Authors: Bernard Beckett
âEmily, I have to tell you something.'
She looked up at me. There was no hope in her eyes, or fear.
âIt's, it wasn't me.'
âWhat wasn't you?'
âAt the picnic. Up the tree.'
I'd hoped it would be that easy, that she'd
understand straight away, but her eyes
remained empty.
âOf course it wasn't you.'
âNo, I meanâ¦remember how I told you, when we were little, me and Theo would swap
places? We swapped. Just this one time, I swear. Just today. I'm him, I'm me. I'm
Rene.'
I was sure, if she looked at me, properly looked at me, she had to see. How could
she not see?
âYou're sick.'
âI know. It was an awful thing toâ¦'
âHow couldâ¦He's your brother, Theo. Just for once in your life, have a little bit
of fucking respect for him.'
âEmily, justâ¦'
She stood up, but there was nowhere for her to go.
âAnd you shouldn't, by the way. You shouldn't go through with this sick plan of theirs.'
Emily turned to Maggie. âYou've told him that, right? You've told him the last thing
this world needs is two Theos.'
âEmily, I need you toâ'
âI don't care what you need. I don't owe you anything, okay? One pissy little night,
I was drunk.
I don't even remember it. How many times do I have to tell you I don't
even remember it?'
A small tear in the curtain, a glimpse of the world that had shadowed my own. Any
other time, I would have asked.
âEmily, please sit down.' Maggie's voice was calm and clear.
We both turned to her. The first sliver of doubt lined Emily's face. She sank back
into the couch.
âDon't take his side,' Emily whispered. âYou don't know him. He'll manipulateâ'
âEmily,' Maggie said. âI've come here to apologise to you. I should have done a
better job of checking the details. That, in part, is how this has happened. We should
have known much sooner. You should have been told.'
âKnown what?' Emily shook her head, as if trying to dislodge the possibility. âWhat
didn't you tell me?'
âRene is telling you the truth.'
Beneath every face, there is another face, the one revealed when the defences collapse
and vulnerability turns to despair. When it's a face you love, the sadness is overwhelming.
âYou don't know that. You can't know that.'
Emily looked up at Maggie. âHe is lying
to you. Theo, you're an arsehole. Tell her you're lying.'
âWe chose the new paint for the flat together,' I said. âLast Tuesday. You wanted
the peach, but the painter explained to you how much brighter it would be when you
saw the whole wall.'
âRene told you that. So what?'
âWhen we hold hands, you take your little finger and press it against my palm.'
âHe tells you everything. I told him not to. I told him it isn't healthy. You sucked
him dry. You know that don't you?'
I could have thought of a hundred different secrets to tell her, but belief, in the
end, doesn't turn on evidence. And the truth was, she knew. She already knew.
Emily might have hugged me. She might have been so glad I was still alive, that nothing
else mattered. A tiny part of me expected it. But she didn't, and I knew then how
hard it would now be to ever believe she had loved me.
âIf I had my time over,' I said.
âYou'd do it differently,' she replied. âWho the fuck wouldn't?'
Emily moved toward the door. I began to
follow her, but Maggie's hand was on my arm.
âYou have to wait,' Maggie said. âLet her come back to you, when she's ready.'
âI need her now,' I answered.
âI know you do.'
It felt as if I was the one still point in a world of flux: that every moment, past
and future, was moving away from me.
âTake me back to my brother, please.'
Let me hold him. Let him anchor me.
I crawled onto his bed. Maggie didn't try to stop me. I left my tears on his cheek.
I felt his hip bone dig into my stomach, his bony runner's hip. At some point I stood.
I looked down at the face that was no longer his. He was empty, a puppet abandoned
by its master. The brow was as flat, the eyebrows as dark, the nose as straight,
save for the slight rounding into a bulb at the end. The eyes, beneath the lids,
would be as brown, the bottom lip was as full, but he was empty. I ran my fingers
over my face, felt every matching detail. Later, I remember, I sat on the floor with
my back against the wall, and the sight of the casters on his bed struck me as the
saddest thing I had ever seen. The body, to be wheeled away, transient. Was that
it? The connection has
escaped me. I'm forced to invent.
I don't know how much time Maggie let pass. I remember standing again, looking at
Theo, trying not to think of the picnic. Failing.
âIn half an hour, they'll need to take him away,' Maggie said.
âWho says I'll decide to go through with it?'
âWe're not presuming that. We just need to have him ready, if that is what you want,
when the time comes.'
I thought of Emily, walking away from me. Fully clothed.
âDo you think he ever knew?' I asked.
âKnew what?'
âThat he was dying? Do you think there was a moment?'
That's what I wanted to know. That was the pinpoint of tragedy I needed to construct.
Theo, all alone, as we all must be, in the end. Terrified. And me, not there to hold
his hand, say it will all be okay, tell him lies.
âWhat are you going to tell the doctors about me?' I asked.
âWe have a little time left,' Maggie said, âbefore I need to decide.'
âSo you don't know?'
âNot entirely, no.'
I didn't believe her.
âYou think I might be out of my mind?' I asked.
âThat's not the test.'
âI am,' I told her. âI'm coming apart. I can feel it happening.' I don't know what
I was trying to do. Find something else to break, I suppose.
My cheap theatre left her unmoved.
âShouldn't you tell people what's happened?' I asked. âAbout your mistake, I mean.'
âI did, while you were talking to your brother. I went out into the corridor.'
âI wasn't talking to him.'
âOkay.'
âI know he can't hear. I understand that. I didn't even notice you'd gone. How's
that a sign of sanity?'
âWhat will you decide?' she asked. âHave you thought about it?'
âIt hasn't crossed my mind.'
âThese jokes waste time,' she said.
âIt doesn't feel wasted.'
âWhat do you want, Rene?'
As if I was going to tell her that.
The worth of my life, in that moment, was easily measured. Just three things mattered:
Theo, Emily, and my memories of both of them. I'd lost one; the second, I suspected,
wasn't coming back; and the third they were asking me to give away. What did I want?
What I wanted made no sense, and there was no way I was telling her that.
More silence. Our speciality.
âI want him to live,' I said.
âHe's not going to live though, is he?' Maggie said.
âNo.'
Me and Emily must have been put together differently, because I was out of tears.
âWhat's your next choice?' Maggie asked.
âI want to do what he'd want me to do. This is for him. I just want to do something
for him.'
It wasn't true, but it sounded plausible, the sort of thing a young man still in
possession of his mind might say.
âWhat would you tell somebody else, if you heard them saying that?'
All I had to do was turn it around, put myself on the bed, with Theo standing beside
it. The
way Emily had thought it was.
âI'd tell them that was grief talking. And grief passes. It does pass, doesn't it?'
âOften.'
âI still do though. I still want to do what he'd want.'
âAnd what's that?' Maggie asked.
âHe'd want me to walk away, scatter him down by the river, where we let Mum and Dad
go.'
I heard the truth in my words. If he could talk, that's what he'd tell me.
âBut?'
There's always a but.
âBut if we swapped places, if this was him standing here, not me, he'd go through
with the procedure.'
âSo do unto othersâ'
âDoesn't always work,' I said.
âNo,' Maggie said. âIt doesn't.'
âSo what does?' I asked.
âYou want me to give you a rule for living?'
âSure.'
âI don't have any.' She shrugged. âSorry.'
âWhat if I change my mind?' I asked her.
âWhat if we go through with it, and then
I change my mind?'
She wouldn't look at me.
âYou might find it better to stop thinking like that,' she said.
âLike what?'
âThinking of yourself as just one person.'
It was like feeling earth crumble at your toes, and only then realising you were
at the edge of the cliff top. I teetered, my head swirled, maybe my eyes closed.
I remember Maggie took hold of my elbow.
âIs that possible?' I asked.
âWhat?'
âThat one of us changes his mind and the other doesn't?'
âI think so, sure.'
âBut if we're identical,' I said.
âYou'll have the same memories, the same thought patterns. But inevitably there'll
be differences.'
âWhat sort of differences?' I asked.
She looked at me, as if answering involved making an important decision. Her face
was a stage, and back behind the wings another
world busied itself with preparations.
âFrom the moment you wake up, your experiences will diverge, your feedback. And
that will set up its own development cascades.'
âThat sounds like something you just made up,' I said.
âI'm not an expert,' she admitted.
âCan I talk to one?'
âI don't know there are any,' she said. âNot yet.'
I felt dizzy. My feet buckled. I reached out to her shoulder, leaned against her,
sucking in my breath.
âLet's get back toâ'
âNo, I'm fine. I'm just, I'm hungry. I need to eat something.'
It's amazing to me, the way the mind finds ways of making sense of its fractured
world.
âRene.'
âWhat?'
She stood between me and the door, blocking my way. âThis will definitely be the
last time. You should say goodbye.'
âI already did,' I lied.
Maggie walked with me to the cafeteria, watching no doubt, taking mental notes the
whole way. By then, my constant second guessing had become background static.
What
would a sane person order for lunch?
âYou know your way back to my office?'
âYou're not going to come in, take notes on the way I eat?' I said.
Confident, pugnacious.
A sane person would be spoiling for a fight.
âI'm sure you'll report anything out of the ordinary.'
Maggie's eyes darted past me and settled for a moment on something behind my left
shoulder. It had affected her, her mistake. Suddenly she was nervous, skittish and
uncertain.
That's the way it is: the more we are used to having control, the more we react to
losing it.
âSorry,' she whispered. âCome on, I can get food brought to us.'
She tugged at my sleeve, a strangely childish action.
I turned to see what had spooked her. Emily. Waiting in line with her food on a tray.
Beside her stood a man; he was somewhere between my age and her father's. Young enough,
in some other circumstance, for me to feel a stab of jealousy. The man was thin and
casually dressed. His head was held high, as if he was aware of his good looks. He
leaned forward, to whisper something to Emily. The body language was easy, familiar.
She looked up, and caught my eye.
âWe need to go.' I heard the urgency in Maggie's voice.
âWhy?'
Emily shook her head, not at me, but at the man.
âThat man she is with, he's a journalist. An activist journalist. He shouldn't be
here. The hospital is supposed to be in lockdown. I'll call security.'
Maggie's hand went to her earpiece. She mumbled her instructions. Too late, Emily
and the man were coming over. I didn't move.
Emily and I faced one another. There had been a moment in the musical, exactly like
this; it wasn't clear whether we would dance or fight.
âYou're not permitted to be in the building,' Maggie said.
âSettle, love, I'm just leaving,' the journalist replied.
I imagine Maggie and the journalist were staring at one another, too. All I saw was
Emily. The truth had settled on her. I, Rene, was alive. Theo's fate was less certain.
Emily still bristled, but the anger was deeper now, more complicated.
âThere's something I need to say to you,' she said.
âRene, I think we shouldâ' Maggie leaned close, her hand on my arm.
âWhy, don't you want him to hear it?' The journalist's voice was full of fight. âDo
you want me to publish that you refused his girlfriend a chance to talk to him aboutâ'
âYou publish anything about what happens
inside this hospitalâ'
âCareful now, threats make excellent headlines.'
âSecurity are on their way.'
Emily turned back to the journalist, as if uncertain. He nodded his encouragement.
âJust say what you told me you wanted to say,' he said.
âEmily, you don't have to do anything this manâ'