Read Brother of the More Famous Jack Online
Authors: Barbara Trapido
âMy baby had some mob caps,' I said. âShe hadn't grown into them of course. I mean, she couldn't even hold her head up, Jonathan.' I bored my fists into my eye sockets to mop the copious flow.
âI've made you cry,' Jonathan said bleakly. âOh God. Christ, my lovely, I've made you cry.' He reached for my hand, but I shook him off with a sudden viciousness.
âIf you want a baby so much,' I said, âwhy don't you bugger off and fuck some bloody Sunday School teacher with her female parts intact, like your brother does? Perhaps she's got a sister for you.'
The outburst caused us to lapse into a silence which lasted till the ticket barrier.
âYou've got the tickets,' Jonathan said. âAre you going to hand
them over then, or not?' The ticket man was waiting. I had them in my handbag.
âSorry,' I said. I produced them and we passed through the gate. âHey, Jon,' I said with some embarrassment, âI'm sorry. I was shitty to you.'
âI was boring,' Jonathan said curtly.
âBut Jon,' I said, âif you were to bugger off, I'd feel bereft, you know.'
âWho's buggering off?' he said. âNot me, snotface. I'm sticking here with you. Like a bloody barnacle. Listen love,' he said earnestly, âif I'd known the woman was pregnant, we wouldn't have gone.'
âI know,' I said. âYou don't have to persuade me that you're nice, Jonathan. It shows.'
âIf you want to know why I sounded so pleased about her boring pregnancy,' he said, but I put a hand on his shoulder to stop him.
âBecause you're nice,' I said. âWhy shouldn't you be pleased? There's no harm.'
âBecause I was so bloody glad that it was Sally who was having Roger's babies,' he said, âand not you. If you must know. I'm sorry to say this to you, Kath. I know it's what you might have wanted. Sometimes I think it still is. But I have to see it my way, don't I?' It made me weep profusely on to his chest. âI've made you cry again,' he said. âWhat's the matter with me?'
âI'll chuck away the pills if you like,' I said. âRight away.'
âIf
you
like,' Jonathan said. âOnly if you like.'
âOkay, if I like,' I said. âOf course I like, Jonathan. I mean, how churlish it would be of me not to like to have your baby. Can we just not talk about it please?'
âSure,' Jonathan said. âWe'll just screw like blazes and not utter a word on the subject. Right?' I laughed.
âI'll tell you this, though,' he said, âand then I'll shut up. If I make you pregnant, you get me too. You understand? No woman
is going to pull that matriarchal shit over me again, Kath. Not you. Not nobody. You'll have to stick with me.'
âI think I could realistically envisage doing that,' I said. âI find you a very thinkable proposition.'
âLady,' Jonathan said. âI find you a rave-up.'
The consultant had already seen me twice in his hospital clinic, but he had asked me to bring Jonathan to his private consulting rooms in Seymour Place. He liked to do Mr and Mrs together. He talked blandly and interminably over the top of his expensive glasses, intoning soothingly. He himself, he said, could see no striking and tangible reason why Mrs Browne should be unable to conceive a child. He addressed himself to Jonathan who appeared to have dominion, in his eyes, over my substandard private parts. I stopped listening to him from time to time and began to amuse myself by imagining the situation reversed. Were Jonathan to have consulted him, let us say, over a hernia in the groin, or retreating testicles, would he have been addressing me over Jonathan's head in this way? Does one man ever discuss, over another man's head, the problem of an incompetent penis? Mrs Browne's cervix did display evidence of considerable surgical repair, he said. And there was a significant area of scar tissue in what he called âthe front passage', but he had known women in such cases go on successfully to bear subsequent children by Caesarean section. Mr Browne would, he hoped, indulge him if he ventured to suggest that it might not
altogether
be advisable to rule out the possibility of emotional factors inhibiting conception in this case. That, taking into account Mrs Browne's highly regrettable previous experience of childbirth, and her experience of death â not once but twice (here he folded his hands like a
clergyman and paused briefly to cast an eye over his notes) â for we must not disregard the matter of her father's untimely death, he said, which occurred when Mrs Browne was, ah, was, let me see, was it nine years old? The sentence had no end. It was nothing but qualifying clauses. He clothed his propositions endlessly and skilfully in yards of wool. I had inherited from my mother a habit of treating men of the medical profession with an almost obsequious deference. Clean pillowcases for a home visit and best knickers for the surgery. One always apologised for calling out one's GP to a fever, making the assumption that what one's doctor both liked and deserved was patients who didn't get sick. It was therefore a marvellous joy for me to watch Jonathan calmly take apart this high priest of female plumbing.
âShe didn't come here to have you iron out her head,' he said. âShe came here to have you repair her reproductive equipment. What she wants to know is whether that is a thing which your particular tribe of mechanics can or cannot do. Spare us the O level psychology.' The consultant, to my very great surprise, was unshakeable in his excessive politeness. He absolutely accepted Mr Browne's point, he said.
Absolutely.
âGoldman,' Jonathan said. âGoldman is my name.' The consultant paused for a moment and looked again at his notes. Mr Goldberg was
absolutely
right, he said, in that he and his colleagues could never, of course,
altogether
be sure that there were not factors beyond what they perceived, which inhibited conception, but he would like to stress, he said, that in this case, given the circumstances, Mrs Goldberg might, subconsciously (and he would like to say
altogether
understandably), be balking at the alarming possibility of experiencing, once again, the agony of pain and death.
âGarbage,' Jonathan said. Since I assumed we were about to be thrown into the street I gathered up my handbag in readiness and sat on the edge of my chair, but the consultant waited for Jonathan to proceed.
âYou have made no test of her response to pain and her fear of
death,' Jonathan said. âYou haven't locked her up with maneating rats, for example, or made her walk the plank. You are fobbing her off with a hypothesis in the absence of knowledge. Nobody will blame you for your absence of knowledge, but the cover-up is dishonest. A collection of Italian butchers, who operate under the badge of your profession, have carved her up incompetently and your instinct is to make less of this and more of her psyche, because you are all members of the same closed shop. Blame the patient and save your face.' He turned to me. âI can't sit here and listen to any more of this, Kath,' he said, âI'll wait for you outside.' He swept out, leaving me behind. Jonathan was always a master of the exit and entrance. Like Mr Knightley, he appears in doorways, knocking mud from his boots. As a card-carrying female masochist, I find both this, and his terrific cheek, quite essential to my sense of wellbeing.
The consultant determined to be protective towards me, which was embarrassing in the extreme. I could see that if I stayed much longer, I would find myself in the marriage guidance department. He hoped I would forgive him, he said, but might he be permitted to ask whether these outbursts were typical of Mr Browne's behaviour? Poor Mr Browne. He couldn't have been more innocuous.
âOnly when he's on acid,' I said, treading in my master's steps, before I left. In the waiting room, Jonathan was sitting among a collection of women and reading
Cosmopolitan.
He was the only man I knew who had always had the confidence to read women's magazines in public. He was reading the
Girl's Crystal Annual
the day I met him. I went up to him and kissed his cheek.
âBolshie, aren't you?' I said. Jonathan looked up.
âHello, Mrs Goldberg,' he said. âWhat a timorous creature you are. You let a hack like that trample all over your subtle and lovely head. Jesus, I can get psychology like that in the barber's shop for free.' Jonathan, being a short-haired male, had developed the conviction that if people got their hair cut more often they wouldn't need psychiatrists.
âI took a stand,' I said. âI told him you were on acid.'
âWhat?' Jonathan said.
âI thought you'd be proud of me,' I said.
Jane loved my account of Jonathan's behaviour. She fed us tea and chocolate brownies that afternoon and laughed with delight.
âGood for you, Jontikins,' she said. âNow tell me, Katherine, why is it that we need men to say “garbage” for us? Why don't we say it for ourselves? I think perhaps Annie will say it. I have great faith in Annie. And she'll be utterly charming with it too. Still, I have to say, it's got you no nearer having a baby, has it? Perhaps you could adopt one? It may well require you to get married, of course, but you couldn't have any serious objections to that, could you? All it takes is a registrar to mumble a few civic proprieties. You may borrow my ring for the occasion if you're short of funds.' Jacob slapped his brow.
âJesus, Janie,' he said, âyou can't say these things to people. Have you no sense of decency?'
âI merely thought it expedient if they wanted to adopt a baby,' she said.
âThere's another thing,' Jacob said. âAdopted babies are brown. Brown babies are admittedly very nice, but only in Hampstead. These people are proposing to live in the Irish Republic among the bigoted Catholic peasantry. You want Katherine to carry a brown baby on her hip? She'll have all the local women crossing themselves in the market-place as she goes by.' Jane smiled.
âShe'll have that happen in any case,' she said. âYou couldn't have failed to notice that Katherine is glossy.'
âBut think, Jane, how we'd look in the agency files,' I said.
âWhat's the matter with you?' she said loyally. Loyalty was one of the many good things about Jane. âI think you are both perfectly lovely. If I were choosing parents for myself I should have no hesitation at all in choosing you and Jonathan.'
âFor heaven's sake, Ma,' Jonathan said. âOf course we'll get
married if it's any use, but Kath is a lapsed Methodist who's done time in the nuthouse. She's had an infant, now dead, got upon her out of wedlock by a married Venetian. And me? Look at me, for Godssake. I'm divorced. My kid is halfway across the world. I live off my girlfriend in a dubious attic.'
âBy another reading you are also very respectable, Jont,' she said. âI admit it still surprises me to say it. You are a pleasant young man with a good degree from Oxford. You have a novel in the press. Your girlfriend is manifestly a woman of good sense, for all she's had a bad time in the past. You own a dear little house. Your father is this dear old white-headed philosopher here. I think all you need do is get married.'
âAnd not say “garbage” to the social workers,' I said.
âAnd not say “garbage” to the social workers, of course,' Jane said. âCome on now, Jonathan. Ask her nicely.' Jonathan laughed.
âKath,' he said. âYellow stockings; hand on heart; Scouts' honour. Will you marry me?'
After I had married Jonathan, my mother expressed to me the opinion that I âcould have done a lot worse'. We paid her a weekend visit where he did all the right things. He opened doors for her, laced his shoes properly and sat down beside her to watch an evening's weekend rubbish on the box. She had reduced her standards for me so considerably since I entered the husband market at nineteen that she was, most of all, relieved. Her next-door neighbour had told her that Jews were âvery good to their own and especially to their wives', and she had passed this on to me that I might similarly snatch some comfort from the fact. Because I was not nineteen, I made no attempt to deny that Jonathan was Jewish. But nor did I tell her, as I would have done then, that Jonathan had been baptised into the Greek Orthodox Church. The object, after all, was not to be cheeky, but â having done what I wanted to do â to make her happy if I could. In return she respectfully eliminated bacon from our Sunday breakfast on Jonathan's account. Jonathan was charmed by this and asked me afterwards how he could be sure she hadn't gone in for any ungodly mixing of meat and milk in the washing-up.
âShe bungs the lot into the dish washer,' I said. âWe must tell her then that for my next visit I want two dishwashers,' he said. âFor the truly righteous washing up is an expensive business.' I hung about his neck, as they say, like a new wife.
âBefore you touch me,' Jonathan said, âassure me that you aren't bleeding. I cannot suffer the taint of a menstruating woman.'
âI'm not bleeding,' I said. It was then that it occurred to us both that I was not bleeding when I ought to have been.
âDon't get excited. You'll bleed tomorrow,' he said. I shook my head.
âIt's the only consistent and dependable thing about me,' I said.
âBless the woman,' Jonathan said. âPerhaps she's pregnant. Wouldn't that be a joke?' We had gone through the ritual of marriage, involving if not the Church then at least the State in our love affairs, and for what? For the sole reason that it would improve our chances with the adoption agency.
âThere she is,' he said, â
Spare Rib
under her arm. Claws into my defenceless brother. Fee Fi Fo Fum. Big talk with that poor innocent Aussie maths bloke. And look at her. She can't get pregnant until she's got a husband.'
A nice reliable English husband.