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Authors: Marina Lewycka

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BOOK: The Lubetkin Legacy
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Violet: Towel

Violet wonders whether it's worth persevering with her door-knocking campaign. Truly there are some weird people in these flats, including one who pushed her out of the door with an empty coffee jar.

The heavy rain makes it even more dismal. The walkways between the flats, although undercover, are awash. Some downpipes must be blocked because the water has brought to the surface all the nasty things that are usually hidden out of sight in gulleys: dead cigarettes, dead insects, dead fast-food wrappers, even a dead pigeon. She steps past it quickly, noting that it has two feet, so it's not Pidgie. In the rainy season in Kenya water poured out of the sky for an hour or so and everything was washed clean, then the sun came out. But here in England it seems to be rainy season all the time.

She's finished all her side of the block, and rings the doorbell of the first flat on the west side, waits a moment, then rings again. There is someone at home, she can hear a radio playing inside, and soon the door opens. The man who stands there is wearing nothing but a towel wrapped around his middle.

‘Yes?' he says belligerently. Then he looks her up and down and adds in a friendlier tone, ‘What can I do for you?'

She knows that look of appraisal, when a guy is trying to suss out whether to make a move on you; she would normally make her excuses and leave. But she hears a child's voice calling from inside the flat, ‘Who is it, Dad?'

She launches into her patter. ‘I'm sorry to bother you. My
name's Violet. I live upstairs. I'm just letting people know about a planning application that will affect the residents of these flats.'

‘I'm not staying here long.' He sounds bored.

‘There's a proposal to build a fourteen-storey block of flats just in front of here, where the cherry trees are.'

‘Really?' He sounds less bored.

‘Really. The notices went up on the lamp posts last week, inviting comments or objections.'

‘So you're getting the tenants agitated?'

‘I hope so. Would you be agitated enough to write a letter to the Council?'

He smiles. Nice teeth. ‘Sure. It's bound to affect property values.' Actually, he has quite a nice torso too. ‘Would you like to come in? I'll get some clothes on. I've just come out of the shower.'

The warning bells ring: it is not a good idea to be alone with this half-naked man in his flat. But the appearance of a boy at the door makes her relax. It's the same boy she saw getting out of the limo.

‘Arthur,' the man says, ‘make Violet a cup of tea, will you, while I get dressed.' He turns to her. ‘Is tea all right? Or would you prefer coffee? I'm not sure about Arthur's barista skills.'

‘Da-a-ad?' whines the boy, kicking the door frame with his socked foot.

‘Tea's fine,' she says, and steps inside out of the rain.

Berthold: Mud

Just as Inna and I left the flat for the funeral, the heavens opened. Inna ran back to fetch her umbrella, a jolly leopard-skin-print number, which she flicked open as we raced towards the waiting minicab. Through the blur of rain, I noticed a small red car pulling up at the kerb behind us. Mrs Penny was at the wheel, staring in our direction.

‘Quick! Let's go!' I yelled at the driver, handing him the piece of paper with the hand-drawn map.

‘Green Glade? Never heard of it. Have you got a postcode?'

‘Um … not exactly. N4 it says. Just go!'

The minicab driver pulled away slowly. The red car didn't follow. Phew!

‘Go where? N4's a big area, mate.'

A steady rain was falling, drumming on the roof of the minicab. Inna was perched on the back seat next to me like a bird of ill omen, dressed all in black with a jet necklace and matching jet earrings, a dab of pink lipstick, and clutching her wet umbrella, unaware of the lucky escape we had just had.

‘Head north,' I told the minicab driver, ‘and I'll phone the funeral director.'

But Jimmy the Dog was doggedly not answering.

We passed up Kingsland Road, and Inna, peering through the misted-up window, started jumping up and down, ‘Oy! Stop here! Stop! My friend will know. He come from Georgia, but been in London long time.'

The cab driver pulled up outside a shabby shop which appeared to sell mainly international phonecards and ‘herbal
Viagra'. Hm. That was something I might need to look into, should matters with my beautiful neighbour approach a consummation devoutly to be wished. It was a long time since I had put the beast through his paces.

‘Ali! Ali!' Inna shouted from the pavement outside the shop under her leopard-skin umbrella, and moments later a huge man with a black beard, a gold front tooth and an embroidered skullcap opened the door. He looked at her, laughed, and hugged her in a giant embrace. She showed him the piece of paper. He frowned and turned it this way and that, muttering something I could not hear. She stood on tiptoes and kissed him on the chin – she could not reach his cheek – and hurried back to the cab.

‘He not very sure. Mebbe Finsbury Park next-door railway.'

As the minicab driver got on the road again, the mobile in my pocket rang.

‘Jimmy? Thank God! Listen, I don't know exactly where we're going … have you got an address? Or a postcode?'

His voice sounded faraway and scratchy. ‘Calm down, Bertie. Meet us under the railway bridge at Finsbury Park Station. You can follow the hearse.'

Follow the hearse – that sounded like the first sensible thing I had heard all day. The cab driver put his foot down and off we went, ploughing through a tropical-style downpour; the windscreen wipers dancing their crazy hand-jive barely managed to maintain visibility. I would have asked him to pull over and wait it out, but we were now pushed for time.

As we ducked under the shelter of a wide flat bridge, the drumming on the roof ceased instantly. And there in front of us, with its sidelights still on, was the hearse. I jumped out, and went over to where Jimmy was standing on the pavement. He looked superbly funereal, dressed in black tails with a black top hat and a black silk handkerchief in his breast pocket.

He shook my hand solemnly, and patted my shoulder. ‘Well done, Bertie. You made it. It is a little difficult to find. Nuisance about the rain. Of course
she
is beyond reach of all that now,' he nodded solemnly towards the coffin in the back of the hearse with a single white lily laid on top of it. ‘Safe from tempest, storm and wind.'

‘Death lies on her like an untimely frost upon the sweetest flower.' A tear sprang into my eye, but something about the coffin bothered me. ‘The coffin – it seems a bit cheap, Jimmy.'

‘Cardboard, old pal. Biodegradable. More environmentally friendly. We've all got to do our bit on climate change, haven't we?'

I didn't like the look of it at all; it reminded me of those big supermarket boxes they pack loo rolls in. But I supposed it was too late to do anything about it now. At that moment, two elderly women, dressed alike – all in black, with black hats, white frizzy hair and bright red lipstick – rushed up to us.

‘Where is Green Glade cemetery?' they gabbled. ‘Is this Lily Sidebottom's funeral?'

I was so taken aback it took me a few moments to recognise Ted Madeley's twin daughters.

‘Bertie?' The first twin looked me up and down.

‘Jenny? Margaret?'

‘Jenny. That's Margaret.' She pointed at the other twin, who was standing at the back of the hearse, trying to peep inside. At first sight, she seemed identical, but as I got used to their likeness I also noticed differences; Margaret appeared older, more frail and stooped, though of course they were exactly the same age. ‘Thanks for getting in touch, Bertie. It's good to have a chance to pay our respects. She was a fine lady, Lily, even though we didn't always see eye to eye.'

‘Fine. Yes, indeed,' I murmured.

When I had last seen them, they were in their thirties. The
cruel hand of time had indeed scrawled his ugly mark over their once pretty features. Then again, I had been just a boy, so it was a miracle that they remembered me at all. Mum had kept in touch for a while, but I hadn't seen them since I left home. I heard they had both married in their thirties, and both lost their husbands in their sixties. That's one of the strange things about twins, the way their lives mirror each other.

‘Why is the coffin made out of cardboard?' asked Margaret.

‘It's ecological,' I said. ‘This is going to be a woodland burial.'

‘But won't it go soggy in all this rain?' From the edge of the railway bridge, water was sloshing down on to the traffic like an overflowing bathtub.

‘Lily was a great campaigner on climate change. It's what she would have wanted.' That shut her up. ‘This is Lily's friend, Inna Alfandari.' Inna had been prowling around the hearse, examining the coffin. I introduced Jenny and Margaret as Lily's stepdaughters.

‘I am mother? I am sister?' Inna whispered, glancing at them with a nervous smile.

‘Friend. Just a friend, Inna. A confused friend.' I did a quick Lear's Fool roll of the eyes.

She winked beadily, ‘Hey ho! Rain it rain it every day!' Then she flicked out her umbrella as if for an approaching storm, and they all gathered under it, even though it was quite dry under the bridge.

‘We'd better drive up as close to Green Glade as we can,' said Jimmy, who was wearing fancy grey trousers and leather-soled shoes. ‘Just follow us in the cab. You and I can carry the coffin between us when we get there. It's not heavy.'

He introduced the driver of the hearse as Miss Wrest, the owner's daughter, a lugubrious mousy-haired young woman wearing a top hat and a black suit, her face blanked out with
panstick make-up which also covered her lips. I have never slept with a female undertaker, but this may be one life experience that passes me by.

As soon as we left the shelter of the bridge, the rain sheeted down. The minicab followed close behind the hearse. Miss Wrest was a nervous driver, heavy on the brakes. Once we almost slammed into the back of her when she braked sharply to avoid a drunk who lurched out into the road, and after that the cab driver held back a bit. As the hearse sailed past a parade of shops, a bus pulled out, getting in between us and the hearse. It had the smirking George Clooney poster on the back, which I took as a bad omen.

We only just managed to keep behind the hearse as it turned right – our driver's view was blocked by the bus. After that we wended our way down some anonymous residential roads and soon came to a halt in a cul-de-sac, at the bottom of which a footpath led towards a bank of trees. Here we got out, and opened our umbrellas. I noticed a not-very-prominent sign stuck into the ground that said
Green Glade
, with an arrow pointing towards the footpath. Beside it stood a couple of guys waiting under a green and white striped umbrella, whom Jimmy introduced as the gravediggers. They were wearing smart but soggy black tracksuits with a Wrest 'n' Piece logo on the breast pocket, and both had pencil moustaches, presumably because they thought it was part of the gravedigger look. A third man – a thin elderly guy wearing a damp black suit, a bit short in the leg, and a bowler hat – stood beside them under his own black umbrella. I wondered who he was. I shook his hand and introduced myself, and he mumbled something I didn't catch, his words mashed by the booze I could smell on his breath.

Jimmy was right – the coffin bearing my mother's body was not heavy at all. So many years of life and love reduced to this
puny parcel of cardboard and dust. I held back my tears as we hoisted it on to our shoulders, him on the right side, in front, me at the back on the left, leaving his right arm and my left arm free to hold umbrellas. This awkward equilibrium was like the balance of gladness and sadness in my heart as I bore my dear mother's mortal remains towards their resting place. Although frankly, the rain was annoying.

Mousy Miss Wrest, who was wearing knee-high black boots, the only one of us with sensible footwear, strode out in front, holding a black umbrella. Inna and the Madeley twins huddled behind us under Inna's leopard-print umbrella, and the gravediggers, sheltering under the green and white, brought up the rear, with the thin bowler-hatted man tagging along beside them. With downcast eyes we set off up the muddy path. The trees dripped all around us. My mind was so caught up with the solemnity of the occasion that I hardly noticed the slipperiness underfoot, but Jimmy was slithering about in his leather-soled shoes.

The footpath from the cul-de-sac joined another larger track through woodland, which was gravelled and raised, about the width of a railway track. Here under the trees the rain was gentler and the ground less treacherous. We followed this for some two hundred metres, until another
Green Glade
arrow pointed up a grassy rise towards a grove of trees through which I caught a glimpse of a wide green glade. It would indeed have been an idyllic spot, had it not been for the rain.

Even in her sensible boots Miss Wrest struggled to keep upright on the wet grassy slope, now partly trodden into mud. I cunningly pointed my umbrella downwards, and used the spike to stick in the ground to give myself a bit of leverage. I daren't look over my shoulder to see how the old ladies behind were doing. In front of me, Jimmy was skidding dangerously,
flailing with his umbrella arm. We had made it about halfway up the incline, when his phone rang. Balancing the coffin on one shoulder, he fumbled in his pocket.

‘Yes, Phil, yes, okay, I get what you're saying … parting of the ways … sorry, I can't speak now … Green Glade … sorry it had to end like this …'

Suddenly a roar like a low-flying jet reverberated through the trees, making the ground shake beneath our feet. In the moment that I lost concentration, Jimmy slipped. The coffin slid off his shoulder and bounced down the steep path on to the track below. I turned, lost my footing, and slid after it, my opened umbrella acting as a sort of parachute. Jimmy did a sideways skid and managed to bring down the three old ladies and the bowler-hatted gent, before landing beside the dented coffin, his phone still pressed against his ear in one hand and his umbrella aloft in the other. Only the gravediggers were upright, and they were still on the main track, standing by being elegantly unhelpful.

Amidst all the confusion, I was aware that there was a terrific amount of noise – the low-flying aeroplane now sounded more like a high-speed train roaring past quite close by behind the trees, Jimmy was still jabbering into his phone and the three women were screaming their heads off. The screaming seemed a bit excessive, I thought, but in a moment I could see the reason for it. The wet cardboard coffin had burst open, and the corpse had tumbled out, stiffer than its container, to join the melee. Inna was screaming and crossing herself. Margaret had fainted. Jenny, who was underneath it, was trying to push its shoulder out of her face. I looked, and looked again. Even beneath its muddy coating, the corpse didn't seem quite right.

I screamed too. ‘There's been a mistake! This isn't my mother!'

‘Don't distress yourself, Mr Sidebottom.' Miss Wrest laid a soothing hand on my arm. ‘Appearances of a post-life loved one can often be deceptive. Death is a great counterfeiter, you know.' She patted me with her fingertips; her nails were painted scarlet, the only touch of colour about her.

‘She was probably done by one of the trainees,' added Jimmy, replacing his phone in his pocket. ‘We've had some new jobseeker placements in the funeral parlour. Lily would have been in favour of that, you know, helping to prepare the long-term unemployed for useful jobs. We've all got to do our bit on the economy, haven't we?'

‘But …' I looked again. It looked distinctly unlike Mother. ‘… it's a man. An old man. An ex-old-man, I should say.'

BOOK: The Lubetkin Legacy
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