During this speech Lucas had turned his chair a little, facing toward the curtained windows. Not looking at Mir he spoke now wearily, even sadly. âWhat you say is interesting. Do not ruin the effect by being pathetic. In any case you know you are invulnerable â what is in parenthesis is easy of access, and your “despair” at the “evil act” is only a possibility. You must also envisage, as equally likely, the pleasures of a just revenge. I too have had nothing to do with happiness, and I certainly cannot create it for another. Indeed, in our situation, the concept is odd and out of place. And you have rightly implied, the only pleasure I could afford you would be that of being your victim.'
Mir replied. âI am sorry, what I still have to say will seem strange to you and will embarrass me. I wish I could say it more carefully and at length, but I fear you might not listen, so I shall be brief. I was an only child, early an orphan, I have never married. I have never, to use a crude phrase, had much success with women. I have no close friends, that is, no friends. Now in the long time during which I was waiting for you I have had the opportunity to study your family and your friends, I have watched them, I have speculated about them. Studying them has indeed been a crucial occupation whereby I kept my sanity and my reason during that long agonising vigil. You,' he said to Clement, âI discovered in the telephone book, and you led me to others, to the man with the grey collie dog, to the young man who now has a limp, to the fashionable lady, French perhaps, and to other persons, including the four ladies, a mother and three daughters, who â '
At this point Clement cried out, âFor heaven's sake tell us what you want!'
âAll right, I will state it simply, I have come to like these people, they interest me very much, I want you to introduce me to them, I want to get to know you all, I want to become part of your family.'
Clement, utterly astonished, instinctively horrified, said â
Oh
!' He looked at Lucas. Lucas said, â
Well
â ', then began to laugh quietly. âWell, Mr Mir, you really do turn out to be a comedian after all! So this favour is to be a substitute for severed hands!'
âYes, and an intelligent and humane one I think. Of course I do not know how far I, just as my person, might be welcome. You yourself have opened a way for me when you spoke of friendship, generosity, charity. What am I to do with my money? I could leave it to an institution. But why should I not also play the part of a rich uncle? I am not suggesting that I bribe my way in! What I want, if I may be blunt, is
love
â at least loving kindness, friendship, the chance visibly to
benefit
people, to assist in the children's education for instance. I have not been able to achieve such things, which I have often longed for, alone â if you will help me I may now achieve them, as it were, ready-made. Do you understand me?'
After saying all this, addressed to Lucas, Mir turned to Clement. Mir's large eyes, seen at close quarters, were very dark, nearly black. Clement was about to say âYes' when Lucas spoke.
âThank you for telling us about your life, we have listened with interest to your various reflections. Now please at last it is time for you to go.'
âYou haven't answered him!' said Clement. âHe has asked you to do something.'
Mir intervened, âOf course I could simply go and introduce myself, but it would be so much better â '
Lucas said, âWho and what are you anyway? What are your motives? No, I am afraid I do not understand you.'
âIt would be so much better if you would introduce me.'
âI am very tired of this conversation which has gone on far too long.'
Lucas rose abruptly. He marched to the door and opened it. Clement picked up Mir's trilby hat and his umbrella and proffered them to him. Mir took them with a smile and a little bow. He said to Clement, âDon't worry, there is no hurry.' Pausing half way to the door he said to Lucas, âSo, will you work with me, or against me?'
Clement expected Lucas to explode in exasperation, but he did not. He said, holding the drawing-room door wide, âI'll think about it.'
âI have intended,' Mir went on, âto require you to confess to these people.'
âHumiliate myself? Bow to the ground? I am not a Russian Jew.'
âHow do you know you are not? But there, I will think about that too. I am tired also. I will come back on Monday at this time. Be here please. Till then, farewell. By the way, my first name is Peter.'
Â
Â
Peter Mir had departed, Lucas was sitting on his desk. He was again laughing. Clement watched him with anxiety and amazement.
âIt's too funny for words! He wants to be adopted into our family, he wants security, affection, shelter, love. It's too touching. Who knows, he may decide to buy one of the girls!'
âYou shouldn't have let him see the bat.'
âPerhaps not. I felt I owed it to him!'
âYou must get rid of it, you must destroy it, it must never have existed â like me. But, Luc, what are we to do? You said you'd think â '
âOh let him have what he wants! Why shouldn't he meet all those charming people? I think it's a wonderful idea!'
âBut we don't know him â and he made such terrible threats â you called him a terrorist, he may be dangerous, he may be raving mad.'
âOh, he's dangerous all right, he's very dangerous. I'm just relieved that at last he wants something that I can give him. You said you'd seen him hanging about, pressing his nose against the window-pane, poor fellow! I'll brush him off on the family, what a priceless solution!'
âBut he said he wanted you to confess to them all â '
âConfess what, dear boy?'
âAll right, but he might talk â isn't he bound to talk?'
âLet him talk, they won't believe him, they'll be mystified, they won't understand, you must see to that.'
âMe?'
âYes. I'll tell you what to do.'
Harvey was sitting on Tessa Millen's bed, Tessa was sitting opposite to him on a chair. They had been talking for some time. âIt's like philosophy!' Harvey had exclaimed at one point. It was evening, it was dark, a little squat lamp, a bulbous blue bowl and a yellow shade, was alight on the bedside table. A gentle wind was blowing, pensively rattling the ill-fitting windows. Harvey's crutches were leaning against the wall. The damaged limb, its discoloured flesh damp and softened was, where visible, the consistency of lard. His ankle and half of his foot were bound in thick bandages. The remainder of his foot protruded pathetically, plump and red. Harvey had rolled up his trouser and removed the big unseemly slipper which was supposed never to touch the ground. Tessa had promptly lifted the wounded leg, laying it across her knees, placing her cool hand upon the hot unhappy toes.
Tessa now released his toes and laid his foot gently upon the ground. âAnd cheat the poor girls?'
âDon't make jokes. Anyway I've changed my mind.'
âSo be it, my child.'
âI can't fall in love, I just can't, I can't even imagine it.'
âWell don't complain. It leads to dangerous and distressing things like sex and marriage. The end of freedom, the end of romance. Don't be in a hurry. Go on having romantic friendships.'
âLike with you? Do you think I'm gay?'
âNo, you've just had too much cold milk.' (This referred to âthe girls'.) âYou don't realise you're in clover. Relax. Work, think, learn languages, read books, read poetry, write poetry, attract people, make lots of eternal friendships, parade your beauty. Youth is a great green field. Romp in it.'
âSurely romping means sex.'
âNo, that is the mistake all you young people make. You don't colonise all the potential joys of being young. Later you'll look back and wonder why you made so little use of your freedom. Sex means anxiety, fear, servitude, and being
forced
to be unkind. Watch and wait.'
âI feel everything's too late already. It isn't just the leg â that's a sort of symptom, or a label, or an emblem. What's wrong is in my soul. I'm
maimed
and that shows what I'm
like
. And I'm putting on weight. I need help.'
âDo some good. Go and see your mother.
She
needs help.'
âAll right, all right! Have you seen Lucas?'
âThat creature? No. Why do you suddenly bring him in?'
âYou know he's back?'
âOf course. You don't imagine
he
could help you?'
âI sort of want to see him. I think I'd feel better if I'd â just â seen him.'
âLike touching a big black stone. He'd make you cry.'
âYou said he was real.'
âThat's what real does. Just ask your mother about him.'
âWhy? What does she know?'
âOh, well, just what everyone knows.â
âI feel unreal.'
âThat feeling is self-pity.'
âPerhaps I need the tears which reality would make me shed.
You
are real. Tessa â could you just â do it for me?'
âDo you mean now? Do you mean what you said before?'
What Harvey had said before was that he wanted Tessa to initiate him into the mysteries of sex.
âNow I've said it again, I suppose I do mean what I said before.'
âMake up your mind.'
âI do mean it.'
They sat looking at each other. Evidently it had now begun to rain, Harvey could hear the mild rain which now enclosed the little room on all sides, tenderly holding it in space, a continuous sibilant presence. He saw, with the huge rounded eyes of a dragonfly, the global room, the meagre chairs, the battered chest of drawers, the crumpled flimsy curtains shuddering in the continuous draught from the faintly rattling windows, the fat little blue bowl and dusty parchment lamp-shade, the double divan bed, jammed up against the wall, upon which he was sitting and at whose faded Welsh quilt he had been unconsciously picking, his hands, he discovered, holding little balls of dusty textile which he now surreptitiously released onto the floor. He saw Tessa, leaning forward, her long hands on her knees, her old worn tweed jacket, her brown shirt open at the neck, her thick trousers tucked into her boots. Her pale straight yellow hair, as pale as primroses, cut neatly short, gave her a tranquil authoritative air, calm with the gentle serenity of some sibyl who through millennia has observed the foolish helpless grief of mortal men. Her lips reflectively parted, her grey eyes narrowed, expressed as she perused him the gentle whimsical pity of a superior being. Harvey, motionless, felt the impulse to kneel at her feet and kiss her long hands. He wanted to groan and weep. He wondered, is this
it
after all?
He said, âYes, yes. But forgive me.'
âDon't be silly. Get up. One has to undress, you know. What about your leg? Is it hurting now?'
âNo. You don't mind?'
âNo, you fool!'
âSuppose someone comes.'
âNo one will come.'
They moved, avoiding each other in the little room. Harvey thought, it's like
chess
. Tessa pulled back the quilt and blankets, and sat on the bed to take off her boots. Harvey, standing, watched her. He took off his jacket. He stepped back and felt a pain in his leg. He had forgotten his leg. He sat on one of the thin rickety chairs and took the shoe and sock off his good leg. By this time Tessa had removed her boots, socks, jacket and trousers. Harvey began to ease off his trousers. He thought, now she will take off her knickers. In his brother and sister upbringing with the girls, when they went on holidays to the sea together, he had often seen them undressing, even undressed. He had often watched them, before the time of the taboo, dropping their skirts in circles round their feet, and then hauling off their knickers. This had interested him only in retrospect. Much later, remembering those times, he had noticed how just that action, that movement, had something so thrilling about it, so crucial, so holy. Even the word âknickers' had for him a kind of charisma, like a religious charm or mantra. As carefully and deftly, keeping his bad leg outstretched, he was removing his under-pants with his trousers, he became aware that Tessa had performed the action in question and was looking at him with nothing on except her rather large and long shirt which he now saw to be not just brown but khaki, and evidently bought at some army-surplus shop. A
soldier's
shirt. Harvey had pulled his own shirt and vest down as far as he could. The room was cold. Now Tessa had unbuttoned her shirt but not removed it. She was not wearing a vest. Looking back at her Harvey wondered whether now they would burst out laughing. Perhaps it would all end in crazy helpless laughter. Sex was funny, it was
ridiculous
, how had he got himself into this absurd situation! For a moment indeed they might have laughed, but by a silent compact they did not, but smiled at each other, gentle smiles, as Harvey recalled it, full of deep and complicated sadness. Harvey felt the presence of those tears.