Read The Unforgiving Minute Online
Authors: Unknown
room, I was terribly depressed. Was a love like theirs the thing
I’d been searching for my whole life? I thought it might be.
The comedy was pleasant and enjoyable. The humor was
totally comprehensible to an American. I loved the London
theater. Most of the theaters were quite small and the seats
were usually never really bad. The prices were much better than
New York. There were several differences. In London, you had to
buy a program in contrast to the free playbill you received at
New York theaters. In London, you could usually buy chocolates
or other such refreshments from your seat. I decided to take the
Underground back to the hotel. The London Underground is the
equivalent of New York’s subway. There, the similarity stops.
The Underground is clean, comfortable, reasonably safe, and is
easy to navigate. It consists of many different lines, crossing
each other in various locations, making transfer from line to
line easy. You pay by destination, purchasing a ticket at your
point of departure and presenting it at your destination. Most
of the stations are so far underground that you reach them by
escalator or elevator.
It was my day for experiences that I’ll remember the rest
of my life. This one has racked me with guilt for years. I
stepped on the train at a stop about a half a block from the
theater. The train was crowded, so I was obliged to stand. I
didn’t mind because the trip to the hotel was short and involved
one transfer. At the very next stop, the doors opened. On the
platform, obviously waiting for a different train, was a middle-aged couple, I suppose about my age. He was wearing a bowler hat
and a sedate dark blue suit, she, a white ruffled dress.
Suddenly, while the doors were still open, the man turned
a pale, yellowish white and collapsed to the platform. No one on
the train moved to help. The woman screamed and cried
hysterically, “Oh my God, help, please, oh my God, oh God, God.”
Still, no one moved. I stood there frozen; I don’t know why.
Maybe I was waiting for someone else to move. The expressions on
the riders didn’t change. It was as if everyone was making
believe it wasn’t happening.
I have been trained in cardio-pulmonary resuscitation at
our local firehouse on Long Island and could have done something.
I finally started to move toward the doors when they closed. I
looked around. Still, the expressions were the same. It was
like a dream. I looked out the window and the man was lying
there. Finally, some new arrivals on the platform started to
give help. From the looks of the man, he was probably dead when
he hit the ground, but that didn’t assuage my guilt. The other
people on the train acted as if nothing happened. There was not
even the buzzing of frantic conversation. As far as they were
concerned, it never happened. I’ve been a New Yorker all my life
and I know the reputation of New Yorkers, but I couldn’t imagine
that happening there. I exited at Oxford Street for the short
walk back to the hotel and I was in a state of extreme
depression. It hurts me now even to tell this story. I looked
in the paper the next day but something like that isn’t really
news in a big city and the newspapers in England are all of a
national nature even though they may be called the London Times
or Manchester Guardian.
That’s why you can never find a local movie schedule in a
British paper. I was so upset when I got back to my room that I
forgot I hadn’t eaten dinner. I looked for a book to read and
laughingly realized that since I started the trip I had read six
pages of Madame Bovary. How was I going to start a book to give
me a flavor of England, when I hadn’t fulfilled my promise to
read the French classics in France? I picked up Madame Bovary
and started to read it again. I read about three more pages and
said to myself, “Oh great, Bob, now we’re reading a book about
adultery. This will never do.” Wasn’t there some other subject
I could get into? I threw the book across the room, still
agitated over my traumatic experience of the evening. I kept on
torturing myself. Why didn’t I move for the door faster? Why
did I have to be such a sheep and do what everyone else did? I
reached for the vodka bottle and poured myself about three
fingers, neat. I gulped it down and waited for the blessed
anesthesia of the alcohol to envelope my body. When it didn’t, I
poured about half a drinking glass full. I staggered to the
radio and put on some classical music. Through my haze it
sounded like Wagner or Mahler, I couldn’t tell which. It was a
great combination; alcohol, a depressant, the depressing events
of the evening, and Wagnerian music, another depressant. I
peeled off my clothing, put on my pajamas, and fell face down on
the bed. Finally, after what seemed like a long time, I cried
myself to sleep.
I slept fitfully, waking up several times in a pool of
sweat. I awakened at about seven a.m., unable to sleep any
longer. I was lonely and depressed and considered going home
very strongly. I decided instead to spend the evening with the
Dinsmores and leave as soon as possible for a spa to get my body
and mind in shape. I was sure the Dinsmores would know the name
of a good one. My immediate problem was how to fill up today. I
wasn’t due at the Dinsmores until seven p.m., so I had twelve
hours to kill in a city I had been to at least twenty times. I
steeped myself in a hot bath and read the London Times, which had
been slipped under my door earlier. After bathing, shaving, and
dressing, I managed to kill an hour and a half. I breakfasted in
the hotel dining room. There were several other diners there,
both single males and couples, and I wished someone would strike
up a conversation. I tried to make small talk with the gentleman
at the next table but to no avail. Between eating and reading,
another hour passed. I went back to the room in a state of
nervous agitation. I could not remember ever feeling so nervous.
I didn’t know if it was the incident on the Underground or my
extreme loneliness. I desperately wanted the crutch of speaking
to Ann Marie, but I knew that it would not be wise to call her.
I wanted to write to the kids, but I wasn’t in the mood. What I
really wanted was Jane. I missed her constant company very much.
I realized that Jane had replaced Laura totally. This was
telling me a lot about myself.
At least one good thing had been accomplished on this
trip. I was getting a good look at Robert Boyd, and I didn’t
particularly like what I was seeing.
I decided to spend a few hours strolling through Hyde
Park. There has always been something relaxing about Hyde Park.
Aside from the fact that it is tranquil and pretty, it is
colorful and steeped in tradition. On the northeast corner is
“Speakers Corner,” where just about anyone who cares to can get
up on his soapbox and carry on about any subject. On the west
side along Kensington is the Albert Monument, a garish piece of
architecture built by Queen Victoria in memory of her husband,
Prince Albert. On the south is the Wellington Monument in memory
of the Duke of Wellington. There is also a band shell and
several small lakes.
I walked west from the hotel to Park Lane and turned north
to find a subway. (A walking tunnel under the road.) The one I
found took me to Speakers Corner. I stood with a small crowd of
people and watched a scruffy-bearded young man rave and rant
about nuclear armament. In another part of the Corner, which is
quite large, a rather well-dressed, professorial type was
speaking on “Save the Elephant.” In addition, there were several
evangelists and a Hare Krishna group. It was immensely
entertaining to go from group to group and listen. I’ve always
wanted to film it on video tape. I think it would make a great
short subject.
After an hour had passed, I tired of Speakers Corner and
set out for Hyde Park itself. It was another lovely day and I
enjoyed watching people. There were nannies and young mothers
pushing baby carriages, children playing, elderly people
strolling leisurely, and all varieties of third-world people who
seemed to have converged on London in recent years. There are
canvas chairs liberally spread through the park that are
available for lounging. Each time I saw them I always wondered
how long they would last in Central Park. My guess was no more
than five minutes. As I watched joggers going through their
routine, I again thought about how much I missed exercise. I had
a renewed desire to work on my body and looked forward to the
next phase of my trip. I looked around and noted that most
people my age or older who weren’t indulging in some exercise
were dressed, as I was, in coat and tie. The younger people,
however, were just as informal, perhaps more so than in America.
The punk haircut with shaved temples and hair dyed in shades of
green, blue and purple seemed to be an ever-growing fad. Some of
them even had tatoos where the hair was shaved from their
temples. Both the male and female of this species seemed to wear
large earrings and dress in the most outlandish manner. Some of
them seemed to be ruining what should have been good looks with
this get-up. I prayed that this was just a fad and wouldn’t gain
large acceptance as long hair did in the sixties and seventies.
There were football (soccer) games going on and I stopped
to watch from time to time. When I looked at my watch, I was
gratified to see that it was after two o’clock. I decided to
walk to Harrod’s Department Store in Knightsbridge and pick up a
gift to bring to the Dinsmores this evening. I exited the park
on the south side and walked west to Harrod’s. The walk took
about fifteen minutes and, as usual, I was awed by the sight of
the famous department store. The store was about a block square
and its style of architecture was Byzantine. Minarets protruded
from its roof line prominently. The inside was like no other
department store in the world. In addition to the usual articles
one would find in a department store, there was a food department
which featured one of the largest butcher shops I’ve ever seen.
I mean a real butcher shop, not one with wrapped meat as found in
a super-market. There was floor after floor, section after
section, of the most exotic items. It was like spending time in
a museum. Finally, just before leaving, I picked up a basket of
candies, nuts, and dried fruit to take to the Dinsmores. As I
headed back to the hotel in a cab I realized that I couldn’t
spend another day doing what I was doing without going completely
crazy. I wasn’t hungry and didn’t want lunch and was suddenly
very tired from lack of sleep the night before. When I returned
to my room, I took off my clothes and slid beneath the sheets for
a few hours of badly needed sleep.
The Dinsmores lived in a town house in the Baker Street
area, near the University of London. As I sat in their cozy
living room sipping an excellent cognac, I looked at the
comfortable surroundings. The room was furnished in what
appeared to be mid-Victorian. The seating was replete with soft,
comfortable cushions that all but embraced you as you sat. The
color scheme was burgundy with hints of tan. The lamps had a
touch of India and the lighting was soft and on the dim side.
The curtains were of fabrics that had a hint of the Orient. The
cognac was poured from a cut-glass decanter that was an object of
art. I sat in a deep chair that was so comfortable I had trouble
staying alert. The Dinsmores sat, slightly apart, on a large
sofa. Christine spoke.
“Well, Robert, you said you would explain why Julie isn’t
with you and you sounded very strained. Is something wrong?”
“I really don’t know how to explain this,” I said. “It’s
like … like … well, we’re kind of separated.”
Both of them seemed to straighten up in their seats and
they looked at me with disbelief.
“I don’t believe it,” John said. “You looked like the
happiest couple.”
“Well, how can I say it? What you see in public is not
always the real story.”
I proceeded to tell the whole story, leaving out the
amorous adventures. As far as they knew, I was wandering around
Europe alone.
“I think we’ve been good friends long enough for me to say
this, so I hope you’re not offended,” John said with a look of
pensive concern. “You probably need professional help. You
should have sought a good psychotherapist before taking on this
madness. You understand, don’t you, that this is a rash and
impulsive act?”
For some reason, I didn’t expect to be reprimanded. I
thought I would get total support and sympathy. My first impulse
was to bolt and run in a fit of pique.
“Really, I know what it looks like, but I’ve given this a
lot of thought for a long time and I think it’s the only way I