Read The Constant Gardener Page 8


  “His name is Baraka,” she says. “It means blessing. But you knew that.”

  “Good name.”

  “He’s not mine.” Woodrow says nothing. “His mother can’t feed him,” she explains. Her voice is slow and dreamy.

  “Then he’s lucky to have you,” Woodrow says handsomely. “How are you, Tessa? I’ve been terribly worried for you, you can’t imagine. I’m just so sorry. Who’s looking after you, apart from Justin? Ghita and who else?”

  “Arnold.”

  “I mean apart from Arnold too, obviously.”

  “You told me once that I court coincidences,” she says, ignoring his question. “By putting myself in the front line, I make things happen.”

  “I was admiring you for it.”

  “Do you still?”

  “Of course.”

  “She’s dying,” she says, shifting her eyes from him and staring across the room. “His mother is. Wanza.” She is looking at the woman with the dangling arm, and the mute boy hunched on the floor beside her. “Come on, Sandy. Aren’t you going to ask what of?”

  “What of?” he asks obediently.

  “Life. Which the Buddhists tell us is the first cause of death. Overcrowding. Undernourishment. Filthy living conditions.” She is addressing the child. “And greed. Greedy men in this case. It’s a miracle they didn’t kill you too. But they didn’t, did they? For the first few days they visited her twice a day. They were terrified.”

  “Who were?”

  “The coincidences. The greedy ones. In fine white coats. They watched her, prodded her a bit, read her numbers, talked to the nurses. Now they’ve stopped coming.” The child is hurting her. She tenderly adjusts it and resumes. “It was all right for Christ. Christ could sit at dying people’s bedsides, say the magic words, the people lived and everybody clapped. The coincidences couldn’t do that. That’s why they went away. They’ve killed her and now they don’t know the words.”

  “Poor things,” Woodrow says, humouring her.

  “No.” She turns her head, wincing as pain hits her, and nods across the room. “They’re the poor things. Wanza. And him down on the floor there. Kioko, her brother. He walked eighty kilometres from his village to keep the flies off you, didn’t he, your uncle?” she says to the baby and, settling it on her lap, gently taps its back until it blindly belches. She places her palm beneath her other breast for it to suck.

  “Tessa, listen to me.” Woodrow watches her eyes measure him. She knows the voice. She knows all his voices. He sees the shadow of suspicion fall across her face and not move on. She sent for me because she had a use for me, but now she’s remembered who I am. “Tessa, please, hear me out. Nobody’s dying. Nobody’s killed anyone. You’re fevered, you’re imagining things. You’re dreadfully tired. Give it a rest. Give yourself a rest. Please.”

  She returns her attention to the child, buffing its tiny cheek with her fingertip. “You’re the most beautiful thing I ever touched in my life,” she whispers to it. “And don’t you go forgetting it.”

  “I’m sure he won’t,” says Woodrow heartily, and the sound of his voice reminds her of his presence.

  “How’s the hothouse?” she asks—her word for the High Commission.

  “Thriving.”

  “You could all pack up and go home tomorrow. It wouldn’t make the slightest difference,” she says vaguely.

  “So you always tell me.”

  “Africa’s over here. You’re over there.”

  “Let’s argue about that when you’re stronger,” Woodrow suggests in his most placatory voice.

  “Can we?”

  “Of course.”

  “And you’ll listen?”

  “Like a hawk.”

  “And then we can tell you about the greedy coincidences in white coats. And you’ll believe us. It’s a deal?”

  “Us?”

  “Arnold.”

  The mention of Bluhm brought Woodrow back to earth. “I’ll do whatever I can in the circumstances. Whatever it is. Within reason. I promise. Now try to get some rest. Please.”

  She reflects on this. “He promises to do whatever he can in the circumstances,” she explains to the child. “Within reason. Well, there’s a man. How’s Gloria?”

  “Deeply concerned. She sends her love.”

  Tessa lets out a slow sigh of exhaustion and, with the child still at her breast, slumps back in the pillows and closes her eyes. “Then go home to her. And don’t write me any more letters,” she says. “And leave Ghita alone. She won’t play either.”

  He gets up and turns, for some reason expecting to see Bluhm in the doorway, in the posture he detests most: Bluhm propped nonchalantly against the door frame, hands wedged cowboy-style into his arty belt, grinning his white-toothed grin inside his pretentious blackbeard. But the doorway is empty, the corridor windowless and dark, lit like an air-raid shelter by a line of underpowered lights. Making his way past broken-down trolleys laden with recumbent bodies, smelling the blood and excrement mingling with the sweet, horsy scent of Africa, Woodrow wonders whether this squalor is part of what makes her attractive to him: I have spent my life in flight from reality, but because of her I am drawn to it.

  He enters a crowded concourse and sees Bluhm engaged in a heated conversation with another man. First he hears Bluhm’s voice—though not the words—strident and accusing, echoing in the steel girders. Then the other man speaks back. Some people, once seen, live for ever in our memories. For Woodrow this is one of them. The other man is thickly built and paunchy, with a glistening, meaty face that is cast in an expression of abject despair. His hair, blond to ginger, is spread sparsely over his scalded pate. He has a pinched, rosebud mouth that pleads and denies. His eyes, round with hurt, are haunted by a horror that both men seem to share. His hands are mottled and very strong, his khaki shirt stained with tramlines of sweat around the collar. The rest of him is concealed under a white medical coat.

  And then we can tell you about the greedy coincidences in white coats.

  Woodrow moves stealthily forward. He is almost upon them, but neither head turns. They are too intent on arguing. He strides past them unnoticed, their raised voices lost in the din.

  Donohue’s car was back in the drive. The sight of it moved Woodrow to sick fury. He stormed upstairs, showered, put on a fresh shirt and felt no less furious. The house was unusually silent for a Saturday and when he glanced out of his bathroom window he saw why. Donohue, Justin, Gloria and the boys were seated at the table in the garden playing Monopoly. Woodrow loathed all board games but for Monopoly he had an unreasoning hatred not unlike his hatred of the Friends and all the other members of Britain’s overblown Intelligence community. What the devil does he mean by coming back here minutes after I told him to keep his bloody distance? And what kind of weird husband is it who sits down to a jolly game of Monopoly just days after his wife is hacked to death? House guests, Woodrow and Gloria used to tell each other, quoting the Chinese proverb, were like fish and stank on the third day. But Justin was becoming more fragrant to Gloria with each day that passed.

  Woodrow went downstairs and stood in the kitchen, looking out of the window. No staff on Saturday afternoons, of course. So much nicer to be just ourselves, darling. Except that it’s not ourselves, it’s yourselves. And you look a bloody sight happier with two middle-aged men fawning on you than you ever look with me.

  At the table, Justin had landed on somebody’s street and was paying out a stack of money in rent while Gloria and the boys hooted with delight and Donohue protested that it was about time too. Justin was wearing his stupid straw hat, and as with everything else he wore, it became him perfectly. Woodrow filled a kettle and set it on the gas. I’ll take out tea to them, let them know I’m back—assuming they aren’t too tied up with one another to notice. Changing his mind, he stepped smartly into the garden and marched up to the table.

  “Justin. Sorry to butt in. Wondered if we could have a quick word.” And to the others—my ow
n family, staring at me as if I’ve raped the housemaid—“Didn’t mean to break this up, gang. Only be a few minutes. Who’s winning?”

  “Nobody,” said Gloria with edge, while Donohue from the wings grinned his shaggy grin.

  The two men stood in Justin’s cell. If the garden hadn’t been occupied, Woodrow would have preferred the garden. As it was, they stood facing each other across the drab bedroom, with Tessa’s Gladstone bag—Tessa’s father’s Gladstone bag—reclining behind the grille. My wine store. His bloody key. Her illustrious father’s bag. But as he started to speak, he was alarmed to see his surroundings change. Instead of the iron bedstead, he saw the inlaid desk her mother had loved. And behind it, the brick fireplace with invitations on it. And across the room where the bogus beams appeared to converge, Tessa’s naked silhouette in front of the french window. He willed himself back to time present and the illusion passed.

  “Justin.”

  “Yes, Sandy.”

  But for the second time in as many minutes he veered away from the confrontation he had planned. “One of the local broadsheets is running a sort of liber amicorum about Tessa.”

  “How nice of them.”

  “There’s a lot of rather unambiguous stuff about Bluhm in it. A suggestion that he personally delivered her child. Sort of not very hidden inference that the baby might be his as well. Sorry.”

  “You mean Garth.”

  “Yes.”

  Justin’s voice was taut and, to Woodrow’s ear, as dangerously pitched as his own. “Yes, well, that is an inference that people have drawn from time to time in recent months, Sandy, and no doubt in the present climate there will be more of it.”

  Though Woodrow allowed space for him to do so, Justin did not suggest that the inference was wrong. And this impelled Woodrow to press harder. Some guilty inner force was driving him.

  “They also suggest that Bluhm went so far as to take a camp bed to the ward so that he could sleep close to her.”

  “We shared it.”

  “I beg your pardon?”

  “Sometimes Arnold slept on it, sometimes I did. We took turns, depending on our respective workloads.”

  “So you don’t mind?”

  “Mind what?”

  “That this should be said of them—that he was devoting this amount of attention to her—with your consent, apparently— while she was acting as your wife here in Nairobi.”

  “Acting? She was my wife, damn you!”

  Woodrow hadn’t reckoned with Justin’s anger any more than he’d reckoned with Coleridge’s. He’d been too busy quelling his own. He’d got his voice down, and in the kitchen he’d managed to shrug some of the tension out of his shoulders. But Justin’s outburst came at him out of a clear sky, and startled him. He had expected contrition and, if he was honest, humiliation, but not armed resistance.

  “What are you asking me precisely?” Justin enquired. “I don’t think I understand.”

  “I need to know, Justin. That’s all.”

  “Know what? Whether I controlled my wife?”

  Woodrow was pleading and backing away at the same time. “Look, Justin—I mean, see it my way—just for a moment, OK? The whole world’s press is going to pick this up. I have a right to know.”

  “Know what?”

  “What else Tessa and Bluhm got up to that’s going to be headlines—tomorrow and for the next six weeks,” he ended, on a note of self-pity.

  “Such as what?”

  “Bluhm was her guru. Well, wasn’t he? Whatever else he was.”

  “So?”

  “So they shared causes together. They sniffed out abuses. Human rights stuff. Bluhm has some kind of watchdog rôle— right? Or his employers have. So Tessa—” he was losing his way and Justin was watching him do it—“she helped him. Perfectly natural. In the circumstances. Used her lawyer’s head.”

  “D’you mind telling me where this is leading?”

  “Her papers. That’s all. Her possessions. Those you collected.

  We did. Together.”

  “What of them?”

  Woodrow pulled himself together: I’m your superior, for God’s sake, not some bloody petitioner. Let’s get our rôles straight, shall we?

  “I need your assurance, therefore—that any papers she assembled for her causes—in her capacity as your wife here—with diplomatic status—here on HMG’s ticket—will be handed to the Office. It was on that understanding that I took you to your house last Tuesday. We would not have gone there otherwise.”

  Justin had not moved. Not a finger, not an eyelid flickered while Woodrow delivered himself of this untruthful afterthought. Backlit, he remained as still as Tessa’s naked silhouette.

  “The other assurance I’m to obtain from you is self-evident,” Woodrow went on.

  “What other assurance?”

  “Your own discretion in the matter. Whatever you know of her activities—her agitations—her so-called aid work that spun out of control.”

  “Whose control?”

  “I simply mean that wherever she ventured into official waters, you are as much bound by the rules of confidentiality as the rest of us. I’m afraid that’s an order from on high.” He was trying to make a joke of it but neither of them smiled. “Pellegrin’s order.”

  And you’re in good heart, are you, Sandy? Given that times are trying and you’ve got her husband in your guest room?

  Justin was speaking at last. “Thank you, Sandy. I’m appreciative of all you’ve done for me. I’m grateful that you enabled me to visit my own house. But now I must collect the rent on Piccadilly, where I seem to own a valuable hotel.”

  At which to Woodrow’s astonishment he returned to the garden and, resuming his place next to Donohue, took up the game of Monopoly where he had left it.

  4

  The British police were absolute lambs. Gloria said so, and if Woodrow didn’t agree with her, he didn’t show it. Even Porter Coleridge, though parsimonious in describing his dealings with them, declared them “surprisingly civilised considering they were shits.” And the nicest thing about them was—Gloria reported to Elena from her bedroom after she had escorted them to the living room for the start of their second day with Justin—the nicest thing ever was, El, that you really felt they were here to help, not heap more pain and embarrassment onto poor dear Justin’s shoulders. Rob the boy was dishy—well, man really, El, he must be twenty-five if a day! A bit of an actor in a non-flashy way, and awfully good at taking off the Nairobi Blue Boys they had to work alongside. And Lesley—who’s a woman, darling, nb, which took everybody by surprise, and shows you how little we know about the real England these days—clothes a little bit last season but, apart from that, well, frankly you’d never have guessed she didn’t have our sort of education. Not by the voice, of course, because nobody speaks the way they’re brought up any more, they daren’t. But totally at home in one’s drawing room, very composed and self-assured, and cosy, with a nice warm smile and a bit of early grey in her hair which she very sensibly leaves, and what Sandy calls a decent quiet, so that you don’t have to think of things to say all the time when they’re having their pit-stops and giving poor Justin a rest. The only problem was, Gloria had absolutely no idea what went on between them all, because she could hardly stand in the kitchen all day with her ear glued to the serving hatch, well, certainly not with the servants watching her, well, could she, El?

  But if the matter of the discussions between Justin and the two police officers eluded her, Gloria knew even less about their dealings with her husband, for the good reason that he did not tell her they were taking place.

  The opening exchanges between Woodrow and the two officers were courtesy itself. The officers said they understood the delicacy of their mission, they were not about to lift the lid on the white community in Nairobi, et cetera. Woodrow in return pledged the cooperation of his staff and all appropriate facilities, amen. The officers promised to keep Woodrow abreast of their investigations, so far a
s this was compatible with their instructions from the Yard. Woodrow genially pointed out that they were all serving the same Queen; and if first names were good enough for Her Majesty, they were good enough for us.

  “So what’s Justin’s job description here in the High Commission then, Mr Woodrow?” Rob the boy asked politely, ignoring this call to intimacy.

  Rob was a London Marathon runner, all ears and knees and elbows and true grit. Lesley, who could have been his smarter elder sister, carried a useful bag which Woodrow facetiously imagined to contain the things Rob needed at the track-side—iodine, salt tablets, spare laces for his running shoes—but which actually, so far as he could see, contained nothing but a tape recorder, cassettes and a colourful array of shorthand pads and notebooks.

  Woodrow affected to consider. He wore the judicious frown that told you he was the professional. “Well, he’s our in-house Old Etonian for a start,” he said, and everybody enjoyed this good joke. “Basically, Rob, he’s our British representative on the East African Donors’ Effectiveness Committee known otherwise by the acronym EADEC,” he went on, speaking with the clarity owed to Rob’s limited intelligence. “The second E was originally for Efficacy but that wasn’t a word many people were familiar with round here, so we changed it to something more user-friendly.”