Authors: Raffaella Barker
âHello? What?'
It's Lucy, my sister, five hours ahead in England. She's a year older than me, and although I like to think of her as my inspiration and my mentor, the truth is that nothing she has done has rubbed off on me, and actually the dynamic between us is more that she glows and I try to shut my eyes to it. When she got married, I was meant to give a speech, but I couldn't find the words, and I burst into tears. I could not express what she meant to me, or how fabulous she is at all. It was so important and I couldn't do it. She could have done it for me, that is what I love about her; she will try anything and make a success of it. She could plait her hair and tie her shoelaces when she was five. She did mine too, so I didn't learn until I was embarrassingly old. I wanted to say that although I try to ignore her loveliness as much as possible, she
is like the sun, and even when my eyes are closed, her golden warmth emanates through my eyelids, permeating my being, and that is what she is like with everyone who comes across her. In the end that was just about what I did say, and she stood up and gave a speech back that I wish I could remember about how she could not have been her without me being me beside her. On her wedding day it was a loving and inclusive thing to do, and that's Lucy. She is sunny and the world smiles with her. While I love that about her, it is sometimes hard to bear, and so is her unswerving belief that I will soon be experiencing what she is, in the way that she is experiencing it. It is nonsense, we are way too different, but she needs to think of me following the path she cuts through life; it's too big a deal for her to be doing it just for herself. Just now she sounds tired.
âHey, Sis, how are things? I just heard on the news that they've closed JFK, your snow looks unreal.'
âOh Lucy, hang on a sec, I'm so hot. How are the tiny girls?' With a gasp, I tuck the phone under my chin and wrench off the next layer, a dark green T-shirt, hurling it down. Even the way it floats to the floor is infuriating.
âOh they're lovely, full on, but they're asleep now. God, I'm jealous you're hot.'
Now I am topless apart from my bra. âGod, it's so unhealthy to be living like this. It's wrecking the planet. We should get back to nature a bit and use fires instead of central heating. Then we wouldn't find the cold so freakingly COLD!' I am puffing now,
and trying to put a different T-shirt on with the phone cradled somehow on my shoulder.
Lucy laughs. âYeah, you're not wrong, we should get used to the weather we have instead of trying to set ourselves up against it.' She pauses and sighs. âBut the reality of doing that is hellish, let me tell you. We've got no heating in this cottage, and in Norfolk by the sea there's nothing between us and the North Pole and boy, can you feel it.' The phone clatters as she chats on, I imagine her tucked up in bed in the wild weather of Norfolk, and it's sweet, like a children's story.
Lucy is still chatting, âI seem to find every reason and fantasy not to get used to it â like telling myself this is only an illusion of cold and actually it's really boiling, or so Mac tells me all the time.'
âIs it?' I wonder what the geology lesson is leading towards. âWhat are you on about?'
âThe earth is actually soft centred. It's molten deep within, you know â but, speaking of boiling, how can you be hot for even a moment? How can you be hot in New York? It feels like the dawning of a new ice age.'
âI'm wearing too many clothes, that's how.' I am over my suffocation now and am gulping water from the bottle on the table.
âI wish I was hot here,' says Lucy, âMac is away and I've got three hot-water bottles to replace him, and they don't do the job when the draught is wafting the curtains. But anyway, we want to have a party and I really want you to come.'
âYeah? I will, of course â if I can. When is it? What's it for?' My heart bumps at the thought of going back
to England, and I know it's something I have been avoiding thinking about. But I should go. âSorry, Luce, it doesn't need to be for anything. When is it?'
âOh, not for ages. I want to have it when the bluebells are out.'
This is a long-term thing, the panic recedes a little. I don't have to go just yet. âWow. That's months away. You are amazing, Lucy, I haven't even planned next week. Or tomorrow.'
âOh, I know, but you've got a career. How did it go in Denmark this time, by the way? Aunt Sophie sent me a cutting from the local paper in Norfolk. You were a headline on the front page, you know. Local girl makes good. She said the staff in her home had kept it for her so that she had two copies, one for her and one for me.'
I have a lovely cosy feeling thinking of Aunt Sophie. She is the only person I know who ever reads about me on the occasions where my work is mentioned in a newspaper, and she always keep the articles. It's a truly motherly act from my father's sister.
âThat's nice. God, I must write to her, it's been weeks, I think. She's learned how to email, though, which makes things much more immediate. But yes! Denmark was good. I loved being back there. I can't believe it was five years ago that I had that show. What have I done with my life? But seriously, it was great to get away from here in the winter. Over there, they didn't even have a Valentine's Day theme, it was such a relief.'
I've got one leg over the sofa arm and I sit there astride for a moment then tip myself over into the
cushions just for something to do. Then I slide down to the floor, flexing each foot, leaning forward over my outstretched leg, giving myself the illusion that I am doing some exercise while talking on the phone. Forward bends are beatifying, according to my yoga teacher.
âYou know what, Luce, I'm really proud I'm in their National Gallery, but it's also a bit embarrassing, I feel a fraud. This visit was very different from last time. It was all so grand. I had to sit next to the Mayor. His name was Ginseng Jensen.'
She giggles. âIt wasn't! I can't imagine being so grand as to sit next to the Mayor, I have enough trouble getting books back to the library.'
I close my eyes, trying to feel Lucy's calm energy in the room with me. Her acceptance of life is one of her most restful qualities. I realise I haven't talked to anyone properly for ages. Jerome and I seem to pass one another on the stairs at the moment. Actually. I'm not sure that that's true; he's away and I've been away, so we haven't set eyes on one another for over a week.
âHow's your love life, Sis?' she asks suddenly, and I know I can't get out of it with a flip remark. But it doesn't stop me trying. âOn holiday.'
âIs that good or bad?' Lucy is genuinely caring. She is so different from my mother; I can never understand where she got it from. Now she has children, she's even more loving. She also has a good memory. âDoes that mean you had a holiday romance? Wasn't that what happened in Copenhagen last time? Do you
remember? It was when Mum died, and you were in a real mess. You hardly showed up to the opening of your own exhibition. Some man waylaid you. What happened to him? Is it him?'
âDon't be daft, I never heard from him again. I meant Jerome's away right now and it's all just bundling along as usual.'
Lucy is still talking. âI remember you really liked that guy. What was his name?'
âRyder.' Saying it out loud still makes my heart race â even now, when I haven't seen him or heard from him since that night, and probably never will again.
âRyder. Nice name. Yeah, I always thought that if he had come to New York and found you again, that would be it. You'd be married with kids like me by now.' Lucy giggles down the phone and I laugh too. God, what if she was right?
âI wonder if I would? But he didn't, and here I am with Jerome.'
âHow's it going, Grace? Did he go with you to Denmark? My God, did another guy turn up like before?'
âIf only,' I sigh. âNo, Jerome didn't come; he was working, and I didn't ask him.'
I have a splash of cold-water realisation that I didn't ask him because I had secretly hoped subconsciously that I would meet someone else there â and I had wanted it to be Ryder. It's too crazy to share with Lucy, so I interrupt myself: âBut he's away and I haven't seen him since I got back. He'll be home tomorrow.'
âAre you looking forward to seeing him?' Lucy's questions are like arrows, they hit the bull's-eye and quiver there. I feel I'm under such scrutiny that I could be a laboratory mouse under microscopic surveillance. The only good thing â and it is exactly the opposite of what I felt a few minutes ago â is that she is on the phone in Norfolk and not here in New York. I hedge a bit by repeating her question.
âAm I looking forward to seeing him? What sort of question is that?'
âNot a very taxing one under ordinary circumstances,' says my sister gently. âWhat's up, sweetheart?'
Oh God, it's always the same. These days, any human heart reaching out to mine makes me want to cry. I don't answer and she changes her tone, trying to make me laugh, and I know she's doing it because she's too far away to comfort me, and that makes me feel even sadder. Then she switches again and she does make me laugh.
âYou didn't have sex with anyone this time you were away, did you?'
âLucy! No, I did not. I didn't have sex with anyone that time either, actually.' I really miss my sister. No one teases me in New York.
âBut you could have done?' No matter what the subject, the dynamic of Lucy and me has always been the same: she drives, insists and pursues, making the suggestions, while I hesitate, back off and remain non-committal, running away to avoid the spotlight of her caring.
Like now. âYes â no. Oh! I don't know. Of course I couldn't this time. Not that I could the other time, I never even gave him my number, he just vanished at the private view. Well, he said goodbye, but then he vanished. You are just winding me up and anyway, heâ oh whatever. It's a long time ago now and I'm with Jerome.'
âMmm.' Lucy doesn't need to be in the room or even on the same continent for me to know that she knows my feelings and thoughts better than I do. She is still on the trail and I can't bear it, so I try to create a false scent to divert her.
âI really loved being in Copenhagen, Sis, it's got so much. You know, fabulous architecture, artisans still working, and mournful poets all in a special bohemian area.'
âAnd cows,' interrupts Lucy dryly, in case I thought for a second that I had fooled her. I am more up for this now and I take the comment as it comes.
âYes, and cows and such a richness of culture, but it's all quite undiscovered. At least, that's how it feels to me.'
âMmm. Fish and silver is what it makes me think of; a bit like Norfolk, if you add some mud and sugar beet.'
âNo silver in Norfolk. Just fish and fields of potatoes. Fish and chips, actually.'
Lucy laughs now. âOh God, I miss you, Sis. You've got to come over when we have this party to christen the girls and welcome everyone to the house. I need you to come. Come and have a summer holiday with us.'
âBut the summer is a million miles away.'
I am so relieved that the conversation has swerved away from my private life. I need to look at the wounds I didn't realise were still so open, and to mend them in private before I can share my feelings with Lucy or anyone else. I left home a long time ago, and I have done my best not to think too much about what it is in me that has kept me away. I know Lucy wishes I lived in England, and when Mum died I thought I would feel some tug to draw me back to where I came from, but I didn't. Maybe one day I will move back. And maybe pigs will fly. I twist the telephone wire and lie back against a big cushion.
âBut it's important to have things to look forward to. Will you come? Please? Grace?' Lucy's inability to be silent chimes with her hopes.
I move to the window, rest my head against the cool glass. Blocks of light make a modernist pattern across the façade of the warehouse buildings opposite, and beyond it, trickling between the sprawl of bricks and concrete to the Hudson River. Even the back end of Brooklyn in the snow â like all of New York almost all of the time â is familiar to me from films before it ever became familiar through my own existence there. One of the things that has kept me here is the unique unreality of living somewhere I know so well through other people's interpretation of it. I sometimes feel I don't even need to have my own experience of living in New York; someone is sure to have a better one which I can borrow, and I like the impermanence of that. I don't belong here,
and for now that suits me. Sometime, though, I hope I will find somewhere I do belong. And someone I belong with. A huddle of clothing steps out of a door and down some steps just across from my window. Once on the sidewalk the bundle develops limbs and begins mechanically to shovel a mound of snow, stiff at first, but warming to the task until movement takes over and the figure bends, scoops, throws and bends again in a graceful flow like the articulated illustrations in a flick book of an animated cartoon.
âGrace?' Lucy is too impatient to ever hold on to a silence. She can't resist speaking first; she will always say anything to fill a gap. She isn't moody, so she doesn't need silence.
Even playing Hide and Seek as a child she was always the first to say, âI give up, here I am.' Lucy isn't convinced anyone is listening if they aren't talking. It makes phone calls a bit of a problem for her.
âYes. I'm here, I was just thinking.' My reflection is visible in the window, faint like the moon when it is out in the day, my bare arm a wishbone on the glass.
âGod, I remember the summers in Norfolk when we were little. We used to go for tea with Aunt Sophie after picnics. I can remember going to pick cucumbers from those frames she made from bales of straw and panes of glass.' Shutting my eyes takes me there and I am six years old again. âI can even remember the smell.' And the smell of the house, a mixture of lime marmalade and some kind of wax floor polish which I don't suppose anyone uses now.