Read The Best of Fiona Kidman's Short Stories Online
Authors: Fiona Kidman
Colin stood reading poems aloud to his audience, one hand clutching a sheaf of scruffy paper, the other combing his wavy black hair from his forehead.
Cam sat at the edge of the circle beside the daphne bush, for once
appearing
a little aloof, perhaps because he was older. His hair was held in place by a red and blue bandana, a gingery stubble of beard sprouted on his chin.
Lewis leaned on the railing, listening to Colin, his face working.
â¦
and
so
I
came
to
where
you
slept
touched
the
dreaming
of
your
face
and
knew
your
dreams
were
all
of
me
â¦
âHe's still flogging that,' Lewis said.
Colin's very first published poem. Veronica had been proud when it appeared. âIt's for you,' Colin said, as if she might need reassurance that there was nobody else in his life. People looked at her, knowing she was loved by a poet. Like being the mistress of a king or a president.
âI always liked it,' she said.
âOf course,' Lewis said, after a pause. His knuckles were white along the edge of the rail. âOf course, so you should. And who's that guy?' He was referring to Cam. The way Colin recited the poem, he looked as if he was speaking directly to Cam.
âOh him, that's Cam McGuire,' Veronica said. âTrust Colin to show off to the newcomer. He's been quite taken up with him.'
âYou should take a firm stand,' Lewis said violently.
Veronica was surprised at his vehemence. Hers was a passing remark. Perhaps Lewis really was jealous. She remembers the tremor of shock she felt, the way something was being said, and not said.
âIt's the artist's life, I guess,' Veronica sighed, pushing aside her discomfort. âHe's doing so well, what am I supposed to say? Well, you can't expect him to
live just like you, Lewis.' If there was something prissy about the way she said this, she didn't care. Lewis didn't have the right.
Chalk and cheese the two men used to boast. But the elements were falling apart.
âI get tired of the chip on his shoulder. It's time he grew up.'
Cam stood up on a signal from Colin. He had brought his bagpipes with him.
âYou're not going without saying hullo, are you?'
âYou tell him from me,' Lewis said, as he left, the opening strains of âAmazing Grace' in his wake.
Veronica and Colin were invited to visit Cam and Morag. They had begun to think they might not be asked, although it didn't bother Veronica. Now that she had Katie, visiting was like an interruption to the daily flow of happiness she felt. Katie preoccupied her night and day. Every fold of her dimpled skin, the beginnings of a smile, the extraordinary scent of her, like ripe pears, absorbed her. Her secret little thought: I don't need history, I've made it. There was nothing she would not do for this miracle.
The invitation was for Sunday lunch, although Cam called it their âdinner'. Their flat was a square one-bedroom box with blankets thrown over the chairs. There was no sign of Morag. âShe's late back from her shift at the hospital,' Cam said. âI don't expect her to be long.'
Cam produced some beer. Veronica, who was breastfeeding, drank tap water. He put on a record, Brailowsky playing Chopin's âPolonaises' plink plink plink, on and on as the afternoon wore on.
âWe wouldn't have come if we'd known Morag was working,' Veronica told Cam, sitting and rocking Katie.
And, later still: âWe would have brought something to eat, something to help out, perhaps we should go now?'
Morag appeared sometime after two, not in her nurse's uniform at all. She wore one of the floral print dresses with puffed sleeves on a band that her mother had made for her trousseau, and a blue cardigan.
As soon as Morag arrived, Veronica saw how she hated them being there. She guessed she was terrified of cooking them a meal. But they were caught, like fish in aspic, until something happened.
Morag refused to be helped. âYou could feed your bairn,' she said, when Veronica offered. Her accent was broader than Cam's, he used his for effect in the classroom, to make his students laugh; hers slipped through, strong in bad moments, of which there seemed to be many.
The meal was served late in the afternoon, a chicken like Morag herself,
pale skinned and scrawny, with blood leaking into the pan juices.
For, Cam said, awkwardly farewelling Veronica and Colin at the gate: âShe's wearing her rags today. Sorry.'
Veronica wanted to slap him (for what? Not starting the meal himself? For trying to explain Morag's unhappiness away like this? Probably for inviting them at all). But she was too tired and unwell to say anything much. The chicken and hard potatoes hadn't agreed with her, and, although she didn't know it for another week or so, she was already pregnant with Sam.
âThank you,' she said, instead.
When they were settled in the car and the motor running, she said, âThat was a disaster.'
âYou would say that, wouldn't you?'
âWell, they're hard work, those two.'
âI guess he can be a bit of a prick,' Colin said. âI might have known.' It sounded like her fault, but it wasn't worth an argument. All the same, he seemed to go off Cam for a while.
âAre you getting enough iron?' Lewis asked in a worried way, the next time he visited. He wasn't Veronica's doctor, she didn't think it was proper, him being a friend, but he fussed over her as if he was.
Lewis sat at the end of the kitchen table, topping and tailing beans, a
tea-towel
spread over his front to protect his cashmere sweater, his slim hands working with methodical surgical precision at his task.
Colin had rung him. âWhere the hell have you been, mate? C'mon over, we've been missing you.' As he said, Lewis couldn't stay away for long. They had drunk their first bottle of wine; Lewis would stay over for the night. It was impossible to imagine that their friendship would ever be disturbed in any serious way.
Colin said: âLewis, you're elected to be Katie's godfather.'
âI thought you didn't believe in that. Religion and superstition, you've said it often enough.'
âWell, this is different. Katie needs a godfather. She needs you.'
Veronica could see the way Colin was casting around for something to give Lewis, an affirmation of their old friendship, a sign that said forgive me. She held her breath, willing Lewis to accept, the old tenderness for them both closing round her heart. She saw them as she did when she first knew them, Lewis, the young doctor; Colin, the scholarship boy still making up his mind what he'd do with his life; two merry devoted friends.
Lewis gave one of his serious, affable smiles. âFine,' he said, âif it's okay with Veronica.'
None of it would last. This was the evening Cam chose to arrive for an unexpected visit, bringing Morag in tow. Veronica was stirring a sauce with her free hand, Katie over her shoulder, when they walked in. Morag was gaunt, her permed hair slicked in greasy ringlets against her head.
âShe's missing her mother,' Cam said, as if Morag wasn't there. âShe needs a bit of family life, that's what I told her.'
âBut this is just wonderful,' Colin cried. âAt last, my two best friends in the world get to meet each other. They must stay for dinner, mustn't they?'
Veronica saw the way Lewis flinched. Cam had brought a bottle of whisky, which he placed on the table between them.
âGlasses, Vronnie, there's a good lass.' He poured drinks all round, even though the others were drinking wine.
When they had eaten, another difficult meal, full of artificial conversation and hesitations (Lewis was totally silent), Veronica sat on the sofa and fed Katie. âD'you want to wind her, Morag? She's been a bit grizzly all day,' Veronica asked, thinking Morag would like that; she nursed children, after all.
âI need a rest from work when I go visiting, thanks very much.' The way she said it offended Veronica. Lewis took Katie instead.
âI'm surprised you got pregnant when you were feeding,' Morag said, in a small mean voice the others weren't meant to hear.
âIt seems to be a contraceptive myth,' Veronica said.
Morag started to cry. She got up from the sofa and went to the bathroom, from where they could hear her sobbing through the wall.
âWhat did I say, Cam?'
âJust homesickness. I tell her she should forget about her mother.' Cam poured more drinks as if he were the host, wanting to hold his place at the centre of things. Lewis covered his glass.
âYou can't just forget about your mother,' remonstrated Veronica, who talked to hers on the phone every day. Morag emerged from the bathroom and sat in the corner of the sitting room, pretending to read Veronica's magazines, but she kept weeping, in a noiseless disconcerting way.
âMusic, we need some music around here,' Colin said, casting around. âWe could do with a bit of boogie.' He dropped a record on, something slow and sentimental.
âShall we dance?' he asked Veronica.
âI'm tired,' she said, feeling that they were all behaving foolishly, and hating the way Lewis was looking at Colin.
âI'll dance with you, laddie,' said Cam. âIf our wives won't dance with us, we'll have to make our own fun.'
She could see how truly drunk they both were. Colin never could drink
spirits. The two men weren't just jiggling around the room, they were slow waltzing, Cam taking the lead, even though he was the shorter.
âPerhaps you could think about bringing your mother out for a visit,' Veronica said to Morag, trying to ignore the men's antics.
Lewis stood up. âI'm going to bed.'
âShe needs some treats to look forward to, doesn't she, Lewis?' Veronica plunged on wildly, not wanting to be left on her own. Besides, what she said seemed kind and reasonable.
But Morag began to wail, a clear piercing cry that rose to a shriek, and Cam had to take her away home.
Before they left, Cam kissed Colin goodbye, lip to lip, as if he were a girl. Veronica had never seen two men kissing before, Colins long blue-ish chin leaning in against Cam's white bony one.
Lewis, who had learned to kiss on each cheek when he was in Europe, froze beside Veronica.
âWhat an exhibitionist,' he said, when Cam and Veronica had gone.
âIt's just acting,' Colin said. His best friend was looking at him as if he had made a curious error of taste. âI'll kiss you if you like.'
âOh forget it,' Lewis said.
But it shook Colin.
âI'm sorry,' he told them both at breakfast the next morning. âI'm giving up booze. I need to do some work.'
Veronica invited Lewis over mid-week for his birthday, a celebration they always shared. She didn't think he would come. It'll just be us, she told him, not mentioning Cam and Morag. He said he'd think about it.
He arrived, though, walking in as if nothing had happened. It occurred to Veronica that she and Lewis might be united in an unspoken resolve to keep the friendship alive, while the worst passed over. Perhaps, even now, they could all survive.
âWhere's Colin?' he asked, picking his way around the kitchen.
âHe said he had something to drop off down town. At the radio station, I think.'
Although it was his own birthday, Lewis had brought Colin a present, a book of Auden's poems. He wanted to open it straight away. âI can slip it back inside the wrapping,' he said, impatient as a boy. He was wearing a tweed jacket, a polo-neck sweater. Leaning against the doorway, he looked, himself, like a poet escaped from the thirties rather than a doctor.
âWhere is Colin?' he said again, holding the book a little away from him. Soon he would need glasses.
âHe shouldn't be long.' She slid the oven tray out and peered at the lasagne.
âWill it come when it's picking its nose? What d'you think, Veronica?' She liked the way he called her by her proper name.
âWhat are you on about, Lewis?'
âLove. Don't you know that poem? “O tell me the truth about love.” It's a song too.' And then he sang the line “o tell me the truth about love,” his voice musical and lovely. She thought, I could love him.
âThis is real poetry,' he said, with a note of satisfaction. âDidn't you read Auden at university?'
âI must have,' she said, flustered. Perhaps it was Lewis she was meant to love all along.
They were interrupted by a knock at the door, the imperious rap of someone in a hurry.
The caller was a very young woman called Gina whom Veronica recognised as a hairdresser at Fishtails, the salon where she had her hair cut. Veronica had seen her at work, a luscious barley-sugar blonde girl with tanned skin and huge grey eyes. When they opened the door to her, she was full of righteous anger, hands on hips. Her jeans were as tight as a chrysalis skin, a packet of Marlboros stuck out of the pocket of her black leather coat.
âThat friend of yours,' she said, speaking directly to Veronica. âYou'd better come.'
âWho are you talking about?'
âOh, for goodness sake, you know. The Scotch one.'
âMorag?' Veronica vaguely recalled recommending the salon to Morag when she first arrived.
âShe says you're her only friend.'
âWell, I don't know,' Veronica began.
âShe's in a dream,' said Gina. Then her self-confidence deserted her, as if struck by the unlikeliness of what she had done, barging into the house and yelling at two grown-up, serious people. Gina looked about nineteen, a dozen or more years younger than Lewis, although Veronica was only twenty-six at the time. The astonishing thing Veronica would learn about Gina was that she could touch the end of her nose with the tip of her tongue. âYou can't really talk to her. I told her not to have another perm, but there it is, her hair'll probably fall out and she'll blame me. Anyway, there's nothing I can do about that now. I just need to get her out of the salon.'