Read The Unforgiving Minute Online
Authors: Unknown
I could see she really meant it and I crumpled meekly.
“Fine, I’ll really write to you often and please write to me a
lot, because I really need you.”
She answered gently, “I will, Robert. You know I love
you, although sometimes I wonder why … And, Robert, write to
your children. You know you’re not being fair to them. If you
don’t want them to know where you are, send the letters to me and
I’ll send them from New York. But, please, write them before you
lose them. Goodbye, caro, ti voglio bene.” With those words “Goodbye,
darling, I want you very much” she hung up softly.
I sat back and thought about my children, yearning for
them for the first time in weeks. My oldest, Robin, had
everything going for her. She was twenty-three years old,
exceptionally pretty with jet-black hair and blue eyes, very
bright and gentle and ladylike in her manner. She had started
medical school in July at New York University and was looking
forward to a career in pediatrics. My second child, Andrew, was
twenty-one and was a business major at the University of
Pennsylvania. He hoped to attend Wharton School of Business
there when he graduated next year. Andrew was tall, blonde and
extremely studious and mature in his manner. We always joked
that he was grown up at age ten. Sometimes when I was around
him, I felt like he was my father and that I had to worry about
misbehaving in his presence. I was proud of his no-nonsense
demeanor. He seemed to me to be what I really wanted to be. My
youngest, Gary, was a gregarious, popular, good-looking boy who
was a male version of Robin in looks. Gary was nineteen and
starting his second semester at Hofstra University in Hempstead,
Long Island. Although he was on the short side, he was muscular
and highly athletic. At present, in his sophomore year, he
played on the varsity baseball squad and ran the mile in track.
When last seen, he claimed to be pre-law, but his career choice
changed daily. Scholastically, Gary was as mediocre as the other
were excellent. He was still the kind of boy, however, that
people marked for future success. I knew that if anyone was
hurting from my antics, it was Gary. Athletics brought us very
close together. When he was young, we always played at sports
together. In recent years, we talked sports incessantly like two
tavern buddies. He had to miss me the most.
I made a mental note to drop a line to all three of them
and either send the letters to Ann Marie or mail them directly.
I didn’t, however, and filed it in my mind for future reference.
I looked in the mirror, straightened myself, and decided
to take a long walk. I stepped out into Brook Street and
marvelled at the section of London that is Mayfair. I truly do
not think there is another district in any city of the world that
compares. Mayfair is a section roughly bounded by Hyde Park on
the west, Oxford Street on the north, Bond Street on the east,
and Picadilly on the south. I have, in my time, walked every
block in Mayfair and even some of the back alleys. The American
Embassy is located in Mayfair and its modern-style construction
is contrary to the general architecture of the rest of the
neighborhood. It is across from Grosvenor Square, in which
stands a magnificent statue of Franklin D. Roosevelt. The
neighborhood is a mixture of luxury brownstones, fine hotels,
embassies, offices, and expensive shops. Oxford Street on the
north is absolutely the opposite. It is dirty, noisy, blustery,
and its image is definitely cheapside. When you take two steps
south to Mayfair, it’s like walking into Oz. I decided to walk
east to the theater district and try to get tickets for something
to fill the coming evening. I walked up Brook to Bond Street
before turning right towards Picadilly and drank in the sights of
Mayfair. The women were elegant and well-turned-out, the men
dressed impeccably, and some wore the traditional bowler hat and
carried the mandatory “brally” (umbrella). I turned right on
Bond Street and browsed the shop windows. Bond Street is where
most of the fine clothing shops are. One walks from New Bond
Street into Old Bond Street which terminates at Burlington
Arcade, which is kind of a mini-shopping mall except that it
looks like a well-lit, ornate tunnel with shop entrances on
either wall. Both Bond Street and the Arcade are filled with
interesting shops. There are designer clothing shops, bespoke
tailors, coin collections, unicorn collections, and even a shop
that deals in nothing but buttons, brass, and otherwise. The
dollar, in 1985, was in pretty good shape and the exchange rate
was fairly good. It was about a dollar and a quarter to the
pound. The converted prices in the Bond Street stores, despite
this, still looked rather outrageous to me. I exited the south
side of the Arcade into Picadilly. I decided to detour to my
favorite shirt shops, Turnbull and Asser and Hilditch and Key,
which are located on opposite corners of Jermyn Street, just
south of Picadilly. I have, through my professional career, been
a kind of a clothes nut. British clothes have been my passion.
If the exchange rate was favorable, I usually returned from
London laden with new clothing. The two shirt stores couldn’t
have been more different, although their products, in my mind,
were equal. Turnbull and Asser was a posh, well-decorated store
with two stories of clothing. It was richly carpeted with
beautiful dressing rooms and plenty of comfortable chairs for
waiting companions. It was the kind of place I liked to walk
around in even if I weren’t buying a shirt. I browsed
extensively and found at least four or five shirts I considered
buying. I was well-known there and, like most British
establishments of its kind, I was recognized immediately upon
entering. I informed them that I might return later in the week
and was bid a cordial goodbye. Hilditch and Key, where I was
also well-known, was quite the opposite in decor. It was a small
store with most of its shirts on shelves behind a counter.
Looking around, you would never know that this was one of the
finest shirt shops in the world. I was particularly fond of
their shirts, as they were fuller cut and longer in length than
most shirts. You could be in a wrestling match and one of their
shirts would never come out of your pants. Again, I saw at least
four or five shirts I liked, and exited. Walking toward the
theaters I realized that if I bought anything I would either have
to send it home or add it to my already-bulging luggage. This
certainly wasn’t going to be one of my customary trips to London.
I walked east on Picadilly and arrived at Picadilly Circus. The
word circus in Britain refers to the Latin word for circle. In
America we would call it Picadilly Circle.
Picadilly Circus is very similar to Times Square in New
York and year by year is fast approaching it in sleaziness. As
it is in New York, most of the theaters are within walking or
short cab ride distance. I really wanted to see the new Andrew
Lloyd Weber show, “Starlight Express,” but it was playing in
another part of town, near Victoria Station. I strolled block
after block, looking for something to occupy my evening. I
finally settled on a British comedy (always dangerous, since
there is a type of British comedy that does not transfer well to
the American mind), which was allegedly a bedroom farce about
adultery among members of parliament. I was able to acquire a
very good orchestra seat for what was a fraction of New York
theater prices. After purchasing the ticket, I strolled the Soho
district, which houses many theaters and, among other things,
includes London’s Chinatown. There are also many strip
joint/bars in Soho which are always fun to stop in for a drink in
the afternoon. This time, however, I didn’t stop at one. I did
not want to get into anything that would stir up my libido. I
even kept myself from eyeing passing women, although I have
always found English women the most feminine and gentle of all
the women in the world. I had a funny kind of admiration and
curiosity about English and Oriental women, and yet had never had
a love affair with either. It suddenly came to my mind that
seeing a play about adultery would not be good for me. I walked
back to the theater and got a courteous refund. I purchased
instead a ticket for a play about a London cabby. The play was
allegedly a comedy but I was keeping my fingers crossed. I
flagged down a cab and opted for an afternoon at the hotel.
London cabs are a unique experience. These square, black, old—
fashioned-looking vehicles are the roomiest of their kind in the
world. An NBA basketball player could stretch comfortably with
room to spare. As a bonus, they are driven by the most skilled
drivers I have ever seen. Each driver, before being licensed,
must pass an extensive course in which, among other things, he
must be a living map of London and its environs. You will never
find a London cabby who does not have a working command of the
English language. The whole cab situation is directly the
opposite of New York, where half the drivers don’t speak English
and the other half don’t know their way around the city. I
settled in my seat and observed the London hubbub around me. It
was now around two in the afternoon and I thought I would have
high tea instead of lunch. That would enable me to call room
service (the butler) for an after-theater snack or to skip dinner
altogether. All of the gourmet eating in France during my
relationship with Jane was threatening my waistline. The hardest
part of a trip like this was not partaking in the wonderful food
experience that is Europe. Add my propensity for drinking and
you don’t exactly have a prescription for top-notch physical
fitness. It was at that moment that I decided that very soon I
would have to check into a spa and whip myself into shape.
At one time I jogged two miles every day, rain or shine,
but somewhere in the last few years the discipline seemed to
leave me. When I arrived at the hotel I went to my room, washed
up, and went to the tea room downstairs for high tea. High tea
is far more than a cup of tea. It also includes tiny sandwiches,
scones with clotted cream, and jam and pastries. These are
served in three courses all with freshly brewed tea with heavy
cream. Claridges requires a coat and tie for gentlemen at high
tea and the ladies are turned out with equal elegance. I sat
down and ordered from the very dignified maitre d’ and waited for
my order. While waiting, I observed a scene that, for some odd
reason, has haunted me to this day. A tall, thin man of about
seventy-five or eighty years came walking into the tea room. He
was using a cane and, from his gait, he looked as if he might
recently have had a stroke. He was wearing a three-piece navy
blue suit with regimental striped tie and gave the impression
that at one time of his life he was incredibly handsome. His
hair and silver mustache were impeccably groomed. Assisting him
was a woman, perhaps in her late sixties, who was still
beautiful. She wore a red silk dress and her walk and manner
were a thing of beauty to behold. They sat at a table and held
hands like young lovers and looked into each other’s eyes with a
love that was evident by its burning intensity. She attended to
him as a mother would attend to a favorite child. When he sat, I
could see that one of his hands was shaking so much he could
hardly eat. She helped him and yet still related to him as a
lover rather than a nurse. I couldn’t take my eyes off them. My
imagination ran rampant. I tried to make up stories in my mind.
Were they married? Were they lovers who had a long-running
affair? As I looked at them, I imagined them ten or fifteen
years ago. Certainly they must have been, and in many ways still
were, an exquisite couple. I found myself envious of what they
had. This was obviously a man and a woman who possessed a deep
and undying love they both would take to their graves. I
wondered if I had ever had anything close to that in my life.
They are to this day forever ingrained in my mind. I still find
myself making up their story. I wanted so much to walk over to
them and strike up a conversation, but they were so wrapped up in
each other that it seemed a sin to do so. Usually, I can’t eat
alone unless I read a newspaper or a book. In fact, I brought
with me a copy of the London Times for just that purpose.
Instead of reading, I spent the best part of an hour observing
them. Whenever I read or think about love between a man and a
woman, I think of them. I hoped they were staying in the hotel
and that I would see them again, but that was the last time I
physically saw them, although I have seen them mentally for
years. At first they made me feel good, but afterward, in my