Read Barefoot in the Head Online
Authors: Brian W. Aldiss
They stared out at the tangerine stripes of the square. People passed slowly. The used cars slumped on their haunches listening to the distant noise of traffic, like new animals awaiting battle.
He asked. ‘Did you have a mystical experience ever?’
‘I suppose so. Isn’t that what religion is?’
‘I don’t mean that stuff!’ With his cigar, he indicated the illuminated stone outside. ‘A genuine self-achieved insight, such as Ouspenski achieved.’
‘I never heard of him.’
‘He was a Russian philosopher.’
‘I never heard of him.’
Already he was forgetting what he had seen and learned.
As he nursed his head and tried to understand what was inside it, she began to chatter, tongue delicate against teeth and lips redeeming the nonsense.
‘I’ll go back to Milano in the autumn, in September when it’s not so hot. They’re not good Catholics here in Metz. Are you a good Catholic? The French priests — ugh, I don’t like them, the way they look at you! Sometimes I hardly seem to believe any more... Do you believe in God any more, Signor?’
He turned and looked painfully at her orange eyes, trying to see what she was really saying. She was very boring, this girl, and without alternative.
‘If you are really interested, I believe we each have gods within us, and we must follow those.’ His father had said the same.
‘That’s stupid! Those gods would just be reflections of ourselves and we should be indulging in egotism to worship them.’
He was surprised by her answer. Neither his Italian nor his theology was good enough for him to reply as he would have liked. He said briefly, ‘And your god — he is just an externalisation of egotism. Better to keep it inside!’
‘What terrible, wicked blasphemy for a Catholic to utter!’
‘You little idiot, I’m no Catholic! I’m a Communist! I’ve never seen any sign of your God marching about the world. He’s a capitalist invention!’
‘Then you are indeed sick!’
Angrily laughing, he grabbed her wrist and pulled her towards him. As she struggled, he shouted, ‘Let’s make a little investigation!’
She brought her skull forward and struck him on the nose. His head turned cathedral-size on the instant, flooded with pain. He hardly realised she had broken from his grip and was running across the square, leaving the Banshee’s passenger door swinging open.
After a minute or two, Charteris locked the car door, climbed out, and made his way across to the hotel. The door was barred; Madame would be in bed, dreaming dreams of locked chests. Looking through the window into the bar, he saw that M’sieur still sat at his special table, drinking wine with his crony. Madame’s dog sprawled by the radiator, still restlessly changing its position. The eternal recurrence of this evening, a morgue of life.
The enchanter Charteris tapped on the window to break their spell of sleeping wake.
After a minute or two, M’sieur unlocked the door from inside and appeared in his shirtsleeves. He stroked his tiny puff of beard and nodded to himself; as if something significant had been confirmed.
‘You were fortunate I was still up, M’sieur! Madame my wife does not like to be disturbed when once she has locked and barred the premises. My friend and I were just fighting some of our old campaigns before bed.’
‘Perhaps I have been doing the same thing.’
‘You’re too young! Not the pesky Arabs, the Bosche, boy, the Bosche! This very town was once under Bosche rule, you know!’
He went up to his room. It was filled with noise. As he walked over to the window and looked out, he saw that a lock gate on the dry canal had been opened. The bed of it was full of rushing water, coursing over the car body and other rubbish, slowly moving them downstream. All the long night, Charteris slept uneasily to the noise of the purging water.
In the morning, he rose early, drank Madame’s first indifferent coffee of the day, and paid his bill. Angelina did not appear. His head was clear, but the world seemed less substantial than it had been. Something was awakening and uncoiling within him, making the very ground he trod seem treacherous, as if invisible snakes lay there. He could not decide whether he stood on the edge of truth or illusion, or a yet unglimpsed alternative to either. All he knew was his anxiety to escape from old battle pictures and stale caporal smells.
Carrying his grip out to the car, he climbed in, strapped himself up, and drove round the cathedral onto the motorway, which was already roaring with traffic. He turned towards the coast, leaving Metz behind at a gradually increasing speed, heading for his imagined England.
Metz Cathedral
Strong vertical lines familiarise
An alien love. Yet the cathedral
Escapes its statement after dusk
When for the tourist trade they floodlight
It and all-too-solid piety
Fragments in its own enormous shadows
Of buttresses, porches, peeling pillars.
Nothing familiar then: a cage
For something frightful? So you park
Outside and maybe make a joke
About the modern restorations
Being turned into a 3D Braque:
So much worse than it’s bright:
And head towards the nearest bar, where
Horizontal lines familiarly
Provide the indifference of a bed.
Night-time
Night-time
The town sleeps...
I pretend to sleep
By the cloaca maxima
The clock strides
Midnight
— yes, that’s true
Enough. How goes the song?
A boy wanders
across
The fields among the peonies
O Serbia I have another name
All things have other names
And will that change them
And will that change them
As I am changed?
Looking for his loved one’s
House
... Let’s hope her
Bed springs did not clang!
Night-time
The town sleeps
The springs strike
And I wander across
The midnight fields
Looking for the house
The house where dancing is
The Girl at the Inn
The city was open to the nomad
The fountain sparkled for his lips
But at the inn the girl who served there
Had nothing to spare a traveller
The traveller settled at the inn
Although he left his bill unpaid
The girl no longer held him strange
One day she let him clasp her lightly
And then that night he clasped her tightly
Now she lets him clasp her nightly
Wrongly rightly clasp her nightly
The traveller sang He loved the girl
And was captive of the city
This was their tiny personal story
Like perhaps to many others
Or why else should he say the curious thing
When smiling to her smiles one day
Although I love you dearly love
There’s nothing personal in it
And then that night he clasped her tightly
Still she lets him clasp her nightly
Wrongly rightly clasp her nightly
The Knowledge That the Car is Going to Crash
The knowledge that the car is going to crash
The ponic jungle blowing through its tunnels
The certainty that bodies burst apart
Is with me as I put my foot down
And racial memory’s the dangling chain
That earths me to a neolithic road
Earlier youths and stabs of unearned knowledge
Milano blinds my eyes its dust
Somebody said ‘I knew the blazing plane
Was going to crash before I clambered in’
A premonition isn’t quite the same
Thing as the suffering
What if I knew that every word I spoke
Fell into silence deep as any sea
Or sailed it drunken derelict should that
Stop up a throat others have used
I am not powerless even though the power
Was never mine the blazing plane came down
Though vulnerable I keep the power to wound
Draw blood from bloodless faces
The knowledge that my car is going to crash
Is my inheritance and monkeys take
Their seats before the jungle blurs again
Can’t daunt me as I put my foot down
Zimmer Twenty
The glories of La Patrie in coloured lithographs
All up and down the airless stairs
The Huns are always running. Not my battle. But he laugh;
Suppose that Zimmer Twenty really cares?
This bed’s a battlefield for unconsumated doubts
Madame would charge more for it if she dared
It’s so familiar worn sheets dry canal. Before she shouts
Suppose that Zimmer Twenty really cared?
To speak to him of childhood — and in my native tongue
Or foreign in my old aunt’s prayers
Exiled committed in this beastly town and not so young
Suppose that Zimmer Twenty really cares?
How often Zimmer Twenty seems to care
The sluice gates open every midnight to the good
Every dawning morn more debris thrown down there
They’re not good Catholics in this rotten town
Fat old M’sieu with fingertips all brown
In Milano Milano there’s better blood
Behind the other shutters neutrality is lying
I give myself defy them. There
My body’s breath mists up the pane crying crying
Who’s Zimmer Twenty? Should I care?
THE SERPENT OF KUNDALINI
At the French port, they were sceptical, smiling, nodding, looking wizened, walking behind their barriers in a clockwork way. He stood there waving his NUNSACS papers which later, on the ferry going across to England, he consigned to the furtive waters.
They let him through at the last, making it clear he would find it harder to get back once he was out.
As yet he had nothing to declare.
Once the French coast and customs were left behind, he fell asleep.
When Charteris woke, the ship had already moored in Dover harbour and was absolutely deserted except for him. Even the sailors had gone ashore. Grey cliffs loomed above the boat. The quays and the sea were empty. The void was made more vacant by its transparent skin of flawless early spring sunshine.
The unwieldy shapes of quays and sheds did nothing to make the appearance of things more likely.
Just inside one of the customs sheds on the quay, a man in a blue sweater stood with his arms folded. Charteris saw him as he was about to descend the gangplank, and paused with his hand on the rail. The man would hardly have been noticeable; after all, he was perhaps thirty yards away; but, owing to a curious trick of acoustics played by the empty shed and the great slope of cliff; the man’s every sound was carried magnified to Charteris.
The latter halted between ship and land, hearing the rasp of the waiting man’s wrists as he refolded his arms, hearing the tidal flow of his breath in his lungs, hearing the infinitesimal movement of his feet in his boots, hearing his watch tick through the loaded seconds of the day.