Authors: David Nicholls
There seemed to be something slightly lewd about this revelation, so I moved on. âWhere are you from, Freja?'
âCopenhagen.'
âYou speak wonderful English.'
âDo I?' she said, smiling.
âYou speak better English than my son!' I said, the kind of pointless jibe that had brought me here in the first place.
âThank you. I wish I could pretend it was because I read a lot of Jane Austen, but mainly it comes from bad television. Cop shows, detectives. By the age of nine, every schoolchild in Denmark knows the English for âwe've found another body, superintendent'. And pop songs, too â you're bombarded from an early age, the same all over Scandinavia.' She shrugged. âAbsurd, really, that I speak better English than Swedish. But knowing me, knowing you, there is nothing we can do!'
âI wish I could reply in Danish.'
âDon't feel too bad. We've long given up hoping that the world will take lessons.'
âMy wife enjoys very much your television programmes.'
It'll be herring and Lego next
, I thought, and wondered if it was a particularly British, no, English trait, to grab at clichés like this.
âOur gift to the world.' She smiled and pushed her chair back. âDouglas, against my better judgement I am going to get more of this disgusting fruit juice. Can I get you something? They have cake â¦'
âNo, thank you.'
I watched her go.
My wife enjoys very much your television programmes.
The mangled syntax was back, and why was I straining to mention Connie? Certainly I had no desire to deny her existence, but neither was there any reason to hang a âmarried' sign around my neck â except, I suppose, from an awareness that Freja was a very attractive woman. Fifty or so, I guessed, with flattish features and a pleasant, healthy glow suggestive of black bread and swims in icy lakes. Clear skin, the veins close to the surface on her cheeks. Laughter lines around very blue eyes, dark hair that might well have been dyed â it was a slightly unreal dark brown, like Cherry Blossom shoe polish. She smiled over her shoulder and I found myself sitting straighter and running my tongue over my teeth.
âSo,' she said on her return, âare you travelling alone?'
âI am. For the moment. I'm hoping to meet up with my son in a day or two,' I replied, which was true, if not quite the whole story. âYou?'
âYes, I'm alone. I've just got divorced.'
âI'm sorry to hear that.'
âIt was best for both of us.' She shrugged and laughed. âThat's what people say, isn't it? Where is your wife? She's not travelling with you?'
âShe's back in England. She had to go home early. A family thing.'
âAnd you didn't want to go with her?'
Here my imagination failed me. âNo. No.'
âDo you like travelling alone?'
âThis is only my third day.'
âFor me it's my second week.'
âAnd how is it?'
She considered for a moment. âI thought Italy would cheer me up. I thought I would walk all day through little mediaeval streets and sit every night with a book in a little restaurant and eat a modest meal with one glass of wine before retiring to bed. It seemed so
nice
in my imagination. But usually I'm given the table by the bathrooms, the waiters keep asking if I'm expecting someone and I find myself fixing this very relaxed smile to let everyone know I'm all right.' She demonstrated a tight grin that I recognised at once.
âIn Berlin I once went to the zoo by myself,' I said. âThat was a mistake.'
Freja laughed and put her hand to her mouth. âBut
why
?'
âI was on a conference, and I heard it was a great zoo, so â¦'
âI've been to the theatre alone,' said Freja. âThe cinema I think is okay, but the theatre feels ⦠awkward.' We smiled at this and continued a light-hearted riff about places one should never go alone. Paintballing! A rollercoaster! Trampolining! The circus, we decided, was the worst.
One ticket for the circus, please! No, just the one. One adult, yes.
By the end we were quite hysterical. âI feel better,' she said, wiping her eyes. âNow the table for one doesn't seem so bad.'
âLast night I was so exhausted I ate a sandwich in my room with my head out of the window, so there wouldn't be crumbs.'
âCongratulations!' She handed me the sugar bowl with mock formality. âYou win today's international loneliness award.'
âThank you, thank you!' I said, accepting the trophy and acknowledging the applause then, feeling a little foolish, placing the sugar bowl down. âAnd now I must go.' I attempted to stand, groaning and steadying myself on the edge of the table. âChrist, I'm like some ancient old â¦'
âGoodness, what have you done to yourself?'
âI overdid it yesterday. I walked completely around Venice, three times.'
âWhy on earth would you do such a thing? Surely there's no pleasure in that.'
âNot after the first time, no.'
âSo why?'
âI'm looking for ⦠it's a long story, I'd ratherâ'
âI'm sorry, I'm prying.'
âNo, no, not at all. But I must get going.'
âWell, if you need a break â¦'
I stopped and turned. âI don't know how you feel about visiting art galleries on your own,' she said, âbut I prefer not to.'
âUm â¦'
âI'm going to the Accademia first thing this morning. It opens at eight thirty. It's really not far. We can walk around very slowly, sit on benches. If you'd like.'
Might I find Albie there? Would he really be queuing at opening time for a museum of Venetian art? Unlikely, but would it really be so bad to devote an hour or so to the Grand Tour?
âI'll meet you back here in fifteen minutes.'
And so Freja and I walked out along the Riva degli Schiavoni, which was still cool and quiet in the morning sun, and I found myself hoping, perversely, that I would not bump into my son.
Freja and I liked the Accademia very much. There was a sense of the art belonging to a city that, on the evidence of many of the canvases, had barely changed in seven hundred years. Crisp and vivid Bellinis; exquisite, bright Carpaccios; and, in one room, an immense Veronese the size of an advertising hoarding, three great arches swarming with figures, twenty, thirty of them all distinctly individualised and dressed in anachronistic Venetian garb, with a biblically robed Christ at the centre, preparing to eat, somewhat unconventionally, what looked like a terrific leg of lamb.
â
The Feast in the House of Levi
,' said Freja, consulting the caption on the wall and stepping unwittingly into my trap.
âThat's what Veronese ultimately called it, but in fact it was originally
The Last Supper
. The Inquisition didn't like the picture, they thought it was irreverent â all these people, bustling around, Germans, children, dogs, black people. You see that cat, under the table by Christ's feet? They thought it was blasphemous. So instead of painting out the animals and the dwarves, Veronese simply changed the title. Not a Last Supper, but
The Feast in the House of Levi
.'
Freja looked me up and down. I realise this is a cliché, but her eyes really did scan up then down. âYou know a great deal about art,' she said.
I shrugged modestly. âMy wife's the expert. I've just picked up a thing or two along the way.' â¦
from the internet
, I should have said.
My expertise lies entirely in looking things up
,
but I kept my counsel and strolled on, hands locked professorially behind my back.
âSo what do you do?'
âI'm a scientist, a biochemist by training. Nothing to do with art, I'm afraid. You?'
âA dentist, so to me biochemistry sounds fascinating. Dentistry is also not very artistic.'
âBut necessary!'
âI suppose so, but there's not much room for free expression.'
âYou have terrific teeth,' I said, somewhat idiotically.
âWell, I've learnt that as soon as you say you're a dentist, people start peering into your mouth. I suppose they want to see if you practise what you preach.'
â“Practise what you preach” â you see? Your English is incredible.'
âYou mean I know a lot of clichés?'
âNot clichés. Idioms. You're very idiomatic.'
âSo much praise!'
âI'm sorry.'
âNo, I don't mind. Why would I mind?'
In the final gallery we found a terrific mural by Carpaccio, occupying a whole room and telling the legend of the life of St Ursula in comic-book form. If I knew anything about Renaissance art, it was that stories of saints rarely end well. In this case, the virtuous Ursula says goodbye to her betrothed and leaves Britain to go on a pilgrimage with 10,000 virgin followers, but they're all beheaded by the Huns in Cologne. In one canvas, an arrow is fired point blank into Ursula's chest, and I wondered what message could be drawn from that?
âThe moral is, don't go to Cologne,' said Freja.
âI went to a conference in Cologne. I thought it was a charming city.'
âBut were any of you virgins?'
âWell, we were all biochemists so, yes â almost certainly.'
She stepped closer to the canvas, tilting her head. âPoor St Ursula. Poor ten thousand virgins. Still, it's a comfort, I suppose, to know that someone is having a worse holiday than you.'
For all the gore of the final frames, it was a wonderful painting, full of colour and life and strange, imaginary cities under cobalt blue skies, with that precise perspective that is so conspicuous in early-Renaissance art, as if they had all been issued with really terrific geometry sets. âI don't want to sound conceited, but I'm pretty sure that, if I'd been around in the early Renaissance, I could have come up with the theory of perspective.'
âYes!' said Freja, grabbing my forearm. âI've always wondered, why did no one pick up on that before? “Listen, everyone! I've just realised, when things are far away they appear smaller.”'
I laughed, then remembered my new guise as an art historian. âOf course it's a little more complicated than that.'
âOf course, of course.'
âI love Carpaccio's version of England.'
âYes,' said Freja, âit just so happens to look exactly like Venice.'
âI suppose, if you'd spent your life in Venice, you might very well expect everywhere to look like Venice.'
âWhy would you wish for anything else?'
And then we were out in the clean blue light of the morning, our surroundings seeming somehow refreshed and made vivid now that we had seen them on old canvases. Those strange top-heavy chimneys were still there, the same accentuated geometry of the buildings and fruit-bowl hues of pink and orange and peachy yellow, the forced perspective of the eastward view from the top of the Accademia Bridge. We took it in.
âWhat a place,' said Freja. âIt shouldn't be here, and yet here it is.'
âThere's a nice café on Santa Margherita,' I said. âIf you're not in a hurry.'
We headed west. Freja had been separated for two years, divorced for six months. âThe usual story. It hardly bears repetition. He had an affair, and then I had a silly affair to punish him for his affair, and then he had another affair, like some ridiculous poker game. Except that he fell in love with his lover and I did not. To begin with it was awful, a catastrophe. Chaotic and shocking and sad. We had built this business together â we were in the same surgery every day â and all through the day there would be arguments and rows and accusations. Believe me, no one wants to see their dentist cry, not while they're working. Can you imagine? Tears plopping into your mouth while this hysterical woman is wielding a drill. And of course the children were so furious with us both.'
âHow many children?'
âTwo, both girls. But they had already left home for university, so perhaps things could have been worse.'
âAnd do you think that was a factor in the break-up?' I said, adopting a casual tone.
âThat they'd left home?'
âAnd that your work was somehow ⦠complete?'
Freja shrugged. âFor him, perhaps. Not for me. I loved our family, I was proud of us; it never occurred to me to think of it as work. My husband used to send me crazy, of course, but that was beside the point. The point was we were married and we would be together until we died.' She was silent for a moment. âSo it was awful to begin with, screaming and shouting and tears, and the girls went a little off the rails. But then you're lying in the wreckage â to continue the metaphor â you're lying in the wreckage and you reach down and feel for your legs, they're still there, and both your arms and your skull is in one piece. You can see and hear and realise you can still stand up. And that's what you do. You stand up and you catch your breath and you stagger away. I'm talking a lot. It is because I have said nothing but “
grazie
” and “a table for one” for the last three weeks.'
âI don't mind. Really.'
We were out of the dark alleys now, into Campo San Barnaba, the church front bright and elegant and unadorned.
âI haven't seen this square. I like it a lot,' said Freja, and as her tour guide I felt rather proud.
âYou must see this,' I said, the expert once again. On the bridge at the far side of the square, four white marble footprints were inlaid deep into the stonework. âIt's a fighting bridge. If you had a dispute with someone, you settled it here. A sort of public boxing ring. The footprints were where the fight started.'
âYou're a real local historian, Douglas.'
âI read the guidebooks. It sends my wife crazy. She's always telling me to put the book away and look up. Look up!'