Authors: Melvyn Bragg
Some weeks later when Joseph came home late and subdued, Natasha said,
âWe ought to talk, Joseph.'
âYes.'
âYou think it will hurt me to know.'
âYes.'
âYou hope it will just come and go without you having to say or to do anything.'
He paused. Whom would he betray?
âThat's the hope.'
âBut now you are not sure.'
âI still love you, Natasha. You and Marcelle. You're first.'
âI know that . . . Marcelle knows that.'
âCan't we not talk? I mean
not
talk.'
âI have to talk, Joseph. It is too difficult for me not to talk.'
Both of them smoked. Neither drank. The street was quiet, the things in the room wrapped them in their past.
âI don't know what to say. Well, I do know what to say. But . . . Natasha . . .'
âYes.'
âWe are together. Now. Here. Why does anything else matter?'
âBecause we have to face the truth, Joseph. Then we can understand why we will stay together. What is hidden becomes dangerous. We both know that. We have to talk.'
âThere isn't just one truth,' he began.
âJoseph! This is a simple truth. It is not easy for me to say this, Joseph, but you are having an affair.'
âYes.'
âIt is obvious, and very painful for me.'
âThen why insist that we talk about it?'
âIt would be even better not to continue with it.'
Better for you, Joseph thought, but dared not say.
âBetter, that is, for me,' said Natasha. âWhat is she like?'
âThat's not fair.'
âWhy not?'
He could not articulate an answer. But surely something and someone so private ought not to be hauled up for examination even by Natasha. The matter was supposed to be secret, secrecy was part of its potency, kept secret it could thrive and maybe harm no one, take away the secrecy and it came out of the dark into a light in which it would be destroyed or destroy.
âI'm sure you've told her what I'm like.'
He had.
âSo this would be English fair play.'
âI said you were great. I said you were a wonderful writer and painter and much cleverer than I am. And that you looked . . . distinguished.'
âI believe you,' she said. â“Distinguished”.'
âIt's true. And I did say that. All of it.'
âYou are such a poor liar, Joseph, though you try very hard. But you are not lying now. Poor girl. I presume she is younger than you.'
âThere's about a five-year difference,' said Joseph. âAbout the same as between us.'
âSo you are the one between,' she said. âHow did she respond when you told her I was a paragon?'
âFine . . . Peter had told her much the same, she said.'
âOh. She works with Peter.'
âShe's a researcher.'
âWhat does she research?'
âPolitics, usually; and social issues. That sort of thing.'
âPresumably she went to university and is full of life as the unencumbered are and she wears a miniskirt.'
Yes to all three, thought Joseph, but he was damned if he was going to answer.
âI'll have one drink,' he said. âJust the one.'
âJoseph. You are light years away from being an alcoholic. I have known alcoholics. You are an occasionally excessive and silly drinker, that is all. Drink what you must. I'll join you.'
âWhy aren't you angry?'
âI like to surprise myself,' she said. And I won't cry. And I am very angry.
âLook,' he handed her the whisky, âwhy don't we just let it drift?'
âDrift where? And what do I do while this drift of yours is going on?'
âI come back home, don't I?'
âShould I applaud?'
âSo you are a bit angry.'
âAm I, Joseph? Do you want me to be?' She raised her glass. â
A la vôtre!
'
âJust leave it alone, Natasha. Please.'
âWhat does she feel about it?'
âWe don't talk about it. She doesn't push me.'
âThat will be a relief to you for a while. In any case it is a good tactical position.'
âIt isn't like that. Can we stop talking about it?'
âYou admit infidelity. You expect acceptance. You plead for silence.'
âI wasn't pleading.'
âYou are grasping at straws.'
âI'm here. You're here. Marcelle is upstairs. This is what is.'
âYou're certainly pleading now. What you have just said is meaningless although you probably imagine it to be profound.'
âIs an affair the end of the world?'
âOur world? No. Not necessarily. Not at all. Except,' she paused, âyou have a fatal tendency to fall in love. This is usually shallow and temporary like a pang of infatuation. But I fear that this might be different. If you are really in love it is dangerous.'
âI am in love with you, Natasha. You know that.'
âI do,' she said and sipped at the whisky. âAnd I believe that I will always know that. But I am not what I was when we met and, more dramatically, neither are you. Would you fall in love with me were we to meet for the first time tomorrow evening?'
âYes.'
âThank you, Joseph,' she smiled. âI know you mean it. But would you? And would I? You had so many simple but important qualities then and sometimes I see that time and success have overlaid them.'
âYou can't really talk about me having success, Natasha.'
âThe television. Novels published. An important film made. It did not please all of the public or all of the critics but it was bold. I think we can say that Sam and Ellen and even your friends from university would use the word “success”. But it has disturbed you, and uprooted you. It has made you defensive and belligerent, neither of which you were when we met, and left you marooned in your own no man's land.'
âYou've always excelled at dissecting me. But other things have changed and some of them are liberating. Letting more life in and taking on as much out there as I could manage. You'd call it overreaching probably, greed if you like; or even worse; I don't want to talk about that.'
âDo you talk about that with her?'
âNo.' He hesitated. âA very little. Very very little. When I feel a bit odd, she sort of tells me to take a couple of aspirins.' He smiled. âNot really â but she has not gone down our route and when I say I talk very little about that I mean it, Natasha, I don't want to take it there.'
âSo she is the comfort and the refuge. I am the confession box and the rubbish dump.'
âWhy do you turn it against yourself? You've changed just as much as I have. You wanted to change. You went into analysis on purpose to change. Yet why is it that sometimes I think you haven't changed at all. When I see you smiling, even a little, even just trying to smile, I think, that's Natasha, that's her. And there's the inadequacy I feel in front of your serious sense of life. I've always felt that but it didn't much matter because there was a rough and ready equality between us. Not now. Your ideals soar above mine: so do your morals. And you are so deep in your analysis that I feel like an outsider. Your affair is with your analyst.'
Natasha wanted so badly to tell Joseph of the death of the woman into whose hands she had delivered herself but even now she held it in. It was a question of honour. To divulge that now would be to take unfair advantage. Pity must play no part in this. Neither of them should be the nurse to the other, she thought, and yet this reference to her analysis caught her unawares and almost threw her. It was daily more difficult to deal with that loss. Her best efforts had so far been unsuccessful. Joseph's reference brought panic into her throat.
âAnd I don't ask about that, do I?' he continued, seeing an analogy helpful to his case. âI don't scrutinise you about your affair.'
âJoseph!'
âIt's not so much different. Unless. Unless you believe that physical attention, well, sex is, of itself, vital. Then what you are saying is that to have sex is to be in love.'
âFor you, Joseph, in this case, I may be mistaken,' she said, and stood up to go across for another drink, âI think it is. When it isn't you dislike yourself for it. You don't dislike yourself now. You believe that love is central to sex, don't you?'
âIt's what you believe that counts,' he said and held out his glass for her to pour a measure. She stood above him as she spoke:
âI think, although this might be changing in the present circumstances, but I think that I will always hold onto the conviction that the intention in our hearts is what most matters and you have no intention to betray me or to hurt me, I know that, and therefore sex elsewhere, I must accept, does not fundamentally matter however much pain it gives.'
âI could never leave you.'
âAre you sure . . . ? Are you really sure?'
The words came quietly, even dreamily, as if from some retreat deep within, from a life being led in darkness, away from the light of the day's events, a life which had begun to claim her in the analysis and one by which she found herself fearfully entranced, a landscape of dream deserts and oceans, of timelessness and ancient forests in which her mind seemed to roam through the history of the earth itself, a fugitive from the present.
âOf course I am,' he said.
âYou sound like a true and stout-hearted Englishman, Joseph.'
They talked to each other more often and more clearly over the next weeks than they had done since the first few years when they had put together a life cut wholly to their best intentions. Sometimes in those early times it had seemed to him that while he was out at work she had been waiting and preparing all day for his arrival home, saving up for an intimate and lengthy discussion. Her preoccupation with him had been flattering and mostly he had been a willing accomplice. Now it was a strain, though still for him too a compulsion. The stakes had become much higher. The game being played out was serious. Yet in this combustible context for some weeks they talked on. Joseph drank sensibly, Natasha her usual restrained self, both smoked voraciously.
âI had hoped you would have come to a decision by now,' said Natasha after a month or so. âYou, I presume, hope that you will never have to come to one at all.'
He did not want to admit that this was true.
âWhat do you think love is, Joseph?'
âOh, God!'
âIs it not a question you should answer?'
âHow can you answer it?'
âYou write about it.'
âThat's different.'
âEvasion with you is a high art, Joseph. Why not risk an answer?'
âCaring for somebody, wanting to live with them, being attached to them physically, believing they think those things too.'
âDoes that mean you love me?'
âYes. You know I do.'
âBut you prefer to be with Helen, don't you? You love two people now.'
âI'm with you, now, and every night.'
âWhy should I love someone who prefers to be with someone else and only comes here to keep up appearances?'
âWhat appearances? Who cares, save us?'
âWhat we have been taught to do, that is what cares. Our past cares. What our parents might think of us or our friends, a little, but most of all what our own moral conscience thinks of us. You care about what you think of yourself, Joseph, and it's a great obstacle for you.'
âHow do you know?'
âI don't,' said Natasha. âI now think that all the knowledge we have of our essential selves is guesswork or mere acceptance of clichés or a work of the imagination. Of why we think what we think we know so little. We grope around. We look as your Bible says “through a glass darkly”. I've always loved that phrase. One day it might all be clear: I wish I could have been born for that day.'
âYou keep saying we know nothing,' said Joseph, âbut that is a sort of easy defeatism, isn't it? Look at what we have found out. Look at what we learn every day about other peoples and other cultures. Look at the moon landing and a hundred and one inventions that would have been thought miracles. Look at the discovery of DNA. You could say we know not too little but too much for us to take in.'
âFacts, yes; mountains of new facts. But what do we know, other than in the broadest brush strokes, most of which are just generalisations, what do we really know of what concerns us, you and me, now, of what we are truly thinking and feeling, matters that concern so many others who want to know about their feelings with precision. They need to know because it could be vital for how they lead their lives or whether they lead their lives. “To be or not to be, that is the question.” It is always the question. Yet how can we answer it save in an unsatisfactory and general way? The poorest, most fragile human being can want “to be” so badly â I remember when you read to me the ending of
The Grapes of Wrath
when she who had only the milk in her breasts gave it to him who had nothing but hunger in his belly. Even in worse
extremes of deprivation there are people who will fight to live. Yet there are others, who would seem to the poor and the starving to have everything that life could bestow, who will decide “not to be”.'
As she said this, the hand that held the cigarette clenched and the cigarette broke. She gathered it and stubbed it out without losing a beat of her fluency. âSo how do we know what happens in our minds, how to answer that simplest question, to live or not to live, and why are there only individual answers and even then are we sure they are all the answer? So I maintain we know little of what we are inside us, Joseph, even though we know more and more about what is outside us. Love, truth, freedom, they are words but they are also slogans, often merely slogans and I am tired of all slogan words save one â freedom.'