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Aramon went down to Rua.s.se (to the other Rua.s.se that tourists seldom liked to think about) and picked up an olive-skinned wh.o.r.e called Fatima, and f.u.c.ked her twice a week in her secretive attic room where chiffon scarves were draped over the lampshades and the air was perfumed with body oils and incense.
But what Aramon Lunel did with Fatima never made him black out.
It was never the same as it had been. And then Fatima died. Someone killed her with a knife, there in her hot little scented room, they split her open from her breast bone to her pelvis, and she was taken away, wrapped in plastic sheeting, to the morgue.
Aramon was led into the police station and questioned. (They called it questioning but there didn't seem to be any audible question marks on the ends of sentences.) You killed this girl.
You stabbed this wh.o.r.e. Fatima. You cut her open.
He told them he wouldn't have bothered to kill her. She didn't mean that much to him. With her, he'd never blacked out.
Blacked out.
This could explain it, then: your loss of memory.
You killed the wh.o.r.e. Then, you blacked out.
The 'questioners' were just stupid, ordinary policemen. How could the intensity of what he'd once felt be explained to people like them? All he kept saying was: 'She's of no account to me. Fatima. I probably never even called her by her name.' And after a long and weary while, after days in police custody, they found another man and accused him of the murder and left Aramon alone. They told him he was 'walking free'. But he knew what they did not know, that after what had happened for fifteen years, he would never be free.
There were a lot of family tombs in the cemetery at La Callune. The little graveyard was almost full up. Some of the dead were labelled Heroes of the Resistance, carved in stone. Not Serge, of course. He'd guarded trains and stretches of railway line against Resistance saboteurs. But quite a few of the others. Yet, whenever Aramon went to the graveyard, he found himself alone and it was as though Serge had somehow arranged this, so that the two of them could talk (well, he thought of it as a conversation, even though he knew it was a monologue) and not be overheard by other people visiting their departed relations. 'These villages are full of spies,' Serge had once said to him. 'You can't trust a single soul. Only the family.'
Now, Aramon told Serge that he was confused. He was going to get a pile of money in return for the mas and the land. Four hundred and seventy-five thousand euros! Nearly three million francs! More money than had ever existed in generations of Lunels. But he didn't know where when he had all this cash in his hands he was going to go.
'Where should I go?' he asked. 'Where?' 'Where?'
He longed for Serge to answer. Serge Lunel had been a survivor. Always, this survival had been a close-run thing. He'd narrowly escaped slaughter by the German army in the Ardennes. He'd survived Renee's death by marrying Bernadette. He'd managed to avoid being sent to work in Germany with the S.T.O. by agreeing to a night-time job in Rua.s.se, guarding trains. And the things that came later: he'd survived his own guilt by making his son his accomplice.
Aramon stared out at the heavy-shouldered tombs. Everything, he thought, weighs weighs so much in this place. The earth. The houses (for the living and for the dead). The canisters of this or that poison you have to carry on your back. The boulders in the path of the river. The thunderclouds filled with rain... so much in this place. The earth. The houses (for the living and for the dead). The canisters of this or that poison you have to carry on your back. The boulders in the path of the river. The thunderclouds filled with rain...
He drank because of the weight of things. More and more, the alcohol was making him ill, he knew this, but he couldn't find any subst.i.tute, any other way of sliding out from underneath the slab of memories that tried to crush him, crush him with guilt and with love that he could never express.
Often, in his reveries, he was a boy again and Audrun was a little girl, jumping in the dusty courtyard with her skipping rope, with the sun s.h.i.+ning on her brown hair. Together, they fed the chickens and the family pig. After heavy rain, they were sent out together, hand in hand, with identical tin buckets, to collect snails.
Sometimes, when they were picking snails near the river and their rubber boots were larded with moist earth and the wet weeds and rushes brushed against their legs, he asked to see her scar, where the surgeons had chopped off her pig's tail, and she lifted her pinafore-dress and showed him her little round tummy, and he stroked it and said he was sorry about teasing her and pretending she'd been the daughter of an SS man. And she said it was all right, she couldn't remember anything about that. And he'd give her some of his snails, so that Bernadette would be proud of her and say: 'Well done, ma cherie ma cherie. You found more than your brother.'
And, at other times, after warm days in April and early May, they stood together in the fields of cherry blossom at dusk, listening out for nightingales, and the white blossom became luminous in the fading light and one evening, when Audrun was still a child, but growing in beauty, beginning to resemble her mother and her dead aunt Renee, Aramon broke off a little branch of it and tucked it behind her ear, and she looked up at him and said: 'Now I'm a princess. Am I?'
Take me there.
That's what Aramon wanted to say to Serge. 'That's the place I want to go. Please, oh please take me there: to the field of white blossom.'
But the dead never responded to any living plea. They could, it seemed, arrange a confidential hour, but then when you whispered your longings to them and asked them to help you, they fell back to being inert and useless: just brittle branches, bare twigs, dust.
Aramon walked slowly, painfully back to the Mas Lunel. His feet hurt all the time. There was an ache in his hip. His gut churned with some kind of distress that wasn't quite hunger and wasn't quite sickness, but a mortal unease he couldn't identify. And he wondered whether, when he'd got his great wad of money in exchange for the mas, he wouldn't go in search of some hospital or rest-home and pay them to take him in and take care of him. Were there such places, where you could just walk in the door and be led by the hand to some small but clean room? People said that, in this modern world, everything you could think of existed, provided you could pay for it, so perhaps these existed too? Sanctuaries.
It was the time of year for olive-pruning before the summer truly arrived.
Veronica and Kitty had been to a seminar in Rua.s.se on how this was supposed to be done. You cut back the growth only every second year and, when you did, you had to let the foliage have air; you had to keep in your mind an imaginary bird flying into the tree and out again the other side without pausing in its flight.
The olive grove at Les Glaniques had more than twenty trees, so Anthony had agreed to help with the pruning. He enjoyed repet.i.tive tasks. They calmed his mind. And the feel of the secateurs in his hand reminded him of pruning roses with Lal: the bright sound of the cut, the consoling idea that you were making the plant strong, the unexpected warmth of spring suns.h.i.+ne on your face... So he felt happy as he worked. Kitty was satisfactorily far away, Veronica within easy call. There were no clouds above them.
The vivid birdsong reminded Anthony of Lal's garden, too: of a time when the mistle thrush was a common sight, when scarlet-breasted bullfinches snickered in the hedges, when you could hear woodp.e.c.k.e.rs those determined amateurs of DIY tapping at tree trunks in the orchard and pheasants squawking in the spinney.
And he thought that here was another reason to leave England: even as people and property crowded in there, so nature was withdrawing her riches. It was as though the land had tired of the way its variety and complexity kept being ignored by man, and had decided to brand itself with just the few, dull species everybody would recognise. Fifty years from now, there would be only blackbirds and gulls and stinging-nettles and gra.s.s.
The beautiful olive branches ma.s.sed around Anthony's feet. Loving France, he thought as he looked down at them, was going to be easy for him.
His mobile rang and it was Madame Besson telling him she had another house for him to see near Rua.s.se. It had just come onto the market.
Anthony heard himself let out an audible sigh. He knew that he couldn't bear another disappointment so soon after the visit to the Mas Lunel. To have been so near to something beautiful and yet so far from it had enraged him.
He asked Madame Besson if this house was on its own truly on its own with nothing to spoil the view, and she said, Yes, it was on top of a hill, with its own drive, its own road that led to it and nowhere else. 'Lonely,' she said. 'Very lonely. But I think that's what you want, Monsieur Verey, n'est-ce pas n'est-ce pas?'
'Yes,' he said. 'I guess so. Is it stone? Is it beautiful?'
There was a moment's pause and Anthony could tell that Madame Besson had covered the phone receiver with her hand. Then she came back and said: 'I haven't actually seen it. My daughter went to get the details. She says it's quite nice.'
Quite nice.
It didn't interest him then, if that was all it was. 'Quite nice' was not how Anthony deigned to see his future. Better to have no future than to have that. And he was beginning to be weary of estate agents. They didn't seem to understand who he was the the Anthony Verey, who lived in fear of ugly surroundings and so they were wasting his time. Anthony Verey, who lived in fear of ugly surroundings and so they were wasting his time.
And yet. He had to go on in his search. He had to try to find it, the place where he could live and be happy. Anthony said to Madame Besson that he would come by on Friday and pick up the keys and get directions to the house. He said he wanted to look at this property on his own.
'Whatever you prefer, Monsieur Verey,' she said. 'I will tell the owners. But it is a very isolated place. I wouldn't like you to get lost.'
The night before Anthony went to look at this house, he, Veronica and Kitty were invited to dinner with some French friends of Veronica's near Anduze, Monsieur and Madame Sardi. Veronica had redesigned their garden, made it, they said, 'the true garden of our dreams'. The Sardis' grat.i.tude, Veronica told Anthony, often expressed itself in invitations to fabulous meals.
Their house was solid, grey-stuccoed, turreted, a kind of miniature chateau, whose style of architecture, Anthony commented as they drove in, didn't suit the region.
'Anthony,' said Veronica sternly, 'you're not going to spend the evening making criticisms, are you?'
'Certainly not,' he said. 'I'm too well mannered. But look at this: why isn't it stone? This stucco belongs in the Loire. Or are your friends barbaric enough to have rendered the stone?'
'Shut up, Anthony,' said Veronica. 'We're going to have a nice time.'
'I didn't say we weren't.'
'Shut up then.'
The Sardis Guy and Marie-Ange were people at ease with their wealth. The first thing visitors saw was an impressively large fountain, not dissimilar from the one in front of the White House in Was.h.i.+ngton, DC, that played a sparkling fan of water into a lily pond, set in the middle of an immaculate gravel turning circle, bordered by Florentine cypresses, topiarised box and pincus.h.i.+ons of tenerium and santolina. As they got out of the car, Kitty said: 'I love this garden. The air smells of the maquis maquis.'
'That's the whole idea,' said Veronica. And Anthony wondered, with a small frisson of pleasure, whether this didn't sound a bit like a snub. He looked at Kitty, dressed for the evening in a navy silk Nehru jacket and boxy white trousers which made her short legs look even shorter. She was smiling. She didn't appear snubbed. But he remembered with relief that, early tomorrow morning, she was setting off for Beziers, to talk to some gallery owner about her pitiful paintings, and so he and V would be alone for at least twenty-four hours. Snub or no snub, she'd soon be gone. Perhaps he'd even be able find a way of willing willing her to stay away. her to stay away.
The Sardis' guests were greeted, not by Marie-Ange, but by a butler, who offered them flutes of champagne from a silver salver. Taking a grateful sip of the champagne, Anthony immediately caught sight of a marble pedestal on which rested a fine nineteenth-century copy of a Borghese vase, very like the one in the Louvre. He couldn't resist stepping nearer to appraise this. He almost put on his gla.s.ses to verify his initial findings ('Possible restoration to rim? Probable value, region of 30,000...') but restrained himself from doing this, afraid to appear too much like a vulgar auctioneer. Nevertheless, this was how Marie-Ange Sardi found him, gulping champagne from the too-meagre flute, and examining the Borghese vase.
'Ah-ha! Veronica told us that you're an antiques collector,' she said in faultless English, 'and I see you've gone straight to the vase. What d'you think?'
'Oh,' said Anthony, 'good evening, Madame Sardi. I'm so sorry. I just couldn't resist a tiny look...'
'No, of course, why not? It is rather special. My husband found it in Florence. It's an 1850s copy of the Borghese vase in the Louvre. I adore the dancing figures, don't you?'
Marie-Ange was a woman in her fifties, well-groomed and slim, but with her skin beginning to suffer the ravages of sun-wors.h.i.+p. Anthony made his quick a.s.sessment and guessed it was astute. ('Possibly part Jewish, despite the Catholic-sounding name. May have brought Guy Sardi some kind of fortune, to which he then added another one in investment banking, rather like Benita and Lloyd Palmer...') Anthony now dared to whip out his spectacles and put them on. He longed to touch the vase. 'It's very fine,' he said. 'The satyrs on the handles are such an extraordinary detail, aren't they! So you and your husband are collectors, too?'
'No, not really. We just buy things we like. We've got a lot of Louis XVI furniture. And there may be a few pictures that interest you. We have a couple of Corots down here, but we spend most of the year in our house in Paris, so our best treasures are there.'
Ah, thought Anthony, really deep money, then, the kind of una.s.sailable fortune I should have made always a.s.sumed I would make, until I suddenly became aware that the time for making it had gone. Though he smiled and nodded politely at Marie-Ange, he felt himself squirm, once again, with envy. He wanted to turn round and walk back out into the garden and listen to the birds for a moment and then drive away. But Marie-Ange had put a light hand on his arm. 'Do come and meet Guy,' she said, 'and the others.'
Others?
Oh G.o.d. Veronica hadn't warned him this was a dinner party. party. And no doubt, the friends of Guy and Marie-Ange Sardi would all be rich, all be serene in their certainty of a future in which their white linen table napkins would always be starched and enormous, their wine served at the correct temperatures, their chauffeurs at the doors, their clothes lined with silk... As Anthony turned from the vase to follow Marie-Ange into the And no doubt, the friends of Guy and Marie-Ange Sardi would all be rich, all be serene in their certainty of a future in which their white linen table napkins would always be starched and enormous, their wine served at the correct temperatures, their chauffeurs at the doors, their clothes lined with silk... As Anthony turned from the vase to follow Marie-Ange into the salon, salon, he felt that same sudden weariness come over him that latterly he experienced in his shop after a day when he'd sold nothing. he felt that same sudden weariness come over him that latterly he experienced in his shop after a day when he'd sold nothing.
Guy Sardi was a tanned and handsome man, a little shorter than Anthony, but with a bearing so confident and upright it made him seem larger than he was. His eyes were still beautiful, with thick, dark lashes. These eyes said: I can seduce at will: men and women of my circle, servants, CEOs of international companies, secretaries, casino croupiers, maids, and even dogs come and try to lick my hands...
Sardi's handshake was firm, almost brusque, and made Anthony feel limp and old. Looking at Guy Sardi, imagining how he himself appeared through Sardi's eyes, Anthony thought, How completely absurd it is, my desire to go on living! I was finished a long time ago. Why am I so afflicted with this ridiculous tenacity?
He exchanged a few obligatory sentences about the Borghese vase, then when his host went to welcome a new guest started to move to Veronica's side. But, as he approached, he heard her talking in French to a woman he vaguely recognised, who might have been a politician or might have been one of those actresses whose name you never quite remember, but who makes a living out of a thousand small appearances in big-budget films. Anthony a.s.sessed that such people could be mortally offended if you didn't recognise them, so he made a sideways sashay towards a waiter going round with a champagne bottle and held out his empty gla.s.s.
Over the waiter's shoulder, above a small mahogany spinet ('French, late 18th century... with a four octave keyboard with ebony naturals (worn) and ivory accidentals'), he spied one of the Corots. He waited for his gla.s.s to brim again and then, relieved by this at least and sipping as he went, moved towards the Corot, his left hand agitating involuntarily upwards towards the pocket where his spectacles resided.
Before he was able to concentrate on the picture, however, Anthony's eye was caught by a black-and-white photograph in a silver frame, standing on its own on the spinet. It was a head-and-shoulders photograph of a young man of astonis.h.i.+ng beauty. He smiled at the camera. Juvenile curls flopped over one eye. His sensuous mouth was slightly parted to reveal the tutored, white teeth of an adored and pampered child.
Anthony gaped. He knew that his own mouth had literally fallen open and he closed it quickly. He felt slightly breathless. 'That,' he wanted to whisper aloud, 'is what I mean by beauty. That face epitomises human grace and loveliness to me...' By the young man's just-recognisable resemblance to Guy particularly the same sleepy eyes, with their long eyelashes Anthony guessed that this was the Sardis' son. He was about twenty-five. He was wearing an ordinary white T-s.h.i.+rt, probably hadn't really posed for the picture... just turned to the photographer and smiled, knowing that what this smile expressed was all the certainty, all the inevitable dazzle of his marvellous future. 'Catch me now,' it said, 'before I soar away and leave you all behind...'
Marie-Ange, the ever-vigilant hostess, appeared at Anthony's side. Behind them, the chatter in the salon salon was animated, indicating that more people had arrived, and, in truth, Anthony wasn't sure how long he'd been gazing at the photograph of the young man. He was aware that Marie-Ange might think him rude, or at best slightly weird, to spend this c.o.c.ktail hour snooping at the Sardi family's personal possessions. But, in fact, her voice was amused and gentle as she said: 'You found Nicolas. I took that picture in the garden here last summer.' was animated, indicating that more people had arrived, and, in truth, Anthony wasn't sure how long he'd been gazing at the photograph of the young man. He was aware that Marie-Ange might think him rude, or at best slightly weird, to spend this c.o.c.ktail hour snooping at the Sardi family's personal possessions. But, in fact, her voice was amused and gentle as she said: 'You found Nicolas. I took that picture in the garden here last summer.'
'Your son?'
'Yes.'
'He's very... handsome. Beautiful, in fact. He's beautiful.'
Marie-Ange gazed lovingly at the photograph. She reached out and touched the young man's floppy hair.
'He's directing a film at the moment. He's only twenty-four and he's directing his first feature film. Guy and I are rather spellbound.'
'I can imagine,' said Anthony. 'I'm spellbound.'
'Well,' said Marie-Ange. 'Now you must come and meet everyone. Most of our friends are lawyers and bankers, so everybody speaks English.'
Lawyers and bankers.
The world is so so dull, thought Anthony. So cripplingly tedious. So full of all that you've met a thousand times before and which has never moved you and never will. And still it goes on... dull, thought Anthony. So cripplingly tedious. So full of all that you've met a thousand times before and which has never moved you and never will. And still it goes on...
Marie-Ange Sardi had her hand on his arm and was leading him towards the noisy group of middle-aged people, guzzling their champagne. He had to let himself be steered away, but he couldn't resist turning one last time to look at the photograph of Nicolas.
Come to me, stammered his heart. stammered his heart. Find me, Nicolas. Give me back my life. Find me, Nicolas. Give me back my life.
When you live alone, thought Audrun, when you've lived alone for thirty-four years, you find it difficult to endure the presence of a stranger in or near your house. You can't help but imagine all the wrongdoing of which he's capable.
Audrun made coffee for the surveyor while he went in search of boundary markers. Her mind wasn't on the coffee, but on the surveyor's feet, trudging back and forth. She knew what these feet would do: trample flowers, tread down the s.h.i.+ne on the new gra.s.s, scuff the gravel, stumble into the vegetable patch, imprint the earth.
Boundary markers.
She told the surveyor, whose name was Monsieur Dalbert, that he wouldn't find any of these. She said he would never find them, never. Because this was not how things had been done.
Once, there had been a byre on this plot, where a grey-brown donkey had been tethered in darkness. Sometimes, during Audrun's childhood, Serge had untethered it and it had stood there, blinking in the daylight, while he put panniers on its back and loaded these up with wood or sacks of onions. Audrun could remember cupping her hands gently over the donkey's poor eyes. Then later, after Serge died, Aramon had told her: 'You can build the bungalow there. All right? Where that useless nag expired. Where the byre collapsed. Use the stones as hard-core.'
Monsieur Dalbert wasn't interested in memory. He was interested in certainty. He said he didn't wish to contradict her in an impolite manner, but there would certainly be boundary markers indicating where her ground ended and Aramon's began. The commune of La Callune would have insisted upon these when permission to build her house had been granted.
Out of her kitchen window, she watched him toiling in the afternoon heat. Sun rays bounced off his bald head. He was a small man, but full of petty cruelty, she could tell, proud of his ability to wound. Audrun crumbled some black earth from the geranium pot on her kitchen window sill and threw it in with the ground coffee because she knew this could have the power to quell her anxiety, to watch the surveyor imbibing geranium compost and never knowing it.
She set the tray of coffee things on the terrace table and waited. The dogs in the pound at the Mas Lunel were braying, scenting the stranger, even at this distance. And no doubt Aramon would be smiling up there in the detritus of his life, smiling as he drank, thinking: Now the last reckoning is about to arrive, the one that chucks Audrun out into the arms of Mother Nature, ha! The one that leaves her with nothing except her sainted forest.
Black earth in the coffee; under the floors, the bones of a dead animal, the mossy stones of the fallen byre... If these peculiarities could coexist in time, then other more exceptional things could... could what? Well... they could suddenly happen happen. For who had imagined that Marilyn Monroe would die like that that, with her poo-p.o.o.py-doo soul fluttering out of her a.r.s.e while a was.h.i.+ng machine turned, while people came and went from her house on Fifth Helena Drive, Brentwood, California, USA in the small hours? But that was the way it was. Apparently.
Back and forth Audrun watched him go, the bald surveyor, staring at the driveway, consulting his bulky papers, laying down his steel measure, straightening up, catapulting the measure back into its housing, searching among weeds and nettles. Back and forth, treading everything down.
Then he strutted back and climbed the three steps to the terrace where Audrun waited and plonked the sheaf of builder's plans on the table. With a jabbing finger, he located the boundary markers on the stiff paper: 'Here, here, here and here.'
Audrun stared at him.
'I can't find them,' Monsieur Dalbert said, wiping sweat from his forehead. 'The markers have either been illegally cut or removed from the ground.'
Audrun said in her mind: I told you. There weren't any boundaries.
'They should not be touched, ever ever,' said Monsieur Dalbert. 'Boundary markers are the property of the commune. Did you know that it is a felony to remove them?'
Felony. A thrilling word. A thrilling word.
Audrun wanted to remark how numberless, how diverse might be the crimes to which the word could apply. But there was something in the air, in her breath, in her lungs a heaviness which made speaking difficult on this late afternoon.
The surveyor surveyed her over his spectacles. (Another one who considered her mad, no doubt, told by Aramon that she couldn't distinguish north from south, had no idea where one thing began and another ended.) She decided that now she would pour out the coffee, soured with earth, but she found that her arm just stayed where it was, by her side. The surveyor shook his head in an exasperated way, as though the coffee mixed with its little sugaring of compost might have been the thing that had brought him here and now he saw that he wasn't going to get any.
The dogs kept up their whining, their yelping for liberty, for meat, for blood. And Audrun watched Monsieur Dalbert turn his head in the direction of these wild hounds and felt in him a sudden welling-up of anxiety. Yes, felt it felt it. As though, for a particle of time, infinitely small, she'd left her own body to inhabit the air this stranger was breathing...
...and this stepping away, this parting from her self self, it was as familiar to her as the sound of her heart when she lay in her bed in the darkness. She knew that it signified something something which wasn't meant to happen any more, but which did happen never the less.
Never the less.
Words. Who knew when they were right ones? Who knew?
Now, he's staring at her, terrified, the man whose name she's already forgotten. He's nothing but this terrified stare, very close to her, with his mouth moving, as though speaking or trying to speak, but all sound has vanished. And then it comes swooping down on Audrun: the void.
She woke on the floor of her sitting room, covered by her green eiderdown. Marianne Viala was kneeling by her, holding her hand. Somewhere, just out of sight, was another person, waiting, waiting for time to move on.