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Obstacles to Young Love
The cabaret is an embarrassed Basilio with a guitar. He plays quite nicely. Timothy holds Maggie’s hand. Not to be outdone, Naomi holds Simon’s hand as if they are walking down the Ramblas in Barcelona and it’s her wallet. The poor travel agent tries to look as if he is delighted to have no hand to hold.
Basilio doesn’t play all that long, to be honest, and the four English visitors can’t blame him, but the German whispers, ‘Short measure. Always short measure.’
Basilio now has a few words to say to them.
‘Tomorrow we will visit an Indian village. They do not use money. They have nice things to buy, and you will need to barter. The best thing to use is cigarettes. They like cigarettes. If you want to buy things tomorrow, get some cigarettes at the bar tonight.’
Simon fetches more drinks – beer for him and the German, red wine for Naomi, bottled water for Timothy and Maggie. He also buys cigarettes.
‘I will not spread this noxious weed,’ says the German. ‘I have fish hooks with me. Many fish hooks. I will barter with fish hooks.’
Timothy and Maggie also refuse to buy cigarettes. The travel agent offers to sell them some of his fish hooks.
‘I don’t think so, thank you very much,’ says Timothy loftily. ‘I don’t honestly anticipate that there’ll be anything we want to buy.’
By the time they have finished their drinks, the barman is asleep. It’s almost ten o’clock.
Naomi has been wondering about Timothy’s sex life. Maggie doesn’t look sexy. Not that they will be likely to be having sex tonight. The chalets have single beds underneath mosquito nets. It’s not conducive.
‘I love your breasts,’ whispers Simon from his single bed. ‘I wish I was fondling and kissing them now. Imagine kissing hers. He’s got a job on. They’re enormous.’
‘I must say they did remind me of some old English burial mounds I saw once in Dorset,’ says Naomi.
‘You’re a terrible woman,’ says Simon affectionately.
In the morning they’re scheduled to walk to a village of the Yagua Indians. Basilio meets them outside the lodge. He bangs a big drum five times with a gong, explaining that this is an Indian method of communicating.
Their walk takes them about an hour. Animals seen amount to a slightly disappointing total of one iguana.
The German astounds them by saying, ‘I know a German joke about the British.’
‘Oh, do tell us,’ says Naomi.
‘There were two Englishmen who met at work.’
They wait to enjoy the rest of his joke, then realise, to their horror, that he has finished. They don’t get it.
‘They work at the same place, but they have never met, because one or the other of them was always on strike,’ he explains. ‘German jokes are subtle.’
After about three-quarters of an hour the little party cross a creek on a high bridge. They find themselves in a small village of thatched houses on stilts. There are two houses filled with people hiding. They can dimly see that they are wearing jeans and T-shirts. Basilio hurries them past these houses.
Waiting for them on a bench are four Yagua Indians, three men in grass skirts and a woman in a large green kerchief that doesn’t quite hide her breasts, which look two decades past their suck-by date. It’s difficult to say which group seems the more embarrassed by this travesty of tourism.
In front of them, on a wire, are rows of beads, necklaces adorned with alligator heads, and other delights.
The German decides to buy something, and the bartering begins, translated by Basilio.
‘I give you two fish hooks.’
‘Packet of cigarettes.’
‘Four fish hooks.’
‘Packet of cigarettes.’
It’s the only currency they want, and they only want whole packets so they can sell them in town. Of course they use money. The German buys a packet off Simon, says, ‘I can’t think why they want this noxious weed,’ and with the packet settles on a bracelet of alligator teeth. Who is it for? wonders Naomi.
Nobody else buys anything.
Naomi wonders if bartering with cigarettes is the derivation of the phrase, ‘It costs a packet.’ She must remember to find out when she gets home.
Home. Why does the word send a shiver through her? Is she no longer looking forward to home life with Simon?
There’s some embarrassing fooling around with blow darts, and the charade is over. The travel agent, in generous mood, offers the villagers all his fish hooks. They don’t want them. They use nets. He shows for the first time a softer side. He seems genuinely disappointed. Not hurt, just sad. Naomi wonders if there is a woman in his life, or if the alligator teeth are for his mother.
The walk back is slow, as the heat and humidity rise. Naomi and Timothy find themselves walking side by side. Whether they have planned this or whether it’s chance is not obvious even to them.
‘I want to thank you for having the courage to come and tell me that dreadful day,’ says Timothy. ‘I think it really made a difference. Left me with a bit of self-respect.’
‘I hope you got over it quickly.’ But not too quickly, perhaps.
‘I didn’t. It took months.’
‘How long after…me, did you meet Maggie?’
‘Best part of two years.’
‘And how are you now? Really happy? You seem it.’
‘Oh, yes. Maggie’s lovely. You? Everything all right?’
‘Absolutely. Can’t you tell?’
‘Er…yes.’ He hesitates. He wants to confess something. Naomi isn’t sure if she wants to hear it. ‘The…er…not everything is…I mean, it’s different from you and me. It’s…’ His dark face colours slightly, and seems to swell with embarrassment. ‘I mean, we do have sex. I mean, it is our honeymoon. But not…’
‘Everything we did?’
‘No. That was actually a bit special, Naomi.’
‘Well, thank you, but…it was one night.’
‘I know, but still it was a bit…you know. In fact, I can’t believe what I did. I don’t expect I’ll ever do it again. It seems, somehow, with Maggie, you know, something we just wouldn’t do.’
She wants to blurt out, ‘Can’t say I’m surprised,’ but keeps it to herself.
‘…Anyway, I suppose our relationship is more…spiritual.’
Why on earth is he telling her all this? He obviously needs to. She finds that very encouraging. This worries her. Why should she be encouraged by it?
‘Talking about spirituality, how about you? Are you…do you still not believe?’
‘No.’
‘You don’t not believe or you do not believe?
‘I don’t believe.’
‘I’m sorry.’
‘Why should you be sorry?’
‘I’m sorry?’
‘Why the hell should you be sorry?’
‘I wish you wouldn’t be flippant about hell.’
‘Oh, for God’s sake.’
‘And God.’
‘Oh, Timothy. Loosen up.’
‘I’m not good at that. Sorry, but what have I done wrong?’
‘You’ve patronised me because I’m an atheist.’
‘Oh, you’re not even an agnostic any more. That’s a bit arrogant, isn’t it? Being so certain that you know.’
Naomi has never called herself an atheist before. She has believed that she is an agnostic. But she wants to make Timothy angry. She needs to make him angry.
‘I don’t believe this,’ she says. ‘I can’t believe you people. What are you if not being so certain that you know? That’s what pisses me off about you. You think I desperately want to believe and have failed. I don’t particularly want not to believe, but it doesn’t put me in some sad class of disappointed failures. The reason I don’t believe is that I can find no evidence of a compassionate pattern in life, and it doesn’t mean that I’m any more wicked than you or any less sodding spiritual than you. Oh, what a fucking good decision I made walking out on you, you fucking prig.’
She charges angrily after Simon, but he is disappearing at a fast sulk.
Soon they are back at another perilous narrow bridge, high above the piranhas. Ahead of them is the lodge. It has taken less than five minutes. They realise that the village is almost right opposite the lodge. The five bangs on the gong meant, ‘There are only five of them. No need to try too hard.’
At the lodge, Simon is waiting with a face like the thunder that is beginning to threaten once again.
‘Rather an argument, I see,’ says Simon. ‘Bit of tension.’
‘So?’
‘I didn’t know you still cared enough about him to bother to be angry. I see that I was wrong.’
He is right, of course, which annoys her. She has been feeling pleased with herself for managing to end the meeting with Timothy angrily. It was sad for him, but necessary for her. She wished that she hadn’t sworn, but the future would be difficult to bear if she’d ended on friendly terms with him.
After an early lunch they set off for the boat back. The German, who is staying for another night and is scheduled to have a four-hour jungle walk that afternoon, shames them by walking with them to their boat to see them off.
‘I expect there will be a few more people on today’s boat,’ he says hopefully, ‘and some of them will probably be taking the four-hour walk with me.’
As they watch today’s thatched boat nosing towards the landing stage, he says a rather strange thing.
‘Don’t think too badly of Peru.’
Naomi likes him for that as much as for anything.
There are no tourists on the boat, none. He will be alone for his four-hour walk, alone for his second candlelit dinner, alone for Basilio’s limited repertoire on the guitar all over again. Naomi’s heart goes out to him, and she never even found out his name.
They shake hands with him, politely. His handshake is perfect, firm yet not too firm.
They enter the boat.
He stands on the landing stage, a stiff, erect figure, curiously forlorn and vulnerable.
The boat begins to move. He waves as if they are old friends whom he is going to miss. They wave back.
Just before he is out of earshot, they see him shout. A moment later, his words arrive over the brown water.
‘I will insist on the full four hours. I will not accept short measure.’
Timothy and Maggie move to a seat near the front of the boat.
Naomi sits down quite far from them, in the middle of the boat.
Simon marches right to the back of the boat, and plonks himself defiantly into a seat. God, he’d be cross if he knew how young it makes him look, thinks Naomi.
The journey back, against the flow, takes longer than two and a half hours and feels as if it takes for ever. None of them would have wished not to see the Amazon, but none of them will ever go for a week’s cruise on it. It just rolls on and on for ever, a slow, brown streak among the endless rainforests.
As they make their way off the boat to get onto the minibus back to their hotels, Timothy approaches Naomi.
‘So,’ he says, ‘this is goodbye.’
‘Yep. Sorry it ended in a row.’
‘One last kiss:’
‘It’ll have to be a very quick, casual one. Simon’s furious.’
‘Really? Maggie won’t mind at all. She hasn’t got a sensitive bone in her whole body.’
He means it as a compliment.
At the last moment Naomi relents, holds her cheek against his, tries to put a real feeling of warmth and affection into it. After all, it will probably be the last kiss they ever have.
PART THREE The Rocky Road to Seville 1991–1993
They’re late. Lunch is ready. It’s annoying.
William offers a second glass of sherry. This is very unusual, but they can’t just sit around with empty glasses, waiting. It embarrasses him to have to do it, he’s not a drinker, so he has to pass a little comment. ‘It is New Year’s Day, after all,’ he says. When he’s finished pouring he stops for a moment in front of the picture over the piano. It shows a Norfolk wherry sailing away from the staithe at Wells-Next-the-Sea. Naomi knows that, just for a moment, her father is sailing away from a staithe somewhere, and is happy. This worries her. She has become more sensitive to atmosphere over the years, and senses that something is afoot today. She feels uneasy, edgy, tense.
They’re having curry, in the English style, quite hot but not fearsomely so, and sweetened with sultanas and slices of apple. On the side there will be mango chutney, slices of banana and finely minced coconut. The curry can be held quite easily in the Hostess trolley, but the rice may dry out. It’s annoying that they are late.
‘Where are they?’ Penny cries.
‘They’ll have got utterly and totally arseholed last night,’ says Julian. ‘No discipline, artists.’
He’s very grumpy today.
‘Please, Julian, not in front of the child,’ says his mother.
‘I don’t like that expression, “the child”, Mum,’ says Naomi. ‘She does have a name.’ The words are a rebuke, but Naomi speaks them very gently and without any hostility. Penny is tense today. There’s that telltale working of her mouth when she isn’t speaking.
‘What’s “arseholed”?’ asks Emily.
‘It’s not a word you need to know, dear. It’s a word silly lawyers who’ve never quite grown up and still want to shock their parents use. It means having too much to drink.’
‘Dad used to get “arseholed” sometimes, didn’t he? He still gets “arseholed” sometimes when he takes me out for a meal. He has a double gin and then a whole bottle of wine and then he drives me home.’
‘Yes, yes, Emily. That’s enough. And does he indeed? Right.’
‘I prefer Dad when he isn’t “arseholed”. He’s much nicer. I don’t intend to get “arseholed” at all when I’m grown up.’
‘Yes, Emily, thank you, good, I’m really glad, you stick to that, but we’ve had enough of that word, thank you.’
Emily is six. She isn’t usually annoying, though sometimes she comes out with awkward things, the way children do. Once Auntie Constance, whom she doesn’t like – you can’t be made to like people just because they’re your auntie – had said, ‘You’re as bright as a button, aren’t you?’ and Emily had drawn herself up to her full height, which at the time was two foot eleven, and said, ‘I’m much brighter than a button, excuse me. I never saw a button do anything clever.’ Pink spots had appeared on both of Auntie Constance’s cheeks.
There’s a welcome crunch of gravel.
‘They’re here!’
Relief sweeps over Penny’s face. Emily dances up and down. She loves Uncle Clive and Uncle Antoine. She takes them completely for granted and has never seen anything funny in their being two men together, but then she has no concept of the idea of a lover. Long may she not have.
But it’s the delight on the faces of Penny and William that amazes Naomi. She hasn’t realised how far they have travelled since they first met Antoine over twelve years ago, when she was eighteen. How embarrassed they had been in 1978. How affectionate they are in 1991. Clive and Antoine enter with beaming smiles and exciting parcels. The whole mood lifts. Well, no, not quite. Julian’s mood doesn’t lift. He never exchanged another word with Teresa after Naomi’s eighteenth birthday supper, but to him Antoine will always be what Teresa called him, ‘That Frog poofter.’ On the surface it’s prejudice, but deep down it’s even sadder than prejudice. Deep down it’s a defence mechanism against the sight of a man being so much more at ease with himself than he is.
There’s a round of kissing in the French style, on both cheeks and slightly formal. Even William, not a natural kisser, manages to kiss both Clive and Antoine, and does it with a bit of panache. ‘You’ve turned us all French now, Antoine,’ he says with shy pride.
Clive and Antoine don’t kiss Julian, though. His face is set in unkissable mode. His face is like a Pennine crag.
And almost immediately Antoine is on the floor, level with Emily, in front of the cosy, crackling winter fire.
‘So, Emily, do you want me to help you with the jigsaw or do you want to finish it on your own?’
‘Help me, please, Uncle Antoine.’
Naomi and Clive give each other a long, loving hug. Julian pours himself another sherry. Antoine finds a piece of sky. Emily squeals with delight. Penny’s mouth moves anxiously. Something is up.
‘What about the presents?’ asks Emily from the floor.
‘After lunch,’ says Penny.
‘Are you sure, Penny?’ asks William.
‘Well, no. Yes, now.’
Naomi realises that this exchange is meaningful. She just doesn’t know what the meaning is.
‘Julian,’ she says.
‘What?’
‘The day you don’t hand round the presents, this house won’t be L’Ancresse any more.’
Julian pretends not to be pleased.
Clive and Antoine have brought lovely presents for everyone, they’re really good at presents, and living in Paris does help, though how they get them all on the plane is a mystery. But things like weight restrictions don’t matter to Antoine. He charms his way through.
In their turn, Clive and Antoine express great delight at the presents they have been given.
‘Late night last night?’ asks Julian.
‘Yes,’ says Clive. ‘Good party. Francis Bacon was there.’
‘Name dropper.’
‘Excuse me, we hate name dropping,’ says Antoine from the floor, where he has just found the piece that completes the funnel. ‘I was saying so to Brigitte Bardot only yesterday.’
‘Who’s Brigitte Bardot?’ asks Emily.
‘A beautiful French actress who was better treated by animals than by people,’ says Naomi.
‘But that’s not why we’re late, Julian,’ says Clive. ‘We set off in good time. Had a problem with the ruddy car. Hire cars!’
‘Right,’ says Penny firmly, finding a suitable cue at last. ‘Well, you’re here anyway. Lunch.’
They take their seats at the table. The dining room smells even more of disuse now that all the children have left home. The table is plainly laid, as ever, but there are crackers.
‘I know it’s not Christmas,’ says Penny, ‘but Emily loves them.’
‘Uncle Antoine loves them too,’ says Emily.
They pull their crackers, with much laughter as Julian is left without any of the insides of either of the two crackers he’s pulled, laughter which is killed stone dead when he says, ‘You see. Can’t even pull crackers.’
‘I’m sorry. I’m not in the mood for paper hats,’ he says, but Naomi says, ‘Julian!’ and she can wind this gruff, awkward brother of hers round her little finger. He puts on his paper hat – it’s a bright yellow crown – without protest.
‘What do you get if you cross a fish with two elephants?’ reads out Clive.
‘A very large bouillabaisse?’ suggests Antoine.
‘No. Swimming trunks.’
There is a loud, communal groan, but Emily laughs with delight.
Penny begins to serve the meal. She has made a special curry, not quite so hot, for Emily. Naomi waits for her to make some kind of disparaging remark to Antoine about the food. If only her mother had more self-confidence. The remark duly comes.
‘It’s only curry, I’m afraid, Antoine. Well, the food over Christmas has been rather rich and a bit bland, I mean, let’s face it, turkey is bland, there’s no getting away from it, so I thought it might make a nice change.’
‘It’s perfect, Penny. I like your curry. It’s one thing we French are not good at.’
‘Charming as ever, Antoine.’ William beams as he says this, trying to show that he’s not being sarcastic. But it doesn’t quite work. Everything he says sounds at least faintly sarcastic. It’s the schoolmaster in him.
‘Antoine’s charm is his weakness,’ says Clive. ‘You should see him in Paris. He makes Maurice Chevalier look like a yob. People have to meet him at least five times before they realise he’s sincere. It’s held him back enormously in the art world.’
‘How is business?’ asks William.
‘Not good. We struggle on. Couldn’t do it without Clive’s regular earning.’
Clive teaches English, and teaches it well. He has inherited his father’s talent.
‘He’s a strange one, isn’t he?’ says Clive. ‘The more way out his art gets – I mean, he’s letting the cat walk over the paint now – the more he dresses like a bank manager.’
Clive is in jeans and an open-necked shirt. Antoine is wearing a suit and tie.
‘Too many artists live their art instead of painting it,’ says Antoine.
‘What do you mean about the cat, Uncle Clive?’ asks Emily, who loves cats.
‘I slosh wet paint on a canvas and let her walk over it,’ explains Antoine. ‘The marks she makes become incorporated into the structure of the painting. She does it brilliantly. Sasha’s very artistic. She’s a natural. It’s the element of chance in life that I need, you see. You can have too much composition. There is no composition in life. Sacha is therefore an essential element in my work, and doesn’t she know it? She doesn’t even mind too much when I have to use turps to wipe her feet.’
Emily laughs. She is so happy about the cat.
‘I thought you were bringing your girlfriend, Julian,’ says Clive.
‘Just noticed, have you?’
‘Well, no, I noticed when we arrived but I thought maybe she was in the bathroom or something. It was only when we were all sat down and there was no empty chair that I was sure. It’s not easy, Julian, to broach the question of your love life with you. One usually finds one has touched on a sensitive spot.’
‘Well, this time it’s not sensitive at all, because it’s good riddance.’
‘Oh!’
‘She was coming. We had a row in the station.’
‘Terminal?’
‘Yes. King’s Cross.’
It’s not often that Julian makes a joke, so everyone laughs a little too much at it, and then realises that it’s rather heartless to laugh at his predicament, so they all stop laughing rather suddenly.
‘But you’re getting on all right with your partners at work, are you, Julian?’ asks William.
Naomi has never seen her father taking such an active role in the conversation. Something is definitely up.
‘Oh, yes,’ replies Julian. ‘Well, they’re all men. I don’t have problems with men.’
William goes round the table, pouring more wine. This is without precedent, not because he’s mean, he isn’t, but because he never even thinks about drink. But today he is drinking as well. Naomi’s anxiety grows.
Penny offers seconds, again with, to Naomi’s mind, an unnecessary verbal accompaniment. ‘I didn’t give you too much first time around, in case you all felt you’d been eating too much over the holiday period, or in case it was too hot for you. But I thought, you can always come back for more.’
Everyone comes back for more.
‘It is very good, Penny. No more self-criticism, please,’ says Antoine sternly.
Her father raises his glass. ‘Well,’ he says, ‘I think we ought to drink to Naomi, and wish her good luck with her sitcom.’
He’s ticking off the conversational boxes one by one, thinks Naomi, smiling with a modesty that, sadly, is not false, as they toast the success of her upcoming sitcom, which goes into production in a couple of weeks and will be on the screens in April.
‘Yes,’ says her father. ‘We’re very proud of our little girl.’
‘Dad, I’m thirty.’
‘That’s young. Only thirty, and a starring role in a sitcom.’
‘What is this sitcom?’ asks Clive.
‘It’s about a couple who keep having children. It’s about how the mother has to do all the work. It’s about the stresses of motherhood and of marriage, only it’s funny.’
‘Well, that sounds a good part,’ says Julian encouragingly. Only on matters to do with Naomi does he brighten in the family these days. Naomi almost wishes that he wasn’t so loyal to her. It makes it hard for her to criticise him for the rest of his unsatisfactory life.
‘I don’t play the mother,’ says Naomi. ‘I play the neighbour.’
‘But you’re regular,’ says her father. ‘You’re in it every week. Aren’t you?’
‘Yes.’
‘It’s a start. You’ll be back at the Coningsfield Grand. “Starring Naomi Walls from…”. What’s your series called?’
She doesn’t want to tell them. She still hopes the title may change.
‘It’s not quite decided.’