utensils. Through the window was a fantastic cityscape of bleak places and deprived people and cranes and furnaces. The people were part of the objects, seemed somehow enslaved by them. I remember a face looking out of a closed tenement window as if through bars. It was meant, Scott had told me, to be an echo of the face that was looking at his painting. I remember a manâs face seeming liquid in the glow of his own blowtorch,as if he were melting down himself. The whole thing was rendered in great naturalistic detail, down to recognisably working-class faces below the bonnets, but the total effect was a nightmare vision. On the left of the kitchen window, like an inaccurate inset scale on some mad map, was a small, square picture. It was painted in sugary colours in vivid contrast to the scene outside. It showed an idealised Highland glen with heather and a cottage pluming smoke from the chimney and a shepherd and his dog heading towards it. Scott had called his painting âScotlandâ.
The painting became the empty patch on the wall again. So easy was it to erase that fiercely felt vision. The room was anybodyâs, nobodyâs. Even the carpet had been lifted. Anna had always been thrifty.
I crunched across the chips and went round the side of the house. There was a wooden door set in the wall around the garden. It was locked. I put my foot on the door-handle, pulled myself up and dropped over. The back area was just an outhouse, a garage and a patch of grass. Gardening hadnât been one of Scottâs passions.
I wandered around a while, peered in the kitchen window. The place was empty and clean. Anna had always been a good house-keeper. I looked at the patch of grass. I could remember sitting there a few times on travelling rugs during sunny Sundays, with Scott and Anna and Ena. The children were playing around us and we sipped beer. Our desultory talk from those times seemed to hang in the air about me. Our plans had been motes, just sun motes.
The outhouse door wasnât locked. I looked in. There was an old rusted lawn-mower, a rake, some lengths of wood, asmall bag of tubes of oil-paint, nearly all of them squeezed empty. This was it so soon?
I felt I might as well have stumbled upon an archaeological site. You would be hard pushed already to tell who had lived here, unless you adopted the expertsâ technique of constructing an elaborate edifice of theory on a minute base of fact that couldnât support it. Scottâs memorial was how much his house fetched and this handful of rubbish.
Then I saw it. I wasnât sure what it was at first. It was behind some pieces of board, face to the wall. I had thought it was just another board itself till I noticed the varnish shining and knew it was a frame. I extricated it. It was Scottâs painting, âScotlandâ.
Holding the painting up, I couldnât believe it. What had happened between them that Anna should do this? She knew how much it had meant to Scott. I was angry.
I found an old, black bin-bag and put the painting in it. I came out and closed the outhouse door. I balanced the painting on the garage-roof that abutted on to the garden door. I climbed the door and brought the painting with me on the way down. I was putting the painting in the boot of the car when a neighbour crossed the street towards me. I didnât know him.
âExcuse me,â he said. âWhat are you doing?â
âJust visiting,â I said.
âYou can only view by appointment.â
âIâve seen all I need to see.â
âWhatâs that youâve got there?â
âWho the hell are you?â I said. âThe Keeper of the Suburbs?â
As soon as I said it, I felt bad. The man was right enough. He had seen a stranger poking around an empty house.
âLook,â I said.
I took out my identity-card and showed it to him.
âIâm Scott Laidlawâs brother. Iâm just collecting something