Charles is ill. He is the one that pain rides. This is the second year. He takes morphine. I sit on a chair by his bed every night – not even on the edge of the bed, because he cannot cope with the mattress sloping – and gets terribly impatient. Or restless. I have a hard time staying seated for long periods at a time. And depressed. And very upset to see his pain-ridden face. I am not good at being the next of kin. I feel sorry for myself, at the turn life has taken. And for him, most of all, the one ridden with pain.
On the odd occasion that Charles gets up, I sometimes throw myself onto the bed where he lay, in an attempt to try to mull over the situation, and as I do, I view the room from his position – see what he is surrounded with every day. Still on the table are the gifts this week’s visitors have brought, a jar with a brown label dangling from a fiery-red bow: ‘Alwilda’s Strawberry Jam with Cumin,’ there’s some tea, and a silk pillow towering there, all gifts from young women with sunny dispositions; a little to the right are the dark gentlemanly things – rum and bitter chocolate.
The windowsill is lined with flowers and rocks, and there are a number of red items, a red plaid blanket over the back of a chair, a red glass on the table. The yellow orchids do not have the dead waxen characteristic that orchids often have, there is a swarm of small light flowers, and the height of the plants (nearly a metre) and the colour of the flowers (warm yellow) with the grey sky as a backdrop, makes you think of the yoga routine, Sun Salutation, where a person sits and salutes by stretching their arms high in the air. My maths tutor (at secondary school) tried to teach it to me, he struggled to cross my stiff calves over my thighs, into the lotus position, it felt like sitting on a see-saw. In the corner of the room is the rocking chair that he seduced Alma in, its seat and back are made of wicker, it was given a new seat, there were holes in the old one. The upstairs neighbour has a golden Buddha in the windowsill facing the street, in our windowsill Ganesha is standing with a rat, also visible from the street. Approaching the property, you would think you were approaching a couple of sanctuaries: Hindus on the ground floor, Buddhists on the first floor. Charles loves flowers. Charles loves rocks. I have an equally difficult time with rocks as with the sky – I stare and wait for something to happen, but nothing happens, and after a moment I give up. Or I just send short, dutiful looks at rocks, at stars. I have a strong desire and an expectation for something to happen inside me during my encounters with the world.
We, Charles and I, used to characterise our love with the words ‘speed, motion and momentum’. We never thought we would get stuck. Now we are. ‘Locked,’ visibly, just like something in his back, him to the bed, me to the chair by the bed.
The morphine has taken away Charles’s appetite, he lives on oranges. First his stomach became as flat as that of a young man, and I stroked it with desire. Now he is practically hollow. I lean over him gingerly – I need to be an angel or some other winged presence so that I can float above him weightlessly, touch him without making the pain worse – and kiss him and I am terrified that he will disappear from me entirely, ‘ow, ow, ow,’ he says. Back to the chair. I have become a sister. I recall: Torremolinos, God knows what year exactly, but there was an air of hippyness to it, and we were all reading The Drifters (it was passed round between us) by James A. Michener, that was why we were in Torremolinos, one of the chapters was set there, and that was why we later travelled to Marrakech (and then returned to Torremolinos just like in the book) where we arrived in moonlight, and I provoked my boyfriend, Tim was his name, by saying that the walls and the ground were yellow, not red, the red walls of Marrakech, as Michener had described so enticingly, and which at long last we now stood by. Alas, all of this because I sit looking at Charles’s brown pill bottles remembering a man with brown hair (who constantly had to toss his head back to get the long fringe out of his eyes, was missing a couple of teeth and must have had a name like Jimmy) with a guitar on one of the beaches, very quietly singing ‘Tell me, sister morphine, when are you coming round again,’ and I thought: yes, that’s how it is, (‘it’ likely meaning life – but actually things are only like that now, just under twenty years later (now: morphine & immense pain that I am a neighbour to here on the chair) while at the same time feeling left out and, quite rightly, like a complete idiot. My self-consciousness made me quiet as a clam; but within my muteness I kicked against the pricks – against the idea that there was something wrong with me, even though I was unable to fit in with the crowd.
I was envious of those who were happy and easy-going. In particular a Norwegian girl whose laughter rose and fell as she played ball, wearing only knickers and with a couple of long hairs (though blonde) poking out from one nipple; she had been an intravenous drug user and saw it as her new mission in life to smuggle hash into Norway – to somewhere far north where she came from, to give young people there an alternative to heroin, which was much easier to smuggle, and for that reason it was far cheaper and more accessible (she explained to us in a rare moment of gravity) – swaddled in packages around her tall Norwegian waist, maybe around her legs too. I remember that her legs were not even that long. It occurs to me that the one time we were alone together (which was easier for me than being in a crowd, I kept seeing myself from the outside, and it cast an enormous damper on me: it meant that there were two of me and I found myself walking in a never-ending circle, treading on my own toes) and in an attempt at intimacy (which maybe I was able to reciprocate, maybe not) she told me about a house she had lived in, along with several other junkies, where they had slept in one big pile and every night they would simply reach out for whoever was closest, from somewhere deep inside ‘the blind night of intoxication,’ and I envisaged a Hieronymus Bosch scenario, it was also the first time I heard the Norwegian words for cock and cunt. And I should not have begrudged her for all the happiness available to her. But I did.
She was with a German named Uwe who spent his life in a VW Breadloaf, he was such a warm and beautiful person, with long, thick curls and a laugh that went on so long that I seized up, that is, moved a notch below my base condition – like a clam. And I had an unpleasant feeling that my mere presence, my essence, was placing a damper on the group; once in a while they looked at me with concern. Of course, it was frisbee she was playing, or they were playing frisbee, the happy Norwegian and the happy German, the beautiful couple, one fair, the other dark, that is whenever they were not simply bent over the hooka (which for my part definitively and conclusively severed my connection with the group, as I sailed off in a darkness of grief and regret. A little later when they slipped down to the beach to get high on LSD, they were clever enough to leave me in the VW, which (by the way) Uwe had placed at his girlfriend’s disposal for her project. They collected the hash in Morocoo, hid it behind the hubcaps and in a couple of hollowed-out surfboards that were secured to the roof, and I don’t know whether I came down one day and saw her preparing to leave with all the packages fastened to her body with thick tape, or whether that was something I saw in a film) and he shouted ‘Go for it, Cathy,’ with glittering teeth; and maybe later he would lean his magnificent German bite over her breast and snip off the hair. Or not. Because what was there was natural. Just as she burped when she had to – in a straightforward and graceful way, like a small and lovely sound had been released inside a seashell and now rolled between its mother-of-pearl walls.
After a couple of months I managed to tear myself away – it felt like I was glued to the spot, and in all that time by the sea, in the southern sun, I had not bathed, neither in the sea nor the sun, I was liable to fits of monological rage (with my family as the focal point), which the hash had clearly unlocked, and which kept going, for years – without additional fuel, a kind of perpetual motion machine of the mind.
‘Here comes the spring,’ I said to Charles as I walked past his bed with a yellow glass vase (I had just bought) and placed it on the table where he could see it. At Østre Anlæg, the slopes are yellow with buttercups. The vase is more of an old-fashioned yellow colour, however that is supposed to be understood. I also bought one for Alma. Now, as I sit by Charles’s bed, I keep turning to look at it. The colour is outright soothing.
Later the forsythia arrive, but perhaps yellow is not comforting, but a sheer maddening energy; because Charles just lies there. Charles just cries or turns away. And now the mirabelle is powdery white, in long white strokes with all that brownness still around it. Charles turns over and says, so that was how life turned out.
‘Who knows what constitutes a life,’ I say, it sounds matter-of-fact, you would not think it was the title of a book by Ashbery.
Outside the miracle continues, the colours rise from the brownness; the miracle continues to be miraculous, year after year, and the older you get, the more you seem to love the spring, it is the coldness of the grave in the bones that this love comes from. There stands the tree, Charles, with lead weights dangling from his arms, a pendulum round his neck, no, he has become a grandfather clock, a staggering and bandy one. He stands as though on a sloping floor. And the mirabelle loses all its leaves in a single night.
We have two pairs of boxing gloves, mostly for decoration now, but once, in another lifetime, Charles used to box with his two sons. Listen, we haul Charles out of bed, make the bed and to begin with, we position him on top of the bedspread.
We say: ‘That can’t be right, two people who together had so much speed. Let’s have a little party.’
(We, it is always Charles and I.)
Who’s that coming? It’s jolly well Edward, and he has brought his dog with him, it’s white with black freckles, and it jumps up on the bed and grabs a corner of the bedspread in its mouth and spins round twelve times while it whimpers as though it was painful work, ‘to make sure there are no snakes in the grass,’ Edward says, ‘the primitive mind, you know, when dogs were wolves,’ before eventually lying down. But then there is another knock at the door, and it has to get up and say hello, the entire ritual was in vain, my beloved Alma arrives, and she has Kristian with her, the dog spins round again, the bedspread is getting properly wrinkled, ‘easy now, lie down, there are no snakes.’ Alma and Edward have never met before, but they seem very familiar to one another, and poor Kristian gets jealous – until suddenly Edward is positive that he has seen him before too. Charles places the morphine on the table, who wants to try, Edward does. Edward is always in need of relief, first there were his parents, then Alwilda, his life is far too empty, he has to fill the great void that the dog alone has been unable to. I lug in an entire case of champagne from the kitchen, ‘the majority of eye injuries in the sixties were caused by champagne corks,’ Kristian claims and covers his face with his hands, he has never been much of a hero, in actual fact he would prefer to crawl under the table, and I tell them how during my time as a waiter I hit a man in the forehead. The corks fly, and the anticipation of the intoxication is like standing at a great height and looking across a kingdom, I seldom drink, but when I do, I drink far too quickly.
‘Slower, Camilla, slower,’ Charles says, but it is probably too late, my mind is already galloping – ahead, across the kingdom. Edward is talking dog-talk, and I place my watch on the table and say ‘okay, Edward, you have ten minutes, and then I don’t want to hear another word about dogs.’
‘You’re so cynical, Camilla,’ Edward says.
I crank up Sexy Back in order to avoid hearing him tell how dogs are such sensible creatures yet again, then Edward asks Alma what kind of music she prefers, and she says: ‘Gloria Gaynor and Shostakovich,’ Edward can appreciate that, and they both get up and browse the shelves of music, I notice that Kristian is in the mood for a fight, and I go and fetch the boxing gloves, ‘I’ve thrown down the gauntlet,’ I shout and drop them on the table in front of my companions, one pair brown and the other lacquer red, a promise that blood is going to be spilt – when good manners crack. Charles is talking about the dog’s long legs, it has jumped down from the bed, its lofty legs, and I am on the verge of being jealous, but isn’t it a he, I check under the belly, yes, no.
‘Charles, give Edward some more morphine,’ I shout, because he has brought the lovely dog with the lofty legs into the living room.
‘I had decided not to speak to it,’ Edward says to Alma, and I can see that she is already bored, ‘at least not outdoors, but I was unable to follow through on that, as it is well known that language cannot be blocked, it trickles or crashes out of you. A gaze that meets your gaze, and a will that can be guided in the right direction, or can’t – that is sufficient. Language takes hold. It enquires, it persuades, it threatens and reasons. But I try to curb it and do not use the conjunctive, subordinate clauses or irony. Not like the lady with the black labrador. When it finally comes to her, she forces its head up, it looks at her sluggishly and she hits it: “What’s wrong with you? Didn’t you hear me? There’s no way you didn’t hear me. I’m not falling for that, my friend. You know that when Mummy calls, you have to come to Mummy.” I tried to tell her that the dog does not want to come to her when it associates that with being hit. “It understands,” she answered. Towards me, she is rather curt.’
‘Your ten minutes is up, Edward,’ I shout, because now I can only express myself by shouting and only move by running, and he nods and falls silent, maybe he has nothing else to talk about today. In any case Alma can probably hear how bright he is. Edward was the last friend to arrive. It feels like someone is missing, ‘where has Kristian got to?’
‘He has probably got his head in the fridge,’ Alma says, and he probably has, because he always fancies something other than what is being served, and he is always hungry, even though the table is groaning with sausages and cheese, but he is most at ease when he can slink around on his own in the kitchen and open cupboards and drawers and nibble a little here and there. ‘Should we take a look?’ I ask, because then I can have Alma to myself for a moment, (I am a possessive and jealous person) and she takes me by the arm, and we slip through the rooms and down the long corridor, and then Alma jumps into the kitchen with a howl, and just as we suspected: the fridge door is open, and Kristian has one hand on his chest, ‘jeez,’ he says.
‘Can I help?’ I ask, ‘or can you find what you’re looking for on your own?’
Kristian nods, a sandwich in the other hand, a scrap here and a scrap there, his nose is running. Kristian is a doctor. ‘Hoping that he won’t become a patient,’ Alma says. He is terrified of illness. The patients’ eyes meet the shifty gaze of the doctor, shake his sweaty hand, receive their diagnosis from a cracking voice. I know nothing about all of that. But he looks nice in his white coat, I have seen him, stern and slender. ‘Since our time here is so brief…,’ is how he often starts his sentences. It sounds beautiful and it is sad and true. Just as, according to Alma, in the final moment of abandonment, near the conclusion of the seething, pounding finish, he shows the whites of his eyes – so she is forced to close her eyes and to think: Here it is, the death you fear so much. And now it arrives, now, now, now.
I sit down at the kitchen table, ‘Doctor, doctor, I think I’m ill,’ I say. Alma sits down next to me and swings her legs, ‘Doctor, doctor, I’ve broken a bone,’ she says.
Without resembling each other one iota, Alma and I are often mistaken for sisters, because after having known each other for so long, we are like two sides of the same coin, Alma is the queen and I am the ship or the throne or the tower or the statesman.
‘Doctor, doctor, I have appendicitis,’ I say.
‘I’m leaving the scene of the scandal,’ he says and exits the kitchen, his face contorted as though he has smelt something awful; the scene of the scandal is the intoxication, we realize, he is right and never gets intoxicated.
Nobody says no within me. Everything within me agrees.
‘Doctor, doctor, I have flat feet,’ I shout after him.
It might be appropriate to reveal a little about my friends here, just a little:
1. Alma is my number one. When I was fourteen and had known Alma for seven of my fourteen years, it struck me like a bolt of lightning when I was standing in the shower: ‘Oh no, I’ve fallen in love with Alma.’ I caught my gaze in the mirror and soothingly repeated my mum’s words (said in an entirely different context) in my mum’s deep voice: ‘It’s easy to mix up one kind of love with another.’ Why did I think of her round breasts back then? But it passed. Maybe even by the time I climbed out of the shower a moment later.
2. Charles has large features, a seductive mouth, Kristian is sophisticated, and Edward is handsome, in good shape and has well-developed calves. He spends the majority of his life walking. Such men, such times.
3. Alwilda. But she couldn’t come.
Back to my companions. The living room has become a boxing ring; Charles, who can hardly walk, but is the only one who can box, is bouncing around on the floor, along with Edward; the combination of champagne & morphine gives them wings. Until he receives a sudden blow that makes him collapse. He deprecatingly raises both arms in the air, the gloves quickly resemble bandaging. A moment later he is lying on the bed again, now with the dog at his side, and Alma is extricating him from the gloves, ‘Doctor, doctor,’ I say, because now the pain is shooting up through the champagne and through the morphine, ‘where’s the brown pill bottle?’ Finally I can be still.
And now Edward leans towards Alma and tells her about the ducks dozing in the sun by the lakeshore, about how the dog races after them, sends them splashing across the water; if one of the ducks is too slow, it swipes at the air with its paw, because not for a moment does it consider killing them, it merely enjoys the pleasure of forcing them into the water – this takes place off the island with the rhododendron, in Østre Anlæg, where at the moment a long pink reflection drags the flower down into the lake, and there are also white, crimson and purple rhododendrons. The flower bushes are close together, practically a thicket, white stretches up and peers over the shoulder of red, but they jostle all the same. There is a denseness resembling a tropical forest.
When Edward begins to talk about the reflection, Alma wakes up. He has nudged her with his eloquence. Now they look at each other. Edward imagines a life with Alma and Alma imagines secret meetings with Edward, on Rhododendron Island, for example, where she will lie with her head in his lap while he raises her limp hand and speaks about her simultaneously pointy and round fingers.
‘Oh,’ Alma says, ‘I’m in love with the spring. I can’t sit still. I can’t stay indoors.’
‘But most of all, I love the lilacs,’ Edward says.
‘That’s not even an island,’ Kristian says.
‘Kristian,’ I say and reach for the gloves, ‘now it’s our turn.’