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Authors: Kirsty Gunn

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BOOK: Infidelities
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Anyhow I had my Nanni’s garden, with the broccoli and beets and different kinds of lettuce, sweet potatoes, corn … She put them into stews. And she had up behind the ferny bank thick rose-bushes and beds of daisies, tall masts of bamboo keeping the flowers away from the bush, the gully and the scree. She had all this – so why go on and on about that other place, like it might hold meanings?
Why talk on about it with Queenie whenever the two of them got together? Like it was a place she might enjoy better than where she lived? Like it was a place she might need?

*

When I found out for sure the answers, it wasn’t just the crying days that told me. Or overhearing Queenie say once about me that it may as well be I had no family, all because of ‘that mother of hers’ and Nanni saying ‘or my big heart’ … No, not even. It was the day when there were different kinds of tears, something not just crying but more than that, like wailing, calling, both of them together, Queenie putting her head back, I saw her do it and she closed her eyes.

Because Queenie had got sick, and soon after she was to die – this I learned years after my parents had moved abroad and there was a summer I never saw my Nanni, and after that not any summer, not ever again. After Queenie had gone and Nanni wiped her face, she took me in and told me like a poem, like something my mother might have said, constructed in a certain kind of way that it might be remembered and I have remembered it, all the words: ‘How your mother’s like a tree,’ she said. ‘And she wants to make herself into a tall clipped shape and straight, straight, when she could be so beautiful if she could grow differently, see, let herself be more wild. Come out thick at the base with strong roots,’ Nanni said, ‘and wide …’

‘She lost herself,’ I’d heard Queenie tell Nanni, in the low lamplight, that same day of the sickness and
the wailing and the different kinds of tears; they’d been talking about my mother and my mother’s father then. ‘My brother would have loved her, man, if he’d stayed alive. But she’s taken herself deep into the dry place, that daughter of yours. She doesn’t know now’, Queenie said, ‘who she is.’

‘And now I’m losing you, my Lovely Lady,’ my Nanni said to Queenie in reply. ‘You’re leaving me. My last one left. All the
tangis
, they get started now.’

They hadn’t known that I was there, that I had seen. I crept to the door and saw it all, heard it all, what they were saying. Saw Queenie take my Nanni in her arms. ‘Honey, honey,’ she said and she stroked her hair. ‘You speak of this with me when you come out to the
marae
, eh? To say goodbye. When the little one’s gone back to the city. I take you out there and remind you, honey, where you belong, where you and my brother always belonged …’

And they both were crying again then, for old days, old times, long ago and something sweet in it, something loved and lost, forever gone, crying, remembering, and wanting that time back, the person who gave you that time, grieving but having someone there to hold you in your grief, take you to their arms, go
Aueee
in a soft voice, keep you comforted so the spirits of your ancestors can come and give their comfort to you, take the sadness away.

The word for it is
tangi
, like Nanni said before, for sadness and for mourning, grief and loss. The summer I saw Queenie for the last time was when I found out why
my Nanni loved her so. When I saw those tears, heard the kind of crying, saw the women sitting there … Sitting
tangi
for all they’d lost and were to lose, and remembering, remembering … Queenie the last part of her husband my dear Nanni had left.

And still there was my mother, sitting straight and unmoving in the front seat of the car, at the end of that summer, driving me away … What was she thinking, that she could remain that way, just so? Just sitting, just looking straight ahead at the road, her hands in position on the wheel? I wouldn’t be writing any of this down now, I guess, if ever I knew what was going on in that one’s head. And neither would it be a story then, would it? If I had it all in my mind from the beginning? I’d have nothing to find out, then, would I? In the writing? Have no need to tell?

*

For I am pale, my mother the dark one. Newborn, see? Like I might always stay too young to fully know. Newborn on account of those fronds, tiny curled-up toes and fingers, their new green. Newborn, like I was once and my mother and her mother before her, all of us, arrived curled up that way and closed into ourselves with the secrets of our birth like so many ferns kept huddled close together on that bank leading up to my grandmother’s wooden house.

I guess in the end what made me understand the two places in my life was learning how I might live between them, that it might be okay to go from city to the country
and back again, from the dark to light and the light to dark. From sentences all long with vowels and commas to other ways of being, other words … It might all of it be easy and okay.

Because now I know it’s not so much as finding out the secrets, girl, as understanding where the words come from that makes a person who they are. And when I think about Queenie and my Nanni together … Well, something of that understanding started to make sense to me then, I guess. Something old, old, coming out of those two women’s mouths and bellies and nothing in like it newborn. The way they spoke together on the step, the way they squeezed each other, or poked their fingers into each other’s bellies and laughed … It was like watching whole bodies speaking, the old white woman and her
Maori
friend. Like all the understanding you might need coming deep, deep out of their real selves like the ferns right up at the back of the bank give up their seeds for new growth and everyone knew they’d been there a hundred years.

So, yeah.

Because a long time ago, sure, all this might have been another world.

But the story told by now, I guess, and listen to me now, you. How I sound.

Not so new, eh? After all?

*

Not that she would ever put it this way, let alone turn it into something that might read like a story, but the fact is, when she starts thinking around the two events that seemed to mark the beginning and the end of her marriage, what she sees is one statue at one side and another at the other. Like bookends, is what the image is. And her life with Karl, those thirteen years in between when she was with him, they’re like titles of books facing out of the shelf but she hadn’t read any of them. All that time she’d never even looked inside.

And the statues were identical. Is how she remembers it, anyway. The same dead poet up on his box in the middle of a hot winter’s day surrounded by foreign birdsong and strange trees as the one on the grey hill in the Borders that last weekend, after Karl had told her about his affair and how long it had been going on. He was still seeing her, he’d said, the woman he was involved with, but couldn’t they make a go of things anyway? Because they were best friends, after all, him and her, they’d been like that since
they met. And they liked doing the same things, didn’t they, and wasn’t that the most important part of marriage? To have interests in common? Isn’t that what, Karl had said, kept people together in the end?

Like walking. That was how they’d met, at the University Rambling Club, and so quickly fell into the routine of going out to the hills in the weekends, coming back late or sometimes taking a tent with them in the summer months and staying out overnight. There was that exhaustion of lying down in their sleeping bags at the end of a long day and she can see now how that could have easily felt like deep contentment, happiness even. No wonder then he’d quickly called it love, Karl had, and she’d believed him. She’d ended up believing it for a long time.

Even that day when they were out in the Borders, after he’d told her about the woman he’d met who worked at the library and about all the time they’d had together and that he couldn’t keep it secret any longer because he wasn’t that kind of man … Elisabeth had not exactly realised at the minute of his confession that she would leave him as a result of it. For there it was still between them, the pleasure of the landscape, the miles they’d already come. She’d looked around her, from her place on the hill, taking in the lovely silence and the quality of the air, and yes the words Karl had said were there, but so too was the knowledge of the thermos in his rucksack, the delicious sandwiches she’d made that morning in hers … And nothing else had seemed as real as that, had it? The routine of their life together, it’s childless, contented pleasures? She’d even
said to him, hadn’t she, as they’d stopped on the side of that hill and she’d looked all around her at the great bare expanse of wintry brown and grey … ‘I think I understand what you mean …’

But then they’d walked on, and that’s when she’d seen that the mark on the landscape which she’d noticed when they stopped and had thought was some kind of cairn or obelisk, was actually the statue of Robert Burns, and the same one – the other a copy of this perhaps – as the statue she’d seen all those years ago, on that holiday when Karl had asked her to marry him.

*

That holiday. You could say it had been like another part of their friendship too. It was the summer after they’d both graduated and they’d booked plane tickets straight away, making lists of what they’d need to take, walks they’d plan, with Karl organising every little detail. He’d made sure he could find the cheapest deal for one of those long-haul flights where you stop off everywhere in the world – the US and India. The Far East and Australia all the way to New Zealand and then home. He’d said it would be their big adventure, ‘OE’ they called it ‘down under’, meaning ‘Overseas Experience’ – like all the kids from New Zealand and Australia came through to Scotland for a year. Only this would be them having the adventure, leaving one side of the world for another, with nothing but their backpacks and their walking gear, all the money they’d saved, and, somewhere tucked into the corner of one of Karl’s pockets, a tiny diamond ring.

Karl had told her, when they’d got home again, that he’d always planned for it to be in New Zealand when he would ask her to marry him, as far away as they could be so that, as he put it, ‘There’d be no going back.’ Only look at him, Elisabeth had thought that day in the Borders as they’d got closer to the statue and she realised it was the same one: He had gone back on his word after all. He’d gone right back. Though perhaps, she thinks now, in another way, he’d only gone back to being the same twenty-two-year-old he’d been when he’d said it was her he wanted to be with all the time, sleeping with a young woman every night and waking holding her tightly in his arms like he was afraid she’d disengage herself from him in the dark, that she’d quietly ease out one shoulder and arm from the circle of his embrace and get away before he saw her go out the door … Only that young woman was no longer Elisabeth. It was someone else.

And that was when, when she’d come upon that statue, something stirred in her then. But not because of him. Not the sight of the dead poet up there on his plinth or whatever it was called, with the dates of his birth and his death and some half-worn-out bits of his poems beneath his iron feet … It was something else, the memory of another day with another statue, long ago, and of a sensation that she’d had then in the pit of her belly, ever since Karl had given her the ring, like a little nub of hardness. Like she’d swallowed the ring, been made to swallow it. That Karl had not just put it in on her finger like he’d done on some beach somewhere in the North Island but
had tilted back her head and poked it right down her throat like she was an animal and it was a pill … That’s what she’d been thinking about the morning of the other statue. How being married felt like something she’d had to swallow. Though he’d asked her in a perfectly ordinary way and she’d said yes and now here they were in a different part of the country anyway and having had a row about directions because she’d been driving the hire car while he’d slept with the map on his knee and she hadn’t woken him to ask him which way when the road had taken a fork around the base of that big mountain, what was it called, where they were supposed to be joining a walk that was setting off the following week … It sat with her as she’d driven, Karl quietly snoring beside her, continued to sit with her, the feeling of the little nub of Karl’s will, sitting there in the pit of her and not dissolving.

He’d been cross when he woke because he liked to be in charge of that sort of thing, reading the map, giving instructions. Yet all the time while he’d been asleep she had loved it, just driving along the road and deciding which way to go as the signposts came up and choosing one way or another on the spur of the moment. She’d seen a sign that had in brackets under it (‘Secret Lake’) written up like that, like the title of a poem or a story, with speech marks around it as though it were someone’s private, special name for a place, and it had a little picture beside it, a silhouette of a little figure and there in smaller writing underneath were the words ‘Memorial to Robert Burns: ¾ mile’ and an arrow. And she’d followed that.

They’d studied him in school of course, and Karl would have known a few of the poems by heart, no doubt, would have liked them too. But he hadn’t been keen on the walk from the beginning. Waking like that to suddenly find himself somewhere that hadn’t been planned for, wasn’t in their itinerary, and yet there they were drawing up beside a picnic table and big municipal rubbish bin in a little car park dug out of the side of the road, with a board set up that gave walking directions to the lake and times it would take and the drawing of Burns and information all about him, and why he was Scotland’s ‘Most Loved Poet’.

Karl had stayed bad tempered while they pulled on their boots and jackets – jackets even though the winters were so mild there it was like summer at home, and people kept talking about the cold and sudden changes of weather but all Elisabeth could see was bright pacific blue sky all around her and the kind of sun that would make you brown if you lay in it and put suncream on. Not a winter at all. Even so, she did what he said, put her jacket on and they got ready in their usual way – and three quarters of a mile was nothing, she’d joked to Karl to cheer him up, they’d be in and out before he would notice they’d been gone.

They locked the car and headed into the opening in the bush that marked the beginning of a track. The bright day closed instantly behind them like a door. They were used to it by then, of course, from all their walks, the darkness, the close growth of the vegetation in this country that blocked out all the light. It had its own smell, its own particular
damp and musky odour. You needed the tracks to be well marked or you’d be lost in a second, the low ferns and trees pushing in at you as you went deeper in and the high
totaras
, they were called, those amazing old and massive trees that grew not like trees growing in the woods at home exactly, but seeming to rise up out of all that other bush that was banked up around them … They made Elisabeth think of that line from another poet, nothing like Burns – ‘Darkness visible.’ Because that was what it was like there, looking into the dark, seeing the dark as your eyes adjusted, but as they walked on she didn’t mind it either, Karl’s back up ahead of her as the path inclined a little as though rising to a hill then flattening again. Certainly it had been an easy enough walk. The description on the board in the car park had not exaggerated the time it would take and after about twenty minutes she’d seen slices of bright water through clearings in the bush, the glinting reflections of the sun and then they’d stopped, Karl had, and she came up behind and he’d said, ‘There it is’, and there it was: ‘The Secret Lake’.

Later, years later, once Elisabeth had started reading again and knew where ‘darkness visible’ came, in Book Two of
Paradise Lost
and why she’d always loved Milton, she’d found an essay by Rebecca West where she wrote about this lake. That had been like a secret, too, discovering that someone else knew about that place and had written about it. And she recognised the feeling that was described in the writing, of the surprise of seeing those sudden flashes of bright blue amongst the dark bush and
then stopping and suddenly there it all was, this large and flat expanse of lakewater lying in the centre of the country, at its secret heart, wrapped around by
ponga
and
totara
and
manuka
all those trees and bushes she’d memorised the names of while she’d been there … A clear wide open lake of blue in a place that anywhere else in the world would have picnickers gathering on its little beaches, boats pushed off on the water’s surface or waterskiers criss-crossing one side to the other – but here was completely hidden from view.

They saw the Memorial statue immediately – down one end of the lake and set like a jewel on a green lawn that had been created for it especially. They walked up towards it, skirting the water when the path took them down to the sand and then turning back into the bush for the final corner where they came out to stand on the grass. It seemed both bigger and smaller when they got there – the poet standing legs apart, hands on hips and his head upturned as though to catch the sun, high enough that you couldn’t make out an expression on the face but low enough that the whole thing was of a scale that felt lifelike and real … Weirdly present, somehow, the figure of the famous Scottish poet set down here in this faraway country, polished and shining, with his own green lawn about him, even with the dark growth ever closer at his back, and the hidden lost water coming lapping over the sand towards the base of his pedestal where the dates of his birth and his death were marked, and those words again, after a few lines of his verse, ‘Scotland’s Most Loved Poet’.

Immediately she’d wanted to take off her jacket and stay. It was warm, now they were out here in this clearing, in the sun, the statue threw a clean dark shadow on the bright grass and Elisabeth had lain down alongside it, stripping off her top and trousers, the feel of the bright sun on her head and face and body like a pulse, a beat, the centre of the day above her and before her only blue … It did feel like summer, no matter what anyone in that country said, no matter what Karl said as he’d stayed standing there above her, alongside Robert Burns, refusing to lie down, to sit even. So she’d just stretched out, relaxed completely, the shadow of the poet beside her like a companion, her body long and lean and full of sun lying there on the grass.

She’d wanted to stay for the whole afternoon. She’d wanted to lie in the warmth and hear the lap, lap, lap of the blue water against the little beach, listen to the silence all around and the little sounds of birds she’d never heard before collecting in the tall trees. She’d wanted to stay all through the rest of the morning, into the afternoon, all through the day, let the sun come down and still she would stay … Not think about the next place they had to go to, or the next map to see … Not answer questions or make decisions, just keep herself whole in this state of absolute arrival she felt herself to be in now, like she’d felt in the car before with Karl asleep and she’d taken any turn she wanted, seen the sign and just followed it with her eyes. So it was like Karl may as well be asleep now. Like he wasn’t even there. And she realised the little hard feeling
in her stomach from before, that little bit of indigestible nut, like metal or bone, was gone and everything felt light and easy and warm.

*

That experience, she knows now, looking back on all this, of getting ‘lost’ on that holiday as Karl had said they were when he’d woken up to find himself somewhere unexpected, was of not being lost at all. It was the feeling, at the minute of letting it fall over her and claim her as she lay on the grass, of herself, of who she was, what she wanted, what she didn’t want. That she didn’t want to be pulled to her feet as Karl pulled her. Didn’t want to go back into the bush and leave it all behind her, the bright open secret of the lake with its strange statue that had been like some kind of a marker, to make her feel that all was tended, the grass cut around it and the ironwork polished and cleaned so it glinted in the sun …

BOOK: Infidelities
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