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Authors: Ruth Rendell

Asta's Book

BOOK: Asta's Book
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Asta’s Book

Ruth Rendell
Writing as Barbara Vine

In memory of my grandparents,
Anna Larsson and Mads Kruse

Contents

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

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26

27

28

29

30

Acknowledgments

My grandmother was a novelist without knowing it. She knew nothing about how to become a novelist and, if she had, it would never have occurred to her as feasible. The alternative path she took is now well-known.

This is a collection of papers and memories: my grandmother’s diaries, an account of a crime and a transcript of a trial, letters and documents and the things I remember. It is a double detective story, a quest for an identity and a quest for a lost child. At the same time it is a voyage of discovery and a witness to the triumph of chance.

At first I thought I must include the diaries in their entirety. It was impossible; I would have had a volume of a million words. Besides, most of my readers, if the sales figures are anything to go by, will already have read
Asta.
It seems to me sometimes that the whole world has read it. You may possess Parts I to IV and have them on your shelves, at least in the paperback editions. You will know that the passages I include are extracts only and if you want to put them in context have simply to consult your own copies. I have been obliged to choose the relevant passages—relevant, that is, to Swanny’s story and to Edith’s.

As to those few who have only heard of the diaries, heard them read on audio cassettes or seen the television adaptations, I would remind them that the notebooks themselves span sixty-two years, that those from 1905 to 1944 have already filled four fat volumes and that there are more to come.

It is the fashion to make films about how a film was made and television documentaries about producing documentaries. This book is about discovering a diary and about the long arm, nearly a century long, of artfulness and well-intentioned deceit.

Ann Eastbrook
Hampstead
1991

1

June 26th, 1905

IDAG TIL FORMIDDAG
da jeg gik i Byen var der en Kone, som spurgte mig om der gik Isbjørne paa Gaderne i København.

When I went out this morning a woman asked me if there were polar bears in the streets of Copenhagen. She is one of our neighbours and she stands behind her gate waiting for people to go by so that she can catch them, and gossip. She thinks I must be a savage and half-witted too because I’m not English and I don’t speak English well and stumble over words.

Most people here feel like that about us. It is not that there are no foreigners (as they see us), they are used to people from all over Europe, but they don’t like us, any of us. They say we live like animals and take away their jobs. What must it be like for little Mogens at school? He doesn’t tell me and I haven’t asked, I don’t want to know. I’d rather not know any more bad things. I’d like to know some good things but it’s a puzzle to find them, as hard as finding a flower in these long grey streets. I close my eyes and remember Hortensiavej, the birch trees and the snowberries.

This morning, in the great heat and sun—sunshine is never nice in a city—I went to the stationers at the corner of Richmond Road and bought this notebook. I practised what I would say, the words I’d use, and I must have got it right because instead of grinning and leaning over me with his hand cupping his ear, the man in the shop just nodded and offered me two kinds, a thick one with a stiff black cover for sixpence and a cheaper one with a paper cover and lined pages. I had to take the cheap one for I daren’t spend money on things like this. When Rasmus comes he will expect me to account for every penny I have spent, in spite of being the worst man in the world with money himself.

I haven’t kept a diary since I was married, though I did when I was a girl. The last words in the last one I wrote two days before my wedding and then, the next day, I came to a decision and burnt all my diaries. This was because I had made up my mind there would be no place for writing in my new life. A good wife must devote herself to her husband and to making his home. That’s what everyone told me and what I suppose I thought myself. I even thought there would be some pleasure about it. I was only seventeen and that’s my excuse.

Eight years have gone by and I feel differently about a lot of things. There’s no use moaning and no one to hear me if I do, still less to care, so what complaining I do I shall have to do in these pages. The funny thing is that once I had bought the notebook I felt a lot better. For no reason at all I felt hopeful. I was still all by myself in Lavender Grove with no one to talk to but Hansine—for what that’s worth—with two little boys and a dead one to think about and another coming. That wasn’t changed. Nor was the fact that I haven’t seen my husband for five months and haven’t heard from him for two. The notebook couldn’t take away the heavy weight of this child I carry, swinging on the front of me like a great sack of flour. It was my loneliness it changed, which is one of the worst things I have to bear in this horrible foreign country. In a strange sort of way it seemed to take the edge off my loneliness. I thought, I’ll have something to do this evening when Mogens and Knud are asleep. I’ll have someone to talk to. Instead of brooding about Rasmus, about how you can dislike someone and not want him yet be jealous of him, instead of worrying about the boys and what’s happening with this baby inside me, I’ll be able to write again. I’ll be able to write it all down.

And that’s what I’m doing now. Hansine has been in and brought me the newspaper. I told her I was writing letters and not to turn down the gas, which is what she usually does, all in the great cause of saving his money. It would still be light in Copenhagen at ten but it gets dark half an hour earlier here. Hansine has pointed this out three times since Midsummer Day, just as she tells me with peasant regularity that the days have started getting shorter. She asked me if I had heard from ‘Mr Westerby’. She always asks, though she knows the postman comes next door on both sides but never here. Why does she care? I believe she feels worse about him than I do, if possible. Probably she thinks that if he doesn’t come back we three will end in the workhouse and she will lose her place.

The second time she came she wanted to make tea for me but I told her to go to bed. Soon, if no money comes, we shall all have to eat less and perhaps she will get thinner. Poor thing, she’s so fat and getting fatter. I wonder if it’s due to the white bread. None of us had ever tasted white bread before we came to England. The boys loved it and ate so much of it that they were sick. Now we have put the rye-bread cutter Tante Frederikke gave me for a wedding present away in a cupboard. I don’t think we’ll ever use it again. Yesterday I opened the cupboard and looked at it, it has become a symbol to me of our old life and I felt my eyes burn with tears. But I won’t cry. That was the last time I cried, when Mads died, and I never will again.

This room where I’m sitting, the ‘drawing room’, would be tiny if I didn’t keep the folding doors to the dining room open. All the landlord’s furniture is ugly but for the mirror which is just a little bit less ugly than the rest of it, an oblong glass in a mahogany frame with carved mahogany leaves and flowers twining about the top of it. A branch with carved leaves on it actually comes across the glass, something I expect the carver thought very clever. I can see myself in this mirror, sitting at the circular table with its marble top and iron legs. It is like the tables I see in public houses when I pass their open doors. I am sitting in a chair that is covered up with a bit of brown and red tapestry to hide the worn patches where the horsehair is coming through.

The curtains are not drawn. Sometimes a carriage goes by, or more likely a cart in this dreary place, and sometimes I hear a horse stumble on the pitted road. If I look to the right I can see the garden outside the french windows, a tiny yard with bushes covered with blackish-green leaves that are the same winter and summer. This house is very small but the same number of rooms are crowded into it as in a proper size house. It’s run-down and shabby round here, but pretentious, and that’s what makes me angry.

In the mirror, in the pale gaslight, I can see just the upper half of myself, my thin face and my reddish hair that is coming loose from its pins and hanging beside my cheeks in wisps. I have the bluest eyes Rasmus ever saw, he told me before we were married, before I knew about the 5,000 kroner. But perhaps anyway it wasn’t a compliment. Blue eyes aren’t necessarily beautiful and I’m sure mine aren’t. They are too blue, too bright, the kind of colour that is better on a peacock or a kingfisher. In fact, they are exactly the colour of the butterfly’s wing in the brooch I had from Tante Frederikke for my sixteenth birthday.

Not that it matters what colour they are. No one looks at an old woman’s eyes and I feel like an old woman, though I’m not quite twenty-five. That has reminded me to put the brooch on tomorrow. I like to wear it, not because it’s pretty—it isn’t—or because it flatters me—it doesn’t—but, well, maybe out of what Rasmus calls my perversity and waywardness. I wear it to make people think, does that woman know that brooch is exactly the colour of her eyes? And, that woman ought to know better than to show up the ugly colour of her eyes. I like that. It’s the kind of thing I enjoy, speculating about what people think of me.

The intolerable sun went down half an hour ago, dusk has come and it’s quite dark outside now and very quiet. The street lamps are lit but it is still warm and close. I haven’t recorded much on my first day of writing my new diary and I must record something, so I’ll write down what I read in the paper about an awful accident to a Danish cadet training ship. I only read it because the
Georg Stage
is Danish and the accident happened near Copenhagen. A British steamer rammed into it in the dark and twenty-two young boys on board were killed. They were very young, from fourteen to sixteen. Still, I don’t suppose I knew any of them or their parents.

June 28th, 1905

My baby is due on July 31st. Now, whenever she comes, it will be written down that July 31st is the day she was expected. I’ve put ‘she’. Hansine would say that’s tempting Providence. Luckily for me, she can’t read. She gossips with people she meets when she goes out shopping, her English is awful but fluent and she doesn’t mind making a fool of herself. I do and that’s probably why my progress is so slow. But she can’t read any language. If she could I wouldn’t dare write in Danish which means not writing at all as I’m incapable of producing a line of English. ‘She’—I want a girl. There’s no one I dare tell that to and anyway no one here would care. Imagine saying something like that to the woman who asked me about the polar bears!

I wanted a girl last time, insofar as I wanted a baby at all, and instead it was poor little Mads who came along. He was dead within a month. So there, I have recorded that too. I do want this baby and I do want my daughter. Even if Rasmus never comes back, even if the worst happens and we have to make our way to Korsør and throw ourselves upon the mercy of Tante Frederikke and Farbror Holger, I want my daughter.

But I wish she would move. I know babies don’t shift about so much in the last weeks. I should know, I’ve had three. I wish I could remember how it was with Mads. Did he go on moving about right up to the end? Did the others? Are girls different and might her stillness be a sign she’s a girl? Next time and I expect there will be a next time, for that’s woman’s lot, I’ll know. I won’t need to remember, I’ll have my diary and it makes me feel better to write these things down.

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