cb.booksofblood2-第21章
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we were enemies at the Bar; to the same placent circle。 We ate at the same tables; we drank elbow to elbow。 We even shared mistresses; though we didn't always know it at the time。 In such circumstances; it's easy to believe the world means you no harm。 Certainly you grow older; but then so does everyone else。 You even believe; in your self…satisfied way; that the passage of years makes you a little wiser。 Life is bearable; even the 3 a。m。 sweats e more infrequently as the bank…balance swells。
But to think that the world is harmless is to lie to yourself; to believe in so…called certainties that are; in fact; simply shared delusions。
When she left; all the delusions fell away; and all the lies I had assiduously lived by became strikingly apparent。
It's not a small world; when there's only one face in it you can bear to look upon; and that face is lost somewhere in a maelstrom。 It's not a small world when the few; vital memories of your object of affection are in danger of being trampled out by the thousands of moments that assail you every day; like children tugging at you; demanding your sole attention。
I was a broken man。
I would find myself (there's an apt phrase) sleeping in tiny bedrooms in forlorn hotels; drinking more often than eating; and writing her name; like a classic obsessive; over and over again。 On the walls; on the pillow; on the palm of my hand。 I broke the skin of my palm with my pen; and the ink infected it。 The mark's still there; I'm looking at it now。 Jacqueline it says。 Jacqueline。
Then one day; entirely by chance; I saw her。 It sounds melodramatic; but I thought I was going to die at that moment。 I'd imagined her for so long; keyed myself up for seeing her again; that when it happened I felt my limbs weaken; and I was sick in the middle of the street。 Not a classic reunion。 The lover; on seeing his beloved; throws up down his shirt。 But then; nothing that happened between Jacqueline and myself was ever quite normal。 Or natural。
I followed her; which was difficult。 There were crowds; and she was walking fast。 I didn't know whether to call out her name or not。 I decided not。 What would she have done anyway; seeing this unshaven lunatic shambling towards her; calling her name? She would have run probably。 Or worse; she would have reached into my chest; seizing my heart in her will; and put me out of my misery before I could reveal her to the world。
So I was silent; and simply followed her; doggedly; to what I assumed was her apartment。 And I stayed there; or in the vicinity; for the next two and a half days; not quite knowing what to do。 It was a ridiculous dilemma。 After all this time of watching for her; now that she was within speaking distance; touching distance; I didn't dare approach。
Maybe I feared death。 But then; here I am; in this stinking room in Amsterdam; setting my testimony down and waiting for Koos to bring me her key; and I don't fear death now。 Probably it was my vanity that prevented me from approaching her。 I didn't want her to see me cracked and desolate; I wanted to e to her clean; her dream…lover。
While I waited; they came for her。
I don't know who they were。 Two men; plainly dressed。 I don't think policemen: too smooth。 Cultured even。 And she didn't resist。 She went smilingly; as if to the opera。
At the first opportunity I returned to the building a little better dressed; located her apartment from the porter; and broke in。 She had been living plainly。 In one corner of the room she had set up a table; and had been writing her memoirs。 I sat down and read; and eventually took the pages away with me。 She had got no further than the first seven years of her life。 I wondered; again in my vanity; if I would have been chronicled in the book。 Probably not。
I took some of her clothes too; only items she had worn when I had known her。 And nothing intimate: I'm not a fetishist。 I wasn't going to go home and bury my face in the smell of her underwear。 But I wanted something to remember her by; to picture her in。 Though on reflection I never met a human being more fitted to dress purely in her skin。
So I lost her a second time; more the fault of my own cowardice than circumstance。'
Pettifer didn't e near the house they were keeping Mrs Ess in for four weeks。 She was given more or less everything she asked for; except her freedom; and she only asked for that in the most abstracted fashion。 She wasn't interested in escape: though it would have been easy to achieve。 Once or twice she wondered if Titus had told the two men and the woman who were keeping her a prisoner in the house exactly what she was capable of: she guessed not。 They treated her as though she were simply a woman Titus had set eyes on and desired。 They had procured her for his bed; simple as that。
With a room to herself; and an endless supply of paper; she began to write her memoirs again; from the beginning。
It was late summer; and the nights were getting chilly。 Sometimes; to warm herself; she would lie on the floor; (she'd asked them to remove the bed) and will her body to ripple like the surface of a lake。 Her body; without sex; became a mystery to her again; and she realized for the first time that physical love had been an exploration of that most intimate; and yet most unknown region of her being: her flesh。 She had understood herself best embracing someone else: seen her own substance clearly only when another's lips were laid on it; adoring and gentle。 She thought of Vassi again; and the lake; at the thought of him; was roused as if by a tempest。 Her breasts shook into curling mountains; her belly ran with extraordinary tides; currents crossed and recrossed her flickering face; lapping at her mouth and leaving their mark like waves on sand。 As she was fluid in his memory; so as she remembered him; she liquefied。
She thought of the few times she had been at peace in her life; and physical love; discharging ambition and vanity; had always preceded those fragile moments。 There were other ways presumably; but her experience had been limited。 Her mother had always said that women; being more at peace with themselves than men needed fewer distractions from their hurts。 But she'd not found it like that at all。 She'd found her life full of hurts; but almost empty of ways to salve them。
She left off writing her memoirs when she reached her ninth year。 She despaired of telling her story from that point on; with the first realization of on…ing puberty。 She burnt the papers on a bonfire she lit in the middle of her room the day that Pettifer arrived。
My God; she thought; this can't be power。
Pettifer looked sick; as physically changed as a friend she'd lost to cancer。 One month seemingly healthy; the next sucked up from the inside; self…devoured。 He looked like a husk of a man: his skin grey and mottled。 Only his eyes glittered; and those like the eyes of a mad dog。
He was dressed immaculately; as though for a wedding。
'J。'
'Titus。'
He looked her up and down。
'Are you well?'
'Thank you; yes。'
'They give you everything you ask for?'
'Perfect hosts。'
'You haven't resisted。'
'Resisted?'
'Being here。 Locked up。 I was prepared; after Lyndon; for another slaughter of the innocents。'
'Lyndon was not innocent; Titus。 These people are。 You didn't tell them。'
'I didn't deem it necessary。 May I close the door?' He was her captor: but he came like an emissary to the camp of a greater power。 She liked the way he was with her; cowed but elated。 He closed the door; and locked it。
'I love you; J。 And I fear you。 In fact; I think I love you because I fear you。 Is that a sickness?'
'I would have thought so。'
'Yes; so would I。'
'Why did you take such a time to e?'
'I had to put my affairs in order。 Otherwise there would have been chaos。 When I was gone。'
'You're leaving?'
He looked into her; the muscles of his face ruffled by anticipation。
'I hope so。'
'Where to?'
Still she didn't guess what had brought him to the house; his affairs neatened; his wife unknowingly asked forgiveness of as she slept; all channels of escape closed; all contradictions laid to rest。
Still she didn't guess he'd e to die。
'I'm reduced b