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Authors: Alan Hollinghurst

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"Nor have I," said Nick, with giddy understatement, glancing over his shoulder.

"I thought, he's a shy one, a bit stuck-up, but there's something going on inside those corduroy trousers, I'll give him a
go. And how right I was, Henry!"

Nick blushed with pleasure and wished there was a way to distinguish shy from stuck-up—the muddle had dogged him for years.
He wanted pure compliments, just as he wanted unconditional love.

"Anyway, I was in the area, so I thought I'd try my luck." Leo looked him up and down meaningfully, but then said, "I've just
got to drop in on old Pete, down the Portobello—I don't know if you want to come."

"Sure!" said Nick, thinking that a visit to Leo's ex was hardly his ideal scenario for their second date.

"Just for a minute. He's not been well, old Pete."

"Oh, I'm sorry . . . " said Nick, though this time without the rush of possessive sympathy. He watched a black cab crawling
towards them, a figure peering impatiently in the back; it stopped just in front of them, and the driver clawed round through
his open window to release the rear door. When the passenger (who Nick knew was Lady Partridge) didn't emerge, a very rare
thing happened and the cabbie got out of the cab and yanked the door open himself, standing aside with a flourish which she
acknowledged drily as she stepped out.

"Now who's this old battleaxe?" said Leo. And there was certainly something combative in her sharp glance at the two figures
on the front steps, and in her sharp blue dress and jacket, as if she'd come for dinner rather than a family lunch. Nick smiled
broadly at her and called out, "Hello, Lady Partridge!"

"Hullo," said Lady Partridge, with the minimal warmth, the hurrying good grace, of a famous person hailed by an unknown fan.
Nick couldn't believe that she'd forgotten him, and went on with almost satirical courtesy,

"May I introduce my friend Leo Charles? Lady Partridge." Up close the old woman's jacket, heavily embroidered with glinting
black and silver thread, had a scaly texture, on which finer fabrics might have snagged and laddered. She smiled and said,

"How
do you do?" in an extraordinarily cordial tone, in which none the less something final was conveyed—the certainty that they
would never speak again. Leo was saying hello and offering his hand but she had already drifted past him and in through the
open front door. "Gerald, Rachel darling!" she called, edgy with the need for reassurance.

The Portobello Road was only two minutes' stroll from the Feddens' green front door, and there was no time for a love scene.
Leo was walking his bike with one hand, and Nick ambled beside him, possibly looking quite normal but feeling giddily attentive,
as if hovering above himself. It was that experience of walking on air, perhaps, that people spoke of, and which, like roller
skating, you could master with practice, but which on this first try had him teetering and lurching. He had such an important
question to ask that he found himself saying something else instead. "I see you know about Gerald, then," he said.

"Your splendid Mr Fedden," said Leo, in his deadpan way, almost as if he knew that
splendid
was one of Gerald's top words. "Well, I could tell there was something you didn't want me to know, and that always gets me—I'm
like that. And then your friend Geoffrey in the garden was going on something about parliament—I thought, I'll look into all
this at work. Electoral roll,
Who's Who,
we know all about you . . ."

"I see," said Nick, flattered but taken aback by this first glimpse of the professional Leo. Of course he'd done similar researches
himself when he'd fallen for Toby. There had been a proxy thrill to it, Gerald's date of birth, pastimes, and various directorships
standing in somehow for the intimate details, the kisses and more he had wanted from his son. He thought it probably wasn't
like that for Leo.

"He's quite nice-looking for a Tory," Leo said.

"Yes, everyone seems to fancy him except me," said Nick.

Leo gave him a shrewd little smile. "I don't say I fancy him exactly," he said. "He's like someone on the telly."

"Well, soon I'm sure he will be someone on the telly. Actually of course there are monsters on both sides—looks-wise."

"True enough."

Nick hesitated. "There is a sort of aesthetic poverty about conservatism, though, isn't there."

"Yeah?"

"That blue's an impossible colour."

Leo nodded thoughtfully. "I wouldn't say that was their main problem," he said.

The weekend crowds were pressing steadily along the lane from the station and down the steep hill into the market. Pete's
establishment was in the curving row of shops on the left: PETER MAWSON in gold on black, like an old jeweller's, the windows
covered in mesh though today the shop was open. Leo shouldered the door and the wired doormat, as he stood there manoeuvring
the bike in, kept sounding a warning chime. Nick had peered into the shop before, on one of the dead weekdays, when it was
all locked up, and the mail lay unattended across the floor. There was a pair of marble-topped Empire tables in the windows
flanking the door, and beyond that a space that looked more like a half-empty warehouse than a shop.

Pete could be heard on the phone in a back room. Leo propped up his bike in a familiar way and wandered through, and Nick
was left alone, blinking longingly at that last image of him, the slight bounce or dance in his step. He heard Pete ringing
off, a murmur of kissing and hugging. "Ooh, you know . . . " said Pete. "No, I'm a bit better."

"I've brought my nice new friend Nick round to see you," said Leo, in a silly cheerful voice which made Nick realize this
might be an awkward half-hour for all of them. He was very sensitive to anything that might be said. As so often he felt he
had the wrong kind of irony, the wrong knowledge, for gay life. He was still faintly shocked, among other emotions of interest
and excitement, at the idea of a male couple. He and Leo had come together, in their odd transitory way, but the truth was
they weren't yet a couple themselves.

"So what's all this?" Pete asked, following Leo back into the room.

"This is Pete, this is Nick," said Leo, with a large smile and a mime of urging them together. The effort to charm and reassure
was a side of him that Nick hadn't seen before; it seemed to make all sorts of other things possible, in the longer view.
"Pete's my best old friend," he said, in his cockney voice of concessions. "Aren't you, darlin'?" They shook hands, and Pete
winced, as at the grip of something not quite welcome, and said,

"I see you've been hanging around the school gates again, you terrible old man."

Leo raised an eyebrow and said, "Well, I won't remind you how old I was when you snatched me from my pram."

Nick laughed eagerly, though it was a kind of camp slapstick he didn't naturally find funny, and it was surprisingly painful
to be given a glimpse of their past together. He found himself picturing and half believing the story of Leo in his pram.
Being small and fresh-faced was usually an advantage, but he was anxious not to be thought a child. "Actually, I'm twenty-one,"
he said, in a mock-gruff tone.

"Hark at him!" Pete said.

"Nick lives just round the corner," said Leo. "Kensington Park Gardens."

"Oh. Very nice."

"Well, I'm just staying there for a while, with an old college friend."

Leo tactfully didn't elaborate; he said, "He knows about furniture. His old man's in the trade."

Pete made a shrugging gesture that took in the sparse contents of the shop. "Feel free . . . " he said; so Nick had politely
to do that, while the old lovers fell back into quiet scoffing chatter, which he deliberately blocked out with tunes in his
head, not wanting to learn anything, good or bad. He examined some knocked-about Louis Seize chairs, a marble head of a boy,
a suspiciously brilliant ormolu-mounted cabinet, and the pair of tables in the window, which made him think of the ones turned
into washstands at Hawkeswood. One wall was covered with a huge dreary tapestry showing a bacchanalian scene, with figures
dancing and embracing under red and brown trees; it was too high for the space, and on its loosely rolled bottom edge a satyr
with a grin seemed to slide forwards like a limbo dancer on to the floor.

The only real object of interest, the thing to acknowledge and be equal to, was Pete himself. He was perhaps in his mid-forties,
with a bald patch in his sandy hair and a bit of grey in his thin beard. He was lean, an inch or two taller than Nick and
Leo, but already slightly stooped. He wore tight old jeans and a denim shirt, and something else, which was an attitude, a
wearily aggressive challenge—he seemed to come forward from an era of sexual defiance and fighting alliances and to cast a
dismissive eye over a little chit like Nick, who had never fought for anything. Or so Nick explained his own sense of discomfort,
the recurrent vague snobbery and timidity with which he peered into the world of actually existing gayness. Nick had pictured
Pete as the fruity kind of antique-dealer, or even as a sexless figure like his own father, with a bow tie and a trim white
beard. That Pete should be as he was threw such a novel light over Leo. He glanced at Leo now, with his sublime little bottom
perched on the corner of Pete's desk, and saw him totally at home with a far from attractive middle-aged man—he had been his
lover and done a hundred things with him that Nick still only dreamed of, time and time again. Nick didn't know how it had
ended, or when; they seemed to share the steadiness of something both long established and over, and he envied them, although
it wasn't quite what he wanted himself. It was part of Leo's game, or maybe just his style, to have told Nick almost nothing;
but if Pete was Leo's kind of man it looked suddenly unlikely that Nick would be chosen to replace him.

"Have a look at that, Nick," Pete called out, as if amiably trying to keep him occupied. "You know what that is."

"That's a nice little piece," said Leo.

"It's a very nice little piece," said Pete. "Louis Quinze."

Nick ran his eye over the slightly cockled boulle inlay. "Well, it's an
encoignure,"
he said, and with a chance at charm: "n'est-ce pas?"

"It's what we call a corner cupboard," Pete said. "Where did you get this one, babe?"

"Ooh . . . I just found him on the street," said Leo, gazing quite sweetly at Nick and then giving him a wink. "He looked
a bit lost."

"Hardly a mark on him," said Pete.

"Not yet," said Leo.

"So where's your father's shop, Nick?" said Pete.

"Oh, it's in Barwick—in Northamptonshire?"

"Don't they pronounce that Barrick?"

"Only frightfully grand people."

Pete lit a cigarette, drew on it deeply, and then coughed and looked almost sick. "Ah, that's better," he said. "Yes, Bar-wick.
I know Barwick. It's what you'd call a funny old place, isn't it."

"It has a very fine eighteenth-century market hall," Nick said, to help him to remember it.

"I picked up a little Directoire bureau there once, bombe it was, you'll know what that means."

"That probably wasn't from us. It was probably Gaston's. My father sells mainly English things."

"Yeah? What's trade like up there these days?"

"Pretty slow, actually," Nick said.

"It's at a fucking standstill here. It's going backwards. Another four years of Madam and we'll all be on the street." Pete
coughed again and flapped away Leo's attempt to take the cigarette off him. "So how long have you been in London, Nick?"

"About . . . six weeks?"

"Six weeks . . . I see. You'll still be doing the rounds, then. Or are you just shopping local? You've done the Volunteer."

Leo saw Nick hesitating, and said, "I wouldn't want him going to that old flea-box. At least not till he's sixty, like everyone
else in there."

"I'm exploring a bit," said Nick.

"I don't know, where do the young things go these days?"

"Well, there's the Shaftesbury," Nick said, naming a pub that Polly Tompkins had described as the scene of frequent conquests.

"You're not so much of a pubber, though, are you?" Leo said.

"He wants to get down the Lift," said Pete, "if he's a bit of a chocoholic."

Nick blushed and shook his head dumbly. "I don't know really." He was very embarrassed, in front of Leo, but undeniably fascinated
to have his taste guessed at and defined. He felt he had only just guessed at it himself.

"When did you meet Miss Leontyne?"

That he knew exactly, but said, "About three weeks ago," feeling more foolish with his quick straight answers to chaffing
questions. He didn't flinch at the girl's name for Leo, and he had sometimes laboured through whole conversations calling
Polly Tompkins "she," but he'd never found it as necessary or hilarious as some people did.

"That's what I call her," said Pete, "Leontyne Price-tag. I hope you've got your chequebook ready."

There was nothing to say to this, but Leo muttered dutifully, "There's not much you don't know about price tags, is there,
Pete."

Nick tittered and watched the affronted look fade from Pete's drawn features as he smoked and gazed at the dreary tapestry.
It could have been one of those items which never sell, which the dealer ends up almost giving away because they seem to bring
bad luck on the whole shop. He remembered that Pete had been ill, though he didn't know in what way. "I've got this fucking
great bed," Pete said. "I can't shift it." The phone rang, and he went off into the back room. "Have a look at it."

The bed had been taken apart and the fluted poles, the ornate square frame of the canopy and the head- and footboards inset
with painted rococo scenes were leaning up against the wall. "Let's have a look at this, then," Leo said, wandering over and
briefly stroking Nick's arm as he passed; he was being sweet to both of them, he surely didn't really want to look at the
bed. They didn't want to move anything in case it all fell over. Nick peered at the faded gilt and the unpolished inner edges
that would normally be hidden. All his life he'd looked at furniture from odd angles, and he still had his childhood sense
of tables and sideboards as elaborate little wooden buildings that you could crawl into, their bosses and capitals and lion-heads
at face height, their rough under-surfaces retaining a dim odour of the actual wood. This was a very grand bed, but there
was worm in the frame and apparently it had no hangings with it. He felt the old impulse to put it together and get into it.
Leo squatted down to look at the picture on the footboard. "This is nice," he said. "What do you think?"

BOOK: The Line of Beauty
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