Authors: Howard Jacobson
So between kissing Chas goodbye and waiting for her return, on those days when she
did
return, Kreitman idled through his afternoons. The rain hammered on his roof. There was nothing to see from his windows but the tops of umbrellas and the amphibian feet of uncomplaining Londoners. Bizarre to him, the patience of these people. Did nothing stir them to revolt? By three o'clock, flamenco was on his record player and the smell of Moorish dust was in his nostrils. Whereupon the longing started.
Ridiculous, but there was nothing he could do. Anyone seeing me, he thought, would say I have finally got my comeuppance.
But then if that's what I have got, that's what I have got. It's not within my power to do anything but suffer it. You can't get up, pull yourself together and walk away from your comeuppance.
Tears poured down his face. He would walk around the flat to keep his circulation moving, smiting his chest an inch or two above his heart, great thumps with a clenched fist, as though he meant to knock himself off his feet. Maybe a bottle of red wine, maybe not. Occasionally a cigar. He did not want to become a creature of habit. By four he was too upset to trust himself to his feet and had collapsed on his desk, his forehead on his gouging knuckles, the longing banging in his ears.
But tell him this: if the longing
was
for Hazel, how come it was sparked off by flamenco â music for which Hazel had never expressed the slightest enthusiasm nor shown the remotest aptitude. Had Hazel been a flamenco dancer â no mystery. Had she loved the guitar even â no mystery. But the brutal truth was that Hazel hated flamenco with a passion and, in the days before Kreitman moved his enthusiasms to his den on Clapham High Street, had never missed an opportunity to deride his devotion to it. âFinding the gypsy in your soul, Marvin?' she would call when she caught him with his ears to his speakers, crouched like a beast in pain. In more playful moods she would imitate the castanets, making sluttish expressions with her mouth, as though to imply this was music for the sort of tramps in whose name he had trashed their marriage. On the blackest days she would simply yell, âFor Christ's sake, Marvin, will you turn that crap down!'
You see his quandary. How could flamenco move him to yearnings for a woman to whom flamenco was crap?
What he decided was that he was in mourning for companionship, for the companionship of just one woman, and was yearning to be happy. Flamenco reminded him of all the ways a man could be unhappy. Stop playing it. Chas was all set to be the
companion of his heart, but she was out of his sight too often. Stop letting her go.
Of course, the way things stood, she had to go. There was no room for her here. To get into bed she had to perform a manoeuvre of which an SAS man would have been proud. To get out of it, especially in the middle of the night, was more perilous still. There was nowhere for her to write. And she had a pair of children growing loopier by the hour to keep an eye on. There was only one resolution to this. He would buy a house for them both. In Richmond if that was what she wanted, though not on the same side of the street as the house she already had. He would get down on one knee, ask her to marry him and buy them a house.
What was wrong with that for a plan? He was obviously in love with Chas â there could be no other explanation for his missing Hazel, assuming for the moment that it was Hazel he'd been missing. He knew himself. In the process of his affections passing from one woman to another, he suffered. Something in the brain: the migrating affections, crushing over the pons Varolii, pressed upon a cranial nerve. That was how he knew, definitively, he was in love with woman Y â the agonies he suffered remembering woman X.
Not that he lacked the proof he needed in his feelings for Chas herself. The old fault-line appeal hadn't led him astray. He continued to marvel at how unlike herself she could be. He loved the surprisingness of being with her. He believed she loved the surprisingness of being with him. The sex, to isolate a single component at random, was extraordinary, by virtue of how her skin felt under his fingers â neither flaking nor about to spill â and by her virtue of how his felt under hers â her hand the collar, her arm the chain. That would change, of course, he knew that. One day his fingers would not feel what they felt now and one day the collar at the end of her chain would loosen. Infinitessimally on both counts, but that's all it takes. No matter.
They would have the continuing unexpectedness of each other. You and me,
us
; who would ever have thought
that
when you stole my cat Cobbett from me?
And who would ever have thought
this
â you and me, us â when you picked me up at a party all those years ago, taught me the Bump, and then handed me over to Charlie?
Nice, wasn't it, when life turned out so differently from the way you expected it?
Very nice.
And very nice back at the Kreitman residence where Charlie was waiting for Hazel, out visiting her mother, with a big bunch of red roses, a lemon meringue pie in a pretty cardboard box tied with violet ribbon and what looked suspiciously like a complete set of the novels of P. G. Wodehouse.
He leapt at her like a labrador when she came in. âI've missed you,' he said.
âI've missed you,' she told him.
Then he bent to her and they kissed, balancing to perfection, you would have thought, sensuality and affection.
Maybe, thought Hazel, I don't have anything to worry about after all.
If a person is happy for the first sixty-nine years of his life and unhappy for the last one, does he die an unhappy man?
When is it reasonable to call âTime' on happiness? Think no man happy until he's dead and you save yourself a lot of bother. But that's routine pessimism, and routine pessimism is merely a sort of showing off. It also dodges the question. As a young man Kreitman liked saying that you should call no man dead until he was happy â but that too was only swagger.
The trouble is that happiness, as a summation of an observable condition of life, is arbitrary. It all depends where you decide to stop. Cut the deck here and you draw happy, cut it there and you draw sad.
This might be why we like to have a painting above our mantelpiece. A painting freezes time, offering the illusion that a loveliness of nature, or an expression of human contentment, can last for ever. In the best paintings you can feel Change breathing just beyond the canvas, panting to be let off the lead. But look again the next day and he is still where he was, still eager, still chomping, but still restrained.
Someone should have painted Hazel and Charlie just before Charlie cut into the lemon meringue pie.
Or Kreitman on his knees to Chas.
âI wish I had a camera,' Chas laughed, flushing, flustered even, âbut haven't you forgotten something?'
âWhat's that?'
âThat you are already married.'
âOh, Hazel will be glad to be rid of me,' Kreitman said.
âIs that a recommendation?'
âDo I
need
a recommendation?'
Chas thought about it. âAnd the other thing you've forgotten,' she said, âis that I too am already married.'
âTo which I cannot, with any gallantry, reply that Charlie will be glad to be rid of you.'
âNo,' Chas laughed, âyou can't.'
It made her sad, suddenly, to hear the words that Kreitman couldn't say.
âLeave it,' she said, helping Kreitman to his feet. âThis is very sweet of you and entirely unexpected, but let's leave things as they are for the moment, eh?'
She was surprised how disconsolate he looked. âCome on,' she said, taking him by the shoulders and straightening his back. It was like cheering up a child. She felt she had to put the briskness of hope back into him. âCome on,' she said again, kissing him. âWe're all right as we are, aren't we, eh? Eh, eh?'
It had been her great thing as a wife and mother, instilling briskness. Let's go for a walk, let's buy an ice cream, let's bake a cake. She had excelled at it. But she had never been a wife or mother to Kreitman, from whose eyes the tears rolled inconsolably, like a baby's.
The moment Charlie cut into the lemon meringue pie his heart crashed through his stomach.
He had been here before. Once before or a hundred times â it didn't matter. There was the lawn running down to the river, and there were the children â his darling Kitty-Litter, his laughing boy Timmy Hyphen Smelly-Botty â doing what children do, and
there were the de Selincourts and the Gosses sipping Charlie's Greek wine, and there, viewed through the kitchen window, was Chas in a comically harassed turban rolling pastry or boiling gnocchi or stringing beans â and there in the sky was the sun, and there on the river were the rowers, and there, just there, in the middle of it all, was Charlie himself standing at a trestle table, shouting âYummy!' and slicing lemon meringue pie for everyone. There'd been a discussion about clothes lines â when wasn't there, on the Merriweather lawn, a discussion about clothes lines, given Charlemagne's queer predilection for them? â in the course of which everyone had agreed that the clothes line, however useful, was a social menace and an aesthetic blight, and Charlie in a fit of lugubrious self-denial had made a face and said, âOh, all right then, I'll wear wet chinos from now on,' and to everyone's delight had taken the rusted garden shears and with an exaggerated grunt had snipped the clothes line in the middle, sending a solitary wooden peg flying into the air, where it triple-somersaulted like an acrobat before landing to great applause in Chas's homemade lemon meringue pie.
Were the Kreitmans there? Charlie couldn't see them. Let him close his eyes however many times, he could just about make out Marvin on the lawn, but not Hazel. Had she never been there, or had he never noticed her? Funny, because he had noticed every other woman. His own wife he had not, of course,
noticed
in that sense. Chas was just Chas, not there to be noticeable in
that
sense. Even as his heart was crashing through his stomach his memory did not rearrange her to be a visual stimulus to him. What he missed, with an ache like a wound, was the familiarity of her â however unfamiliar that was now, after all the months he hadn't clapped eyes on her â and that included, as a matter of course, the dissatisfactions which had driven him to look too closely and with too much undisguised desire at every other woman on the lawn. Every other woman excluding Hazel, that is. Without a doubt, she had been there. Coldly, he could enumerate the occasions on
which she was bound to have been there. So why couldn't he
see
her there? He could come up with only one rational answer to that â he didn't
want
to see her there. You don't wipe a person out of your visual history unless your eyes reject them.
She had refused pie. She had her figure to think of. Something annoyed Charlie about her employment of that word.
Figure
. His mother had been fond of the word figure. On his mother's lips the shape it had made was formal and cold. On Hazel's it was voluptuous. More voluptuous, all at once, than he cared to make mental room for.
As an atonement for not being able to find her on his lawn he made himself look at her arranging the flowers he had just bought her. She was still wearing the clothes she had been to visit her mother in, a too short Whistles skirt with a too deep slit, extravagantly decorated with pretend-old buttons and lace, a sexy play on the idea of old-fashionedness, soft on her hips, and a lovely bloody maroon flesh-responsive cardigan he had helped her choose, through which he could watch her nipples breathe. Ten minutes before, the sight of her had filled him with love. Desire, too, yes. Her legs so strong in those high strappy heels. Her prodding chest. Eyes in the wrong place. But first and foremost love. âI've missed you.' There was the problem, right there! âI've missed you.' He had forgotten what all this was supposed to be about. He hadn't originally gone to her for love. He hadn't originally been looking for love.
He already had love
. Love was what he'd swapped with Kreitman, who had something else. If he'd merely swapped love for love, he had let a few people down, had he not? In the time it took him to revisit his garden, in less time than it took him to finish his pie, he had come down from love to fondness â another commodity he hadn't been in the market for â from fondness to consideration, and from consideration to pity.
No sight in creation looks more dolorous to a man than a woman in the fullness of her sensuality and glamour, once you
have allowed pity to play a part in your appreciation of her. In restitution for which dishonour â and this explains the terrible spiral of the sexual affections once they start to tumble â you can do nothing except pity her some more.
This will pass, Charlie told himself. Don't give in to this. But he was filled with an unassuageable yearning to be back on his lawn in Richmond, bouncing his children who were no longer children on his knee, telling them mad stories, pouring lukewarm retsina, and Chas in her comical turban, up to her elbows in flour.