Read The Man Who Forgot His Wife Online

Authors: John O'Farrell

The Man Who Forgot His Wife (6 page)

I already understood that Gary’s rudeness about my job and the school must signify some sort of grudging respect – that this was the way we must have talked to one another, and that I would have to learn to give as good as I got.

‘So am I just a classroom teacher or a head of year or anything, yer bastard?’

‘What?’ said Gary, suddenly looking slightly offended.

‘Do I have a job title?’

‘But why did you call me a bastard?’

‘Er – sorry. I just thought that might be how we talked to one another.’

‘You can’t go round calling people “bastards”, you stupid bastard! You joined the establishment, you’re
one of them
, man.’

Linda was marginally more illuminating, explaining that during my time at the school I had been promoted to ‘Head of Humans, or something’.

‘Humanities?’

‘Yeah, that sounds right – I thought it would be a bit weird to have one person in charge of all the humans …’

‘So how long have I been teaching here?’

‘Oh, ages now. Over ten years anyway,’ said Linda.

I felt a twinge of worry that I was supposed to be on the other side of the gates, that there were classes of children wondering what had happened to Mr Vaughan.

‘But my own kids don’t come here?’

‘Don’t be ridiculous! Maddy knows what the teachers are like!’

‘They go to a school closer to where you live,’ explained Linda. ‘Actually Dillie’s only just left that primary. That’s where we want Baby to go, isn’t it, Gary?’


The
baby.’

Although I could remember nothing about these friends, their characters or personal histories, I had not forgotten the code of etiquette that made this feel rude.

‘So – er – anyway, what do you two do for a living?’

‘What?’

‘You know, what line are you two in?’

‘What is this? A Rotarians’ Christmas cheese-and-wine soirée or something?’

‘I don’t know – it just felt a bit impolite to keep talking about
me
all the time. I didn’t want to appear self-obsessed or whatever. First impressions and all that …’

‘Second,’ said Linda.

‘Oh yes, second impressions. For you anyway.’

‘One thousand and second,’ said Gary.

‘Okay. Well, I’m – this is weird – I am in recruitment,’ said Linda, ‘and Gary is in computers – internet and all that.’

‘Right.’ I nodded neutrally. ‘Not data-recovery by any chance, is it?’

‘Ha! No, though I know a few people who do specialize in that. They’ll just say you should have backed your brain up on a memory stick. No, I work for myself, designing websites, developing new ideas for the net, you know.’

‘Wow! What sort of ideas?’

‘Okay, well, I might as well tell you about our big project, then.’


Our
big project?’

‘Yeah, you and me have been developing this together. We’re developing a site that will completely revolutionize how we consume news.’

‘How’s that?’

‘This is going to be the future of current affairs.’ I noticed a sudden degree of zealous self-belief in Gary. ‘See, currently all news is top down. Some fascist corporation decides what’s the most important story, sends some lackey to report it, who then serves up all the Murdoch lies to the trusting public.’

Linda was nodding supportively.

‘The internet allows you to turn that model on its head. Imagine millions of readers writing up whatever they might have just witnessed around the globe, uploading their own photos and video footage and text. Millions more readers are searching and clicking on stories that interest them, and hey presto! The story with the most hits becomes the main item of news on the world’s most democratic and unbiased news outlet!’

‘It’s ever so funny,’ added Linda. ‘Front page yesterday was
a
transsexual doing it with a couple of midgets, ha ha ha …’

‘Yeah, obviously, we’re still working on the filters and all that. But YouNews is the future, you said so yourself. You can search by region, subject, protest movement, whatever.’

‘You must check it out,’ said Linda. ‘I’ve learned how to upload stories. I put up a lovely bit of video yesterday: this cute kitten being surprised by a cuckoo clock!’

‘No, Linda, that’s not news! That’s not what the site is for!’

‘So, no reporters or editors?’ I observed.

‘Exactly! No hacks filing their expenses from around the world, no expensive studios or equipment, and no press barons protecting their political allies or paymasters.’

I thought about this for a moment, and then pinpointed what made me uneasy about the whole idea.

‘But how do you know it’s true?’

‘True?’

‘Yes, a story that some member of the public has uploaded. How do you know they haven’t just made it up?’

‘Well, if they’ve made it up,’ explained Gary, ‘then you always said that other members of the public will say so in the comment thread and it will lose credibility. Or they can re-edit it themselves – it’s like Wikipedia, but for current affairs. You’re really into it, believe me! You and me – we’re going to take on the world!’

My feelings about Gary’s website echoed a deeper worry I had had ever since my brain had first pressed Control+Alt+Delete. How could I know whether anything was true? I was still fighting a tiny voice in my head that questioned whether my name was really ‘Vaughan’, that I was in fact a teacher and that my marriage was really over.

Eventually we reached the address where I had been living right up until my fugue. I learned that between moving out of my family home and taking up a residency on the fourth floor of King Edward’s Hospital, I had sofa-surfed between a number of temporary addresses, most recently housesitting near my old
neighbourhood
for a rich family who were in New York for three months.

‘Wow, what an amazing house. And I had it all to myself?’

‘Yeah – but you didn’t like it. It made you, like, really tense being responsible for all the fancy furniture and that. You were always like “Gary, don’t smoke dope indoors! Gary, stop borrowing his clothes! Gary, don’t piss on the herb garden!” Yeah, it seemed to make you a bit uptight, if you don’t mind me saying …’

When I had disappeared, I had left my clothes and my belongings there, which were now in boxes round at Gary and Linda’s.

‘Yeah, there was some pretty hard-core porn in amongst all your stuff.’

‘Really?’ said a shocked Linda.

‘No,’ I said with a smile, already better at recognizing Gary’s wind-ups than his wife was.

The family were apparently now back home, probably still picking the fag ends out of their tropical fish tank, so this private mansion was no longer an option for me.

‘And you don’t recognize that either? That is really amazing! So is there anything you can remember?’

‘Actually, there is this scene that keeps coming back to me. I have this vague memory of really laughing with a girl when I was younger. And we’re sheltering under a canopy or something but still getting wet, and we don’t mind. But I can’t remember who she was or what she looked like or where we were. I just remember being really, really happy.’

Gary and Linda looked at one another but said nothing. We turned into a residential street just off Clapham Common. Rows of mid-size Victorian houses were interspersed with a few ugly 1950s blocks, where post-war builders had done a poor job of disguising which house numbers had been removed by the Luftwaffe. On the corner was number 27, which looked like the best house in the street, with dormer windows at the
top
and a little turret which gazed out over the London skyline.

‘Recognize this?’

‘Don’t tell me – it’s where I was born? Ah, but there’s no blue plaque.’

‘No – have another go.’

‘Did I stay here as well?’

‘Er, well, yeah, in a manner of speaking …’

At that moment the front door opened and a striking redhead stepped out into the autumn sunshine and dropped a bag into the wheelie bin.

‘Wow! Who is that?’ I whispered. ‘She is gorgeous!’

The woman stopped to remove a couple of dead geranium heads from the window box, tucked a strand of hair behind her ear, and paused as if to check the weather.

‘Was she living there when I was? Should we go and say hello?’

‘Blimey, Vaughan, you’ve gone bright red!’ said Linda. ‘Gary, we probably shouldn’t hang about. We don’t want her to see us here.’

He was already putting the car in gear and pulling away.

‘Hang on, you haven’t explained anything … Where are we? Who is that beautiful woman?’

‘That, Vaughan, was the house you lived in for twenty years,’ said my tour guide. ‘And that was Madeleine. That was the woman you’re about to divorce.’

Chapter 5

AS YOU CAME
in the front door, the first thing you saw was a baby-gate across the foot of the stairs and a brand-new stroller folded up by the coat hooks. There were plastic safety covers over the electrical sockets and in the lounge was a big Thomas the Tank Engine rug with primary-coloured bricks stacked up against the wall.

‘Sorry, are you expecting
another
baby, or will this one be your first?’

‘No, it’s just the two of us at the moment,’ confirmed Gary. ‘It’s just that Linda likes buying all the stuff, you know.’

‘I always loved your home, Vaughan,’ enthused Linda, ‘brimming with children’s toys and everything. I said to Gary that I wanted our place to be just like that.’

‘Right. Well, it’s good to be prepared, I suppose …’

‘You see, this isn’t a
house
,’ she said meaningfully. ‘It’s a
home
.’

‘And it isn’t a
house
,’ added Gary, ‘because it’s a
flat
.’

Linda proudly showed me into the room where I would be staying. In the corner was a brand-new cot, surrounded by musical mobiles with rotating light patterns. Cartoon teddy-bear
wallpaper
was softly lit by the low-wattage light from a Disney lampshade. Linda lovingly adjusted one of the soft toys, which looked settled in for a long wait. The extended sofa bed that had been made up for me rather spoiled the nursery atmosphere; it jutted out towards the primary-colour baby gym and the padded changing mat.

This was where my new life would begin – in a room with a nightlight and a baby monitor so that Linda could hear if I started crying. On the ceiling I noticed a poster with letters of the alphabet constructed out of contorted farmyard animals. The curtains featured rabbits parachuting off the edge of the moon. There seemed to be an unspoken presumption that this baby would be heavily into hallucinogenic drugs.

‘Isn’t this a lovely room?’ she said proudly. ‘Obviously you’ll have to move out when Baby comes …’ she said.


The
baby,’ came Gary’s voice from down the hall.

Inside a low wardrobe hung a range of men’s second-hand clothes. These had either been collected for Baby when he grew up and reached middle-age, or were all the jackets and jeans that had belonged to me before my fugue. I had gone for the default casual-smart look of jeans, shirts and sweaters, as lazily favoured by millions of middle-class men from Seattle to Sydney. There were a few frayed-looking suits which had presumably been my teaching uniform, and some uninspiring ties that seemed doomed to be worn at half mast.

Linda had kindly prepared everything for my stay and there was even a new toothbrush still in its packet.

‘This is the bathroom, Vaughan – I thought you might fancy a bath. You have to pull that lever there if you want to use the shower—’

‘Do you think she looked sad?’

‘Who?’

‘Maddy? I thought she looked a little sad …’

‘Er, no, she looked pretty much how she usually looks to me …
Dirty
laundry goes in there, and I’ll show you how to use the washing machine.’

‘Maybe she was suddenly just a bit cold – the wind was quite cold, wasn’t it?’

‘Er, yeah, that could be it.’

The thought of a relaxing bath was appealing after a week or so in hospital and so a few minutes later I was taking off my clothes in the private space of virtual strangers. I felt like the intruder in a family bathroom. There was all her make-up and there were his razors; around me were other people’s lotions and towels. I still wanted to ask them so much more; I felt like I’d just had the barest glimpse of who I was before the mirror was steaming over. When did things go wrong with Maddy? Did I move out? Did she kick me out? Did one of us have an affair?

The bath was foamy and scented and I lay there for so long that the hot water needed topping up again. I submerged my aching head under the suds, letting my senses deaden to the outside world. Now I could hear only my own heartbeat. That’s all there is really: your own heartbeat, and your own eyes looking out at everything.

I slowly came up for air and looked at the ceiling. This was the most relaxed I could remember feeling. My head felt completely empty. A tiny spider was hiding in a crevice by the window. And then it happened. From nowhere and with no mental association or logical thought process, I recovered my first memory. It was just as if I were actually there, living it in real time, feeling the emotions, the sounds, even the weather – the whole episode fell into my head all at once.

Maddy and I are walking up a grassy hill hand in hand, nimbly hopping over cowpats and rabbit holes, until we stand at the summit and feel the wind and sun on our faces before indulging in another quick kiss
.

‘So where do we go from here?’ I say, looking down towards the sea
.

‘I dunno. Move in together, maybe ten years of domestic bliss until I discover you’ve been having an affair with your assistant.’

‘My assistant? Why not my secretary?’

‘That’s the big surprise. Your assistant is a man.’

‘Yes, I am a repressed homosexual. That’s why I find you so attractive …’

‘Ten years! God, we’ll be nearly thirty. How ancient is that?’

‘I’m planning to look quite distinguished as I grow older. Like that man on the Grecian 2000 advert, with “just a touch of grey hair” at the side.’

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