She gazed out of the train window at the passing scene. The train entered a cutting. His reflection formed before her eyes, and she was free to look without restraint. He was handsome, his strong features framed and softened by a tangle of chestnut curls. He wore a denim jacket over a check long-sleeved shirt, the cuffs unbuttoned. Round his neck on a leather thong was a single mottled ceramic bead. He read intently, moving only to turn the page. She studied his hand in reflection, admiring the long fine fingers, noting the bitten nails.
He did not look at her. He seemed to be unaware of her. His indifference on this, their first encounter, won her respect.
She asked Katie O’Keefe later, ‘Do you think that a man who wears a bead round his neck is gay?’
Katie screwed up her face to consider.
‘One bead?’
‘Quite a big one. Kind of tortoiseshell.’
‘Bent as a poker,’ said Hal Ashburnham.
‘Pokers aren’t bent.’
‘It’s all about where you put it, isn’t it? In here it’s straight. In here, it’s bent.’
The following evening she went to a party given by Richard Clements in his college rooms. She had an essay to finish and worked long into the evening, so by the time she arrived the party was noisy and crowded. Felix Marks cornered her almost at once. He spoke to her intently but inaudibly while her eyes searched the room.
Richard had told Laura that Felix was in love with her, though how this could be, or even what it meant, Laura didn’t know. Love that is offered but not returned is just words, surely, a nothingness, a whistle in the dark.
Why have I never been in love?
Nineteen years old and no shortage of offers. She caught sight of herself reflected in the uncurtained window panes, a shine of dark-blonde hair, a pale face, serious eyes. Why do I let Felix whisper secrets to me? Because I want to be liked. Liked but not loved. Admire me but don’t touch me. No, not that. Touch me, love me, but only you, whoever you are, and only when I’m ready, whenever that may be.
Richard found her and rescued her.
‘Someone you have to meet,’ he said.
He had his back to her but she recognized him at once. He turned at Richard’s touch and looked at Laura and smiled.
‘We’ve met already.’
‘You’ve met already?’ Richard was hurt. ‘No one told me.’
‘Not exactly met,’ said Laura.
So he had noticed her after all. He was smoking a Gitane, its acrid smell reaching her like a low growl. There was music playing behind the clatter of voices. Jackson Browne.
Honey you really tempt me
You know the way you look so kind
I’d love to stick around but I’m running behind…
‘Laura Kinross. This is Nick Crocker.’
3
Plumpton racecourse in the rain. White rails lonely without a crowd, just fields really. Woman reading Vogue has great legs. Catch Barry before the meeting, ask about changing the screen credit, written and directed by Henry Broad, it’s called intellectual property, Barry. Not that I’m not grateful. Barry knows I took the job after eight months developing projects as they say, no one in television ever being out of work, merely unpaid. Though Jesus knows it’s not as if even now they pay what they call in the City shed loads. You take a garden shed and fill it with twenties all the way up to the bituminous-felt-clad roof and you give it to a man like a frog as his reward for gambling with other people’s money. The frog man buys a pretty young wife and a house in the country with a paddock for his pretty young daughter’s pony, he takes the train to London every morning, he sits at his work station and fondles money, tosses money, jerks money until it spasms more money, on through the day, no lunch, into the evening hours. Daughter untucked, wife unfucked, shed reloaded.
Ah, sweet envy, balm of my soul. No, this isn’t about money, Barry. This costs you nothing. This is about self-respect.
Woman reading Vogue has truly terrific legs. Can’t see her face. Skirt with buttons up the front, one button missing, tights with a run on one side, not one of those glossy women you’d be afraid to touch. Rest my idle gaze on her crotch. Will she sense it? Play the mind game. Push up her skirt, reveal the let’s say white triangle of her panties, white so much sexier than black or red. Translucent white fabric, dark crinkle of pubic hair. Look away. Down comes Vogue. Face worn and warm, rumpled, attractive. Tired eyes don’t see me. Only a game. The secret life of commuters. They say men think of sex every seven seconds. Six seconds of rest, then.
Rain streaking on dirty windows. Look at it closely and it’s got its own logic, pattern, form. They say you can see beauty in anything but then when everything is beautiful what’s left to deliver the shock of beauty? A runnel of rain storming aslant this window bold and grey-gleaming to its disintegration and death. Yes I know, yes sometimes I catch it, the beauty lies not in the thing seen but in the quality of the seeing and that comes rarely, that charged intensity, and can’t be willed. Takes a good night’s sleep and a full stomach, or possibly starvation and exhaustion, but not vulgar busyness, the people’s drug of choice, the trivial pursuit, the shrinking from thinking, the visceral dread of thought.
Me too, I’m no different. Later, I say, I’m busy. Then later, I say, I’m tired. And those big eyes watch without understanding as I pretend to read the paper. Daddy will you play a game with me? But I deserve my down time. Don’t I do enough? Not enough never enough no never enough.
* * *
The train carriage is the old slam-door design, bought from British Rail by a consortium of former Southern Region managers and sold on at enormous profit to their successor, the French-owned railway company Connex. The seats are laid out in open stalls of four, twenty stalls to a coach, which gives a maximum capacity of eighty passengers. This morning as the train rolls through the grey rain-soaked light of the Sussex weald there are ninety-eight men and women packed into the one coach, because ever since the Hatfield crash the timetables have been in chaos and fewer trains have been running.
The early morning commuters, whether sitting or standing, read newspapers as they travel, the headlines offered outwards like credentials of rank. ‘Cabinet falls out over cure for sterling.’ ‘Dame Liz pines for love of her life.’ Only Henry Broad, unshielded by newspaper, magazine or book, sits exposed to the gaze of all, were any of the other travellers to have a mind to look at him: a tall, slender man in a brown denim jacket worn over a charcoal-grey crew-neck cotton jersey. He’s in his mid-forties, his soft sandy hair cut fuzzy short, his face just a little too long to be handsome, a little too hesitant to be commanding, in the clumsy English fashion. Only his eyes might attract a second glance, because he alone in the carriage is looking about him. His eyes are hazel in colour, wide-set and striking, especially now as they move over the scene before him, animated by a lively nervous curiosity. He is sitting with his arms folded across his legs, his knee lightly touching the knee of the woman opposite, who is reading Vogue.
Yesterday evening Laura showed him a copy of a school composition written by his eleven-year-old son Jack. It was about a journey that takes place in a dream. The dreamer is walking along a path that turns into the top of a high wall, a wall so high that below it there are clouds.
When he woke this morning, Henry remembered that single page, those few lines, and experienced a wave of giddiness. He held the hard white edge of the bathroom basin and bowed his head, as the nausea passed through him. After a few moments he felt all right again, except his head seemed to be empty. What had happened? He interrogated himself as he shaved, seeking the source of the sudden sensation, which he recognised as misery. Why should Jack’s composition make him miserable? Because once long ago he too had written stories that came to him like dreams, and were about journeys. Because there was a strangeness and a wonder in his son that had once been in him, and had become lost. Because he was not living the life he had meant to live.
My signature defect: indecisiveness
. A tendency to see both sides of every question. Take iconoclasm. When Archbishop Laud speaks of ‘the beauty of holiness’ I say yes, the holy must be beautiful. God, being perfect, must be beautiful. But when William Dowsing leads his men into Pembroke College chapel and cries, ‘Tear down the idols!’, when his righteous hammer strikes the friable stone and the saint’s face crumbles, I feel the excitement of the act, the outrage against superstition, the sheer bravado of defacement. This is original, no? Iconoclasts have had a bad press over the years. The evil dwarf Aidan Massey is not the author of this insight, for Christ’s sake his special period is the Tudors, when it comes to the Civil War I know as much as him. So does Christina, one year out of Edinburgh University, three months’ research and she’s master of her subject. Mistress. But the professor gets the credit. The world turned upside down.
Where does an eleven-year-old boy get an idea like that? Walking on walls and below only clouds.
She’s put her magazine down and closed her eyes. Such a sexy bruised face. Why these thoughts from a happily married man? My six seconds have expired. Things I want and haven’t got. Hard to speak simple words. Why didn’t I say more to Jack this morning? Breakfast the least serious time of day. And then there’s Laura, sharer of my life, mother of my children. How come I daydream of sex with a stranger on a train? Fifteen years married and still a certain shyness, or a delicacy maybe. Not good form to love your wife and desire other women. Things I feel but can’t admit. Suppose I were to say it. Hurt, lack of comprehension, perhaps even disgust. Driven out of the house like a dog with muddy paws.
The house Laura’s father’s money bought. The school fees Laura’s father’s money pays. And in this morning’s post an insurance bill for over two thousand. Last month’s credit cards not yet paid, oil for central heating running at four hundred a quarter, both cars due for servicing, even the water bill’s a killer these days. And there’s a tax bill coming up in two months that I do not have. But no, I’m not asking for more money, Barry. This isn’t about money. Call it justice, if you like. Call it honourable behaviour. Call it an end to idolatry.
I must remember to ask Jack about his dream, maybe at the weekend when we’ve got time. A walk on the Downs on Sunday, maybe go into the secret valley, we could get as far as the lost monument if we give it enough time. The children always pull faces and say they hate walks.
You walk everywhere on the tops of walls, you can go anywhere you like, only don’t fall because the walls are so high there’s only clouds down there. And beneath the clouds? Ah, there’s the question. A happy land of wine and roses. More clouds, more nothing. Or just falling, falling for ever.
Uncrossing her legs. Eyes closed but she won’t be asleep. What makes one woman sexy and another not? Nothing to do with beauty. You can just feel it, or maybe it’s a smell.
Beeble-beeble-beeble. Her phone.
‘Hello? Yes. No, I can’t do it, Tom. I wish, I wish. Ask Sally. I don’t know.’
Here am I, inches away from her, and she’s talking to someone invisible, someone far away. Her face makes expressions for her distant friend, but it’s I, the close stranger, who witnesses them.
‘I can’t do your job for you, Tom. It’s hard enough doing my own.’
Something in the fashion world? Not quite groomed enough. Could be publishing. Though Christ knows television has its share of dossers.
‘Hi, Sally, it’s Liz Dickinson, eight something Wednesday morning, just wanted to warn you Tom’s on the scrounge. I’m out for lunch, catch you later.’
It’s like being at the theatre, a one-woman play. The overheard life. Rear Window in audio. Maybe she’s committed a murder.
‘Jane? It’s Liz. Look, huge apologies, I’m not going to be able to make it after all. I would, but I have to get back for Alice. She hates me leaving her with my mother.’
What makes her believe her phone calls are private? I’m listening and learning. Or at least guessing.
‘No, I’m having lunch with Guy. Not a chance. No, I mean it. I keep in touch for Alice’s sake, she needs a father, and he’s the only one she’s got, God help her.’
So she’s a single mother. Someone wrote a whole book about picking up single mothers, the idea being that they’re more up for it, though I don’t see why. Not with me at least. Particularly as I’m married and even to think such thoughts is beyond the bounds of acceptable behaviour. What Jimmy Carter called ‘adultery of the heart’, which happens every day, every hour, and means nothing but is still a secret. How could I ever tell Laura? We’re close, we talk, there’s trust, but beyond the lamplight lies terra incognita, dark continents, the beauty of unholiness.
Do other husbands feel this way? If so, what a strange world we live in. Every man an almost-adulterer, constrained by decency, habit, squeamishness, lack of opportunity. No, there’s more than that, there’s something honourable, a refusal to inflict pain on one you love. But even so, the desire remains. The desire concealed. The secret carried in men’s eyes, we recognize it in each other, but we don’t speak the words.
‘Because he’s a two-timing bastard. Three-timing, ten-timing. He can’t help himself. I don’t blame him any more, that’s just how some men are, it’s not personal.’
Some men. But which men? Women know the worst about some men, but the man they love, the father of their children, he’s the exception to the rule. He doesn’t fantasize about sex with strangers on trains. Why would he need it when he has a good sex life with his wife at home?
Why indeed?
The train is passing over the Balcombe viaduct. Henry looks out through the rain-blurred windows at the green fields and woods. He likes this stretch of the journey, always watches out for it, the train raised high over the wide and peaceful scene. He has made something of a speciality of landscapes, you could say he collects views; and not views in isolation, views according to the time of day, the weather, the time of year. Thus his home view from Edenfield Hill looking towards Mount Caburn and the plain of the weald is at its most perfect on an early spring morning when there are high clouds in the sky and low sunlight spills over the land. He treasures his views precisely because they are not collectable, you catch them by chance, most days the light is too flat or the cloud cover too low. These days he rarely finds the time to go view-hunting because his hours at work are getting longer.
He pulls an orange paper file from the bag beneath his seat and settles down to prepare for his script meeting. Forty minutes or so still to go to Victoria. The rain seems to be passing.
It’s very simple, Barry. What I’m asking for isn’t a favour, it’s a fundamental issue of justice. Also it happens to make me extremely angry.
He takes out a pencil and writes on the top of the script:
‘Break something.’
4
The cars turn off the lane into Underhill School, follow each other nose to tail over the sleeping policemen down the rhododendron drive, swing left at the art classroom and past the dining hall, to pause, engines purring, between the gymnasium and the main school porch. Here Alan Strachan stands, idly calculating the accumulated value of the cars, while watching to see that no arriving children are run over. Toyota Landcruiser Amazon, W-reg, forty thousand new. Grand Voyager, X-reg, tinted windows, thirty thousand. Volvo V-70, T-reg, twenty-five. Mercedes SL300, Y-reg, forty. And these are the wives’ cars, the nannies’ cars, the little country runabouts. In Haywards Heath station car park even now there stand several million pounds worth of automobiles, the BMWs and Jaguars and Range Rovers that ferry their masters seven miles a day, not to mention the Sunday cars kept pristine in silent garages outside rectories and manor houses, the Aston Martin DB5, the Ferrari Testarossa, the Bentley Tourer built in 1935 when real men knew how to build real cars. Most mornings standing by the school drive you can pass the half-million mark in quarter of an hour.
‘Morning sir.’
‘Morning Richard. How’s the cough?’
‘Better sir.’
/> The young teacher wears brown cords, a mushroom-coloured jacket: his attempt at camouflage. On his pale and beautiful face there lingers a habitual smile, the outward form of an ironic view of the world. Alan Strachan is not embittered by the knowledge that any one of the arriving cars has cost more than his entire year’s salary. He is amused. The absurdity of the world’s rewards systems amuses him. The popular illusion that people get what they deserve amuses him. Perhaps he would concede that in the long run justice is done, good work is honoured, poor work forgotten. But by then all concerned are dead.
No post yet this morning. It gets later and later. Maybe pop home in the lunch break to check. The letter should have come by now.
‘Morning sir.’
‘Morning Thomas.’
‘Sir I’m off games today sir.’
‘What’s the problem?’
‘Temperature sir.’
‘Everyone has a temperature, Thomas. If you had no temperature you’d be dead. Or rather you’d have ceased to exist.’
‘My mother says it’s ninety-nine point two, sir.’
Save me from parents. Save me from the bored wives of rich men who work too hard. Save their children from them. This decent healthy kid, born into comfort and privilege, is being robbed daily of his natural resilience and vigour.
‘Do you feel unwell?’
‘Maybe a little sir.’
Feel unwell for Mummy, son. She’ll love you more if you need her. Don’t feel unwell for me.
‘All right. Tell Matron.’
The boy stands back for Science, a door-wide form in the doorway.
‘Morning Mrs Digby.’