Authors: Ann Victoria Roberts
Bram shrugged and made a face. âNor me.'
On consideration I thought he must have known a different side of Jack Louvain, a side I didn't know at all. So after a while, pondering aloud and trying to draw him out, I said I'd always found Jack difficult to understand. He hadn't been in love with Isa Firth, and it seemed to me that the only thing that mattered to him was what he did, observing people, photographing them, making a record of the way they stood and looked and behaved. If he was in love at all, I concluded, it had to be with the pictures he took, images captured on glass and paper â people and places at a distance.
âHe could go back to them, you see, whenever he wanted.' I paused, and Bram was nodding, not meeting my eyes, but agreeing. âLike those pictures of you and me,' I went on, aware of a sudden catch in my voice. âThey were too good for him to destroy. I don't suppose he ever considered what might happen to them after he was gone...'
âNo, I don't suppose he did.'
He stood up to pour us both another drink. I waited until he turned his head to look at me. As our eyes met, I knew. It seemed so obvious, I wondered why I hadn't always known. For a long moment I seemed to be pinned down for lack of air.
âIt was you, wasn't it?' I asked, when I could breathe again. âHe kept those pictures because they were of
you...
'
With a brief nod he abruptly moved away. He lit a cigar and stood by the window, smoking, with his back to me.
We were both embarrassed. The revelation cast such a different light I hardly knew what to think, where to begin. Eventually, I had to speak, just to break the silence.
âThat last night,' I said anxiously, turning to look at him, âbefore Irving arrived â you were out for hours, alone. I thought you'd gone walking over the moors â I was worried sick about you. But when you got back you said you'd bumped into Jack Louvain, that you'd been drinking with him...'
âYes. Yes, I had.'
I paused, aware of the tension between us. âWhat happened?'
âNothing,' he said quickly. âAt least, nothing very much.' Limping slightly, he began to pace the room, while I followed him with my eyes, willing him to tell the truth.
âWe had a few drinks and something to eat, then ended up going back to the studio with a bottle of whisky. As I recall, we drank rather a lot. We looked at some of his latest pictures â he showed me some of the saucy ones too. But more as an introduction, I think, to what he wanted to say, which â in short â amounted to the fact that he found women rather less attractive than men.
âThat was not a complete surprise,' Bram admitted, clearing his throat, âalthough I was surprised â and not a little embarrassed â to discover that he was attracted to me. I was drunk, of course, and so was he, which cushioned things a bit, but still...' He shrugged as though to rid himself of uncomfortable memories.
âDid you find
him
attractive?' I asked, and I could see the question embarrassed him further.
âWell, I liked him â I always did like Jack, you know that.' For a moment he paused, then added quickly: âI suppose, if I'm honest, there may have been an element of attraction, but it wasn't something I'd been aware of. Although for a while that night, I must admit to a mixture of temptation and curiosity which nearly got the better of me... Nearly, but not quite. Anyway, I left.'
Drawing deeply on his cigar, he paced up and down the room. Eventually, he said: âThe encounter left me in a strange mood. I remember feeling angry and frustrated because I thought I'd found the simple life here in Whitby, yet it was turning out to be incredibly complicated.'
With a humourless smile he went on: âEverything seemed against me â even my own sensibilities. All the usual curbs were failing. I'd even found myself responding to Jack, which was completely out of character, while my behaviour with you earlier that day had just â gone too far. It was alarming. I felt I was losing my grip...
âI wasn't in control of anything, least of all myself, and when I got back to the cottage I â well,' he finished despairingly, âyou know what I did. And I know how wrong it was.'
Briefly, our eyes met, and in the midst of my own anguish I sensed his shame and distress. I could tell that, like me, he'd spent a long time, years ago, trying to account for his behaviour then, and had not entirely succeeded.
âAll I can say is that I was in love with you, Damaris â madly in love â and at the same time half mad with anxiety because I knew it was doomed. The last thing I wanted was to hurt you â God knows, I just wanted to love you. But I â I don't know, somehow, somewhere, everything went wrong...'
âIt felt as though you hated me,' I said with difficulty, âas though you blamed me for something â for not giving enough, or not
being
what you wanted me to be...'
âWas that how it seemed?' He paused, frowning; and then as I stood up he came to me. With a sigh, he reached out tentatively, touching my hair, my cheek, my shoulder, his eyes full of concern and affection. âIt wasn't like that, Damaris, believe me...'
I was stiff with resistance. My throat felt dry, but I managed to say, âI always thought, afterwards, that you'd used me as a substitute.'
âFor what?' he asked in surprise.
âFor Irving.'
Taken aback, he shook his head. âNo. No, Damaris, you're wrong there. I can see why you would think so, but believe me â no! You weren't a substitute for anyone or anything â I loved you, I wanted you, you satisfied me. You gave me the freedom I'd always longed for -' He broke off abruptly, breathing hard.
âBut?' I asked sharply.
âBut I was beginning to be afraid of what I might do with it,' he declared. âThe more you gave, the more I wanted. It was as though I couldn't stop. I wanted to possess you, body and soul. It frightened me.'
âAnd me.' Even so many years distant, the memories were chilling. I shivered, and he turned to me at once in mute appeal. I felt he needed my warmth just as much as I needed his, and, in spite of everything, I opened my arms instinctively.
âI felt there was something wrong with me,' he said as we embraced, his voice rough with emotion, âsomething sick and evil that would destroy you if I stayed. I wasn't even sure it wouldn't destroy me too, but I knew I had to leave. It was almost a relief when you said you never wanted to see me again...'
Moved by his remorse, I was aware, more disturbingly, of wanting him to go on holding me. A sense of comfort and familiarity made me cling, as though he could and would defend me now, against all the maladies of the past. As though we could share the better times again.
It had been too long since anyone had touched me, much less held me with affection. With an effort I forced myself to move away from him, and dragged my mind back to the matter in hand. A pulse was beating furiously against my throat, but now we'd begun, I had to see this thing through to the end. Now he'd told me about Jack Louvain, I had to know whether physical desire had been part of his feelings for Irving.
My voice sounded strained but he heard me out, standing perfectly still, with his eyes closed, for what seemed a long time. I thought I'd gone too far, that he wouldn't answer, or would make some excuse and leave.
Instead he picked up his glass and drank from it, and when he'd put it down again, he said quietly, âDamaris, my dear, you must understand that Irving and I worked together, closely, for more than twenty-five years. Friendship changes. Feelings change. In all that time there was often hostility as much as affection, and if there were times when I loved him, there were times, I swear, when I loathed him, too.'
But I couldn't leave it there. A little desperately, I said: âYes, I believe you, but there had to be more to it than that. Tell me the truth, Bram. All those years ago â did he tempt you?'
At first he shook his head and, with something like exasperation, ran fingers through his hair. But then he said abruptly: âOh, for God's sake, Damaris, yes, he did â at times â one time certainly.' He broke off, and tension was dispelled on a long release of breath. A moment later, with a kind of weary resignation, he added: âThe thing is, even when I knew, I wasn't sure why he was doing it.
âI thought it was just me, a combination of fatigue and frustration, my own lurid imagination getting carried away. It took a while for me to see that all the looks, gestures, touches, were deliberate, that he was well aware of what he was doing. He used his appeal to manipulate people â men as well as women. But he did it in such a way that it appeared innocent, unintentional, charming â you were never quite
sure,
you see...'
He described Irving in the early days, before success changed him: young, handsome, possessing an amazing mind as well as that prodigious talent, and the kind of charm that was later to mesmerise audiences both at home and abroad.
From their first meeting, the two men had seemed to understand each other; on his part, Bram described the feeling as akin to finding a soul-mate, even though he could hardly believe that such a dazzlingly talented man would choose him for a friend. In fact he'd been chosen for his own talents, for the energy and organisation that was to assist Irving in his great venture at the Lyceum. But in those days, Bram said, he was far too inexperienced to see that. He was simply overwhelmed by the offer at a time when he felt his own life was stagnating in a backwater.
âOddly enough, my mother accused me of being infatuated. She sensed Irving's power and was afraid he'd drop me when I was no longer of use...
âAnd even though the position was beyond anything I'd dreamed of, still I had qualms about it. Mostly to do with Irving himself. I was certain we could reach the heights, but at what cost, I wasn't sure. Rather like Faust, later,' he confessed with dry self-mockery, âI think I was afraid of losing my soul.'
I remembered the impact Irving had had on me, and shivered. âAnd did you?'
He shook his head. âI hope not. I think I paid with more immediate things â my peace of mind, my marriage, whatever talents I possessed â and you.'
Reaching for his glass, Bram sighed and swilled the whisky round for a moment. âWith regard to
Faust
â the play we were rehearsing when you and I first met â he was playing Mephistopheles. Your
Gentleman in Black
,' he added with a dry smile. âExcept Irving set a new benchmark by playing him in
red
...
âHe was always affected by a part, so I should have been prepared for the worst. But he was so devilish he came close to destroying everything â abused his power, did everything possible to belittle those of us who had been with him since the beginning. Even Ellen, who'd been in love with him for years, he treated abominably. As for me, well, it was as though he was determined to bring everything to the surface, just to make me suffer. And he did. Love, hatred, jealousy â the full gamut of emotions. I thought I was going mad.
âHe'd flirt with his coterie â quite openly, often with a sly look to be sure I was aware of it. And while I was holding onto my temper with the greatest difficulty, he would come to me and slide an arm around my shoulders, for all the world the affectionate friend he'd always been.
âBut then he would whisper, say something lascivious as a joke, and laugh at my reaction, which I'm afraid could never quite match his. I was too serious, you see, too aware of his cruelty to find it in the least amusing.
âI felt stupid and angry â powerless. I wasn't eating or sleeping properly, Florence and I were arguing all the time... between home and the theatre,' he added with bitter humour, âit was like living in a Shakespearian tragedy! I racked my brains for alternatives â writing for a living, retiring to Scotland or the West Country, as far as I could get from Irving and the theatre.
âThen there was talk of arranging the next provincial tour, so I seized the opportunity with both hands...'
I recognised the edginess of the man I'd met then. That was when he'd come to Whitby for the first time, when, as he said, he'd braved the cliffs to do battle with the elements. He'd gone away feeling that I'd cured him of his megrims with a blast of real life.
The play was a success â but that, as he said, brought its own peculiar pressures. Over the winter his relationship with Irving had worsened, bringing him back to Whitby at the first opportunity. As we talked, I saw it all quite clearly: the strain of overwork, torment from Irving, lack of sympathy from Florence, too little rest and a complex build-up of resentment and anger and fatigue. At the time I'd joked about his need to escape, but Bram had been escaping a nightmare; and having got away, his fear of discovery was very real.
âIt sounds slightly mad now, that I should have been so fearful. But I was. I knew that once Irving discovered my whereabouts I'd have to face him again. It made me desperate, made me cleave to you ever more fiercely. You were my salvation, Damaris â I wanted to be part of you, have you be part of me. Only then would I be strong enough to defeat him. Because I knew, as soon as I saw him, it would start all over again.'
âAnd did it?' I asked after a while.
After an even longer pause, he shook his head. âNo,' he said, sounding mildly baffled, ânot really. Of course the play was over, so that probably had something to do with it. But all those uncontrollable emotions had somehow been dispelled. I was still moved by him, still in awe of his talent â but by some miracle, when we came face to face, I could see who and what he was. I was no longer dazzled.'
I knew the symptoms. âYou were no longer in love with him.'
âNo. I was in love with you, that's why.'
It was late and we had yet to dine. Since neither of us could face formality, we studied the menu and ordered a light meal to be sent up to my rooms. Afterwards I felt calmer, more relaxed, and as waiters brought coffee and cleared away the remains, I found myself thinking how strange it was that Bram and I should be sharing such intimate secrets after all these years.