Authors: David Nicholls
Freja laughed. âI'm sorry, but
that
is a very bad holiday.'
âIt has been both fun and harrowing.'
âWhat's left to go wrong, I wonder?'
âAre there sharks in this lagoon?'
âI shouldn't laugh. I'm sorry. No wonder you were so upset. I'll try not to add to your woes tonight.' Here she took my arm and at that precise moment, as if she had activated an alarm, my telephone rang.
âHello?'
âHi there. Where are you?'
âOh, out walking, walking. As usual.'
âNo news, then.'
âNot yet.' To Freja I mouthed,
Sorry, one minute
, and indicated she should walk ahead. âBut I'm closing in.'
âWhat does that mean, closing in?'
âIt means I have a good lead. The net is tightening!'
âYou sound like a private detective.'
âI'm wearing a mackintosh as we speak. I'm not.'
âNo. So â tell me, then.'
âYou'll see.'
âYou've heard from him? You've spoken to him?'
âYou'll find out.'
âBut why won't you tell me?'
âTrust me, I have material proof that he's fit and well.'
âWell, should I fly out to you?'
âNo! No, I've told you, I'll bring him back.'
âBecause it's been five days now, and I'd really like to know, Douglas.'
âI'd prefer to tell you when it's definite.'
There was a silence.
âI think you should come home.'
âI will when I've found him.'
âExcept you're not really looking for him, are you?'
I felt an irrational moment of panic, absurdly turning my back on Freja, who was waiting patiently at the next bridge. âI am! I'm out looking now.'
âThat's not what I mean. I mean you're doing something else.'
Should we turn left or right?
mimed Freja.
âI'm about to get something to eat. Can I call you back?' I said, and mouthed
one minute
.
âOh. Okay. I'd hoped we could talk, but if you're too busy â¦'
âI'm sitting at a table, the food's about to arrive. Not the food, the menu â the menu's about to arrive.'
âYou said you were walking.'
âI was, and now I'm sitting at a table. I hate talking on phones in restaurants, it's very rude. The waiter's glaring at me.' With this last detail I had overreached myself, because I could hear Connie frowning.
âWhere are you exactly?'
âI'm in Castello, by the Arsenale. I'm sitting outside and the waiter's standing over me. I can send you a photo if you like.'
There was a pause that seemed to last an age, a lowering of her voice. âI'm worried about you, Douglas. I think you might beâ'
âGot to go,' I said and hung up. I'd never done this before, hung up on Connie. Then, to my amazement, I turned the phone off too, and limped quickly towards Freja.
âI'm sorry about that. Connie, my wife.'
âI thought, when the phone rang, you were going to leap into the canal.'
âIt startled me, that's all. I need a drink. The restaurant's just here.' And we turned into a tiny campo. No carnival masks or postcards for sale here. Instead laundry hung between the buildings like celebratory bunting, televisions and radios played in first-floor rooms, and in the corner of the square was a small trattoria that, despite my best intentions, looked undeniably romantic.
âWhat do you think?'
âI think it looks perfect.'
We were seated outside in adjacent chairs, facing the square. The restaurant had no menu and instead we were brought glasses of prosecco by a small elderly man with suspiciously black hair, then small bowls of marinated squid and octopus and anchovies, sharp and oily and entirely delicious. As if to reassure each other of the platonic nature of the evening, Freja showed me pictures of her daughters on her telephone, two startlingly beautiful girls with very blue eyes, born a year apart, growing in montage form into straight-limbed, long-haired, white-teethed young women, the very embodiment of health and vigour, pictured against a varied background of windswept Atlantic beaches and Thai palm trees, the Sphinx, a glacier somewhere. With shrewd editing it might, I suppose, be possible to compile an upbeat slideshow of even the most grim and Dickensian of childhoods, but on the evidence of Freja's photo album her daughters had been particularly blessed. They seemed like the kind of healthy, wholesome family who'd be happy to share the same toothbrush. Of course she was far too nice a woman to gloat, but I couldn't help but be aware that while Freja was usually pictured in the embrace of her photogenic offspring, I could not recall a single photo of my son and me. Perhaps when he was a small child, but in the last eight, ten years? Never mind, here was a photograph of Anastasia Kristensen, swimming with dolphins; here was Babette Kristensen, volunteering in an African village. Here was our pasta, and more wine.
âAnastasia is a documentary-maker now. Babette is an environmentalist. I'm very proud of them, as you can probably tell. I have an almost limitless capacity to bore people about them. I'll stop now before you slump forward into your linguine.'
âNot at all. They seem like lovely girls,' I said.
âThey are,' she replied, returning the phone to her bag. âOf course when they were younger they could be little bitches â¦' She put her hand to her mouth. âI shouldn't say that even if it's true â but goodness, we fought! Thankfully those things get easier with time. One more â¦' She produced her phone again. âI debated whether or not to show you this, you'll understand why â¦'
And here was Babette, twenty years old, sitting naked in a hospital chair, a newborn baby girl the colour of an aubergine at her breast, her hair sticking to her forehead with sweat. âYes, this year I actually became a grandmother. Can you believe it? I'm a
mormor
at fifty-two! Good God!' She shook her head and reached for her glass.
âWho is this here?' To the left of the chair stood a lean, distinguished-looking man, a Roman senator, absurdly handsome despite the foolish grin and surgical frock.
âThat's my ex-husband.'
âHe looks like a film star.'
âAnd is all too well aware of the fact, I'm afraid.'
âHe has incredible eyes.'
âMy downfall.'
âWait â he was at the birth?'
âYes, of course.'
âHe saw his grandchild ⦠come out?'
âYes, yes, we both did.'
âThat's very Scandinavian.'
Freja laughed and I peered once again. âHe really is a very handsome man.'
âThat's where my daughters get their looks.'
âI'm not sure if that's entirely true,' I said obligingly, and Freja nudged me with her elbow. âAre they friendly with their father?'
âOf course, they adore him. I repeatedly instruct them not to, but they insist on worshipping him.'
My son did not worship me, and that was fine. To be worshipped would have made me uncomfortable, likewise âadored'. But âfriendly with', I could have lived with that. âI always thought that daughters were more forgiving of their fathers,' I said. âIt always seems like an easier relationship than fathers and sons. I wonder why that is?'
âI suppose it's because you're freed of the obligation of being a role model. Or at least the comparison is less direct. Whereas with a son â¦'
âPerhaps. I'd never thought of that.' Had Albie ever aspired to be like me? In what respect? If I thought long enough, perhaps I'd come up with something, but now Freja was pouring wine.
âI feel the same about sons. I'd have loved a son. A handsome, rather old-fashioned boy who I could mould and dress up and then hate his girlfriends. Besides, you mustn't idolise girls. If you had a daughter, that would bring its own problems too.'
âI did have a daughter.'
âYou did?'
âMy wife and I. Our first child was a girl, Jane, but she died.'
âWhen?'
âSoon after she was born.'
A moment passed. Over the years I've noted that some people, when told we lost our baby, seem almost angry, as if we've played a trick on them. Others try to shrug it off, as if it doesn't really count, but thankfully this is rare. For the most part people are thoughtful and kind and when the situation arises, as it sometimes does, I have a facial expression I produce, a smile of sorts â Connie has one too â to reassure people that we are okay, and I produced it now.
âDouglas, I'm very sorry.'
âIt was a long time ago. More than twenty years now.'
My daughter would have been twenty this year.
âNo, but still â it's the worst thing that can happen to a couple.'
âI didn't raise it to be dramatic, but Connie and I, we have a policy of never avoiding the subject either. We don't want it to be a secret, or something taboo. We want to be ⦠straightforward about it.'
âI understand,' said Freja, but her eyes were reddening.
âPlease, Freja, I don't want to spoil the evening â¦'
No,
not twenty,
nineteen years old â just. She'd be about to start her second year at university
.
âNo, but stillâ'
âI don't want to cast a gloomy spell.'
Medicine, or architecture, I'd imagined. Or perhaps she'd be an actress, or an artist. I wouldn't mind â¦
âSo your son â¦'
âAlbie is our only child, but our second child.'
âAnd is that why you're here? Because of your son?'
âThat's right.'
âHe's gone missing?'
âHe's run away.'
âAnd he is â¦?'
âSeventeen.'
âAh!' She nodded, as if this explained everything. âIs he sensible?'
I laughed. âNot always. Rarely, in fact.'
âWell he is seventeen, why should he be?'
âI was very sensible at seventeen.'
Freja shook her head and laughed. âI was not. Are you particularly close?'
âNo. Quite the opposite. That's why I'm here.'
âDo you talk to each other?'
âNot really. Do you? With your daughters?'
âOf course. We talk about everything!'
âWith my son and I, it's like a rather awkward chat show. Albie's this surly young pop star who doesn't want to be there. “So, how are things? What have you been up to? Any future plans?”'
âBut if you don't talk to each other, that must be a worry.'
âIt is. It is.'
âPerhaps we should change the subject. Except to say, I don't mean to underdo â is that a word? Underrate, underestimate your concern, but if he has access to money and a phone for emergenciesâ'
âHe doesâ'
âAnd he's an adult, more or less. Why not just let him be?'
âI promised my wife I'd find him.'
âThe wife you are separated from.'
âNot yet,' I said defensively. âWe're not separated yet. We're just not in the same city. We are ⦠geographically separated.'
âI see.'
We sat quietly until our waiter had taken our plates away.
âAlso, we argued, my son and I. Things were said and I'd like to make amends. In person. Does that sound insane?'
âNot at all. It sounds very noble. But if I had to apologise to my daughters for all the foolish things I've said to them, we would never talk about anything else. I think, as a parent, one has the right to make some mistakes, and to be forgiven for them. Don't you agree?'
Certainly, I felt guilty about Jane. Irrationally so, of course, but then guilt is rarely rational. We were assured, over and over again, that there was nothing we could have done, that the sepsis that killed our daughter was not a result of behaviour or lifestyle, was not present in the womb. Although she was a little premature, there was every reason to believe that she was healthy and well at birth. Because anger was preferable to guilt, I had searched for blame; the prenatal care, the postnatal care, the staff. The word âsepsis' suggested infection â was that someone's fault? But it soon became clear that the staff were blameless â better than blameless, immaculate really â in their handling of the situation. It was one of those things that happens, they told us; very rarely, but it happens. Which was fine, but what were we meant to do with all that anger, all that guilt? Connie directed hers inwards. Was it the fault of some past behaviour, smoking or drinking, was it complacency on her part? She must have done something. Surely there couldn't be a punishment as harsh as this without some crime? No, we had done nothing wrong and there was nothing we could have done. It was one of those things that happens. That was all.
There had been no sense of danger at the birth. That had all gone well, the experience traumatic but thrilling, too, both familiar and entirely new. Connie's waters had broken in the night. At first neither of us could believe this â it was only the thirty-fourth week â but the sodden mattress was undeniable and we put our plan into action, driving to the hospital where we paced and waited, boredom alternating with elation and anxiety. The contractions began mid-morning and then things happened very quickly. Connie was as strong and ferocious as I knew she'd be, and by 11.58 a.m., Jane was with us, mewling and shouting, punching at the air with tiny fists, pedalling away, a shade over 4lbs but fierce; oh, she was a beauty, all the worry, anxiety and pain swept away by her perfection and the joy of it all. She was healthy and we could hold her as we'd hoped. There were photographs and private vows; I would do all I could to care for her and protect her from harm. Connie took her to her breast and though she didn't feed at first, all seemed well. There'd be no need for an incubator, just a careful eye. We returned to the ward.