Authors: Janet Davey
The glass doors to the Federation, across the river in Vauxhall, were automatic, gliding apart, so there was no hanging around, half in, half out.
âFunny smell,' Jamie said. âBut you get used to it.' The bar had been his choice.
âWhat is it? Petroleum-based materials? Recently set cement?' Richard asked.
âI don't know,' Jamie said.
âIt's supposed to be bad for you, isn't it? New building sickness.'
Jamie inhaled slowly. âIs it? What's supposed to happen to you?'
âI don't know. Headaches. Asthma. That sort of thing probably.'
âI never get headaches,' Jamie said. âI never get ill.'
They were walking across the empty floor. The walls to either side rose upwards into blackness. The lighted bar, with a handful of people gathered round it and unoccupied low-level seating to each side, formed a tableau in the distance. Change of use became commonplace later â banks converted to bars and schools to residential blocks â but such transformation seemed sophisticated then. The Federation had only been open a month.
âExtraordinary place,' Richard said. âLike a cathedral. Everything happening at the far end.'
âA working men's club, not a cathedral. They stripped the inside out and made it over. I like it,' Jamie said. âWeird music, though. Haven't you been here?' He moved away from Richard, stretched out his arms horizontally and turned round slowly, completing a circle. That was the first time Richard really noticed Jamie's clothes, the narrow strip of velvet round his right wrist.
They were three-quarters of the way through their second pint of beer when Jamie glanced at his watch. It was a nice old sixties Ingersoll that had to be wound. Jamie had already shown it to Richard. He had found it at a boot fair in Essex, near where his family lived. It turned out that he and Richard were both at London University, though at different colleges, reading different subjects. They had swapped information about student life and cheap eating places. Richard had been describing the birthday weekend, meaning to make it sound funny. Jamie had laughed, out of sympathy, not because he found the story amusing. Then the talk petered out. The corner seat where they were sitting was in shadow, dark enough for the luminous paint on the watch numbers to glow. The watch showed half past ten.
âSay something,' Richard said, staring into the glass.
âHow do you usually meet people?' Jamie said rather loudly.
Richard downed his beer. He knew Jamie didn't mean people. âI don't.'
âThere are no hidden microphones.'
âI'm not gay,' Richard said.
âDon't worry about it.'
âDo you want something else to drink?' Richard asked, after a few moments of silence.
âNo, thank you.' Jamie got to his feet.
âIt hasn't been a great conversation on my part. I'm sorry,' Richard said.
Jamie smiled and shrugged his shoulders. âIt was all right.'
Richard stood up too. He put on his coat and buttoned it. Doing up buttons makes some people look like children. Perhaps it's the way they do it. They show a sort of concentration that makes them look vulnerable. For some reason Richard saw that in himself and fixed the particular image in his mind. He still remembered it, nearly twenty years later, though other pictures that he would have preferred to retain had gone for ever. He picked up his backpack containing the bag of leftovers. But then he was reluctant to move.
âShall we go?' Jamie said.
âWhere?' The question seemed to come from nowhere.
âMine?' Jamie said.
When Jamie was dying, Richard promised God he'd give him up. It wasn't a wager â not an either/or promise. He made it when the message got through to him that Jamie was in University College Hospital with acute viral meningitis. If Jamie had survived the terrible fever it would have held, and if he had died, inescapably, the same. The promise needed to be unconditional. It was as if he had been trying to impose a counterweight to Jamie's soaring temperature; a strike for equilibrium. Richard hadn't, at that time, been conspicuously Christian â just timidly and conventionally brought up. He hadn't âclosed the deal' as Paula and Hartley would have said â or prayed the prayer asking Jesus to come into his life. That had come later after he had started going out with Vivienne. The emergency appeal to God, at the time of Jamie's illness, had somehow been primitive, straight from the gut. He had wanted to give something â out of love â and that was all he had to give. The willed attempt at forgetting had begun then. It was the only way he could cope. After returning from the funeral â a dreamlike assembling of strangers and friends at a crematorium in Essex â Richard looked one last time at the photographs. There were twelve of them, in a
yellow Kodak packet, all taken on a day trip to Brighton. He walked to Vauxhall Bridge and threw them into the Thames. Richard had never visited Jamie's family â they were among the strangers â and as far as he knew, no one had ever guessed that he and Jamie were lovers.
Richard survived the turbulent period after Jamie's death, though at the time he didn't care about survival. All his everyday actions slowed down, and split into moments of time so tenuous that the days and nights were endless and their shape unrecognisable. He took to his bed at unsuitable times. He moved slowly and aimlessly. He nearly said inappropriate things. He felt on the point of tears. It was as if he were trapped in a lift, with his own thoughts blaring out from an intercom. He let it be known that a friend had died suddenly. He implied an
old
friend, though he and Jamie had only known each other for a short time. Nothing less than an
old
friend would have explained his sadness. Of all his circle, Paula and Hartley showed the least alarm. They made their way to the Oval at regular and dependable intervals; brought food, tidied his room, opened windows. They talked to his parents and tutors on his behalf, and tuned out the worried sounds from their messages before they relayed them back to Richard. When Richard revived enough to listen, and even when he barely listened, Paula and Hartley told him who had sent their love and who had been praying for him â all in the same reassuring tone of voice. He came to appreciate these benign communiqués that involved no evident obligation. It was like a return to childhood: receiving Christmas and birthday presents from people he didn't know.
He couldn't put a date to a week, or even a month, when he knew he was better. Over time, tiredness became bearable tiredness and anxiety merged with boredom. The waves of grief grew further apart. He managed to sit his final exams. He went on a walking holiday in the Pyrenees. He became articled to a firm of accountants. Paula introduced him to Vivienne and when they became engaged he joined St
Dunstan's. He came to believe in the power of prayer which, combined with some dependable resilience of his own, saw him through.
RICHARD HAD SHUT
up the Abe episode in a box that he was determined never to open. As a husband and a Christian, he was appalled at what had happened, but the part of him that was pure Epworth pragmatist considered that the best way to deal with the encounter was to vow that it would never happen again and forget about it. This worked for a week or so, but through February and March, different breaches occurred in Richard's defences, old memories and new fantasies. Richard could hardly distinguish them. Their comfort as mental relief was compromised by his inability to control them. Abe, or men resembling Abe, walked into his thoughts: young men with springy hair and an easy way of talking. Then there was more to control, because the spectres also had to be extinguished. After the family returned home from skiing, Richard avoided the guest bedroom where he and Abe had slept â though sometimes all he wanted to do was to go in and lie quietly on the bed.
There were layers of permission in his fantasies that were like interleaves. Richard came across them: thin, almost opaque, sheets between one page of his thoughts and the next. To steady himself, he kept returning to the weather on that January evening. Epworths could cope with weather. But the topic blew itself out and he moved on to the chance encounter, the way Abe had arrived at his house. It had been simple but also complicated â like a dream mixed up with a weird mathematical probability problem. What
was the likelihood of something like that happening? The timing soothed him â the way the flow had created itself. He remembered Abe's careless questions about the girls, and his own anxious queasiness as he heard them spoken of. He had replied to the questions. The queasiness passed. His best memory was of Abe, in the darkness of the taxi, with his hands clasped behind the back of his head, his legs stretching across the taxi floor â the posture of businessmen when feigning contemplation.
Richard had taken the sheets to the express laundry. He had checked and rechecked the guest bedroom and bathroom â believing that he was bound either to have missed or created some domestic discrepancy that Vivienne would home in on. On the correct day he turned up at Heathrow Airport, joining the po-faced men behind the rope at Arrivals who were carrying boards or makeshift notices bearing wonkily inscribed names. He scanned the incoming passengers emerging from the Customs Hall and saw his wife and daughters before they saw him. In that split second he panicked at not being recognised â afraid that he had turned into a stranger. Then the girls started grinning and waving. They came running towards him. Vivienne, tussling with the luggage on wheels, finally noticed him. By the time she reached him and he was hugging her, he had forgotten the blank look on her face that suggested he might not have been her husband.
His blunder, it turned out, had been failing to take down the Christmas decorations. He had got into trouble for that â past Twelfth Night, past Epiphany. Vivienne had said that they had never left Christmas decorations up beyond the due date. Richard claimed that he had lived entirely in the kitchen and the bedroom while she and the girls were away. He said he had forgotten to go into the other rooms. Vivienne had nodded, as if she believed him, but it was clear that she felt exposed. To what, Richard wasn't quite sure. Bad luck didn't come into it. Or good luck. In the circumstances he felt unable to press the point. He looked on while Vivienne
stripped the dried-up tree. First the decorations, then the lights, which she unwound, beginning at the top, until she had a tangle of green wire and tiny bulbs festooned round one arm. A pile of crisp pine needles collected on the floor and yet more fell into the decorations box, which had once contained the computer printer and still bore its name and outline on the side. Having pulled the plug from the socket, Vivienne placed the tangle in the top of the box and pushed down the flaps. Richard had closed his ears to the possible scrunch. Vivienne had looked up at him rather defiantly and said that if it turned out that the lights had shattered, they would simply have to go to John Lewis next December and buy new.
Several times Richard came close to dialling the mobile number Abe had given him and which he had committed to memory. He had looked at it often enough to have it by heart. He wanted to hear Abe's voice â the deadpan delivery that suddenly activated. The thought of Abe answering the phone in person stopped him. Since he hadn't made the call, what did âcoming close to' mean? He could make no sense of the words that he used to describe his unguarded intentions; it pained him to use them.
So far, his work hadn't been affected but weariness, free time, ordinary days at home laid him open. Richard valued his family. For him it came first. Fractures to his contentment, during the twelve years of his marriage, had been infrequent; caused by a look, a touch that changed the rhythm of his thoughts. He had never acted on the strange uneasiness that came over him, so there was nothing to remind him once the moment had passed. The notion of Men Seeking Men in the personal columns, or by any other means, was as alien to him as the equivalent Men Seeking Women. He disapproved of affairs between married men and their secretaries, or female colleagues, and he would have disapproved of an affair between a married man and another man even more, if he
had heard of such a thing in the office. He wasn't, and never had been, on the lookout. It was as if he were on a bridge which he knew to be safe, well above the waterline, when, for no reason that he could understand or predict, he felt the bridge breaking. Until meeting Abe he had held steady.
On the afternoon of Easter Monday Richard drove up to Harrow-on-the-Hill to drop off Bethany and Martha at a birthday party. The village, as people called it, was only a mile or so away from where the Epworths lived but, apart from delivering the girls to social events, Richard had little reason to go there. He hadn't been for over a year; certainly not since January.
Richard knew that he had reached the right house when he saw the red and orange balloons attached to the gatepost, the 4x4s, pavement-parked, and children clambering down from them. He let the girls out of the car and they ran across the gravelled drive and in through a door with a fanlight above it. Decent-sized family houses âon-the-Hill' were out of his price bracket, which was why he and Vivienne had ended up with a less desirable postcode, off Sudbury Hill, in one of the new executive homes that backed on to the grounds of a private hospital. Compared with some of his colleagues in the City, his income was modest. He never got the huge bonuses. No one did in his department. It was a backwater that had, so far, escaped being the focus of an initiative.
As he had taken no exercise at all on Easter Day and was still feeling thick-headed from Paula's lunch, Richard decided that rather than drive home and set out again later he would go for a walk. Having manoeuvred the car into a proper parking space, he left a message for Vivienne, explaining what he was doing, then switched off his phone. He got out and locked the car door. He looked up and down the street as he inserted coins in the meter. There was a woman on a bicycle and a man with a dog; no one he recognised.
Meeting anyone by chance always gave Richard a jolt â like the time he had met a colleague's secretary, Tricia, at the customer services desk at the Marks and Spencer at Finsbury Pavement and had suddenly found himself explaining why he was returning the pack of socks in his hand. Turning a corner and coming across Abe would have immobilised him. He would have felt an agonising level of embarrassment and come out with some idiotic remark. No, he wasn't expecting to meet Abe.