Prague (63 page)

Read Prague Online

Authors: Arthur Phillips

BOOK: Prague
5.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

"Well, you've had a very difficult life, obviously," Emily said in her sweetest lone. "That's terribly sad." John and Charles, head-pivoting tennis fans, glanced at each other to be reassured they still existed. "On the other hand," Emily said, striding boldly hut quietly forward despite the red tint to Nicky's bald head, "maybe he made you strong."

 

3SO I
 
ARTHUR
 
PHILLIPS

 

"Made me strong? What are you, some kind of Nietzsche freak?"

 

"T just mean maybe your special gifts, your artistic talents, your evidently very flamboyant personality, all come from your ambiguous experience with him, and he made you who you are."

 

"What?" JNicky began to stand, but John grabbed her arm. "Get your hands off me," she spat al him, pulling her hand away in a fist. But she did sit. although a little fleck of saliva jumped from her lips onto Emily's shirt. "So he made me? Fuck you, farm girl. I made me. Can you even understand what that means, sweetie? I made me. I. MADE. ME. Ladislau didn't make shit. His participation ended with the sperm, thank you very fucking much."

 

The angrier Nicky grew, the calmer Kmily became, and John thought he saw a gleam of pleasure in her sudden taunting mastery of the enraged artist.

 

"Well, who's up for dinner, then?" Charles asked.

 

"No. I was heading home. Fuck this." Nicky stood and gathered her things. "You know where to find me when the itch comes." she said to John, standing directly behind him. She bent over the top of his head and kissed him upside down, deeply if necessarily awkwardly. She pulled away, a line of saliva connecting their mouths like an echo of the kiss. She whispered something acid and sticky in his window-side ear, then spoke to the others: "See you around. Charlie. Bye-bye now. Sister Mary Catherine." She left them in a silence punctuated by Charles's laughter.

 

John's intended trio walked into the cool darkness of Vorosmarly Square, cut past the Kcmpinski scaffolding into Deak Square, up Andrassy in search of food. His thoughts knotted, tousled in the wind: Emily's cold and pointed provocations, Nicky's whispered venomous send-off: "Lose the farm dyke and come to me tonight." He had savored the spectacle of the two women fighting over him, and enjoyed watching Charles watching. But in her combat calm. Emily seemed to accuse him of insincerity, for how could he be with Nicky. someone so unlike Emily in every way? Emily walked in this oppressive, accusatory silence (but for her conversation with Charles). They read a menu on a rusty metal stand in front of a restaurant and Charles vetoed the establishment. Emily obviously thought Nicky had attacked out of jealousy or because John had instructed her to, had invited Kmily there precisely for this sort of infantile ambush. (And here they were trying to pick a restaurant on Andrassy as if nothing had happened.) But Emily had fought: she was jealous. And side by side, how marvclous she had seemed: energized, calm, serene, essential, while Nicky was a mess, a spiky ball of jagged, ingrown fears and uncontrolled appetites.

 

PRAGUE
 
1
 
:i.M

 

And tonight Emily had risked candor by fighting for him. tipped her heart just far enough for the light to reflect off it. She had said as much as she could say to let John know she was ready for him. (She and Charles laughed at something in a doomed and dusty shop window display.)

 

An overture of a few raindrops drummed the pavement, and then the entire untuned orchestra crashed its clumsy way through the clouds. Charles shouted something about the sanclity of his creases and ran into the first restaurant he could. Emily moved to join him. but John took her hand as Charles disappeared into the dimly glowing doorway, and the two of them were left half under a streetlight and fully under the falling cold. "What are you doing?" she yelled over the downpour, and he saw one half of her face in shadow, one half in dripping light, and he understood why this was so. He put his hands on her cold wet cheeks and he kissed her. "What are you doing?" she repeated (the same volume but with different accents), and pushed him away, the second woman in fifteen minutes. "You baffle me." he granted. "Evidently."

 

"But it doesn't have to be like this anymore. I think you've been trapped—" She nodded. "Let's go inside and get something to eat." she concluded for him.

 

"Come home with me." he said, and took her hand. "Come home with me. f know you—"

 

"What? John. Enough. Please." But her hand still lay in his, and that was not nothing.

 

"No," he said. "This is me talking. Listen to me. i've never been more serious about anything. You have to believe this."

 

She took her hand away and, saying something inaudible under the spill of rain against the shining pavement, turned toward the restaurant, and he knew that now was such a moment as men wait all their lives to face. "Emily, wait. I'll tell you. What if 1 told you I knew? I've known for ages. I'm a journalist. I could've told the world what you really are. but I haven't. I understand you."

 

"What 1 really am? What did that idiot tell you? Why would you listen to her? She's plainly a pervert, she's a lunatic." She pushed wet bangs off her forehead, breathed deeply, even smiled slightly. "But fine, go ahead. I'm very curious to hear what she said."

 

"Do I have to spell it out? Fine. I'll speak for both of us. Hide if you want.

 

352 I ARTHUR PHILLIPS

 

just know that you don't have to hide from me. You can't hide from me. I care about you. I don't care that you're a spy."

 

Emily stood entirely still for a moment, seemed to stare past John, and John saw that he had reached her at last. Another moment passed, and she spoke so quietly he had to lean toward her to hear: "Fuck you, John, you little prick."

 

A
  
CASE
  
COULD
  
BE
  
MADE
 
THAT
 
THE
  
WHOLE
  
EVENT
  
HAD
  
BEEN
  
A
  
VALUABLE

 

icebreaker, a steam valve. One more push and they would be past it all, beginning at last. The next morning: tbe rain symbolically past, blue sky, yellow stone bridge, birdsong above carsong, perpetual motion river, cloud wisps like eyelashes just parting after sweet conjugal sleep. (Yet some shapeless doubt tickled the inner ear, hummed just out of view, made rude faces when he was not quite looking away.) He composed his speech to her, and the Danube's rumble and splash were audible from this best of all possible bridges, providing a tympani roll to the avian oboes and the automotive strings. Just ahead of him, elderly orange-vested municipal sanitation workers stooped and swept the sidewalks with stiff bound-twig brooms, fairy tale props. As John passed, one sweeper leaned against his staff and caught his eye, expressionless. John wished him a Hungarian good day. The old sweeper hmph'd an ambiguous response and returned to sweeping into a heap tiny pieces of blue and white sky—bits of mirror smashed and sprinkled over the walkway.

 

Ahead of him on the sidewalk, in the shadow of the Parliament, knelt a young woman, her back to him, her head hanging low. Walking by her. looking over his shoulder without slowing, he saw she was petting a cat, who lay on the sidewalk wilh its head in her lap. The young woman wept quietly, and the cat's innards slumped damply out onto the pavement. The cat's half-open orange eyes sluggishly followed John as he passed, bul Ihe poor creature had no energy left to move its head or paws. The woman stroked the animal's still, soft head. She seemed to John unafraid, even though in tears, though she had no options, could not call on a flying squad of crack mobile cat surgeons. She wept and stroked the animal, and John did not have the words to ask what had happened. Lo be of any help or comfort at all. He walked on. shaken, and tried to concentrate on the written message to Emily (a fallback if she could not be lured down to the lobby to hear his principal address).

 

He reconsidered his prepared remarks (I would never do anything to...}. He

 

PRAGUE
 
i
 
353

 

rehearsed and made slight changes as an unknown marine called upstairs (7 only said what 1 said to show you I...). "She's on leave." the Alabama-accented, microphone-muffled voice filtered through the bulletproof Plexiglas. "Yep, as of today. Naw. didn't say how long. 'Scheduled leave' is all they said. Wanna leave a message, sir?" On the walk back toward the river, he edited the appeal that had now been redocketed for her bungalow (I just needyou to see how. . .). On the way he stopped into the newsroom and graciously rehearsed her responses on her behalf (Of course I'm not mad at you, come here, these things happen, mmm, you are terrible...}.

 

"Excellent. A surprise visit from Proyce. A moment of your time, sah." Editor's manner had lately been modeled on that of a Dickensian headmaster, and John laughed at this summons—the stern eyebrow, the crooked beckoning index finger slowly curling and uncurling as if Editor were studiously tickling the chin of an invisible and frightened child. Editor shut the door, sat down lightly, and began marking pages heavily. "Very good. Price. You're fired. Everything off your desk and out of here in—let's be fair—fifteen minutes. And no: no references."

 

John dropped into the extra chair and rubbed his eyes, still dry and itchy after a relatively sleepless night (Would you have really wanted me to be an aching virgin?}. "Man, I'm beat. 1 haven't slept right in ages. Oh, before I forget, the stripper piece is going to take one more day, I think. Tl's almost done."

 

"Won't be necessary." Editor mumbled, and violently scratched out a line.

 

"Oh. don't pull it. Really, just one day. I have an appointment this afternoon with this quartet who do a desert orgy thing. I promise—finished tomorrow."

 

Editor looked up from his scribbling. 'Are you still here? Were you listening? Fifteen minutes started when I said fifteen minutes."

 

"Also, I had another idea. What do you think about a series of ambassador profiles, very social-like. Tennis with the U.S. Hopeless restaurant-hunting with the French. Sex clubs with the Danish. Sad, impoverished window-shopping with the Bulgarian and North Korean."

 

"Have you gone barking mad? It's a very simple transaction. Take your belongings. Leave mine. Go away. Don't enter my line of sight again."

 

"Are you angry about something?"

 

"Mr. Price. If this is how you want to spend your"—dramatic displacement of cuff, inspection of black plastic watch face, mental calculation, replacement of cuff, interlacing of fingers on desk—"thirteen minutes, so be it.

 

OKI HUH

 

Did you think the embassy would not complain? Did you think I'd defend you? Or that you'd pass for a symbol of the free press? It's a crime to print the names of embassy employees and say they're spies, even to threaten to do it. The embassy gets angry if you get it right or not. And I would be liable."

 

"They said I said I'd—I didn't say I'd .. ." For a long moment. John stared at the unblinking man. The very dim possibility that she had massively misunderstood, had then told someone above her. that they had called Editor...

 

"Are you still here? You're not going to bore me with a free-press lecture, are you, my young moron? You've more sense than that. Just go."

 

John sat very still and tried to think. "You want me to call somebody to explain or whatever?"

 

"No. I want you to leave. Now."

 

"You're going to tire me for this? This is ridiculous. I had a fight with my girlfriend and you're firing me for treason? That's absurd."

 

"Are you still here? Fine, Mr. Price. Apparently you think I'm a monkey. I admit this is not the bloody Times or the Prague Post, but we are not, you know, absolutely corrupt, you little twat. Have you or have you not written profiles for this organ in exchange for payment from your subject?"

 

"That is completely out of context. You're getting this wrong, whoever your source is. The tone of it—this was not this serious thing you seem to think."

 

Editor picked up speed, and his nostrils took on an animated life of their own. 'Are you still here? Very well. Mr. Reilly. the undereducated. oververbose embassy security person who woke me from a dead sleep last night also informed me that this is not your girlfriend, Mr. Price, but that you have been, and I quote the unfortunate man, 'prcdatorily stalking the young lady in question up to this point in time.' So you have to excuse me, Mr. Price, if I ask you again, are you still fucking here?"

Other books

Hover by Anne A. Wilson
Jace by Sarah McCarty, Sarah McCarty
Forever This Time by Maggie McGinnis
Stay With Me by Alison Gaylin
Death's Lover by Marie Hall
Murder in Bloom by Lesley Cookman
The Death of Lila Jane by Teresa Mummert