The Dog (16 page)

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Authors: Joseph O'Neill

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Jimmy was asked about his first impressions. “I love the huge posters of the Sheikh you see everywhere,” he said. “I wouldn’t mind getting hold of one. I could make a fortune on eBay.”

A fork was waved in Jimmy’s direction. “That sort of hipster irony doesn’t go down very well here.”

“Yeah,” someone said. Making quotation fingers, this person added, “He’s not ‘The Ruler,’ he’s the fucking Ruler.”

The fork waver warned Jimmy, “You want to watch it. They don’t have a sense of humor about that sort of thing. Just so you know.”

“They like to be ruled. It settles them down. I’m not against it, to be honest. Not in England, of course, but here.”

“He’s a good bloke, Sheikh Mo. He’s done a lot of good for his people.”

Jimmy: “Is it true he’s got a private jet just for his falcons?”

“Yes. So they say.”

“And he’s got cheetahs, too.”

“No, he doesn’t. That’s total rubbish.”

The cheetah guy threw his party hat at the rubbisher, who in turn threw his napkin at the cheetah guy. There was a brief storm of things being thrown. Bread rolls flew from one end of the table to the other, to shouts of approval.

When things calmed down, somebody said, “They say he’s after getting married again.”

“That’s what I heard, too. Sheikha number four.”

“Could be number five, for all we know.”

Jimmy: “Why’s it so hush-hush?”

Somebody began to air a theory (which I paraphrase and, to be honest, save from disjointedness) to the effect that the Ruler’s overt power depended on an inner zone of secrecy for secrecy’s sake, and this centrum of inexplicability (which deprived outsiders of data relating even to royal matrimonial and domestic arrangements) tacitly communicated the existence of broader political arrangements by which entitlement to significant information was made the subject of concentric separations, with the Ruler at the center and the populace distributed more or less at the perimeter, etc., etc., with the inevitable reference to the Wizard of Oz.

To my left was a kind-looking blonde in her thirties. She must have been as restless as I was, because she said, “Hello, I’m Samantha. What’s your name?” She was drinking a cocktail involving champagne and Rémy Martin. The neighboring table gave a hilarious roar as I answered her, and we both smiled, because it was good to have so many relaxed and happy souls assembled in one room, and at that moment, in fact, the music
came on and a kicking conga line instantly formed and people from every corner of Yalumba joined in, laying hands on shoulders and waists and shuffling along singing the olé song and tooting on party blowers. Samantha said, “Come on,” and I added myself to the shambling human concatenation, and I had fun, obviously because I was well on my way to getting loaded. It was a full five minutes before the music stopped and we all returned to our tables in the best of spirits.

Samantha told me she was heading home to England, to get a divorce and “start all over again.”

“That must be very painful,” I said.

She suggested in a sensitive tone of voice that I might have gone through something similar, and I said, “Perhaps I have.”

“Well, either you have or you haven’t,” she said.

I laughed. Samantha seemed to be upset by this, which was the last thing I wanted, because I was really rooting for her, this spirited and good person, and I said, “Sorry. I was just remembering something. My ex objected to me using that word—‘perhaps.’ ”

Samantha said, “What do you mean, she objected?”

“She just didn’t like it. It got on her nerves.”

“I suppose it depends on the context,” Samantha said with great pensiveness.

“Yes,” I agreed.

The Perhapsburg Empire—that used to be my unspoken nickname for the Jenn-me realm.

I said, “And ‘henceforth.’ ‘Henceforth’ really, really irritated her.”

Samantha giggled.

My theory, kept from Samantha, was that Jenn objected to this fancy (in her mind) vocabulary because it was (as she saw it) the tip of an iceberg of European haughtiness. I suspect she equated my Swiss ancestry with being looked down on from an alp. It sounds crazy, but I don’t think she could quite accept, or understand, that an American could through no fault of his
own know French (a language spoken by normal people all over the world), and that the whole thing wasn’t just some kind of trick of one-upmanship designed to knock her back down into the Lehigh Valley.

The salmanazar! Three men hoisted the inexhaustible Brobdingnagian bottle and, not without anxiety, filled our glasses. Samantha was looking very appealing now, and I recognized that I was imagining myself alone with her and prospectively knowing the bliss of being with her, and it took a real effort to avail myself of the technique I’ve developed to protect myself and the woman in question at such moments, which is to fastforward through the joyful scenes of carnality and closeness, valid imaginings though these may be, and slowly play in my cerebral cinema the moment when it’s pain-pain and lose-lose-lose-lose and she’s heartbroken and I’m boarding a boat to Tristan da Cunha.

Samantha declared, “Henceforth I’m going to start saying ‘henceforth.’ Perhaps.” She laughed very hard, and her elbow dropped into a jumbo shrimp combo, and several of the jumbo shrimps sprang from the salad onto the table. A cheer went up.

“Bloody elbow,” Samantha said, wiping her arm with the tablecloth. “Story of my life.” She laughed courageously.

I decided to not give voice to my deep, untrustworthy compassion.

Samantha told me that her husband, Gavin, had been unfaithful to her with a twenty-four-year-old he’d met while “seal bashing” at Barasti. “That’s when he took up ‘scuba diving.’ ” It was her turn to make air quotes. “He’d tell me he was ‘scuba diving’ with this friend from work, Ted, and then he’d be gone for the day. Very easy, really.”

Unthinkingly, I said, “Ted? Not Ted Wilson?”

“You know him?” she said.

“Only very slightly,” I said, as if I were under accusation. “He seems to have gone missing.”

“Cherchez la femme,”
a bruncher interposed.

“Cherchez la voiture,”
another said. “I hear from a little bird that a very naughty little blue Mazda has been seen in some unlikely places.”

“Really? Where?” The topic had everyone’s attention.

Our informant paused deliciously. “Sharjah,” she said.

“Of course.”

“Of course what?”

“It’s the perfect place to keep his floozy. Then the wife comes over from the States, and old Teddy says no thanks and does a runner. I bet you he’s lying doggo there right now. He’ll be back as soon as the missus flies home.”

I said, “That doesn’t make much—”

Samantha said, “I wonder if he was in on it with Gavin.”

“Wouldn’t surprise me. Scum collects.”

The fork waver pointed at me. “Hold on—weren’t you in that search party?”

Everybody turned to examine me.

I said, “I—yes. I was asked to take part, so I did.”

Samantha said disgustedly, “You’re a scuba diver, too?”

“Not really,” I said. “Not anymore. I mean, I used to dive, sure. Yes. But never with Ted.”

“You must be a bit pissed off, mate, going to all that trouble while our Ted dips his wick in Sharjah.”

“Did he even really go diving? It was probably a cover, wasn’t it?”

“He went diving all right.” There was laughter.

“Sounds to me like he’s a psychopath,” someone said. “I’m not saying he’s going to murder anyone. I’m talking, you know, psychiatrically.”

More ha-ha-ha-ha.

“No, no, think about it,” the psychiatrist said. “The fake diver thing, the shag pad in Sharjah, all the lying and cheating. The whole double-life thing. No conscience. No empathy for anyone else.”

“OK, here we go.” This bruncher was consulting his iPhone. “ ‘Psychopathy Checklist.’ ” When he started to read out the alleged characteristics of psychopaths, I removed my fez and left. I should have gone earlier, as soon as it became clear that the dignity, and in particular the privacy, of the Wilsons was going to be violated. Privacy is in many respects an indistinct ideal, but surely we can agree that there is such a thing as misappropriating another’s biographical belongings.

I’d texted Ali an hour earlier. The stout fellow was waiting for me in the Méridien lobby. He drove me and the Autobiography home. Then he took a taxi back to his place or wherever it was he wished to go, Friday theoretically being his day of rest and liberty. I gave him taxi money, of course, and slipped him a hundred dirhams for good measure.

Of that group of brunchers, I would guess that less than half are still in Dubai. Evanescent conga!

Brett Hutchinson is one of those who went away, whether by choice or not I can’t say. He has not stayed in touch, even though he still owes me five thousand AED. The day after the Yalumba event, he e-mailed me this:

Hey bud. Great seeing you. I may be wrong, but I think you left without paying? Give me a buzz when you get a minute or just send me a check. Cheers.

PS: Dh 700 a head inc. giant bottle of bubbly!

I LIKE TO THINK I TRY
to be curious about others in the way I’d want those same others to be curious about me, namely in a way that is not alienated from the root meaning of curiosity: to care. I try to not be a busybody. I reject the idea that one can enter another life at no cost. I guard against the lowness of the detective. (When I first came out here, I would daily Google Jenn, then my old firm, then me. It was as fruitless as
it was compulsive. I was like the dog with the empty bladder that nonetheless goes from tree to tree, stopping at each one to cock his leg in vain. Later, I went through a phase of Googling the Batroses, and, regardless of the search results, the outcome was the same: my degradation: my falling farther down the slope of Parnassus.) On the other hand, a measure of inquisitiveness is sometimes called for. If the petition “Help!” reaches us, obviously we should want to look into it. I’m not arguing that the Wilsons cried out to me. But I did come away from Brett’s brunch with the feeling that Ted Wilson, and Mrs. Ted Wilson by association, had been run over in absentia. I don’t know why such a little thing should have got to me. Every day, the immaterial ear of conscience—surely the organ that must distinguish a human being from the remainder of animals—receives other, louder calls.

Anyhow, I decided to Google Ted Wilson.

Predictably, Wilson had a LinkedIn page. I used to be LinkedIn, because my old law firm required it. Membership of LinkedIn or any self-revealing network is, however, incompatible with the sensitive and confidential nature of the family office job. It would be wrong if my “profile” were visible to John and Jane Q. Public as a source of connectivity to, potentially, the Batroses. It’s a relief that Googling my professional name these days produces next to nothing. This is because, virtually, I am legion. Anyone searching for me could easily get the impression that in the preceding twenty-four hours I have pitched victoriously in a high school baseball game in Long Island; worked as a fire marshal in Idaho; jumped bail in Corsicana, Texas; and passed away in Maryland and Ireland and Australia. For all practical purposes, I am completely camouflaged by my name’s commonness. If you look deeply into the image results and scroll past the pictures of scores of my namesakes, most of them on Mugshot.com, you can dig up a photograph of me from a long bygone corporate softball event
in Central Park; but even there, the legend confuses me with a certain Graham Herold as we stand next to each other in a lineup of seven squinting softball players. As to why I find my online absence pleasing, I will only say that I also find pleasing my absence from the African wilds.

Ted Wilson, another almost unsearchably ordinary name, became distinctive when qualified by the word “Dubai.” In this way, I was able to find the LinkedIn page of “Dr. Ted Wilson.” It was informative. Wilson attended Reed College and obtained a Ph.D. in German economic history at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He held “adjunct and visiting professorships, fellowships, and other faculty positions” at (chronologically) Duke, Emory, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Coventry University (United Kingdom), Lund University (Sweden), University of Illinois at Chicago, and finally the American University in Dubai, where he taught in the International Studies program. In 2004, he joined his current employer, RCF (Reality Creativity Futurity), an Emirati-owned advertising, PR, and branding (or, their website put it, “Presence Management”) agency. The “Overview” stated:

Dr. Wilson has taken his deep scholarly knowledge of the processes that give rise to the historic perception of nations, and applied it to the contemporary arena of country branding, public diplomacy, and reputational risk management. At RCF he has been instrumental in the successful development of Brand Dubai and other country brands. Dr. Wilson’s expertise at measuring, building, and managing Arabian Gulf national and commercial assets has been internationally acclaimed, with his team at RCF winning
Brandweek’s
Best Emerging Market Story 2006 (for the “Do You Really Know Dubai?” campaign), and also winning UAE Tourism’s Most Valuable PR Campaign 2007 (“Hospitality of the Desert”).

I visited RCF’s site. Under the “Our Team” tab, Ted Wilson was designated “Team Leader, Country Branding Visions and Operations.” The photograph showed a smiling Wilson. Resting neatly on his forehead was a pair of round red spectacles. The caption asserted,

Ted is so ridiculously bright that at RCF we call him Two-Brains. User-friendly to the max, he is unsurpassed in his commitment to making Total Branding concepts a reality for our clients. When he’s not burning the midnight oil, Ted enjoys scuba diving. “I’m very lucky to have the best diving water in the world right on my doorstep,” he says.

I went further with my investigations, if that is the right word. It turned out that in addition to LinkedIn, Wilson had Friendster and Facebook and MySpace and Vimeo and Twitter accounts to his name and in each case had opted to make public the content of his pages, so that even I (who was then, and am now, a non-member of any such site) could freely and immediately access their content and, by implication, Wilson himself. I well understood that in Wilson’s work circles, a certain trendy visibility was advantageous. Still, I was taken aback by the man’s forwardness, which struck me as unbecoming as well as surprising. The surprise was of my own making: extrapolating from my sense of him as a furtive aquanaut and standoffish elevator rider, I had had in mind the conception of a lone wolf or lone ranger—by which I of course mean a man who keeps himself to himself, not a masked searcher for truth and justice. As for my judgment of unbecomingness, I quashed it right away, and not without guilt. I was the unbecoming one. I had no right to pass judgment on Wilson on the basis of some unexamined taste preference or, come to think of it, on any basis, especially as I knew very little about social networking services and their norms and could easily have been misdirecting at Wilson a
more general horror founded on little more than my unfamiliarity with these virtual communities, whose character struck me as falling bafflingly between the stools of
Gesellschaft
and
Gemeinschaft
. If Wilson was innocuously and/or self-servingly into this sort of socializing, that was entirely up to him.
Laissez faire
. To each his own. Mind your own business. Judge not, that ye be not judged.
Honi soit qui mal y pense
. Take a look in the mirror. Turn the other cheek.

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