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Authors: William McIlvanney

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BOOK: Walking Wounded
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‘It's a good thing for whoever it is that he isny here.'

The logic was opaque but John understood it perfectly.

‘That's right,' Sally said.

‘A fortnight,' Alec said.

In a moment of wild panic, John could imagine the cryptic exchange going on until his emaciated body was lifted too late, from the Wendy House. There was a noise that he was sure meant Alec had sat down on the bed. He hoped that was a good sign. Something hit the Wendy House and it buckled slightly and rattled against his head. He almost called out in panic.

‘Oops,' Alec said.

‘Watch Christine's Wendy House.'

No, no, you bloody mug, John was screaming to himself. Don't draw his attention to it. What Wendy House? There
is
no Wendy House. He might come over and inspect it for damage.

‘'S all right, love,' Alec said. ‘Just ma shoe.'

The other shoe hit the floor.

‘Lie down, Alec.'

‘Hm?'

‘Let me get your jacket off. That's it. Right, lie down.'

‘Uh-huh.'

The bed squeaked on its castors. Alec sighed, a sound like a small whirlwind. There was silence. John strained into it desperately. He was about to move his leg when he froze the movement, biting his lip.

‘Sally,' Alec said.

Sally said nothing. A couple of minutes passed. Someone was at the door of the Wendy House. Although John had seen Sally's nightdress move towards him, he was still tensed as the door opened, as though it might have been Alec in drag. Sally was crouched looking in at him, her forefinger to her lips. Did she think he might be singing? She held his clothes with one arm against her body. With the other she motioned him to follow.

Tiptoeing after her, John couldn't escape the hallucinatory feeling that he was in a fairy story after all. And John tiptoed from his little house past the sleeping giant and followed the good fairy. He glanced very quickly at Alec in case looking at him might waken him. He seemed gross in sleep. His mouth, like every other part of him, appeared to make more noise than was consistent with performing its basic function. His lips flapped in the wind of his breathing.

In the hall, John studied his heel briefly and saw the imprint of the face of the miniature doll – savage little household god. As he dressed very swiftly, Sally stroked his hair a couple of times. She mouthed his ear. Was she mad? He had noticed that before about women, how quickly they forgot risk when they were feeling roused. At the open door she held his arm.

‘It's all right now,' she whispered. ‘It's just that he's impossible when he's drunk.'

John nodded.

‘In the morning I'll send him packing. No problem. He'll go like a lamb.'

John nodded.

‘I don't see him now, you know. That's all finished. There's nothing between us. It's just taking him time to get over it. He's living in the past. But he has no rights here. And he knows it.'

John nodded. Of course. That's why he was taking up two-thirds of her bed.

‘Listen. I hope this hasn't put you off.'

John nodded and then changed to shaking his head. Not at all. Why should the possibility of being beaten to death every time you got into bed put you off?

‘Sally!'

She winked, kissed the tips of her fingers and touched them to his lips.

‘It's all right, Alec,' John heard her call as he came downstairs, letting the darkness take him into it. She rattled the milk bottles she had put out when the baby-sitter left. ‘I'm just locking up.'

John had brooded on the significance of that evening ever since. Sometimes, without warning, fragments of it would occur to him. He would hear ‘Sally! Sally!' or see her face, distorted with panic, as she lay beneath him. Such moments came to him isolated and complete, inexplicable but stubbornly there, ciphers the pilgrim found along his way. But in what direction were they pointing him? Their repetitiousness suggested he hadn't resolved them. They were liable to turn up anywhere, in a pub, in the car, at a football match on a wet evening.

‘Tackle, Freddie, tackle!' Jodhpurs was calling.

Gary had the ball. As Freddie lunged towards him, Gary drew the ball back and then threaded it neatly through
Freddie's legs and ran round him, leaving him stranded. ‘Nutmegged him,' John muttered to himself. It was a way in which professional players hated to be beaten, perhaps because it made you look so silly – your legs, the very basis of your craft, being reduced to the role of a triumphal arch for the parade of your opponent's skills. John was absurdly pleased. He glanced along at Jodhpurs as if he had taken revenge on her loud ignorance.

‘Sally! Sally!'

He had seen her since then in her office and once had a drink with her (not in ‘The Barley Bree'). She gave him occasional reports on the nocturnal activities of Alec Manson. His visits were apparently becoming less frequent. ‘He's coming to his senses,' Sally had said but John wasn't convinced that would ever be a permanent place of residence for Alec. Sally seemed still to expect that they would some time continue where they had left off, once Alec's supposed refusal to forget the past had died of exhaustion. John wasn't so sure.

He had thought about it a lot and and he believed (how could he be sure?) that his uncertainties didn't come from fear of Alec. Now that he understood the risks, the location and habits of the dragon as it were, he felt he could work out ways to reach the maiden safely. But he suspected she was no longer the maiden he had thought she was. He still relished the memory of her body and would have liked to go back there but – such was the fervour of his dreams – he could only do it with his faith intact. Paradoxically, to accept her offer of herself would have been for him to diminish her unless he did it on terms of belief in her.

That belief had been undermined to some extent. ‘A fortnight' had been carved on John's mind. Alec had said it as if it meant a long time in his terms. Surely he wasn't always drunk and surely he didn't always go there just to sleep. John thought perhaps Sally had been lying to him. And, besides that central matter, his sense of Sally had been
irredeemably altered. ‘Oh shite!' was something he would never have imagined her saying, a glimpse of another person, just as the nature of Alec had been. How had she become involved with a bouncer from ‘The Barley Bree'?'

One of the times John had been in that pub, a group of women in their thirties had been skipping rope, one at each end spinning the rope and the others jumping in turn, repeating the rhymes of their childhood. It had been an arresting scene to witness coming in off the street, rather like pushing open a door in an industrial West of Scotland town and entering the atmosphere of a frontier saloon in the American West. It was all loud laughter and the abandonment of bouncing breasts and shouted encouragement. A bystander, who appeared to be a regular, explained to John how the scene had come about, as if it were the most natural thing in the world.

It seemed one of the women had been shopping before coming into the pub and happened to mention over her drink that she had been buying a new clothes-rope. There had been talk of how times had changed for all of them, how rope had at one time meant not the boring duty of hanging out washing but the carefree pleasure of jumping rope. Someone had said it would have been great to go back there so they had gone, there and then, challenging one another to demonstrate their skills. The man who was telling John of the background to the event seemed to be concerned to make it clear that this didn't happen every day in the pub. That didn't make the place much less remarkable in John's eyes. ‘The Barley Bree' might not be the kind of pub where big, buxom women skipped rope every day like maenads but it was the kind of pub where, if they had the notion to do so and a rope was handy, they just carried on – and the barman looked on with a kind of reluctant indulgence, perhaps because there were other uses to which a rope could be put.

An acquaintance of John claimed to have been in ‘The
Barley Bree' one Saturday afternoon when a dog and bitch decided to consummate their passion in a corner. Nobody had paid particular attention, John's acquaintance said, and when he had expressed his amazement to someone sitting near him, the man had answered, ‘What can ye expect? They see it every day in the hoose.'

The story could have been apocryphal but it matched John's sense of the place. Sally's association with ‘The Barley Bree' changed John's sense of her. The enchanted bedroom was surrounded by quicksand. He wasn't judging her life or anybody else's. It wasn't in his nature to do that. He was simply looking for a habitation for his private longings, a place where he could share them with someone. Sally had not only made him think that it might be impossible to share them with her, she had also made him wonder if it would ever be possible to share them with anyone.

He would sit in his room, reading the greasy moquette pattern of his suite into a significance as mysterious as the Rosetta stone and, whatever it meant, the message was a sad one. The incomprehensible Gaelic songs would drift hauntingly around him like the sound of all the lost dreams of which his was just another. The cistern would gurgle from time to time. Andrew Finlay would cough nervously through the evening, as if embarrassedly trying to attract the world's attention. John would look through the jazz records for which he had no record-player (‘Out of the Galleon' was the one he held the most) and they became in his melancholy a symbol of his life, the mute longing, the music that couldn't be heard.

The ridiculous image of himself hiding in the Wendy House began to seem more than an accidental moment in his life. There were perhaps times, it appeared to him, when a fleeting gesture or a spontaneous stance could freeze into definition, like a head stamped on a coin, and become your essential currency. For a great footballer it might be one game or one goal. For another man, the moment of his
marriage. John dreaded that for him it might be his sojourn in the Wendy House. That might become the prison of his own sense of himself. Perhaps that's who he was – a ridiculous naked man with one sock on hiding in a cardboard house, waiting for his own true love.

‘Ah can't wait to get home an' get the wife's knickers off,' one of the players in the works' game said to another. ‘They're killin' me.'

‘Aye,' the other one answered. ‘If they had pints laid out across the park, Ah would cover the ground a lot quicker.'

‘Referee!' somebody shouted. ‘There's a man here wankin'. Is that a foul?'

The player who had been adjusting his shorts responded at once: ‘Only when the balls are in play.'

The harsh self-confidence of everything they said and did was like a mockery of John's uncertainty about himself. He stood on the path of neutral ground between the two games and felt his position as an irrelevant spectator to be a just expression of himself. In his attempts to adjust to the kind of life Katherine had wanted, he had lost the rough spontaneity he had come from, the ability the works' game was celebrating to take whatever life offered and shrug and have another pint in a way that suggested you hadn't expected much more of the devious bastard. Yet, leaving that behind, he hadn't managed to reach the place that presumably Gary and most of these other boys were practising to get to, where you knew all the practical social rules and could apply them to your advantage. He felt as if he didn't fit anywhere, didn't seem to know what position he was supposed to be playing, might never know what the score was when the final whistle blew.

When it blew for the end of Gary's game, he was glad. Gary's team had won three–two.

‘Shake hands! Shake hands!' Gary's Company Leader shouted unnecessarily.

All the boys were shaking hands anyway. John approved
in theory of the idea that they should. But the formality with which they did it seemed to him false, an adult imposition on their natural reactions, like a bow-tie on a tee-shirt. As they came off the field, some parents joined them on the walk back to the clubhouse.

‘Well played, Freddie. Well played!'

John settled for gently slapping the back of Gary's head as he passed and Gary's right hand hinted at a wave of acknowledgement. It was their relationship in miniature: affection inhibited by circumstances. As John waited for Gary to come back out, he wondered if Katherine had told the children that the divorce had been finalised. He thought that she must have told them. But in the car he glanced at Gary and wondered.

‘What did you think, Dad?' Gary asked.

‘You played well, son.'

‘Made a mess of that corner.'

‘The wind was deceptive. What did Helenio Herrera say?'

The name of the famous football manager was their private joke about the Company Leader.

‘He's daft. Know what he said? “You didn't die for the jerseys.” You'd think it was the World Cup.'

John agreed with Gary but the distance in years between them made that agreement strange. At Gary's age, John would have taken the Company Leader seriously. He would have wanted to die for the jerseys. Gary's perspective on things disconcerted him, as it often did.

‘Gary. Your mother's told you about the divorce?'

‘Uh-huh.'

Gary had been fiddling with the glove compartment. He took out a sheet of petrol stamps and studied them like a philatelist.

‘How do you feel about that?'

‘Doesn't make any difference to us, does it?'

‘No, that's right.'

‘Well.'

‘Any word of the other house yet?'

‘Not yet. Mum says there's plenty of time. We don't have to move out of this one for a while.'

Gary seemed calm. John didn't want to disturb that calmness. He didn't say anything else till they pulled up at the door.

‘Thanks, Dad. So when will I see you? We've got a game on Saturday.'

BOOK: Walking Wounded
10.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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