Authors: Rupert Thomson
I laughed. âWhat else?'
His head swivelled towards the alley, as if he had heard something. He kept one hand on my chest, though, pinning me against the door. We remained in that position for at least a minute. I could probably have freed myself, but I chose not to. He turned to me again. âWe could go somewhere,' he said, âif you've got time.'
âYes,' I said. âAll right.'
He stepped away from me, sliding both hands into his trouser pockets. Though he was still staring at me, his face seemed to have been decanted of all expression, like someone daydreaming. For the first time he was thinking back, perhaps, trying to place me. I straightened my jacket, brushed myself down.
âAre you still called De Vere?' I asked.
âHow do you know that?'
âBracewell told me.'
âBracewellâ¦' He looked off down the cul-de-sac to where a cat crouched by a dustbin, its eyes lustrous and flat.
We didn't say much after that â at least, not for a while. De Vere jerked his head and started walking. Over bridges we went, through a housing estate, across a park. Every now and then he would give me a rapid sideways glance. He still appeared to suspect me of some kind of trickery or subterfuge.
At last we reached a building whose double-doors were paned with frosted glass. De Vere knocked twice. A stooping grey-haired man let us in. The interior was poorly lit, the floor bare concrete, the walls pale-blue to waist-height and then cream beyond. The man locked the doors behind us, grumbling about the weather. As we set off down a corridor, I thought I could smell chlorine.
âA swimming-pool,' I said.
âUsed to be,' De Vere said. âIt's a bar now.'
We passed through another set of double-doors and into a vast dark hall that was lit only by candles, the air filled with the murmur of people talking in lowered voices. Glass-topped tables had been arranged on the floor of the pool. More tables stood around the edge. The fact that it had been drained was supposed to be a political statement, De Vere told me, a slight sneer on his face. Clearly he thought such gestures either immature or futile.
There were no free tables in the pool itself, so we sat above it, near the diving-board. I studied De Vere as he ordered drinks, large ones â gin for him, brandy for me. He looked pretty much as I remembered him. He had the same unusually red lips and cocky features, and he gave off the same subtle aura of debauchery â or perhaps it wasn't quite so subtle any more, I thought, as I noted the faint but uneven growth of beard, the stained teeth, the eyes that looked bloodshot, almost infected. He had acquired a curiously indefinite quality. I could see the boy he used to be, but I could also see the old man he was going to become. He was like somebody trapped between different versions of himself, unwilling â or unable â to decide between them.
Our drinks arrived. De Vere snatched up his gin and drank half of it straight down, then he apologised for his behaviour in the alley.
âYou did seem a bit nervous,' I said.
He let out an explosive sound that was only distantly related to laughter. âDo you have any idea what's going on round here?' He watched me across the candle flame, the shadows shifting on his face. âNo. Probably not.' He drank from his glass again, icecubes jostling against his teeth.
The authorities pretended to be initiating transfers, he told me, but what they were actually doing was throwing people into prisons or detention centres, or even, and here his voice trembled, into unmarked graves.
âIt's true,' he said when he saw my reaction. âAt least one person I know has disappeared. Because he spoke out. Because he said it was wrong, the way our country's organised, and that
no government should have the right to â' He shook his head, as if it was useless to go on about such things, then he finished his drink and stared fiercely into the empty glass.
âIt doesn't sound very phlegmatic,' I said.
âYou don't have to be strong to abuse power. You can abuse it out of weakness or insecurity. Out of fear. We've had so many governments during the last decade that every new one spends most of the time looking over its shoulder, trying to consolidate its position â using whatever means it can.' Once again, he saw the expression on my face. âYou think I'm exaggerating.'
I didn't say anything.
âDo you still live in the Red Quarter?' he said.
âIt's where I've been living,' I said, âyes.'
âWell, let me tell you something,' he said. âIt's happening there too.'
I started to remonstrate, but he talked over me.
âMaybe not the killings, but the arrests, the imprisonment without trial, the interrogations. That's why we all have an Internal Security Act. That's what it's
for.
He looked at me and shook his head again, as though he couldn't believe my naivety. âWhy do you think you have the same leader year after year?'
âMaybe people are happy with the way things are,' I said quietly.
âHappy?'
He almost choked on the word. Then he beckoned to the waiter and ordered two more drinks.
âI don't know how you know all this,' I said.
âBecause I talk to people,' he said. âBecause I listen. Because I don't go round with my head buried in the sand.'
We sat in silence until the waiter brought our drinks. This time I paid.
I glanced down into the pool where a young couple were sitting at a table, kissing. âSo you knew about Bracewell.'
De Vere looked up slowly. âThat's not his name.'
âMaclean,' I said. âHow did you find out?'
âA policeman I was having sex with told me.' He stared at me, chin lifted, and I caught a glimpse of Cody, the boy I used to
know â his combative spirit, his iconoclasm â then he looked down and began to fidget with his plastic swizzle-stick. âI used to have a thing about policemen in those days. Border guards as well. Maybe it was the uniforms â or maybe it was as close as I could get to being somewhere else.'
The policeman in question was one of the people who had found Maclean. Haunted by the case, he had given De Vere a graphic description of the mutilated body, as if by recording every detail he might exorcise himself.
âHe even told me about â' De Vere broke off. He wiped at his nose savagely with the palm of his hand. âFuck,' he said. âFuck it.' He wiped at his nose again, then his eyes, and then sniffed loudly. âWhat did you have to turn up for? What are you doing here, anyway?'
I was silent for a moment.
Then I spoke again. âSo you were sent to the Yellow Quarter?'
âI spent eight years in the Yellow Quarter. Now I'm here. They don't seem to know what to do with me. Can't make up their minds.'
âAnd he knew you were there?'
âMaclean? Yes, he knew.' De Vere's face twisted, and he looked away. âHe wanted to join me. He wanted to be with me. That's why he tried to escape.' De Vere laid his hand flat on the table, the palm facing down. The way he was staring at it, it could have belonged to someone else. âHe never stopped loving me â did he?'
âNo,' I said. âHe talked about you all the time.'
With a single violent gesture, De Vere reached into his pocket and tossed something on to the table. The object behaved much as a dice would have done, only it seemed heavier, clumsier. When it came to rest, I saw it was his wedding ring. I remembered Bracewell telling me that they had both thrown their rings into the moat. Was that a lie, or had De Vere gone back later and fished his out again?
âCrazy, isn't it,' he said. âIt's just the wheel-nut from some old bastard's car.'
âIt's more than that,' I said.
He eyed me sceptically. I was presuming to speak for him, and I didn't have the right. With an impatient sound, half sigh, half snarl, he snatched up the ring and thrust it back into his pocket, as if he hated himself for keeping it but couldn't help himself, then he reached for his glass and swirled the contents. âAnother drink?'
Wondering how late it was, I risked a look at De Vere's watch. He noticed.
âI'm sorry,' I said. âThere's somewhere I've got to be. I mean, I don't â'
âYes. Of course.' He jumped to his feet, rocking the table. His drink toppled over. âSorry to have kept you.'
âNo, wait. I didn't mean â'
But he was already brushing past me. By the time I twisted round in my chair, he had disappeared through the double-doors at the far end of the pool. Somehow, I felt I could still see him, though â his tousled red-brown hair, his tight, hoisted shoulders, the worn-down heels on his shoes.
When I left the bar moments later I half expected to find him on the towpath, pacing up and down, or scowling into the canal. He would still be smarting from what he would have perceived as an insult, but I was ready to apologise. I had been insensitive, unthinking. Also, I wanted to have the chance to explain myself. If I told him what I was doing, I was sure that he would understand. But he had gone. I listened for his footsteps, called his name. Out in the fog somewhere was De Vere, who I hadn't seen for twenty-seven years.
I waited ten or fifteen minutes, but he didn't return. I had lost him, probably for ever. Even an unexpected stroke of luck â a water-taxi gliding out of the fog with its âfor hire' light on â couldn't lift my spirits. I flagged the taxi down. It cut its speed and drifted towards me. In a listless voice, I gave the driver the address.
âThat's quite a way,' he said.
âIt's all right,' I said. âI've got money.'
I stepped down into the cabin. Everything I touched was damp and slightly sticky. If anything, the fog had thickened since
the early evening, and the taxi's engine had a flat, dead sound as we pulled out into the canal. There wasn't a single second during that long ride out to the club when I didn't regret my tactlessness.
I suppose I should've known that something would go wrong. There had been any number of warning signs, not least De Vere with his sinister disclosures. I was dreaming of a reunion, though, a kind of homecoming, and when the club's white stucco rose out of the murk, lights burning in the ground-floor windows, my excitement was so great that I didn't doubt that it was all about to happen. I didn't really notice the figures standing on the towpath, let alone grant them any particular significance. I paid the taxi-driver. My hands shook so much that I almost dropped my wallet in the canal. There were no thoughts of a journey back to the centre, no thoughts of anything beyond this moment⦠Only when I approached the club did I realise that the figures were all dressed identically, in dark-blue tunics, and dark-blue hats with black plastic brims, and that their eyes were trained exclusively on me. They were police, of course. One of them stepped forwards, flipping open a small notebook. âThomas Parry?'
I didn't answer. Clearly they had been patrolling the quayside for some time. They had an excitement that was all their own â the thrill of a tip-off, a stake-out, a possible arrest. Their bodies trembled with stored tension.
âYou're to come with us,' the man with the notebook told me.
To have travelled so far, to have got so close â and now this ⦠I hadn't even considered such an outcome, and my reaction was suitably incongruous. I laughed out loud.
âWe're taking you to the Ministry,' the same man said, âfor questioning.' His voice had tightened. He nodded to one of his colleagues, who grasped me by the upper arm and tried to steer me towards a waiting motor launch. I immediately shook him off. I had never been able to bear the feeling of being held like that.
âFirst I have to go into the club,' I said.
The man with the notebook shook his head. âWe've got our orders.'
âPlease,' I said, âit won't take â'
âIt's orders,' one of the others said. âIt's not up to us.'
The inside of my head buzzed and flashed, as if something in my brain had blown. They were about to deny me the very thing that I'd been looking forward to, the thing I wanted most in all the world. I pushed past them, making for the entrance, and was aware, for a few moments, of people shocked into unnatural shapes.
Before I could reach the door, though, two of them grabbed hold of me. Then the third joined in, his notebook fluttering clumsily to the ground. As we struggled on the steps, one of the glass doors opened and the blonde-haired girl looked out. She was wearing her kimono with its pattern of exotic birds and trees, and her eyebrows, lifted a little in surprise, were plucked into two fine arcs, as usual. In order to recreate the experience of my other visits to the club â or to reproduce the same level of intensity, at least â I had always felt that conditions had to be similar, if not identical, and the blonde girl's presence there that night, the fact that she would have been sitting in the ticket booth when I walked in, only added to the fury with which I resisted all attempts to restrain me. I was told later that I seemed to possess an almost superhuman strength, and that, if there hadn't been three policemen at the scene, and if one of them hadn't been a famous wrestler when he was young, I might actually have got away.
We passed beneath a bridge and swung sharply to the left, the canal splitting wide open in our wake, waves slapping against the sheer dark walls of town houses and then rebounding. The massive bulk of the Ministry towered above us now, its eaves all but shutting out the sky. Though it was after two in the morning, lights still showed in several of the windows. It could be a twenty-four-hour job, working for the government. Nobody knew that better than I did.
I was escorted to a room on the first floor where two men were waiting for me. One wore glasses with no frames, his brown eyes floating beneath the lenses like a pair of sea anemones. The other man had the fleshy but solid build of a field athlete. Running along the far wall of the office was a soundproofed window that overlooked an indoor marina. The water was lit from below, an eerie jewelled green, and various small craft were going silently about their business.