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In all justice she had to thank George for having such a wide range of hammers. He could never resist a nice-looking red-handled claw hammer set in a row of diminishing sizes in a shop window. He had to go in and get one. If the income tax had really wanted to know how rich he was they’d have to weigh him in hammers like the Aga Khan in gold. There were probably enough in his tool shed and factory for both of them.

She threw the hammer on the bed, and put a few tubes and lipsticks into her case, then sent the rest of the trash over the carpet so that he would know something had altered in his life when he found the garage door open and the house empty.

She pulled sensible blouses, skirts and dresses out of the wardrobe, folding them into her case. Early risers have plenty of time, so she lit a cigarette, and thought of igniting what couldn’t be taken. A few drops of paraffin and up it would go. ‘I don’t hate myself that much,’ she decided, ‘so I won’t do it,’ having to speak her decisions before being able to follow them with action. The thought of such a fire scorched her hands and face, and she stood back from the bed a few moments, rubbing her palms together. Then she took tights, pants, vests, bras and stockings, handkerchiefs already folded, and packed them in neatly, but lifted everything out again to lay shoes on the bottom, and fit in two of the heaviest sweaters.

She sat on the bed, cases full but not closed, failing to leave. Hadn’t got this far before. What did you do? How did you do it? It was like waiting for someone to come and haul her off to prison. A better idea was to run away from the house and go over the fields, throwing off her clothes bit by bit till she was naked and could crawl into a wood, go to sleep and never wake up. It was as impossible to run away as it was to die, and felt like one and the same thing now that she was trying.

The dialling tone purred. Didn’t want to take her gaze from the beige carpet. The whole day could go by, and he would come home and gently put the receiver down before pushing her on to the settee and shouting it was about time she grew up and stopped giving him such a bloody hard time. She took her parents’ small black Bible from the dressing-table drawer and slipped it into her case because she had read it as a child, and the dates of births and deaths were inscribed.

‘Oh no,’ she said, ‘it’s not going to be like that,’ and dialled a taxi, still hoping the number would be engaged or out of order. It wasn’t. When the car came she was glad there was no one to say goodbye to.

3

Her two cases were near an empty platform seat, and she walked to get warm rather than go in the tea-bar waiting-room. Someone who knew her might phone George, but if by magic he came down the steps she would throw herself under the mincer of a non-stop train. She preferred to be in the cold wind where people didn’t look at each other, for if they did they might see her, and she wanted above all to be invisible.

There was a smell of smoke and diesel fumes. Shining rain-needles slanted on to the rails. Her life was her own – as cold as the weather was – and no one knew better, but she felt she would never wake up from the disabling fear that made her arms tremble as if she would be unable to lift her cases. She would get them on the train herself, or not at all, had them by the edge and hoped a door would be level when the train stopped.

A station announcement, sounding like wind and marbles thrown at the roof, increased her uncertainty and dread, showing a vision of hauling cases up the steps and out of the station, getting into a taxi and setting herself for home, which made the luggage so light when the train did arrive that she threw both heavyweights up into the doorway and carried them easily to a compartment.

Twenty years of concrete crumbled from her, and she laughed while pressing her cases as far into the rack as they would go, thinking it would be a shame if one fell at some sharp jolt and knocked her brains out at this stage of her departure.

She didn’t notice the train leaving the city till it had gone by the castle. Coming from the toilet she saw a middle-aged well-dressed man surrounded by expensive leather luggage near the doorway spit through the open window. He swung quickly to one side to avoid any blowback, as if he’d made the same gesture more than once. A handkerchief was also ready, and half covered his face. When he removed it and looked at her she saw a sallow complexion, dark neatly parted hair, a straight well-angled nose, and good teeth when he smiled. The scent was eau-de-cologne, and the mutual stare was short enough to give a feeling of complicity. She climbed happily over his cases as if she had drunk several tots of whisky yet did not feel giddy.

If someone asked why she had left her husband she wouldn’t have said anything because the answer she had been born with was embedded like a stone, not to be pulled prematurely into the glare of day without ripping her to pieces. She had lived and breathed too long with a monster she did not know how or when had been conceived. The heart had no way of creating words and giving it birth. But some day a reason would, with time and patience, be found for the riddance of everything that had tormented her since marrying George, and which had agonized her even before that, if she faced the truth which at the moment her thoughts only hinted at.

There was nothing to do except sit. She heard herself laughing at the fathomless drop opening abruptly beneath. The only space was the compartment, luckily empty, otherwise someone might have led her away as she screamed with amusement at distances opening on every side. She gripped the arm of the seat and pressed her cheek to the cold window. To leave home, husband and son for no good reason means I’m going off my head. She wiped tears and stood to look in the mirror, to find out whether or not she was actually laughing.

She had oblique grey eyes, a tinge of blue at happy times. Too much like a bloody cat’s, he had said more than once, now and again with a sentimental stare, but she’d hated her eyes for years because they had betrayed the way she felt, patience only built up and sustained by a false contentment. Her hair was long and brown, with no grey seams as yet. Maybe the grind of life had held it in suspension, and it would turn all at once now that she had left.

It was wrong to look at yourself. Before marriage there had been one mirror in the house, over the bathroom sink. The bond had broken under the strain. She saw herself anew. Her mouth was still full, lips shaped because, unlike most people she had known, she’d got her own teeth, and not yet the rabbit-grip George would have felt much easier living with. The fact of her being a few inches taller had often given him a rankling gaze. The raw bruise down her face was a memento from his fist, a reach that more than made up for his short body. If the knife had gone into his throat she would have left him by going to jail, and there would have been no mirrors there either, she imagined. If she had struck blood yet failed to kill, she would never have escaped from his life.

Lines of washing in back gardens flapped towards the place she was rapidly leaving. Clothes of all colours waved goodbye. The train was bully enough to push through any wind and to clear the clouds away, yet such free air could not disperse the ache that George still made her feel. He could crush himself from this point on. Perhaps he would even relish the chore of getting his own washing done now that she had a first-class ticket to St Pancras in her purse.

Despite pain from the mark he had given, she knew herself to be happy. When tears pushed at her eyes she could visualize his face, and reassure herself how lucky she was. The sensation wouldn’t last, but would be so much better for that, providing she enjoyed it while she could, for wouldn’t she, after wandering around the shops of London, and eating a nice Italian dinner in Soho, come back tonight and be in the same old bed again?