The Happy Marriage (18 page)

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Authors: Tahar Ben Jelloun

Tags: #Political, #Family Life, #Fiction, #Literary

BOOK: The Happy Marriage
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His recurring nightmares worried him to the point that he decided to redouble his efforts when it came to his physical therapy. He went
out into the city every morning. The Twins took him to the seashore, where he walked while leaning on them and breathed in the salt air, insisting on doing all his exercises. At first he hadn’t wanted to show his face in public to avoid noticing people looking at him or even running into certain individuals who would take pity on him. One day, he bumped into Larbi, his frame-maker, a talented guy who’d been trained in Spain and whom he liked a great deal. He’d always liked speaking to him because this man, who was twenty years older than he was, had decided to keep working instead of slipping into lethargy like all his other colleagues. He had a keen intellect and loved to tell funny stories. The painter had asked him to come visit him in his studio so they could chat, just like in the old days.

The following day, Larbi came to see him and brought some
kif
and a couple of pipes. They smoked it and drank some tea. Larbi would hold the pipe for him and then help him to drink. Just two old friends who used to party together back in their foolhardy days. Larbi asked him if the “boss” was “still in business.” The painter nodded to say yes, while raising his eyes to the ceiling to indicate that all his women had distanced themselves from him.

“You need to do something about it. If the Boss stops working then he might never wake up!”

“I know.”

At that moment, Imane entered the room wearing a djellaba and a matching headscarf. It was the first time that the painter had seen her covering her head. She told him that she did it in order to avoid being harassed by men in the street. She then pulled her scarf and djellaba off, revealing tight jeans and a pretty blouse, loosened her long hair, and brought the oils she used to massage him. In awe of her beauty, Larbi excused himself and made to leave, reminding the painter on his way out that he needed to look after the “boss.”

“So, captain, must I call you ‘boss’ now?” Imane asked.

He smiled.

“Captain suits me just fine,” he said.

He remembered how his wife would go out in the evening when he used to suffer from his yearly bout of angina—despite having been vaccinated, he would spent two to three weeks floored by a flu that would eventually develop into angina—and how he would stupidly wait for her to come home. He’d get all worked up and be unable to fall asleep until she’d returned, or he would call her and only get her voicemail. He would look at his watch: 2:10 a.m., 3 a.m., 4:05 a.m., and then he would hear the gates of the villa open to let her car through. He would close his eyes, he didn’t want to talk to her or find out where she’d been. Besides, she would simply tell him: “I was with the girls, and we talked and talked and I didn’t notice how time flew by!” She would reek of alcohol. He hated that smell on her breath. He would curl up in bed and try to get some sleep, while she would doze off the moment she laid her head on the pillow. While that young woman was busy taking care of him, he would measure the differences between her and his wife. Needless to say, Imane was his employee and he paid her a salary, but there was something else to her, she exhibited a kindness and charm that had nothing to do with work.

He had feelings for her—but he kept them in check. He missed her whenever she wasn’t there. And whenever she came back, he suddenly sprang back to life. He didn’t want to label his feelings, but it was a discreet kind of joy.

Once, a magazine had asked him how he defined happiness. Without even thinking about it, he’d replied: “Lunching with friends under a tree on a summer day in Tuscany.” Despite a few betrayals, he loved friendship; he also loved Italy, and felt happy while sitting in the shade of a huge tree, as though it protected him or blessed him, recalling his parents, or his devotion to spirituality.

XX

Casablanca

November 2, 2002
Katarina thinks I’m a spineless lump of jelly.
—Peter, to his friends Johan and Marianne
INGMAR BERGMAN
,
Scenes from a Marriage

It had been nearly three years since his stroke. Thanks to his doctors’ and Imane’s talents, the painter had recovered the use of his hand. He could now hold a brush and paint on small formats without his hand trembling. His leg still hurt him, but he could get around by himself in a wheelchair. He had recovered his power of speech, and he could talk fairly normally and sustain a conversation. An exhibition of his new works had been planned. His preparations for it were meticulous because it had assumed a special significance: it marked his triumph over his illness. In addition, his style had also gone through yet another transformation. His canvases had acquired a spareness and simplicity, exuding a feeling of profound serenity.
The experts dedicated to his work had been quite struck by this new development.

His wife had grown closer to him. Although they hadn’t seen much of each other in two years, she’d started to visit him in his studio; at first she only did so from time to time, but then her visits had become more regular when they’d started being able to talk to one another again. She was the first person to congratulate and encourage him when he went back to work and put the finishing touches on his first new painting. She even organized a little party to mark the occasion. They were able to resume some semblance of married life in both the house and the studio. The painter would use his wheelchair to go see his wife after he’d finished working his studio in the afternoons. He took his meals with his wife and children and spent his evenings with them. Yet even though his body was recuperating, he quickly realized that his marriage would never heal. Soon enough, arguments began to creep back into their daily lives, to the point that he started to yearn for those months when he’d been paralyzed and confined to his bed and his wheelchair, but at least far removed from her.

“The older you get, the more you start to look like your father.”

This was not a compliment, at least not from his wife’s lips.

“What do you mean by that?”

“That you’re getting increasingly bitter, nasty, two-faced, and hypocritical.”

She’d burst into his studio unannounced while he’d been in the midst of preparing a complex mixture of pigments for his latest canvas. He pretended that he hadn’t heard her. She then renewed her assault.

“You see? You don’t even try to deny it …”

The painter continued to focus on his work, while she disappeared and then returned carrying an Arabic magazine where he had
been photographed in the company of a young Lebanese actress. She threw the magazine at him, causing the palette to slip out of his hand and hit the canvas. The painter turned around and calmly told her:

“Please leave me alone, I’m in the middle of painting and I can’t talk to you right now. I have to think about the painting, and nothing else. Leave me be.”

“You’re nothing but a coward.”

She left. The painter locked himself inside his studio, but as soon as he’d done so he realized he’d lost all desire to paint, so he sank into his armchair and felt like he wanted to cry. He thought about his father, to whom his wife had just compared him. What a faulty comparison that was, he was so different from him! His father had certainly had a bad temper, but he’d been anything other than mean. His father had never been very attentive toward his wife, but that had been the way things were done in those days, and their way of life was completely removed from the painter’s own, which always required him to travel since he was so highly sought after. All in all, the painter’s parents had loved each other, even though they’d never been effusive or conspicuous about it, but something bound them together, whether it was habit or tradition, or perhaps more simply just affection or a kind of mutual respect. Their arguments had never approached the levels of violence that characterized the ones between the painter and his wife.

To cheer himself up, the painter had called his friend and confidante Adil—a wise old man and a longtime devotee of yoga and tai chi—and told him about his wife’s latest outburst. Adil told him: “Your physical and psychological health must come first. Don’t go through life wearing horse blinders, or stick around to watch the ship sink. You have to take the bull by the horns. Keep your spirits high and make an effort to stay calm. I know, separating from your wife will lead to heartbreak, but you must be certain that it’s the right decision for you. Your children will thank you for it later. Death also causes heartbreak, but it helps to put matters into perspective. Life
ends in the blink of an eye, it’s a spark that flickers and fades. Time is an illusion. We live and learn to coexist with that illusion. By the time we die, all the little aches and pains life inflicts on us stop mattering. Be brave!”

Imane arrived late the following morning. She was in a bad mood and kept apologizing while she got on with her work. The captain was now nothing but an ordinary sailor. The painter was taken aback by the sudden change in her, but left her alone. While she was busy massaging him, he turned his mind to the painting he would work on after his session. Imane’s hands came to a stop on his left calf, and she looked up at him, her eyes full of tears.

“Those tears are going to fall if I start talking, won’t they?”

“Yes, I’m very unhappy.”

“Would you like to tell me what’s making you so sad?”

“No, captain.”

She picked up her bag as soon as she’d finished her work.

“This will be my last session, you must find someone else. I can help you with that, give you some addresses …”

She started crying again.

“No, don’t go. Let’s brew some tea and talk about it.”

The painter understood that his wife must be behind all this.

“So she came to see you …”

“Yes, she offered to pay if I would agree to give up working for you. She was kind, she wasn’t violent and she didn’t threaten me, but she was determined. She told me: ‘He’s my husband and I want to repair our marriage and keep him. Nobody’s going to stand in my way.’ I refused to take her money, but I promised her that I would leave.”

“Let me talk to her. I’m the sick one, not her, so please keep doing your job and don’t worry about her meddling.”

“All right, but I’ve already given her my word.”

“Your word, that’s exactly right. I love the sound of your voice
and I need to keep hearing it. I need you to keep doing your job and need to feel your presence.”

“OK, but I need to speak to you about that. I would prefer to leave because I’m not sure I’m doing the right thing by looking after you and then spending extra time in your company.”

“I know, I know, it’s not just about how you take care of me … but what can I do about that? We’re only human after all … in any case, keep in mind that thanks to you I’ve made such progress that the doctors were completely amazed. I can paint, I can walk, and I can talk. That’s all thanks to you. Even though I had to put some effort into it myself, and go through all my exercises on my own when you weren’t here. Meaning I just can’t do without you. My own feelings aside, I’m perfectly aware that you can’t have a future with me, you have the right to fall in love with a nice man of your own age and your own choosing, while I’m just an old shoe, and nothing more. I just wanted to tell you how much I was in your debt and you’re free to do as you like.”

Imane hung her head, raised the captain’s hand to her lips, and kissed it, as though to thank him. Avoiding his gaze, she told him:

“I think about you all the time, I don’t know what to do. My boyfriend came back from Brussels two weeks ago so we can get our marriage license, and the nearer the time draws, the less I want to marry that man. He emigrated to Belgium and drives a bus there. He’s big, young and strong. He’s even kind, too. But I don’t want to be a bus driver’s wife, I have other dreams. I’ve got nothing against him, but I don’t have good things to say either. I want to read, go to museums, mingle with artists … a bus driver won’t be able to give me all those extravagances. Besides, he’s already warned me that I’ll be living with his mother, and that’s making me sick to my stomach. Do you realize what that’s going to be like for me? She’ll keep her eyes pinned on me and spy on me all the time. Oh no! I have a friend who was forced into living with her husband’s mother, and it all ended badly, fighting, police, divorce … I’m sure he’ll make a
good husband, he’s muscular, we flirted once or twice, and we didn’t have anywhere to go so we could be alone so we went to the movies. We kissed. He’s fiery, after all, and, well, none of that really matters—you’re the one I want.”

He looked at her tenderly.

“But, my poor Imane, I’m neither young nor muscular, I’ve always been horrified by the thought of sports and working out. What would you have me do at my age? I’ve got nothing to offer you and besides, I’ve taken an intense dislike to anything resembling marriage. Do you know what Chekhov used to say about marriage? ‘If you’re afraid of loneliness, don’t marry.’ I would be more of a burden to you than a companion. You’d quickly tire of me and my habits, because—I’ll be honest with you—I’m obsessive-compulsive, a pain in the ass. I want things to be in their proper place; I don’t like clutter; I don’t like people who aren’t punctual, who act in bad faith, or are hypocritical—and I especially love being alone, it seems unbelievable I know, but that’s the way it is, I love being left alone without anyone to bother me. I sleep alone out of respect for my wife since I believe that my bouts of insomnia shouldn’t annoy the person who shares my bed. My wife always thought I was trying to avoid her, whereas the truth is that I was worried about disrupting her sleep and calm. Our entire life has been a long series of misunderstandings. If I arranged them end-to-end, our fights would look like the longest train in the world. I’m starting to lose my thread here but I promise you that we’ll talk about this again the next time you come over. But I meant what I said, I don’t want a different nurse and physical therapist. That’s out of the question. Don’t worry. I know what to say to my wife.”

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