Authors: Rupert Thomson
Moses groaned inside.
âHave you two met?' Margaux asked.
âI don't believe I've had the pleasure,' Paul Newman said.
I don't believe you ever will, you bastard, Moses thought. The American had a pleasant transatlantic drawl and, for a moment, Moses wished he had brought Vince along. He would have enjoyed watching Vince toss a glass of champagne in that pleasant American face.
âThis is Moses,' Margaux was saying. âMoses, this is Tarquin.'
Tarquin?
Jesus.
âHave you seen Gloria?' Moses asked.
Neither of them had. Not recently, anyway.
âIt's very important.' He looked round, as much to avoid further conversation as anything else.
Ronald stumbled past, ash on his tie, flies undone. He had stuck the vodka bottle in his trouser pocket. It swung against his hip like a six-gun with no bullets in the chamber. Phoebe and Prince Oleander still hadn't reappeared. They were probably still fucking in the shrubbery (one day my prince will come). Violet de Light, who had seen her husband stroking Margaux's hand on the patio, had captured Romeo and was pawing him in a desperate last-ditch attempt to arouse her husband's jealousy. Raphael de Light, the publisher, knew Romeo was gay. He wriggled with amusement in the kitchen doorway. John Dream was quietly taking his leave of Heather who, turning back into the room, caught Moses's roving eye and came towards him.
âMoses, are you enjoying yourself?'
âIt's a wonderful party. Tell me. Have you seen Gloria anywhere?'
âThe poor boy's desperate,' Margaux said.
You cunt, Moses thought, and smiled pleasantly. He began to look round the room again. For a blunt instrument this time. Margaux drifted serenely out of range.
ââ I don't know where she is,' Heather was saying. She pushed her hair back from her forehead with spread fingers. An expensive smell circled her left wrist like a bracelet.
Moses felt a wave of nausea well up inside him. His body started moving up and down, up and down, a smooth well-oiled movement, almost pistonlike. The sweep of Heather's hair became a part of this. The smell of her perfume too. He didn't dare look at her.
ââ she could be anywhere â '
He heard her voice through a buzz of interference. The air between them had broken up into patches of black and white. He hoped to Christ he wasn't going to pass out. Not in Hampstead. He hoped with a desperation
which, if anything, made it seem more likely to happen.
âGot to go to the bathroom.' Hardly able to move his lips. Mouth heavy, hydraulic. And he could see the sound waves his voice made looping out towards her. Loch Ness monsters made of words, of frequencies. There was a look of concern on her face, he thought, but it was like a bad television picture. All snow. No, bigger than snow. Black gaps between the flakes.
â â first on the right at the top of the stairs â '
He thanked her.
All the way to the bathroom he seemed to be falling. He locked the door and dropped to the floor.
*
Time passed.
Slowly â reluctantly, it seemed to Moses â the nausea withdrew, the pistons ceased. He lifted his head. Marble surfaces. Gold fittings. Plants. In the centre of the room, a sunken bath. Roman-style. He reached over, turned on the taps. There was great wealth in their smooth tooled action, in the instant power they released. He listened to the crash of water on enamel as Chinese philosophers once listened to crickets. He drifted into calm stretches of contemplation. Mr and Mrs Wood must have extraordinary problems, he thought, to own a bathroom as magnificent as this. He would write a book one day. He would call it
The Bath â A Definitive Study.
Something serious like that. There would be glossy colour plates shot by you-know-who and an introduction written by somebody distinguished. He could already see the press reviews:
â It is not easy to find words to describe the joy, the delight, the passion which Mr Highness evokes â
Publisher's Weekly
â I was held spellbound. Mr Highness is clever, very clever, and immensely entertaining â
Sunday Telegraph
â Memories came flooding back. Enthralling â
Woman
â Exhibits a wonderfully dry sense of humour throughout â
Times Literary Supplement.
Fame beckoned. Fan-mail. Royalties. He would have enough money to fly to America and look for another Highness. He might even appear on the Michael Parkinson show.
As he left the bathroom he heard a sigh of ecstasy and, turning round, saw Margaux and Mr de Light (his future publisher maybe!) breaking from a surreptitious drunken clinch.
âMy Raphael,' Margaux murmured. âMy priceless Raphael.'
âMein Kampf,' whispered Mr de Light, erudite even in desire.
Moses didn't know how long he had spent on the bathroom floor, but
the party, he was glad to see, was obviously still in full swing.
Moses slipped across the landing and down the stairs. There had been a few departures, he learned. Violet de Light had stalked off in a huff. Christian Persson had gone to Heaven (he wanted to check out London nightlife). Phoebe and her tanned tennis-player had taken leave of the Woods (and the bushes) and sped off in a white Golf GTI convertible. Ronald had departed too, but only into unconsciousness. He lay in the garden, his face a mask of masochistic agony, the casualty of too much jealousy and vodka. Alcohol had also transformed the Very Reverend Cloth. He towered over Lottie von Weltraum, two fingers raised, the other two tucked into the palm of his hand, like the pope. He was telling her that he would like to talk to Derek about unnatural acts. But Derek was in the bathroom with Romeo, performing one. Moses knew. He had watched them go in together. Then, finally, he saw Gloria. She was standing in the Picasso alcove. Talking to Paul Newman. Moses walked over.
âHello, Gloria.'
âHello.' Without actually moving at all, she seemed to shrink from him. Perhaps to fill the silence, she said, âHave you met Tarquin?'
âYes,' he said. âWhere've you been? I've been looking for you everywhere.'
âIs that what you were doing in the bathroom for an hour? Looking for me?'
Moses stared at her.
âAre you all right now, Moses?' Tarquin asked.
Moses swung round. âNone of your business, Paul.'
The American smiled. âMy name's Tarquin.'
âWell, you look like a Paul to me.'
Gloria pushed Moses away into the corner. âWhy are you being so weird tonight?'
âI'm not being weird. This is weird.' He waved a hand in the air to indicate the room, the house, the party. âYou're from a different world, Gloria. I don't know where I'm from, but I don't think it's somewhere like this. In fact, I know it isn't.'
âWhat's that supposed to mean?'
Moses pressed his fingers into his eyes. âI don't know.'
Things had begun to drift away from him again. He was travelling backwards on a slow roller-coaster. Voices sounded distant and cramped, like voices on the telephone, and even his dislike for Paul Newman was being sucked back into a past that was vague, gelatinous, irrelevant.
He looked down at Gloria. Her eyebrows told him that it was time to go home.
âI ought to be going,' he murmured.
She nodded.
They found Mrs Wood adjusting her hair in the full-length mirror by the door.
âThank you for the wonderful party,' Moses said. He took her hand in his, bent over it, and touched it with his lips. For one awful moment he thought he was going to be sick on it, but the spasm passed and he straightened up again, pale but undisgraced.
âLovely to meet you,' she said. âI hope we'll see you again.'
âI like you,' Moses said.
She smiled. âI like you too, Moses.'
âI'll see you out,' Gloria said.
In the night air Moses felt better. âDid I really kiss your mother's hand?' he asked Gloria.
âOnly just,' she said. âI mean, you nearly missed.'
They both began to laugh. Softly, privately, for different reasons.
Moses leaned back against the voluptuous white curve of the staircase. âYou see, you never told me your parents lived in a spaceship.'
âMoses, you're very drunk.'
âAnd you, Gloria, are very beautiful.'
âAre you sure you can drive?'
âI'll be all right.'
âMaybe I should call you a cab.' She was trying very hard to be stern with him. âDo you want a cab?'
âNo, I'm all right. Really. My motor skills are unimpaired. Look.' And very carefully, like someone mounting a butterfly, he leaned over and placed a kiss on Gloria's lips.
It was nice, so he did it again. Doing it for longer didn't seem to make it any less nice. Though this time it was a little less like someone mounting a butterfly, perhaps.
He ran down the stairs and his voice hovered in the air behind him.
âRemember, you're singing. Thursday.'
*
The posters had been up since the beginning of the week â bold black letters on a dayglo orange background: HOLLY WOOD. THE BUNKER. THURSDAY JUNE 26 10 PM â and by nine-thirty on Thursday night many of the tables had been taken. Moses sat in a dark corner and glanced across at Gloria. She was discussing something with her pianist. It was extraordinary how interesting she made the dance-floor seem just by
standing on it. He had wanted to wish her luck again, but by the time he had ordered another brandy and returned to his table she was already up on stage. She had her usual band. Only the saxophonist, Malone, was new; he stood to one side, facing away from the audience, wearing a brown coat that buttoned all the way from his ankles to his throat. Gloria had chosen a shimmery pink dress this evening â to go with the building, she had told Moses earlier. She had backcombed her hair into a mass of spun black candy-floss. A fringe hid the time her eyebrows were telling. One hand on the microphone, she turned, said something to the guitarist. Moses's heart did a swift drumroll. He still couldn't adjust to the sight of her performing. This public Gloria was always an apparition out of nowhere for him, some exotic derivation of the girl he knew, smiled at, slept with. It made him dizzy to feel himself slipping into the objectivity he saw in other people's eyes when they watched her sing.
But there she was, spotlit now, one hand shading her eyes.
âI'm going blind up here,' came her voice, husky, echoing above the hiss of the PA. âCould someone do something?'
The lights dimmed. The buzz of the audience cut out as if a plug had been pulled.
âThanks.' A quick smile, and then simply, âMy name's Holly and this one's for Moses â '
It was one of those songs where the voice sets out alone and the instruments creep in after a verse or two, discreetly, one by one, like people arriving late at a theatre. A brave way to open, Moses thought, still feeling the glow that her surprise dedication had given him. He had only heard her sing twice before, but it seemed to him that she was singing better than ever tonight. There was an edge to her voice, even when she softened it, that cut into the silence of the audience, left marks to prove it had been there. People would walk out talking about her.
As the first song faded into brushwork and random piano, applause flew towards the stage on great clattering wings. Moses suddenly imagined Gloria ducking, her hands thrown up around her ears. He was too preoccupied with this vision of his to clap. Or to notice that Elliot had slipped into the vacant seat beside him.
*
âWhat's up, Judas?'
Moses jumped. âElliot. How long've you been there?'
âNot long.'
âWant a drink.'
âI've got one.'
âSo what's new?' Moses had meant nothing by the question, but he watched it hook something big in Elliot.
Elliot's head lifted. âAre you in any kind of trouble?'
Moses looked blank. âNot so far as I know.'
âWhat I mean is, are you in any kind of trouble with the police?'
Moses grinned.
âI'm serious.' Elliot moved his shoulders inside his jacket. He tipped some brandy into his mouth, swallowed, and bared his teeth. âLast Saturday I had a visitor. It was right after you drove off in your car. He wanted to know if you lived here. He knew your name.'
âWho was he?'
âI don't know. He was a big bastard. Wore one of those old check jackets that look like a dog's thrown up on it. I reckon he was a copper. Plainclothes.'
âWhat makes you think that?'
Elliot leaned back, pushed his empty glass around on the table. âYou get to recognise the smell. Something about them. And
that
bloke, I smelt it on him right away.'
âSo what did you tell him?'
âI didn't tell him nothing. I told him to fuck off. Then he hit me.'
Moses's eyes opened wide. âWhat d'you mean he hit you?'
âHe fucking hit me. Right in the guts. Took me by surprise, didn't he.'
Elliot drained his glass.
Moses was up to the bar and back again with two brandies like a man on elastic.
âThat was the other thing,' Elliot said. âThe way he hit me, right? One, blokes like that, they don't go around hitting people, not unless something's really getting on their tits. Two, he knew how to hit. I mean, he had a punch. There was muscle under that jacket. Technique too. He was a copper all right. No question.'
Elliot turned towards the stage. He registered no emotion or feeling of any kind. His mind had travelled somewhere else. It had left his face vacant, the bolts drawn, the power switched off at the mains. He was looking at Gloria, but he wasn't seeing her at all.
After a minute or two Moses said, âSo you don't know what this bloke wanted?'
âHe wanted you,' Elliot said, without taking his eyes off the stage.