Authors: David Nicholls
My father died six weeks later. Of course I have no belief in an afterlife, least of all the one depicted in newspaper cartoons, but if he was looking down from some cloud on to the Siena train, he might, I suppose, be allowed one of his old favourite remarks:
You see? You see? Not so bloody clever now!
I fell into something of a low.
It was not merely the loss of my belongings â they were, after all, perfectly safe and retrievable â but my increasing loss of control. It had been some time since I'd spoken to Connie. I missed hearing her voice but did not quite trust my own. I was sure Siena would mark some kind of turning point, and I would speak to her when there was good news. But if there was no good news, how could I go home?
At Empoli, I was joined at my table by a little boy in a striped vest, three years old, perhaps, travelling with his grandparents who were large and jovial, full of proud smiles as they watched the boy lay out the contents of a small bag of sweets, twelve artificially coloured jellies, four red, eight blue, sprinkled with the tartaric acid that causes them to fizz on the tongue. He counted them, then counted them again. He divided them into rows and columns, three by four, two by six, showing that instinctive pleasure in play that seems to disappear as soon as we call it mathematics. He licked the tip of his finger and dabbed at the sweet-sharp sugar that had become detached, making a great show of choosing which sweet to eat first. I watched him quite openly, perhaps a little too openly for this day and age. He was aware of giving a performance and when he finally settled on a red sweet, popped it into his mouth and puckered his lips at the tartness of it, I laughed and we both laughed together, his grandparents too, nodding, smiling.
He said something to me in burbling Italian. â
Inglese
,' I replied, â
no parlo Italiano
,' and he nodded as if this made sense and slid a blue sweet towards me, arm fully extended, and the gesture seemed so generous and so familiar that I thought,
Oh God, it's Albie. It's exactly how Albie used to be
.
Because he really was a charming little boy, like a kid from a comic, full of benign mischief. There were difficult days, of course, particularly in the early months. Croup! He caught croup, a disease designed by nature specifically to terrify parents, and there were further panics to come, over mysterious rashes or inexplicable tears, our nerves perpetually jangled from lack of sleep. But we bore all of this gladly and with only the occasional loss of composure, because hadn't we yearned for this disruption in our lives? I returned to work, half regretful, half grateful for some respite, then came home and did my bit to bathe and feed him, and the days and weeks and months went by.
At some point around this time, he must have begun acquiring first memories. I hope so, anyway, because it's hard to imagine a child who was more adored and cared for by parents who, for the most part, got on incredibly well. The inability to control a child's recollections is a frustrating one. I know my own parents did their best to provide sun-dappled days of picnics and paddling pools, but mainly I remember advertising jingles, wet socks on radiators, inane TV theme tunes, arguments about wasted food. With my own son, there were times when I definitely thought âremember this' â Albie toppling through the high grass of a summer meadow, the three of us lolling in bed on a winter Sunday or dancing around the kitchen to some silly song â wishing there was some way to press ârecord', because the three of us were, for the most part, pretty good together, a family at last.
We were sharing a bath one night, at a time when we did such things, Albie lying between his mother's legs, head resting on her belly, and I made an observation that, while all of us might sometimes covet other people's lives, their careers, their spouses (I coveted no one's spouse, but knew from experience that others coveted mine), it was extremely rare â unheard of, even, and certainly taboo â to prefer someone else's children to your own. Everyone thinks their own child is delightful, yet not all children are delightful, so why are parents unaffected by that? What is the reason for this fixed and unshakeable bond: neurological, sociological, genetic? Perhaps, I suggested, we're hard-wired to love our own children over others as a kind of survival mechanism, for the propagation of the species.
Connie frowned. âYou mean the love you feel for your child is not real, it's just science.'
âNot at all. It's real
because
it's science! The way you feel about friends or lovers or even siblings is dependent and conditional on their behaviour. With your children, that's irrelevant. It doesn't matter what they do. People with bratty kids don't love them less, do they?'
âNo, they teach them not to be bratty.'
âAnd that's the difference â they stick with them and even if they don't succeed, even if they stay brats, they'd still give their life for them.'
âAlbie's not bratty.'
âNo, he's lovely. But everybody thinks their own children are lovely, even when they're not.'
âAnd they shouldn't?'
âOf course they should! But that's what people mean by “unconditional love”.'
âWhich apparently you think is a bad thing?'
âNoâ'
âOr an illusion, a “behavioural instinct”.'
âNo, I'm just ⦠thinking aloud.'
We both went silent for a while. The bath was cooling now but getting out would have felt like conceding a point.
âWhat a stupid thing to say in front of Albie!'
I laughed. âHe's eighteen months old! He doesn't understand.'
âAnd I suppose you know that, too.'
âI was thinking aloud, that's all.'
âThe eminent child psychologist,' she said, rising suddenly from the bath, Albie in her arms.
âI was thinking out loud! It was just a theory.'
âWell I don't need a
theory
, Douglas,' she said, wrapping him in a towel and bundling him away. My wife has always had a gift for effective exit lines. I lay alone in the bath for some time, feeling the water grow more tepid around me.
She's tired
, I thought,
it's nothing
, and sure enough the debate was forgotten almost instantly by everyone except me.
At least I presume she has forgotten it.
But from the beginning there was never any doubt that she was better at it all, so much more competent, kind and patient, never bored in that dull old playground, never reaching for a newspaper, happy to watch the twentieth, twenty-first, twenty-second trip down the slide. Is there anything duller than pushing a swing? Yet she never seemed resentful â or only occasionally â of the hours and days and weeks that he consumed, the attention he demanded, the irrational tears, the trail of destruction and spilt paint and mashed carrot that he left behind, never repulsed or angered by the vomit that stained our new sofa, the poo that found its way into the cracks between the floorboards and is still there now, I expect, at some molecular level. As Albie got older, his devotion to his mother became more and more blatant and extreme. In early years this circumstance is so commonplace as to be barely worth acknowledging. Strain as he might, even the most fervent father lacks the ability to breast-feed, and the paternal bonding would come later, wouldn't it, over chemistry sets and model planes, camping trips and driving lessons? He would beat me at badminton and in return I'd show him how to make a battery out of a lemon. In the meantime, there seemed little to do, except wait patiently for the day we became close.
But increasingly I seemed to have a particular gift for upsetting him, standing awkwardly while he wriggled and writhed in my arms, waiting for Connie to relieve me. Without her there, we were both on edge. The journey from baby to toddler will involve a certain number of mishaps, but something about her absence made him tumble and trip so that even now there are scars and dents that Connie can point to and attribute to me. There, that's the coffee-table incident; that's the fall from the tree; that's the ceiling-fan affair. And always, always, his arms would stretch towards his mother on her return because he knew he would be safe.
All my best intentions seemed to backfire, and even my loving nicknames didn't stick. Connie invented Egg, as in Albie/albumen/egg white/Egg, a pleasing name that seemed to fit. Noting the somewhat simian way he clung to his mother's hip, I made a play for âMonkey' but it didn't take, and I abandoned it after a week or two. Then there was the incident with the Lego, an episode that has since passed into Petersen folklore as an illustration of ⦠I don't quite know what, because my behaviour always seemed entirely reasonable to me. Needless to say I was raised on Lego, which was a rather more rigorous and austere toy in my day but nevertheless something of a secret vice for me; that satisfying click, the symmetry, the neat tessellations. Maths, engineering, design â they were all there disguised as play, and so I looked forward to the day when Albie and I could sit shoulder to shoulder in front of a tea-tray, open the cellophane bag, turn to page one and build!
Yet Albie's technique just wasn't there. He seemed incapable of following the simplest instructions, happy instead to jam different-coloured pieces together at random, to chew the pieces so that they became unusable, gum them up with Plasticine, drop them behind the radiator, throw them at the wall. If I constructed something on his behalf â a police station say, or an elaborate spaceship â he would smash the toy to pieces within minutes and make instead some nameless, formless thing to shove down the back of the sofa. Set after set expired this way, a perfectly good toy turned into detritus for the vacuum cleaner.
One night, motivated entirely by a desire to give my son something lasting and permanent to play with, I waited until he and Connie were in bed, poured myself a large Scotch, mixed together some Araldite adhesive in a jam-jar lid, laid the instructions before me and carefully glued together a pirate ship, a troll castle and an ambulance. Now, instead of a box of expensive shingle, here were three terrific, long-lasting toys. I displayed them on the kitchen table and went to bed, anticipating much acclaim.
The tears and wailing that woke me the next morning were therefore something of a disappointment, and certainly quite out of proportion to my crimes. But look, I told Albie, now they'll last forever! Now they won't smash! But he doesn't want them to last forever, said Connie, consoling tearful Albie, he wants to smash them, that's the point! That's what's creative about them. That destruction could be creative seemed like one of those things artists say, but I let the point go and went off to the lab, sour and frustrated, the pleasures of Lego quite lost to us now. The offending articles were stashed away in a high cupboard, the story materialising years later as an anecdote at dinner, signifying ⦠what, exactly? A lack of imagination on my part, a lack of creativity, I suppose. Lack of fun. Oh yes, they remembered
that
.
Anyway, the anecdote always seemed to get a big laugh, and as a father I have learnt to develop a thick skin and appreciate jokes at my expense. Nobody would ever have dared to laugh at my own father and this is progress, I suppose, of a sort.
Certainly the boy on the Siena train found me engaging enough and by the time we arrived at my destination we were firm friends, nodding away at each other, nodding, nodding. I was grateful for the sweet he offered me and would gladly have gorged on all of them, because who knew when I would eat again? But we were pulling into Siena.
Ciao, ciao!
Say goodbye to the nice crazy man. I shook the sticky fingers of the boy's hand and stepped out into the brutal heat of a Tuscan noon.
The bus that shuttled into the old town was packed and I was aware of how smugly unencumbered I felt amidst the backpacks and suitcases, as free and light as a recently escaped lunatic. Now we were passing through a mediaeval gate, now disembarking, the suitcases rumbling behind me as I hurried ahead, through another gate and then, without any expectation, out into the bright light of an immense piazza, a fan divided into nine slim wedges like a peacock's tail or a tin of Scottish shortbread, radiating from an immense Gothic palace, the whole scene baked a terracotta red. Quite, quite overwhelming, and heartening too, because Siena was a walled town, compact and self-contained, and if Venice was a maze, this was a shoebox. The Piazza del Campo was inescapable, with a clear focal point at its base. Like ants beneath a magnifying glass, it would be impossible for Kat and Albie to avoid passing before me. Optimistic, alert, I chose a spot on the herringboned bricks about halfway down the slope, pulled my baseball cap down over my eyes and promptly fell asleep.
I woke a little after three and swore so extravagantly that the tourists turned to stare. How could I have been so stupid? Struggling to my feet, I found that I could barely stand. In my exhaustion, my head had lolled to one side and the right side of my face and neck had the familiar tightness that precedes sunburn. I stumbled, then sat once again on the hot bricks. Three hours! Three hours in which I felt almost certain they had passed me by. I had a perfect image of Albie stepping over me, collapsed here like some drunk. My mouth was dry while my clothes dripped with perspiration â I had left a damp patch on the ground where the bricks had drawn the remaining moisture from my body â and my head throbbed with what surely must be sunstroke. Water, I must have water. I tried to stand again, resting on my toes a moment then staggering up the sides of the sun-baked terracotta bowl, like Lawrence of Arabia clambering up a dune.
In a kiosk at the edge of the square I paid an extortionate amount of money for two bottles of water, draining one and half of the other before stopping to take in my reflection in the mirrored wall. A vertical line divided the crimson half of my face and neck from the white, while across my forehead the shade of the baseball cap had created an equator. My face had been stencilled by the sun into something resembling the Danish flag. I touched the skin â the tenderness told me there was worse to come â and laughed, the kind of laughter that precedes great sobbing tears, and stepped out into the heat.