‘You know,’ said Betty, ‘teaching at that place has done horrible things to your language.’
‘It’s done horrible things to my outlook on life, never mind my language,’ said Braintree. ‘It’s enough to drive a man to drink.’
‘It certainly seems to have done that to Henry. His breath reeked of gin.’
‘He’ll get over it’
But Wilt didn’t. He woke in the morning with the feeling that something was missing quite apart from Eva. That bloody doll. He lay in bed trying to think of some way of retrieving the thing before the workmen arrived on the site on Monday morning but apart from pouring a can of petrol down the hole and lighting it, which seemed on reflection the best way of drawing attention to the fact that he had stuffed a plastic doll dressed in his wife’s clothes down there, he could think of nothing practical. He would just have to trust to luck.
When the Sunday papers came he got out of bed and went down to read them over his All-Bran. Then he fed the dog and mooched about the house in his pyjamas, walked down to the Ferry Path inn for lunch, slept in the afternoon and watched the box all evening. Then he made the bed and got into it and spent a restless night wondering where Eva was, what she was doing and why, since he had occupied so many fruitless hours speculating on ways of getting rid of her homicidally, he should be in the least concerned now that she had gone of her own accord.
‘I mean if I didn’t want this to happen why did I keep thinking up ways of killing her,’ he thought at two o’clock. ‘Sane people don’t go for walks with a Labrador and devise schemes for murdering their wives when they can just as easily divorce them.’ There was probably some foul psychological reason for it. Wilt could think of several himself, rather too many in fact to be able to decide which was the most likely one. In any case a psychological explanation demanded a degree of self-knowledge which Wilt, who wasn’t at all sure he had a self to know, felt was denied him. Ten years of Plasterers Two and Exposure to Barbarism had at least given him the insight to know that there was an answer for every question and it didn’t much matter what answer you gave so long as you gave it convincingly. In the fourteenth century they would have said the devil put such thoughts into his head, now in a post Freduian world it had to be a complex or, to be really up to date, a chemical imbalance. In a hundred years they would have come up with some completely different explanation. With the comforting thought that the truths of one age were the absurdities of another and that it didn’t much matter what you thought so long as you did the right thing, and in his view he did, Wilt finally fell asleep.
At seven he was woken by the alarm clock and by half past eight had parked his car in the parking lot behind the Tech. He walked past the building site where the workmen were already at work. Then he went up to the Staff Room and looked out of the window. The square of plywood was still in place covering the hole but the pile-boring machine had been backed away. They had evidently finished with it.
At five to nine he collected twenty-five copies of Shane from the cupboard and took them across to Motor Mechanics Three. Shane was the ideal soporific. It would keep the brutes quiet while he sat and watched what happened down below. Room 593 in the Engineering block gave him a grandstand view. Wilt filled in the register and handed out copies of Shane and told the class to get on with it. He said it with a good deal more vigour than was usual even for a Monday morning and the class settled down to consider the plight of the homesteaders while Wilt stared out of the window, absorbed in a more immediate drama.
A lorry with a revolving drum filled with liquid concrete had arrived on the site and was backing slowly towards the plywood square. It stopped and there was an agonising wait while the driver climbed down from the cab and lit a cigarette. Another man, evidently the foreman, came out of a wooden hut and wandered across to the lorry and presently a little group was gathered round the hole. Wilt got up from his desk and went over to the window. Why the hell didn’t they get a move on? Finally the driver got back into his cab and two men removed the plywood. The foreman signalled to the driver. The chute for the concrete was swung into position. Another signal. The drums began to tilt. The concrete was coming. Wilt watched as it began to pour down the chute and just at that moment the foreman looked down the hole. So did one of the workmen. The next instant all hell had broken loose. There were frantic signals and shouts from the foreman. Through the window Wilt watched the open mouths and the gesticulations but still the concrete came. Wilt shut his eyes and shuddered. They had found that fucking doll.
Outside on the building site the, air was chick with misunderstanding.
‘What’s that? I’m pouring as fast as I can.’ shouted the driver, misconstruing the frenzied signals of the foreman. He pulled the lever still further and the concrete flood increased. The next moment he was aware that he had made some sort of mistake. The foreman was wrenching at the door of the cab and screaming blue murder.
‘Stop, for God’s sake stop,’ he shouted. ‘There’s a woman down that hole!’
‘A what?’ said the driver, and switched off the engine.
‘A fucking woman and look what you’ve been and fucking done. I told you to stop. I told you to stop pouring and you went on. You’ve been and poured twenty tons of liquid concrete on her.’
The driver climbed down from his cab and went round to the chute where the last trickles of cement were still sliding hesitantly into the hole.
‘A woman?’ he said. ‘What? Down that hole? What’s she doing down there?’
The foreman stared at him demonically. ‘Doing?’ he bellowed, ‘what do you think she’s doing? What would you be doing if you’d just had twenty tons of liquid concrete dumped on top of you? Fucking drowning, that’s what.’
The driver scratched his head. ‘Well I didn’t know she was down there. How was I to know? You should have told me.’
‘Told you?’ shrieked the foreman. ‘I told you. I told you to stop. You weren’t listening.’
‘I thought you wanted me to pour faster. I couldn’t hear what you were saying.’
‘Well, every other bugger could,’ yelled the foreman. Certainly Wilt in Room 593 could. He stared wild-eyed out of the window as the panic spread. Beside him Motor Mechanics Three had lost all interest in Shane. They clustered at the window and watched.
‘Are you quite sure?’ asked the driver.
‘Sure? Course I’m sure,’ yelled the foreman. ‘Ask Barney.’
The other workman, evidently Barney, nodded. ‘She was down there all right. I’ll vouch for that. All crumpled up she was. She had one hand up in the air and her legs was…’
‘Jesus,’ said the driver, visibly shaken. ‘What the hell are we going to do now?’
It was a question that had been bothering Wilt. Call the Police, presumably. The foreman confirmed his opinion. ‘Get the cops. Get an ambulance. Get the Fire Brigade and get a pump. For God’s sake get a pump.’
‘Pump’s no good,’ said the driver, ‘you’ll never pump that concrete out of there, not in a month of Sundays. Anyway it wouldn’t do any good. She’ll be dead by now. Crushed to death. Wouldn’t drown with twenty tons on her. Why didn’t she say something?’