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Authors: James Lasdun

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BOOK: The Horned Man
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‘It's not something I relish. But if there's no other way around it …'

Roger looked pensive for a moment.

‘Perhaps on second thoughts we'll keep this to ourselves', he said, ‘until the student herself complains. You don't happen to know who she was?'

‘Candida something?'

Zena Sayeed raised a dark eyebrow at this: ‘Candy Johanssen? Skinny girl? Sort of a Pre-Raphaelite starveling?'

‘That sounds like her.'

‘She's my advisee.'

Roger turned to her. ‘Then perhaps you might want to have a word with her, Zena.'

Zena made a non-committal sound.

‘Do you have a problem with that?' Roger asked; not aggressively, but with a surprising forcefulness that impressed me again with the strength of his passion in this cause. Apparently he was prepared to ruffle a few feathers to get the results he wanted.

Zena eyed him a moment – debating, I sensed, whether it was worth getting into a discussion.

‘Not at all,' she said pleasantly. ‘I'll speak to her.'

Roger pressed his advantage: ‘It sounds to me as though there may be a psychological endangerment issue here. You say she's thin?'

‘As a rail.'

‘I think you should speak to her, Zena.'

‘I said I would, and I will.'

A few minutes later Bruno was brought into the room by the Dean's assistant.

One would have thought that, with the threat of the ultimate stigma of his profession hanging over his head, he might have appeared nervous, but it was evident at once that he had decided to adopt a posture of casual indifference toward the proceedings.

He gave us an affable sort of a grin and sat sideways in his chair, sprawling an arm over the back.

He looked at me. ‘Hello Lawrence,' he said quietly.

I felt again the pressure of his peculiar and unrequited urge to make an accomplice of me. I nodded at him, glad that I had made my feelings about him clear to my colleagues, though
uncomfortable at the appearance of duplicitousness that his friendly attitude seemed calculated to promote.

‘So. What atrocity have I committed?'

Refusing to rise to the bait of Bruno's scorn, Roger proceeded to explain the charge of unfair grading, and how, under the circumstances, this had opened Bruno to the graver charge of sexual harassment.

‘I've never harassed anyone in my life,' Bruno interrupted in his rasping voice. ‘Personally, I've never needed to.'

‘And we're anxious', Roger put in gently, ‘that you don't find yourself accused of it. Which is why we asked you to come and meet with us.'

‘Who's threatening to accuse me of it?'

‘Bruno, if I may, two things …' Roger spoke in his calm, dispassionate way. ‘Number one, since we don't, unlike some other colleges, have a rule saying you absolutely can't get involved with students, the onus is on us to keep the barrier of protection especially high. You can make the choice to have an affair with a student, but at your own risk. The first whisper of a complaint from the student, you're presumed guilty of harassment and you're out of here, period.'

‘Has there been a whisper?

‘No. Not yet. Not from a student. But my second point, Bruno, is that you have a rich and rewarding career ahead of you. You're on tenure track here, you're clearly a gifted teacher, why blow it?'

‘No whisper of harassment from a student, but a whisper from someone else?'

‘That – that's not something you have to trouble yourself with for the moment.'

‘Then what are you driving at, Roger?'

‘At this point I think if you would give us an undertaking
not to go any further along this road than you may have already gone, that ought to be sufficient. Yes?' Roger looked at each of us. We nodded, and he turned back to Bruno.

Bruno merely gave a disdainful grin. ‘I'll take my chances with the whisperers,' he replied swaggeringly. I felt that his eyes were upon me, though I had my own firmly down on the page of minutes before me.

‘Am I free to go now?' he asked.

Roger sighed. ‘Yes. But please keep in mind that we're charged with certain responsibilities here, and that we do take them seriously.'

Bruno stood up. ‘I'll keep it in mind.'

There was a silence after the door closed.

‘So much for that,' Roger said quietly. ‘Zena, you'll have a word with your student?'

‘I'll do what I can, Roger,' Zena replied wearily. Even she seemed to have been disturbed by Bruno's attitude.

A few minutes later I was walking across campus with Elaine by my side. The afternoon had turned soft and sunny. Over the distant roar of traffic, you could hear the trickle of melted snow running into the storm drains. For a while we moved together in silence – a silence that I sensed was highly charged for her.

‘I'd almost given up on you,' she said at last, her voice thick.

‘I'm sorry.' I didn't attempt to explain why I hadn't been in touch.

‘Oh no,
I'm
sorry. I was just so – excited, I guess.'

‘That's good. I want you to feel excited.'

‘Oh … Thank you for saying that.'

‘What would you like to do?' I asked.

‘I'd like to cook you a meal. That's what I'd like to do.'

‘I was hoping you might say that.'

‘I'm famous for my cauliflower quiche.'

‘My mouth's watering already.'

‘Oh, you!' she said, laughing. She scribbled the directions to her house on a scrap of paper, and we parted with a fond, liquid look into each other's eyes.

Since she lived near the next train station up along the line, it wasn't worth my while going back into Manhattan before dinner. I had two hours to kill. I went to my office, picking up a yellow interdepartmental envelope from my mailbox on the way. Inside was the piece Amber had asked me to look at. Reluctantly, I laid it on my desk and began to read, but I found myself completely unable to concentrate on it. I was thinking of its author – the way she seemed to suspend herself so vividly in the inner proscenium of my consciousness whenever I was in her presence, and the apprehension this always aroused.

At once I caught a trace of something from the distant past: a faint resonance, like the last, almost inaudible reverberation of a gong.

It sometimes seems to me that the mind – my own at least – far from being the infinitely capacious organ one likes to think it is, is in fact rather rudimentary, possessing only a very limited number of categories for the things it experiences, and lumping all kinds of diverse phenomena together on the basis of the most accidental resemblance. That would account for the way you realise from time to time that you have never made a real distinction between, say, the dog-owning neighbor in the town you were born in, and the cat-owning neighbor in the town you moved to later on. Both have simply been categorised as ‘pet-owning neighbors.' It's always
a bit of a shock when you realise that the people or things you've fused together have nothing to do with each other at all.

In the case of Amber, what I realised was that I had combined her image with that of a figure from my adolescence: Emily Lloyd, my stepfather's daughter.

It wasn't that they looked like each other. Emily had thick chestnut ringlets; she was petite, with a watchful, smoothly angular face, while Amber was long-limbed, willowy, even a little gawky; a bit like a giraffe foal in fact, with her freckles and red-gold hair.

But the feeling each aroused in me was the same: a desire so sharp (I had had to acknowledge that Amber's effect on me amounted to this) it seemed more to do with recovering something vital and precious that had been taken from me, than with gaining possession of something new. That, and a feeling of confronting something capable of destroying me.

Not wishing to think about either of them, I scanned the bookshelves for something to distract me.

A small collected Shakespeare caught my eye. I took it down and opened the front cover. In faded green ink, the handwriting as neat as a row of pines on a mountain ridge, was the following inscription:

To our beloved Barbara
,

A gift to remind you how much we treasure you as you go off to college and embark on your life's great dream
.

Your ever-loving Mom and Dad

8 September 1985

The late Barbara Hellermann, I presumed: Trumilcik's successor in this room, and my own immediate predecessor;
brewer of coffee for her students, recipient of thankyou notes, collector of uplifting quotations … And quite a bit younger, judging from the date she went off to college, than I had imagined. Not more than her mid-thirties, it would seem, when she died: a painful thought, especially in the context of the parents' loving inscription. With a small internal rustle – a little inner scene-shifting – the kind-old-lady image I had formed of her was replaced by that of a young woman in the tragic flush of some rare illness. Poignant, though since I had no personal connection, only superficially distressing.

Leafing through the silky pages of the volume, I came to
Measure for Measure
. I hadn't looked at the play since my teens, but the lines were as familiar to me as if I had written them myself. There was the sexual miscreant Claudio, that ‘warpèd slip of wilderness', on death row for his sins. There was his judge, Angelo, ‘this ungenitured agent', as the dissolute scoffer Lucio calls him, battling (with underappreciated sincerity, I felt) his own ungovernable urges. And there was Claudio's sister, chaste Isabella, about to enter the cloisters when she encounters Angelo, triggering his explosive lust. I took her part once in our all-boys O-level class, and I recalled now the queazy excitement it had given me to announce that I would rather die than accept Angelo's offer to spare my brother's life if I would sleep with him.
Were I under terms of death
, I remembered declaiming passionately,
th'impression of keen whips I'd wear as rubies …

I took the volume over to my desk, meaning to reread the play. I hadn't got far, though, when Emily Lloyd started drifting back into my thoughts. It occurred to me that I must have come into contact with her right around the time we were studying this play. I was fifteen, home from school, where my stepfather was now paying the fees. I remember
him tousling my hair as I arrived at the little station near the weekend cottage he'd bought my mother in Kent. I put down my bags and we shared a look of helplessness. We were less than nothing to each other – a void; the shape of an absence. In his case his own children; in mine, my father, who'd died of a brain tumor when I was five.

The house was tiny; all that Robert – my stepfather – had been able to afford now that his ex-wife had his finances tied up. It was a former ploughman's cottage, with minute windows. My mother filled the little rooms with rustic bric-à-brac, but it remained obstinately gloomy, and every time the three of us spent any time there together, the effort of not getting on each other's nerves would distill itself into a fine, potent melancholy that tended to engulf us in silence after a few hours.

‘You look a bit peaky, dear,' my mother said to me that evening.

‘I'm fine.'

‘You're not bored are you?'

‘No.'

‘I think it's a dreadful shame you didn't want to bring one of your friends to stay.'

‘I'm all right.'

‘There's lots to do. Bike rides, sailing on the reservoir … I should have thought they'd jump at the opportunity to come and stay.'

‘I'm supposed to be revising.'

I couldn't tell her it was out of the question that I should ever bring a friend here. There was an absolute veto on the subject in my mind. The form it took was a sense that everything that occurred in our household was blighted with a deep wrongness of spirit. I didn't know where this sense had
originated, but I knew it was so. Under our roof, the simplest observation on the weather was liable to sound insincere, or manipulative; the social functions my mother liked to arrange had a fraught, overelaborate quality that made everyone long for them to be over. With the resignation one learns at the kind of schools I went to, I accepted all this as my lot in life, but I had no wish to share it with anyone else.

Even so, my mother was right: I was bored, and I was lonely.

‘It's a pity the Bestridges don't seem to want to know us,' she pressed on. ‘They have a boy Lawrence's age don't they, Robert?'

‘Do they?'

My stepfather was ensconced behind his newspaper with a glass of white port, his long legs in their well-cut pinstripes sprawling with an incongruous languor toward the diminutive fireplace.

‘Why don't you invite them over for cocktails?'

He lowered his newspaper, glancing at her through the tops of his bifocals.

‘We've been through that, dear.'

‘Have we? Well I think it's very silly that we can't invite them for cocktails just because they haven't had time to invite us back for dinner yet. I think it's very stuffy and conventional, if you must know.'

‘If they'd wanted to socialise with us, they'd have found time to invite us over in the year and a half since we had them to dinner, don't you think?'

‘How would I know? I'm not them. Anyway, why wouldn't they want to socialise with us?'

‘I can't imagine.'

‘It isn't as if they have any right to be high and mighty with
us. You're a company director. Lawrence goes to a perfectly good school. I may be a bit of a nobody, but at least I'm not a frump, which can't exactly be said of Jill Bestridge. I should have thought they'd want to bend over backwards to be friends with us. Perhaps they're shy, perhaps that's all it is, Robert. Perhaps they need more encouragement. Robert?'

‘Perhaps.'

‘Oh, you're no help!'

BOOK: The Horned Man
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