Desiring Cairo. Louisa Young. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Louisa Young
Издательство: HarperCollins
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Жанр произведения: Современная зарубежная литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9780007397013
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      More silence, maintained this time by Harry. Then:

      ‘He hasn’t been well.’

      Oh.

      ‘How not well? Not well of what?’ You see, I couldn’t speak.

      ‘Um,’ said Harry.

      Into my state of shock came a sliver of … not fear, but … awareness.

      ‘What?’

      He sighed. ‘I didn’t tell you because I thought it would just … go away. I thought he’d get better.’

      ‘What?’ I said. ‘Was it what he was talking about before the trial? What was it?’

      I could just about register how difficult Harry was finding this, but I no longer let him get away with not saying things. We are way past the silent understandings, or more often misunderstandings, of our optimistic youth. In theory, at least.

      ‘You know when he was arrested,’ said Harry, ‘he had a head wound.’ I did know. I had inflicted it on him. I had hit him on the head with a poker when he was trying to jump me. Harry knew that. I had told him in the confusion of the end of the day of comeuppance. I seem to remember he had said, ‘Attagirl’. Anyway, some such unpolicemanly expression of approval.

      Harry was not looking at me. ‘He has been suffering ever since from dizzy spells. That’s one thing his lawyers put up when they were trying to delay the trial. He’s continued to have them inside. Last week a new inmate arrived, who for reasons best known to himself took the first opportunity he could to punch Eddie’s lights out. Two days later Eddie was found dead on the floor of his cell. They haven’t done the post-mortem yet but it looks like a fractured skull.’

      Now my skin was burning up.

      ‘He may have fallen,’ said Harry.

      I took a drag on the cigarette and started coughing. Harry took the stub from my fingers and put it out.

      ‘So did I kill him?’ I asked.

      ‘He never said in court what had caused his initial head injuries,’ Harry continued, conversationally. ‘That was one reason why the application wasn’t accepted. The doctors agreed that he was not in the best nick, but he just said he’d fallen, and the damage wasn’t consistent with that, so they couldn’t accept it.’

      I stared down at my plate. A gherkin had fallen out of my sandwich. I picked it up and ate it, and a huge sadness washed over me. Why do only mad psychotic scumbags love me, and is that love?

      ‘You didn’t kill him, legally or otherwise. But you did something,’ he said.

      ‘Yes I did.’

      Bad people around me die, but I don’t kill them, but I do something. Oh for God’s sake. Janie wasn’t bad. Not bad. Not like Eddie.

      ‘When’s the funeral?’ I asked.

      Harry was shocked. ‘You’re not going to go?’ he said. Aghast.

      ‘Yes,’ I said.

      ‘Why? Why the fuck?’

      ‘To see that he’s really dead,’ I said. ‘Because … because I thought it was over with the court case, and it wasn’t, and I want to make sure it’s over now.’

      His face was amazed but kind. ‘There you go again,’ he said. ‘You want to do something absurd and ridiculous and stupid, but you’ve got a completely good understandable reason for it.’

      ‘Oh,’ I said. ‘Is that what I do?’

      ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘You should be a lawyer.’

      Is that good or bad?

      ‘But it doesn’t mean you’re right,’ he said.

      ‘Right about what?’

      ‘About going to the funeral.’

      ‘You think I shouldn’t?’

      ‘I think it unwise,’ said Harry.

      ‘I’m sure you do,’ I said.

      ‘I’ll think about it,’ he said.

      ‘About what?’

      ‘Whether to tell you where it is,’ he said.

      ‘There you go again,’ I said, a little pointedly.

      ‘What?’

      ‘Telling me what to do. Acting like you’re in charge.’

      ‘I daresay,’ he said, unmoved. Only one step beyond his admirable unflappability lies his bossy pain-in-the-arse stubbornness. It reminded me of how he’d been when I first met Eddie, through him; when he warned me off making friends with him, not knowing that I was only doing so because Ben was making me. It reminded me of how jealous he’d been then, when he’d thought I didn’t know Eddie was a villain, when he’d thought that I fancied him. Harry protecting me for my own good, keeping things from me because I couldn’t be trusted to behave sensibly. Harry being a patronising sexist git. Harry watching over me, looking out for me, still caring what happens to me. Knowing me.

      I would like to be able to take Harry’s concern for me and appreciate it. I would like to be able to maintain my independence without having to spit in his eye. I would like to think that I can rise above daily tribulation and problems of communication to a superior level of transcendent human understanding, but I can’t.

      ‘Then I’ll find out from somebody else,’ I said, in a very slightly nyaaah nyaah voice.

      ‘Who?’ he said.

      ‘I’ll ring …’ I said, in one of those sentences that you begin, hoping that you’ll find an end for it by the time you get there, but I didn’t. Who would I ring? We didn’t exactly have friends in common. His wife! I’d track down his wife.

      His wife.

      You killed my love.

      You did, and I mind.

      Oh.

      Well perhaps his wife would ring me. Perhaps in fact she has been ringing me.

      ‘Tell me,’ I said to Harry. ‘Do people who send anonymous letters ever get violent, generally? Is that the sort of thing that happens. Do you know?’

      Harry looked tired. ‘What?’ he said. ‘What a …’

      It suddenly hit me like a hammer. Eddie’s dead. His wife thinks I killed him. I burst into tears, stared at Harry in horror, and hurtled to the back of the café in search of the ladies. Only there wasn’t one. The sandwich shop man gave me a handful of paper napkins from a chrome dispenser and turned me round again. The napkins soaked up nothing; just smeared and redistributed. Harry was standing up, wobbly through my tears, tall and a little menacing as he unfolded himself from behind the café table. I remembered his father telling me how he used to stop fights just by unfolding himself out of the squad car and being exceptionally tall. Young miscreants would simply stop toughing each other up and gaze in amazement as more and more of the length of the copper unfolded. He’s six foot seven. Harry’s a shrimp in comparison, a mere six foot four. I forgot for years that Harry’s father was police. So strange. I daresay it helped to get Harry in, despite his past. Though he was never convicted of anything. Nor charged with much, come to think of it. Perhaps his father helped with that too. Not consciously, not on purpose.

      The miscreant in me folded.

      I was still crying.

      ‘Come on, lover girl,’ he said. ‘I’ll get you a cab.’ He looked disgusted. I remembered when he’d told me he was disgusted one time before. Over Janie. When he thought I’d known, and I hadn’t.

      He took my elbow and walked me into the bright street. I could see reflections of Petty France on the teardrops that shook on my lower lashes. Like a hall of mirrors,