Paris—March 15, 2007
Dear Ben Constable,
You may well be curious to know why I have sent a letter and not a text message or an email; why didn’t I just call for the pleasure of laughter, or wait until we were seated at a table in the corner of a busy café, turned sideways on our chairs with our backs to the wall so as not to blow smoke in the other’s face, our coats on a stand by the door with the distant smell of rain, and droplets tracing watery furrows down the window as we turn to face each other directly, because the conversation has, perhaps, become more intense, and we carefully place our elbows so as not to upset the coffee cups or, better still, wineglasses? And why, you may ask yourself, is it a typed letter, not handwritten (more intimate), with the delicate and honorable craft of calligraphy?
I’m sure it has crossed your mind that the time taken to write and the effort to deliver such a letter suggest a message or a purpose greater than idly occupying myself on a sleepless night, more urgent than to flatter with evidence I was thinking of you.
But what about the tactile delight of paper, Ben Constable? Why should I not write simply for the multisensory pleasure it gives, to bask in the gratification of the words, or for the weight of a thousand of years, no—much more, thousands, of letter-writing tradition?
You are right, of course; there is an explanation, although it is one I am loath to give, because you will not want to hear it. If only I had something to say that was joyful or could gently overwhelm you with images and sensations of wonder, but this is not that kind of letter, I’m afraid. And I become tangled as I try to dilute it, coat it in sugar. Would that it were possible to make you smile in spite of me.
And now, with such seeds of apprehension sown, I should no longer skirt the issue. But the point is choked up somewhere between the lump in my throat and my stumbling fingertips. If I could avoid it long enough, maybe it would go away or drift into memory like a bad dream. But alas, this point will not fade so easily.
Oh, how bad can it be? I’m not your girlfriend, so you can’t be dumped. I’m not your boss, so you’re not fired. You have done nothing wrong, you have not hurt me, I am not angry, I love you (and that’s not the point either, by the way. I’m not about to embarrassingly prostrate myself before you, begging that we live out our tiny lives in tedium and grow old and frail in each other’s arms).
And if the reason for my writing is still enigmatically shrouded in drivel, what I imagine is becoming clearer is my method for postponing the inevitable. As well you know, I have long taken shameless pleasure in the avoidance of the crux of any matter. “The point” is so often a delicacy to be savored, its anticipation a tantalizing delight, teasing its way closer with agonizing lethargy, in its every delay a mounting of the tension and a prolongation of the bliss.
However, what I have to say is important and sadly carries with it little pleasure. (Parenthetically, this style of never getting to the point is in some ways an appropriate reflection of our friendship. We are neither of us a stranger to the eternal flow of conversation, twisting its way across the floodplain, dallying in the shallows, splashing over small rocks, resting calm in deep pools, spinning in eddies and forming unlikely currents, because the experience of the journey has been the joy, and to reach the ocean is to signal the end. And maybe we had the remote idea that time could never run out and that we would never be bored, that the river would never stop flowing, as if the parenthesis could be endless and the brackets would never need to be closed and the opening clause never resolved, leaving the point to be continued at another, nonspecified time until eternity, and even then the sentence would just finish with an ellipsis . . . And I almost feel as though we could have gotten away with it too if it weren’t for one overriding fact that spoils the whole thing. It’s an obvious fact, and one that you know about, Ben Constable. The fact is that death will finish our conversation long before eternity even comes close.)
And this sadly brings me to the point, if only I could have said it earlier, and I did once try before I knew you too well; it seemed easier then. Do you remember, Ben Constable, you were drinking with your friends in a bar a few streets from here and I rang you to say hi (I wasn’t feeling too good)? You told me to come and join you, and I didn’t want to cramp your style, I would have left quickly, but you talked mostly just to me, and after a while your friends went on to a party, and you and I stayed drinking wine until close. Then we walked up Ménilmontant and I showed you the cobbled street at the top where there is a secret place to sit and we smoked a cigarette or two, and the point was becoming distant. I was just happy to be with you and we laughed in lowered voices so as not to disturb the neighbors and I wasn’t sad anymore and the point drifted out of reach. Perhaps that was the beginning of this overly worded, endless sentence that is all our conversations (the carefree tangents, my avoidance). I’m so proud; it seems I’ve managed another paragraph without telling you why I’m writing.
But now I’m not playing because, this one time, the point isn’t the last thing. It’s the trigger for something new, the beginning of something bigger, the start of an adventure, Ben Constable. So here it is (I hesitate, trying to think of some other urgent distraction, but there is none): the point is that I’m going to die.
Of course, death comes to us all, but I’m dying more quickly. And I’m not going to drag it out, desperately clinging to the fading crepuscule of my life; I’m going to kill myself. Sorry. I don’t imagine that this is in any way entertaining for you. But I wanted to say goodbye.
I also wanted to introduce you to an idea: you are the inheritor of a thing, or many things, I’ve been making for years, since long before I knew of your existence—since my childhood, in fact. I can’t tell you what it is yet; that would spoil it. It’s a surprise.
But by the time these pages find your hands I will have been dead for a few hours. And as I’m writing, Ben Constable, I am sad because I miss you already. It seems such a shame to finish it all. But I’d like the dignity of control in my ending. I think you can understand that, because you know that endings do not always come last, and that they are only a question of definition, a place to change activity, theme or pace.
Hey, can I tell you some stuff? Stupid stuff, nothing exciting. But even at this of all moments, my attention snags on things that I like, things I think of as treasures. I’d love to show you. I’d love you to know about them.
The first treasure is the view while I write. I like the sketched lines of the trees at nighttime and looking down through their bare branches at the square below, where on sunny days people gather around the ornate drinking fountain or sit outside the salon de thé, smoking. I love the grand stairway leading up to the doors of the church, towering over the neighborhood like a sentinel. And I love to look at the collected objects around me, each with a story that will die on my parting, and the stopped clock on my wall saves me precious seconds. Its hands point to twenty past three, optimistically suggesting time for one last thing. I will miss my clock, and in my imagination the clock will miss me too.
And as I note these words I’m reminded how much I love the activity of writing. I might have drawn this up by hand for you to admire my spidery scrawl, and it is true there is something more intimate in the scratching of nib spreading ink, but while in front of my computer I prefer to type, for in the rapid flow of syllables so many words come out, in the click of each letter I find myself, and for this moment I am whole.
There’s a fine mist of rain coming down outside, making golden halos around the streetlights, and I wish I were outside walking, with the water soaking into my hair and eventually running down to the tip of my nose, from where I would try to blow the drop or wipe my face with my sleeve as ladies shouldn’t, but then I never said I was a lady (although perhaps one time I did). Paris and the rain also have places in my treasure chest of loved things.
Do you remember the day the sky went black and you called me from somewhere high up, Montmartre, I guess, and told me you could see a storm coming toward my house, and that you could see the lines of rain pouring down as they moved across the city? As we talked you gave me a commentary, saying it would start raining in two minutes, one minute, thirty seconds and then counted down from ten, and when you got to zero you asked whether it was raining yet, and I said no and then, a moment later, oceans fell from the sky outside my window and you probably beamed with pride, or at least that’s how I imagined you because, let’s face it, everybody likes being right. I was impressed.
There is another thing that I love as well, an improbable thing. On metro line 7bis, between stations Buttes Chaumont and Bolivar heading downhill, the tracks swing round to the right, and after maybe a hundred or a hundred and fifty yards there is a garden on the left-hand side of the tunnel. “Garden” is admittedly an overstatement; it has only one small plant, more like a weed, in fact, that has pushed through, or taken root in the wall beneath a light, but it’s the only plant I know of that grows underground. I can never get to see it properly, but it’s there. Sometimes I go up and down that line six times in order to get a good look. I love the idea that you will go and find a way to photograph it, or maybe even that you will hide in the metro station until it’s closed and sneak down onto the tracks to touch its sun-starved leaves, and it will be an adventure and security guards will see you on closed-circuit screens and come looking for you and you will be on the run and have to find a secret way out of the metro through tunnels and come out of a manhole cover on some poorly lit side street, triumphant!
All that remains is to press print and place these pages into an envelope. Then, when you have left for work, I will go to your apartment and slide them beneath the door. But there is so much more to say; so, so much more. Or maybe there is nothing. Maybe I have to accept that the letter is over and the hypnotic purring of the keys will stop, and the sentence will never be finished, the opening clause never resolved, and I wish I could just keep this moment a little longer. Maybe because I’m a coward and if I carry on writing forever, then I won’t die, but I don’t actually know what to say. I don’t think I can tell you how I came by my two leather chairs, or list the plants in my window box. The window box, yes, another improbable garden—a green place for me to linger. Oh, did I tell you about . . . and did I tell you about . . . ?
It’s twenty past three (still) and there’s a little more time, but I have to go now.
Ben Constable, there are adventures awaiting you and I’m sorry you will never get the chance to tell me about them and that we won’t get drunk late at night and walk in the rain and shelter under trees on tiny cobbled streets and sit in our special sitting place, smoking cigarettes. I miss you already.
Goodbye.
Butterfly X O X O X
Fridays make me smile. I catch myself laughing in the mirror as I wash the week from my hands before leaving work. I love the weekend and the surprises that fall from nowhere. I call out goodbye, then pace along the road and skip down the escalators into the metro. I let people pass in front of me and help a woman with heavy bags on the stairs, a beggar gets my loose change and I leave my seat for a stranger. I stand with my back against the side of the carriage and consider getting out a book, but I prefer watching people come and go and eavesdropping on snippets of their conversations taken out of context.
The phone rang in my pocket.
‘Et alors?’ When conversations start like this on Fridays it means: ‘So, have you had a good week?’ and it means: ‘So, are you ready to come out and play?’ This evening, I was informed, we (me and friends) were going for a meal, then on to a party where there would be music and dancing, and people we’d never met. We were going to meet up at seven thirty for an aperitif and would be a little drunk by the time we got to the restaurant, where we would laugh and argue about politics and art. That gave me time to go home, have a quick siesta, shower, get dressed while listening to music, look for a random fact on the Internet that would spring to mind and seem like an urgent task, then turn up at about nine. Being late has never been a conscious intention; I just like to do things at my own pace. Rushing is not my thing. Today, for no particular reason, I am happy. But that’s not uncommon.
When I got home, I waited for the lift and my fingers tapped impatiently in my pockets as it laboured up the six floors. I looked at my tongue in the mirror because that’s surely what mirrors in lifts are for.
Cat was sitting outside my door, which surprised me because he doesn’t need me to let him in or out.
‘Hello, Cat, what are you doing here?’ I said to myself, and watched him while I opened the lock. ‘If you’re bringing me bad news, I don’t want to know.’ He stood up and brushed against my leg and I felt a sudden uncertainty because Cat generally only comes for a good reason. As the door opened, there was the sound of paper dragging over wood—something pushed under the door. Cat moved past me and strolled in like he owned the place and I bent down and picked up a fat envelope with my name scrawled on it in a familiar hand. It was from Tomomi Ishikawa (who is also called Butterfly), although I couldn’t imagine why she would have written to me and come all the way to my apartment to put the letter under my door while I wasn’t there. But then Butterfly was full of surprises.
I hung up my coat, walked into the bedroom and flopped down on the bed. I kicked off my shoes and toyed with the envelope for a couple of seconds before ripping it open. Inside was a wad of printed pages.
Cat jumped onto the bed next to me and I hoped his paws were clean. He stretched out like a sphinx, much too big for a normal cat. I stroked him with my foot, but he ignored me and stared out of the window. I started to read.
Tomomi Ishikawa was my friend. Tomomi Ishikawa was dead in my hands. My brain locked up as I read the pages. No thoughts could get out. My eyes were heavy with tears, but they wouldn’t fall. I watched my chest to see what my breathing looked like. It was slow, steady and strong. I could see my heart beating, big, powerful beats. It was fast. Very fast. Tomomi Ishikawa was dead, and like a deep and terrible wound, I knew I was hurting, but I couldn’t feel anything.
I was trying to remember the five stages of grief: shock, denial, anger, depression and acceptance? What about guilt, is that one of them? This must be shock. I was in shock. I didn’t know what was happening. I didn’t know my mind and I didn’t know what I was going to do. Why hadn’t I called her yesterday? I could have called so easily. We could have gone for a drink. I looked at Cat and he turned his head and looked in my eyes. I wished he were the kind of cat that would come and sit squashed up next to me and absorb all my negative ions or whatever cats do. But Cat isn’t like that for a couple of reasons. The first is that he isn’t a domestic cat. He’s some kind of wildcat or lynx (or something), the size of a dog, quite a small dog, but much bigger than a cat. He has big claws and doesn’t much care for being stroked. He’s not my cat. He just comes and hangs out sometimes. The second reason is that he doesn’t exist. He’s an imaginary cat, but that’s kind of a secret.
I stood up, looking for my phone, and found it in my coat pocket. My thumbs scrolled down the contacts to Butterfly (fr); I pushed the green button and held it to my ear. There was silence for a second and I took the phone away from my head and looked to make sure it was connecting, then I listened again and it was ringing. ‘Come on, Butterfly, answer the fucking phone. Answer!’ After five rings or so it went to a recorded message and her familiar voice told me in French that she wasn’t available and that she would ring me back as soon as possible. And I could hear myself laughing in the background because I’d been with her when she recorded it. I hung up.
‘What do I do, Cat?’ Cat looked at me. As an imaginary cat, one would think he wouldn’t be restricted by reality, or the laws of science. But Cat is. For example he can’t speak, or at least he never does. Sometimes I think I know what he’s thinking and I sometimes imagine what he would say if he could speak to me, but that’s imaginary imaginary. Cat is very much tied to the world of real imaginary.
‘Oh Cat, help me, I don’t know what to do.’ I put the tips of my fingers on my eyelids as if this would free my brain to think clearly. I lay down on the bed, pulled a pillow over my head, and squashed it down onto my face. I hadn’t been paying much attention to Butterfly of late. She had been occupied with other things and I’d just been . . . doing stuff. She must have desperately needed help, but I was doing stuff. Stuff. Fuck. I felt Cat’s weight as he walked over me, squashing my legs uncomfortably down.
I picked up my phone and rang Tomomi Ishikawa’s number again, but it went straight to voice mail. I rang it seven times in a row and each time there was a moment’s silence and then her recorded voice. That’s not normal; it rang before. How could it have gone out of range or stopped working in the few minutes between me ringing the first and second times? Maybe it had run out of battery. What if someone had turned it off?
I pulled a small box of interesting things from a shelf. I looked through it and pulled out a key on a short piece of red ribbon. I had a key to Tomomi Ishikawa’s apartment to water the plants when she was away and in case of emergencies.
I put on my shoes, grabbed my coat and went out, slamming the door a little harder than I intended. I hoped I hadn’t chopped off Cat’s imaginary head, but he was standing by the lift. ‘Let’s take the stairs,’ I said to myself, and Cat was happy because he doesn’t really like the lift. He doesn’t like the metro either, but he followed me down and into the carriage and settled between my feet. It’s a tricky business being an imaginary cat on the metro, because people can’t see you and they often infringe on your personal space, but he came with me anyway and I appreciated the gesture.
In the street outside Butterfly’s door, I fumbled with the key panel, trying to remember the code. I typed in various combinations of four numbers I had in my head and the letter A until there was a click. We went in and climbed the stairs. I knocked, but there was no answer, so I pulled out the key from my pocket and let myself in. Cat went ahead because he is braver than I am in this kind of situation. I called out hello, but no one made a sound. Everything looked normal apart from a note on the table with a stainless steel click-on/click-offable pen on top of it. I walked into the bedroom. It was normal and the bed was made. In fact it was very tidy. I checked the bathroom, but there was no one there, then I picked up the note and read while Cat sat down and licked his right paw.
Ben Constable,
It’s twenty past three and it seems that everything is done. I won’t be here when you arrive; I found a place to do this where nobody will have to get dirty hands (death can be a messy business). I’ve organized for somebody to come and deal with my things so you can leave them as they are, but the computer is for you—please take it. There’s stuff in the fridge as well if you’re interested. The yogurts are past the date, but everyone knows that yogurt’s just out-of-date milk, right? There’s some fruit as well if you can be tempted. (What the hell am I nagging you about food for? Sorry—I just hate to see it all go to waste and what with you not being the fattest person in the world, I always imagine that you could use a few pies.) (There are no pies.)
I hope you’re OK and I’m sorry for all this. I have to go now because I still have one more letter to write. (To you, stupid.)
XOXOX Butterfly.
P.S. Hey, you should have this pen as well, it’s an old favorite.
I picked up a banana and ate it. I stood for a moment looking at the clock on the wall. It had faithfully kept the time of twenty past three since I’d known her, but why she’d keep a stopped clock at all was a mystery to me. Cat got up and stretched. Where had she gone to ‘do this’ and who was the somebody who was going to deal with her things? A lawyer? Some kind of removal person? Had she booked herself into a special suicide clinic in Switzerland that offers a full sorting-things-out-after-you’ve-gone service? Does that kind of thing even exist? It seemed hard to believe that she was that organised. She would have gone to the clinic’s website, noted the clean lines of the building, thought of the architect Albert Frey, and then started reading about desert modernism and the moment would have passed.
Cat sat facing the door so that I could be in no doubt he was ready to leave. I found a jug in the cupboard and filled it with water, then went around pouring a little into each plant pot. I put Butterfly’s shiny laptop, the note and the pen into my bag and left, depositing the banana skin in the dustbin at the bottom of the stairs.
Tomomi Ishikawa was dead and I didn’t know what to do. I turned off my phone and went home.