âIt's true,' says a woman from the WI stand who has come to both retrieve her plate and butt in. As her eyes convey, she is alert to the thieving potential of the dark visitor, Liz or no Liz. âThe midwife left me alone in the labour room for an hour so she could go and have a sandwich with the ward sister. Corned beef and salad cream, with some jelly off the dinner trolley for afters. I'll never forget it.'
Maternity anecdotes make him feel ever more the foreign newcomer. Genteel china-clinked laughter. Liz doubles up more exuberantly than the others as if to hastily close what should never be opened up before a son-in-law, leaving him enlightened but bemused. When they have finished, the woman is quick to snatch back the plate.
âYou should talk to your wife about these things. Make sure you're looking after her,' Liz says gently, giving him the good sense that a stupid boy needs. âSamuel was very good with me when I was going through that. I think that's why they invented marriage: so you can make someone sweat in the middle of the night besides yourself.'
He always thought it was only Sam who made bad jokes to detract from his discomfort. He is wrong. There has never been any antagonism towards Liz, she is too benign for that, but something in what she says, a generosity, warms him towards her in a way he has never considered before. That she can be confided in like a friend. He suddenly feels protective towards her, ready to stand up to Sam the next time she is bullied or shown the slightest impatience; as if this can make up for over three years of indifference and complicity in Puppa's scathing opinion of her.
âQuiet as a mouse Englishwoman who enjoys playing the little wife.'
Puppa is a bastard in his judgements, and no matter how hard he tried to shake it, the description stuck. Sticks.
Claud should be treated the same way, like a friend who is ready to hear anything, any confession of failings. Is that not the point of husbands and wives? Once you learn to keep things to yourself it becomes a bigger well. Ample enough to hold your secrets. His has become a bottomless pit where worry floats with fear, floats with resentment, floats with dissatisfaction, floats with indecision. Did he do right by either of them, in marrying her? Had he thought hard enough about how their future would be, not the house and the car, but their day-to-day future; whether they could stand to be in the same car together, how they would divvy up the chores, and the outcome of any arguments at the supermarket checkout. All the stuff that is not covered in the non-stop fuck-fest pre-marriage, where cocktails are never bitter, and nothing is dirtied by domesticity. Nothing that can be muted by the detailed lists, footnotes and card indexes of serious wedding day preparation, either.
His has been a three-year period of preparation, of making mistakes and learning to correct them. Of forgetting those lessons and messing up again, before seeking new ways to avoid discord, such as the most recent one: staying out of the house; leaving work and spending half the night listening to music in the car because it made things easier than talking back to hormonal barb wire.
During his introductory lessons to Christianity, the
young reverend coaching him (earnestly and in detail, as if he were counting down to a school exam) remarked with some envy on the freshness of one's early marriage years when everything about each other was still not known. That he would find beautiful mystery in the mundane everyday situations that drove the world. It was a sensible notion that should have stuck with him more than any of the Church teachings if he had not been so caught up with discussing bloody frescos. Even as a child he had always liked a mystery. But there have been three years of mysteries on both their parts and he is tired of it. Tired from not enough sleep, and from this constant process of learning. When do the lessons end? When can they finally settle into their marriage and start to be happy?
There is something resolute in Liz's manner that gives him hope. Claud has Sam's bossiness but in every other way she is Liz's mirror, a time-tunnel to her sixth decade: the slight frame that has thickened with age without turning to fat; the jawline that continues to defy gravity by curving to a gentle point under the mouth; the hair, of a darker copper than her daughter, but still with the same thickness and lustre. He watches her as she playfully creeps up behind Sam and pinches his bum whilst he is in mid-spiel to a group of tourists who have put down their cameras and cakes to listen to a five-minute lecture on local concerns. Sam jumps at the suddenness of the move, at which everyone ham-fistedly stifles giggles, as if this is
some regional theatre being acted out before them. But he remains as is, not turning round once until he has finished his point. There is no need. He recognizes the touch like a fingerprint. So close to him, it is virtually his own. Now their hands are locked, her nestling closer to him, his body slightly curving to accommodate her, and as if connected to the same battery, she too starts to speak on the perils of the proposed centre. Whether husband or wife, one must always be ready to welcome the other and speak with their voice. That is his lesson for today. Amen.
Left to his own devices, he finds himself doing a Sam and wandering alone around the Green. Passing a bench one of the older WI woman calls him to sit down.
âCome and have a rest. Too many children here.'
âYes. Noisy, isn't it? I won't stop, though. I'm walking-off my cake.'
âPeople should only have one each, like they do in China. They're exhausting the planet with these screaming monsters. Some shouldn't have any at all. It's overrated, parenthood.'
He makes several laps as if he is being sponsored for his efforts. At every turn making sure he now avoids the old woman, whose words rattle him, he is drawn to the presence of the pole, no less phallic and authoritative than earlier. If there is any dormant belief left inside he should feel the gifts of pagan fertility bestowed upon him; some tiny seed to convince him that it is worth trying again.
That what they have suffered is a minor hiccup in the history of their future family. His ears close to the sound of bells being jangled from a nearby table, rattling and ringing, an amateur medley to mark the Herald of Spring, where every farm animal and villager is primed and aching to reproduce. Just not them.
He takes refuge in the church. The crowd has begun to leave their activities at the fringes of the Green and converge towards its centre. From the corner of his eye he expects to see the tug-of-war rope being coiled out, and suitable men conscripted into one side or other. Teeth-clenching rivalries between country houses and workmen's cottages have long since lost their validity in the wake of the mass exodus of the late '60s and '70s. Now they are lucky to muster an army fit enough for a game that pits country versus visiting townies or, if the ranks have swelled, the village versus the rest of Sussex.
We are scared of no man! Normans, Saracens, County Councils! We will take all comers!
He hurries past the Green and down the path that leads to the cemetery gates before he is spotted and volunteered. He has taken the bearings of the in-laws, both distracted with other matters; Sam now holding court at the pub steps; Liz helping with the litter patrol. Already his
excuse is mapped out should he be found and questioned: he was taking a long shit in the pub on account of the berry flan.
The church, originally Norman, with Saxon, Victorian, Edwardian and Silver and Golden Jubilee additions, stands at the bottom of the lane overlooking the cemetery, and beyond that, the Green and the pub. The path is a cut-through from one side of the village to the other, one that avoids the worst of the hill; the building itself is a local point of pride, with well-tended gardens and a row of highly polished slatted benches, but otherwise it is ignored bar Sunday ritual. Loved, but hurriedly attended to, like a long-standing pet slowly on its way out.
On previous visits, smug with newfound knowledge, he would take a detour whilst Claud and her parents meandered over misshapen vegetables at the organic market. His head rang as high and clear as that marvellous iron construction in the bell tower, devouring ornamental woodwork; dark, circular hymn tables and coved placards honouring mothers' unions. Relishing the cool air of the chancel; feeling the smoothness of the stonework, and tracing his fingers over the deep-set engraving that adorned it.
The Tudors were ahead of the village's origins by a few hundred years, but everything here is in praise of the rose and more meadow flowers, as if, drunk on the beauty of the Downs, the stonemasons felt an obligation to incorporate the bucolic landscape within worship.
From a succession of furtive visits â a thirty-minute detour when work meetings were booked anywhere off the M25 â he has come to the conclusion that villages most often got the churches that they deserved. Half the reason he converted was not to pray within the sometimes handsome, but often utilitarian red-brick boxes of the modern towns. He appreciated a beautifully embroidered kneeler, but did not approve of an array of soft furnishings scattered across pews, or worse, rows of richly upholstered chairs in red or hunting-green gauze that smelt depressingly similar to the municipal furniture of conference centres or service stations. The no-nonsense stained-glass, thrifty in spirit and lacking in decoration, suited those streets lined with post-war semis and their Tudor gables and tightly paved driveways.
He can never admit to Ma and Puppa that it is architectural snobbery that has convinced him of a specific Christ, hardily worshipped from such taken-for-granted splendour as here. If Claud's family had come from Milton Keynes he would have put up more of a fight, found a way to argue out of converting; treating the cultural clash like a structured debate with reasons for and against. There would be no emotional element, no epiphany or pull from his guts to illustrate his mindset; just blatantly taking advantage of those who disagreed with each other on how strength of belief should be measured.
Often he comes here, bored, angry, though those feelings never linger for long; not when there is so much to look at. Put him anywhere holy and he has the eyes of a newborn, constantly registering and filtering the surroundings.
It was the very serious curate leading his conversion who was to blame, developing his studied appreciation for something that had previously been passed off as a curiosity. A cursory forty minutes was spent at each class checking that he had done his homework. The remainder of the ninety minutes was taken with a series of antique art books with enlarged colour plates.
Christopher's subject of interest was Russian icons. Probably the closest he would get to camp, he thought, during their discussions on religious art. English and Italian Formalists versus ostentatious works composed almost entirely in gilt. Now, as is usual, his attention is first taken with the imposing painted cross suspended at the head of the altar, a surprisingly Catholic touch for so English a village. A Norman souvenir, it stands five foot by three; a pleasingly severe depiction of sufferance and benediction. Austerity aside, as perhaps a reflection of their being in the country, lush and lazily bountiful, he looks for the slightest smirk across Christ's tight lips.
None of you have it hard the way I do.
Many times he has sat in the twelfth pew â further enough away from the door to deflect conversation with
flower-changing busybodies, and the nearest he can get to fully appreciate the crucifix in all its severe, glossy detail without craning his neck. Sat open-mouthed, like stone, willing the one who died for our sins to absorb his petty frustrations: a sore cock and balls from Claud's shagging schedule; wanting to spend his weekends anywhere else other than a village tucked into the hills.
There were certain pictures of Shiva, Ganesh, and Lord Krishna that had the same effect up in Leicester, but he had never shared this with his parents. There, worship was domestic, visiting temples something that was done while in India or during the bigger festivals. His experience of home worship was all backroom incense, and pins and needles from sitting an hour cross-legged.
Ma and Puppa would often equate the rolled eyes and the sulking at having to put aside the bike, computer game, long-planned dalliance with a girl to his godlessness. It was not the act he was fighting, more a sense of suffocation; his inability to take prayer seriously, when just yards away from the front step he had stubbed out an illicit cigarette the night before, having to creep down at 6 a.m. to scrub it clean for fear of detection. His attention was most often taken with what was directly above his head, his bedroom, which offered a more alluring and pleasurable array of distractions. (His temple was under the duvet. It was the same for all the lads in his class.)
Up until he married his experience of life was cramped. Home: small rooms; university halls: small rooms; rented studio: small room; first one-bedroom flat: small, low rooms. The spatial dimensions of the church are what hook him. The fact that he can sink into the pew and feel insignificant and no longer aware of himself; so taken is he by sensations of fascination and fear. The city temple north of Birmingham gives a similar feeling, but what puts the church forward is the fact that he is often the only person there. Ten minutes alone in there and it becomes his own place; God's House on a temporary let.