A Killing Frost. Margaret Haffner
When finally her fit ceased, Catherine leaned on the doorframe. She’d have to find the vacuum cleaner as soon as possible, she decided, sniffing and wiping her streaming eyes. The dust wouldn’t wait after all.
‘Tomorrow, we’ll go over to the high school and register you,’ Catherine said as they ate dinner. ‘We have an appointment with the vice-principal at nine-thirty.’ Noticing the frown on Morgan’s face, she reached out a comforting hand. ‘I know it’s tough to start at a new school, but at least it’s the beginning of the year. There’ll be lots of new kids.’
‘In Atawan? They were probably all born here. Who would move to a place like this?’
‘We would. And so would the other staff at Agromics … and their families. I’m sure Atawan is more dynamic than it looks.’
‘That wouldn’t be hard.’ Morgan got up and started clearing the table. ‘Are you going to work tomorrow?’
‘Just for the afternoon. You can go for a walk or something.’ She pointed out of the kitchen window. ‘There’s a belt of trees behind the house that looks worth investigating.’
After their gourmet dinner, Catherine decided to look for the vacuum cleaner while Morgan washed the dishes. The only part of the house she hadn’t yet been in was the basement. At the top of the steep stairway she flicked the light switch. Nothing. ‘Damn,’ she hissed in exasperation. She hated dark, musty places. Where had she seen a flashlight?
Carrying both a flashlight and a new light bulb, Catherine carefully negotiated the open staircase. She directed the wavering circle of light towards the ceiling, illuminating the open rafters and cobwebs and then at last a naked light bulb hanging from a frayed cord.
She stood on a rickety chair and stretched to twist in the new bulb with her right hand. She leaned her weak left arm, injured in a car accident two years before, against the back of the chair for an illusion of security. When the bulb blazed into life she squinted and turned away. Even with the light, most of the basement still lurked in shadow. When she had agreed to rent the house, Catherine hadn’t bothered examining the cellar – furnaces and plumbing were unknown territories for her. Now, as she looked around, she wished she’d taken the time. The age of the house showed all too clearly down here.
By the stairs, a relatively new washer and dryer were paired with the laundry sink and the hot-water tank. The rest of the space between the bare rock walls was dotted with the accumulated detritus of years past. Catherine skirted an old baby carriage and the cannibalized corpse of a bicycle to examine the deep shelves on the far wall. They were lined with preserving jars – a few of them looked full. She ran her fingers over the dusty labels. Strawberry jam. Peach chutney. Chilli sauce. Lifting one jar she examined the seal. It looked intact. ‘I wonder if I should use this stuff?’ she murmured. She turned the jar in her fingers. ‘How old is it?’ She shrugged and put it back as another container caught her eye. It looked like a jar of grey dirt. Picking it up, she peered at it in the dim light. It resembled the samples she took to collect certain species of soil fungi. The handwritten label said: ‘Sample sent to Colton Laboratories, October 7’. The next line gave what looked like a lot and concession number. As Catherine returned the jar to the shelf she couldn’t help wondering about the previous inhabitant of the house. Another scientist?
Turning away from the shelves, she noticed the small window above her head. Outside, the dusk had deepened to night and presented a dark backdrop to her pale reflection. She reached up and felt the window frame. It was soft and rotted. She shivered. She didn’t need any visitors sneaking into her house – she’d had enough unpleasant surprises in the past year to last a lifetime. She’d have to have her landlord secure the opening as soon as possible.
On the far side of the furnace, she at last found the vacuum cleaner. It looked old and heavy but the agent had insisted all the appliances worked. She lugged it upstairs, plugged it in and got to work, forgetting all about the window.
‘Let me look at you.’ Catherine studied her daughter, head cocked to one side. ‘Don’t you think that skirt’s a little short?’
‘It’s the style,’ Morgan replied impatiently. ‘And besides, what about you? Should you wear pants the first day on the job?’ She ran a critical eye over her mother. The hair rinse she’d talked her into using covered the grey threads and made her look younger. And she was very slim – they both were. They hadn’t felt like eating over the summer.
‘You know I prefer comfort to style,’ Catherine replied.
‘Yeah, but I don’t.’ Morgan flicked her skirt and pointed a fashionably shod toe. She headed for the door. ‘Let’s get this over with.’
They climbed into their ancient Datsun which sputtered a few times, then coughed into life. Sometimes Catherine wondered if she were being silly, refusing to drive Paul’s Volvo but she just couldn’t bring herself to use it. She couldn’t even see a Volvo without a wave of depression overtaking her. ‘I think the school’s on this side of town,’ she said, ‘so you won’t have too far to walk.’
At the school Catherine tapped lightly on the vice-principal’s door and a rich, feminine voice invited them to come in.
Mrs Beneteau walked forward to greet them, smoothing her blue gaberdine skirt over her ample hips. Morgan’s set expression relaxed a little in the warmth of the vice-principal’s smile. ‘Nice to meet you, Morgan,’ she said, shaking the girl’s hand firmly. ‘I’ll have Mr Enright, the art teacher, show you around the school while your mother fills out the forms. I think you’ll find our facilities excellent despite the fact we’re a small school.’
Mr Enright, a plump young man bearing an uncanny resemblance to Winnie the Pooh, appeared in the doorway. ‘Pleased to meet you, Morgan,’ he said, shaking her hand. ‘If you come with me, we’ll start with the art room. It’s my kingdom.’
After a nervous glance at her mother, Morgan followed her guide.
‘Now,’ said Mrs Beneteau, sitting down behind her desk, ‘let’s get the paperwork done and then we can have a chat. I like to get to know my students’ parents.’ She motioned Catherine to a chair. ‘It’s too bad Morgan’s father couldn’t come with you.’
That too familiar constriction formed in Catherine’s breast but she ignored it. ‘He had to stay in Kingsport,’ she replied without elaborating.
Mrs Beneteau couldn’t miss her visitor’s tension. ‘Are you and Mr Edison divorced?’
‘In the process,’ Catherine said repressively. ‘Morgan doesn’t like to talk about her father at the moment.’
‘I see,’ said Mrs Beneteau in a voice which implied disbelief. Catherine knew the woman thought it was she who didn’t want to talk about him, not Morgan. She didn’t defend herself, turning instead to fill in the questionnaire in front of her.
‘We’ve received Morgan’s records from Kingsport District High School,’ the vice-principal commented, indicating the folder on her desk. ‘She seems to be an excellent student, though her last term marks slipped quite a bit … Marital breakup often adversely affects the children.’ The woman’s sharp eyes bored into Catherine’s defiant ones.
‘So I’ve heard,’ Catherine replied and clamped her lips shut on a cutting remark the woman didn’t deserve. Morgan’s marks were marvellous under the circumstances.
Mrs Beneteau felt the chill and reverted to small talk. ‘I hope you’ll like Atawan. We’re a close-knit community but we welcome newcomers.’ She noted Catherine’s Ph.D. and profession on the form Catherine had thrust at her. ‘Especially people like you and your daughter.’ She laced her fingers together and rested her hands on the desk. ‘Do you and Morgan enjoy swimming?’
Catherine nodded.
‘We