Robert Goddard - Borrowed Time
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- Название:Borrowed Time
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“I spent most of the next week drifting down through Germany, Austria and the Balkans, buying day-old English newspapers at every stop in search of information about what line the police were following, what clues they’d found at the scene. The panic attacks lessened. The fear of imminent arrest ebbed away. Then came creeping revulsion at what I’d done. An inability to believe I’d done it so strong I started quite genuinely to doubt I had. My geographical remoteness from the crime became a psychological remoteness as well. My memory told me what had happened, but my conscience refused to accept it. It was partly a survival mechanism, I suppose. A way of coping with the guilt. A method of evading responsibility for my actions. It was Louise’s fault for provoking me beyond endurance. Bantock’s for barging in when he did. Naylor’s for grabbing and soiling what I’d not been allowed to touch. Anybody’s fault. Except mine.
“I still didn’t know who Naylor was then, of course. When I read of his arrest, I was briefly tempted to go to the nearest British Consulate and turn myself in. Then I thought I’d wait to see if he was charged. When he was-with rape as well as murder-I realized exactly who he must be and why the police were bound to think they’d found the culprit. I was in the clear. And suddenly it seemed not merely a matter of luck but of fate. Destiny had decreed I shouldn’t be punished and Naylor should. Who was I to argue? It was only fair, after all. It was only as it should be. I hadn’t known what I was doing. I’d lost control. In France, they’d have dismissed it as a crime of passion, an understandable and pardonable surrender to anger and jealousy. As for Naylor, well, there was an ironic form of justice in the likelihood that he’d suffer for what I’d done. Because he’d goaded me into doing it in the first place.
“So I told myself, anyway. It sounds contemptible, I know. It is contemptible. But you don’t know what excuses and justifications the mind is capable of until you find yourself in such an extreme situation. Louise was dead. So was Bantock. I couldn’t bring them back to life by confessing to their murders. And Naylor was nothing to me. He was nothing compared with me. I had a successful and worthwhile life ahead of me. I had the chance to redeem myself by hard work and respectability. Whereas he was just some sordid nonentity who’d be as happy in a prison cell as he would be on the streets. Sacrificing myself to save him would be a pointless waste. It would only make matters worse than they already were. I had endless conversations with myself on the subject, turning it round and round like a debating point. I even convinced myself Louise would have forgiven me and urged me not to confess. I saw her occasionally in my dreams. Even more beautiful than the reality had been. So serene. So understanding. And I kept hearing her voice. Speaking the words she’d used that afternoon in Holland Park. ‘ Let’s forget this ever happened. Let’s write it off as an unfortunate misunderstanding .’ In the end, it seemed to be her will I was yielding to, her last wish I was respecting. I’d murdered her, yes. But by letting Naylor take the blame, I was protecting her reputation. She could be remembered as a faithful wife and a devoted mother. So long as I held my tongue.
“I got home in late August, sure by then that nothing could implicate me in the murders and that my conscience, though it could never be clear, was at least secure. I wrote a letter of condolence to Sarah and got a polite but guarded reply. I decided to leave it at that. Our paths had divided and I was confident they’d never cross again. I went back to Cambridge in October determined to start my life over again. To re-create myself and in the process cast aside forever the memory of the things I’d done that night at Whistler’s Cot.
“I succeeded. I made new friends and threw myself into new activities. By the time the trial started, I was beyond its reach, so safe in my busy self-regarding world that I didn’t even read the newspaper reports of its progress. It was only thanks to another student who’d known Sarah that I learnt of Naylor’s conviction. And do you know what I felt when I heard the sentence? Relieved. That’s what. Just relieved it was over. Just glad he was going to be locked away for twenty years. Just happy to know I could forget all about him.
“But I couldn’t, could I? Not as it turned out. Because after graduation I toyed with several job offers, thinking one wasn’t much different from another, and accepted a post with Metropolitan Mutual Insurance. A fatal mistake, I suppose you could say. Because it meant moving to Bristol. Where Sarah had gone to take her articles. And Rowena had also gone, to study mathematics. I didn’t know they were living there, of course. I had absolutely no idea. Until the day I bumped into Sarah in Park Street.
“It seemed no big deal at the time. A coincidence I could simply brush off. But Sarah invited me to dinner and I could hardly refuse. So I went out to Clifton one night and met Rowena for the first time. Early January of last year. Not long ago really. Not long at all. Yet in other ways it seems… Sarah admitted later that she was keen for Rowena to meet as many new people as possible. It was only six weeks or so since she’d tried to commit suicide. Sarah thought varied company might take her out of herself. That’s really why she invited me.
“It started slowly. As an attraction to the things in Rowena that reminded me of Louise. A rapport developed between us, based on a subconscious awareness that we were both suppressing something. In Rowena’s case, doubts about her mother’s death. In my case, the knowledge of what really lay behind those doubts. She was lovely as well, of course. Lovely and vulnerable. Right from the beginning, I wanted to protect her. To shield her from a truth I thought she’d be unable to bear. And to shield myself at the same time. Chance had given me the opportunity to repair some of the damage I’d done and to silence the voice that still whispered reproaches to me in the long watches of the night. It seemed as if fate had taken a hand in my life once more.
“And so it had. But not in the way I thought. I married Rowena and for a while everything seemed perfect. Loving her made me see my obsession with Louise for what it had truly been: a shallow delusion. But its consequences endured. Whether the secret I always had to keep ate away at Rowena’s trust in me or whether she just wasn’t quite capable of abandoning her doubts I’m not sure, but something was wrong even before the book appeared, let alone the TV programme. And then there was the pregnancy, of course. How that affected her I don’t know. But she didn’t tell me about it, did she? So maybe it wasn’t good news as far as she was concerned. Maybe it just added to her problems. Made her future seem as doubt-ridden as her past. And just as intolerable.
“I shouldn’t have tried to keep her in the dark. That’s obvious now. But I was afraid that facing up to the rumours and speculation would eventually oblige me to tell her the whole truth. Secrecy becomes a habit, you see. More than a necessity. A way of life, almost. It can’t just be shrugged off. It doesn’t work like that. So my response to the growing interest in the case was to block it off and pretend it didn’t exist. It was all grotesquely misplaced anyway. Oscar Bantock may or may not have been a forger. But I knew better than anyone why he’d died. And forgery didn’t come into it.
“Except in the sense that my whole life had become a forgery. A convincing but counterfeit piece of work. A sham based on a lie. The only genuine thing in it was my love for Rowena. When she threw herself from the bridge, she took the purpose of my deception with her. She exposed my forgery. For the world to see.
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