The Magus, A Revised Version (46 page)

BOOK: The Magus, A Revised Version
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And get me into bed?


Only if you wanted.

She explored my eyes, then looked down.


And if I don

t?


Then obviously.


So perhaps it

s not worth your going on.


That

s bloody insulting.

I said it with enough force to check her. She bowed her head, her arms still folded.

I spoke in a gentler voice.

Look, what the hell

s he been telling you?

There was a long silence, then she murmured,

If only I knew what to believe.


Try your instincts.


I seem to have mislaid them since I came here.

There was another silence, then she made a little sideways movement of her bent head.

Her voice was a shade less accusing.

He said something foul, after last time. That you … that you went to brothels and that Greek brothels weren

t safe and that I mustn

t let you kiss me again.


Is that where you think I

ve been?


I don

t know where you

ve just been.


So you believe him?

She said nothing. I felt furious with Conchis; the damned gall he had, talking about the Hippocratic oath. I stared at the bent head, then spoke.

I

ve had enough of this. I

m clearing out.

I didn

t really mean it, but I turned back towards the table as if I did. She said quickly,

Please.

A tiny pause.

I didn

t say I believed it.

I stopped and looked back at her. At last there was something less hostile in her eyes.


But you

re behaving as if you did.


I

m behaving as I am because I don

t understand why he keeps telling me things he knows I can

t believe.


If it was true, he ought to have warned you at the beginning.


That did occur to us.


Didn

t you ask him why not?


He said he

d only just found out.

Then she said, in her gentlest voice yet,

Please don

t go away.

Though she looked down in the end, she held my eyes long enough for me to believe the request was sincere. I went back in front of her.


Are we still so convinced of his essential goodness?


In a kind of way, yes.

She added,

In spite of everything.


I had the universal telepathy experience.


Yes, he told us.


He has hypnotized you?


Yes, several times.


He claims that

s how he knows everything that

s going on in your mind.

That shocked her momentarily, she looked up, but then she gave a little puff of protest.

It

s ridiculous. I

d never let him do it. June

s always been there, he insists on that himself. It

s just a technique, actually rather a marvellous one, for helping you get into a part. She says he just talks and talks … and somehow I absorb it all.


Is Julie just another part?


I

ll show you my passport. I haven

t got it with me, but … next time. I promise.


That last time … you might have warned me the schizophrenia thing was coming.


I did warn you something was coming. As much as I dared.

I could feel our doubts and suspicions mounting once more, and I had to concede that yes, she had warned me in her fashion. There was something much more submissive about her now, on the defensive.


All right … but whatever he isn

t, he
is
a psychiatrist?


We

ve known that for some time.


So the whole thing here is along those lines?

Again I was assessed. Then she looked sideways down at the tiles.

He talks a lot about experimental situations. About the behaviour patterns of people faced with situations they don

t understand. A lot about schizophrenia.

She shrugged.

How people split themselves … ethically, all sorts of ways, before the unknown. One day he said something about the unknown being the great motivating factor in all human existence. He meant not knowing why we

re here. Why we exist. Death. The after-life. All that.


But what does he actually want us to prove for him?

She still looked at the ground; now shook her head.


Honestly, we

ve tried and tried to pin him down, but he … he always comes up with the same argument

if we know the final purpose, what he expects, then obviously it will effect how we behave.

She let out a reluctant breath.

It does have a sort of logic


I

ve had that line. When I asked to know your supposed case-history.

Her eyes met mine.

It does exist. I

ve had to learn it by heart. What he

s invented.


One thing

s clear. For some reason he

s feeding us every lie under the sun. But we don

t have to be what he wants us to imagine. I

m no more a syphilitic than you

re a schizophrenic

She bowed her head.

I really didn

t believe it.


I mean, if it

s a part of his game, experiment, whatever it is, I don

t care a damn how many lies he tells you about me. But I do care if you start believing them.

There was a silence. Her eyes, it seemed almost against her will, rose to meet mine again. They said something beyond the present situation, in a much older language than that of words. A doubt dissolved in them, a candour was restored; and they tacitly accepted my judgment. For a fleeting moment there was the tiniest conceding curl, a wry admission, at the comers of her mouth. She lowered her eyes again, and then her hands slipped behind her back. Silence, a hint of little girl

s penitence, a timid waiting to be forgiven.

This time it was a shared thing. The lips were warm and they moved under mine, and I was allowed to hold her body close, to know its curves, its slenderness… and also to know, with a delicious certainty, that all was much less complicated than it seemed. She wanted to be kissed. The tips of our tongues touched, for a few seconds the embrace became tight, passionate. But then she abruptly pulled her mouth away and turned her head against my shoulder, though she stayed close against my body. I kissed the crown of her hair.


I

ve nearly gone mad thinking about you.

She whispered,

I

d have died if you hadn

t come today.


This is real. Whatever else is unreal.


That

s what frightens me.


Why?


Wanting to be sure. But not being sure.

I tightened my arms a little round her.

Can

t we meet tonight? Alone somewhere?

She was silent and I said quickly,

For God

s sake trust me. I

d never hurt you.

She detached herself gently, took my hands, still looked down.

It

s not that. Just that there are more people about than you imagine.


Where do you sleep here?


There

s a … a sort of hiding-place.

She said quickly,

I will show you. I promise.


Is there something planned for tonight?


He

s telling us another supposed episode from his life. I

m going to join you after dinner.

She smiled up.

And I honestly don

t know what it is.


Then we could meet after that?


I

ll try. But I can

t…


How about midnight? By the statue?


If I possibly can.

She glanced back towards the table, and pressed my hands.

Now your tea

s cold.

We went back to the table and sat. I stopped her making any fresh tea, and we drank it tepid. I ate a sandwich or two, she smoked, and we talked. Like myself neither she nor her sister could understand the old man

s paradoxical determination to lure us into his game, yet seeming preparedness to abandon it.


Every time we show qualms, he
off
ers to fly us straight back to England. One evening on the cruise we went at him

what
was
he doing, couldn

t he
please
… all the rest. In the end he was as near being upset as I

ve seen. We almost had to plead with him the next morning. Ask his forgiveness for being so nosy.


He

s obviously using the same technique on all of us.

BOOK: The Magus, A Revised Version
2.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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