Moses turned back to Gloria. He quickly realised that he wasn’t going to have to lie to her about how good she was. She didn’t let the music dominate her. She used its rhythms, its momentum, and rode on them, always balanced, always in control. She could be as agile as the song demanded. She could wrongfoot you just when you thought you knew where her voice was going, leaping seemingly into a void, landing in places you hadn’t even known were there. What a relief, Moses thought, not to have to lie to her.
He had been thinking about her off and on all day, going over remembered ground – incidents, gestures, fragments of conversation – going over and over them in his mind as waves go over stones, polishing them until they shone, felt smooth against his skin, had value. Something went through him, sideways and upwards, as he watched her performing on stage in her charcoal-grey forties’ suit and her diamante earrings and her diaphanous black scarf that she wore looped loosely about her neck, something made up of so many feelings, half-feelings and fractions of feelings that he felt like a whole audience – generous, expansive, irrepressible. The song finished and he was clapping, using every square millimetre of his massive hands.
Towards the end of ‘Stormy Weather’ Vince showed up. He dropped into the chair next to Moses, his hands wedged into his pockets, his waistcoat slippery with grease and oil and spilt drinks. His face had the dampness, the pallor, of a sponge. Stubble littered his chin. Moses could sense his knees jiggling up and down beneath the table.
Vince scowled. ‘I feel like shit.’
Eddie grinned. ‘I was just going to say. You look like shit, Vince.’
‘How did you get in with that waistcoat on, Vince?’ Moses asked. He poured Vince a glass of wine.
Vince downed it in one and slumped back in his chair. ‘I haven’t slept for three days.’ He stared morosely at his empty glass. ‘Took some smack on Wednesday night. Fucked me up completely.’
Moses and Eddie exchanged looks of resignation. Vince being histrionic again. Nothing unusual about that.
‘I thought you’d stopped that,’ Moses said.
‘How many times do I have to tell you, Vincent?’ said Eddie.
‘Screw you.’ Vince turned to Moses. ‘You got any downers, sleeping-pills, anything like that?’
‘Why would I have anything like that?’ Moses said. ‘I’m in love.’
Vince grimaced.
‘I haven’t seen you for ages,’ Moses said. ‘What’ve you been up to?’
‘Not much,’ Vince said. ‘Staying home, mostly. Getting out of it.’
‘With Debra,’ he added as an afterthought. He held his glass out for a refill. Moses poured.
‘Debra?’ Eddie said, as if the name meant something to him.
‘You don’t know her,’ Vince said. ‘She must be one of the few women you don’t know.’
‘I wouldn’t bet on that.’ Eddie smiled.
‘You don’t know her,’ Vince repeated.
Eddie looked pensive. ‘Did she used to work in that café in Victoria Station?’
‘No, she didn’t.’
‘She hasn’t got blonde hair, has she?’
Vince looked at the ceiling. ‘No, she hasn’t.’
‘Does she come from Hampshire?’
‘No,’ Vince said. ‘Liverpool.’
‘Was she at that – ’
‘Look, fuck off, Eddie,’ Vince said. ‘You don’t know her. OK?’
‘Well,’ Eddie grinned lasciviously, ‘I suppose there’s still time.’
Vince picked up his glass of wine and threw the contents in Eddie’s face. Vince smiled for the first time since he walked in. He was beginning to enjoy himself. Eddie wiped his shirt-front with one hand and smiled back.
‘Why did you do that, Vince?’ he said quietly.
‘I got bored with the shit you were talking.’
‘Was I talking shit?’ Eddie asked, still dabbing at his clothes.
‘Yes.’
The champagne arrived like a change of subject.
‘Seen Alison recently?’ Moses asked Vince.
‘That fucking bitch,’ Vince snarled. ‘I haven’t seen her since she went back home to mummy. I don’t need any of that shit.’
‘She rang me last week,’ Moses said. ‘Asked me to Sunday lunch.’
‘Sunday lunch.’ Vince’s face screwed up in a paroxysm of scorn and disgust. ‘Sunday fucking lunch. I’ve been to a few of those.’
‘What about them?’
‘It’s her mother. She floats around like some kind of fucking wood-nymph. She talks a pile of crap.’
‘What?’ Eddie laughed. ‘Like me?’
‘Yes,’ Vince said. ‘Like you.’
‘I can’t go anyway,’ Moses said. ‘I’ve got something else planned.’
Eddie leaned forwards. ‘With this Gloria of yours, I suppose?’
Vince leered.
‘It’d be a shame,’ Moses said, ‘if any more of this nice champagne got spilled, wouldn’t it?’ and reaching for the bottle helped himself to another glass.
Eddie drew back, swallowed a thoughtful mouthful of champagne, and left the table to get some cigarettes.
‘Sorry about this,’ Gloria was saying over the microphone, ‘but there’ve been some more complaints and apparently we’ve got to stop – ’
Whistles of disapproval. Two or three people stood up in protest. Vince began to pound the table with his fist.
Gloria lifted her arms away from her sides. Nothing she could do. She glanced at the manager of the place. He stood by the bar looking uncomfortable. She asked him whether they couldn’t end with a quiet number. After a moment’s hesitation, he nodded, pressing the air down with one hand. Gloria turned back to her audience.
‘OK, people, one more it is. A quiet one. So quiet that you’ll hardly hear it.’ She smiled to herself. ‘This song was made famous by Billie Holiday. It’s called “Strange Fruit” – ’
Accompanied by the piano and the drummer’s brushes, Gloria sang the song with a chilling stillness, staring straight ahead of her, seeing no one. The stillness spread, filled each member of the audience as if they were empty glasses and the stillness was water. When the song died away she didn’t move. She let the applause rush at her, shake her, bring her back to life. She seemed surprised for a moment to find that she wasn’t alone.
‘Thank you,’ she said, ‘and goodnight.’
And then, peering at the ceiling, ‘Happy dreams up there.’
*
‘You were good,’ Moses said.
Gloria wrinkled her nose, said nothing.
‘I mean it. You were really good.’ He pushed a chair out for her, but she stayed standing.
‘Thank you, Moses,’ she sighed.
‘No, really,’ he said, touching her arm. ‘You sounded like a proper person on a record.’
‘Did I?’ Gloria smiled faintly. ‘Give me a cigarette, would you?’
Moses handed her the packet. She took one, lit it, and inhaled deeply, her hand supporting her elbow. She stared away into the room. Moses had a sudden sense of awkwardness, of not knowing her at all. As if the previous night had happened in another dimension and needed to be re-established in this one.
The ordinary lights had come on. People looked pale, shifty, guilty of small crimes. The door to the street stood open, and a bitter draught ran through the bar.
‘Come on, folks,’ the manager called out, rubbing his hands together. ‘We’re closing now.’ He seemed anxious to put an end to what had obviously been an awkward evening.
Gloria crossed the room to speak to him. She returned a moment later muttering, ‘Fuck that for a laugh.’
They all walked up the stairs and round the corner to an Indian restaurant which, according to Eddie, served drinks until two in the morning. On the street Gloria took Moses’s arm.
‘I’m really glad you came,’ she said. ‘I’m just sorry it wasn’t better.’
‘You were good,’ Moses told her. ‘I meant what I
said.’
Gloria shook her head. ‘Anyway, that’s the last time I sing in that place.’
In the restaurant Eddie was preoccupied with Danielle, a friend of Gloria’s. Danielle had muscular tanned arms and eyes so green they made you think of envy. She may or may not have been about to become only the third lesbian ever to sleep with Eddie. Moses was preoccupied with Gloria, who really was a jazz-singer and who would almost certainly be spending the night with him, an event that he might or might not remember, depending on how much more he drank. Vince, who hadn’t slept for three days, was preoccupied with the tablecloth. He hadn’t said a word to anyone for hours. He seemed fascinated by the tablecloth, and touched it carefully with his fingertips at regular intervals. Eventually he spoke.
‘I’ve got to go.’
Everybody else exchanged glances as people always did when Vince emerged from one of his long silences.
‘OK, Vince,’ Moses said.
‘I’m going now.’ Vince didn’t move.
‘OK, Vince,’ Moses said.
‘Goodbye, Vince,’ Eddie said.
Still looking at the tablecloth, Vince rose to his feet, slowly, as if there was more gravity around than usual. His mouth tightened with the effort involved. He moved away across the restaurant like somebody walking on the sea-bed. The door opened and closed. A blast of wind. He was gone.
‘He ought to be in the movies,’ Danielle said.
Eddie agreed. ‘Frankenstein.’
They carried on drinking bottles of wine which Eddie, with typical abandon, was now ordering in pairs. They were the last people in the restaurant. They hardly looked at the tablecloth at all.
Ten or fifteen minutes passed. Then, to everyone’s surprise, somebody sat down in Vince’s vacant seat.
It was Vince.
They all turned to him with questioning looks. Vince’s eyes travelled across the smooth white wastes of the tablecloth. Finally he took a deep breath.
‘I wasn’t drunk enough,’ he said.
*
Moses pulled up outside The Bunker. He cut the engine. Rain scratched at the windscreen.
‘Listen,’ he said. ‘Can you hear it?’
The music, he meant. Dub tonight. Shuddering across the street. Bass notes that made the surfaces of puddles shake.
‘No noise restrictions here,’ he said.
‘So will you try and arrange it for me?’ Gloria said. ‘You know, sometime.’
‘If we’re still together.’
Gloria smiled. ‘You’re stealing my lines.’
Upstairs, she flung her coat on to the chair by the door.
‘Oh,’ Moses said.
‘What is it?’
‘It’s just that my ghost might be sitting there.’
‘Your ghost?’
‘Yes. She sits there sometimes, I think. It’s her chair.’
‘You’ve got a ghost in here?’
‘Yes. Well, Jackson thinks so, anyway. I’ve never seen her.’ Moses was smiling. He was imagining the ghost sitting on the chair with Gloria’s coat over her head. Will somebody please get this coat off my head? ‘She’s harmless, though,’ he went on. ‘Sometimes I talk to her without even knowing it. I think we get on quite well, really. Jackson would’ve told me if we didn’t.’
Gloria shook her head. ‘I never know what to believe with you. Tell you one thing, though. You’re right about the music. It’s – it’s everywhere.’
She wasn’t exaggerating.
There was music in the floorboards, music in the walls, music in the windows, music in her earrings, music in the black mass of her hair, music in her eyebrows, music in the way Moses was looking at her, music in his voice as he said, ‘Let’s go to bed’, music in her passage across the room towards him, music in the hinges of the bedroom door, music in their first quick kiss, more music in their second slower one, music in their undressing, music in his hands running over her skin, music in hers as they guided him in, music in the opening and closing gaps between their bodies, music in her orgasm, music in his, music as he turned, like the page of a score, away from her, music in their breathing as it slowed down, deepened, music in their sleeping, music in their dreams –
And music in Gloria’s coat, it seemed, as it slid slowly from the chair on to the floor.
*
On the following Saturday morning Moses picked Gloria up from her flat in Victoria. He had cashed the sheet-money and filled his car with petrol. They were going away for the weekend. The weekend he had promised her.
It wasn’t until they were driving up Maida Vale that Gloria happened to glance over her shoulder and see the two suitcases on the back seat.
Why two? she wondered.
She twisted round in her seat. One of the suitcases was compact – the kind of overnight bag that she herself had brought along. The other, though no larger, looked older, sturdier. Two leather straps held it fast, buckling at the front like belts. The locks were shaped like arrowheads, and halfway between them two words had been discreetly embossed in gold: REAL COWHIDE. At one end, where the hinges were, the leather had darkened as if it had been left standing in water. The most surprising thing about it, though, was the fact that it was there at all. They were only going to be away for two nights. Her mouth framed a question, but never asked it. The weekend had been Moses’s idea. He would tell her in his own good time.
She settled back in her seat again and glanced secretly at his profile, what she called his driving face, as it rushed motionless across a landscape of white houses. But surely it couldn’t just be clothes, she found herself thinking. Before her mind could start inventing possible contents, she shut it off. She didn’t want to guess. It would ruin things. It was curiously reassuring, comforting almost, to know that, sometime in the future, the mystery would be explained. That was what knowing people was all about, wasn’t it? In fact, the more she thought about the suitcase (in the abstract, that is), the more at ease she felt. It seemed to epitomise their relationship. Anticipation, excitement, surprises.
She leaned her head against the back of the seat and watched the trees flick by. Tree after tree after tree lining the main road. All the same make, all identical in age. All their intervening distances measured and exact.
Complete opposite of the suitcase, really.
*
Country and western music on the radio.
Moses often listened to country and western music because he didn’t like it. If you listened to music you liked all the time, he had told Gloria, then pretty soon you didn’t like it any more. That was what had happened with country and western music. Once he had really liked it. But he had listened to it all the time. And now he didn’t like it any more. So he could listen to it all the time without worrying.
Gloria didn’t have strong feelings one way or the other. She sang along, inventing words and making Moses smile. The day warmed up, and a dull haze accompanied their drive north, hanging over the monotonous deserted landscape, denying it greenness. The exit after Leicester, Moses turned off the motorway and it wasn’t long before the road narrowed, acquiring ditches and hedges, and a high stone wall loomed up on the left, dusty and crumbling, the texture of stale cake, with overhanging cedars, their great flat branches reaching out like plates.
‘This is it,’ Moses announced, ‘by the look of it.’
He swung the car into a gravel driveway. Stone dogs sat on the gateposts, their ears pricked, their eyes blind. Gloria peered through the windscreen for a glimpse of the hotel, but the driveway denied her that, winding first through trees – pines planted close together, gloom gathering between their tall red trunks – then through giant clumps of rhododendrons and hydrangeas. Gradually, on the left-hand side, the shrubbery thinned out, and Gloria caught flashes of a green lawn slick with recent rain. Beyond it lay a boating lake. A jetty crouched over the water on dark rotting stilts. A few conifers, almost black, clustered round the edge like mourners.
‘Yes, this is it.’ Moses nodded
to himself. ‘I recognise it from the postcard.’
‘What postcard?’ Gloria asked.
‘You’ll see.’
Moses parked in front of the hotel. They both got out.
Standing beside the car with her coat over one arm and her case in her hand, Gloria stared up at the facade. The name – DOGWOOD HALL – in white foot-high letters. Ivy trimmed close to the pale yellow stone. Blank windows. Neat, well-groomed, oppressive. Even the gravel at her feet looked arranged.
She noticed a bare patch where Moses must have skidded when he turned the car round. We’ve messed up their drive, she thought. And then, Why did he bring me here?
‘Are you coming?’ Moses called out from the porch.
Gloria looked up, smiled weakly. ‘Yes,’ she said. But first she covered the bare patch over, using the toe of her shoe.
*
Moses strode towards the reception desk. He felt powerful, executive. A man with a mission. Moses, he said to himself. Moses Highness.
He put his two suitcases down, leaned on the counter, and waited while the receptionist finished shuffling his papers. The receptionist was superbly bald, his head a pale yellow dome of polished marble. It had the allure of a piece of sculpture and, for one awful moment, when the man bent down to pick up a sheet of paper disturbed by the wind from the open door, Moses thought he was going to reach over and stroke it, which was what he always did with sculpture. Fortunately the receptionist straightened again quickly, as if he had had some kind of premonition.
‘Can I help you?’ he enquired.
‘Yes,’ Moses said. ‘I’d like a double room, please.’
‘A double room.’ The receptionist blew a little stale air out of his wrinkled sphincter of a mouth and opened the hotel register. ‘Can I have your name, sir?’
‘Highness. Moses Highness.’
The receptionist’s head began to wobble violently on his narrow shoulders. He stood behind his counter and stared at Moses, his mouth a widening rift in the lower half of his face. It was like watching an earthquake in an art gallery. What if the head toppled? Moses thought. Would his reflexes be quick enough to catch it before it hit the floor and shattered into a thousand pieces? He couldn’t bear the idea of looking down and seeing one baleful eye looking up at him.
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