Read Catastrophe Practice Online
Authors: Nicholas Mosley
There was a faint singing or gurgling noise coming from inside the caravan. It was like someone blowing rainbows.
He picked up his reel of film.
A voice from inside the caravan said â âHullo, darling!'
He thought he might say â Hullo!
The voice from inside the caravan, or as if from a cloud, said âAnd how are you this morning?'
He thought he might say â Very well, thank you.
He went toward the caravan. On the steps, as if delivered â by a milkman? more fairies? â were placed, neatly, a carton of milk, a packet of cereal, a tin of biscuits, and a bag of nappies.
Anderson stood with the cardboard box with his film in it clutched against his middle.
Lilia's voice said âIsn't this a pretty place! With such nice curtains!'
Anderson put one foot on the steps of the caravan. He knocked. He thought â Will I appear to be an angel?
After a time the door of the caravan opened and Lilia looked out: with her pale hair, and bright black eyes. She carried her baby, who was like the moon, over her shoulder.
Then, looking down at the steps, she said âHow terribly kind!'
Anderson said âBut it wasn't me!'
She said âWho was it then?'
As Lilia bent down to pick the things up off the steps, the baby's head swung forwards and upside down and gazed at him intently as if it were the sun.
Anderson said âAwa, awa, goo goos.'
Lilia heaved the baby up so that its behind was towards him again. Then she turned with the provisions and went into the caravan.
Anderson put out a hand and tickled the baby under its chin.
Lilia said âLook who's here!'
Anderson said âYour prophetic soul, your uncle.'
Inside the small caravan, which reminded him of a shrine, or of childhood, there were flowers, and cushions, and rugs, and wooden and metal images. He thought â Lilia and I used to play in a room like this; as if on a raft, on the bedroom floor.
He said âDoes he talk yet?'
âTalk!'
âDa da di dum dum. Da da di da.'
He sat on the bed and took the baby. He raised it and lowered it several times.
He said âI don't think he should ever talk. He should have a different system of communication.'
Lilia said âHe has.'
Anderson said âHe can fly â'
He held the baby up in the air. The baby held its arms out.
Anderson said as if quoting âLanguage is useful for saying what things are not, not for saying what they are â'
Lilia said âWhere's Eleanor?'
âI don't know.'
âShe was here last night'
âDid she find my film?'
âYour film?'
âI lost it.'
âI don't know.'
The baby seemed to blow a bubble: then looked up in wonder at where it might have gone.
Lilia came and stood by them. Anderson put an arm around her.
Lilia said âHow did you know I was here?'
Anderson said âI didn't. I came to see Eleanor.'
Lilia said âThen who brought the milk and biscuits?'
Anderson said âAngels.'
The baby looked at Anderson sideways; then put its head against his shoulder, as if shy.
Anderson said to the baby âPerhaps you did. Perhaps you found my film. Perhaps you'll lift your family out of the mud and slime â'
He raised and lowered the baby.
Lilia moved away. She said âSomeone must have been here.'
Anderson said âListen!'
He rolled his eyes at the baby. The baby crowed, and put a finger in his mouth.
Anderson said âA lion!'
Lilia was wearing an old dressing-gown of Eleanor's. She undid it, and held her arms out for the baby.
Anderson said âCan I have a bit?'
Lilia said âYou are disgusting.'
There was the sound of someone moving, as if surreptitiously, behind the caravan.
Anderson raised a finger.
Then he said loudly â âAfter all, I am your brother!'
Lilia sat on the bed and fed her baby from her breast.
Anderson, watching her said âOn my way here I met a man who was looking for a lion escaped from a circus.'
He had a memory, suddenly, of when he had been present when the baby had been born; Lilia's face had been flushed and sweating; her legs had been so far apart that they seemed to be splitting her; the baby's head was like an oak from an acorn; he had thought â Thank you, my sister, for letting me see this sun.
Lilia said âWhat about Judith?'
He said âWhat about Judith?'
She said âWhen did you last see her?'
The noises from outside had ceased.
He said âPeople were always overhearing things in nineteenth-century novels.'
He thought â Why did I say that?
Getting up and leaving Lilia, and going out of the caravan, he went round to the back where there were the tent, the camp bed, the sleeping bag, the still smouldering fire. Someone seemed to have been sleeping there: no one was there now.
He thought â Well, who did rescue my film?
Then â But it is impossible to think about coincidences.
Lilia called â âI thought that was because they wanted to get away from each other.'
He said âWho wanted to get away from each other?'
She said âPeople in nineteenth-century novels.'
He thought â One gets what one wants: does one?
â Or one gets into the sun, coming up from behind the trees like the head of a drunk man from behind a table â
He said ââ Shove one's head in its mouth, that old lion â'
Going back into the caravan, he found Lilia transferring the baby from one breast to the other.
He thought â I can put into film some events like these â
He said âEleanor's not there.'
âWho was it then?'
He thought â People moving, yes, like genes, like chromosomes; making a head, a hand, here, there; from the inside world; out into the universe â
He said âThey're expecting us this morning, aren't they?'
Lilia said âShall we go?'
He thought â Those baby's hands are like sea-shells, trying to shape Lilia's breast, which is the sea.
Judith bent down at the door of the Professor's flat and tried to see through the letter-box. Pushing with a finger and thumb against the flap, she made the door swing open. She thought â And so you fall on your face; as when the train is left by the railway station â
It was still very early. She held in her hand the page from the Professor's notes that she had picked up at his lecture. She had been going to push it through the letter-box. She thought â Now I will go inside and leave it even more mysteriously; like a reel of film in a landscape â
She went into the hall. The door into the Professor's bedroom was open. She thought â He is waiting for someone to come into his dreams?
She stood with one foot in front of the other as if she did not want to be caught moving.
As she went into the bedroom â stepping, stopping, stepping â she thought: In grandmother's steps, is it Red Riding Hood who in fact wants to jump on her poor old grandmother?
The inside of the bedroom was dark She had the impression of being watched from elsewhere. She thought â Through a two-way mirror: or through the fourth wall that actors pretend either is or is not there â
The Professor was lying on his bed. He was on his back, with his hands folded across his chest. She thought â Or I am the dog at his feet; or the third eye that looks inwards, like the eye of Siva â
She stood still, her hands by her sides, one foot in front of the other.
The Professor turned and looked at her.
She thought â Will he say nothing: or will he send me back to the beginning?
The Professor said âI was lying here dreaming â'
She took a step forward. She thought â He can imagine it is not exactly me who is here?
He said And what I was dreaming of was you â'
She remained still.
ââ Would I, or wouldn't I, prefer the reality to the dream?'
She reached for the bed with a jump. She said âGot you!'
He said âBecause what I was doing in my dream was â'
He put his arms around her.
She said âWell, here I am.'
He said, quoting ââ I will do such things â what they are yet I know not â'
Judith got off the bed and went into the passage and closed the front door. Then she came back into the bedroom.
He said âWhere's Lilia?'
She said âWith Eleanor.'
He said âAnd that other girl. What's her name â'
âWho?'
âJudith. Juliet.' Then â âWhy does he sometimes call you Juliet?'
He propped himself on an elbow, watching her.
She thought â You mean, something kinky?
She said âBecause I can be part of sometimes this dream, do you think, and sometimes that?'
He lay on the bed and looked at the ceiling. He said â âOr what would be the difference?'
She sat on the edge of the bed. She said âThey were taking samples of soil from in front of the Old Science Buildings.'
He said âAnd getting people out of the surrounding houses?'
She thought â I could put a finger on your forehead and say â Get it out! Get it out!
He said âYou go on for so long, and then you go crazy.'
He held out a hand to her.
She said âWhat do you think it is?'
He said âNothing.' Then â âYou think there was something in that basement?'
She said âBut what do other people think was in that basement!'
He said âThey'll think they can't talk about it.'
She said âAnd will you talk about it?'
He said âNo.'
She said âThat's all right then.'
She began undressing.
She thought â But on a stage, you could try to say something about it?
When she was undressed, she climbed on to the bed.
He said, watching her, âWhat do old men do?'
She said âLie on their backs, don't they, and look at the ceiling.'
He said âYou take away some sort of death, some sort of protection, from me.'
She wondered â Do old men need to be hit, as well as want soft lights and sweet music, like a baby?
She lay on her front. He sat up and began to stroke and caress her.
She thought â Oh I am a queen bee, with all my workers, hanging from the ceiling!
Then â What we are now doing, that is a metaphor â
â A sieve, a riddle â
â Oh I am a nugget of gold â
â Is it you? Is it you? â
â That baby.
He said âThere!'
Then â âUpsadaisy!'
He had put his head down against her and was laughing.
She thought â But if making love is between the two parts of the brain â
â Yes?
He said âAn old man wanted to die within the dream of his young mistress â'
She thought â One part thinks and gives names: the other part doesn't speak much but knows what things are for â
He said'â But as his life was passing in front of his eyes â'
She said âYes?'
She had rolled over and was looking at the ceiling.
He said ââ He saw her, waved, and said â Coo-ee!'
She jumped up and went through into the bathroom.
She thought â Well that was fine: wasn't it?
He called after her âDo you still want to be an actress?'
She thought she might say â Can you smell something burning?
When she came back into the bedroom she said âAre you often lonely?'
He said âI'm what I want.'
âSo am I.'
She began dressing.
She said âBut you've done it. I mean, your life â'
He said âYou can send me postcards.'
When she was dressed she said âWhat is that bundle of nerves called between the two parts of the brain?'
He said âThe corpus callosum?'
She said âDo you think that is like making love?'
He said âOh good heavens!' He jumped off the bed, and began dressing.
She was standing by the door of the bedroom.
She said âI mean, I've brought you that page of notes from your lecture.'
She watched him dressing.
He said âBet I'm first into the passage.'
She said âYou can't possibly be first into the passage.'
He said âWhy not?'
She said “You're still dressing and I'm halfway there.'
He finished dressing.
She said âHow?'
They went out of the bedroom and moved towards the door into the passage.
She said âIs that what you're working on now?'
He said âHow to make love with two parts of the brain?'
She said âLucky old you!'
They were at the door. He opened it.
She stepped aside to let him go through.
He ushered her ahead of him into the passage.
Lilia and Jason walked at the edge of a ploughed field beneath a cold sky and trees as if reflected in water. Jason was carrying the baby on his hip. Sometimes it looked out on the world as if it would tell it what to do; sometimes it studied its parents as though they were legs, lungs, livers, heart-beats. Lilia walked on a furrow balancing with her arms out like a swan. She said âYou didn't sleep with her, did you?'
Jason shouted âOf course I didn't!'
The baby clapped with one hand against his chest.
He said âAnd you didn't sleep with him?'
She said âNo!'
She thought â He shouted too loud? Or need I believe him, when it comes back on the curve of the universe?
The ground they were walking on was strewn with flints. Some of them might have been chipped with axes thousands of years ago.
Jason said âDid he talk about the experiments he is doing?'