere, nowhere. And yet…. What was that sound, as of stealthy, fearful feet creeping away? He wheeled round, and there was the boy coming towards him, walking a little timidly between the straight, grey tree trunks
towards
him. A thick constriction gripped his throat. There must have been something in his face, some threatening gravity made more intense by the half-dark, that stopped the boy in his tracks. Run, Barry, run, run fast away….
    They stared at each other for a moment, for a lifetime, for twelve long years. Then the boy gave a merry laugh, fearless and innocent. He ran forward and flung himself into the Man’s arms, and the Man, in a great release of pain and anguish, lifted the boy up, lifted him laughing into his own laughing face. They laughed with a kind of rapture at finding each other at last, and in the dark, under the whispering trees, each held the other close in an embrace of warmth and friendship.
    “Come on,” Richard said, “I’ll take you home. I don’t know what I was doing, bringing you here in the first place.”
    “To play hide and seek,” said Barry. “We had a nice time.”
    They got back into the car. It was after seven when they got to Upfield High Road, but not much after.
    “I don’t reckon my mum’s got in yet.”
    “I’ll drop you here. I won’t go up to your place.” Richard opened the car door to let him out. “Barry?”
    “What is it, mister?”
    “Don’t ever take a lift from a Man again, will you? Promise me?”
    Barry nodded. “O.K.”
    “I once took a lift from a stranger, and for years I couldn’t remember what had happened. It sort of came back to me tonight, meeting you. I remember it all now. He was all right, just a bit lonely like me. We had fish and chips on Drywood Common and played hide and seek like you and me, and he brought me back nearly to my house—like I’ve brought you. But it wouldn’t always be like that.”
    “How do you know?”
    Richard looked at his strong young man’s hands. “I just know,” he said. “Good-bye, Barry, and—thanks.”
    He drove away, turning once to see that the boy was safely in his house. Barry told his mother all about it, but she insisted it must have been a nasty experience and called the police. Since Barry couldn’t remember the number of the car and had no idea of the stranger’s name, there was little they could do. They never found the Man.

People Don’t Do Such Things
     

    People don’t do such things.
    That’s the last line of
Hedda Gabler
, and Ibsen makes this chap say it out of a sort of bewilderment at finding truth stranger than fiction. I know just how he felt. I say it myself every time I come up

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