Gwyneth Jones - Life(2005)

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Gwyneth Jones - Life(2005) Page 18

by Anonymous Author


  "LEAVE HIM ALONE!"

  Tex gave her an evil look. He dropped the towel on Bill and picked up the bundle. Ramone felt all the sex drain out of her. She knew she must not show weakness but she was frightened. "Put him back in his cage."

  They were standing opposite each other, the width of the big room between them strewn with wreckage. Tex let the towel drop and held the bird between his hands. Bill's grey ruffled head circled around, his china blue eye blearily resting on Ramone without recognition. Tex took hold of his head with one hand, and moved the other down to grasp Bill's knobbly old bunioned sailor's feet. He tugged. Bill struggled, flapping his wings. Tex pulled hard and dropped the corpse on the carpet.

  "I'm leaving," said Ramone.

  "Fucking-A you are. I'm throwing you out, you talentless stupid ugly cunt."

  Ramone marched around trying to pack, tears streaming, while Tex grabbed armfuls of her stuff and threw it out the front door. Between them, it didn't take long. They didn't say another word to each other. Some relationships are like that: no lingering doubts, no loose ends, when it's over it's over.

  She made an inventory, sitting on the stairs, while the slammed door fumed its silent rage at her, and discovered he had not thrown out her gear. Ramone was not addicted to heroin. She was an occasional user, who liked the doom-laden image. She decided that she would take this opportunity to go cold turkey. She would kick the habit (employing, needless to say, the injectable drug as a symbol for the regime of sexual violence that had gone shit on her). She left most of her stuff where it lay and took a taxi with her two best-looking bags. She chose a hotel that was small, smart, and central, determined to hole up until she was clean. She had no trouble getting in. She was wearing an expensive black quilted leather jacket Daz had given her and a metallic gold beanie hat that she had stolen from another model, and she'd made up her face. She looked, she thought, when she checked herself before facing the reception desk, like a delinquent rock star: which was exactly what she wanted to be.

  She didn't suffer withdrawal symptoms, but the twenty-four-hour room service was seductive. By the time she decided to leave she'd run up a sizeable bill on her Visa card. The desk got it authorized all right but she knew she was in trouble now, until she paid something off on one card or another. Money was a problem, because she didn't think she was going to be working on Mère Noire anymore, and she'd made fuck-all out of Praise Song. More pressingly she was running out of cash. She shouldered the good-looking bags and went to find an ATM. She had the feeling of something coming up on her. . . Then a weird unlucky thing happened. Her mind was preoccupied, she couldn't remember her number. The machine gave her a few tries, then it ate her card. She took a taxi back to the flat, which nearly finished her cash, and cased the joint. When she was convinced that Tex was out, she went up the stairs. Of course, he had changed the locks.

  A few letters addressed to Ramone were lying in a damp corner of the ground floor lobby, where Tex had thrown them. The one that wasn't a circular was a rude reply from her agent to a perfectly civil letter Ramone had written, asking why the publishers hadn't done a fucking thing to promote the Praise Song paperback. Ramone was disgusted at the unprofessionalism of these people. You expected to be dealing with rational capitalists, making businesslike decisions. Instead you found nothing but spite and idiocy, pathetic little personal grudges, and of course have the boys had enough? Then we have some little scraps here for the girls. . . She wondered if her situation was different from any literary female in London's history, say Aphra Benn: decided not. It's the same old story. Live on your wits, get paid less if at all, and if you're trying to sell anything that doesn't grovel to their idea of your sex, forget it.

  She had so many options she didn't know what to do. She could go round to Wol and Rosey's, they'd give her a bed. While she was checking her pockets—jacket, jeans, both bags—for undiscovered cash, she found a tab of e. It looked a bit manky but she thought it would be okay and swallowed it dry, because it was raining and she needed to think. She carried her bags to Ladbroke Grove and sat in a doorway. Time to re-invent myself. Ah, but it had been such a strain, that middle-class educated aspirational phase, she was glad it was over. The drug was coming up on her in a tingling effervescence through her nerves and her gut. She smiled, chin on her paw, looking down a lonesome road and knowing it was her own.

  Some weeks later, when she had sold most of the contents of the good-looking bags, the bags themselves, and her useless credit cards, when she had slept on couches and floors, avoiding old friends, until she ran out of acquaintances who didn't take Tex's side, she found herself where she would have been years ago, if it hadn't been for her scholarship money: a northern girl with delusions of grandeur, at large on the streets of London. It was fine. She made friends, she found romance, and she wasn't above doing sex for money, if she liked the person. If anyone asked, she excised the university aberration and told them she'd run away from home because her Dad was abusing her. It wasn't true. But her Dad would never have hesitated at telling a dirty lie about Ramone, if it was going to get him a free drink, so she felt no guilt.

  She spent her days walking around, sitting on benches, begging, staring into the river. The nights were more difficult. That was when the problem of sex resolved itself clearly into one of physical size and strength. There were pros and cons on both sides. Female, or male if you were small, you were less likely to attract the gangs of violent lads, who were the serious threat. But you were in continual danger of being mauled, and it meant you never got any sleep. Ramone thought of herself as the Cat; she walked by herself, and no one got the better of her. One night she was wandering in the dark near Piccadilly (stupid place to roam, but she was looking for a friend who was supposed to have some drugs) and a man drew up. She didn't like the look of him. I only do girls, she said, walked on, and thought no more of it. She heard a car stop and a door slam, and still thought no more of it until suddenly something grabbed her from behind. It was like being picked up by a dinosaur. He grabbed her by the shoulders and slammed her against a wall. Don't talk to me like that! he yelled.

  What's up with you? she demanded, ears ringing. I just said I only do girls. Ask someone else, I'm not the only tart in London.

  You cheeky little bitch. You cheeky, little, bitch.

  He forced her to her knees, grabbling at his trousers. What made her sick was that he was not hard. When she'd screamed no, no, fuck off bastard and he'd hit her and she'd been frightened enough to submit, she had to take something into her mouth that was like a dead slug that had been dipped in stale piss and left to dry. She had to work on it, for years it seemed, until he finally managed to get there. Backed off, fastening himself, muttered something unintelligible, not that Ramone was paying attention.

  It was the first absolutely forced sex she'd ever had.

  She knew she'd got off lightly: but it isn't what happens, it's how you feel, and the dead slug had broken through her defenses. He'd really told her where she was in the world, and no money either. She stumbled back to her hostel bed and cried herself to sleep.

  * * *

  Later in the same descent, Ramone was living in the Embankment Gardens. Her home was a cardboard bivvy in a laurel thicket, with a plastic-bag damp course and a lining of layered newspaper. She loved this gaff, and had to remind herself fifty times a day that everything passes. She had no security. She paid her taxes to the dominant male of the area, but that only guaranteed her against his aggression, if anything. The chances of his defending Ramone's property or person from anyone else were slim. But he was around, and that would keep other aspiring tax collectors at bay. Hopefully.

  She was living a healthy life. She changed her newspaper bedding regularly, like a badger; she showered and took her clothes to the laundromat at intervals. She was off Class A. She knew there are no secrets under those mountains, and she didn't particularly want to feel like Jesus's son. She ate very little, which was good for the budget and promised her
an extended lifespan, and also meant she got far more of a hit from one can of strong lager. She did not eat out of bins. She was only rooting in the skip in that alley behind the Pizzaland because she was collecting crusts to feed the baby hedgehogs. She'd never seen a hedgehog on the Embankment, but they could be living there in secret, like Ramone. She had heard that global warming was affecting the chances of baby hedgehogs surviving through the winters: an idea that preyed on her mind.

  So she was rooting in the bin, with enough money for a whole pizza in her pocket, except that she meant to spend it on wine—and suddenly knew someone was staring at her. She whipped round. Someone there, at the end of the alley, a flash of a face. A woman, she thought, in a long pale brown coat. She would swear she could trace this woman's crisp footsteps hurrying away, among all the rest of the noises out there in the street. Ramone hated incidents like this. People say you ought to trust your intuition, but life on the streets was so physically insecure you could spend your whole existence feeling spooked, and then where's your escape-from-the-rat-race primeval freedom?

  It was the end of November, wet but mild. At dusk she spent a good hour laying little caches of hedgehog food under the bushes. Then she sat on a bench by the river, looking at the lights, drinking her second bottle and taking stock. The last time she'd walked away from something that was over, with no money had been when she went to France with Daz and Marnie. Fine things had happened then. Fine things had happened this time too. She was living in a state of nature, and it was wonderful. It was wonderful to accept, the way Ramone could not possibly accept the fucking shit in any so-called civilized context. She was like an animal now, and content.

  And you could still fantasize the downfall of your enemies, which was as near as she'd ever been going to get to victory anyway. She often snuggled herself to sleep in her cozy burrow, Pele the soft toy rabbit in her arms, dreaming of global economic meltdown. . . You'll get what you deserve all you bastards, you'll join us, we are the future. The lights on the dark water were so pretty and so romantic she thought she had never felt so happy in her life. If only there were a way of filling the vacant daylight hours, besides begging—which bored her so much she hardly pan-handled enough for her food and taxes. For other people on this level, the routine chore of asking for money was a reasonable substitute for some other kind of mindless work: Ramone missed studying and writing.

  It was embarrassing, but those were secretly her drugs of choice.

  She stayed out late because of the spooky Pizzaland incident, today or yesterday or the day before: she couldn't remember. She got home drunk and sleepy, dreaming as she stumbled along in the rain about finding a baby hedgehog with a wet whiffly black nose and little feet and tiny little peepy eyes. Not drunk enough, however, to forget her nightly routine. Her bivvy was protected by an arrangement (patent applied for, someday) of trip wires attached to firecrackers, the crackers in plastic food cartons to keep them dry, and the whole thing fixed so that if anyone tripped one of her wires it would cause a weight to smack onto a percussion cap, and the sparks from that would set off a nest of bangers. It had never actually worked, but put it another way, she had never been attacked in her bed. At last she crawled indoors, pulled down the waterproof apron, and snuggled under her covers with Pele in her arms.

  Goodnight!

  She didn't know where she had put the baby hedgehog. She finally struck a match and lit her candle, though she tried to make it a rule never to show a light at night. Heggy? she whispered. Heggy? This was awful, she must have drunkenly left her baby at that bench. She stuck Pele inside her jacket for moral support and crawled out into the rain, calling Heggy, Heggy? But Heggy was so little she didn't even know she had a name yet. Ramone searched in growing panic. She dropped her candle, tripped on something in the leaf litter, fell on her face; and then all hell broke loose. She did not remember the firecrackers. She thought it was someone with a machine gun. She scrambled to her feet and ran, out of the bushes onto the pavement of the river walk.

  There was that face again. A man and a woman strolling, oblivious of the rain, coming away from something at the South Bank: arm in arm, dressed in evening clothes. The man's sumptuous overcoat, dark ample umbrella cartwheel behind the two heads, the woman's face lit by a glitter of jewels: fine-boned and delicately aged, the clear light blue eyes that looked straight into Ramone. The woman said to the man. "Excuse me—"

  It was Lavinia, her grey hair cut and coifed, dressed in pomegranate satin under her open cloak, with a diamond necklace and diamond earrings.

  "Just a moment."

  She went back to the man, who was standing a few steps away, said something to him, and he walked off. Ramone was too fascinated to stir. She got herself into a heels-on-the-ground crouch. There was a bench beside her. Lavinia came and sat on it. She took out some cigarettes from a black satin evening bag and offered them at arm's length.

  "I don't smoke."

  "Well, I do." She lit up. "I wondered what had become of you."

  "You see, I was a heroin addict. I had my first book out, I was doing really well: but it was all a facade. The drug pulled me down. I had this violent boyfriend, an artist but completely nuts, and it was through trying to get away from him and the drug that I ended up on the street. I couldn't help myself."

  "Hmm. Why did you have to stop using? All you need to thrive with a heroin habit is enough money. How did you get into this state, honestly?"

  Ramone knew that Lavinia had been the woman at the end of the alley, though not wearing a camel dressing gown, that had been Ramone's own little aide-mémoire. Lavinia had maybe seen Ramone around here lots, without making contact. She didn't really want to hear Ramone's sad story. The carefully poised way she was sitting, the cool way she stared ahead of her, not at Ramone: that said it all. Lawy's brother had been right, schizophrenics don't look back. She wondered what to say. She still sometimes woke from smothering dreams in which she'd found the door of the Pinebourne flat open, walked in, and there was Lavinia, arms ending in bloody stumps, blood gouting from her mouth. The woman mutilated to stop her from revealing what was done to her, irony comes not much more savage. That's what Lavinia means, the silenced daughter and wife in Titus Andronicus. Lavinia had never produced any other derivation from her store.

  "I'm on a research project. I'm investigating the wilder shores of Girl Power."

  The beautiful, rich elderly lady who was the new Lawy turned her head: examining Ramone with a steady curiosity, not exactly sympathy.

  "That I can believe. And what have you discovered?"

  "It's all bullshit. May I go now?"

  "No one's stopping you."

  Ramone stayed. She'd been too fucking right to be spooked. With one look, Lawy had transformed Ramone's snug home to a dank squalid den full of slugs. She was shivering, her clothes were worn and filthy, and she had lost her baby hedgehog, probably never going to find her now.

  Lavinia went on smoking. Finally she asked, "Is there anything I can do ?"

  "I'm a beggar," said Ramone, thinking that Lawy hadn't changed. "Give me money."

  At which Lavinia actually began to look in that little bag. Ramone held out her hand, thinking how weird this was, but then instead of a coin or a note, Lawy's fingers touched her cheek, and then her forehead.

  "Oh no. This won't do. You're burning up. I'm going to call a taxi."

  "I'm just drunk. I can't come with you. I've lost my pet, I have to. . ." She was unsure. Maybe she had dreamed finding Heggy. Maybe she'd dreamed that someone had blown her box up. She tried to struggle, feeling an awful pang of double loss. But here was the taxi, and she was getting inside.

  Roads and the Meaning of Roads, II

  You've heard of Jewish Princesses? thought Anna, as she slowed for the Services. I was a Catholic Princess. Like Cinderella in the fairy tale, elle s'estoit bien. I was brought up by my Spanish-nostalgic grandma and French-Enlightenment-nostalgic nuns and my Socialism-nostalgic mother to believe that I had
the power and the duty to make everybody around me both happy and good. They'd given me the technology. I could do it; so I must. I wanted to be like that. It was an ideal I embraced, though it didn't come naturally to me. Was I helplessly driven by my innately caring, non-competitive female genes when I gave up my doctorate? I don't think so. Would Albert Einstein have made that decision? Of course not: ask Mrs Einstein. But there are men, first-class men in science, who have failed to be ruthless. Where does that leave us? Dominant people behave dominantly. Talent without dominance is a fish on a bicycle.

  Ah, the memory of that summer morning. I was too stiff to do good yoga first thing, but it was the only slot in my packed schedule: paschi-mottanasana, the western stretch (the back is the western part of your body) leaning forward gently over my outstretched legs, face lowered toward my knees, hey, where are you little fish, where are you hiding? But she was gone. I knew she was gone. The brutal things people say, that you remember forever. When Spence phoned his Mom, she said maybe it's for the best: which poor Spence repeated to me, not knowing any better. The priest in hospital: You're a healthy young thing. A year from now you'll be back in here and holding a bouncing new baby. Forgive them for they know not what they do.

  Spence's Mom had been aghast because there'd been no barrage of tests for Anna and the stillborn, to establish what had gone wrong. Why bother? It wasn't as if she was going to try and get pregnant again. Anyway, first miscarriage, even a late miscarriage, is happenstance: most likely you wouldn't find out anything useful. Parentis clients had often been told by their CPs not to worry, though they'd clocked up three or four failed pregnancies. No one would ever know if Lily Rose had died by chance or because her mother was working too hard; or if she had been an early statistic in a global tragedy that had not yet become news.

  She moved the car smoothly from the flickering racetrack into calmer regions but killed her speed too late, so that the automatic brakes kicked in and Jake hooted at the jolt. Spence said nothing. Anna gritted her teeth: woman driver, bad driver. Since she had lost her job the world was full of these abrasive reminders, you are second-rate. How naive I was! If I'd been more experienced I'd have known the moment I saw her that Sonia was my enemy, not Nirmal — a disappointed woman, older woman, jealous of her role as the boss's emotional vizier. Along came Anna, bright-eyed young genius. Naturally she fucked me up. . . I should never have let her get between me and Nirmal. Above all I should have told him myself about the pregnancy, at once. It might have made all the difference. Instead of which he threw me out, Lily Rose died, and he let the crucial SCF papers appear without my name on them, which was criminal, as he knew fine well. People ought to take fairy tales more seriously. Anyone who has lived, out in the wild world, knows that's how things happen. Fate. An unwise glance, a word said or left unspoken, and your whole life is changed or set in stone.

 

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