The Facts of Life (61 page)

Read The Facts of Life Online

Authors: Patrick Gale

‘You’ll never let this go, Edward-Eli,’ she had warned him. ‘You have this persistent sense of debt that’s positively Wagnerian. We’re both rational people so we don’t believe in curses. The funny thing with curses, though, is the damage they continue to do even if we don’t believe in them. Sometimes the only way to lift them is to suspend your rational dismissal and enter their crazy logic. Maybe all the months and money you’ve spent with me will get you nowhere and you’ll never stop hurting yourself for having been saved, until you save someone else.’

Trapped in a Rexbridge cinema watching the shuffling black and white lines of hollow-eyed concentration camp prisoners, he had been besieged by feelings of guilt and helplessness. Faced with his grandson’s living corpse however, he felt he
could
do something. Could this, he wondered, be his chance to lift the curse?

Having got the boy away, however, he saw immediately how futile was his impulse to ‘rescue’ him. Driving him out of London, the boy dozing in a blanket oblivious to their wintry surroundings, he was relentlessly reminded of Sally’s mercy mission to snatch him from the Rexbridge psychiatric unit. He imagined that she had felt a similar sense of impulsive daring, a similar fear of risk-taking and of blindly smothering love. He could not save Jamie, however. The ‘rescue’ evinced only a naive belief in the whole-some powers of the countryside over the perfidious influences of the city; the boy was as locked in his sickness as he was in his sickly perversion. Edward knew he spoke to his lover every day – he had occasionally stumbled in on their telephone calls. He was amazed, and sickened that, in full possession of the facts, the boy continued to cling to the very thing that was causing his death. He had initially thought that once they were alone together, he could set about getting to know Jamie properly as an adult, making up for lost time, wringing some meaning from the precious months left them. Instead he retreated to the musical territories they had shared during his grandson’s early boyhood.

‘I’m a coward,’ he told Miriam during her first visit to see how Jamie was progressing. She had appeared with quantities of food which she was packing into the freezer in The Roundel’s kitchen. Jamie was taking an after-lunch doze upstairs.

‘Do you expect me to contradict you?’ Her tone was suddenly abrasive.

Edward shrugged, opting for humour.

‘It would be nice,’ he said hopefully.

‘Well forget it. You were the same about Uncle Thomas.’

‘How do you mean? Thomas and I got on. I could
always
talk to Thomas.’

‘Exactly. You talked
to
him, not
with
him. You always kept him at arm’s length because of what he was and how he felt towards you. It embarrassed you.’

‘Oh really,’ Edward tried to wave her nonsense away with a hand and reach for his coffee. Miriam shut the freezer lid with a muffled bump.

‘Thomas loved you,’ she said. ‘And you could never accept that.’

‘Of course I accepted it. I mean, I couldn’t
reciprocate
but –’

‘You were relieved when he died and stopped making demands on you. You didn’t even get me out of school for his funeral and he was a better father to me than you ever were.’

‘Oh really?’

‘Yes. Really. Thomas talked
with
me. He wanted to know what I wanted, what I thought about things, who I wanted to be.’

‘And I didn’t?’

‘You never showed it if you did. You just wrote cheques, and waited for me to grow, like some impatient gardener.’

‘Ah.’ Edward smiled wearily at the table top.

‘Don’t laugh at me. You’re always laughing at me!’

‘I’m not laughing,’ he assured her. She sat heavily in a chair opposite him looking momentarily, strangely, like his mother, her cheeks flushed with irritation, her plump hands restlessly picking at things. She had never looked like Sally. Only Alison looked like Sally. ‘What does all this have to do with Jamie?’ he asked.

‘Everything,’ she said. ‘Your disgust, your fear, are neither here nor there. Just give him some space and show him some respect. I’m learning so much from all this and I think you could too if only you’d let yourself.’

‘I think I’m a little old to start learning.’

‘You haven’t had a serious illness since your early twenties. You’re strong as an ox. Right now, he’s older than you are.’

‘Don’t bully me. You always bully me.’

‘Somebody’s got to.’

‘I’m sorry,’ he insisted. ‘I can’t change the way I feel. You … You don’t like parsnips. I feel uncomfortable around homosexuals.’

‘There’s no comparison.’

‘Of course there is. It’s an irrational dislike. Maybe it’s a race memory. Whatever it is, simple good will won’t make it go away.’

‘At least try. For me.’

‘All right,’ he sighed. ‘For you. For my poor neglected daughter, I’ll try.’

‘Thank you.’

She smiled. He was fobbing her off. If he told of the churning revulsion he felt when he saw one man hold another’s hand or confessed that no number of documentaries could rid him of the gut belief that this disease was a direct result of puerile self-indulgence, she would probably pack her son into her expensive car and drive him off to Essex. Coward or no, he badly wanted Jamie at The Roundel. For there were other things he could not tell her – for all his bluff dismissals, he did recognise that he had failed her as a father. He could not tell her that the bewildered, helpless love he felt for her children was the only chance he had to redeem that failure. He was a man, after all, with all a man’s foolish, unfashionable pride.

Miriam became calmer. She poured herself a cup of coffee and reached into her shopping basket for a packet of chocolate biscuits which she opened between them.

‘I meant to tell you at the time,’ she said, ‘But I was so het up. I never spoke to Venetia Peake. I mean, of course I spoke to her but I never told her all those silly things about alcoholic nannies and parcelling me off to school, truly I didn’t. I think she got an Old Girls list from my year and tracked some people down. Josie Forbush or someone. Someone with a grudge.’

‘I did wonder,’ he confessed. ‘It was kind of you to protect me.’

Miriam made a small, non-committal noise in her throat and ate another biscuit.

‘She’s called, you know. Myra,’ he told her. ‘She’s called several times. I’ve only answered once.’

‘What does she want?’

He thought a moment.

‘I don’t know. I think perhaps she’s curious. She’d like to see me again. See how I’ve aged.’

‘That would be a shock for her, given the way she looks.’ Miriam looked across and saw that he was serious. ‘Don’t you want to see her?’

‘I don’t think so.’

‘But it might be fun.’

‘Miriam, you can’t have it both ways. I thought Myra was meant to be the bugbear of your childhood dreams and a Hollywood monster.’

‘She is. She was. But still, it might be fun.’

‘I thought you found geriatric romance grotesque.’

‘Who said anything about romance?’ Miriam looked alarmed. ‘You could just
see
her. That’s all.’

‘So you could brag to Francis’s friends about meeting her?’

‘Not at all. God you’re so unfair sometimes! I wouldn’t even want to be there. Of course I wouldn’t. You could just meet for lunch, in London. She comes over to shop sometimes. I read it in a magazine. Now
she
could set you right on a few things; she does a lot of work for AIDS charities. Honestly, Dad, it might be fun. A trip down memory lane.’

‘I don’t think so.’

Edward trusted the glance he threw her was sufficiently withering.

54

As the recuperative fortnight at The Roundel turned into three weeks, then four, Jamie abandoned any pretence of an intention to return to London. After the crowded uneventfulness of his time in hospital, his days and nights in the old house were of a meditative monotony that soon became sweet to him. He rose when he felt ready – often not before mid-morning – took a long bath, went for a walk, lunched with his grandfather, slept again, read a book, ate supper with his grandfather and retired early. He spent hours just sitting. In his overcrowded childhood he had not appreciated how full the house was of good places to sit. He would begin to read or listen to a programme on the radio, find his attention drawn to the nearest window, and become peaceably transfixed by the unpeopled, unchanging view across ploughed fields silvered with frost, the river steaming slightly, or into the smaller landscape of the garden. Alone, or almost alone, for the first time in his life, he came to appreciate stillness and the space it gave for thought. Sitting in silence, he found that thoughts came to feel as distinct as speech so that sometimes, after sitting for a long while, he was not sure whether he had merely thought something or spoken it aloud to the empty room.

He did not spend hours with his grandfather. The knowledge that he was working in a room nearby was often company enough. The distant sounds of his synthesiser and sequencer, producing now the noise of a full symphony orchestra, now the intimate tones of a madrigal ensemble, was the aural equivalent of a comforting nightlight. When they were together, his grandfather often played them music rather than risk tiring Jamie with conversation. Jamie had not heard so much music since he was a teenager. They listened to whole operas at a sitting, whole cycles of string quartets. As in his childhood, music became their safe lingua franca.

Sam, Alison and Miriam paid visits. When Sam came, Jamie’s grandfather acquired an unforeseen engagement in London and left the two of them to spend the weekend in bed and luxuriate in one another’s company. When Alison came, she interrupted Jamie’s routine with the brief imposition of her own habitual weekend behaviour – quantities of newsprint, coffee, convenience food, fitful attempts to tame the garden. Miriam worked in the garden too. She no sooner laid eyes on Jamie than emotions welled up in her she had to channel into practical action rather than give them voice. She would barely be through with hugging him in greeting before she was reaching for the gardening gloves or moaning that Alison had lost the secateurs again. Jamie was almost hurt by this. She did much the same on the telephone. She had no sooner got through and asked how he was before she started saying things like, ‘Well, darling, I better go and feed Frank. You know how he is. I just wanted to hear your news …’

Worried, on her second visit, that Jamie was still not gaining weight, she began by riling his grandfather with an inquisition as to what the two of them had been eating. Then, seized by a sudden inspiration, she pulled on some gloves and marched with a hefty fork to the ruined greenhouse that leant against the wall in the most sheltered corner of the garden. She returned a while later with a big plant in her hand, its glossy leaves drooping and browned slightly with the effects of frost. It was a lone, self-sown survivor of the commune’s long-lost marijuana crop, unspotted by the local constabulary, and spared Alison’s occasional weeding forays, first by her ignorance and then by its authoritative size. Confident yet righteous, as though she were arranging flowers, Miriam dried its leaves off in a low oven, then donned an apron to bake the unappetising results into a double batch of gingerbread which had an aftertaste of bonfires. Packing half the batch into the deep freeze, she explained that her latest watercolouring pupil at the hospital had assured her the herb did wonders for suppressed appetites, while ginger counteracted nausea.

‘It’s not for fun,’ she assured Jamie. ‘It’s strictly medicinal. Your sister’s not to have any and you’re to eat one a day. And you’re not to tell your grandfather. He’d only be shocked.’

Jamie couldn’t help noticing that his mother had slipped a handful of the leaves into her handbag and wondered if she were regressing or merely pursuing a small nostalgic indulgence. The gingerbread worked, up to a point, and he began to put on a little weight. Sometimes it made him so stoned that, far from giving him a hunger rush, he just sat for hours feeling other-worldly and forgot to eat altogether. Once he fed Sam a slice, thinking it might be fun to stay in control while Sam relaxed beside him, but Sam relaxed to the point where he started crying and couldn’t stop.

When Sam’s job on the Wandsworth site came to an end, he brought the Volkswagen down, filled with extra clothes and possessions from the flat.

‘You don’t want to go back there,’ he asked. ‘Do you?’

‘Not much,’ Jamie admitted. ‘Do you mind?’

‘I can’t live there without you, that’s all,’ Sam said and it was understood that a new phase in their life together was beginning. After trying out various beds, they moved to a larger room that faced south. Jamie’s old room, with its narrow bed and small, barred window, now had all the monastic connotations of a sick room, and he would only return there occasionally to lie alone when he was sleeping badly or wanted to nap in the daytime. He refused to let the flat. It was important to him to keep the possibility open that they could always jump in the car and drive up for a wild weekend if they felt like it. But they never did.

Sam hated to be idle for long. It made him restive and short-tempered. Tidying out the mess of dried-up paint tins and rotting boxes of carefully stored newspapers and jam jars so as to make room in the garage for Jamie’s car alongside his grandfather’s, he unearthed an old black motorbike, complete with mildewed side-car. It looked like a museum piece.

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