Four years later
Dear Jack,
How are you? Well, I hope. Thank you for your last letter. I don't suppose I'm
surprised that you and Caroline are married. When I told Mum and Dad they rolled their eyes in mock wonder but it couldn't hide their pain. They're still so confused about the whole thing; they just don't understand how it has happened. They see no reason for Caroline's hostility and why she won't speak to them. For Dad it's become a principle and I think he would reject her if she ever tried to contact him. But Mum's different; she thinks about it every day and now she's missed her daughter's wedding. I don't think anything will make up for that loss. Mum deflects the whole thing by blaming you. There will never be much of a welcome for you in the Roberts family I'm afraid, but then I'm sure you wouldn't ever expect one.I have started my first teaching job. It is all a bit scaryâ28 seven-year-olds and me. Still, I think it's going OK. The kids are great and there are no complaints so far. I think I made the right choice going into teaching. I feel I have something to offer.
I saw Mike last week; he avoided talking about you until I raised the subject. He's still such a politician. Anyway, he said to say hello if I wrote. He is still with Helen and in fact they live together now. Jo is
going to spend some time in Sydney on some exchange with her job. She came for a quick drink when I caught up with Mike (he is very good at keeping in contact with everyone). She seemed quite triumphant about hearing you'd married Caroline.So you're in London now. You never said why you left Cambridge. I thought you were on a good thing as a research fellow thereâwhat happened?
Anyway, I must be off. Write soon. Love,
Mary
Dear Mary,
Thanks for your last letter. I'm sorry it's taken me so long to reply. Now I've left Cambridge, I'm working at home and it's difficult to find the time to write to you undetected. In fact I had just started this letter to you the other day, thinking Caroline was going out, when she returned five minutes later because she'd left her diary in the flat. I must have looked as though I'd been caught having sex with the dog and she came over to see what I was doing. My God, imagine if she found out that we'd been writing
to each otherâit would be curtains for me. I dread to think how she would react. The other night I had a dream that she found out and opened a drawer where I kept your letters. I woke up just as she was about to pick the letters up. I think the consequences were too much, even for a dream.Now for the big news. I'm not sure how you will feel about this, so brace yourself: we've decided to return to New Zealandâ¦
Picked yourself off the floor yet? I know! How about that for a bloody shock. There I was saying that we would never go back to NZ and nowâ¦well, I suppose sometimes things never turn out the way we expect them. Christ, we should know that better than anyone. Why? I hear you ask. The truth is we're finding it hard to make ends meet over here, especially in London. I mean, it's great here, it's such a wonderful city, but my God it's so bloody expensive. I could try and get a job teaching at one of the universities, but Caroline thinks that to work properly I need to have the time by myself and be free of any distractions. I think she's probably right. The work I'm doing is going so slowly. I feel close to a major breakthrough, but I just seem to spend my time circling without ever being able to nail it down. Once I thought I
glimpsed it, but it just slipped away. However, I'm confident that with some really concentrated attention I might crack it, so I suggested we go back and go to the beach house for a while and then I might have the time to get to the heart of my search.Enough of me. It was good to hear your news. I'm sure you'll make a great teacher. It's funny, you know, I've been around universities all my life, but I've never taught a class. Sometimes I think how good it would be to just drop all this theoretical nonsense and teach. It is a wonderful thing to be able to help others to learn. It's really the most important thing a society can do: educate its young, to give them the tools to do whatever they want with their lives. So good on you, I admire you for taking on the responsibility.
There's one more thing. I would like to try and broker a peace between Caroline and you and the family. I'm not sure how to go about it, but I'm hoping that the mere fact we're returning to NZ may make it easier to see if that's possible. What do you think?
Love,
Jack
Dear Jack,
Well, I have picked myself off the floor. It has taken me some time to digest this news and work out what it all means.
I have to admit, my first thoughts were entirely selfish. Did I want to see you? Would you want to see me? What would it be like to see each other again? I know it's been so many years, but I can never quite forget that the last time we actually saw each other we were lovers and we had a future. Then it was all gone, but there was never any contact between us. I don't want us to get together againâI know that's impossible and that you love Carolineâbut how do you feel about seeing me? Can we meet? Can we sit down over a coffee and be normal? I would really like that.
Now I have that off my chest, I guess you'd like to know about Caroline and the family. It's going to be very difficult, but for their sake I'd like to give it a go, especially for Mum. Dad? I think deep down he'd love to reconcile with Caroline, but he has a real stubborn streak. However, I have one word of warning: Caroline has to be committed. There can't be a situation where I start this process with them and then she pulls out. If they have their hopes raised and
then dashed, I think it would completely devastate them. That would be far worse than what they have at the moment. So please, make sure you can pull this off before we open the can. The worms are wretched and will need such careful handling.Let me know how it goes. Good luck.
Love,
Mary
Dear Mary,
I've spoken to Caroline. I got a surprisingly good response. In the past she's talked about burning all her bridges with you and her parents and never speaking to anyone in the family again. I expected a really hostile argument, but she was calm and reasoned and said we would talk some more when she'd had some time to think about everything. I think it's easy to be strong about not seeing everyone while she's over here, but she recognises that it will be very different when we're in NZ . We'll talk again soon.
It was strange to read about us meeting. It's funny, but with all my thoughts about work and Caroline, it never really struck me that there would be the
opportunity for us to meet. Yes, in answer to your question I would like to meet. I'm not sure how, but I'd like to talk again.I'll contact you when I've spoken to Caroline again. So wait to hear from me.
Love,
Jack
Dear Mary,
I've spoken to Caroline many times. She has swung from one extreme to another, cried, got angry and thought as hard as I've ever seen her think about anything.
She's agreed to meet you and your parents. I'm fairly sure she won't change her mind. She'd never actually agreed to the meeting until she sat down yesterday and said yes. It's her decision now. The only stipulation is that I make the arrangements when we arrive in NZ and that it's in public, say in a restaurant. Don't ask me why she wants it that way, but I'm not prepared to push it, quite frankly.
I can't pretend that this is all going to be easy. I told her that I would make contact with your parents by letter. I don't think it would be good for her to ever know
about our correspondence. Send letters to Dad's address. It's only a week before we leave and I don't want to risk not receiving any letters from you.Believe me, Mary, I'm excited about seeing you. Very nervous about Caroline seeing you and the family, but very excited about seeing you again. I keep wondering just what it will be like, what you look like now, what we will say. Life is so full of surprises. Seeing you again will be a very big one.
See you soon now.
All my love,
Jack
Dearest Jack,
Welcome home. How strange does that sound? I have to pinch myself to feel that all this is really happening. I remember how I felt when you came home that first time from Cambridge. I don't want to dwell on the past, but they were electric times for me. I'm not saying I feel the same now. I know it's so very different, but I can't help but remember how I felt.
The date is set for the meeting. The 15th (two weeks, Thursday) at a restaurant
called Bowmans in Mt Eden Road. We will be there at 7.30.See you in a few days.
Love,
Mary
Jack,
I knew this would happen, you fucking useless shit. I told you that if expectations were raised we had to go through with it. So what happens? You just don't show up. As predicted, Mum is devastated, and won't leave her bedroom. Her greatest hope has been torn from her. Dad just spends time in the garden talking to no one.
You know, there is this part of me that can't help but think the two of you planned this. That you thought that there was still a bit more pain you could inflict and this was the way to it. I pray that I'm wrong, I pray that no one could sink that low or hurt anyone that much. But I just can't rid the thought.
DO NOT contact me again.
Mary.
The grand deception of writing to Mary from London had required a Herculean effort. The letters might have seemed breezy and bright, but that wasn't a reflection of my mood, which was mostly stormy and dark. I drank to try and remember the mathematical key I'd glimpsed that day in Cambridge and when I failed I drank to try and forget the failure. Large parts of the day resembled bottomless pits and darkness was entering my consciousness. Somehow it had to be avoided. Throw in recreational drugs and the almost totally claustrophobic relationship I lived with Caroline and light seldom seemed to shine in my life. To find time alone and calm myself sufficiently to write to Mary left me exhausted. Often I slept a day and night after a letter.
I simply didn't have the energy to raise my pen one more time after the failure to meet. And besides, I had my own betrayal to deal with. Caroline hadn't only stood up Mary and her family, she'd done it by sleeping with Greg. Bloody Greg, who was old even years before when she'd first knocked around with him. To try healing the wounds, Caroline and I retreated to the bach. Days later she killed herself.
I
nevitably I went to see Jo. When I left Dad's with a brief farewell and the merest of waves, I knew I would give the order to turn the car at the last moment and head for the hospital. Jo lay in a coma, that strange place people occupy when their soul has switched out the light but the body lives on. The need to know if some deep and distant memory of the world had rebooted Jo's brain was overwhelming. I had spared precious little thought for her over the years, but I knew her feelings for me, so I owed her a visit. I have to admit, this was unusual territory for me. When was the last time I thought of owing anyone anything? I glibly answered such difficult questions by confirming that there were selfish reasons for wanting her to recover. What the fuck would it do for my future if her death were laid at my feet?
My driver displayed his displeasure at my request to turn the car round just two hundred yards short of the hotel. No doubt he'd been expecting this to be the end of his day. Now he was on his way to Auckland Hospital. When I broke the news he planted his foot on the floor and braked late and hard at the first red light we encountered. He drummed the steering wheel to some imaginary tune as we waited for the lights to change. Another
long wait and a drive in the rush-hour traffic was all he had to look forward to for the next few hours. I ignored the flash of rage he gave me in the rear-view mirror.
I fear hospitals. Whenever I have the misfortune to visit one I walk the corridors with head bowed to avoid all the medical descriptions displayed at every junction. I don't know what half of the words mean, but I know they mean human misery and pain, despair and death. I feel a need for protection against the emotions haunting the corridors. I need a shield against the echoes of relations' and friends' cries and wash of their tears. Of course, I fear hospitals so much because I know one day I'll be in one with my liver cooked, or because of an overdose, or maybe cancerâshuffling along in slippers and a gown, open at the back, my old arse falling out, but feeling too sick to care. I don't want to die like that, which is why I think I will. In so many ways I've lived a blessed life; I don't think I've enough luck to have a blessed death. One day it will go spectacularly wrong.
Finally I located the ward sign and found my uncertain way to Jo's room. She lay perfectly still. The sight of her attached to flashing machines was no great surprise, but it was shocking to actually hear the sound of the ventilator with its slight mechanical pause at the beginning and end of each forced breath. Her eyes were closed, her skin pink and she looked far healthier than the last time I'd seen her. Far more dignified as well, with her body covered and neatly tucked into bed. There were two chairs in the room, one on either side of the bed. The place smelled of cleaner mixed with sterilised equipment. I sat in the low chair closest to the door. Straight in front of me was Jo's hand, lying flat at her side, an intravenous drip in the wrist. The skin looked dry and old. Her nails were chewed and her forefinger was marked
with an angry red hangnail. I reached out and touched her hand; it was warm, which surprised me, as though I'd expected stone instead of flesh. Lightly I held her fingers, my thumb stroking the hangnail, its rough edge rubbing the soft underskin of my thumb.
Before entering I'd sworn to myself that I wouldn't try to recall the two nights we'd spent together, fearing that such thoughts when she was ill were a kind of sacrilege, as bad as spitting on the image of Christ in a church. But seeing Jo made me think, sifting through the fragments looking for a clue that would explain what had happened. I fast-forwarded the sex, the flesh (shit, there was so much flesh) passing without feeling, just as a second porn film in one evening loses any allure. It was the drug taking that I searched my memory for. Each time I glimpsed Jo taking a line of coke I tried to remember the minutes before. Was she taking the stuff because she wanted to, or had I forced her to take more as the three of us attempted walls better left unclimbed? I squeezed Jo's hand as if that simple act alone might propel my own memory into action and all would suddenly become clear.
The door behind me opened and I ended my fruitless task. Perhaps given more time I might recall better. Although it made perfect sense, I hadn't even considered the visitor might be a nurse. She was of medium height and slim, her face brown from what appeared to be a recent holiday and scarred with little white marks from teenage acne. Before replacing the clipboard at the end of the bed she looked first at Jo's inanimate body and then at me. It took a moment for her to recognise me, but I knew when it came and she flashed a broad smile.
âFamily?'
I shook my head.
âFriend then?' She had a soft Scottish accent.
âYes.' Was that such a lie?
The nurse started a routine check of the machines that pumped and pulsed to keep Jo alive. She looked at me a couple of times, wondering whether she should say something. This was a conscious moment of embarrassment for her, one I knew well and would usually break by talking. This time I just couldn't be bothered, other than broaching the mundane.
âHow is she?'
âThe same.'
âSame as what exactly?' She looked puzzled. âThis is my first visit. I've been busy with the show but I came as soon as I heard. We went to school together, you know, but I've lost touch with her family, so I have no one to ask. I've no idea how she is.'
âJo's in a coma.' There was a pause, but she was going to tell me, despite what the rules might say. âI'm afraid there's been no improvement since she first came in.' To keep busy, she smoothed out the already smooth sheet.
âWhen will she come out of the coma?'
She stopped, straightened and looked at me. She was used to giving bad news, to seeing faces crumble as she gave it straight. âThe doctors aren't sure she ever will.'
âOh my God.'
âHer parents have been here all day, in fact they left just before you came.' She was about to gossip. This has happened to me many times before: it's as though my life on planet fame makes me special enough to hear other people's secrets. I'm like a cosmic agony aunt. Perhaps people think I have some redemptive quality and that telling me is like taking a cure. âThe doctors have talked to them about her chances of improvement and they've gone to
make their decision.' She rolled her eyes in sympathy.
âI see.' Nothing more needed to be said. I'd met Jo's parents once briefly at school after a play in which Jo had done an admirable job at playing an eighteenth-century wench complete with heaving bosom. Her father had lost a leg in a motorbike accident ten years before and walked with an awful exaggerated limp as though the artificial limb were too long. When he spoke, his voice was so loud I thought he was still competing to be heard above the throaty engine and coughing exhaust of a Triumph. Jo's mother was tiny, with a badly bent back. I never felt any sympathy for Jo when we were young, but remembering her parents filled me with a sudden understanding of how embarrassed she must have been as a teenager and why her parents were so rarely seen. Now this poor couple had to make the decision that would kill their daughter.
The nurse came round to my side of the bed. She didn't need toâthe sheets were as smooth as on the other sideâbut she wanted to be seen, wanted to be noticed. It was the first time I'd seen her legs. Her calves, even in the thick tights, were well sculptured and quite alluring.
âWhat's your name?'
âEvelyn.'
âHow long have you been in New Zealand?'
âEight years.'
âThe Scottish always seem to take the longest to lose their accents.'
She hummed her agreement.
âWho do you prefer, John Lennon or Paul McCartney?' Surely I couldn't be thinking of this now.
She stopped her chores and turned back to look at me, ironing
the front of her uniform flat with the palms of her hand. âI'm not sure I like either better. I like them both.'
âEveryone likes one better than the other. Think about one of their songs you like the best and just say who you think wrote it, even if you have no idea.'
She thought for a while. âPaul McCartney, yes, McCartney.'
âThought so.'
Evelyn gave me a quizzical look, saw I didn't want to engage in any more conversation and left the room. As the door clicked I saw something from the corner of my eye and turned back as quickly as possible to look at Jo. I was sure I'd seen the bedcover twitch. âJo,' I said, leaning over the bed to look at her face for added signs of life. Nothing. I willed some movement, a sign that there was some chance for Jo, some hope for her parents. Even though I didn't know them, the thought of their sadness overwhelmed me. I wanted them saved from this terrible day. They'd coped with enough. They should be spared the awful finality of the thrown switch and inevitable flat line. It would only take a couple of words, just a whisper that I'd seen her move and it was done. It was that simple to raise their hopes and gain Jo a stay of execution, more time for a miracle to happen. For a few more days the curse of death would be lifted. It might seem false hope, but I could do with some false hope at the moment. I might have given her the shit that tipped her over the edge. Of course I wanted her to move a fucking leg. If her parents flicked that switch and turned out Jo's lights, where did that leave me? With a fucking death on my hands, that's where. Please dear God, please make her move her leg.
There was nothing more, if there had ever been anything in the first place. I sat back in the chair, realising how hot I was
and how uncomfortable the seat had become. The door behind opened again.
âHello, Jack.'
âMary?'
âHow is she?'
The shock of seeing Mary sent me rocking out of the chair and I gulped for a breath of air to clear my head. âShe's as good as dead.'
âNice turn of phrase.'
âSorry.'
âYou don't have to be sorry to me, Jack.'
âThere doesn't seem much hope for herâ¦I thought I saw her leg move before, but there's been nothing since. Perhaps I just imagined it, just hoped to see it move.'
Mary walked into my silence and sat on the seat I'd recently vacated. She had her back to me and I could see the twirl of her crown. Her hair was thick and sleek, a much deeper colour than when we were together. I stood awkwardly, unsure if she expected me to leave or stay.
âI hear the show went well.'
âIt was good.' At last I felt confident enough to step into her view and went to the second chair.
âSorry I didn't catch it, but then I doubt if I'd have understood it if I had gone.'
âPlease, Mary, there's no need for that, not here, not at a time like this.'
âYou're right.'
âIt's a shame we didn't get the chance to talk the other night. How are things for you?'
âFine.'
âStill teaching?'
She nodded.
âBoyfriend or partner?'
âIt's funny, you know, I never really liked Jo. I mean I had no time for her at school and when she was after you back in the old days I resented her. Since then we've met at the occasional thing and we've talked and kept our silence about the past, but now I feel an overwhelming sense of guilt.' For the first time she looked at me. âNot that I have anything to feel guilty about, not like some, but I find I have to be here. Perhaps it's more for me than her, a guilt that I never made the effort with her and if she dies that chance will be lost for ever.'
âWhat do you mean, not like some?'
âLast time I saw Jo she was staggering off into the sunset, or should I say moonsetâ¦with you. Two days later she's found in the Hilton in a coma.' She turned back to Jo and straightened the sheet that had attracted so much attention over the past few minutes. âAren't you staying at the Hilton?'
âAre you trying to say something?'
âThe facts speak for themselves. Have the police talked to you yet?'
There are times in life when words truly lose their meaning. You fail to hear them individually, but their total effect is so overwhelming that the body jolts in physical reaction. âWhat?'
âThe police, they're investigating what happened. Jo's in a coma from a drugs overdose and they're ruling out any form of suicide attempt. They think someone gave her the drugs.'
âI'm not sure I understand exactly what it is you're trying to say. Are you accusing me of something? Is that why you're here, to watch my downfallâall those years of waiting and now you
have your chance? Are you trying to frighten me, Mary?' I stood and paced the room, my shoes making a solid sound on the lino floor. At the end of the bed I crossed to Mary's side; this was the closest I'd been to her since Caroline's funeral. The lines around her eyes and from her nose to the corners of her mouth were deeper than I remembered but despite the years she still looked beautiful. In another time and place the moment would have taken my breath away.
âWhy should you be frightened of what I'm saying?'
âIt sounded more like a threat than the sharing of a casual conversation.'
âThere was no threat, Jack. I was stating the truth.'
âI suppose you've already spoken to the police. I bet you enjoyed that opportunity to articulate all your juicy speculation.' These words were mere bravado. Inside I felt the largest possible sense of fear. I might already be a hunted man. Inspector Plod might be sitting with Bebe in a long silence waiting for me to return. How good was Bebe's cover-up? And Claudia, was she gone or was she primed for a flawless entry at the end of the scene? Newspaper headlines scurried through my thoughts as did the company meetings and memos in which everyone severed their connections. No one would want to be tainted with my name. âJack Mitchell? No, never had anything to do with bringing him on board. In fact I told my manager I thought it was a bad ideaâ¦' Oh yes, the rats would be running. Goodbye, planet fame, it's been nice knowing you.