Mallélou doesn't ask his son why he stole. In the cities, you make out as best you can and you do your best not to get caught. He doesn't blame his son for stealing. What he hates is that the woman, Mme. Motte, has now shaped Xavier's future. Her cunning and the pathetic marking and counting of her goods has brought his son to this hell, this terrifying bloody prison. He could cry. His boy, trudging blank-faced round that exercise yard. His boy, carrying a slop bucket from his cell.
“Drink up, Xavier. You're not drinking. Drink while you can.”
“What d'you mean?”
“You never know. With what this country calls Justice . . .”
“I'm not going back inside.”
“No, son.”
“I'll kill her if they put me back,”
“Yes.”
“I'll kill her.”
“Yes. Well, drink up, eh?”
Xavier doesn't know the bar they're in. He doesn't want to take his father to any of his normal haunts. He feels childish, a failure. It enrages him that his father has to be involved at all. Stupid old man, never had any authority, any guts. Used to think he was a big shot because he worked the signals and screwed some leathery old German whore. Used to boast about this to his sons. Boast about that, when it was their mother who ran the family and kept it going. It was their mother, Gervaise, who had all the strength and passed it down to them.
“How's Maman?”
“She's fine. You want to switch to
pastis
?”
“No. Beer's okay. Tell me about Maman. Is she mad at me?”
“I'm switching to
pastis
. Best to drink tonight.”
“Is she angry? What's she said, Papa?”
“Nothing.”
“Go on. I know Maman. I know what she'd say.”
“Why d'you ask me, then? Hey, Xavier let's do some proper bars later on, eh?”
“I don't know. Maybe. I feel tired after those days there. You can't sleep there. People cry in that prison, you know. They cry.”
In one corner of the bar, men still in their working
bleus
are playing cards. Pale youths hang round a pin-ball machine and a Babyfoot table. The thump-thump of the Babyfoot ball, the ping and grind of the pin-ball game, these noises are a reassuring day-to-day part of Xavier's life. They reaffirm, in his exhausted skull, his right to a place here, in the heart of the city, a city you know and which knows you. In prison you know no one. The city turns its back. You wind up making pets out of mice or cockroaches, for the comfort of them. You might as well be in Alaska.
Mallélou orders two
pastis
. When they come, he sets one by Xavier's beer glass.
“Drink it lad. You need it.”
“Okay. Tell me about Maman.”
Mallélou sighs. He wipes his mouth with stained fingers, tugs out a cigarette from crumpled packet and lights it. As he talks, the cigarette stays lodged between his lips, pressed wet and flat.
“She had her little cry. But then she's spent her life blubbing for you boys. What's one cry more? She blames me, of course. Blames the city. If she'd had her way, you and Philippe would have stayed in Pomerac, stayed staring at those cattle till you got simple-minded. That's her idea of a life, that is, staring at cows' arses.”
Mallélou pauses, waits for his son to laugh, but he doesn't; he seems grave and sad. Mallélou coughs, swigs his drink, goes on: “Pomerac's changing though, did I tell you? Those English people kissed goodbye to their Queen Elizabeth. They're in next door, now. All year round. He looks a confused man. Her you don't often see. I couldn't do that â settle down in some strange bloody place. Perhaps they won't last. I dunno. It's odd them being there, though. You sense things changing.”
“How's the Maréchal?”
“Oh, that one, he'll be around for ever. Your Mother still scuttles round him. Come on, drink up, Xavier.”
“Did he lend us the bail money?”
“Why? D'you think I haven't got it? D'you think I haven't got eight thousand?”
“I don't know . . .”
“I don't borrow, Xavier. Never.”
“Maman does . . .”
“But not me. If my son's in trouble, I bail him out. I
find
the money.”
“Where from?”
“Never you mind where from. I find it. Okay?”
“I'm frightened, Papa.”
“Yes. You look frightened. Frightened to bloody death. Where is it then, this woman's restaurant?”
“Rue St. François. Near the station.”
“She's the one who ought to be frightened.”
“Why?”
“Because I'm here, that's why. And I defend my own.”
“What the hell d'you mean, Papa?”
“You think I'm not going to pay her a visit?”
“What?”
“You think I believe in State Justice?”
“Oh, come on . . .”
“State Justice my arse! If you're rich you get justice. I believe in Rich Justice. But not the other kind. Not our kind. No. We just have to find ways of settling things ourselves.”
Xavier shakes his head in disbelief. Big talk. His father always loved this kind of big macho talk. But it remained talk. The nearest he got to “settling” anything for himself was to go and beat up that German, Marisa. But then, beginning to drink the
pastis
, his fear ebbing a little, Xavier starts to imagine Mme. Motte standing smug and safe by her chip-fryer, wiping her little greasy hands on her apron to take the mushy noodle soup to an early customer, smiling her tight smile, her stubby nose red from the kitchen steam. And this smugness, this safety, oppress him. Why should this ugly widow be so safe in her mucky little café, where the glasses aren't even washed properly but only rinsed, where the ham she serves is slimy, where the oilcloth on the tables is yellow with fat fumes, where her one pathetic notion of decoration is sprigs of plastic oranges? And he, with his whole life in front of him, already on the outside, already destined for Alaska . . .
“She's an old slag. She'd deserve anything she got.”
“So why are you afraid?”
“What?”
“Why are you afraid to take matters into your hands?”
“I'm not. But you could do more harm . . .”
“You said you'd kill her if they send you back.”
“Yeh.” Xavier feels choked, boiling hot. He considers now whether he shouldn't go to some bar where his friends will be, just try to forget the whole business for the time being . . .
“So?”
His father's an ugly man. Even as a child, Xavier Mallélou understood this. He used to search, in the mirror, for his father's squashed features in his own face.
“So I could. I could kill her. But what then? That's my life gone.”
One of the youths putting money into the pinball machine is whistling. This whistling aches in Xavier's head. He wants to shout at the youth to belt up.
“Let's move on, Papa. I know a nice bar.”
“Yes. All right. Get good and pissed, eh? Then we'll think. What time does she finish up, your Mme. Motte?”
“Elevenish. I don't know . . .”
“Don't fret, Xavier. That's the thing. Don't fret.”
Mallélou pays for the drinks and he and Xavier walk out of the warm café into the street. A cold rain is falling.
Nadia is alone in her monogrammed sheets. She sleeps with the light on and dreams of Hervé and herself buying lime-coloured tickets for the space shuttle. The astronauts selling these tickets look on her and Hervé approvingly: the man is thin, the woman is small, they will fit in, they won't weigh the shuttle down and stop it lifting off.
Larry is alone in the darkness without Miriam and wide awake. In the rain that drives onto his window is the memory of a night in September 1976 when, after the months of parched weather, with the concrete of his first pool laid that very afternoon and drying by teatime, a storm broke and the dust of summer began to settle back into the clay. He'd woken Miriam and made her listen to the rain. She'd said, good, rain at last, now the willows may survive, and turned back to sleep. But Larry had got up and gone out into his front porch and stared hopelessly at the hurtling weather. In the hot, patient calm of July and August
Aquazure
had begun to grow an order book; now, in this return to dripping and damp and wind, England was pronouncing judgement on his fledgling enterprise: the swimming pool season is over. Around the corner is winter and frost; moss will bubble up in the splits and cracks of tiles; in this country a pool isn't worth the money; this was a freak summer and the pools are simply its legacy. Already, before the first pool was built, Larry had seen the ruin. A swimming pool is only a pit, with plumbing. In time, nature reclaims it as a pond. Later, when
Aquazure
was failing, he'd have dreams of the things you find in swimming pools: dead belly-bloated hedge-hogs, blind drowned moles, frogs, newts, water beetles, smashed birds eggs, blanket-weed, algae, earth. But don't tell the customers. Send in Bill the frogman, in his
Aquazure
blue wetsuit. Clean up. Check the pH. and the chlorine levels. Pour in the chemicals . . . He's restless, remembering fears and portents that drove towards one ending. In his survival of that ending he feels cold. The white space in the bed that is Miriam's absence is icy and grave. He wants to turn over into her warmth and feel her arms take him to her and give him hope. Since
Aquazure
he has been deficient in hope. His English doctor suggested a course of vitamin B
6
. Women are trying to ease pre-menstrual tension with these. He wonders if, month after month, women feel this same hope-deficiency. He wants to ask Miriam, but Miriam's periods are erratic, ending. She mourns for this past pain and he's not sure how best to comfort her. Now she's not there to be comforted. Leni the newt, Leni the black beetle, Leni the earth mother, has reclaimed her. Leni's arms blanket her and he's left out in the cold.
He thinks of Hervé, tucked up in his ornate bed with a wire cradle shielding his broken legs from the weight of the blankets and wonders if he can learn to live like that â dry and alone. He thinks of Nadia's hot little bathed body moist in its sudden yearnings for this clean leatherbound man, and wonders if, in the comedie humaine which is his life anyone will ever yearn for him again like this, with tears and fury. He thinks of Agnès. He imagines a nightie of crisp broderie anglaise with a tiny lattice of pink ribbon. In this, she sleeps straight and deep. Hervé's breaths next door don't disturb her. She dreams clean dreams of her fiancé, Luc. Her lips, opening and closing on the dream, are the pink lips of a child, of the daughter he never had. Thinking of this, he tries to forget Miriam and tries to sleep. Yet something in this sweet picture of Agnès disturbs him and keeps his mind beating as the rain beats on and in Nadia's dream she and Hervé Prierè hurtle soundlessly in space, strapped to airline seats. Then out of the rainstorm, Larry picks another, frailer sound â the sound of Gervaise's laughter.
Mallélou and Xavier have walked through the rain to one of Xavier's favourite bars. You can eat at one end of it â good, expensive food, not the greasy filth ladled out by Mme. Motte â and a group of middle-aged men are ordering oysters.
Xavier has come here hoping to see friends. When any of his crowd are feeling rich, feeling optimistic, they come here. Sometimes they pig out on the seafood, get some good wine opened, and Xavier loves this, this feeling of how wealthy people eat. He decides, eating langoustines, he'll work his arse off to be rich one day.
Mallélou senses the altered clientele in this bar and regrets moving on from the first place, where he felt comfortable. Here he feels shabby. He notices the dirt under his nails, dreads the city people's disdain: he's off the land, he's a shit shoveller. He wants to tell them: I may have married a peasant, but I used to fuck your whores, I used to stub out my fags in a woman's cunt.
“This your kind of place?” he asks Xavier.
Xavier nods, staring at the door. He needs his mates now, not his stupid father. But no one shows. Where are they? Have they forgotten him? Is someone giving a party somewhere?
“You get ripped off in bars like this,” says Mallélou. He's still slurping
pastis
, but without relish now. Xavier stares at him, hating him. It amazes him that he's this man's son. When he was little, he used to invent alternative fathers for himself. One of these was the Maréchal. Occasionally, he still does this: he imagines the day when his mother tells him, you're not Mallélou's son. But it was after the boys left Gervaise that Klaus came. Neither of her sons know that Klaus is always there now, summer and winter.
Xavier drains his glass, feels the burning aniseed fire his stomach. He swallows, then turns to Mallélou.
“If you want to do something about la Motte, it's better you go on your own, you know.”
“Uhn?”
“It's better you go. I'm in enough trouble.”
Mallélou stares at his son. Why in heaven's name did he shed the SNCF uniform for some lousy restaurant job? How could this have been allowed to happen?
“So you want to give me your responsibilities?”
“No. But I don't want to see her again. Her face makes me puke.”
“So why did you ever go and work there?”
“It's all there was.”
“You had a good job, Xavier . . .”
“Good job? You think that's a good job, knocking bits of wood into the ground?”
“You would have got on. If you'd stuck at it.”