Read Recovery and the Return of Ethan Hart Online
Authors: Stephen Benatar
“Remembering things,” I said, “will be to go on experiencing them! To go on reliving them! For ever!”
He offered no reply.
There ensued a further short silence.
“And bearing in mind that you did mislead me,” I observed, “are the terms you've mentioned utterly non-negotiable?”
“Utterly.”
Contained in that question had been a degree of humour which he clearly hadn't recognized. My tears began to well. I fought furiously to stem them.
“Yet if it's any consolation,” he remarked, “I can add that every thousand years or so you'll have the slate wiped clean.”
“Oh, thank you!” I said. “Every thousand years? What a remarkable selling point; you should have introduced it earlier!” (My natural aggressivenessâ¦perhaps accentuated, because of those ruddy tears. I knew it wasn't appropriate. Basically, he was my benefactor. Basically, he was my friend. But all the same⦠Well, I ask you!) “Every
hundred
years⦠Every
thousand
years⦠Can't you think in anything but round figures?”
“Maybe I can,” he concededâfrankly, more gentle than I would ever have expected. “So let's amend it a little. Every thousand years,
more or less
. How's that? One lifetime in ten. But the key factor isâ¦on those occasions you won't have any memories left at all. It'll feel as if you're starting out totally afresh.”
“Just one in ten! I shall go crazy!”
“That's up to you,” he said. “You might go sane.”
I steadied myself.
Took a deep breath.
“Couldn't we make it one in seven?”
“No.”
But then he laughed again.
“I can respect the haggling,” he said. “It's the whining I don't take to.”
He placed his hand upon my shoulder, gave it a squeeze. Nobody in over half a century had done anything that simple or so suggestive of friendship.
“You're right,” I said. “You're right. I wouldn't take to any of the whining, either. âWhat an ingrate!' I would say. âDoesn't he know when he's well off?'”
I added quickly:
“So couldn't we make it one in
three
?”
It was a universal wheeze. He was meant to say:
One in three
;
a moment ago it was one in seven
!
Oh, very well, I suppose we'll have to split the difference
!
One in five
!
That, anyhow, would have been something.
Because one lifetime in ten! Ridiculous! And every lifetime lasting a hundred years! Ridiculous! Hadn't he discovered yet that
all
of human existence was inescapably messy? What about seventy-three-and-a-half, or thirty-nine, or fifty-five, or even eighty-six-and-three-quarters? Eh?
“Well, that all depends,” he said.
16
I remember the night the Regent closed. At least I was more understanding the second time around. About the way my father felt. The end of an era. An era only fourteen years oldâfor
him
âbut the cinema business was changing: all bingo now, soon to be bowling (soon to be Iceland). For the final week he would have liked to show a selection of classic movies, a fresh double programme for each of the six days, but for some reason it wasn't possible. He ended up with
Carry On Nurseâ
I think the second in the seriesâand an Audie Murphy western. Good popular stuff, of course, but even then the last performance wasn't well attended. As the main feature was approaching its end Dad took up his position in the foyer, just as he'd done for practically every final performance of the day since 1945; only, his demob suit of the first years had been replaced, as soon as coupons allowed, first by one dinner jacket and then by another. My father wasn't a handsome man but he looked distinguished in his dinner suit, it gave him an air, and he always seemed a little like the squireâno, there was nothing of condescension in itâmore like mine host seeing his guests off at the end of what he trusted had been a good evening. He felt personally responsible. If someone occasionally told him he thought the programme had been rotten, a total waste of time, it genuinely distressed my dad, even if it didn't altogether surprise him; he always hoped, even with the poorest pictures, that some sort of alchemy might be occurring in the darkness and all his patrons would emerge in a glow, feeling that the world was truly a better place. Poor Dad. In some ways it was his whole life, the enjoyment of those groups of people underneath his roof for three or four hours at a time. He hated it whenever the projector broke down or the heating system packed up. He really worried about what records should be played before the house lights faded.
The final night was different in one way from all the others: a table was brought into the lobby, a table then set with glasses and bottles of wine and bottles of cream soda. There were cocktail sausages and squares of cheddar cheese, bowls of crisps and nuts, plates of biscuits. He'd hired two hundred wineglasses but realized by the time the main film started that despite all his posters and a message to his patrons in the local press he was going to need hardly a quarter of that number. In the event he didn't need a tenth. People seemed unexpectedly awkward and in a hurry to get away, like worshippers slipping out of church by a side entrance in order to avoid the vicar. The modest party he'd envisaged (I knew he had prepared a speech) had turned into a mere sprinkling of embarrassed customers and stilted conversation and unhappy silences. Even Doris the usherette and Mrs Wilson at the box office had both made excuses, one to do with her own health, one to do with her mother's, and the projectionist was a kind man but very shy and he too asked if he could possibly cry off. Both the Shipmans and the Kings had declared that, regretfully, they couldn't come.
So it fell to my mother and me to help Dad through as best we could. Mum got the giggles.
In fact she was almost drunk. Knowing the quantities of wine which wouldn't be required she had slipped downstairs much earlier than was necessary.
She looked very pretty in her red dress and black heels. Always much fairer than my father or me, she had recently lightened her hair still more and it suited her. She called it her Grace Kelly look.
Fifty-five years ago I had been as merry as her and giggled every bit as much. I had ended the evening by suddenly being sick and not even getting to the lavatory. (And my father, bless him, had never uttered one single word of reproach.) This time I went easy on the wine and tried to make her do the same. But I proved as unsuccessful here as I'd been in discouraging Dad from holding such a function in the first place. My endeavours to keep her upstairs, entertained by games of gin rummy and silly impersonations and by putting on her favourite records, had only managed to make the matter worse.
“Oh, Ethan, don't be such a spoilsport! You can see how much your father's over-ordered.”
“But it's all on sale or return. We don't have to polish it off.”
“My darling, you should let yourself go a little. I sometimes worry about you, my sweet.”
“Why?”
“I don't know that you always get the fun out of life that you should.”
She hadn't said this the first time.
“Mum, it's been a wonderful life. I'm the happiest man in the world.”
“Sez you!”
She touched the tip of my nose with a forefinger. She was already on her second glass.
“You know what really worries me? I'd hate any son of mine to turn into⦔
Now she dipped her finger into the wine and flicked at me two drops.
“Turn into what, Mum?”
“Oh, but you mustn't be offended! A prigâjust a teensy-weensy bit of a prig! A very little one.” She measured it: about an inch high.
It speaks volumes for my advanced development that I was, in fact, considerably offended.
“The way you seem to hold yourself aloof; to stand on the outside and quietly observe the rest of us. As if in judgment. Only sometimes. It isn't serious. But, Ethanâpromise. We don't want a prig in the family, do we?”
“I promise we don't want a prig in the family do we.” But I couldn't make my voice as light as I had aimed for.
“Oh, and now I have offended him! Come on, drink my health. Then dance a little dance with me. Tell me I'm forgiven.”
“Mum!”
For she had now begun to hum it:
Tell me I'm forgiven, for making you cry
⦠And she had taken my hands and was pulling me back and forth in a grotesque parody of some form of light fantasticâcould it be a quickstep?
“There you are! You see! So stiff. You should unbend. There's nobody watching, nobody passing on the pavement. You could even do a striptease.”
None of this had taken place before.
“Come on. Do a striptease! I feel so absolutely convinced you would strip to advantage! What a long time since I've seen my little boy all bare.”
She retrieved her glass and raised it to me as she swayed in a far more graceful imitation of a dance than when she'd had to propel her lumpish son in front of her.
She winked at me.
“Mum, I'll be right back. Just a minute or two.”
I found my father standing at the rear of the stalls and looking as if he were positively willing his patrons into finding the film funny; assessing the frequency and depth of their laughter in relation to last opportunities. Lost opportunities.
“Dad. Mum's in the foyer getting tight. I think you ought to be there.”
“Your mother? Tight? No!”
“Well, no. Not tight. But well on the way.”
“Oh, let her be. She enjoys her little glass of wine; doesn't often get the chance. And I ordered far more than we need.”
“She won't thank us, thoughâ¦not if we let her make a fool of herself.”
“Baloney,” he said. “It's the last night. It's a celebration. I may well come and get tight, too. To keep her company. You mustn't be a wet blanket.”
Spoilsport. Prig. Judgmental. Wet blanket. All within the space of five or ten minutes. Was that really the image I projected? Perhaps the image I projected wasn't particularly important yet the happiest man in the world now felt remarkably deflated.
I went upstairs to the flat, bypassed the lobby. Sat on my bed and tried to pray but felt too rebellious. Hard done by. Hurt.
Prigs and judges and wet blankets: weren't they far more the types who'd be able to pray?
It was a Saturday. I'd come home this weekend especially for my father's big event, to see whether, having failed to persuade him not to hold it, I could help him improve things in any way. I had bought
A Pictorial History of the Talkies
to present to him at the end of the eveningâor, rather, to leave casually lying on the table by his chairâin appreciation, partly, of that particular act of forbearance he didn't even know about but which had been one of the many kind things I would chiefly remember him for. Tomorrow I'd be returning to Cambridge.
I had stayed on at Cambridge to do an MA. Now, sitting on my bedâand very much in the light of what my parents had just saidâI briefly reviewed my university career. Reviewed my sixth-form days. Reviewed my whole social history. Perhaps I
wasn't
the life and soul of the party but I had never set out to be. Perhaps I
didn't
too often throw back my head to enjoy a really good laugh yet I wasn't that type. I would smile at things and softly chuckle. I hoped that I was fun to be withâalways tried to be a good companion. But in spite of my increased self-confidence, I still had moments of shyness, was still at times a scaredy-cat, although I thought this wasn't obvious. I tended to be serious about life, more so perhaps than I had been in the past, more into politics and world affairs and all that sort of thing, but I wasn't a wet blanket.
Or was I?
People sometimes said, “A degree in
Divinity
? What in heaven's name made you choose
Divinity
?” And I would have to answer lamely that I found it interesting. “But what are you going to do with it? You're surely not planning to enter the Church?” (Few remembered to say âSynagogue'.) “No, no,” I'd reply, “nothing like that. Future still very vague!” But Divinity didn't turn you into a wet blanket.
Did it?
And could I really be judgmental? For twenty years I'd tried to echo John Bradford who in 1550 saw a group of criminals being led away to execution and exclaimed, “There but for the grace of God goes John Bradford!” Besides, I had far too much to remember from my previous existence (as well as having plenty to remember from this one) to be in any position to throw stones. I truly didn't believe I was judgmental.
But prig? I looked it up in the dictionary. A person who is smugly self-righteous and narrow minded. C18: of unknown origin.
Certainly my life was not developing in quite the way I had imagined. I had pictured myself sowing my wild oats, having a swinging sex life well before the Swinging Sixties, going all out for a stage career. I had always envied actorsâ¦those who were constantly in work. I thought I knew my goal.
But I found that what in fact had appealed to me was really the camaraderie of the theatre, the laughter, the sense of belonging, the thought of cutting a figure. I possessed no burning ambition to act. And since there were thousands of others who did, was it then fair to take up room which somebody else would occupy more worthily?
And as for the sex: was it shyness, or the spirit of the nineteen-fifties, or an unwillingness to engage in merely casual encounters? Don Juan no longer seemed a character to emulate.
Yet did this turn me into a prig?
In any case, I told myself. You were what you were. You did your damnedest to avoid the pitfalls. And when you couldn't manage it, it was best that you should know. Clearly.
Then you went on trying.
Full stop.
End of conversation.
I returned downstairs.