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ation。 It had been the happiest guidance session she had ever known。
‘Were they going to interview you because of rowing?’ asked Tessa。 ‘The crew again?’
‘No;’ said Krystal。 ‘Other stuff。’ Then; ‘When’s his funeral?’
‘We don’t know yet;’ said Tessa。
Krystal gnawed at her nails; and Tessa could not summon the energy to break the silence that solidified around them。
X
The announcement of Barry’s death on the Parish Council website sank with barely a ripple; a tiny pebble into the teeming ocean。 All the same; the telephone lines in Pagford were busier than usual this Monday; and little knots of pedestrians kept congregating on the narrow pavements to check; in shocked tones; the exactness of their information。
As the news travelled; an odd transmutation took place。 It happened to the signature dotting the files in Barry’s office and to the emails littering inboxes of his enormous acquaintance; which began to take on the pathos of the crumb trail of a lost boy in a forest。 These rapid scribbles; the pixels arranged by fingers henceforth forever still; acquired the macabre aspect of husks。 Gavin was already a little repelled by the sight of his dead friend’s texts on his phone; and one of the girls from the rowing eight; still crying as she walked back from assembly; found a form that Barry had signed in her school bag; and became almost hysterical。
The twenty…three…year…old journalist at the Yarvil and District Gazette had no idea that Barry’s once busy brain was now a heavy handful of spongy tissue on a metal tray in South West General。 She read through what he had emailed her an hour before his death; then called his mobile number; but nobody answered。 Barry’s phone; which he had turned off at Mary’s request before they left for the golf club; was sitting silently beside the microwave in the kitchen; along with the rest of his personal effects that the hospital had given her to take home。 Nobody had touched them。 These familiar objects – his key fob; his phone; his worn old wallet – seemed like pieces of the dead man himself; they might have been his fingers; his lungs。
Onwards and outwards the news of Barry’s death spread; radiating; halo…like; from those who had been at the hospital。 Onwards and outwards as far as Yarvil; reaching those who knew Barry only by sight or reputation or by name。 Gradually the facts lost form and focus; in some cases they became distorted。 In places; Barry himself was lost behind the nature of his ending; and he became no more than an eruption of vomit and piss; a twitching pile of catastrophe; and it seemed incongruous; even grotesquely ical; that a man should have died so messily at the smug little golf club。
So it was that Simon Price; who had been one of the first to hear about Barry’s death; in his house on top of the hill overlooking Pagford; met a rebounding version at the Harcourt…Walsh printworks in Yarvil where he had worked ever since leaving school。 It was borne to him on the lips of a young; gum…chewing forklift driver; whom Simon found skulking beside his office door; after a late…afternoon return from the bathroom。
The boy had not e; in the first place; to discuss Barry at all。
The boy chewed vigorously; Simon could hear his saliva working。 Gum…chewing was one of Simon’s many pet hates。
‘It’s the proper thing; though; is it?’ Simon demanded。 ‘Not some knock…off piece of crap?’
‘e straight from the warehouse;’ said the boy; shifting his feet and his shoulders。 ‘Real thing; still boxed up。’
‘All right; then;’ said Simon。 ‘Bring it in Wednesday。’
‘What; here?’ The boy rolled his eyes。 ‘Nah; not to work; mate … Where d’you live?’
‘Pagford;’ said Simon。
‘Where’bouts in Pagford?’
Simon’s aversion to naming his home bordered on the superstitious。 He not only disliked visitors – invaders of his privacy and possible despoilers of his property – but he saw Hilltop House as inviolate; immaculate; a world apart from Yarvil and the crashing; grinding printworks。
‘I’ll e and pick it up after work;’ said Simon; ignoring the question。 ‘Where are you keeping it?’
The boy did not look happy。 Simon glared at him。
‘Well; I’d need the cash upfront;’ the forklift driver temporized。
‘You get the money when I’ve got the goods。’
‘Dun’ work like that; mate。’
Simon thought he might be developing a headache。 He could not dislodge the horrible idea; implanted by his careless wife that morning; that a tiny bomb might tick undetected for ages inside a man’s brain。 The steady clatter and rumble of the printing press beyond the door was surely not good for him; its relentless battery might have been thinning his artery walls for years。
‘All right;’ he grunted; and rolled over in his chair to extract his wallet from his back pocket。 The boy stepped up to the desk; his hand out。
‘D’yeh live anywhere near Pagford golf course?’ he asked; as Simon counted out tenners into his palm。 ‘Mate o’ mine was up there las’ night; an’ saw a bloke drop dead。 Jus’ fuckin’ puked an’ keeled over an’ died in the car park。’
‘Yeah; I heard;’ said Simon; massaging the last note between his fingers before he passed it over; to make sure there were not two stuck together。
‘Bent councillor; he was。 The bloke who died。 He was takin’ backhanders。 Grays was paying him to keep them on as contractors。’
‘Yeah?’ said Simon; but he was immensely interested。
Barry Fairbrother; who’d have thought it?
‘I’ll get back ter yeh; then;’ said the boy; shoving the eighty pounds deep into his back pocket。 ‘And we’ll go an’ get it; Wednesday。’
The office door closed。 Simon forgot his headache; which was really no more than a twinge; in his fascination at the revelation of Barry Fairbrother’s crookedness。 Barry Fairbrother; so busy and sociable; so popular and cheerful: and all the time; trousering bribes from Grays。
The news did not rock Simon as it would have done nearly everybody else who had known Barry; nor did it diminish Barry in his eyes; on the contrary; he felt an increased respect for the dead man。 Anyone with any brains was working; constantly and covertly; t