I saw immediately that he was beautiful, breathtakingly so, and that his beauty stranded him in a lonely place. It had cleared a circle around him, a space no-one dared enter. He had a glass in his hand and everyone who passed glanced at him, covertly or overtly, not once but twice, three times, hardly believing what they were seeing.
He was obviously a model. In Paris I had sometimes come across others of these beautiful human specimens, who did not appear to have the same proportions as ordinary mortals. I once followed an exquisitely proportioned girl out of the metro and onto the street because I could not believe my eyes. She was flawless.
The beautiful man had finely cut bones and a full sensuous mouth that bore a curious resemblance to my father’s.
‘Don’t,’ said Ro.
‘Too late,’ I said as I walked towards him. ‘Hello,’ I said.
‘How are you?’ he said, turning and giving me a smile that almost knocked me off my feet.
The beautiful man turned out to be a painter, English, not yet represented by a decent gallery. Straight away he told me that his work had won no major prizes and consequently it had attracted little critical attention. He said he sold his work here and there, in Paris and in London, but that he mainly made his living as a model—a photographic model, not an artist’s model. He also did catwalk shows.
‘I knew it!’ I cried.
‘Everybody seems to guess,’ he replied, a little mournfully.
I realised that I had seen his photographs in fashion magazines. He told me that he also featured in a large billboard ad for razors, which I remembered passing every time I caught the bus to Nana Elsie’s. In the billboard photo he looked like a man who had never known misfortune and would never meet illness or decay. He looked like someone who would never experience death personally.
His name was Richard. He said it was kind of me to talk to him.
We swapped phone numbers. I said goodbye, in a reserved sort of way. Already I wanted to distinguish myself from all the other women who had drowned him in wishes.
I intended to wait for him to call and vowed not to call him first.
When Richard suggested meeting at a bar in the Marais, I was careful to keep a formal, respectful distance. I was keeping my dying romantic wishes well concealed beneath my longing skin.
When he suggested a drink at his flat after dinner, I said no.
‘Are you saving yourself?’ he asked, giving me his beautiful smile.
‘Yes,’ I said.
Ro and Horatia both advised caution.
‘The beautiful are a race apart,’ said Horatia.
‘I know,’ I said.
‘Beauty has its own rules,’ Horatia added, just in case.
Richard lived in an apartment in the Marais, in a little Jewish quarter off the rue de Rivoli.
‘Bloody tourists,’ he said, leading me through a throng of people to his flat for the first time.
When he walked down the street, women nudged each other and people sometimes stopped walking altogether to stare. Like a beautiful woman, his beauty defined him, and he was condemned to a life of either justifying it, or else pretending that it did not exist. He chose the latter.
His apartment doubled as a studio. His bed was a mattress on the floor, and every surface, every wall was covered with his paintings and drawings and with photographs he had cut out from magazines, from postcards, from newspapers. The effect was beautiful, a wild disarray of colour and line and form, and I spent the first hour gazing at the walls. His paintings were extraordinary.
‘Even I can tell that these are very, very good,’ I said.
‘Thank you,’ he said. ‘It’s nerve-racking betting everything you’ve got on your own talent. There’s always a good chance you won’t be any good.’
I wished I could bet everything I had on something worthwhile. Should I bet on him? Was he the perfect lover, here at last?
The beautiful lover did not talk much and seemed to find speech an effort. ‘Words are useless for describing the world,’ he said that first evening in his apartment.
I had made the fatal female mistake of asking what he was thinking. I couldn’t believe I had tripped up so easily!
‘I didn’t ask you to describe the world,’ I said. ‘I only asked what you were thinking.’
‘I’m thinking of soup, a sky I saw one night in Tunisia, of the lines of that stupid Morrissey song. I’m thinking of the number three and the word zero. I’m also thinking about the meaning of life.’ It was possibly the longest speech I had heard from him.
‘You are not,’ I said.
‘I might be,’ he replied, smiling.
I still suffered from that female complaint of wanting to know everything. He had already told me that when he was fifteen he had saved a girl from drowning. Being literal-minded, a girl with no imagination, I imagined that this event merely prefigured every other drowning woman in his life who would cling to his neck.
When we finally lay upon his mattress later that night I wondered if the wishes of drowning girls were the reason the beautiful lover approached me in such a nervy, startled way, as if at any moment he might be dragged under.
In the act of love he was soft and fluttery, and came almost as soon as he entered me. ‘Sorry, my love,’ he said. ‘That was like a sparrow.’
‘What do you mean?’
‘A sparrow’s fuck,’ he said. ‘Fast and light.’
But every time after that was like the first: a soft, gentle flutter as of startled wings, a spurt, over in seconds. Nevertheless I enjoyed the birdlike grace of it.
He soon made it clear that he was already leaving. ‘I’m moving to Tunisia in May,’ he said.
‘Wonderful,’ I said. ‘I’ve never been to Tunisia. I’ll come and visit.’
‘Yes, you must,’ he said, in the same way that people often say they must catch up sometime.
He was not my boyfriend. We rarely went out together and when we did I found the experience unsettling because of the stares. I never established the beautiful lover’s exact relationship to me. I could not tell you what I was to him either.
The last night I spent with him before he moved to Tunisia I sat in a chair opposite the mattress on the floor, itemising the beauty of his face.
I noted the architecture of the bones beneath his skin, the well-cut lines of his nose and his cheekbones. I noted the placement of his eyebrows over his eyes, each a perfectly sculpted arch. I especially admired the way his lips were shaped, perfectly drawn as if modelled on an artist’s best drawing.
I left the bedside light on and lay down beside him. His eyelids flickered in a dream, his mouth fell slightly open like the fat, happy mouth of a satiated suckling baby. I reached out to brush the hair from his forehead and he flinched.
I felt important, having a member of beauty’s royalty asleep beside me. I will always be grateful that human beauty once came fleetingly to rest upon my pillow.
SIXTY-SEVEN
Breasts
A TRACERY OF FINGERS, A body mapped.
A body outlined, drawn, weighed down by the impressions of a million fingerprints, lighter than air.
The tracery of fingerprints a body has known: the comforting touch, the erotic stroke, the arm pulled too hard by a lost husband, the wrist grabbed too insistently by a skinny boy child seeking your immediate attention.
How you loved lying next to that boy, skin to skin, nose to nose. When that boy was a baby lying tucked into your arm he turned his head towards yours, so that his small face was directly in the path of your warm breath. The tiny hands of that baby boy, splayed against your breast, the miniscule fingerprints engraved with his signature.
How he loved your breasts, how he made them new again. All those years of hungry lovers sucking at the teat! All those mouths, all those lips, until his! His lips were unkissed, his breath unsullied, as pure as clouds. His new lips washed your lips clean, made your body new again. His lips washed an old heart fresh, made you a virgin.
>
Once, in those first milky days, you are standing under the shower when milk spurts from your breasts. You hadn’t known that your nipples contain barely perceptible tiny perforations, so that when the milk comes it sprays out, as if from a shower rose.
How your breasts turned into two new living creatures upon your chest. You have never had big bosoms before, and now you look like a page-three girl.
Your new husband is pleased.
Your new husband is not pleased about the baby.
He feels the baby is taking up too much of your attention.
He feels the baby’s cries are too loud.
He feels put upon, unjustly harnessed to the onerous task of bringing in the bacon.
When you hold your new husband’s head against your page-three breasts it is like cradling a horse’s head because the baby’s head is no bigger than an orange.
Your hungry lovers loved your breasts, page three or not. A fine bosom, high, pink-nippled, girlish. The only thing that changed after the birth of your son was that the pink, girlish hue turned a deeper colour. They remained girlish and high for the longest time, long after your son stopped supping at their teats, long after he was grown, long after endless men had stopped sucking upon them, long after Steph lost a breast to cancer.
How you and Steph mourned that lost breast. Steph never had children and she told you her breasts remained sexual emblems. ‘I have to look at them in an entirely new way now,’ she said and then she laughed. ‘Correction. I have to look at “it” in an entirely new way.’ She tried to laugh but it turned into a sob.
By then our bodies were turning into maps, figurative representations of what we had lived, loved and suffered. Soon, anyone would be able to read our histories in the fault lines of our skins, in the former succulence of our lips, in the archaeology of our shameless, ruined faces. How vain we started, how humbled we finished.
SIXTY-EIGHT
The house she fell in love with
THE HOUSE, THAT OBJECT LOVER, was never hers. It belonged to Horatia, who had it designed to her specifications.
One blue evening in Paris, Horatia told her about it, but nothing Horatia said prepared her for its beauty.
The house was in Corsica. A mountain rose up behind it, looming, preposterous, too full for the eye, snow-capped, even in blazing summer. So close it seemed anyone might reach it in a hundred steps.
At the front of the house was a valley, fashioned with low hills, and here and there a great craggy string of cliffs arose, with little villages perched on top. Directly across from the house was a village the same colour as the cliffs, carved from it, a church at its peak with bells ringing out the hours.
The house was a mix of Corsican stone, left natural, and whitewashed stone, modernist, like a Frank Lloyd Wright design. Inside were cool white tiles, some scattered with the flokati rugs Horatia had collected in Greece over the years.
The house looked like a sculpture. It consisted of several cubes linked by passages and walkways, ponds and rockeries, and each section had its own distinct and memorable character.
On top of one cube was a roof garden with three-hundred-and-sixty-degree views which looked over all the other roofs of the house and down into the valley and hills below and where she drank a glass of juicy wine and turned her face up to the stars. The mountain behind, the sea far, far away, the folds and sweeps of the valley, green, tawny, more Italian than French, with stone villages atop hills, church spires, and yellow ridges dotted with pines. Every night they ate dinner on the roof and watched the boundless sky change from blue to orange to pink to purple before melting into a deep, inky black.
In the garden around the house were fig trees, grapes, cherries, insects, birds; the air was always scented and hot and quick with life. Every afternoon she dozed in the heat, naked on a white sheet, weightless.
She wanted to live in that house forever, to feel her feet upon its cool white tiles.
She wanted to whitewash its walls every summer and clean out its fireplaces every winter. She wanted to live in it until she grew old, forgotten, like some wizened holy man in a cave.
She could never own it, in the same way she could never own existence. She knew that no-one owned anything, not houses, not lovers, not life. Like everything and everyone, like houses and Mademoiselle Joubert and lines of giggling sisters and dogs and the briefest, lightest croissant au beurre, her existence was air.
SIXTY-NINE
The love of hands
IN KEEPING WITH THE FAMILY tradition of failing to become great men and women ourselves, instead being history’s bit players, my father once got drunk in a bar in a small town in Louisville, Kentucky, with the greatest boxer of the twentieth century, Muhammad Ali.
Muhammad Ali was then not yet a great boxer. He still went by the name of Cassius, which my father believed was Roman, as in Emperor Cassius. He was not a great drinker either, Emperor Cassius. ‘He was a two-pot screamer,’ said my father. ‘He couldn’t hold his grog.’
How my father happened to be in the same Louisville bar as Cassius Clay I never found out. My father was everywhere for a while, travelling on his magic carpet, appearing and disappearing in a blink. I do know that as the night wore on Emperor Cassius and my father stole a hat stand from the bar and waltzed it down the street.
‘Can you remember anything else? You know, anything he said about civil rights or boxing or religion?’
‘Nope,’ he said.
Besides waltzing a hat stand down the street the only thing my father recalled was Emperor Cassius asking him to place his hand on the bar. ‘He put his hand next to mine,’ my father said. ‘Maybe he was measuring the difference.’
Ever since I have tried to make out Muhammad Ali’s hands in photographs and film clips. The bones of the palms, the four bones of the fingers, the knuckles, the web of tendons and veins beneath the skin, the principal tool of the body to reach out and grasp the world. The first part of the body to be held out in greeting, in friendship, in meeting. In some countries, after a handshake, the palm of the hand is placed against the heart.
The average length of an adult male hand is one hundred and eighty-nine millimetres. Each fingertip holds a dense web of nerve endings.
My father’s hands were not of average length, being as small as a girl’s. Perhaps Emperor Cassius admired my father’s small, defenceless lily-white hands, so useless at catching, so different from his own hands, faster than a striking snake, capable of felling all comers.
Because my own small hands have a tendency to sweat, I have never liked holding hands. I was even anxious about holding hands with my small son. When he was eight my son told me that he no longer wished to hold my worried hand.
My hands hold anger as well as my worries. Once, in a fit of temper, I placed my hands around my adolescent son’s neck. Once, in despair, I slapped my small hand across my sister’s beautiful face.
Recently I saw footage of Muhammad Ali, reduced to pure body by the end. His mind was elsewhere, his hands calcified, numb, their stories lost to him. His hands were now catchless too, those same hands that once stung like a bee.
SEVENTY
The worried lover
AFTER THE BEAUTIFUL LOVER LEFT for Tunisia, after spring had ended and the Suspicious Wanderer moved out of Horatia’s flat into a small studio of her own belonging to an American academic, her life once again fell into a pattern. She noted that even wandering, unclaimed persons crave order, a design to place upon the plotless days.
She didn’t walk the streets as much as she used to. For a start she was busier, working in the mornings on numerous proofreading jobs and in the afternoons and evenings teaching the English classes she still ran out of Horatia’s sumptuous apartment. She earned enough to pay her rent and to shop every Wednesday and Saturday at the market at the end of her street. She earned enough for an occasional meal and a small pichet of wine at a cheap restaurant. On rare instances when she had coffee and a croissant she always stood at the
counter instead of sitting down, because it was cheaper, and if she ever went to bars with friends she kept the same drink in her hand throughout the night. Her studio was in the thirteenth arrondissement, near the périphérique, in a rundown part of rue Jeanne d’Arc, and she chose it because she liked the name of the street.
By then she was eligible for a much-coveted carte de séjour. By then she had heard of AIDS, known in France as SIDA. To get her carte de séjour she had to have an AIDS test, to find out whether all that condom-free sex had killed her.
By then all the lovers of the world were crowding in on her. By then, she felt jostled by elbows, torsos, knees. Sometimes the teeth of strangers appeared too close and she imagined she heard the sound of tooth against tooth, as if accidentally knocking teeth when kissing. The thought of opening her mouth to a stranger, of having an unknown tongue swimming against her own, repulsed her. She, who had always loved kissing! The thought of having an unknown penis enter her body struck her as ludicrous, impossible. She was so tired of endless lessons involving the tongue, the hands, the ears, the belly and the fallible heart.
Even though the Suspicious Wanderer tested negative for HIV, she began to imagine that the virus lurked undetected in her blood. Wasn’t it possible that it existed, not yet manifested? Wasn’t it possible that her body was polluted, that in truth it was a shameful, dark thing, too little loved?
At night all the lovers she had known swam around her head. Leonardo della Francesca, the shadow lover, Stephen Porter, the Scandinavian lover with the too-full lips, the long-lost Nina Payne, the dissolute lover. Had she loved any of them? Had anyone loved her? She remembered that Jonathan Jamieson had loved her, and she had loved him. She remembered that love was supposed to mean desiring the happiness of the lover as much as one desired it for oneself. It meant letting a house or a dress or a person be themselves or itself, without imposing your own wants or desires, without confusing the lover with someone else or with anything they were not. Let the leaf be the leaf, let the dress be the dress, let the lover be himself or herself, unopposed!