The Greening (17 page)

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Authors: Margaret Coles

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BOOK: The Greening
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I felt that in order to have any connection with Mark I was faced with being diminished, because he would or could accept only a watered-down version of me. Denying and diluting me allowed him to continue pretending that everything in his life was fine. I felt that he would give me only a cardboard cut-out of himself. How could I be myself in his company when he would no longer even touch my hand? All the things that had attracted him to me had to be kept under wraps. He made me feel like the invisible woman, like a butterfly that had been pinned to a board. I felt angry, frustrated and sad. I felt that colluding with him, shrinking to the pale figure in the corner of his picture of reality was the price I had to pay in order to be included. It felt as though I were killing some part of myself, consenting to be killed. I began to feel light-headed and detached from the scene we were playing out, but he didn’t seem to notice.

Soon lunch was over and we were walking down the high street. We parted by his car. He kissed me on the cheek. He looked smaller suddenly, I thought, as though his body were shrinking around his shrinking spirit. I turned and walked away, wondering if this would be the last time.

I walked back down the high street. I felt I was floating almost, moving out of my body. My breath was coming in gasps and I started to panic. I was hyperventilating. The world seemed to be revolving around me. I leaned against a shop window, my head pounding, just managing to get my breath. I remained there for several minutes, then blindly headed back up the road towards the railway station. A London-bound
train was about to leave. I ran and caught it as the doors were closing.

For the next twenty-four hours I felt physically sick. I had pushed myself too far and my body was rebelling. I kept being overwhelmed by a feeling of panic, sweating and hyperventilation. I would have to sit down, breathe evenly and try to calm myself.

14 December

The panic attacks went on for five weeks but I haven’t had one since Friday, so I hope that’s the end of them. Somehow, if I am to regain my sanity, I must say my piece to Mark. Those feelings need to be expressed, to end the torture and torment. But how? Though I want to see Mark, the thought of it makes me feel sick. I’ve gone beyond the limit of my strength. Nevertheless, what I have to say has to be said to his face or I will again be cheated of a conclusion. I must risk everything on one last card.

16 December

I feel strong enough to ring him. I’ve prayed that I will be able to communicate with him.

17 December

I rang this morning. Mark sounded delighted to hear from me, as he always does. We chatted as though everything were normal. Work is still very stressful. I had the impression that things are going badly. But he was cheerful and friendly – until I said there was something I wanted to tell him. Suddenly his mood changed. He said, “I don’t want to hear you pour out a lot of emotion. I had to shoot my horse last week, but you don’t hear me pouring out a lot of emotion about it.” He said he thought it selfish and unreasonable to ask him to rearrange
all his plans if I wouldn’t say what the emergency was. I tried to calm him, but it was impossible. He said, “The only alternative is to talk on the phone in the morning. I can be free of meetings and calls for about an hour.” I feel utterly desperate. What shall I do?

18 December

I realized, during another sleepless night, that Mark was not going to listen. I rang and said I would leave things for the time being. Mark was friendly and cheerful. After we had talked for nearly an hour and a half about nothing in particular, I said I must go. I feel relieved and resigned. I can do no more, at least not for now. I do not feel any less unhappy. I long for peace of mind. Whenever I allow myself to recall my feelings of the past months I start to shake a little inside and reach for a cigarette.

5 January

Gradually, something has changed. It seems, curiously, to have been a physical change that has brought mental and emotional release. It is as though some intelligence within my body has made a decision for me. Some dam was breached and some mechanism activated to contain the flood. My body simply would not allow the situation to continue. If I pushed it any further, it seemed to be telling me, it would refuse to cooperate. But still, the hurt goes very deep. I feel there was something between us at so intimate a level that when he went a part of my soul went with him.

7 January

This morning I opened the study door and saw the slanting sunlight glancing across boxes, files and papers. There, on a corner of my desk, was the large red box that contained all my
papers about Julian. Close by, in several untidy piles, were the books I had bought, including Julian’s own book,
A Revelation of Love.
I remember that I reached a startling conclusion when I last handled those papers: that I was on the trail of the Holy Grail itself. For the Grail is the cup that gives everlasting life, and the search for the cup of Christ is the search for the divine in each of us. But the wine in the cup has a bitter taste. In Gethsemane, Jesus asked if it might pass from him. He knew, as I am beginning to understand, that those who drink from the cup must undergo a crucifixion. And beyond that, I trust, the other side of vulnerability and exposure, lie redemption and release.

And there the narrative ended. Had Anna reached a resolution? Had she found redemption and release? She seemed about to start on a second phase of her journey but, frustratingly, she had simply stopped. I had resisted all along the urge to turn to the end of the journal, anticipating a resolution of Anna’s situation – and perhaps fearing that there would be none. Now that there was none, I felt cheated. But my quest for Anna Leigh was far from over. The yearning to believe in lasting love and meaning would not give me peace, for I had chosen Julian’s path and in her footsteps I must proceed upon the journey of the spirit and the greening of my soul.

A week passed. I heard nothing more about Paul Huntingford’s assignment. The row over Dr Newell rumbled on. But no charge had been made against him. Patrick appeared on television from time to time, holding the government’s line that there had been a miscommunication and breach in security, which it was investigating. Every time I saw him I felt sad. Had he ever felt anything for me? How big a fool had I been? Where was the man I had loved? Had he ever been there at all? Why did I still love him, and fear him, and feel angry towards him, all at the same time? Despite everything, I still wanted him, and I did not like myself for wanting him.

One morning Milo appeared at my desk, saying, “Get over to Hampstead and talk to Ismene Vale. Your appointment’s at 10:30. Simon will brief you. And this time, don’t bugger it up.” Milo headed towards the Editor’s office for the morning news conference.

Simon was not at his desk. I was told his wife had been rushed into hospital and he had gone to be with her – leaving no details of my assignment. Milo would be in conference for an hour, so I would have to go without a briefing. I fumed. I was bound to make a poor impression.

The taxi took me to a quiet, tree-lined street in Hampstead, north London, and along a drive, edged with poplars, to Ismene Vale’s front door. Her home was a large Georgian house with wide, tall windows, around which curled late-flowering pink and white
clematis. As I waited at the door, I noticed in the front garden a long, pointed stone, placed upright, its rimpled grey surface catching the sunlight. Within and around it I seemed to sense a presence that commanded my attention.

The door was opened by a maid. She greeted me with the news that Miss Vale had been unavoidably delayed and had asked if I would wait. I followed the maid across the hallway and into a wood-panelled library. I felt tense and angry. I hoped Miss Vale would give me enough time to do the interview. But as I walked into the library, my mood lifted. I felt immediately at home. The room was elegantly and comfortably furnished, with inviting sofas and armchairs piled with cushions. It felt like a room that was used frequently, a sanctuary even. I could be at ease in such a place as this.

I walked across to a window that gave a view onto the garden. A magnolia tree sheltered a flagstone terrace. Beyond was a lawn interspersed with trees and bushes. The garden was private and proportionate, emanating an atmosphere of wholeness, contentment and ease – in keeping with my earliest impression of its owner. Ismene Vale… even her name had seemed exotic and mysterious in those far-off days when I was growing up, when her books had opened my mind and taken me beyond the unhappy and unchangeable present to a future filled with thrilling possibilities. Ismene Vale had seemed dauntless and unstoppable, and – in such contrast to my great-aunt – full of compassion. Naturally, her home would feel peaceful, restful and welcoming.

I rarely had times like this, moments with no urgent activity to fill them. I had admired Ismene Vale since I had first read one of her books more than twenty years earlier, when I was twelve. The book, titled
Voices
, reports a series of conversations with a diverse range of people – the rich, poor, content, wretched, influential and powerless. The book had inspired my choice of career. I had been impressed by her gift for getting people to open up to her. People instinctively connected with her and spoke from the heart, sharing their thoughts and feelings and revealing their inner lives. She knew how to listen, ask searching questions and report faithfully.

Her books had dazzled me. She had taken me to new worlds. Through the vivid pictures she painted with words, I could imagine I was there, feeling the atmosphere, hearing the sounds and almost tasting the air. She showed me the reality of other places and other lives. I was made to understand the suffering of people who saw their children starve because their land had been taken from them, who made a home along a railway track or under a plastic sheet at the side of a dusty road – for it was the stories of the dispossessed that affected me the most. I admired her ability to note tiny details. She reported small things that most people would overlook or think unimportant. And yet, those little nuggets of information – like a lover’s glance – said everything. They encapsulated the reality of the individual’s experience and brought the story to life.

One story in particular had touched me deeply. It was about a boy who lived among a colony of children in a Colombian sewer. The children were being hunted down and murdered by local gangs and had no one to defend them. This particular boy was a leader; he protected the others as best he could. He had one prized possession – a hat with a jaunty feather. The hat was a symbol, an assertion of the boy’s individuality. He wore it with pride. Then, one day, he gave it to a friend.

I was astonished, not only by his generosity but also by his ability to let go something that was so much a part of his identity. What would make a child who had known little from the world but abuse, hatred and exploitation choose to serve others? And how could he, defenceless and vulnerable, bear to part with something that had become the symbol of his selfhood? It was a noble act, and more – an assertion of real independence. How are kindness and strength of spirit grown in such barren soil? What power is it that makes a soul shine clear and whole amid rottenness and decay? These were among my many unanswered questions. Ismene Vale did not hurry to supply answers, but she posed the kind of questions that made me want to search for answers within myself. I longed to inspire others in the same way.

As I gazed across the garden I realized how very much I wanted to do the interview. I had found most of the well-known people I met – business and political leaders and celebrities, people who were rich, famous and admired by the public – to be hollow shams, shallow and self-absorbed. They were little people who were perceived to be great. Ismene Vale – she was different… I must have stood there for several minutes, lost in my thoughts. Then the library door opened and the maid reappeared. “Would you like some tea or coffee, madam?” she asked. I glanced at my watch. My interviewee was twelve minutes late for our appointment. I began to worry: would she let me down again?

“Will Miss Vale be much longer?” I asked.

“I shouldn’t think so, madam. It’s not like her to be late. I expect it’s the traffic. Would you like some tea, or some coffee?”

“I won’t, thank you,” I replied.

“If she telephones I’ll tell you straight away,” said the maid. She closed the library door quietly behind her.

A feeling of panic flooded me; the familiar sensation of fear and helplessness that engulfed me whenever I felt I was losing control of events in my busy life constricted my stomach and made me feel queasy. Ismene Vale was cutting it fine. Even if she gave me extra time, I was under pressure to get back to the office to do other interviews for the following day’s paper.

I suddenly felt angry. I wondered: Was Ismene Vale all I had believed her to be? Stress and panic filled my mind with doubts. Ismene Vale was famous, successful, she could afford to override the day-to-day pressures of life. No worries for her about paying her mortgage or keeping her job – and no consideration for those who did not enjoy her privileges, I thought angrily. And her dedication to the world’s impoverished and suffering had done her no harm financially, I observed, as I looked around the room. There were some very fine prints and original paintings. A glance at her shelves revealed rows of antiquarian books. Ismene Vale had a collector’s eye and liked to indulge it.

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