Authors: Frank Moorhouse
âLouise said you were having Cobalt 60 inter-cavity irradiation.'
âYes, but I gave it up.'
âBut why, Robyn, why?'
She squeezed his hand. âDon't feel offended because your magic is being refused.'
It wasn't
his
magic â nor was it âmagic'.
âI changed therapies,' she said, âas Susan Sontag said, all the medical therapies are like warfare â they bombard, they attack, they search out and destroy.'
âBut for godsake, Robyn, they
work.
'
âCalm down, calm down. So does my way.'
Her way.
âI'm meditating and I have a vegan diet which is all I feel like eating anyhow â now hold on â don't be so quick to make a mock of it. It works too, you know. I'm doing imagery therapy â the Simonton technique.'
âThe what!'
âCalm down. I imagine the white cells eating the cancer, as simple as that. I believe in the power of the imagination. But I don't see it as a violent act â I imagine it as peaceful. The imagination is a much under-used power.'
She looked very tired from having had to put it into words against her sense of his opposition. She had stated it as a testament of faith. Oh he was still so zealous with her. He angered again against himself. He wanted to take both her hands and kiss them as a supportive gesture and as a way of dissenting from those negative responses his personality was giving to her. But still he could not bring himself to do it.
âYou're not looking like an invalid,' he forced himself to say, âso something's working, maybe.' He tried to
bite back the word âmaybe'. âI'm sorry I mocked you â you know me, always the schoolboy rationalist.'
âBut a rationalist who was sophisticated would accept that there are these grey areas in medicine and especially in cancer healing. Strange things do happen.'
âYes. I'm for anything that works for you,' he said, feeling happier with that form of words, âbut why don't you try everything at once? The Cobalt 60, the alternative therapies, the lot.'
âBut don't you see that if you try the medical things you're being passive â you're putting yourself in the hands of other people and saying “cure me”. With the other therapies you are active â it's me working for my own cure.'
But there was nothing in the book that said you shouldn't put yourself in the hands of others when ill. Trusting, or involving others, might be part of being committed to your life. He didn't want to argue with her. He was afraid of upsetting the balance of her will, in so far as he was granting validity to willpower cures. He suspected, though, that do-it-yourself cures might be a diseased reaction to disease. We could not depend upon the beneficence of the unconscious. He wouldn't rely on his.
âRemember that last party we had here at the end of fifth year,' she said, âno, of course, you were already in Sydney. We had my old gramophone here,' she went over and stood where the gramophone had been, âwe drank soft drinks and ate cakes which the girls had baked.' She stood in reverie. âGee â¦' She became tearful.
He wanted to go to her but the resistance was still there.
They traced their school lives slowly as they wandered about the empty school.
âI was truly deeply shocked that day in Room 17. I mean, I hadn't actually seen a man's ⦠a penis before.'
âIt took you more than a year before you would look again.'
âYou're lucky I
ever
looked again.'
They stood in the grassy fields where twenty-three years earlier they'd made tentative pre-sexual love. If his mother or her mother were not at home they would sometimes go there and pet more until they ached and were almost sick from arousal without release.
As they stood there in the long grass, she said, âI sometimes wonder what gave me the cancer, was it â this is silly I know but I have to say it â could it have been men's penises not being clean enough?'
He tried to joke. âI don't think so â British women would all have cervical cancer.' It was a typical idea for her to have, and, who knows, maybe right.
âI don't mean you,' she touched him, âyou were a good middle-class boy and clean, but well, others â¦' She gave a small guarding smile as if he might even now be upset by mention of other men, âothers after you weren't always good middle-class boys.'
âDid a doctor suggest this?'
âNo, it's a private theory, I have lots of private theories these days. Being ill in a serious way gives you a special sense of knowing your body.'
They left the school. âI always remember the Head saying something that was very important to me,' she said, âremember him saying that school wasn't preparation for life â it was real life, real living. It's true, and school is an important part of living.'
In the car she suggested she'd like to go to the church where they'd been married.
Outside the church he said how normal their lives had looked then â church, fellowship, Sunday School, confirmation, débutantes, engagements, balls, marriages, births.
âI missed out on confirmation,' he said to her, âthat was one of my protests.'
âBut you
were
confirmed,' she said, âI was the one who refused to be confirmed and caused all the ruckus.'
âNo,' he said, feeling determinedly sure, âI was the one who refused to be confirmed.'
âNo, sorry, I was the one who held out, you were forced into it by your mother but you were certainly confirmed.'
He flushed, she was right, he'd been rewriting his history. Why? When had he started that legend â lie â and then forgotten to correct it?
âYou talked about doing it,' she said, âyou talked of rebellion but your mother put great pressure on you. My mother oddly enough was a bit against it for some reason. Low church â found it too popish.'
He was embarrassed, he must have made up the story when he was a teenager in Sydney as part of the picture of rebellious adolescence in a country town.
âAre you honestly confused?' she asked.
âWhat does it matter now,' he said, âyes, you were the one.'
They went into the dim church and walked up the aisle where they'd walked as nineteen-year-old bride and groom. âIs this the altar?' he asked her. âI never quite knew where the altar began.'
âYes, but Rev. Benson called it the communion table.'
âThe altar was where they once sacrificed animals.'
âNot in this old town,' she said, âhere we sacrificed kids. Kids like us.'
She turned to him then with tears and came to him. âHold me.'
She held on to him.
âIt's OK,' he said, âyou're OK, Robyn.'
âI'm dying,' she said, âI know it.'
âYou're fighting it â you'll win, you were always a winner.'
âWe will at least know all the answers then,' she said.
Towards what end?
She looked up at him hopelessly. âMarry me again â just for today â let's marry for the day. We may never see each other again anyhow, whatever happens.'
He strove to get her meaning.
By âmarry' he assumed she meant they should pledge to each other some vow of affection.
âWe were little children together,' she said, âand we went through all that stuff of adolescence, and we were
each other's first love, and I did bear your child â even if you never claimed her.'
He had lived as if this child did not exist. He had decided years back that he could not be a father for the child because of the circumstances, his alienation from Robyn, his emotional deficiency. But he'd also made the decision to protect himself from the pain of being held away from the child. If he had once permitted his fatherly feelings free rein they would have tormented him forever. He had still to keep them unreleased. He had explained this to Robyn on a number of occasions but she had never accepted it. He wouldn't try again.
He knew then for the first time, or faced for the first time, the fact that parenthood had passed him by.
He'd passed through another of the doorways.
He felt no deep affection for her. He felt a sympathetic bond of, probably, a unique kind. He didn't feel caught up in a rush of new affection or restored affections. Perhaps he felt sentimental. What he felt most was recoil from her disease. This continued to make him angry with himself.
âYou do still feel something for me?' she asked.
âYes, a lot.'
âDo you feel some love for me?'
âOf course I do,' he lied, softly, searching for some validation of this in whatever fudged and twisted way, yes, there was a unique place for her in his personal history. âYes, you are in a special place in my heart.'
Why not lie? He was frightened that a lie would be detected by the antennae of her unconscious and hurt her more.
âDo you take me,' she whispered, âas your spiritual wife for this day and for all days until we die, from this day forth?'
All he could react to was her extension of the make-believe vows from one day to âuntil death'. She was taking pleasure from the pseudo-ecclesiastical wording of it too.
âYes.'
âNo,' she said with insistence, âsay it to me, say the words.'
âI take you as my spiritual wife for this day.' He wanted to conclude it there.
â⦠and for all days until I die, from this day forth,' she instructed him.
At first he noted that she changed the wording to refer to her death, but when he said it, it made it
his
death, â⦠and for all the days until I die, from this day forth.'
âNow ask me.'
He was acutely uncomfortable, worried that someone might come into the church and come across them doing this.
âCome on,' she said, sensing his reluctance, âdo it for me.'
âDo you take me as your spiritual husband for this day and for all days until I die, from this day forth?'
âYes, yes I take you, Ian, as my spiritual husband for this day and for all days until I die, from this day forth,' she said with a forceful sincerity.
âYou may now kiss the bride,' she said, smiling, and he was ashamed that he could not give himself to the kiss with a wholehearted spirit, instead he changed the kiss into a brotherly kiss but it was enough of a personal kiss for her to believe it to be, for it to suit the prescribed kind of love and the vows of the occasion. He sincerely hoped she would accept it as the kiss she wanted.
Â
Maybe if he'd been able to give her that kiss passionately without withholding, maybe if he had been able to make love to her on that visit to the home town â or at least give her physical embraces of a wholehearted kind â she would have stayed alive. Maybe with her method those gestures by him would have been enough to tip the balance. Maybe she died because of people like him in the world. Maybe he was a negative cell. Or maybe this was egocentric thinking and placed him unrealistically large and unrealistically close in her personal galaxy.
Â
He was in the bar at the UN City in Vienna, drinking alone, when he heard of her death from Mark Madden, an American chemist with the NEA who had been her lover at some time after the marriage.
Madden and he also had been close for a few months when he'd come to Australia as a young
student drop-out. They'd re-met on the IAEA circuit at times. Despite these close links and their respective distances from their homelands, he and Madden now usually avoided each other in the bar. This night Madden had come across to him and said, âRobyn died this morning, I thought you mightn't have heard.'
Why would Madden think that? But yes, Madden was right, he hadn't heard.
âGod,' he said, âthat's rotten.'
He felt a real sadness and a regret for her now permanent absence from his life, or to be precise, the âabsent presence' she'd been in his life since they'd separated.
âShe was a sweet, sweet person, a very special sort of human being,' Madden said, as they had a drink together. That sort of talk, he thought, was why he didn't drink with Madden.
âI knew her as a giggling hockey-playing schoolgirl,' he said to Madden, âthat is my enduring memory.' It was a way of asserting the superiority of his knowing of her over Madden's knowing of her. Two male egos still clashing like stags over her dead body.
âShe was essentially a poetic person.'
âPoetic? I never saw her as poetic. I didn't see that side of her.' Nor did he believe it.
âIt wasn't a “side of her” it was the whole damned person.'
âI'm not doubting you, Mark, just that I knew a much different Robyn. How do you mean poetic anyhow?'
âI mean, man, that she wrote poetry.'
He and Madden had once been really close and now it was nearly all animal antipathy.
âRobyn wrote poetry?'
âShe had poems in magazines. Yes.'
He was surprised by this and resented Madden knowing and his not knowing.
Privately he still felt his relationship to Robyn to be superior to whatever she'd had with Madden, but he was finding it impossibly disorienting to believe that this self-important, unnaturally fit, tomato-juice-drinking chemist in the tartan check trousers and black jacket could have been a lover of a girl he had once been married to and shared innocence with. He noted alcoholically that he was now released from his secret vow to her in the home-town church. Not that the vow had carried any obligations but it had from time to time invaded his consciousness in an ill-defined way, suggesting obligations which he could not discover.
Nor could he match this guy Madden with the guitar-playing gentle American youth he'd known in those years before. It seemed wasteful of nature to have put all that growing into that guitar-playing youth only for it to come out as the NEA chemist, Madden.