“This may disappoint you,” Billy said, “but I’m just keeping my head down, to be honest. It’s only a few years till I get my pension.” He paused. “I’ve put a lot into the job — maybe too much. I need to start thinking about my family.”
Phil held Billy’s gaze for a moment longer, then nodded slowly and looked down into his coffee.
It was different for Phil, Billy thought. He’d only done ten years. He still had a taste for the work, and someone in that position would find it hard to imagine what it felt like to be coming out the other side.
“Do you remember the barbecue we had at your place?” Phil said after a brief silence. “We were out in the garden, and suddenly that old bloke who was riding down the track fell off his bike.”
“Harry Parsons,” Billy said. “He hit a stone or something.”
“He went flying. Cut his head quite badly.”
“We had to call the ambulance.”
“The sausages all burned, remember?”
“And the chicken drumsticks. Sue had to get a meat pie out of the freezer.”
“We drank a lot that night, didn’t we?”
The episode had upset Billy. He would have gone to the hospital with Harry if the paramedics hadn’t told him it wasn’t necessary. Though Harry had never actually set foot in their house — modesty stopped him venturing beyond the back door — he was like a member of the family. If Billy ever had good news, Harry would be one of the first to know — and Harry had seen him at his lowest too…One night, not long after Emma was born, Billy was standing on the track behind his house when something seemed to reach down into him and wrench the tears out by force. He kept glancing at the bedroom window, afraid that Sue might hear. Then a piece of the darkness near him shifted and came loose, and a voice said, “Is that you, Billy?”
“Yes,” he managed. “Yes, it’s me.”
In good weather, Harry often sat up late in the allotments. He had his own shed and a couple of folding chairs. As he’d admitted to Billy once, he didn’t have much to go home to.
“Are you all right?” Harry said.
“I think so,” Billy said. “More or less.”
“I was just sitting here, having a beer.” The dark air flooded in around Harry’s voice, seeming to cushion it. “Would you like a beer, Billy?”
“Yes,” Billy said. “Thanks. That’d be great.”
“I think there’s one here somewhere…”
As Harry rummaged for a beer, Billy stepped closer. The apex of the shed’s roof showed black and sharp against the sky. Harry pushed a cool can into Billy’s hand and set up the other chair for him.
“That’s clever of you, Harry, keeping a drink out here.”
“Well,” Harry said, “you’ve got to, haven’t you?”
They sat side by side in the darkness. The beer tasted metallic, almost rusty, as if it had been made not from hops but from bits of old machinery.
“Sue asleep, is she?”
“I hope so.”
To keep the birds away, Harry had hung CDs from horizontal canes. When the air stirred, they would fidget, knocking and clicking against each other. Sometimes one of them glinted silver as it twisted on its string. After a while, a train clattered past.
“They go all the way to Liverpool Street, those electric trains,” Harry said. And then, sometime later, “When my wife died, I couldn’t stop crying for a month.”
Pinching his eyes against the glare of the snack-bar lights, Billy sighed, then took a sip of his black coffee.
“Is he still alive?” Phil asked.
“Harry?” Billy said. “Yes, he’s doing well. He still comes up to the allotments, even when it’s raining. He’s growing delphiniums again this year. He loves delphiniums.”
“Good for him.”
“When me and Sue got married, we invited Harry to our wedding. He came instead of my father. I’d never seen Harry in a suit before. Usually, in the summer, he just wears trousers and braces and a flat cap, and he’ll have chalky stains all over him from the talcum powder he puts on after he has a bath. The suit, though. It was brown tweed, stiff as cardboard — and he’d stuck one of his own nasturtiums in his buttonhole. You know what my best man, Neil, said? ‘Who’s the scarecrow?’” Billy smiled at the memory.
“Instead of your father?” Phil said.
“What?” Billy said. “Oh right — well, I couldn’t have invited him. I didn’t know where he was.”
Phil watched him across the rim of his paper cup.
“I never knew my father,” Billy went on. “He left before I was born.”
Shaking his head, Phil looked down at the table.
“He was a musician,” Billy said, “you know?”
“That’s no excuse.”
Billy was tempted to ask Phil why his wife had walked out on him, and whether he was happier since she had gone — at four-fifteen in the morning, in these extraordinary circumstances, he might have got away with it — but in the end he thought Phil probably had enough on his mind without him adding to it.
“When all this is over,” Billy said, “you should come round. I know Sue would like to see you.”
Phil nodded, fine wrinkles multiplying at the edges of his eyes. “I’d like that.”
Shortly afterwards, he was called to the control room in reception, leaving Billy in the snack bar by himself. Billy drained his coffee, wincing at the bitterness, then he threw the cup in the bin and started back to the mortuary.
31
Billy was Glenn Tyler’s second child. Charlie was the first, born five years earlier, in 1951. According to their mother, Glenn had been away at the time, touring America, and didn’t set eyes on Charlie until he was eight months old, his sole contribution being the name — Charlie for Charlie Parker, of course. With Billy, it was different. Glenn had no record to cut, no live dates booked. There was no reason not to be there, which must have put the fear of God into him. He left two months before the birth, and this time he didn’t even bother to suggest a name. Maureen had her new baby boy christened “William Douglas,” after her maternal grandfather, whom she adored.
Glenn came back to Weston once, when Billy was seven. Billy had no memory of anything his father said or did that day, or even of what he looked like. It had been sunny, and his father had parked across the street, the powder-blue Cortina standing out against the curved white wall of the pub. He wore boots with pointed toes and pieces of elastic in the sides. A car, a pair of shoes — and that was it. His father who had returned, but without any warning, and just for the afternoon. “He only ever thinks of himself,” Maureen said afterwards, on more than one occasion. “Does as he pleases. Always has.”
Gathering his reports together, Billy slid them back into the folder. He didn’t think he would be doing any more paperwork before he went home. He held his Thermos over his cup and shook it. Three drops — not even enough to cover the bottom. He swallowed it anyway, then put the flask and cup into his bag, along with the folder. Back in his chair, he leaned forwards, elbows on his knees, and stared down into the drain. He had only seen his father one other time, but that was ten years later, and his father never even knew.
Some weeks short of his eighteenth birthday, Billy saw a fly-poster on a wall in Liverpool, advertising live jazz at the Iron Door on Seal Street. the glenn tyler sextet, it said in bold black capitals. Then, in smaller letters, one night only! He stood quite still and waited for his heart to slow down. The wind, briny and cold, pulled at his coat, his hair. Glenn Tyler…That had to be his father, didn’t it? Surely there couldn’t be two Glenn Tylers who played jazz. Not yet knowing what he was going to do, he wrote the details down on a scrap of paper, which he folded and pushed to the bottom of his trouser pocket. He didn’t say a word about it to his mother. As for Charlie, he was in London, at medical school, and wouldn’t be home till Christmas.