The Deepest Sea

THIS IS BEING WRITTEN with green ink—though in fact it is not, not yet. Quite some time has passed since this pen was last used—and, compared to the other fountain pen I have, which is used very often, it is indeed rather unwieldy—and perhaps for that reason alone I am finding it quite difficult to just get on with something.

It would seem the last time it was used the ink running from its nib was blue black. In fact it still contained the old cartridge, more or less empty, and I wonder—I can’t help it—where all the ink from that cartridge went. Quite some time has passed you see since this pen was last used and actually I have a fair idea where most of the ink from that last cartridge went because the pen itself had been a gift as a matter of fact, and since there was a notebook along with it too it’s reasonable to suppose that the two things combined, just in the way the person who made the gift had intended.

How very diligent of me.

Even now, this far in, the words here are still coming blue black—and give no indication of changing. Not so much as a hint, which I think is unusual. How can that be? I don’t see anything odd or ridiculous about writing in green by the way; but, alas, it is not really something you can go on with once you’ve come across those unkind and boorish remarks and recognised the stigma attached, and then of course one just feels very embarrassed as if caught out and doesn’t do it anymore and sort of pretends they never did. The reason why it’s happening again now, or soon will be, is not because I have recently returned to green ink but because recently a cartridge of green ink was discovered in the bottom of a shopping bag I haven’t used for a very long time. The reason I haven’t used this particular shopping bag for a long time is because it has wheels, and while it was very useful to have a shopping bag with wheels when I lived in the city, it is completely impractical now that I no longer live in the city, and so the last time I used it was when I moved from the city and I filled it up with things from the kitchen cupboards in the house in the city I was moving from, and even then I didn’t put it to its proper use and pull it along on its wheels from the house, a man carried it over his shoulder from the kitchen to a van that was quickly filling up with my stuff from the house I was moving away from in the city. Sure enough the shopping bag with wheels was stuffed with bubble wrap, which I’m sure I will need again one day, but I’m sure I don’t need to hang on to this particular bundle, so I discarded the bubble wrap actually, and then, at the bottom of the bag, well not very much really.

A battery of course always a battery, a very small whisk, and a Sheaffer cartridge of green ink. I always assumed Sheaffer was Dutch or Danish or perhaps Swedish—who wouldn’t? As it turns out Walter A. Sheaffer was born in Iowa and his fountain pens were incorporated in 1913, which means this year marks the 100-year anniversary of Sheaffer fountain pens and I’m sure there are some very fine special editions available to commemorate the occasion. Parker Pen, again to my surprise, was also founded by an American—Mr. George Safford Parker, in 1888, which means Parker are currently celebrating their 125th anniversary, in rather more understated fashion than Sheaffer I would think, whose current output is, in my opinion, a little ostentatious. Paper Mate, I believe, manufacture ballpoint pens—but that is not the overall reason why I have no interest in them and will say about them nothing further.

Time was I’d have any number of fountain pens on the go at the same time, but they were not interchangeable for the reason that they each contained a different coloured cartridge and therefore each had a specific and distinct function. I would negotiate both high-minded matters and bureaucratic downers with the steely blue black, flourish the gold for noteworthy turning points and milestones, and switch over to green perhaps for more clandestine dealings.

Yes, secretly, I wrote occasionally in green right up until quite some time ago—even after I learnt about the stigma associated with it—perhaps in fact I appreciated there being a stigma and felt duty bound to develop it further. Added to which my fountain pens were stolen—what I mean is, I stole them—quite easily—so that at all times I never had fewer than three fountain pens in the top outside pocket of my Crombie. I did not have the clips of the pen lids fastened over the pocket, ever, by the way. Certainly the tops of the pens were just about visible over the pocket but since that was just how it went I had no doubts whatsoever as to whether this was acceptable or not. In any case it was a particularly shabby coat, with a straggly length of thread where the top button should have been, and pockets that fell into the lining and a somewhat hardened hem, bent all out of shape, so really it would have been nigh on impossible to look highfalutin in it which was just as well because the last thing I ever wanted was to look highfalutin. I still have it in fact but in recent years it seems the only occasions I take to wearing it are when someone has done me a complicated and mostly unforeseen unkindness; it’s a coat I can wear lying in the long grass with my arms folded even when the long grass is wet through you see.

I shall admit that I have always had an innate weakness for shabby clothes and so inured am I by now to holes and so on I have become quite impervious to the offense or alarm or unease or pity such thread-worn garbs might occasionally cause in others. I remember once years ago seeing a French girl in Dublin wearing a light coloured corduroy coat which had large stains down the front of it, on both sides of the zip, and the stains were very dark as if they had come from the pulp of a dark fruit such as a damson or perhaps some elderberries and when I was first introduced to this French girl with the filthy corduroy coat I couldn’t take my eyes off these decadent blossoms of deepest crimson that thrived on both sides of the zip and whenever I met her on subsequent occasions I’d always feel a bit put out and slightly bored if she wasn’t wearing it. I thought those stains were quite exquisite and exciting somehow—as if she were brandishing a glimpse of herself in process; they were so vivid and unashamed. Even now the ink has not changed and goes on and on blue black—I thought perhaps I was just seeing it all wrong so went over to the brightest lamp, there in the left window, and even there, there especially, the words are uniformly blue black, with no hint at all of green—not so much as a whisper.

Well I can’t believe my eyes! I unscrewed the pen so as to check that what I’d put into it was what I thought I’d put into it, and yes, sure enough, there it was, quite quite green—and draining fast! A good fifth already spent and still no sign of it yet. The reason in the first place I came by this cartridge of unforthcoming green ink is because the shopping bag it was at the bottom of was itself out on the driveway quite suddenly, and without my say-so, along with some other bits and pieces of mine that are not in current use. Funnily enough I can’t recall if I spotted my displaced belongings from somewhere outside or while standing at the kitchen sink doing the usual—furthermore, I did not feel any sort of anxiety or affront when, wherever it was I stood, I noticed some of my belongings had been shifted without my say-so from the outbuilding to the driveway.

Up until that moment I had more or less accepted that I was the sort of person who didn’t feel at all easy about having any of her belongings interfered with—and by interfered with I mean anything so much as looked at actually. I’m terribly secretive you see so that kind of attention just doesn’t suit me. Nevertheless, right there in front of me were many of my personal effects, moved by someone or other, quite suddenly, and without my say-so, yet I had half a mind to pretend I hadn’t noticed a thing. So despite what I thought about myself it turned out my concern for these outlying possessions of mine was really quite scant and I think in all honesty the chief reason why I went out there at all was because I was wearing a new sweater.

There was in fact nothing at all untoward about parts of my stash being put out onto the driveway like this; my landlady and her sister have been making frequent visits recently and from what I have observed from the kitchen window they are very much taken up with putting things in order. Three days ago, for example, she came to my door and asked me about two large bags of empty bottles which have nothing to do with me, but of course one has to be very careful about how one communicates that something has nothing to do with one so as not to get the people it has everything to do with into hot water. And so now they’ve made a start on the outbuilding, and why not. After all it’s become a dumping ground for every sort of discoloured tat, blighted clutter and things that are just too damn awkward to get rid of; it seems perfectly reasonable that they should wish to reinstate it as a repository for those things that aren’t needed day-to-day yet can’t quite be given up.

Indeed, when I first came here the outbuilding was like a sort of lumber room, and sometimes, when I was at a loose end, I’d go across and stand in its delicate gloom for a while and wait to see what caught my eye. And then, when I’d been living here a little longer, I might go ahead and pick something up and look at it that way, and then, when I’d begun to feel really quite at home, I’d occasionally appraise something or other rather favourably and thereupon take whatever it was back into the cottage with me. I won’t go as far as to say the outbuilding contained unimagined treasures, indeed at first glance it all looked rather humdrum, nonetheless, for a while each time I went in there I wouldn’t leave without bringing something back with me and I remember thinking what a soft touch I must be that even old things on a shelf can somehow win me over and impel me to return them to where they used to be. Because I was quite aware that that was what I was doing; carting castaways right back to the very places they used to be.

We’ve been to the tip four times already, she told me, after saying something pleasant but slightly erroneous about my new jumper. We stood on the driveway and talked about stuff and the way it mounts up, and we talked a little bit about France and Italy—I must say she looked very well. Then we both went on over to the outbuilding where indeed more and more things had been piling up to the extent that it had become pretty well impossible to get the door open and I saw that in fact a considerable amount of stuff had already been got rid of or was out on the driveway in a kind of awkward limbo awaiting a final verdict and whatever remained had been stacked together very neatly, with my stereo as a rather impressive centrepiece. That doesn’t work, I said, you can get rid of it. I saw my tent was there too—rolled into its proper bag—forming a sort of mantel, or lintel actually—and catching sight of my tent is always bracing and so there was no doubt at all in my mind about whether it was going or staying. Outside, on the other hand, were things that were not so easy to know what to do with—including, for example, many thousands of words I produced during the three years I spent working on a doctoral thesis. Many of the pages were loose and I knew very well they weren’t in any order. There were quite a few of those frumpy ring binders that I could never quite bring myself to use because they are just so heart-sinking and severe and I recall I had to hunt high and low, which is actually quite a difficult activity to carry off in just two available stationery shops, for folders that were not black or red or blue. This is all a preamble really, of course it is, going on and on, as much as possible, so as not to ever get to what it was I really came across. There was an envelope, a white envelope—the sort which can easily accommodate an A4 sheet of paper or two if they’ve been neatly folded across-ways twice. And on the white envelope was somebody else’s name crossed out and above that was my name and on the back was a small strip of sticking tape, that was still, actually, quite sticky, so I had to pull at it a bit in order to get the envelope opened. And there it was, from him, in my hand again.

It was my understanding that the letter had been in the house the whole time in the inner pocket of a clutch bag I no longer use, because that was in fact where it was kept for a long time, and I can’t imagine what the reason for me moving it was at all. I had not anticipated standing with it today on the driveway, of course I hadn’t, and so I stood on the driveway and just held it with both hands for a while, enjoying the occurrence of something I had not expected and feeling terrifically self-conscious in the process. I came right out of myself as a matter of fact; I could see my new sweater and the bright colours of its haphazard design, and I could even see around to the back of my neck and the loop of hair that had come loose from my ponytail and hung there. Then I realised I was waiting for the feelings to come; that same arrangement of feeling which always runs its course whenever I hold this envelope. But those feelings did not come, and, in any case, those feelings had never quite been natural—the fact that this letter existed at all was something of a miracle you see, there had been a great deal put in the way of it, it always felt so hot and vertiginous in my hands; nothing in relation to it could ever be fresh and voluntary. Yet that was all so far away now and today, this afternoon, the letter stood alone, unhindered, free from all the panic and recrimination that had followed and obscured it. I took it from its envelope and the feeling that came to me was that I was about to read something I had not read before.

The type was small and the font unfamiliar—the whole format was kind of strange actually—but I knew they were his words only, coming from him. And unlike those first times previously I did not plunge through it headlong but took it word by word, moving steadily, from one word to the next, without once slipping. Consequently every line I came across seemed different beneath my eyes—closer, much closer. Closer than how they had appeared to me the first times I’d read it years ago. Looking at it then with hungry rapid eyes I remember the same unconnected words would rear up forcing other words in between to recede and it was always as if I stood out on a small doweling perch above a loaded and churning landscape. I would see a thick black storm always, and colossal phosphorous waves, and amongst all the tumult and electric tints something firm yet recoiling would call out to me, but of course I could not hear what it was. And so I would just stand there, shaking perforce on my small doweling perch, feeling helpless and culpable and vicious for reasons I could not really examine nor wholly accept. Today on the driveway in my bold new sweater I went right along with him.

Word by word.

Step by step.

And directly came into contact with his mind in motion as it railed, proclaimed, recalled, confessed, imagined and eventually wrung itself out. Something was happening to him and what I held between both hands were indiscriminate workings out, notes that sought to give shape to a struggle: a love letter intent upon pushing right into every corrosive crevice and scabrous contour of its own impossibility. So much action, so much energy—so much of everything; I stopped and looked around, turning my head so as to include the gates in my survey—surely he was somewhere. All I’d required from his letter then were beautiful and accomplished sentiments not a pell-mell and furious thrashing out of his craving and cowardice. And yet it is that, the defeated aspect of desire, hopes dashed and ragged, which in the end outlives any exalted pronouncement striving towards the eternal; what I held in my hands felt so alive it seemed unthinkable that it did not prosper. Why does he not come through the trees right now?

I brought the letter back into the house with me but I did not return it to the clutch bag because it seemed to me it had spent enough time in there and belonged somewhere else now—though I’m not sure the new place I put it is an entirely satisfactory place. It might not be satisfactory, but it’s certainly better than the clutch bag—to tell you the truth I was sick of it being in that clutch bag. It’s an old-fashioned kind of bag, God only knows where I got it, a secondhand shop I should think, a long time ago: it’s just the sort of bag a woman who’s only ever received one letter in her whole life would keep that one letter in, and as a matter of fact I’ve received many letters, more or less consistently, starting from quite some time ago. Letters, poems, songs, cassette tapes, little portraits even—I even have an unremarkable pebble with a delightfully brazen message wrapped about it, I like that very much in fact; it always astonishes me. And all these notes and stones and so on are precious vestiges of something that took place and played out, however briefly, however blunderingly, and as such they are tucked in a big box all together, side by side, like lovely soft-hued sugared almonds, tied up with silver string. That’s the difference. When, on the contrary, a letter attests to something that did not happen, that could not happen, it will not come to rest. It possesses you on and on and there is no final place for it. Everybody knows deep down that life is as much about the things that do not happen as the things that do and that’s not something that ought to be glossed over or denied because without frustration there would hardly be any need to daydream. And daydreams return me to my original sense of things and I luxuriate in these fervid primary visions until I am entirely my unalloyed self again. So even though it sometimes feels as if one could just about die from disappointment I must concede that in fact in a rather perverse way it is precisely those things I did not get that are keeping me alive.

Sometimes I imagined us near the sea in a cove with the tide coming in too fast. Other times we sat on great big rocks that struck out over a lake and we each held a bottle of beer loosely in our hands and we’d indicate things either on the lake’s surface or right across on the other side with the neck of the beer bottle we each held loosely in our hands. And then, more and more, we’d be in a car heading down a long straight road with a beach just there to the right of us. There were lots of people on the beach and they were all incredibly fit and attractive in a florescent and bronzed sort of way—I wonder if we weren’t in LA actually. Perhaps we were heading out of LA—I think that’s more like it. The metallic sun was so dazzling I could hardly even see the bonnet of the car. It was beautiful. I looked down now and then at his hand and his lap. Then at his feet, the laces in his shoes in fact—and there it was, the only idea, the only thing I could think of: speed. Foot down, windows down; direct sunlight, all the way.

What we’d talk about is anyone’s guess; I can’t remember ever really talking to him. Except one day. One day we were talking, he was describing something to me, and one of the first words he used in his description was a term I did not really know the meaning of and even though I understood all the subsequent elucidations no picture could come together in my mind because of this one fundamental detail that I was largely unclear of. This made me shy and anxious because something was forming in my head regardless and I knew it was all wrong and I didn’t want for anything connected with him to be inaccurate because I knew I’d only get to have one or two things about him to remember and so naturally I was very keen for those one or two things to be limpid and precise. What does that mean, I said. What does what mean, he said. Cantilevered, I said. Cantilevered, he said. Yes, I said, I don’t know what it means really. And he explained to me what cantilevered means and it must have been that my face still looked concerned because he held his hand flat out in front of us and he took my hand and placed it vertically beneath his so that my fingertips connected with those little mounds where his own fingers began and, just like that, everything came together. That’s it, he said, that’s cantilevered. And of course the picture that fell into place only highlighted the life he had and the hopelessness of me supposing I could ever be a part of it. Even so, I loved the way he said it. Cantilevered. Cantilevered. I love the way he said that word. Cantilevered. I will never hear it and I will always hear it.