I knew what I must do. The scarce rain, with
its worn wooden drum, died in a few minutes and it no longer accompanied me at
dinner. I ate without knowing, for the first time in many nights, if they were well
fed. In spite of the fact that I hadn’t eaten at all that day, it was eating
and nothing else because I then knew that betrayal has no flavor. But soon I
went up to my room, where Doris had already told me that she had prepared my
bed. I peeked at the balcony just to check if the night was clear. But I made a
big mistake. I had two intentions: to see the stars and to check, looking east, whetherf I could at least see the place where I supposed the Torn Hand
should be. Lights prevented me to see the night sky and soon I checked bitterly
that the room was looking, in fact, on the west. I wanted to, for a few
minutes, move to one of the rooms for guests, but surely you remember, Protch,
the last two nights I had barely slept. I left it for the next day. I needed
the restful oblivion of sleep. Even so, it was not easy, accustomed as I was to
sleeping on the floor with no blankets. Fortunately I submerged myself soon in
the blessed slumber of the soul at sleep, shortly after realizing that night,
at least, Bruce would sleep in his tent again.
Jack woke me up in the usual way at 6
o'clock, telling me that coffee awaited me in the mahogany lounge. Sleeping
images returned when I remembered that morning I would not have to light
any bonfire. I had hardly started drinking my coffee when I found myself looking
at Beth, who had just entered. I had some courage to tell her that
from then on I would have breakfast in Avalon Road before starting to work.
Being alone was to me fundamental. Alone with my broken universe, I walked away
from the temptation to get poisoned.
After eleven days without taking the car, I
realized that driving calmed me down, even if the journey from Deanforest to
Avalon Road was so short that I had hardly any time to hear two pieces of news
on the radio. Maybe to go somewhere in the city with my Mercedes would be a
good way to be some time without my servants. So from that day I got used to
walking to work and take the car in the afternoon. Loneliness was not so awful
if you are sober. What was a real headache was not to see them.
But before entering the Thuban two of them I
saw. There were also Castor and Pollux. At that time the sun had not reached
yet a window facing west. In the darkness they had a matte color and the
grisaille was perceptible with difficulty. But in that light, the Argo Navis,
on its return from the Colchis, was peacefully sailing in darkness. Jason and
Medea were distinguished from the others with more relief and a halo of
unmistakable passion. They were smiling around the fleece. To win it, Jason had
to yoke two oxen that fired through their mouths, which were on the left, in
another scene. Oxen... or bulls. Castor and Pollux were not difficult to
differentiate from the others. There were two identical Argonauts, one beside
the other, represented both naked. The fleece, the oxen and the twins: Aries,
Taurus and Gemini. But my mind had to move away for a second from the Zodiac and
the ecliptic and enter at once the ancient pole star.
A star now wandering that no longer showed
where the north was and which was opposite the ecliptic, miserable and lost.
And on that August day the Thuban was abandoned by everybody, like deserted in its
summer emptiness, without a clear direction. I soon knew that Norman and
Thaddeus were on holidays. The quiet at that hour in the corridors was
disheartening and I went up to my office with a shrunken soul. Inside, more
than one month without me, I was disoriented, without much knowledge of what the latest businesses were, or what I should do. Apathetic, I let my gaze be
lost in past papers, invoices and delivery notes for July that Anne-Marie must
have let in my office. But it was only five minutes. Without knowing very well
why I got up and I started to look out the window.
I didn't have time for more. Instantly Anne-Marie came
into my office. I sensed by the dark circles in her eyes that she had
hardly slept last night and I couldn't help feeling guilty. As best I could I took
courage to ask her how she was. And she, looking at me with a wound and elusive
gaze, replied:
− "Nike, please.
I still have to process the information that you gave me yesterday. I have no
grudges, but at the moment let's just speak of work, shall we? There, in
the outskirt, I wanted to update you of which the last businesses were, but
I don't know if you were listening to me. And today we have a Board of
Directors reunion."
She left me on the table projects, finances,
telephones of people to meet... She spoke mainly of an iron mine that was
nearly bankrupt and that the Thuban Star could acquire advantageously. It was
the mine of St Eustace. We would put the capital and it would provide us the
much-needed iron. Now the blast furnaces of Arcade claimed it more and more
frequently. I would have to meet Mr. Erkins and Mr. Willoughby, lawyers.
There were always special Board of Directors
meetings when we went back to work and that August 7 there would be one only
due to my late arrival.
− "And when the
Board of Directors meet you will hear talk about another business that will
pass to your hands. Pay attention to what they say. Now you only need to
know that it is the Colonial Railway and
it seems that the Thuban Star wants to extend its tentacles to the Asian
market."
But for paying attention to her eyes, I was not
listening to all her words. She hardly dared to look at me. For a few minutes talking
about work matters had managed to take off her mind the most burning problems.
Poor Anne-Marie! It was impossible not to feel guilty, but what could I do? To
resume our relationship was already impossible, because even if I had made a
mistake and discovered that I liked women after all, it was undeniable that I
felt no love for her. I had never felt it. But I needed her. Her friendship was
essential to me and some friendly face would be the only thing that could make me not feel completely abandoned.
When she finally left I kept on arranging the
papers, which was better than the impossible task of ordering my
ideas. I noticed myself somewhat disoriented, but soon I discovered that work
matters I could deal with out of habit, with a piece of my mind in darkness. At
that time, my job was the only thing that could take me away from them for a
few seconds. Only for a few seconds. Fortunately I discovered immediately that
when I had the time to think, my reason was concerned only about the seven. I am
lying, they were not only seven the characters in my drama now. I always
remembered also the little king.
The Board of Directors members all looked at
me with curiosity. We were all but two. There we were five. Something I had to
say:
− "Where to
start? –I began with many hesitations-. In July I was on holidays. I was the
first fifteen days in the north of Italy, but this is not what you want to
know. Back to our country nothing important to tell about my first days. The
night of the 26th of July I wanted to go back to a disco where I have sometimes
been, Baphomet, I do not know if you
know it, in Alder Street. And then... well, what you have heard is true. I
can't tell you why there was a snake there, or what kind it was, but there it was.
I met it just as there were two people coming. It is inevitable that I name them,
Harold. There was your nephew John with his partner Miguel −Harold looked at me
then with hostility−, who saved my life. Your nephew, Harold –I looked at him
in the eyes− extracted the poison in a tent in an outskirt where I was taken to.
There I have spent the past eleven days and I've met five more of them: three
women and two men. I would not be able to explain it, but I have loved them so
much and we have shared such good moments that they have made me feel at
home."
− "You are speaking
of beggars, Nike, for God’s sake - Walter interrupted me-. Sure that they were
good people, but I do not think that you should idealize their situation."
− "Their situation?
I only have seen seven people who have found freedom and who have known that
they had to pay a price for it, but they have taken where they live
and how with beauty."
− "I have never
met John Richmonds - intervened by surprise Samuel Weissmann-, but it seems to
me to be obvious, according to what you are telling, that he must be ok when he
has never decided to return."
This comment seemed to irritate Harold
Blessing and maybe for that reason, to irritate him, he had uttered those words.
− "Nonsense - he
said-, what is clear is that my nephew is not sane. To leave all he had for a
deceptive dream of freedom. What does he know?"
− "Sorry, Harold.
It may be that I have just come back from there or maybe that they have bitten
me with their beauty, another bite, but I cannot consent to your insulting them.
They value their existence and even value other
people’s lives. They extract the blood of life and they drink the dawn light - I broke down. I realized that I had begun to cry-. Do not pay me attention. Less
than 24 hours later, I have already learned to miss them."
− "Now you know –
I concluded-, so now please let's speak about work."
We discussed the acquisition of the St
Eustace mine. I was assigned the project, but in addition we talked long about
the Colonial Railway. It was a
company that built railways mainly in Asia and Eastern Europe. It was now short
of steel and capital. The following week I should meet its most important
shareholder, Logan Perrier, and should negotiate with him for the company to
provide them both things, in exchange for our real objective, which was to buy
it. I soon realized that thinking of work matters helped me to forget them. No!
I didn't want to forget them. I remembered myself these past few days saying
that if forgetfulness is a demon, get thee behind me. What I needed was not to think of them for a few hours, just a few hours, and to that not even sleep
helped me, for I soon found I even dreamt about them.
In this mood no wonder that looking at a
still life in the corridors I came to think that everything in my life would be
a still life, since only the seven were alive.
About 12 o'clock I went down to the bar. I
needed a coffee and at least to cry with my thoughts. But when the waiter saw me,
he asked me as he used to do.
− "Whisky as usual,
Mr. Siddeley?"
Later he would tell me that my face then, no
doubt disfigured, was horrifying.
− "Richard... your
name is Richard, isn’t it? –He answered that was his name - give me a coffee, with
very little milk. And if you want me enough, never again give me any alcohol."
− "Is anything
the matter, Mr. Siddeley?"
It hurt me to be called by that name. I
sensed that it would be in vain to make a new effort, but even so, I tried
again. And Protch, please, do not say anything yet. I didn't know it, and it is
important to know when and how I knew. Again I ask you to have patience.
Everything will come in its time.
− "Richard – I
tried again – could you call me Nike? Here almost everybody calls me thus.
Yesterday one of my maids almost succeeded. But she called me Mr. Nike. I need
to hear my name without Mr."
− “Of course, Mr.
Siddeley, sorry Nike." – He could.
− "It is not so
difficult, is it?"
− "It isn’t, but excuse
me, why do you want to be called Nike?"
− "I am sure that
you know what has happened to me. I've been eleven days cared for by seven
beggars. And I need to talk to someone of them. But why are you going to appreciate
me enough? Theoretically you depend on me and you're a subordinate. You might
think that I am testing you with any malicious purpose, to fire you, for
example. If you think something like this - and in that moment I knew what to
do - I offer you a piece of information in exchange and you can use it against
me if I hurt you. Look, Richard, these days have been very important for me
because I have even fallen in love. Luke Prancitt he is called. Now you know. So
if I hurt you, you can tell everybody that I've fallen in love with a
man."
But his reaction was completely unexpected.
− "Nike, let us
shake hands. And if what you want is a
friend, here you have one. Now I'm rather busy, as you see, but in a while,
you're going to talk about Luke or whatever you want."
I started to cry. I waited for him
patiently. So they had even taught me to make friends. When he returned, I said.
─ "I also want to
apologize because three years ago you were witness to a nasty scene. You saw
how that imbecile of Nicholas Martin Siddeley insulted John. These days I have apologized and he has forgiven me."
− "Perfect then
and you needn’t apologize to me. But Nike, since I clearly see that you want a
friend, let's try. You will always have my respect. And I'm also going to give you
information against me that only Mr. Weissmann, who hired me, knows. I've been
in jail some time. I want you to know it, but I don't want to talk to you about
that, I prefer to forget it. Now tell me, what are you going to do with this
information?"
− "Nothing,
Richard. And I can see that, whatever it is, you are rehabilitated. I'll talk
about them. I am looking forward to it. But I'm going to ask you a favor. I like
them so much that if one day you see that I no longer mention them or I am
forgetting them, then please slap me."
I was talking about them all awhile.
− "They are three
women and four men." - And I named them all. My thoughts are transparent, they
are, but it is also true that now I didn't mind anybody reading me. And Richard
has a special ability to read what I'm feeling.
− "Excuse me,
Nike, now you can continue. I cannot know
what, but there is something that you did not like to say."
It was that exactly.
− "I would have
liked to say that we are three women and five men and include myself. Two
nights ago I decided to spend all my life with them, but then I saw that it
could not be. You must think I've gone crazy - and as he rebelled, I added-.
You are allowed to suppose it. Yesterday Anne-Marie thought that."
− "Did you decide
to live all your life as a beggar?"
− "I'm crazy, aren’t
I?"
− 'You aren’t. Each man's life is the life of each one. Thanks, Nike. Maybe tomorrow you don't want
to continue the friendship with me. It often happens. But now you really
interest me."
− "My problem is
that now I don’t know what my life is or what my house is. And I am worried
about a challenge that looks like what you have just said. Lucy told me a sentence
that worries me: "when thou seest us, thou shalt know us". It's that
simple. I have to adapt myself to what so far has been mine, although I no
longer feel it as mine, but there is something more important. What will I do
when I see one of them? I want to know them, because if I don't I will feel that I
have destroyed myself, that I won’t be myself anymore."
− "Then speak to
your friend Richard every day. Now I am busy again, but whenever you see me free,
come and tell me what you want."
− "Tell me
something about you, Richard."
− "I'm married.
My wife is called Sarah. I really love her. We have a son named Armand. He is
two years old. And another child will come soon. My wife is eight months now.
One of these days I will be a father again. But why are you weeping?"
− "It is wrong, I
know. But to think about your children has reminded me of the little king. I will
probably never have any children, but I feel as if he were mine."
− "He is Luke’s
son, I understand."
− "And Lucy’s. A
few days ago I would have told you that I should have fallen in love with her.
I now say otherwise: I should hate her. I don’t love her, but I will be unable
to express how much I like her. And I like to also know that Lucy and Luke will
be always together. But anyway, let's return to what we were talking about. You
look happy. Since I will have to be here, your child will be born and I will continue on
the Thuban. Please tell me when it is born."
August 7. The best of that day was meeting
Richard, now forever a friend. I went back to my office and saw at least I was able
to keep my mind away with working hours. From time to time I stood up. It was a
strange pleasure to look out the window, even though there was nothing to see.
My office faces Vicar’s End, a dark and dead-end alley. Full of garbage bins, I
imagined seeing one of the seven poking around in them and then I would start
to cry. I thought that when I finish work I will go to see them. But once I finished,
I didn't feel strong enough and thought that I could at least know of them all
if I visited James Prancitt. But besides resembling Luke and it would hurt
me to see him, I sensed that James knew many things about me. I didn't care
anymore; I had just told Richard, but I would mind that Luke knew it. I was
afraid that he could despise me. And I also had the risk of finding him there.
Back to Deanforest, I had to face again the
fact of seeing them serve me and to face my servants. I found them everywhere and to
find them annoyed me. I spent the afternoon in the living room, but was unable
to read yet and I began to watch TV. I could not concentrate and maybe I
changed channel. I learned two pieces of news well, but after two minutes, I
was thinking about them again. And if they talked about the weather, my eyes
rained thinking of the time when it wasn’t a good weather anymore. I was looking
but did not see. I was thinking but was unable to cry. I wanted to be alone and shed tears when nobody saw me. Because if I did, at the time there was Karen
asking me something about dinner. I reached an agreement with her, let her
serve me every night whatever she would like provided that it was always something
different. But let her not ask anymore.
I saw Doris wash my dirty clothes. Usually
before going to bed I had a shave. This time I didn’t. At night I changed my
room and informed my servants. I went to the east with the vain hope of being
closer to them and see the stars. But Castle Road lights prevented me to
distinguish them. Anyway, if I got my eyes used to darkness, the sky became
soon a spectacle of bright arrows, then unknown. All those illuminated jewels
that glittered as if shocked, dazzling... my east, young, proud, fierce and
remote east! Illusions, rewards, hopes... I can't see you now but I know that
you are still there. Wait for me because one day, Mistress Oakes, as you believe,
we will be eight. With these thoughts, perhaps delirious, I ended up tired and
I always slept in an east-facing room.
The next day, August 8, after having my
first breakfast in Avalon Road, I had to meet Mr. Erkins, with tired eyes and a hair-free forehead. But I was surprised that we liked each other. He was a simple and direct man who always went
to the heart of the matter. So easy was to put the whole business in his hands
that on day 16 St Eustace mine became of the Thuban Star, one of the many
companies we acquired those months, some in charge of Harold Blessing. The old
star that showed where the north is, that summer really was circumpolar.
When Mr. Erkins left it was finally the time
for a coffee at the bar. I went there with some haste in order to chat again with my
new friend Richard, so that he wouldn’t think I should not know him.
− "Hello, Richard
– I greeted him with affection-. You'd better serve it without milk, I prefer it like that.
Thanks for yesterday."
− “Can you see, Nike?
You have just done it. Last night I was thinking long about my new friend. But
let's talk about today. You are still desiring my friendship, and I'm a man with
a shady past. If you find yourself one day with one of them, you know what you will
do, don’t you?"
− "Thanks,
Richard - I told him as he made the coffee. There were also his assistants
Laura and Jeff, a casual employee as Mona Simpson, and Mia and Arnold, who
flirted often-. I would like to have some faith in myself. When I find them, I
hope I have a good reaction. This morning as I had breakfast I was thinking
that today I would go and see them, but now I begin to hesitate, and think I
am not able to. It is easy, isn’t it? They are half an hour away from here. But what
I feel right now is that visiting them is nothing. I want to be one of them. But
maybe tomorrow this asshole Mr. Siddeley will tell you otherwise."
− "I can see that
right now life is complicated for you. But at least don't be afraid of the
resurrection of that ghost of Mr. Siddeley. Your face yesterday showed that you
urgently needed a friend and now you have it. Whether you are a beggar or a
raider, you can always count on me. I am almost a neighbor of the Outskirt of
the Torn Hand. You will go and see them and maybe I also go there. Meanwhile
Sarah wants to meet you. I spoke to her about you. I have no secrets for her.
Come one day to have dinner with us."
− "Thank you,
Richard, but I still don't know who I am. Wait a little more. I could come to see
you and behave in a wrong way later. Tell me now how your child will be named.”
− "I like my
name, but I prefer to put the name Jean in front. I have lived in Montpellier and
Orléans. So it will be either Jean Richard or Crystelle. But again you are
crying."
− "I was wondering
whether I will take courage in December to see the star Regulus. They gave it
to the little king. And I have another star of the same constellation. They gave
it to me. Zosma it is called, in the constellation of Leo. They also gave me
the Polar Star. And John explained to me that Thuban was also a star."
So we were a while talking about the sky. I
wasn't able to tell my story in chronological order, but in the remainder of
August I did. Richard had patience and was a great listener. He knew that I
needed to vent. He was listening to me and on successive days he surprised me with
questions like "Did you see Antares last night?" showing me that he
remembered what I told him.
After the daily coffee with Richard, I
focused on the business and I had a clearer mind. So now I was at peace in the
morning. Back to Deanforest, I didn't want to be a prisoner of my own life
again and that day for the first time I drove away with my old Daimler, which
seemed less ornate and ostentation. Just a few words to inform the bishop
Victor, I walked away to the garage and drove out. But I realized that my will
seemed to have chosen a southbound road, not knowing well where to go. Then I
realised that south was Basin Hall, and if I did not dare to see them, at least
I could approach them and know something of their origins. Perceiving Antares
every night I thought that Mistress Oakes was always with me and she was
directing my course. I wanted to see mostly the psychiatric sanatorium, a few
kilometers away from the village, in which I was not long. Once I arrived to its
doors, I remembered the name of her mother: Estella, yes, Estella Oakes.
The town of Basin Hall has really nothing to
be seen. I ordered a coffee at one of the bars to prepare myself mentally for
what I really wanted to do. I asked the waiter to give me directions to the
sanatorium and I came to it without difficulty.
The psychiatric hospital of Basin Hall is
surrounded by fountains and gardens where inmates walk. I saw one with his mind
lost, I suppose, and others who I do not know what they would be suffering but
with a sane mind. The lines of that building impressed and I supposed that its
high enclosure would be dismal on moonless nights. I rang the doorbell and was
received by a young blonde woman somewhat absentminded. I asked for someone in
charge there and I went to speak with Miss Diamond, Sophia Diamond. She was a
redhead little woman, and she did not resemble Lucy, but she reminded me of her
inevitably and therefore I have remembered her name. I saw she was efficient
and hard-working, the soul of Basin Hall. I had to tell her that I didn’t want
to see any patient, or to hospitalize anyone, that I just wanted some
information but I could be wasting her time. I lied and said that I was a friend
of Madeleine Oakes – it was the first time that I pronounced her name. But not
being a beggar I supposed that I could say it - and I wanted to actually ask about the last years of Estella, her mother, if she had been hospitalized here. She
told me that her patients were frequently in and out but that Estella Oakes, who
she did remember, had been there until two years ago, when she died. But she
was permanent, she said sympathetically. She was a very nice woman, but I did
not understand much from her explanation. She was half an hour speaking to me
of medicines and therapies, saying that Mistress Oakes - I shuddered. She
spoke, of course, of the elder Mistress Oakes - had something incurable, but there they were able to stabilize her, getting as best they could that her
aggressiveness subsided. In the frequent visits from her daughter, who did not
come alone, she came with a friend - Olivia, I rightly guessed-, who she also
recalled, the elder Mistress Oakes could not remember her daughter, but at
least they used to walk together without anger.
I left Basin Hall with a strange sense of
triumph over myself. I was somehow still able to maintain contact with them. If
that day it had been Mistress Oakes’ turn, tomorrow it should be Olivia’s. I
remembered that she had told me that she was born in the neighborhood of
Downhills. The next day I went there with the aim to know it better. I was surprised by the
beauty of the landscape in the mountains. The paths had been asphalted, but
nature moved. It didn’t take me long to find Hunter’s Arrows and I looked at it
thinking that from all that overwhelming perfection Olivia Rivers had been
expelled. I went out that day very late and I needed several hours to find the
former mansion. And when I was about to go back I met two girls and a guy who
were young adventurers and I greeted them. They told me they were going to
watch the sunset. I asked permission to join and I watched a scene suitable to
dedicate it a poem. Then I thought that it was impossible for literature
could not describe that beauty. Seated on a rock, the burning clouds on fire, the
horizon liquefied before turning night. We were for half an hour
contemplating the prodigy and after politely saying goodbye to them, I resumed my
way back.
I had found a strange pleasure without
money, to get away from Deanforest driving around and discovering hidden
treasures. I preserved this peace without them for several days. I saw mainly
the villages in the west, more than 20, but I can only remember a couple of
names. I was surprised especially by the calm of Stillbrook, with a dry brook,
but with water everywhere. You could drink in fountains and gardens and I loved
the contrast in the light the day I knew it, with at times a hoarse and
fragrant rain. Further to the west, still smaller, I found the extraordinary
peace of Aldergrove, where you have to admire the alders, approaching autumn, bathed
in a small but intense sun in the afternoon. I was in both villages more than once
and in both I dipped in the luminescence of the Kilmourne, till one day I
planned a route to contemplate the sea where it died, far on the west. It flows
into the ocean in the small coastal village of Old River Garden, a quiet area
where you can almost see gulls talking to burly fishermen, whom they must tell gossips
from remote locations.
Gossips. I thought that it was the turn now to
go where Lucy had lived, but she was born in Knights Hill. I could go and see
it, but I could run into James Prancitt just opposite and I lacked the courage.
In these thoughts I was one evening reaching Deanforest, when John Ellis asked
me something about the rhododendrons. I know the flowers, but I do not know a
word of gardening. The important thing is that they continued blossoming. But
it was only an excuse to tell me some gossip of Newchapel. Something about an
impossible love, oh Luke. But I wasn’t paying him any attention. In contrast,
his nephew Tom Ellis, on the right, was a paragon of an impeccable worker,
concerned only about his work, at that time Queen Elizabeth roses. They didn't
seem to have the same blood.
So I drove away every afternoon, but what could I
do on weekends? Suddenly on Friday night I saw the light, while I was
reading about the planets. I remembered a few words by my dear Mistress Oakes.
She would have not wanted me to feel abandoned and had said to me "remember
when you feel lonely that thinking about many things will comfort you.
Yesterday we talked about the planets, but only in passing. In your greatest
moments of darkness, you will be able to relate us all to one of them. And for then,
I have already given you the first clue. If we exclude Pluto, Neptune is the
last." So I could relate them again, including me. I was Neptune, since my
sign was truly water. I wondered whether there would be some books about the
planets and I remembered the library. The library! As in almost every house,
the library was a luxurious place to show to visitors and was an area that I had
never used. I was determined to see it and its landscapes were a new kingdom to
discover. Their soft armchairs invited me to rest. There I could be alone and
read. Now I discovered pleasures in anything. I informed the servants that I
moved there and they often came to interrupt me, to ask me something, whether
it was the dreadful Doris Keane or Beth Sutherland. But while talking to
them, I discovered a book about planets in the shelves opposite and without an
apparent relation I realized two things. John had given Olivia
planet Venus and to Mistress. Oakes he had given the star Antares, which
according to him it meant the rival of Mars. Then we were already three
planets: Mistress Oakes, Olivia and I were Mars, Venus and Neptune. That night
I dared to read some more of Introduction
to the starry cosmos. It still made me cry to see the drawing of Leo, but I
learned the other stars and constellations: Antares, Spica and Fomalhaut – for
I shouldn’t forget that Olivia had two-, Aldebaran, Castor and Pollux. After a
while, I ordered Beth - because giving orders was what was expected of Mr. Siddeley
- to bring me a cup of coffee to the library, and when she had brought it and
walked away I began to scrutinize the volumes there, always waiting for some eyes
that dared to read them, to live their adventures, their dreams or their
failures. With this new pleasure, I ended up turning the library into my altar,
and with it, with the memory of the seven and the little king always with me,
the entire house was sanctified.
Come with me on a trip, Protch, to the
library, because I see that being verbose I don’t tire you and I want to talk
about a pleasure that has always accompanied me since the year 29. It was
exciting to discover the jewels that I had there well kept, full of dust and
forgotten. Since then I can find new landscapes. I like dialogues and
descriptions, but the reader has a certain undeniable freedom. An author can
take the trouble and say, for example, that a certain building is on the left,
and you read it and will reread it and indeed it says that it is on the
left, but if you've imagined it on the right, whenever you read it again, it will
be there, because imagination is free. And since then I see myself as a
literary character. You have affection for him and maybe he dies. But the next
day, you restart the chapters where you see him alive again.
In the library also were Moby Dick and Great Expectations, and the other books by Dickens that Olivia had
named. She had also mentioned Alice in Wonderland
and Don Quixote of La Mancha and there
were other gems that I discovered in September. Where to begin? I decided to
re-read Dickens. I restarted Great Expectations
and I found Estella, Miss Havisham, Pip and Magwitch again... Old ghosts
returned that you suddenly remember: what you were doing, with whom you were
talking, how you felt then, etc. With this novel, I moved back my watch a few days. I knew myself already in love with Luke, but since I started it until I
finished it important and unexpected things had happened: meeting Lucy and like
her, the campfire distributing the stars, Mistress Oakes and her tale of the
Universe... Since you already know the book, you decide not to rest until you get
to a certain point and you know that the next day you will find such or such
thing.
I sighed when I finally finished it. This
time I had read it in just two days. But a good book you never want to end. You
always desire to read it again. I then had a second challenge: now I was
willing to read Moby Dick complete. I
had a copy with more pages than the one they had lent me in the Torn Hand. I
soon discovered that at least one hundred were dedicated to notes on chapters.
Then I saw that I liked both the novel and the notes. I read a chapter, I went back to
the notes and then I read the chapter again to see what it was I had
overlooked. So I found out that with Moby
Dick I could read two books at the same time. Melville had written a
masterpiece with countless references to mythological facts and even stellar
references and it is much more than a trip of some whalers.
This time I did finish it and I remembered
myself in the early days, when in my obvious hangover I had not been able to read
any more than Call me Ishmael. And I had
read more when I met Luke and fell in love with him. It was also then when Mistress
Oakes, Olivia and Bruce had first come to my tent. I could not stop thinking
about them, but I kept choosing books that they had mentioned. I did not read The Three Musketeers, because it was
inexplicably not at the library. Instead, I chose A Tale of Two Cities, in which I was surprised about how you can
give your life for love, so that the person you love will be happy. I also think David Copperfield is a masterpiece. I
associated everything with me and with them and I liked to see the friendship
between little David and his friend Steerforth. It goes without saying that it
was Luke and me, and I cried when I saw that friendship was broken. In August I
also read Don Quixote of La Mancha
and I identified with him even though the protagonist is crazy. Wouldn't I be too? I smiled when reading the passage where they do a burning of books in the
library, and save others. I had also made a selection, but who was I to burn
anything if I liked everything I was reading? And I made another great
discovery with Alice in wonderland.
Dear Olivia, how right you were when you told me it wasn't a children's book.
The White Rabbit, the Mad Hatter, the Queen of hearts, Cheshire Cat. If only I
dared to see you, Olivia, and talk to you about all of them.
I was one afternoon reading Don Quixote when Agnes Moore came
suddenly in to ask me something. I thought that she was far from resembling
Dulcinea, but also in those moments I didn't need a "proud Lady", perhaps
I needed to chat with a Maritornes. I asked her point blank if she knew how
to make coffee and when she answered me she did, I told her.
− "Bring two cups
of coffee, for you and for me and let’s have it here in the library."
Perhaps she thought I was flirting with her,
but in my transparent face there was more need than desire.
− "I'm cleaning the
windows, Sir, I mean Mr. Nike, and still I have the dining room and the living
room to clean."
− "Agnes, you are
supposed to do that because I pay you. And the windows are pretty clean and it
is not urgent. You can do it another day. Have a coffee with me, please."
− “All right, Mr.
Nike."
And after ten minutes she was there with a
tray with two cups of coffee. I suggested her a fairly comfortable armchair on
my right. She sat with some embarrasment and I watched an attractive and quite smart
woman. I wouldn't talk to her about my feelings for Luke. I would only speak to
her about friendship and how much I loved them. She listened carefully and
nodded and was excited with what I told her. When I introduced everyone, she
said.
− "I live in a
small house in St Mark Street, in the village, Mr. Nike. Down a nearby square comes
often a man with his beard to his chest, and sometimes I see him smoking
something, perhaps marijuana, and he always comes accompanied by another elegant
gentleman."
Miguel and John, surely. I told her to inform me whenever she saw them again and to tell me how they were. It was a
comfortable dialogue and Agnes soon grew accustomed to having a daily coffee
with me in the library and I guess we felt affection for each other. Agnes, I
thought, the great love of David Copperfield. She deserved that name.
So I now thought of work without ambition, I
relaxed talking to my friend Richard, I used to make excursions by car, I had
the haven of books, I explained things to Agnes Moore. My life was not with
them, but was decidedly a different life and I did not even pay attention to
rumors about the Siddeley. Cousin Edmund phoned me one day, but I did not heed
him.
On Saturday 24 Tom Ellis asked permission to
talk to me. I listened carefully to him. He told me that he had relatives in
Aldergrove who in September needed him and there were other
neighbors interested in his services and he wanted to leave. I understood him.
Tom was a good gardener and did not gossip as his uncle used to do. I would
have needed him. But his farewell gave me an idea. Meanwhile Tom told me something
about the tree pits he was taking care of.
− "I think that
winter will be wet. I am guided by the ants, Sir.
− "I can see no
ants, Tom." – I refuted.
− "Neither can I,
Sir. But look, it is already close to September. If the winter is going to be
dry, they continue striving to seek food and you can still see them in
mid-month. But if they guess the water that gives life, they can’t be
seen."
He knew more than me and I assumed that he
would be right. I can assure you that next winter was wet.
Sunday, August 26 I intended to end Alice and was quietly in the library
when Victor came suddenly and announced.
− "Miss
Beaulière, Sir."
Anne-Marie! It was 20 days since her last
visit to Deanforest. What would she think of me? I told Victor to let her into
the library.
− "I had never
before seen you here." – She told me.
− "I have just
had a shower and I entered the library in order to finish a book. But it is a
pleasure to see you again at Deanforest."
− "I see you
every day at work and I said to myself that it was about time for me to return here.
In fact there is nothing to assimilate: you don’t love me, that’s all. But I
want to always appreciate you - I was moved-. I bought two tickets for the
theater and wanted you to come with me."
− "Two seconds. I
will change my clothes and right away I will be ready."- I told her.
We had dinner previously at Temple Road,
near the theatre. Once seated, me with a coffee, she with her gin and tonic, I
asked her what urged me.
− "Have you seen
them?"
− "Nike, forgive
me, but so much coffee is doing you no good. I am glad that you do not
drink, but there are other things in life. But in short – she sighed-, I have,
yesterday I saw them. John sends you his regards."
− "Return them with
a hug when you see him again. And what about the others?"
− "I have not
seen Luke. He was in the street when I went there. The others all asked me about
you. What to tell them apart from the fact that you remember them?"
Little more we talked before the performance.
Anne-Marie reproached me with words or with her silence that I failed to forget
them. Stubborn, I remember to have also said.
− "I do not want
to forget them. And if one day I no longer speak of them, please slap me."
I saw with bitterness how few things united
us: work, memories of the past, of my alcoholic past, some afternoons together
swimming in the same pools, some trips...
During the play, I went crazy. I had better express
it thus. I remember that it was a classic play, but at the very beginning one
of the protagonists said the word Earth. I stood up and at least did not shout
Earth! As I thought, Anne-Marie confirmed to me that I didn’t. Only some angry
spectators to whom I hid the stage a few seconds. Already sitting, I began to
think. Mistress Oakes had left me responsible of a task. I fantasized about seeing
her again and telling her that, right or wrong, I had completed it. But I had
made a schoolboy error: forgetting planet Earth in the solar system. But
suddenly the word Earth hit me. Earth, Earth, she was born on Earth, I felt with
her the calling of the Earth, when Luke asked me opinion about her I saw her as
matter and energy of the Earth: Lucy! I was delighted that the three women had by now their planet and that she had hers before him. Both the same day would
be fine, in the same chronological order. One moment: what was in those words?
Chronological order. My mind wanted to burst and I was busy the rest of the
play and part of the following dinner with Anne-Marie. I already knew! John was the
first in my chronological order. In addition, that same night I read that Mercury,
the God - and the planet was the first in chronological order-, was a God of
trade -John used to work in the Thuban- and was a messenger of them gods and chief
of them travelers and if the stars were gods, he had approached them to us in a
trip from the sky to Earth.
At dinner Anne-Marie and I were taciturn and
she asked what I was thinking. I told her and she said.
− "I didn't want
to reproach you, but Nike, I love you after all and if you don't
think soon of other things, you'll go crazy."
− "Maybe I need to
go crazy. Sorry, Anne-Marie, it is still too early to know who I am or what I
want in life. It is maybe too soon or us to see each other. I still hurt you. And I
don't want to. But look at me, as long as they remain with me, I will not
drink."
We started, so to speak, to comment on the play
we had just seen, but I did not remember, as I don’t remember now, the title.
She understood immediately that my mind wasn't there and spoke slightly of work.
There was a new project: the Thuban wanted to build south of Arcade. The river,
the outskirts, I thought, pollution would come to their threshold.
Nevertheless, the summer air of the illuminated terrace where we were sitting
was good. But we soon left.
Back in Deanforest, I felt enlightened
when I saw the statue of Jupiter. I should return to the library. It was
calling me. I looked up the old copy of The
bright sky – I should return Introduction
to the starry cosmos to John. Would I continue there in December and he
would show me the star Regulus? - And I began to read the book. There it was,
calling on me to find, this: Jupiter comes from Latin Iuppiter and means father of light. God father. I remembered Olivia
asking Luke, "Who are you?" and his answer "nobody at the
moment. I have enough with being in a few days for my child his Zeus
Pater." Zeus Pater! Luke! As he himself would say it could not be otherwise. I returned to the central hall to watch the god. They did not look much alike, among other things because the statue was
angry and Luke was peace. But I loved the idea that Deanforest had been always
protected by Jupiter-Luke. So Lucy was Earth and Luke was Jupiter. That night I
could not move from there. I still had Saturn and Uranus for Bruce and Miguel.
I should further investigate.
On day 30 I went crazy again. I was in the
library, thinking rather than reading and although I was sure, I did not make up
my mind. "Come on", I thought, “now it is not fighting against
windmills". Victor came in to ask me something and I took courage and said.
− "Bring all the
servants here, including the gardeners, to the library. I want to speak to all
of you."
In less than ten minutes they were all
there. I found my courage and spoke to them.
− "I want to
inform you that in September I want to be alone - I interrupted the murmurs raising
a hand-. I know what you want to say, but I want to keep only Agnes. I have
already spoken with her and she will be coming on Saturdays. If the house is
not in a good condition, she will tell me and I'll call back whomever I need".
− "But Sir - I
was interrupted by the bishop, I mean Victor - and what about purchase,
meals...?" – I did not let him go on.
− "I will eat
out. I'll buy sufficient food to eat at home at any time. I will learn to do
the washing up. Furthermore - I looked at the younger gardener-, I would have
kept you, Tom, but I imagine that you will have better prospects".
− "Sorry, Sir, so
it is – he said to me shyly-, but what about the garden?"
− "I want to be
alone for a month. In October I will call your uncle and he may tell me what is
most needed. Meanwhile, let me your addresses: I'm not going to leave you abandoned".
On a bedside table there was paper and a pen.
They wrote each their address with a more or less readable spelling and some
obvious discouragement. Then I continued.
− "I have thought
about your situation and am not going to simply fire you. You'll be earning for
two years your usual salary. Now Agnes has informed me of what each of you
earns. Meanwhile you can find another job and if you don't, call me if I'm still here
within two years. John Ellis, Karen Lindgren, Doris Keane, Jack Stapleton, Beth
Sutherland and Victor Sheffield - I enjoyed naming him the last - here you have
your quantities. Tell me if they are up to date with the bank and if there is
any problem, call me. You still have this morning and this evening. Now back to work".
Victor seemed to like that at the last
minute I behaved as Mr. Siddeley. I silenced some futile protest and I managed
to finally stay alone. The next day all of them were helpful and it was more
bearable. On September 1, Saturday, I would be alone with Agnes and it would be
much easier.
And the new month came and with it my
desired solitude. But fortunately it began one of the days she came. Because
soon I had my first doubt. I surprised her in the kitchen and told her to come
for a coffee to the library.
− "You have the
worst part, Agnes. I'm sorry if you
think I should apologize. Because the others will earn money for two more years,
but without working."
− "I prefer to do
my job, Mr. Nike."
− "Yes, Agnes,
but your job. Don't do what was the job of the others or the
one I can do. What was yours, take it easy, for the house is clean. And I don't
mind learning. So I want you to teach me how to make my bed. All my life they have
made it for me and I still do not know. Oh,
and then you’re gonna teach me to sweep and wash up."
She told me that she could do it herself but she
understood my need to learn. And the truth is that it didn’t cost me much effort
having a good teacher. The best thing to fire my servants was to retain Agnes.
Norman and Thaddeus returned in September
and the company was like an anthill in danger. Days became less arduous with
the work distributed among all. Out of work, every day the same doubts. Tempted
I was to give alms to the beggars I saw but I did not decide. Or I even doubted
whether to ask them if they knew Mistress Oakes and her mates.
On September 6 Anne-Marie came again to visit
me. We didn’t go to the theatre.
− "Nike, I have been
a while ringing the bell and nobody opened."
– “I know. I have
heard it but I was in the shower - and as she looked puzzled, I added-. Now it
is me who opens the door. I don't have any servants."
I explained it.
− "If you allow
me to lovingly reproach you, I will tell you that you're crazy, Nike. How are you
going to survive?"
And as I didn't want to talk about that, I
said instead.
− "Tell me what
you want to have and if you prefer the living room or the dining room."
She asked me her usual gin and tonic and we
went to the living room. I was there somewhat taciturn, because I was thinking
about something else. When she asked me, I said.
− "Today he is a
month old."
− "Who?"
− "The little king."
− "Holy heaven,
Nike. Talk to me about whatever you want. But he is not your child."
− "I'm not so
crazy, Anne-Marie. I am well aware that he
is not my child, but I'd like to see him grow."
She was already getting used to my speaking
of them, but I understood her tender reproach. She did not want me to speak
only of one subject. At the moment I was monochromatic, I couldn’t talk of
anything else. Thinking of them, I was not tired; if I didn’t, I was. Better
than having my mind busy with businesses.
Businesses. Mr. Perrier and I reached an
agreement in the middle of September. It was not easy for the Colonial Railway to lose control of what
had been theirs for not having capital. But they could always be shareholders.
We could have left it there but the Thuban wanted something more.
− "I can
perfectly understand what you have said, Mr. Perrier, but if we are going to
put most of the money, we want something in return. It is as simple as the change
of name. It won’t be noticed, and if it was noticed one could clearly see that
you would be the owners just like us. It could be the TC Railway, Thuban Colonial
Railway if someone asks."
At last! Mr. Perrier found it a good idea
and we reached a satisfactory agreement for both parties. Business over. Now I
could finally deal with Arcade. I had to go and see it.
I went by car to the Arcade area and managed
to park in Castle Road before Knights Bridge. Once in it I saw it was an ugly,
dark, dirty, industrial neighbourhood, but at least it was peaceful. I sat in a
small square next to the river and I got to see it. I didn't let my eyes set in
the furnaces, far to the east. I thought that it was the neighborhood where
Bruce had spent his childhood and watched it fondly. It was almost a village
in the middle of the city and one had freedom to play with hardly any traffic
and looking at the river. In that area of the Kilmourne you could swim safely
and only the smoke of furnaces made the landscape somewhat ugly.
But I had to stand up and examine it. It
seemed that on the south the ground was clay, not ideal to build on it and that
could be a hope of salvation. But I should examine the rest. I went through it
on all cardinal points and soon I found a solution. The large area of
several kilometers between Arcade and the mountains was silty gravel, ideal for
construction; the north had several building areas and it was virgin and no
doubt Hazington would grow one day there.
When three days later I mentioned it in the
Board of Directors, there was a murmur of protest, but Samuel looked
questioningly at me, I don't know if valuing what I had said or valuing me. It
was difficult to know what that man was thinking. But finally he said.
− "I think that
Nicholas is right. The north of Arcade will be the best place. I've been there examining
the ground and what he said is true."
Briefly we discussed the matter and finally
we agreed to extend the city on the north, especially the north-east.
On 16th Sunday I was with an unclear mind. I was wondering whether someday I would know the name of the sixth negative sign, butin order to know that, I had to be a beggar. That day, in addition, it was Olivia's birthday, and it was the first since I was absent. At times I was reading thinking that evening I would really go. They had saved my life. I could return them something approaching there and showing them that I remembered the date. My big problem is that if I went there this afternoon I could do something foolish and stay with them forever. I saw other beggars on the street and when they asked me for alms I did not know what to do.
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