Postcards From Berlin (10 page)

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Authors: Margaret Leroy

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BOOK: Postcards From Berlin
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Sinead came across to me, where I was sweeping by the sandpit. “My Daddy needs you,” she said. She took me by the hand, led
me to him. I felt his gaze on me. I was aware how scruffy I was, bare-legged and my feet bare too because of the sand in my
trainers, wearing a short denim sundress I had that only seemed decent on the very hottest days. I saw how his eyes widened.

“Oh. It’s you, ” he said.

I smiled, and noticed how I pushed my fringe away from my face with parted fingers—not exactly deliberately, yet knowing that
the sunlight would shine through my hair.

“I’m so grateful for everything you’ve done for Sinead,” he said. His eyes holding me, speculating. “She thinks the world
of you.”

I smiled, shrugged a little, not knowing what to say.

“We could go and have an ice cream, perhaps,” he said. “You and me and Sinead.”

“I haven’t finished clearing up,” I said.

He waited, sitting on one of the little walls with Sinead. Even without looking, I felt his eyes on me.

We went out to the street, to his car. It was big but not ostentatious. Inside, it smelled of leather, a rich, complicated
male smell, like whiskey or cigars; the smell excited me, filled me with a sense of astonishment about what was happening
to me that was like a sexual high. The engine had a velvet sound, and cool air lifted my skirt.

We went to a café in Fulham Road and sat in the window. He bought ice creams, chocolate for Sinead, pistachio for me, served
in glittery glasses with silver spoons. I ate hungrily — I was always hungry then — scraping every last sweet drop from the
glass. Richard drank black coffee. Sitting so close, I saw how much older he was than me, his face quite worn, a web of lines
at the corners of his eyes.

Sinead finished first. She knelt up on her chair with her back to us and leaned against the window, looking out into the street.

“Could you have dinner with me?” he asked, his voice hushed so she wouldn’t overhear.

I laughed a little. “Today?”

He nodded. He didn’t laugh.

“In this dress?” I said, feeling all bare legs and bare shoulders.

“I like the dress,” he said.

We went back to his flat to leave Sinead with the nanny. It was in a cobbled mews where cars like his were parked between
tubs of geraniums; inside, there were shiny antique tables and curtains with fringed heavy pelmets and a mantelpiece of pale
marble with an overmantel mirror in a gilded frame. It was polished and perfect, but somehow too quiescent, with the closed-off
feel of houses where everything is covered in dust sheets — in spite of Sinead, who moved through these elegant spaces as
though she were a trespasser, leaving only small marks of her presence: a toppling pile of picture books, a single butterfly
painting stuck to the bathroom door. His ex-wife, I sensed, was a powerful woman. There was a feeling of absence about the
place, as though some vital energy had been withdrawn. I saw so clearly then how Sinead had been rendered mute by her going.
Yet there were many lovely things there; he showed me botanical drawings, Doulton, African carvings.

“I’m quite acquisitive,” he said, “as you’ll discover.” Talking as men sometimes will, as though it was already decided. “When
I see something beautiful, I want to make it mine.”

On the low table in the window there were three Chinese vases patterned with birds and mountains and sprigs of blossom, light
and lovely; the pictures in a way like children’s drawings, simple with flat perspective, yet at the same time somehow old
and wise. There was one that was all blue — distant blue hills, and clouds, and cherry trees that grew by a river, and a narrow
bridge with three little figures crossing over toward the cherry trees: They were hunched like people who’ve been on a long,
hard journey, they had conical hats, one had a parasol. And I thought, I am like them: I am walking across the water toward
the blossoming shore.

He took me to a restaurant called Mon Plaisir, with red checked tablecloths and baskets with several different kinds of bread
and louche waiters who spoke only minimal English. It was chic but casual; my denim dress felt fine. I took ages to decide
what I would eat. This amused him.

“You choose so carefully,” he said.

“I want it to be perfect,” I said. And looked across at him and saw how much he liked that.

We had steak and champagne, and he told me about himself, his work, his parents, his childhood at a repressive boarding school.
And he told me about Sara, his ex-wife: how it had started going wrong a long way back, how independent she’d been, how she
hadn’t had time for Sinead, how they’d scarcely ever made love since Sinead was born. This had made him unhappy. Sex was pretty
crucial to him, he said, his eyes searching mine. In the end he’d moved out of their bed, slept on the futon in the spare
room. Looking back, it was the most open he’s ever been with me. Perhaps it was easier because we were strangers still, as
people in a railway carriage will share astounding confidences. Then — well into my third glass of champagne — I said, “I
need you to know this now,” and I told him about myself, what I had never before told anyone. Told him about my mother, about
The Poplars, about Pindown: sensing what kind of person he was and what he liked in me — that my vulnerability would be acceptable,
appealing even, to him. That after Sara, who had never seemed to need him, my neediness might be welcome to him. That I might
make him feel he had something to give.

“There’s something so hurt in you,” he said. “I can feel that.” And I thought, Maybe he says that to every woman he wants.
Yet really I didn’t care; it was certainly true for me.

When the dessert arrived and I eyed his greedily, wondering whether the crème brûlée I’d chosen, though silkily delicious,
could really compete with the clafouti with frosted blueberries on his plate, he reached across and fed me some of his portion
with his spoon. Watching me, his gaze moving across my mouth and my eyes. It was the nearest he’d come to touching me.

He drove me back to the flat in Garratt Lane. He didn’t kiss me.

The next week he invited me out again. He told me he didn’t much like the dress I was wearing — it was the only other dress
I possessed, ankle length and lackluster, from the bargain rail at C&A — and he took me to a hushed boutique off Sloane Square
and bought me another. It was in a rather obvious style, strappy, made of silk, but the color was wonderful and subtle, red
with a blackish bloom, like mulberries.

The third week we went again to Mon Plaisir.

“Sinead is with her mother tonight,” he said, his eyes holding mine. “We could have coffee at my flat. Would you like that?”

I nodded; I understood.

We drove there in silence. I wondered how it would be. I worried that he saw something almost virginal in me, something that
was an illusion, a kind of innocence — a product, perhaps, of my diffidence and rounded open face and ignorance of the urbane
world he inhabited — that he would therefore be disappointed in me.

He took me into the living room.

“I’ve bought you something,” he said.

It was in a long thin box. I felt unsure: I’d never been out with the kind of man who buys you jewelry. But he’d chosen well;
it was easy to be pleased. It was charming, a silver chain with a stone the color of cornflowers. I had no way of knowing
what kind of gem it was. Precious stones were a mystery to me then, like Rolexes or makes of car or expensive bottles of wine.

“It’s beautiful,” I said, and made to put it on.

“Wait,” he said. And, when I looked at him quizzically, “I want it to be perfect.” As I’d said in the restaurant, taking care
over my choice.

“Come here,” he said. He stood me in front of him, in front of the overmantel mirror. I thought he was finally going to kiss
me. He put his hands very lightly on my shoulders, turned me to face the mirror, started to ease the straps of my dress down
off my shoulders.

“Someone might come in,” I said.

He pushed the front of the dress down over my breasts, doing it very slowly, in this concentrated way, yet scarcely touching
me, so I felt only the slight brush against my skin of the warm tips of his fingers.

“No one will come in,” he said.

I saw how my face looked older, more knowing, in the lamplight. I tried to help him undo my zip. He moved my hand away.

When he’d taken off all my clothes, he took the pendant and fastened it, still standing behind me, watching us—in the mirror.
I seemed somehow more naked with the chain around my throat. The metal was cold against my skin, and I felt a quick, taut
shock of desire. Though I had done so many things, some of them things I now regretted, with men who’d fucked me hastily in
cars or riskily in public places or with their wives downstairs, I felt the shock and thrill of it so keenly. It was, I think,
the sense of exposure, him looking at me and taking me in so completely, when we had as yet no sexual connection, when he’d
scarcely touched me.

He looked at me for a long time. Then he lifted up my hair and kissed the back of my neck above the clasp of the pendant,
still watching me in the mirror, and pulled me down and made love to me on the rug in front of the fireplace. And it was good,
but more ordinary then, as with other men, pleasant but predictable.

Chapter 11

W
E WENT TO VENICE
for our honeymoon. His choice; I loved it coo. It was so beautiful — like walking through a fairy tale, at once enchanting
and confusing, so I never quite knew where we were. It was almost as though the patterning of the streets and alleyways changed,
shifted from day to day, from hour to hour, so that what this morning had felt familiar, this afternoon, in a new light —
gray, with mist coming in from the lagoon, and sad with the cries of seabirds — started to seem strange. Alone, I’d have been
permanently lost, needing a pocketful of pebbles or a ball of white wool to trail behind me, marking out my path. But Richard
could invariably find our way, and I let him take over, take charge: liking this, that I could be so dependent, that I didn’t
have to struggle.

Our hotel room looked out on the Ponte della Liberta. The room was wide, high ceilinged, as though devised for people much
larger than me. There was a bed, vast as adult beds seem to a child, a long mirror, a padded window seat, and out the window
the shimmer and lilt of the water.

Our days fell into a pattern. In the morning we’d wander the city, exploring some mossy basilica of a church or walking beside
the canals, where the little waves lapped at the steps of the crumbling palaces, stuccoed dull pink or purple like rotting
fruit. After lunch in some hushed restaurant, we’d go back to our room and he’d take off my clothes and make love to me on
the window seat, so if the curtain moved in the breeze I worried we might be visible from the street. And at night we’d make
love in the big bed, and again perhaps at three or four, when the yowling of cats woke us.

As a lover he was sure, quiet, definite: a man who knew his mind, who never spoke except to say what he wanted. But now that
we were married and away from the flat where he’d lived with Sara, I found him less reserved, more adventurous. Or perhaps
it was something to do with the staginess of Venice itself, the self-consciousness it inspired, so even the most intimate
act seemed to require extravagant props, red ropes or velvet handcuffs, and to be acted out with a certain panache, as though
for a secret audience. I was very willing, and intrigued, and he never hurt me. But it wasn’t quite how I’d imagined marriage.
I’d thought this kind of thing was for mistresses, not wives. That marriage was a safer, quieter place — that it wouldn’t
have quite this urgency, nor all this apparatus of desire.

He liked to buy me things. I wanted a souvenir, so in a little dark shop by the Rialto, where everything smelled of the fish
market, he bought me the masks that hang now on our wall. But mostly he bought me clothes or jewelry: a filmy dress, pearl
earrings, silver chains, and a long fringed scarf of white silk with a pattern like frost on a window. When we made love he
liked to see me in the things he’d

bought me: the silver chains he twisted round my ankles or wrists when he made love to me in front of the long mirror, and
the white silk scarf he sometimes liked to tie around my mouth.

The sex — the memory of it, the anticipation — was always there, so the smell of him seemed to permeate my skin. Yet in some
ways we were almost formal still. There were subjects that were closed between us: We never talked again about his marriage
to Sara or my childhood. Mostly we talked about art or classical music; he knew a lot and taught me, and I liked that. Sometimes
I looked at him and felt I scarcely knew him. Yet mostly it was happy, and we were at ease with each other.

On our last day, we had our first disagreement, and about something so trivial. We were in a café near St. Mark’s, sipping
coffee from tiny gold-rimmed cups, when I was aware of him watching a woman at the next table. She wore high strappy heels,
a dress that was tight and shiny. She was perhaps fifty-five, and plump: She bulged in her glossy clothes. As she got up to
go, he raised his eyebrows at me, made a disparaging gesture.

“What’s wrong?” I asked, a little sharply.

“Old women shouldn’t dress like tarts,” he said.

“I thought she was just fine,” I said. “She was enjoying those clothes, enjoying her life.” There was an edge to my voice.
“Why shouldn’t she wear what she wants?”

He looked across at me, surprised. Then he patted my arm. “Darling, why does it matter so much?”

I smiled apologetically, feeling I’d been overemotional, getting too upset, as women will. “Well, it doesn’t, really.” Wanting
to seal this crack, to make it all as it was.

But I didn’t like what he’d said. I thought, I too will be old one day.

On our way back to the hotel, he must have taken a wrong turn; the street grew narrower, the houses almost meeting overhead.
Washing lines were stretched across the street with washing hanging from them, and we could hear what sounded like a Western
on someone’s television. We came to a dead end, a promontory with water on three sides. Opposite us over the water was a tall,
strange house, each window with a window box, but nothing much grew in them, no flowers, just a few plants, herbs, mostly,
straggling, untidy. There were little plastic windmills stuck in the earth in each window box, like the windmills that children
stick in sand castles, yet they didn’t quite have the cheeriness of toys. They were all yellow but in many different shapes,
a star, a flower, a sickle moon, and others less obvious, serrated, sharp, like parts of a great machine. The shadow of the
house reached out across the water and over to where we stood. Where the sun was shut out, the canal looked different. Without
all the surface flicker and luminescence, you saw how dirty the water was, how full of mud and rubbish.

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