Authors: Brian Aldiss
âOh, that's how it is,' she exclaimed, putting on a light girlish
intonation. âI thought you were just a little bit huffy with me downstairs. A general huffiness ever since I came in. Favourite pupil had misbehaved.'
âIs that really how you see yourself?'
âI couldn't help being late. I didn't do it to annoy. Or did you think I was hanging about on Paddington station on purpose?'
He preferred not to pursue that line of thought, and said so, slipping his hand down under the duvet instead. Yet he heard the edginess in his own voice.
âI can't think what it is you see in me,' Sheila said, in a mock-naive chirping voice.
He growled. âThis neat little box of tricks so cunningly hidden where none but I may find it.'
âOh, that's what it's all about, is it? Is that all I mean to you? Is that what you were waiting for?'
âYou ask as many questions as Mrs E. Had you forgotten I still fancy you?'
Despite the dark, she moved her head back as if to get a better look at him.
âWhat's that mean?'
âYou seem to have forgotten what happened in Boston with that Spanish gigolo!' He had not meant to say it.
She lay back with her head on the pillow. He could feel the emotion warm in her, without being able to read its content. Anger welled up in him. Unsatisfied, they fell apart. Her refusal to speak seemed to smother them. But, as he was about to withdraw his hand from her thighs, pity for her and all her difficulties overcame his anger.
With compassion in him, he felt able to make love to her. She did not resist.
Afterwards, when he heard Sheila sail on relaxed breathing into the caverns of sleep, he thought to himself, soothingly, âIt'll be all right. She never admits when she's in the wrong. I'll just have to forget about it. Bury it. That's best. She will never refer to it again if I don't; I know that. It means much less to her than it does to me. We're different people.
âWhat a mess. Half the time, she's Green Mouth, leading that other life in that dream world of hers. I must take it easy. There's no need for it to infect me. It's such a misery ⦠Why can't people just screw and be done, for the simple pleasure of it?⦠But I suppose that's what she did with the little Hispanic sod. Don't go over it all again. Think of something else. Remember how she was in Berlin.'
There was always another circle to descend, down to the smallest circle that could never be reached â his self. Before that was the newly activated circle of his lost brother. He found himself lying there addressing Mrs Emerova; and he and she were back in their familiar chairs, in the darkness.
âI wonder why it is I find myself upset about Joseph? After all, his wasn't an easy or a very successful life. Perhaps I envy him because he's out of it all. Or perhaps I'm jealous of the way he's got out of it and left all this stuff â his problems â for me to resolve. What do you think?'
âIf you find yourself offering so many alternatives, could it be something more important to you than any of them?'
âIt's as if I've had no life â no, as if I've only lived through other people, and now he's offering me another substitute life, his secret life, well â¦'
âAnd do you want the life he's offering you?'
âI partly admire, partly despise the all-consuming love he had for a Chinese woman. It seems to have haunted him.'
âIs that what you want in the way of love? Do you feel Sheila gives you a lesser kind of love than the Chinese woman gave Joseph?'
âYes â I mean no. I don't really believe in all-consuming love. It's a Romantic myth. Perhaps I envy him the myth. He was very much a man who lived with myths. My life seems devoid of myths. It's stuffed with contemporary history instead. For two brothers we were very separate â¦'
âBut now he's trying to come closer and you don't want it?'
âWell.' He laughed. âIt's a bit late to try and come closer now, eh? He should have tried that when he was alive.'
âThat sounds rather like your father, doesn't it?'
Clement was silent a long time. Bloody Mrs Emerova, with her irrelevancies, disrupting his line of thought. There was so much hatred and disappointment in various relationships that it was difficult sometimes to see your way.
âAnyhow, this great love of his. It failed, didn't it? He couldn't see it through. He wasn't quite determined enough.'
âIs that how you see it?'
âHow do you see it?'
âI want to see it through your eyes. I think that for some reason it is important for you to believe that neither he nor your father loved you enough, or was capable of loving enough â¦'
âYou confuse me. There are so many points on which we disagree. Sometimes I can't help wishing I was anywhere but here.'
âFar away from me, eh? Like Joseph in Sumatra â¦'
The past immediately becomes history. Even yesterday has undergone a magical transformation; it may still exist in memory, in stone, in documents, in old newspapers waiting to be disposed of. But it lacks breath. It has become part of death's kingdom.
The Sumatra I remember does not exist any more. As far as I am aware, no novelist or poet celebrated the Sumatra I knew. It remains alive only in my memory. And alas, my memory is faulty.
Long after I had returned to England from Sumatra, many years after, the chance arose to return there. I had in mind what Marcel Proust said in the circumstances, that it was impossible ever to return to a well-loved place, for what we sought was a time as well as a place. I knew it, yet, when the opportunity arose, I gladly took it, marvelling that it was possible for me to return at all.
From Singapore I flew to Medan, the capital city of Sumatra. Polonia airport was little different. Except that it had previously â thirty years earlier â lain outside town. Now it was in the suburbs. Medan had grown.
Much had changed. I had known Medan as a sleepy town, a town of shadows and silences. The population had expanded enormously since then, and had taken on some of the trappings of modernity. No longer did bullock carts lumber along the Kesawan. The population now relied on two-or three-wheeled vehicles for its daily errands.
Exhaust fumes poisoned the air. Hooting and tooting, motor-cycles wove their way along the crowded streets.
As I walked through the town, a fever gripped me to revisit the parts of the town I had once known and in particular to set foot again in those places sacred to the love that had existed between Mandy and me. I remembered a short story of Thomas Hardy's in that melancholy vein in which I once delighted, with a title such as âInterlopers at the Knap' or âA Tryst at an Ancient Earthwork', in which a man goes back to his hometown in Wessex and finds it much changed, although he himself feels youthful as ever.
In Wessex, the stones had become worn, the shops had lost their paint, the old coaching inn was ruinous and unwelcoming. In Medan, a similar erosion seemed to have taken place under the burden of population; though I felt myself to be as lusty as ever, thirty years had weighed heavily on the city. Unlike any town in Hardy's Wessex, it bore an additional burden: it had changed hands.
When, on the 5th October, 1945, 26 Ind Div Signals landed at the port of Emmahaaven, we imagined we were visiting a Dutch possession, an island one thousand miles long which was part of the N.E.I., the Netherlands East Indies. In fact, the island never returned to Dutch hands. The world had changed, independence movements had started up everywhere. Thirty years later, a great many evidences of Dutch rule had disappeared under Indonesian nationalism, as tropical temples disappear under encroaching jungle.
The map I bought had not one familiar name on it. Indonesian names had taken over from Dutch. The outlines of the town were blurred. The centre had been disfigured by extra roads and one-way streets. Even the atmosphere had been rerouted, renamed, and reconstituted.
The compulsions of pilgrimage overcame me. Three places I badly needed to visit were the grocery store where Mandy and I had first met, my apartment where we had first kissed, and the bungalow where our love had been consummated. Clutching my map, I set out on foot through a bewildering maze of streets, the lives of whose inhabitants spilled untidily on to the thoroughfare. Pigs, derelict
automobiles, laundry, were the ordinary furniture of any ordinary road, round which the inhabitants made their way. I was dazed by it all. Nothing was the same. This was the measure of thirty years of freedom and progress, that a stranger should choke and weep from the foulness of the atmosphere. Most of the men I passed smoked cigarettes in self-defence.
Nothing was the same. I soon became lost. The map, turn it about as I might, was no help. And then I found myself by a landmark I knew. Presenting a clean wall to the broken street and pavements was the Deli Cinema.
The cinema, built in the streamlined style of the thirties, with curves for corners, had just had a new coat of paint. It glowed with prosperity. The reason was clear. It was showing such masterpieces of the cinema as
Shark Invaders Destruction
and
Ghost Devils of the Pacific
. Just as when I knew the cinema in the forties â when I had taken Mandy there â its speciality was fantasy, generally horror fantasy. Whatever else had changed with independence, with freedom, with the population explosion, an appetite for ephemeral sensation had remained constant.
With this landmark, I was able to find my way to the first of my three objectives, the grocery store. It was, in fact, just round the corner. This was the first hint I had that my memory too was feeling the effect of thirty years, for I had imagined the store to be at some distance from the cinema. Did I not recall shadowy silent streets, walked with her arm on my sleeve at night? Yet here I was, standing in front of the store. It was now shuttered and closed. Next door, a butcher's thrived. An old cart was parked outside its door. Useless to ask passers-by where the people had gone who once lived here; they knew nothing.
Just to have seen the store gave me some satisfaction, although I was burdened with the passage of thirty years, the length of a generation. The years had been longer than I imagined. The Sumatrans thronging past me were young. One and all, they looked too busy, too hard pressed, to wish to speak to a foreigner with very few words of Besar Malay at his command.
Now I could get to one of the two remaining objectives, for the bungalow where we made love in those indolent afternoons was only a few streets away. It was baffling enough, though. One street had been blocked off. New streets had been pushed through, and buildings reorientated to face another way. A low wooden building in which I had worked with Intelligence had disappeared, to be replaced by a shoddy office block.
I walked for a long while, hot and bewildered. I had forgotten the name of the street with the bungalow; it had certainly not been called Jl Irian Barat, as the map seemed to indicate. All was confusion. I nearly got run over by a three-wheeled van. I found myself walking round the outside of a large bustling enclosed market, negotiating refuse, broken boxes, parked lorries, and knots of people. Nowhere was that certain bungalow with a palm (possibly two?) and a flowering â tree? â shrub of some sort? â at its gate.
Time had to pass and weariness set in before I accepted the idea that the line of little bungalows had gone, probably to make way for the market. There remained only my apartment to visit, where Mandy and I had first kissed. That, being further from the centre of town, was less likely to have suffered change.
Clutching the address carefully written on a card, I tried to get a taxi. Six taxis stood outside the Pardede Hotel, their drivers playing cards and smoking in the shade of a palm.
They were used to foreigners and their whims. One of them, who spoke a good smattering of English, agreed to take me on my quest.
Directing him to the right area was complicated. We drove about fast one-way systems while I looked out for landmarks. The house in which I had my apartment had stood on the edge of a wide open space with jungle at the far side of it and a distant view of the railway line. It had been built in a distinctive Dutch style.
There were no open spaces. I could not understand the way the railways ran, or the meandering River Deli, now used for a refuse dump. Replica Dutch houses stretched for street after street.
Finally, I asked the driver to pull into a side road. Something here seemed familiar in the general layout. Close behind the house had
been a sleepy kampong. Of course it would be gone now; one might expect that. Modern housing would take its place. If we had come from that direction, then this would be the road behind my house and â why, this would be the very house, this one on the corner. Some of the grounds must have gone, shaved off to widen the road. I hesitated at the gate. Had it really looked like that? Search my memory as I would, I did not recall exactly the features of the house.
The taxi driver had become very partisan on my behalf. He violently wished that I should find âmy old home'.
âThis is yours, sir? Your old home?'
Thirty years had gone by. âThis is it,' I said.
He immediately took charge, marching past the gate and up to the front door. He rang the bell. The garden was pretty, with plenty of flowering shrubs. Back to me in a rush came the memory of how happy I had been in Sumatra. And what a situation I was in now.
A young woman answered the bell. While she listened to the driver's explanation, which was helped out by plentiful gestures towards me, the rest of the family joined her at the door, their faces bursting out on either side of her hips, her knees, her shoulders, dependent upon age and size.
The woman and a man I assumed to be her husband now came forth and beckoned me inside with welcoming smiles. There was nothing for it but to smile in return and enter the house.
Of course, this was the front. I had always entered by a door at the back, where a staircase led straight up to my room. I had almost never come in by this door ⦠But, wait, surely there had been a modest washplace just inside this door, with a stoup where you squatted and poured cold water over yourself. It wasn't there; this could not have been the house.
The family was friendly and inquisitive. There were the young couple, an older woman, a granny, and several children of radiant looks.
Through the driver, I explained that I had once lived here, that the British had once occupied Sumatra and got rid of the Japanese.
The young couple, who did most of the talking, looked confused.
They knew that the Dutch had once occupied the island. They had never heard of the British or Japanese being here.
In the modern tropics, most of the population is young. The sense of history is something that belongs to chilly northern lands. They had only the present tense.
I had lived in a part of the house, I explained as Sumatran coffee was brought. Upstairs. I had two rooms at the top of the stairs.
Would I care to see the rooms again?
Well, I would. That should prove definitely whether or not I was in the right house.
Grandpa was in the rooms upstairs, sleeping.
Then I could not possibly disturb â¦
No, no, they would send the children up first.
So I found myself in the hall and â escorted by the whole family, climbing the stairs. Conviction came over me. The stairs, the turn in the stairs, were familiar. This was the very place where I had been so tortured, so madly happy.
Children came out on the landing to greet me, dragging Grandpa with them. We gravely gave each other greeting. I entered the room.
It was after all only a faded eroticism which had got me to that room; nothing particularly noble. I felt I had arrived under false pretences. Yet, no matter what, I had arrived. This was the room. It smelt right. And I had travelled through the years and miles to return here. There was a certain triumph to the moment.
And as they all stood back to have a good look at me, I remembered a story about Flaubert, and the erotic enjoyment he had had with a woman in a little hotel in Marseilles. Years later, when on his way to Tunis to collect material for
Salammbô
, he went in search of that little hotel â from motives exactly the same as mine, I suppose â and could not find it. He hunted all over, and finally discovered that it had been turned into a toyshop, with a barber's shop above it. Flaubert went upstairs and asked for a shave. He recognized the wallpaper. It was the wallpaper of his old bedroom, where he had made love.
Now here I was, in a room where I had been with Mandy. And
in that flash of remembrance, as I walked towards the window â even as I said, ecstatically, âYes, yes, this is my old room' â I knew it was nothing of the sort. It was merely a similar room. For my old bedroom had a balcony, and this room had no balcony.
Yet the view out of the window â something there, the disposition of the house next door, remained familiar. No, no, I was mistaken. I remained smiling out of gratitude, and made for the door. There I drew up short. A cupboard stood on the landing. I had forgotten the cupboard but surely in my time there had been a cupboard just there ⦠hadn't there?
As I went down the stairs with the children hopping about me, I thought, well, of course they would have pulled down that old-fashioned bathroom beside the door. They must have a newer bathroom elsewhere. This must be the house. How could I forget?
And as for the balcony ⦠Well, in the tropics things fall down, balconies fall off â¦
I gave them all a grateful farewell. The driver drove me back to the hotel.
Had I been where Mandy and I once had been? I could not tell. Since the doubt still remains it is as well that I enjoy the mists of uncertainty.
Â
Everything was different when we arrived in Sumatra in 1945. Everything there seemed fresh and pleasant after the wastes of India. From the start, we had a more romantic view of the tropics, with small islands green in blue water and the surf white where it beat against the sand. The jungle grew down to the edge of the water, where palm trees canted out over the breaking waves.
We had been warned that the island was occupied by head-hunters and cannibals. We saw neither; it was the nationalists we had to worry about â a more urban breed. Another breed was present on the quayside, to disconcert us as we disembarked: the Japanese.
After the encounters with the Japanese in Burma, we still felt vengeful towards them. Here were these men of the 25th Japanese Army in smart uniforms and polished boots, marching about and
guarding our stores. Their arrogance, however, had disappeared, and they were under the surveillance of a single Indian soldier, his rifle slung casually over his shoulder.
At this period, very few Dutch had come ashore, while British and Indian troops were also thin on the ground. Japanese troops were used for policing duties, and sometimes permitted to keep their weapons. This ordinance from On High seemed bizarre if not downright mistaken to those of us who had seen active service with the now-disbanded Forgotten Army. On one occasion, two friends and I sat down to coffee in a little Chinese teashop in Padang. We were armed with sten guns, which we carried over our shoulders. Some Indian troops belonging to the Rajputana Rifles sat at another table. At a third table was a party of Dutch, also armed. At a fourth table sat a group of Indonesians, while two Japanese in uniform sat huddled at the rear at a table for two. We were all being served by patient Chinese, who sensibly devoted their talents to making money. But for them, one felt, shooting might break out at any time.