Authors: Frank Moorhouse
He glanced at Ulyanov's rather well-cut, tailor-made but obviously Russian suit. His cufflinks were Air India and his tie clip from Olivetti. Ulyanov's shoes were pointed, grey, in some sort of Italian youth-style which was wrong for him.
âYou don't do so badly yourself,' he said, dishonestly.
Ulyanov grimaced. âIn Russia we do not have variety,' but he seemed pleased with the compliment, âI do the best I can.'
âI have not forgiven you, Australia, I suspect unfair play last night â and you a sporting nation!'
âWhat about your news release which some of us on the sub committee didn't get to see!'
Ulyanov put an arm on his shoulder. âNever mind all that. I have an affection for you, Australia â I find something of myself in you. And I have a proposition for you also.'
He waited for the proposition. Maybe Ulyanov was going to try to recruit him.
Ulyanov drank from the champagne, preparing his words. âTell me â do you like caviare?'
âYes, I've never really ever had enough.'
âThat is as it should be, my friend â one should never satisfy oneself with caviare. But I'm about to offer you an opportunity to do so. I have three kilos of first class caviare â Beluga Prime â arrived yesterday from Soviet
Union beautiful â an Aeroflot official has ⦠well ⦠presented it to me â in return for a service.'
Ulyanov looked pleased with himself, pleased that he showed perhaps a flair for Western-style wheeler-dealing. He sipped his champagne, closing his eyes to savour it without distraction. âI want to offer you an opportunity to take a share of this caviare â it is in half-kilo cans â a nice gift. Or eat it in your hotel room. A feast. It's as you say, “top of market”.'
Ulyanov delivered his offer in an imitation of Western âsalesmanship'.
âI will definitely say yes.'
âGood! Let us to negotiations.'
âI'll take perhaps two cans â if the price is right.'
âBoy have I got a deal for you.' Ulyanov said this with relish, relishing the phrase, again, for its Westernness.
He pulled up his heavily cufflinked shirt to expose a watch calculator. He took out a silver pencil â it looked like a public relations gift but the name of the company had worn away â and used the point to punch up his calculations.
âDo you think 500 DM is a fair price?' Ulyanov asked.
âI know that caviare was selling at US$15 at Christmas â it was in the
New Yorker.
'
âI read that,' Ulyanov said, âso you see it is a bargain I offer you.'
âThat was retail.'
He tried to make the US$-DM-A$ conversion in his head â and then the ounce-gram conversion.
âBut if you pay in dollar-A,' Ulyanov said, âwe must consider that it is weakening against the basket of currencies.'
Ulyanov turned away from negotiations to ask the barman for a napkin, with which he dabbed his mouth.
âBut we're not weakening against the rouble.'
âI work in dollars US.'
Ulyanov had all the conversions clear in his head of course, but switched about to muddy the calculations he was trying to make in his head and they concluded the deal without him having any feel for the reasonableness or otherwise of it. They then drank champagne and talked of great dinners they'd eaten.
After one of the pauses in the conversation, Ulyanov asked thoughtfully, âTell me, Australia, if we were at war could you shoot me?'
âYes.'
Ulyanov nodded, pondered.
âBut here at the Commission I listen to you â you are a man without passion. You are the man who raises clever doubts. How could you act?'
âThe important thing is to be able to act decisively while in doubt.'
Again they stood in silence with their champagne, while Ulyanov pondered this, then put a hand on his shoulder and said, âBut now we are living â not shooting. Why don't we leave now and I will take you to a House of Pleasure. On the Gurtel. They will be good to us.'
It was at this moment that he felt that the delayed response to the telephone call to his girlfriend should begin, the concussion hit.
But it did not.
What fell on him was the bill for two bottles of Moët et Chandon. Ulyanov had only roubles, had âoverlooked' changing some money that day.
Thoughts came to him as he paid the bill, of a similar invitation made a few years earlier by a Nigerian at a conference, the brothel bonding, or in the mind of the Nigerian some sort of male combativeness, although he had not fully comprehended the nature of the Nigerian's challenge.
He saw crudely again that while she, the girl, was denied to him she was available to all others, say to Ulyanov. But again he registered this without reaction. No emotional lightning struck his heart.
âZweig, Stefan Zweig â you know of this writer?' Ulyanov asked as they left.
âYes, vaguely, he's on the Vienna reading list.'
âWell Zweig, he went to this House.'
âIs there a plaque?'
âPlaque? Plague? Is there disease?'
âNo â is there an historical marker â a sign saying Zweig went to this place?'
Ulyanov laughed, realising that he had misunderstood the language and then he made it a joke. âThere is no plaque in Vienna. A joke, Australia, a joke.'
He roared with laughter as they went out into the night.
He rang her again when he got to London, despite his earlier rebuff, and this time, after some further resistance, she agreed to meet him for a drink.
They met in the lounge of the Basil where he âstayed when in London'.
âI've always wanted to be able to say the phrase “where I stay when I'm in London”,' he said nervously.
âYes, you would. I work in Knightsbridge,' she said, neutrally, âso it's all very convenient. And I've done a few out-calls in the Basil.'
âOh, so you know it.' His voice was not as neutral as he would have liked.
She had the jauntiness at twenty-two both of the schoolgirl he'd known and also of a girl who was at home on a bar stool. Being at home on a bar stool together with a use of cosmetics to give emphasis to her youth, both things rippled through her style.
She wore a full-length light white linen coat.
She opened the coat to show a pink silk dress presenting her cleavage and her body line, holding out a leg to display her stockings, her patent high-heeled shoes. âWell, how do I look?' She smiled teasingly at him. âDon't tell me â I know how I look.'
âYou look delicious,' he said, âyou haven't changed â¦'
That was not quite right and not quite the right thing to say. âAge has not wearied you nor the years condemned â¦' Not much better.
âYou really mean that you thought that it would make me into some decrepit hag, that sin would have scored my features.' She laughed, drinking down her vodka and tonic and deepening her voice for effect, but said, âI look like a whore: I mean to look like a whore.'
âWell, you said when I called from Vienna that you'd “changed”. I did expect the worst.' That was also weakly diplomatic.
âNot really,' she said, pensively, ânot at all, really.' Adding with a childlike smile, âI hope.'
She was no longer his schoolgirl lover or the university student and although he'd tried to prepare himself for this, he had not succeeded. He wasn't sure whether she was now his peer, and her adultness, her glamour, the female strength of her ârole' all bothered him, almost unmanned him. When he'd suggested they drink a martini for old times' sake she'd declined saying, âGod, who drinks martinis these days â you are really the last Scott Fitzgerald of the world.' If only he were.
She'd been slow to show interest in his work with the IAEA and the other things he'd done in the last few years. She laughed again and said, âMy God, and you were the one who used to say that the bomb had already dropped â inside us,' and again adopting a deep, stagey voice, â“we are the dead in our own life-time”.'
âThat was my period of nihilistic posturing,' he
said, laughing along with her, falsely. âI don't say that now. I'm really only interested in it as a technical and negotiating problem. Australia's very good on the problem of inspections. I don't think of it as a street issue any more.' God that sounded dull.
âNow, what else did you say in those days?' she said, making an effort of recollection. âWhat about always defending the smaller polity against the larger polity. Do we still say that?'
He considered that she might have passed him in worldliness and intellectually, he found himself bemused by her use of words such as polity while she sat swinging on a bar stool, dressed as a whore in silk.
âI have added a refinement to that position,' he said, foggily. âI'm interested in the way we are governed by forums other than recognisable political forums. We are governed by the dead. Maybe the dead are the strongest polity. I've moved economics down the list. I enjoy the elegant paradox of nuclear deterrence. Or the inelegant paradox.'
âDo you now,' she said, lightly mocking.
âI guess you're not interested in all that.'
âWhy? Because I do some whoring? You think I've given up on political science? Do you see it as a switch from mind to cunt? Do you think I'm incapable of using both at once?' She laughed at him.
He blushed.
âI feel out of my depth.' He made a gesture of helplessness, waved a hand at her demeanour.
âCome on now. I'm just kidding you along.' She
touched him, the first touching of their meeting, except for a sisterly kiss when they met. âCome on, be the sophisticate, I always look to you as the sophisticate. You were the first man I met who tipped.'
An impossible command. In his mind he gathered together his scrapbook of credentials, scrappy evidence of his âsophistication'. He'd talked with Carter, Brezhnev. He'd published important papers. He'd stayed in the finest hotels in the greatest of cities. He'd been drunk with ambassadors, heads of state. He'd been a part of historic occasions. But he had not become a writer. He had not become a Scott Fitzgerald. He had not become a great chemist either.
âDo you still want to fuck me?' she asked, returning her lips to the straw in her drink.
He had tried during the meeting so far to push this physical desire for her away, to safeguard himself against desiring the unobtainable, accepting also that her initial resistance to seeing him signalled a contracted involvement with her âboyfriend'. But he now sensed that she needed to know whether he still desired her, that she was wanting something from him now, confirmation maybe that she retained some sexual status in the normal world, or at least, the world he came from.
He tried to sound casual, his desire heated to lubricity. âI thought we had put all that aside.'
She sat formulating a response, no ready response having glided from her bright lips.
âI thought we had too,' she said, âbut we haven't.'
Her voice suggested that this was not for her an entirely happy realisation.
âYour voice has changed again,' she said, but this time kindly. âCome on then, let's finish these drinks and go up to your room.' She paused, looked across the top of her glass. âOr would you like to come to my apartment? More precisely, the apartment I work from?'
He took a drink, he was now swamped by lubricity, her glow of adolescence was mingled with fantasies of whoredom, together with, all together with, their own erotic history. It was a dreadfully powerful surge of desire and so great was his fear of still being denied it at the last instant that he wished profoundly that they had finished, done it, that it was all over or that all desire was absent. He found he almost wished for a return to the low libido which he'd had during a hepatitis attack.
âWell,' she asked, in a voice which suggested she knew the answer, âwhich is it to be?'
He began to answer untruly, to say he'd prefer his room, so as not to reveal how victimised he was by fantasies of whoredom, when she interrupted. âI should tell you,' she said, again as if she knew its effect, âthat I've just come off work â that's why I'm dressed like a tart.'
âIt doesn't worry me in the least.'
She laughed. âWhen you rang me from Vienna your voice went like that.'
âI'm nervous, for godsake. It's been some time, a few hundred years since we went to bed.'
âMaybe you're not sure?'
âI desire you very much.'
âGood. I desire you.'
They took each other's hand.
âLet's go to your place, I want to see it, as part of you.' He tried to control the tone of his lie, but gave up and decided to go to the truth. âNo, I want to go to it because it would be an incredible turn-on.'
She laughed with relief at their having reached some sort of simple candour.
The place was upstairs, through a doubly locked door â a flatette â freshly painted â well-tiled bathroom, piles of towels, a large satin-covered bed, low lights, prints or photographs of David Hamilton-style girls.
âTasteful â in a whorish kind of way,' he said, enjoying the relief of being able to say the word.
âIt is meant to be “tasteful in a whorish kind of way”,' she said. âWe run a class act here,' she said in her mock, street-tough voice, âwe even advertise in the
Herald Tribune.
'
He took her fur coat and she came into his arms.
âLet's go to bed,' she whispered. She went from him to the bathroom, calling to him âput your clothes on the chair, love, there's a hanger for your coat.' She poked her head out from the bathroom, âSorry, force of habit, it just came out.'
She went on with her bathroom activity, but called again, âOh, another thing â sorry about this â but could you put £100 in the jar in case Johnny comes and finds us â¦'
âJohnny?'
âThe Man. The guy who runs this place.'
âOh.' He guessed he understood. He took the money from his wallet and put it in the jar on the mantelpiece.
She came from the bathroom. âThere really should be another girl working tonight but she's sick. We'll get the money back as we're leaving â it's just a precaution against misunderstanding. Johnny's not a man you want any misunderstanding with.'
When he turned from putting the money in the jar she was lying naked on the bed.
âDo I look different?' she asked.
He gazed at her beautiful body. âBeautiful, beautiful.'
âWhat about my breasts?'
âBeautiful.'
âAren't they more attractive?'
âThey were always attractive.'
He joined her on the bed.
âThey are larger,' she said, fondling her breasts. âThe bastards talked me into it. Some days I'm horrified but generally I suppose I prefer it. They wanted me bigger. There's this other girl,' she assumed her tough voice, âSex Queen of the West End. Well, Johnny wanted me to be bigger than she and they talked me into having them enlarged. Voilà !'
âLike Mariel Hemingway,' he said, feeling that he was politely trying to normalise her behaviour.
âYes. Like Mariel Hemingway. Obviously you're not turned off by it.'
âNo.'
She laughed. âBut they still have me on an anorexic diet. Children's portions. The Brits like the idea of a woman's breasts on a girl's body. And the Arabs. And probably every man in the whole fucking world.'
As they began to make love he felt compelled, against his civilised self, to ask her how often she'd been in the bed that day.
âThere's that funny voice again,' she said playfully, âfour or five and you make six.'
âAnd your boyfriend, I suppose, this morning.'
âOh yes him. He's into all this whore-fantasy shit too.' She laughed. âBut of course with him it's no fantasy.'
He dissolved into the eroticism she spun and she ceased to be either the archetypal seventeen-year-old or the New Sex Queen of the West End and instead became a complete and overwhelming other presence.
As they were leaving she said, âI said a lie before.'
âYes.'
âBack at the Basil I said I dressed like this for work. Well â¦' she gave a grim smile as she secured all the locks, âI sort of always dress like this. It makes me feel less split. When I wasn't working I used to dress like Princess Di, an English girl out of
Country Life
, and one day I said, hell, I'm a whore, I'd rather be dressed like one. Well maybe not always like a whore. But I guess my style is “expensive sexy” now. It feels right.'
âI'm frightened by how much I like it. We're still good in bed together.'
âYes, we are.'
Out in the street she said, âWell, this is where we have to say goodbye.'
âNo chance of dinner?'
âNo.'
âLook, if you need help â or your fare back to Australia â¦'
âYou're generous to offer. But I'm well off. I don't need money but I'll keep your offer in mind. I'll go on doing what I'm doing for now.' She put on her gruff voice. âPuts me in touch with myself.'
âOK.'
âIt's good for my feminist critique. I'm learning from being a spectacle.'
âI don't really understand.'
âI'll explain it one day.'
âI'll take you up on that.'
âWhat will you do in London? You said, I remember, something about taking me to Hazlitt's grave or old rooms. But I don't think I can really go sightseeing with you. I'm on a tight rein, one way or another.' She took his arm. âWhat about you? You seem to be living near the edge despite your international diplomacy and all that.'
âOh yes, I feel close to the edge sometimes but I have a job to do.'
âI remember! Another thing you used to say â you used to say, “It's no use asking me about nuclear disarmament because I have a death wish”.'
He smiled as he heard his words.
âDo you still have?'
âI'm still alive. But I say now that all international negotiation for disarmament has to be based on total distrust. The IAEA is a body founded on distrust. That's why I like it. It tries to take trusting people out of negotiations by developing techniques for verification and inspection. I believe in negotiated distrust.'
He added, âThat's probably why I ended up there. I put my faith in distrust now.'
For the first time she seemed to like something he'd said.
He was already seeing tomorrow's looming desire for her and facing now again the possibility of denial.
He said, concealing this from his voice, âYou'll see me tomorrow?'
âProfessionally?' she said, leaning into him. âNo, of course I'll come to the Basil at three. We'll do something. But I must rush now.' She gave a wry smile, wrapped her coat tightly about herself and moved off, refusing the admiring glances from passing males.
She turned and made a kiss. âIt's a weird world I'm in now.'
As he walked away from her he remembered that she hadn't retrieved the £100 from the jar in her apartment. She would bring it tomorrow, he guessed.
He wondered if he would introduce her to Edith his unwanted travelling companion, who had foisted herself on him following the completion of their official business in Vienna.