jutting again; and Andrew wanted to roar at his mother to stay silent: she blabbed when any idiot could have told her she should keep quiet, and she kept quiet when she might have done good by speaking out; she never learned, she never saw any of it coming.
Nobody spoke for a minute. Ruth dabbed at her eyes with the back of her hand and sniffed intermittently. Simon clutched his toe, his jaw clenched, breathing loudly. Andrew licked the blood from his stinging lip, which he could feel swelling.
'This'll cost me my fucking job,' said Simon, staring wild-eyed around the room, as if there might be somebody there he had forgotten to hit. 'They're already talking about fucking redundancies. This'll be it. This'll - ' He slapped the lamp off the end table, but it didn't break, merely rolled on the floor. He picked it up, tugged the lead out of the wall socket, raised it over his head and threw it at Andrew, who dodged.
'Who's fucking talked?' Simon yelled, as the lamp base broke apart on the wall. 'Someone's fucking talked!'
'It's some bastard at the printworks, isn't it?' Andrew shouted back; his lip was thick and throbbing; it felt like a tangerine segment. 'D'you think we'd have - d'you think we don't know how to keep our mouths shut by now?'
It was like trying to read a wild animal. He could see the muscles working in his father's jaw, but he could tell that Simon was considering Andrew's words.
'When was that put on there?' he roared at Ruth. 'Look at it! What's the date on it?'
Still sobbing, she peered at the screen, needing to approach the tip of her nose within two inches of it, now that her glasses were broken.
'The fifteenth,' she whispered.
'Fifteenth ... Sunday,' said Simon. 'Sunday, wasn't it?'
Neither Andrew nor Ruth put him right. Andrew could not believe his luck; nor did he believe it would hold.
'Sunday,' said Simon, 'so anyone could've - my fucking toe,' he yelled, as he pulled himself up and limped exaggeratedly towards Ruth. 'Get out of my way!'
She hastened out of the chair and watched him read the paragraph through again. He kept snorting like an animal to clear his airways. Andrew thought that he might be able to garrotte his father as he sat there, if only there was a wire to hand.
'Someone's got all this from work,' said Simon, as if he had just reached this conclusion, and had not heard his wife or son urging the hypothesis on him. He placed his hands on the keyboard and turned to Andrew. 'How do I get rid of it?'
'What?'
'You do fucking computing! How do I get this off here?'
'You can't get - you can't,' said Andrew. 'You'd need to be the administrator.'
'Make yourself the administrator, then,' said Simon, jumping up and pointing Andrew into the swivel chair.
'I can't make myself the administrator,' said Andrew. He was afraid that Simon was working himself up into a second bout of violence. 'You need to input the right user name and passwords.'
'You're a real fucking waste of space, aren't you?'
Simon shoved Andrew in the middle of his sternum as he limped past, knocking him back into the mantelpiece.
'Pass me the phone!' Simon shouted at his wife, as he sat back down in the armchair.
Ruth took the telephone and carried it the few feet to Simon. He ripped it out of her hands and punched in a number.
Andrew and Ruth waited in silence as Simon called, first Jim, and then Tommy, the men with whom he had completed the after-hours jobs at the printworks. Simon's fury, his suspicion of his own accomplices, was funnelled down the telephone in curt short sentences full of swearwords.
Paul had not returned. Perhaps he was still trying to staunch his bleeding nose, but more likely he was too scared. Andrew thought his brother unwise. It was safest to leave only after Simon had given you permission.
His calls completed, Simon held out the telephone to Ruth without speaking; she took it and hurried it back into its stand.
Simon sat thinking while his fractured toe pulsated, sweating in the heat of the wood-burner, awash with impotent fury. The beating to which he had subjected his wife and son was nothing, he did not give them a thought; a terrible thing had just happened to him, and naturally his rage had exploded on those nearest him; that was how life worked. In any case, Ruth, the silly bitch, had admitted to telling