“What’s up?”
She shook her head. “Nothing.”
“Not having regrets about old Rafey?”
“Jesus!” she burst out. “Why don’t you shag Rafe, if you’re so obsessed with him?”
“Now, hang on,” Conor said, holding up his hands. “I mean, I’m glad you’re getting your own Private Idaho back again, but that doesn’t mean the rest of us have to be lumped in with him.” He jerked his head towards the girl he had come with, who was now lingering in front of the Marilyn piece. “I’m laying my pipe the way any man with eyes in his head would.”
“You can’t say that!” Catherine spluttered, her heart slamming in her chest. He laughed, and she stared at him, feeling confused. Could he say that? Was that an insult to James? She thought so, but she could not be sure—much of what Conor said to her, to anyone, could be perceived as an insult, if you decided to see it that way; but surely it was not just about deciding? She felt she should know; she felt she should, on this question, be so much clearer, so much more solid. It was not as though Conor had a problem with gay people; he had nodded almost respectfully when Catherine had told him, one night early the previous term, about James. He knew gay people himself, he had said; there was a guy he had been to school with who he was pretty sure about, and obviously a few people in his theatre class. Obviously, Catherine had said in response, feeling the surge of pride she so often felt when she talked or thought about James, about how close she was to him. But now, here, in this moment, should she be standing up for him? Should she be angry on his behalf? She was glaring at Conor, trying to get a handle on him, and he was grinning back.
“You know it makes sense, Citóg.”
“Oh, fuck off, would you, Moran,” she shot at him, turning pointedly back to the soup cans, and he laughed again, and he walked away.
“Give him a kiss from me,” he said, as he went.
James was coming home early. He had planned to stay in Berlin until June again this year, and possibly even over the summer, but he had not made it that far. He had made it up to Christmas, and he had made it through January, but a week ago Catherine had had a letter from him, telling her that he had had enough. He had had enough of Berlin, and he had had enough of working for Malachy, and he missed Dublin, and said that he wanted to take photographs there again, and because he missed the flat on Baggot Street, and missed Amy and Lorraine, and because he missed Catherine. He missed Catherine most of all, and most of all he was coming home because he missed Catherine. Catherine knew that. James told her that in his letters; he had told her that in every letter since the end of August. I miss you. I miss you so fucking much. I miss you all the time. I miss your voice. I miss your company. I miss your God-awful jokes. I miss your obsessions with ridiculous men. I miss talking to you and listening to you and sitting with you and bursting like the Milk Tray man into your room like I did that very first morning. I miss you. I mean it. I miss you. I miss you all the time.
And Catherine said the same to him. All the time, she wrote in her letters, every single day—and that was not lying, because every single day, Catherine thought about James, and every single day there was at least one moment when she wished he was with her, and almost every single day, she added to her latest letter to him. There were weeks when she sent him more than one letter, and there was one week, soon after Christmas, when she got three letters from him, each as long and detailed as the next, but it was still not the same as actually having him with her, and she told him that; she told him that all the time. Email was more immediate, but James did not have much access to Malachy’s computer, so they did not tend to correspond that way—and anyway, with email you did not have the heft of the pages, the life of the ink woven tight into the paper, rushing across it, a thing that had come directly from the other person’s own hand. Or from the pen in their hand, which was almost the same; which was almost like touching them for yourself.
In her letters, Catherine described everything that happened to her, putting a net over everything she had seen and heard and read and experienced, so that she could capture it for him, so that it could be as though it was happening, just for him, a second time. Because she did miss him; I miss you I miss you I miss you I miss you was how she closed her letters to him often—she loved the rhythm of it—and then she would sign them, and add a line of kisses, the x’s so easy to lay down, so much easier than the reality of his kisses and hugs. Writing that she missed him, actually, was also so much easier than the thought of saying it face to face, and easier, indeed, than the experience of reading the same words when they came from him; the admission, the declaration was still too emotional for Catherine to be entirely comfortable with it, too nakedly open in its affection and its need. James and she were just different on that score. He was so much more able to express himself emotionally; it was for him so much more natural to be verbally and physically demonstrative in that way.
Or at least, it was so much more natural for him to be like that with some people. With others, Catherine knew, it was another matter entirely—with guys. Because there had been no guys for James during his time in Berlin this time around, either; there had been no expressions of affection, verbal or physical or of any other kind. They had been a failure, these six months, he had written to her; they had, he had said in more than one letter, been a torment. Lonely: that was the word he had written, over and over. Alone: that was another. Never: that had been another, and whenever Catherine read him using that word, looking with it grimly into a future the nature of which he had already decided upon, she had known it was her job to argue, to reason, to come back at him with words that were softer, and sweeter, words like Someday and Someone and Soon. Telling him, once again, that everything would be OK. That everything would turn out OK, turn around, turn into the kind of life, the kind of lightness, that he deserved to have. That this had happened, after all, for her; this was how she had built her argument, using as a comparison the way things had turned around for her so brilliantly this year. The previous year, she reminded him, she had been so so scared, so awkward, so shy; the previous year, nothing and nobody around her had seemed like they could belong, in any way, to her. Her college subjects had intimidated her, and this year she was mad about them; this year, she spent hours every day in the library, devouring novels and essays and poems. Her love life had been nonexistent, and now it seemed never to have a dull moment; there had been Rafe, and there had been others, just kisses, or in some cases just flirtations, but great kisses, fucking great kisses, and flirtations that had set her whole body tingling with giddiness and a barely containable impatience, that had charged the air, hard, with the hugeness of possibility, the sense of her own fresh power. The first of the guys had been Aidan, the older guy from one of her tutorials—a mature student, for Christ’s sake, thirty-one years of age, constantly talking a blue streak about Chaucer: in other words, the least likely candidate imaginable for a snog. But when he put his hand to Catherine’s cheek at the Visual Arts Society party, and said her name, and pulled her to him, his hips square against hers, Catherine had felt like she had never felt before, the shock of her own skin, of her own body and its hunger. So that was what all the fuss was about, she had realized, as Aidan’s tongue had pushed through her lips. That was the point of kissing someone you actually knew, as opposed to a random stranger in a club with whom you were only going through the motions: the jolt. The surge. The way you could stand, pressed up against them, kissing them, laughing with them, and not notice that hours were passing, that it was two in the morning, that your friends had gone home, that the wall behind you was damp and was cold. Someone’s hands in your hair, and someone’s hands moving up and down your back, under your top, under your waistband, and someone’s lips and someone’s tongue, and someone’s smile, when the two of you stopped—when the two of you paused—and the things someone might say to you, the things they told you about yourself, about how, maybe, they had watched you for so long, liked you for so long
, about how you were this and you were that—none of it true, Catherine thought, all of it too flattering and too idealistic, but still. And the taste of someone; the smell of them; the feeling of their frame, of their flesh, of their bones. With Rafe, months after Aidan, it had been more complicated, because with Rafe there had been sex, and shagging someone was not like kissing someone—shagging someone was not, it seemed to Catherine, something you just knew naturally and automatically how to move through, how to build on, how to do—but Rafe and the responsibility of sex with Rafe were over now, and they were not things about which she had to worry anymore. Dusky dick?! James had written to her in that letter after her and Rafe’s first time, the letter which had made her laugh so loudly that Amy had called down the hall, demanding to have the passage read aloud to her. Dusky dick. I’ve heard them called some things, he had written, but that’s a new one on me. And he had gone on: praising Catherine, and congratulating her, and ribbing her, and making her snort, and making her blush. She had not used the actual phrase, of course—she had been trying to find a way to describe the lovely color of Rafe’s skin—but that did not matter; James liked to take something and to run with it until it had become something else entirely, and Catherine loved to watch him, loved to read him—she could always hear his voice saying the lines, see his eyes full of mischief, sarcasm, delight.
But she could also see the darkness in them; she could see the pain. Early on, he had written to her that maybe this had not been such a good idea, this second year working with Malachy in Berlin; that maybe it had been a mistake. Yes, the city was beautiful, he wrote, but there were days when its beauty seemed like a taunt, like an insult. When it was so hard not to take its beauty personally. And Catherine knew, when he wrote like this, that he was talking not just about the city, not just talking about the streets and the galleries and the squares, but about the people who walked through them; about the guys. He had met nobody. He had not broken through in that way. There had been people—of course there had been people—but they had been other people’s people; they had not been for James. After the first couple of months, almost every letter had come to have a sense of this, sometimes so vivid that Catherine felt as though she could see the scenes he was describing, the disappointments—felt, too, as though she could still do something to change them. As though she could just reach out and put her hand on James’s shoulder, for instance, as he stood in a doorway near Malachy’s studio, talking to a German boy called Florian, and saying to the boy that no, he was busy later, that he could not join Florian and his friends in a bar—Catherine, reading about this, wished that she could just reach out and push. And say, No, go; you have to go; you have to see what this might be. But he never did. He always just watched these boys that he longed for; he always just longed. And when the proof came, as it so often did, that he could not have them, that there could not be even the glimmer of a chance—the proof of a girlfriend, or even just of a sighting with a girl, his heart was always broken. Sometimes, Catherine, he had written in one letter—and in other letters variations on the same line—it is just too fucking hard. Too fucking hard. I don’t know. I try not to, but it is so hard not to feel…
Over Christmas, he wrote her a sequence of short notes, the days and dates floating in as headings, looking almost unreal by the time, well into January, that Catherine saw them—Christmas Eve, 4 p.m.; Christmas Eve, near midnight; Christmas morning, 10 a.m.; New Year’s Eve, sunset. Almost all of those days he had spent in the studio; the Tokyo show had been looming by then, and every hour had been precious to Malachy. It was overwork, Catherine had decided, which was making James’s tone so deadened, his words so rambling; it was, she decided, a kind of homesickness, no matter how vehemently he might have insisted that he was happy not to be coming home. How could he, he had written, face Christmas dinner with his mother? But his loneliness, during those last days of the year, had been seared into every word he had put down on those pages; even when he had only been writing about Malachy, and about what a slave-driver he was, Catherine could see the panic and the fear in the very shapes of his letters, in the stretch of his lines. He looked forward so much, he told her, to her letters; he wished he could have a long letter from her every day. Her letters to him, he wrote at one point, were all that he had, all that he looked forward to; and this was a line that so unnerved—and, in fact, so frightened—Catherine that she found herself skipping forward to the next page, hoping for something easier, hoping for something to make her laugh, or make her hungry to know the same things about art, about light, about Berlin, that James knew—or to make her forget. To make her forget that he was in some kind of trouble, her lovely, her wonderful, her so-brilliant friend; that he was going through a thing that she did not know how to help him with, that she worried sometimes—often—would lower itself down on him and claim him, once and for all. Her life, with her manic romances and her friends and her burrow in the library, with her notebook of poems, or half-poems, and her rattled-off articles for TN, with her visits home, where everything was still so uneasy, so awkward, between her and her parents, but where nothing was really badly wrong, really badly unbearable, the way things seemed like they would be for a long time between James and his mother—her life seemed like something harmless, something weightless, in comparison. And yet she liked her life; she loved her life; she did not want to think of her life in this way. And so, if she was honest—if she was blunt—the truth was that actually, lately, she had not really been writing to James as often as she ought to, or had been writing the letters without always actually sending them. She had been enjoying the writing of them as much as ever, but something had been stopping her from putting them in the post. Some of her letters to him lately had functioned more like diary entries, and she had kept them, because by the time she had got round to finishing them, they had been so woefully out of date—she had sent him the letter about the first time with Rafe, but the next letter, about what it was like to be Rafe’s girlfriend, and what the second time having sex with him had been like, and the third, had turned into the letter in which she had wondered about breaking up with Rafe, and then that letter had become the letter in which she had described the breakup, and Rafe’s unbothered reaction, and how it had all felt like a bit of an anticlimax, really, if James would pardon the pun. James would not have to pardon the pun, because James would not get to read the letter, unless she took it out of her desk drawer and handed it to him when he arrived in Baggot Street tomorrow afternoon. James, over the last few weeks, had noticed the lag in her correspondence, while there had been no lag in his; more than once, she had come in to college to find an email from James, teasing her, needling her, pretending to be very disappointed in Catherine and her negligence—but of course not actually pretending, not actually teasing, when it came down to it, at all.
Still. He was coming home. That was the thing to remember; that was the thing that made all of this feel as though it would be OK. He had written to her of the decision earlier that week, and in fact maybe just the knowledge that he was coming home, that they would soon be together in the flesh, had been a factor in the falloff in urgency, for Catherine, of sending him the long letters that had been the hallmark of their separation—for that was how they had both thought of it, especially during those first difficult weeks: a forced separation, a hard, mirrored exile—but now that he had decided to close up the distance between them, the physical chasm, maybe she had decided at some level that there was no need to write at such length to him anymore. Maybe she had felt, from the moment she had read his announcement—I’m coming home. I’ve had enough of this place. Get the couch cushions ready for me—that he was in some sense already home, and that to share things with him, all she had to do was write them down for herself, and because in some sense he was already here with her he could see them without needing them to be flown across the miles. He was home. Or, he was not home, not just yet, but he was as good as home, and when he was home, Catherine decided, none of th
at darkness which had come on him in Berlin could get to him, none of that loneliness would have a chance, not a moment, to sink its misery into him, to pull his days and his nights to shreds. Catherine would be with him. Everyone would be with him. Life would be with him, this teeming, booming, multiplying thing, and she and he could do everything together, and everything would once more be OK. Everything would be more than OK.
Zoe showed up at half three, complaining of a hangover and a broken umbrella and a bus that had failed to arrive. Catherine had already seen the whole exhibition by then, but she went around it with her again, standing for a long moment in front of 5 Deaths, the piece made from the crime scene photograph which showed an actual corpse, a dead woman, staring blindly out from beneath a massive overturned car.
“It’s too much,” Zoe said, her face screwed up in distaste. “I don’t give a shit about how powerful the effect of it might be. I still think it’s wrong.”
“It’s such a long time ago,” Catherine said.
“What difference does that make?”
“Don’t you think that detaches it from any real emotion?”
“She’s still a dead person,” Zoe said. “She’s not any less dead now than she was forty, or whatever, years ago.”
“I don’t know,” Catherine said. “I think the whole point is to be unsettled. It’s not actually a photograph of a dead woman.”
Zoe squinted at her. “You what, Citsers?”
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