Authors: James Lasdun
The line that had caught my eye came from the assignation at the beginning, where the man and his mistress are making love in a hotel room. Apparently I had named the mistress Elaine.
In the light of what had happened today, I had to wonder if
there was any significance in this. Bearing in mind what I had learned in my sessions with Dr Schrever, I tried to think what the name had meant to me when I chose it. Had I been thinking of Elaine Jordan? If so, was that because I had placed her, unconsciously, in the category of plausible sexual partner? And if that were the case, had I perhaps all this time been emitting signals of sexual interest in her, without knowing it â signals that had become transformed, in her inflamed imagination, into the sense of an actual, ongoing liaison between us? And if all this were so, did that mean that under the complete indifference I believed I felt toward her, I did in fact harbor feelings of desire?
As I was turning this over in my mind, Mr Kurwen's first TV came on. A moment later I heard the second, even louder than the first. There was a new level of assault in the volume; a suggestion of deliberate affront. I decided to go up and complain.
This time Mr Kurwen's glass eye was out. The white-lashed pucker of the eyelid over the empty socket struck me nearly dumb. Flakes of dried food fluttered at his mouth, impaled on his white stubble. A fetid stench reared up out of the hallway behind him. He scanned me aggressively with his good eye, then, to my surprise, gave me a rueful smile.
âBetter late than never. C'mon in.'
C'mawn
⦠He had the old-time New York accent; a rarity in Manhattan these days. The lapdogs yapped at his heels.
As he ushered me in, I felt his hand tousling my hair. I looked back, astonished.
âGo on, go on,' he said gruffly, waving me on into the living room. There was a gold carpet; thick floral curtains. The smell â canine, human, with a tinge of something absolutely unearthly too â was so intense I felt myself gagging.
The heat was overpowering too. And the TV, dueling with its partner in the adjoining bedroom, filled the place with an earsplitting din.
âFix yourself a drink.' He pointed at a cabinet where an assortment of ancient bottles presided over some dusty cut-glass tumblers.
I shook my head. âThe TVs,' I said. âDo you think you could turn them down?'
He cupped a hand to his ear.
âThe TVs!' I bellowed.
He gave a guilty, impish grin, fumbling for the volume knob and turning it down.
âI turn âem up loud just to keep the little prick downstairs on his toes,' he said, going off to turn down the one in the bedroom.
A pang of hurt went through me at that. Not that I had any reason to care what this old man thought of me. But the only real news you ever get of yourself is what comes inadvertently from other people.
I was curious who he thought I was, if not the âprick downstairs'.
âAnyways,' he said, returning, âI think it's in the kitchen somewhere.'
âWhat is?'
âMy eye. That's where I last had it. I was boiling it in the pan. I must've put it somewheres by accident.'
I got the idea that whoever I was, I was expected to go in the kitchen and look for the missing eye. I went in there, leaving the other eye staring at a laxative commercial on the TV.
The kitchen floor was sticky with grime; I felt like a fly walking on flypaper. I saw the eye right away, staring up at me
from under an old cupboard on which the green paint had broken down into a mosaic of tiny hard blobs. The eye was the size of a golf ball. I picked it up, meaning to give it to Mr Kurwen, when I decided to pocket it instead. I was vaguely thinking it might come in useful later on, as leverage over the TVs.
âWhat is it with the guy downstairs?' I called out.
âHe's a prick.'
âBut in what way?' I went back into the living room, looking squarely at Mr Kurwen.
âWhaddaya mean in what way? He's a prick! Mimi talked to the wife the day she moved out on him. She told me the guy had to've been a total prick.'
âWhat exactly did she say about him â the wife?'
âWhat is this, a Q and A? How the fuck would I know what she said?'
âI thought â'
But all of a sudden I felt tired of the deception. I had an overwhelming desire to reveal myself to the old man; to come out, as it were, from under my desk.
âListen,' I told him, âI'm not who you think I am.'
He peered at me, not understanding at first, then disbelieving, then angry, with a pale flame of old man's fear wavering over the anger.
âWhat is this?'
âI'm the guy downstairs. The prick downstairs. I just came up to complain about the noise of your TVs. You must have been expecting someone else, right?'
âYou're not Corven?'
âNo, I'm not Corven.'
He looked at me mistrustfully. âI don't see so good no more,' he muttered.
âI'm sorry about that.'
âDiabetes.'
âAh.'
âOn top of my wife dying I have to become a fucking diabetic.'
âThat's rough. I'm sorry.'
He stood there in the doorway, the light glinting round the stubbly perimeter of his face, while I made my way through the hallway, where the airless, lightless space squeezed the stench and heat to a suffocating intensity.
âSo would you mind keeping the volume down?' I asked, turning back to him from the front door.
He grimaced. His swaggerer's courage had returned to him now that he saw I was going to leave without beating him to a pulp.
âI'll think about it,' he said nastily, but then took a frightened step back.
âIt would make a huge difference to me, Mr Kurwen, really.'
His face went abruptly slack. He turned and hobbled away, an old man, saying nothing.
I left, depressed by him, but glad of the plaindealing way in which I had acquitted myself. It gave me a pleasant feeling of large-spiritedness.
Back downstairs I read the phrase that had caught my eye again:
Elaine's pale breasts and thighs
⦠I realised I had pictured my protagonist's mistress in the most stereotypical terms; as a torso without occupation, personality or history: just an embodiment of the idea of lustful infidelity. What if I were to model her on the real Elaine, I wondered; would that bring this stillborn effort to life? But how would I convey the real Elaine â the transcendent ordinariness she projected, even in
the midst of her bizarre behavior today? And if I succeeded, how then would I account for the man's attraction to her? He didn't have much personality either, come to think of it. He didn't even have a name. In the terse style I had opted for, I referred to him merely as âhe'. I decided there and then to name him. I picked up a pen, crossed out the first âhe' and, with a feeling of amusement, replaced it with the word âKadmilos'.
At once something seemed to stir in the sheaf of pages; a little quiver of life ⦠With Kadmilos/Trumilcik in play, the figure of Elaine suddenly seemed capable of making the transition from erotic projection to flesh and blood. Furthermore, conceived as the real Elaine, but looked at through the eyes of Kadmilos, her very ordinariness acquired a sudden allure.
I thought of the three of us â myself, Trumilcik and Elaine â each present there via our more or less phantasmagorical versions of each other, our recondite emblems of ourselves. And for a moment I felt I was at the point of grasping what it was that made the full unfolding of another human being into one's consciousness so painfully dazzling that one spent one's life contriving ways of filtering them, blocking them out, setting up labyrinthine passageways between oneself and them, kidnapping their images for various exploitative purposes of one's own, and generally doing all one could to fend off their problematic, objective reality.
The phone rang.
I let the machine pick up. Elaine's voice came into the room.
âHi there, me again. Guess I missed you. I hope you got my note. Well â¦' She sounded a bit forlorn, but then went on in a firmer tone: âCall me would you, Lawrence, when you get
in? Doesn't matter how late.' She left her number and hung up.
It was only now that I thought of the message I had erased the previous night without listening to it. I realised that it had probably been from Elaine. I tried to surmise what she could have said, and how I could have unwittingly responded to it in such a way as to unleash the delusionary behavior that followed.
At once I remembered the phrase in her note about me turning up at lunch
like that in your shirt
. An idea began taking shape in my mind. It was absurd, I realised, as its outlines clarified themselves, and yet there was a certain mad logic about it that didn't seem out of keeping with the side of her personality Elaine had displayed this afternoon.
She had made some kind of wild declaration of love, I conjectured, followed by a proposal that if I reciprocated her feelings, I should indicate the fact by joining her for lunch dressed in a particular shirt â presumably the very one I happened to be wearing.
What an elaborate rigmarole! And yet I found I could imagine her doing all this. Suppose she had been attracted to me for some time, I thought; suppose I had unconsciously been giving her encouraging signals; suppose then that her feelings had grown to such passionate proportions that she simply had to confront me with them so as to break the deadlock of what, from her point of view, might have seemed an agonisingly slow-burning flirtation that was in danger of missing its moment if one of us didn't act soon. With the enormous courage it must have taken for a woman who presumably wasn't excessively confident of her own attractive-ness, she had crossed the Rubicon of natural inhibition and blurted out her feelings on to my answering machine, risking
the pain of a rebuff, from which she had touchingly tried to protect both of us by asking me to give my answer in a manner that would allow the misunderstanding, if that was what it turned out to be, to sink into the oblivion of history without any echoing residue of words to keep its memory alive. I was just to show up wearing a certain shirt.
I thought of how she must have felt sitting there in the faculty dining room, anxiously waiting, unsure perhaps of her choice of outfit, her new hairdo; a little dazed, still, by what she had done, yet elated by it, carried forward by the momentum of her liberated passion, looking at her watch, thinking that at the very worst she would have a story to tell her grandchildren if she were lucky enough â
blessed
enough â to have any, and then looking up to see, as if in a vision, me, walking uncertainly toward her in my black-buttoned blue shirt, a blue wave of love, rippling through her with the miraculous force of an answered prayer â¦
Such are the phantoms we create out of each other. And although as phantoms went it was an improvement on the âprick downstairs', the idea of it left me with the same sense of depleted reality, as though I had been improperly replicated, and grown correspondingly lighter and flimsier in myself. No wonder, I thought, that so many people end up feeling like the human equivalent of a Bulgarian coin.
âBefore we start, I'd like you to take a look at something.'
I felt a stirring in the air behind me, then a disturbance in my field of vision as Dr Schrever's hand crossed over my prone head, holding a small piece of paper. My heart gave an unaccountable little thump.
The piece of paper was a check. I had signed and mailed it to her the day before.
âDo you notice something strange about it?' she asked.
Had I signed someone else's name? No; the signature looked all right, unless I was truly going out of my mind. The amount was the same as I always made out the checks for. And the date looked right too.
âWhat's wrong with it?' I asked.
âYou can't see?'
âNo.'
âLook who it's made out to.'
I saw then that I had made the check out to a Dr
Schroeder
instead of Dr Schrever. The error made me laugh out loud.
âWhy did I do that?'
âWhy do you think you did it?'
âI have absolutely no idea!'
âDo you know somebody called Schroeder?'
âNot that I can think of.'
âA student of yours, perhaps?'
âNo.'
âSomeone from England?'
I couldn't think of anyone by that name.
âI wonder why it made you laugh when you saw it?'
âI suppose there's something inherently comical about these little slips.'
âI'm wondering if you laughed because you recognised some hostility you felt toward me, that embarrasses you to have to acknowledge?'
I told her I didn't think this was so; she didn't pursue the point. I corrected the check and returned it to her.
I had come in thinking I was going to talk about Elaine, but something had snagged on the current of my thoughts, drawing them in another direction. After a moment I realised what it was.
âWhen you moved your hand over my head just now, I felt myself flinching. I must have thought for a moment that you were going to tousle my hair. My stepfather used to do that. It was his one sign of affection â¦'
While I was talking I remembered how Mr Kurwen had tousled my hair last night as I went past him into his living room, and I realised that at the back of my mind I had been thinking about my childhood ever since then.
Instead of going on to talk about that, though, I interrupted myself to tell Dr Schrever about my encounter with Mr Kurwen; how he had mistaken me for someone he'd asked to come and help find his glass eye, how in my dislike of confrontation I had half gone along with this error, but how I had then come clean to him instead, telling him he'd made a mistake, and asking him, in my capacity as the âprick downstairs', to keep his TV down.
I went on at some length about how large-spirited I had felt after this outburst of candor.