Black Chalk (28 page)

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Authors: Christopher J. Yates

BOOK: Black Chalk
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David’s words were met with shock and blinking disbelief.

‘So Mark is Sleepy, right?’ said Jack, laughing at the severity of David’s gaffe. David beamed. ‘Very good. And obviously, from the hospital and hobbling, Emilia is –’

‘Jeez, man,’ said Chad furiously. ‘Did I really just hear you call Emilia Dopey? What the heck? Do you ever wonder why people stay away from you up there on your stool all night long?’

David threw his hands to his head in panic. ‘Oh,
mea culpa, mea maxima culpa
.’

Chad was turning red. ‘Do you have any idea just how
rude
that is? She’s lucky to be alive. What makes you think you can just sit there in front of Jolyon calling his girlfriend stupid?’ he shouted.

‘Oh dear, oh no,’ said David. ‘Oh, Jolyon, please do forgive me. I’m such an idiot, I’m sorry, I get so carried away sometimes.’ David removed his glasses and started to thump his forehead with the heel of his hand. ‘Such … an idiot … such … a stupid … idiot…’

Jolyon reached over and touched David on the shoulder. ‘David, it’s all right. David, that’s enough now.’ David stopped thumping himself, took a deep breath and rubbed at his moist eyes. ‘Look at me, David,’ said Jolyon, ‘it’s OK. It was only a joke, a harmless joke.’

‘I don’t think your girlfriend’s a dimwit, Jolyon, I promise I don’t. I mean, in this place –’ David gestured around him – ‘who is? No one, we’re the –’

‘David, stop,’ said Jolyon. ‘You don’t need to explain.’ Jolyon squeezed David’s shoulder and, when David had nearly composed himself, patted him on the back. ‘Good man,’ he said. ‘No harm done.’ Jolyon took a drag of his cigarette. ‘In any case, Emilia’s not my girlfriend any more,’ he said.

‘She’s not what?’ said Chad, shocked.

‘It’s over,’ said Jolyon. ‘I went to see her and … Look, there are no hard feelings, she doesn’t blame anyone for what happened. It was amicable enough. She just needs some time to herself, that’s all.’

‘Jolyon…’

‘There’s nothing to talk about, Chad.’

‘Are you OK?’

‘Of course,’ said Jolyon, and he did appear to be in good spirits, it was true. ‘But now the topic is closed, all right?’

So everyone became quiet because Jolyon had spoken. And after the necessary silence seemed to have lapsed, they all looked to Jack to lighten the mood, Jack the expert at shifting the gears of conversation. But Jack was making himself small and biting his nails, his imagination playing and replaying the scene to come.

*   *   *

L(iii)
   They left Pitt to buy cava and crème de cassis to make cheap Kir Royales. Kir Rochdales, Jack called them, his humour awakening in occasional bursts.

Jack walked alongside David, they were both studying history and they argued about the Glorious Revolution. Jolyon and Tallest walked behind them, listening in on their conversation to ensure that Jack said nothing untoward.

Jack’s room was above the library, a long climb up several staircases. There was a small courtyard and a skylight for the library, raised like a wishing well. David tripped on a loose flagstone and the bottle of cava he was carrying smashed in the bag when he fell. He apologised anxiously, he said that he thought he might be a little drunk and suggested that if they were quick they could filter the drink from the bag into some sort of container. He was on his knees using his hands awkwardly to cover the holes that the broken glass had torn in the bag. The drink was draining away as if being tipped from a watering can.

Jolyon motioned to Jack and Jack helped David to his feet. ‘Don’t worry about it, David,’ said Jack. ‘It wasn’t your fault.’

‘My jeans are soaked through,’ said David. ‘I should go back to my room and change.’

‘No, I’ll lend you a pair of trousers,’ said Jack. ‘The others will wait outside. We’ll go into my room and you can change there.’

‘Only if you’re sure I’ll be quite safe alone with you and my trousers down, Jack,’ said David.

Jack clenched his teeth. ‘You’re incorrigible, David,’ he said.

David winked. ‘Oh, but you have no idea, Jack,’ he said.

*   *   *

L(iv)
   David was in a fresh pair of jeans and had been offered the room’s only armchair. Jolyon mixed drinks in the plastic cups they had bought and apologised to David for Jack’s disgraceful lack of glassware.

Tallest refused the offer of a drink and took the chair next to Jack’s desk. He sat there in silence for almost three hours. The rest of them settled on the floor with their drinks, or on top of Jack’s bed, and the night chatter started. They spoke about bullies they had known at school, Noam Chomsky’s opposition to the Gulf War,
The Female Eunuch
, anorexia versus bulimia, football,
The Selfish Gene
, British seaside holidays, Orwell, early twentieth-century imperialism … And then at two in the morning, Kirs finished and several joints having circled the room, Jolyon initiated the final stage.

The armchair in which David was sitting was next to Jack’s bookcase. Jolyon and Dee acted out a short debate over the meaning of the word
metonymy
and then Jolyon pointed to the bookcase. A thick red copy of
The Chambers Dictionary
was on the top shelf, at the bottom of a pile of history textbooks.

‘David, pass me the dictionary so I can prove the supposed English Literature student utterly wrong.’

David tried to pull out the dictionary from the base of the pile but the pile threatened to topple. He groaned and stood up and removed the stack of history texts. Something behind the books caught his eye. ‘My goodness,’ said David. ‘What’s this I see here, Mr Jack Thomson?’

Jack pretended not to hear and stared at Chad. But Chad only smiled.

David picked something up. ‘My oh my oh my,’ he said. He held the thing close to his glasses and then grinned excitedly before revealing his discovery to the room.

It was a picture frame, an expensive frame, thick wood stained with a black lacquer. They had all seen the picture before, of course, but pretended now to see it as if for the first time. The photo had been taken in Jolyon’s room one night, early on in their first term, several months earlier. Jack was in the photo, a cigarette slanting from the corner of his mouth. Red drunken eyes. In his right hand he was holding up and displaying for the camera his half-finished drink. His left arm meanwhile was around someone’s shoulder, a fellow reveller. David’s shoulder. David too was waving his drink for the camera.

‘Well, I barely even remember this being taken,’ said David. ‘But then I suppose we do both look a little, shall we say,
ebriose
.’ David moved his nose closer to the picture, screwed up his eyes as his spectacles almost bumped with the glass in the frame. ‘Oh, now it’s coming back to me, my sole invite to one of your parties,’ he said. ‘But the way I remember it, wasn’t it Dee with the camera? And also I was under the impression that it was Dee’s camera, not your camera, Jack.’

‘You’re quite right, David,’ said Dee, ‘it was my camera. But Jack asked me for a copy of that photo when I showed him the pictures.’

David turned gently pink. ‘How very, very funny,’ he said. ‘And there was I thinking Jack not-so-secretly despised me.’

‘What other photos does he have hidden up there?’ said Chad.

David put the picture frame down on the seat of his armchair and shifted piles of books to peer behind them. ‘There don’t seem to be any more photos up here,’ he announced. ‘Jack, where are your other photos?’ he asked.

Jack gulped. ‘I don’t have any other photos,’ he said. He waved a hand dismissively. ‘I look terrible in every photo I’ve ever seen. That’s the only picture of me in which I look even half good.’

David picked up the frame again, held it at arm’s length, and stared hard at the photo then Jack. ‘I’m sorry to tell you this, Jack, but you don’t look so terribly good in this photo. And neither do I. We are both undoubtedly the worse for several Hemingways.’

‘Then let’s take another one,’ said Dee. ‘A better one this time. Properly composed.’

‘You have your camera?’ said David.

‘Of course,’ said Dee, with enormous glee. ‘I take it everywhere, don’t I, Chad?’

‘She never leaves home without it,’ said Chad.

‘And you’ll make a copy for me as well this time,’ said David.

‘Absolutely,’ said Dee. ‘As many as you want.’ She turned to Jack. ‘Come on then, Jack, assume the position,’ she said.

Jack moved slowly. David detected nothing but everyone else in the room could see it. The struggle for dignity, the urge to flee. Behind David’s shoulder, Jack glared until Dee was ready to take the picture and Jolyon challenged him with a look.

‘After three say cheese,’ said Dee. ‘One, two, three.’

‘Cheese,’ said David.

‘Cheese,’ said Jack.

*   *   *

L(v)
   When Jolyon returned to his room he found his door unlocked. At first this seemed no cause for concern. And then, as he turned to sit on his bed and take off his shoes, he saw an old white sock pinned to his door. On the sock the number four was written in green marker pen.

Sock four: lock door. Yes, he had placed it there to remember to start locking his door every time he left the room. It sometimes took a while for his mnemonics to bed in.

He went to his desk to find his evening routine and noticed the red folder in a curious position. It was sitting apart from everything else on his desk, which was where he left it if he had work to do. But he had done the work, there were three overdue essays for Professor Jacks in there, Jacks had demanded them by tomorrow. Jolyon opened the folder. Nothing inside, nothing. A panic surged through him. Three essays, three whole days’ work. And he knew they had been there, he hadn’t imagined working for three solid days.

He looked at the clock above his desk, nearly three in the morning. He remembered locking his door, didn’t he? He had seen the sock as he left and had locked his door. Or was he constructing this memory? Did he only really remember going over and over the pilled surface of the sock with the pen to make the four stand out?

He sat at his desk feeling sick, pinching the bridge of his nose.

Mark Mark Mark.

There were tears in Jolyon’s eyes. He pulled them down his cheeks and then wiped his fingers over the desk. He opened the top drawer and took out some paper and a pen. He wondered how much of what he had written he could remember. His mind had not been so good of late. Not so very good.

He looked again at the clock. Nine hours to noon, three hours per essay.

And then he would kill Mark. Tomorrow he would find him and kill him. He should put something memorable somewhere to remind him to kill Mark.

*   *   *

LI
   I am full of my evening routine when I feel the same light kiss on my forehead as yesterday. Dee sits down on the blanket and crosses her legs, her shorts sliding gently over her thighs. How was your day, Jolyon? she asks. Tell me everything.

The park lounges all around as I glance here and there for reminders.

What is it? Dee asks.

But my head feels like a beehive deadened with smoke. I don’t know, I say. Working, I suppose. There’s so much to write about, I don’t remember exactly.

Then tell me about your lunchtime walk, Dee says. Where did you go?

I pause to think. Left or right? I don’t even remember. All of my walks have blurred into one. Just the usual, I say, tearing up handfuls of grass in frustration.

Dee sighs, leaning forward and gripping my wrist. Her hand is as cool as a stone and the grass slips away through my fingers. Oh, Jolyon, Dee says, you really do have a mind like a colander. She pats my wrist tenderly as she lets me go. But don’t worry, she says, let’s just chat about something else. Do you want to talk about your story?

OK, I nod.
I would like to lay my head in Dee’s lap.
Yes, I nod again.

Dee does most of the talking, she seems to remember my words so much better than me. But I do at least contribute to the chatter, these are the early stages of my conversational training. As the discussion nears an end, Dee says to me, You know, Jolyon, your story makes me think of something D. H. Lawrence once said. Never trust the writer. Trust the tale.

And you trust my tale? I say.

There is not a single untrue fact, Dee says.

Then you like it?

How can I like it? It was the worst year of my life. Dee looks at me as if I have taken an absurdly wrong turn. No, that’s oversimplifying everything, she shrugs. Maybe it was more like Dickens. It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.

Dee falls silent. And then I see her glance toward her book of poems beside me on the picnic blanket. Yes, let’s talk about your work now, I say to Dee.

She hides a blush with her hands.

I love the poem you wrote for me, I say to her. Will you let me read it to you?

Of course, Dee says, that would be wonderful, Jolyon.

I marked two more as well, Can I read all three?

Dee looks embarrassed. Oh, Jolyon, really, you don’t have to …

I silence her with a raised hand. We’re here to save each other, Dee. I love your poems and I’d like to read them for you.

Thank you, Jolyon. Dee says, her eyes glinting with moisture.

I open the book and begin to read. First Dee’s poem for me, then a poem about Nabokov’s novel
Pale Fire
, and third a wonderful poem called ‘Clean Slate’. It seems appropriate to end on this one, its closing lines –

And when we clean the slate, her smooth dark face

Is powdered white, our words are but a trace.

I close the book gently and say, I think your poems are beautiful, Dee.

Dee holds her hand to her heart and smiles gratefully.
Yes, cynical reader, this is indeed my chosen method of seduction. But I didn’t lie to Dee. I love her poems, they remind me of puzzle boxes, as if you could slide around their pieces and discover something beautiful inside.
And they’re much less dark than I’d have expected, I say.

Dee looks surprised. How much did you read?

I worked my way back, maybe the last fifty or so.

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