Authors: David Nobbs
‘Don’t ring off. I’m on my way.’
He didn’t have an answer machine. He was a Luddite. Well, he was an anthropologist. The past was his business. Or had been. All that was in the past now. Ha ha! Ironic!
He got to the phone while it was still ringing. Must be somebody he knew, making allowances.
‘Stanley Hollinghurst, OBE.’
‘Stanley! You haven’t got an OBE.’
‘No, but very few people round here know that. How are you, James?’
‘Fine. Stanley, I—’
‘How are Charles and Philip?’
‘Fine. Charles is on a concert tour and Philip’s here.’
‘Is he? Well, tell him not to worry about all that global warming stuff. I think it’s great.’
‘Stanley, I’ve got—’
‘Human race deserves it. Can’t hurt me. I’ll be gone.’
‘Stanley, I’ve got some—’
‘Spaniards sizzling. French frying. What’s the problem?’
‘Stanley, I’ve got some bad—’
‘Brighton under six feet of water. All those homos and lesbians shitting themselves.’
‘Stanley! That’s terrible.’
‘I know. I do so enjoy saying things like that, though. People are so bloody self-righteous, James.’
‘Stanley, has it occurred to you that I might have rung you because I have something to tell you?’
‘Ah. Yes. Sorry. Like the sound of my voice. You will when you live alone.’
‘Stanley, I do live alone.’
‘What? What are you on about?’
‘Stanley, Deborah’s dead.’
Stanley remained silent throughout the whole sad story, and when James had finished, he said, in the soft, sincere, real voice he hadn’t used since Mollie died thirty-three years ago, ‘James, I’m so sorry. I really am. Deborah, of all people. She was the best of the whole bunch, James.’
Mike next. No, difficult. Gordon Tollington first. Easier. Gordon and he went right back to the Dorking days. He was the only man who liked food even more than James did. Fifty-three years old, sold out for millions. Rich, idle and fat. Good company, though. Haven’t seen them for far too long.
Gordon Tollington listened in almost total silence, only interrupting, as it seemed most people did, to say, ‘Diss?’, as if Diss was just outside Timbuktu. When he rang off, Gordon’s face was grim.
He went out into the spacious garden, with its long sloping lawns.
Stephanie was sliding broad beans out of their pods in the shade.
He slumped down beside her and told her the bad news. They sat in silent shock.
‘Oh, my God,’ he said suddenly.
‘I know. It’s just sunk in, hasn’t it? It’s so awful.’
‘Not that. Well, that too, of course. But … I bet the funeral will be next Wednesday. It’ll take that long to organise.’
‘So?’
‘That’s the day we’re going to the Fat Duck.’
‘For shame, Gordon. Is a meal more important than Deborah’s death?’
‘It isn’t
a
meal. It’s
the
meal. We booked months ago.’
‘Gordon, I don’t believe what I’m hearing.’
‘I know, but … I loved Deborah, Steph … loved her, wonderful woman, I’m very sad. But we can’t bring her back, and you have to book months in advance.’
‘I think we have to go.’
‘Well, I don’t know that it’s that cut and dried. I think they’ll be used to people cancelling. They’ll have a cancellation list.’
‘I meant, “We have to go to the funeral…”’
‘Yes. Yes, of course we do. No, I really want to. Of course I do. What do you think I am?’
‘It may not be next Wednesday.’
‘It will be. Death is never convenient. Do you know, I think I’m fated to die without ever having tasted snail porridge.’
Edward and Jane Winterburn. He’d been quite close to them once. Well, very close to Jane, for a while. Well, she’d been his very first proper girlfriend. She had legs that went on for ever. He’d thought he loved her. He’d thought she loved him. Definitely wrong on the second count, she went off with Ed the day after James had taken her to his college’s May Ball. Probably wrong on the first count too, because he got over it pretty quickly. They had stayed friends at first. Then Ed did something he really didn’t approve of. Twice, to his knowledge. Went bankrupt, opened up under a new name, owing vast sums that nobody would ever receive. Mocked James for his disapproval, called him naive and stuffy and unrealistically idealistic. After that it had been Christmas cards only. But they had both liked Deborah. Yes, he decided that he’d let them know.
Jane answered. He was pleased about that.
‘Bad news, I’m afraid, Jane.’
‘Yes. How did you know?’
‘What?’
‘Has it been on the news?’
‘What are you talking about?’
‘Ed.’
‘Ed?’
‘His disappearance. Isn’t that what you’re ringing about?’
‘Ed’s disappeared?’
‘Yes. Into thin air. I haven’t seen him since Tuesday.’
‘I don’t believe this.’
‘He went off to a party in some pub somewhere, round Chelsea, well, it was Roger Dodds’s actually, you remember him? I didn’t go. He never came back, hasn’t been seen since.’
‘Good God.’
‘I thought that’s what you were ringing about.’
‘No. I had no idea. I’m so sorry.’
‘Thanks. So what
are
you ringing up about, James?’
‘Um … I’ve got some news too.’
‘Well, I hope yours is a bit more cheerful. I need cheering up.’
‘A light went out of the world yesterday morning, James.’
Yes, yes, Tom, but don’t overdo it.
He had been surprised to find Tom at home, but Tom had explained that he worked from home two days a week now. All right for some.
‘James, I think I’m probably your oldest friend.’
‘Undoubtedly. I don’t have any other friends from that dreadful prep school.’
‘So please, please, feel you can rely on Jen and me for support twenty-four seven.’
‘Thank you.’
‘Um … about the funeral. About the date. Is it decided?’
‘Not yet. These things are complicated.’
‘The fact is …’
‘I can only just hear you, Tom.’
‘I don’t want Jen to hear. She’d be livid if she knew I was asking this. Livid.’
‘What are you asking, Tom?’
‘The fact is … I have two tickets for the Centre Court at Wimbledon for next Thursday. I mean, don’t get me wrong, James, that isn’t important, isn’t remotely important, compared to … your tragedy. However … James, I’ve never told another human being this, except the doctors, but I have … um … a bit of a problem. I … not to put too fine a point on it … I suffer from premature … um …’
James knew he shouldn’t interrupt but really there had been no scope for fun all morning.
‘Ejaculation?’
‘No!’
‘Baldness?’
‘No. Well, yes, but … um … that’s not the … and that annoys Jen, actually. The way baldness is said to be a sign of … um … virility in male mythology. Nonsense, of course.’
James ran his fingers through his thick, riotous hair.
‘Absolute nonsense, Tom.’
‘Everybody comments on my baldness. “Jen’s a lucky woman.” “Jen’s obviously getting plenty.” People can be surprisingly coarse in Godalming.’
‘So what you suffer from is …’
‘Yes. Impotence at an unusually young age. I mean, I was never a several-times-a-night man, if you know what I mean.’
Too much information, Tom.
‘Not by a long chalk. I mean, Jen’s very sympathetic. She’s behind me all the way. As it were. Anyway, the point is …’
Ah! At last.
‘… The point is, I’ve tried for Centre Court tickets for eighteen years at the tennis club draw. Never got them. Every year Margaret Insole gets two, and she prefers golf. Goes, though, and don’t we hear about it? Every sodding serve. Over these last few years as my … my problem … has got worse, the tickets have become a kind of symbol of my impotence, my general uselessness, James. And this year, bingo, two tickets, ladies’ semi-final day. I’d rather a men’s day, I find women’s tennis boring, but Jen doesn’t, of course, and that’s what it’s all about. So, all I’m saying is, if there is any scope for choice, I’d be enormously grateful if you could avoid today week.’
‘I’ll do my best, Tom.’
Oh, give me strength, he thought. And he couldn’t continue delaying the call to Mike.
Mike was feeling quite depressed and wondered whether to answer the phone. Just before it went onto the answer machine, he found himself picking it up.
‘Mike, it’s James.’
The contradictory feelings surged. Well, they would have done if he’d had enough energy for surging.
Affection. Only James of the old mob kept in touch. Only James ever took him out and bought him food and drink. The others had smelt his failure, called him less and less often, eventually dropped out of his orbit altogether. His orbit! He didn’t have a house any more. He didn’t have a wife any more. He didn’t have an orbit any more.
Irritation. James never invited him to his home any more, never invited him to meet any of his friends, never wanted to spend more than two minutes in his horrid little pad, always took him to a pub or restaurant. So kind. So demeaning.
Anger. It was never far from the surface. It wasn’t so much anger at James himself as at his situation and the way James reminded him of his situation. By phoning him James reminded him of all those people who never phoned. By being kind to him, even in the limited manner of his kindness, James brought home to him that the rest of the world was not kind.
‘Well, hello, James. Long time no hear.’
‘I know. I’m sorry. You know how things are.’
Only too well.
Mike was shocked at James’s news.
‘I’m really sorry, James.’
‘Thanks. Maybe we could have a drink this weekend.’
‘I’m not going anywhere.’
‘I’ll be glad to get out of the house, to be honest. Mike, I’ve rung you first of all my friends because I know I’ve rather let you down. Anyway, mate, how about Saturday evening? Hang a few on. Sup some lotion, as your dad used to say.’
That’s right. Remind me I’m working class.
‘Fine. Great.’
‘I’ll need it by then. And by then I’ll know the funeral date. Mike, I hope you can come. And for drinks afterwards. At the house.’
When James had rung off, Mike looked at himself in the mirror. His stained T-shirt was a map of his recent pauper’s meals. He was unwashed and unshaven. His hair was a tangled jungle. He shuddered.
At the house! It was years since he’d been invited to the house. Maybe it was Deborah who hadn’t wanted him anywhere near her. He looked at himself again. Nothing a haircut and a good shave and a clean shirt wouldn’t cure. But perhaps he wouldn’t bother. Perhaps he’d go like this and embarrass the bastard.
Not a bad bastard, though. He wondered whether to ring his ex-wife and suggest that she came too. Melanie had always liked Deborah. If he could see her again, just once, who knew? He looked in the mirror again. No. No chance. Be good to see her, though. Perhaps. Or awful. Oh, hell.
Fuck them all.
He felt a rivulet of sweat running down his back. There were spreading dark stains under his arms. The sun had moved round, and he’d no longer been sitting in the shade, and he hadn’t even noticed. His face was burning, and he had no protection on it. How angry Deborah would have been. ‘Do you
want
skin cancer?’
He tried to stand up. The chair came with him. He was stuck to the chair. He had to prise it off.
And even then it was agonising to stand up straight. His back was so stiff.
He went, very cautiously, through one or two of the stretching exercises that Gareth had prescribed. Gareth. Should he cancel him on Saturday? And the acupuncturist? No. If they were any use, if they weren’t a waste of money, it was at times like this that they’d be needed. He’d stick to his routine.
He walked slowly into the blessed darkness of the house, the wonderful coolness of the kitchen, then went into the utility room and drank two glasses of chilled water from the fridge-freezer.
He entered the sitting room just as Philip was saying, ‘Thank you. Thank you very much for your help,’ and putting the phone down.
‘I’ve had enough for one morning,’ said James. He couldn’t believe that it was only two minutes to twelve. He seemed to have been talking for hours. ‘Still a few people to ring, but I can’t take any more. Um … I never drink before twelve, it’s one of my rules, but it’ll take two minutes to pour. Would you like something, Philip?’
‘Actually a G and T would go down quite well.’
‘Fine. I won’t drink. I’ll only start falling asleep this afternoon if I do.’
‘Well, no, if you’re not having one …’
‘No, no. You want one. You must. I’m very grateful.’
He poured Philip’s G and T and opened a bottle of German beer for himself.
‘I thought you weren’t drinking.’
‘I don’t count beer.’
Philip raised his eyebrows, which were scanty affairs compared to James’s.
‘No need to give me a look. I usually drink too much and in the days to come I’m probably going to drink much too much. Cheers. Thanks for coming.’
‘Cheers. Really glad to help.’
‘How’s it gone?’
‘Not bad. I don’t think there’ll be any real problems. The Hutchinsons were perfectly satisfied with Ferris’s. Well, “efficient and only slightly greasily subservient” were the actual words. It looks as if it’ll have to be Thursday. The vicar can’t do Friday. We could have twelve-thirty or three-thirty. Ferris’s recommend that we get back to them pretty quickly. “Experience shows, Mr Hollinghurst, that we do tend to have a bit of a rush in heatwaves.”’
‘Oh, grab twelve-thirty. The sooner the better, on the day. You said “the vicar”. You’ve found one, then.’
‘Your local man is the Reverend Martin Vigar. I told him you weren’t religious and he said, “I’m a pretty flexible sort of chap. I was actually thirty-two years with Allied Dunbar before I took up this lark.” I didn’t quite see that that followed, but I didn’t press the point.’