Authors: Zoe Pilger
âHe said that before. And oh â this came for you.' She went into the cloakroom and returned with a white box.
I sat on a bench in Soho Square and opened it. There was a blue fluffy toy cat inside, wearing a pair of crotchless, decayed white lace knickers. The knickers weren't stitched onto the cat; they had been added.
There was a note:
I HEAR YOUR SIGHS OF ECSTASY RECUR THROUGHOUT MY DREAMS AGAINST A BACKGROUND RHYTHM OF A MILLION PURRING PUSSIES. I AWAIT. YOURS, JAMES X
I walked along Oxford Street without a purpose. To my left, a man was selling fake celebrity-endorsed perfumes to a crowd of tourists, who spritzed themselves liberally with the testers so that the toxically sweet scent conspired with the pollution to make the air unbearable. That must have been where Madeline bought hers. Another man was watching out for the police. The snow had stopped, but the gutters were lined with it. The white had turned to black, not quite black. There were cars and cars. A bus swung to a stop and a woman carrying ten Liberty bags and a dog got off. The dog got trapped inside the automatic doors; its paws skidded everywhere as the bus began to move again. The dog was being strangled by the lead. A man in a suit banged on the bus driver's window. The dog was saved. I could feel the onset of an existential crisis. The crowd was bombing towards me but there was no face that I recognised. I wanted to see Sebastian. I wanted so badly to see him that I tried by the power of my will to turn these strangers' faces into his. I wanted to see his blond hair and his absurd, rugged beard. I wanted to see his tall shape. I wanted to tell him that I would forgive him for everything but then I remembered that I was guilty as well. I wanted to ask his forgiveness. I wanted to say I'm sorry for boiling Allegra's hamster but she really had it coming. I wanted to say I'm sorry for that night at the dreadful May ball, when I made you dance with me on a very slippery floor, surrounded by all those Cambridge girls, dressed up like catalogue princesses in two-tone gauze. And all the men in top hats and tails. The band was playing âBig Spender'. The princesses tried to roll their hips in a pseudolesbian way for all the men who watched with contempt. Or was it lust? Jasper was there. That was the night he and Allegra met. I told him to ask her to dance, and he did, and I told him that she wanted to sleep with him, and then she did. But before that I was watching your eyes the whole time because your eyes were watching her and I was sick with jealousy. Freddie spilled champagne on the floor. And then I made you push me away and twirl me back towards you, holding my hand all the time. I was holding your hand. And then you fell. You broke your leg.
I had reached Oxford Circus tube. The God squad man was pacing in his usual spot, blasting the crowd with capitalist revisions of the Bible: â
Do you want to be a sinner or a winner?
'
âCan I borrow your megaphone for just one moment?' I asked him.
He moved his mouth away from it. âNo.'
âPlease,' I said. âI want to tell everyone that love is a chimera.'
âI don't know what that word means.'
âLove?'
âNo,' he said. âChimera.'
I followed the crowd down the steps to the tube. I couldn't decide whether to go left or right. I stared at the list of stops for a long time. I could hear the scream of a train approaching, northbound. The dead air lifted my hair. It was warm. I ran at the tracks as the scream turned into a thunderous wail, but my decision to die came just a second too late. The train was already in the station. I got on it. A woman was knitting to my right. I watched her fingers loop and curl the wool over the needles, clicking happily away. She was making a red scarf. I wanted to throw my arms around her so badly but I decided to get off instead and found myself at Euston, power-walking to a place where Sebastian and I had spent days and years together.
The guard at the British Library checked my bag and then I went down to the locker room and left my stuff. I took the lift up to the first floor and scanned the faces of the people along the gangway, but no one was Sebastian. A couple were leaning in for a kiss against the railing around the glass tower of books that ran through the centre of the building.
The guards in Rare Books were happy to see me. They asked me why I never came any more and I told them that I had finished my exams. I decided not to tell them that I'd got a double-starred first. âYou lost so much weight,' they said. âWe were worried about you.' They asked me where my fella was and I said I didn't know. I said I was looking for him â had they seen him? They couldn't remember.
I sat down opposite an octogenarian who had fallen asleep with his head on a pile of books. I got out my copy of
Falling Out of Fate
, and read at random:
Telos was Aristotle's word for an overarching goal or guiding spirit in life. It was a guiding light, a thing to move towards. A meaning. A telos is what all humans need in order to make life meaningful. The point of philosophy was to learn how to live the good life â not a life of limitless pleasure, but a life of balance. Ethics and pleasure were not dissociable.
The octogenarian grunted.
Now we have lost our telos. There is no spirit to guide us. Or rather, we have been left free to invent or choose our own. I say âleft' free. We have been abandoned by God in our freedom. Although He, in the form of the church, the family, and, in women's case, the patriarchy, oppressed us, controlled us, He also watched over us. He told us what to do. He told us the difference between right and wrong. And when we did wrong, we were punished. Now the rules are hazy.
Love is the telos of the modern world. It is a modern idea. We reach for The One as a means to construct a whole ethical and pleasurable universe. In short, to give life meaning.
The purveyors of love â the love songs, romantic comedies, ads, dating sites â promote love as a route to solving the meaning of life. These products are for the most part directed at women. The job of loving remains feminine. This is what University of Chicago academic Lauren Berlant calls âthe female complaint'. Turn on any TV in any country in the Western world and you will find a channel on which a woman is complaining that her man doesn't love her enough, doesn't need her enough, isn't emotionally available or faithful or honest or committed enough. The whine goes on; but it is not natural. It isâ
The octogenarian sat up. He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand.
Our eyes met.
He got up and exited the reading room. I followed. He looked over his shoulder, unnerved. I smiled. I followed him onto the smoking terrace. He lit a pipe. I lit a cigarette. The statue of Mr Punch bowed to us, grimacing.
âWhat are you in for?' I asked the octogenarian.
âBotany,' he said, grimly.
I followed him back through the cafeteria and that's when I saw Sebastian.
He was sliding a dirty tray of food into the rack. He didn't see me. My heart started pounding. I followed him to the water fountain and hung back while he filled his cup. He drank three cups. Then he went into the men's toilets. I must have been in a trance because I followed him in there. Men were pissing against the wall. They clocked eyes on me and started proclaiming that I was a girl. Sebastian had disappeared into one of the cubicles. I ignored the men. I waited for him.
And waited.
I felt a hand on my arm. Someone was trying to get me out.
âNo,' I said.
When the cubicle door did finally open, I saw that it wasn't Sebastian at all.
Ten
I was standing outside Elephant & Castle tube. The snow had started again. The hideous pink shopping centre had been painted blue, but the elephant impaled on a spike persisted in its lurid pinkness. The roundabout roared in the blizzard. I called Freddie.
âI need Sebastian and Allegra's address,' I told him.
âNo.'
âCome on.'
âNo.' He sounded fucked. âSamuel's gone.'
âI know.'
âBut Vic's still here. He showed me his medal.'
âPlease, Freddie.'
There was a pause.
âI'll give you their address if you promise to come to my uncle's for cream tea and pretend to be my girlfriend,' he said.
âNo way.'
âOK, I won't give you their address then.'
I could smell the lamb cooking before Allegra answered my knock on her bright green door. There was no bell. They lived in a low-rise block of council flats.
âThis place is no way near as nice as mine and Freddie's,' I told her. âLiterally, how can you bring yourself?'
âOh, hi,' she said. Her voice was rough. Her glorious black hair was clumped in a knot at the back. She was wearing Sebastian's old T-shirt:
I Wanna Start A Revolution From My Bed!
âHe's not here. If that's what you want.'
âNo.' I hesitated. âI don't want â that.'
âWhat do you want then?' Her legs were bare.
Behind her, I could see backpacks open and books in piles. One corner of the living room was covered with newspaper and splattered with red paint.
âTea?' She turned and wandered back down the hall, leaving the door open.
After a few moments, I followed her. I closed the door behind me.
The TV was on:
Nighty Night
, series two. Julia Davis in red lace was being chased over Cornish hills to the soundtrack of Dolly Parton's âJolene'.
Allegra turned it off.
âI love that programme,' I said.
She boiled the kettle. âI know.'
âThat's my programme. I introduced you to that programme.'
âI know. Seb doesn't like it. He doesn't think it's funny.'
âIt is funny.'
The living room was small.
âMy god, Allegra. You can't swing a cat in here.'
She poured the tea. âHas my brother moved in with you?'
âNo â I don't know. He's a nice boy.'
âYeah,' she said. âBut Mum and Dad are so angry with him. More angry than they are at me.'
âWhy?'
âBecause I'm not doing the Bar Professional Training Course.'
âWhy not?'
She looked stern. âBecause if I become a lawyer, I'll die.'
I laughed.
She handed me the tea.
âHave you poisoned this, Allegra?' I said. âBecause Freddie knows where I am. Plenty of people know where I am.'
She studied my face. âAre you OK? You seem a bit ⦠mentally unstable.'
I laughed. âYeah! Cos I've just been to the library. It's a mentally unstable kind of place.'
The window looked onto another window. I watched a woman watching TV; she got up, left the room, and returned with a banana.
âIt's the over-achiever thing,' Allegra was saying. âLike the J. D. Salinger thing. The Glass family. Because my parents had this thing that geniuses â genii.' She laughed.
I didn't laugh.
âAre made not born,' she went on. âSo they pushed Samuel like really hard. With the whole chess thing. He became anthropophobic for a while.'
There was a silence.
âIt means being scared of people,' she said.
âI know what it means.'
âHe just used to cower in the corner of the room between moves during competitions and stuff. From when he was about thirteen â he was fine before that. Mum and Dad said something happened to him at school because he wouldn't go. He had CBT but it didn't work.' She sighed. âAnd now he's dropped out. I was hoping he would be the good one so I could be the bad one!' She smiled; I wanted to put my sunglasses on. âBut I'm like not talking to Mum and Dad at all now and I hate them.'
âThat's not very nice.'
âNo,' she said. âIt's not very nice. I'm not prepared to be a simulacrum of a human being.' She became angry. âI mean, why don't I just make a façade of myself â like the kind of façades they put on buildings when they're being renovated. The façade looks like the building but it isn't actuallyâ'
âI know what a simulacrum is, Allegra.'
âSo when they come to London for dinner, I can just like send the façade of myself out to have dinner with them instead of me and operate it by remote control while the real me just sits on the sofa. Here. I can make it say all the right things at all the right times.'
âI don't know what you're talking about,' I said.
Silence.
âDo you want to know where Sebastian is?' she said.
We were sitting on the arms of opposite sofas.
âNo,' I said.
âHe's gone fishing!' She laughed. âHe's at the Walthamstow Reservoir. Well, really it's in Tottenham. He spends days and days there.'
âIn this weather? Allegra â you've pushed him over the edge. He's trying to freeze himself to death to get away from you.'
âThat's not a very dignified thing to say.'
I stood up.
She stood up too. Then she sat down again. She extracted a hairbrush from her bag and started brushing that long, stringy hair. The brush snagged at the back. Her hair transformed from dull black to inconceivably luscious black, like an advert. It shone and shone and seemed to absorb all the light in the room so that I began to wither like one of Ursula the sea witch's poor unfortunate souls. A curtain of black fell over her face. âCan't we just let bygones be bygones?' she said.
I stared at her.
âI mean.' She flipped the curtain of hair back and her face appeared. âWhat you and Seb had was sweet.'
Lights had started to pop in my vision.
âBut you have to admit that you blocked him,' she said.
âBlocked what?'
âYou blocked him. His talent. Men like Sebastian come along once in a generation.'
I laughed. âAre you joking?!'
She considered me, sadly. âI'm sorry he doesn't want you any more. I really am.'
I ran at her and managed to get a fistful of that hair. She grabbed my hand. I pulled and pulled, waving her head around the room. She was screaming. When she loosened her grip on my hand, I yanked, hard. Strands of black hair came away from her scalp. There was blood. I staggered backwards. She clutched her head. Her face was wrecked and flushed â more beautiful.
âGet out,' she said.
âNo.' I stormed into the first room that I saw. It was their bedroom. There was Sebastian's Goya print on the wall. It showed Saturn the old man with hollow, hunted eyes eating his baby son. Saturn had the baby's head in his mouth; he looked caught in the act, furtive and guilty and disgusting.
She was panting behind me.
âOh, when is he going to let those bloody daddy issues go?' I shouted.
âHe can't let it go!' she screamed. âThat's the fuel of his art!'
âWhat art?!'
âArt!!!' she cried, crazily. âHis life is a work of art! He is a work of art!'
Suddenly I was exhausted. I sat on the end of their bed. âCan I smoke in here?'
She stared at me.
âWell, can I?'
âIf you must. I always tell Seb to go outside.' She sat down beside me. âBut I guess it's OK.'
We sat for a long time.
I was looking at Saturn.
Finally, she said: âI'm sorry about what happened.'
More silence.
Then I said: âI think I walked out of my finals to make Sebastian love me again. I never thought of it before. But I think I thought maybe, if I failed my exams then maybe he would love me.'
âBut I got a first and he still loves
me
,' said Allegra.
Freddie had told me to meet him outside the fish and chip shop on Endell Street in Covent Garden. There were three fish and chip shops on Endell Street.
I walked up and down for a while.
Then I caught sight of that stooped, devastated form. Vic.
âHey,' I said, punching Vic too hard on the arm. âWhat are you doing here?'
Freddie came out of the shop, his face in a bag of chips. He looked ill. âSaid he wanted to see you.' Freddie's mouth was full. âSaid he couldn't stand not to see you.'
âAnn-Marie,' said Vic. âI've taken the day off work. I don't want to go to work any more. I don't want to operate any more.' He took my hand. âI want to be with you.'
I pulled my hand away.
âI want to be a bohemian,' he said.
âCome on, Freddie,' I said. âLet's go.'
We left Vic waiting in the snow across the road from Freddie's uncle's flat.
Freddie and I were sitting in a bamboo minimalist paradise. Professor Timothy Frank, retired, was leaning backwards in his bamboo throne as though a gale force wind were blowing in his face. To his left, there was a taxidermied seal. Its tail was raised and its fur was sparse and yellow. There was a weird, happy smile on its face.
Professor Frank saw me looking at it. âDo you know why it is smiling like that?'
Despite being made out of bits of car, the conceptual bust in our living room had captured something of the old man's thunderous authority.
I shook my head.
âBecause it has been got by the Mahaha.' He laughed.
The professor's wife scuttled in with a tray of scones, strawberry jam, double, single, whipped, and clotted cream, and tea. Her hair was short like a boy's. Her face was delicate and rotten. She was a rotten peach. She whispered instead of talking.
They both looked about one hundred years old.
Freddie and I smiled and said thank you very much.
âWell, do you know who the Mahaha is?' said the professor.
âNo, Uncle,' said Freddie. âI'm afraid I do not.'
âDid I not tell you to read arch and anth?' he hollered.
âYes, Uncle,' said Freddie. âBut it's all paid off now â studying history of art. I'm a curator. And a video artist. Thanks to your kind patronage. Letting us use your space.'
âMy
space
?' said the professor. âIt is not a
space
. It is a flat.' He slathered his scone with both clotted and whipped cream. âWhen Freddie was a little boy, he loved nothing better than to hear my tales of the Arctic. For a long time Greenland was my area.'
âYou owned it?' I said.
âDon't be ridiculous,' he said. âI am against colonialism of all kinds. Besides.' He looked at his wife. âWe couldn't afford it on an academic pension!'
She mimed laughing.
âThe Mahaha are demons of the cold. They wear no clothes whatsoever.' He chuckled. âDespite the endless ice, as far as the eye can see. They are very strong and very sinewy and they leap about. Do you know how they kill their victims?'
I shook my head.
âThey tickle them to death!'
I laughed politely.
Freddie laughed â too late.
âThey have very long fingernails. And they are always giggling. That's how you can hear them coming.' He looked at the seal. âThey leave a frozen, twisted smile on the face of their victims.'
âDo the Eskimos believe in them, though, or is it just a myth?' said Freddie.
â
Eskimos
is a pejorative term, nephew,' said the professor. âThe Inuit people have not suffered genocides of disease and now this cretinous global warming to be reduced to an igloo animated picture by you.'
There was a photograph on the wall of the uncle standing next to a hole in the ice, raising a type of spear above his head. There was also a photo of him with an Inuit woman, bundled in matching furs, standing by an igloo with a gaggle of what looked like half-Inuit, half-Western children.