Making History

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Making History Page 5

by Stephen Fry


  Donald, like me a ready flusher, backed dorkily from the room. “Ho. Yes. Right, for sure. I’ll . . . yes. ’K.”

  I waited for the flapping of the doors to subside before daring to look up into that mocking gaze.

  “I’m sorry,” I said.

  The words fell with a thud into an achingly long silence.

  It wasn’t really a mocking gaze. I could have attached any prop­erty to it. I could have described it as a cool gaze, an ironical gaze. Or an appraising gaze. It was Jane’s gaze and to anyone else it might have appeared a) friendly, b) sweet, c) amused, d) provocative, e) sexy, f) forbidding, g) skeptical, h) admiring, i) passionate, j) whorish, k) dull, 1) intellectual, m) contemptuous, n) embarrassed, o) afraid, p) insincere, q) desperate, r) bored, s) contented, t) hopeful, u) inquiring, v) steely, w) angry, x) disappointed, y) penetrating, or z) relieved.

  It was all of these things. I mean, it was a pair of human eyes, the mirror of the soul. Not the mirror of her soul, but of mine. I looked into them feeling like ten types of tit and so, naturally, a mocking gaze was what I got in return.

  Suddenly, to my surprise, she smiled, leaned forward and stroked the back of my head.

  “Oh, Pup,” she said. “What am I going to do with you?”

  A word about the Pup business.

  People call me Pup.

  It’s like this.

  You’re due to clock in at a big university wearing a jacket, tie and chinos, as bought by Mummy specially for the occasion. Your name is Michael. You’re younger than anyone else by two years and this is virtually the first time you’ve been away from home. What do you do? Your train journey from Winchester to Cambridge means you have to cross London to get from one station to the other. So, you hit the West End, returning with a serious haircut, way baggy trousers, a T-shirt saying “Suck My Soul,” a khaki parka and the name Puck. You reboard the next train to Cambridge reborn as a dude with atti­tude. It was more or less okay to say “dude” and “with attitude” eight years ago. Nowadays of course, only advertisers and journalists talk like that. What they say for real on the street today I’ve less than no idea. I dropped out of that race early on after I’d been lapped twice and told to get out of the fucking way.

  I chose Puck because I’d played him in a school production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream and I thought it kind of suited me. Spike, Yash, Blast, Spit, Fizzer, Jog, Streak, Flick, Boiler, Zug, Klute, Growler—I’d considered them all. Puck seemed to be cool without being too aggressive. Unfortunately, at my first dinner in Hall there had been a mix-up.

  “Hi,” said this totally uncool bloke in jacket and tie sitting him­self beside me. “I’m Mark Taylor. You must be a fresher, yeah?”

  I gave him my cool new name, but my mouth was full of food and somehow he got it into his specky head that I had introduced myself as Puppy Young.

  “Puppy? Yeah, I see that. Puppy. Right.”

  No amount of spluttering denial led to anything and Puppy or Pup I became. It wasn’t a blow that I ever really recovered from in terms of the kind of homeboy, down by law, yo motherfuckah, sound, bitching, slamming, street, phat, gangsta, waycool cool that I had reckoned on achieving. Maybe Snoop Doggy Dogg of South Central, Los Angeles, California, could have got away with calling himself Snoop Puppy Pup, but Michael Young of East Dene, Andover, Hampshire, didn’t have a fucking prayer.

  Jane loved it of course. Loved calling me Pup, Pups, and Puppy. Which explained in part the little outbreak that led to me graffiting the bonnet of her Renault.

  Her Renault? I meant our Renault. See? She was winning already.

  That’s to say—yes, I liked going out with an older woman. Two years apart maybe doesn’t really count as Older Woman, but I still got a kick out of just that small difference. Yes, I liked being moth­ered a bit. Yes, I quite enjoyed the salty slap of her gentle mocking, but NO I am not a eunuch or a masochist. Part of me likes just once in a while to be a Man. And I felt, frankly, I felt . . .

  “I know what you felt last night,” she said. “You thought I was jealous. You thought I didn’t like the idea of your thesis being fin­ished. We’d both be doctors then, and we’d both be equal. You thought that irritated me.”

  “That couldn’t be further from the truth!” I said, which couldn’t have been further from the truth.

  “And perhaps you thought that I didn’t take history very seriously compared with my work.”

  “Absolutely not!” I lied again.

  “Oh,” Jane lifted her eyebrows in genuine surprise. “Really? Because I was thinking that. All those things. It did annoy me that you were about to get a doctorate. And having to watch you strut about the place like a bantam. I mean face it, dear, a lesser woman would have thrown up.”

  “I was happy, that’s all.”

  “And I did think to myself, what’s a history doctorate? Anyone with half a brain can eat the fruits of a library for a few months and then crap out a long glistening thesis. It doesn’t involve thought, or calculation or work. Not real work. Just pretentious dilettante posturing.”

  “Oh, thanks! Thanks a heap.”

  “I know, Puppy, I know. It was only for a while. I was jealous. I was resentful.”

  “Oh.”

  “I’m sorry. I’m pleased you’ve finished your thesis now. I’m proud of you.”

  Absolute genius for feinting and sidestepping and slithering, has Jane. She’ll make all the points against herself before you get the chance and then apologize for them sweetly and bravely, leaving good grace as the only option.

  “About the car,” I said, looking down, “it was childish of me.”

  “Oh fuck the car. Who gives a shit about the car? It’s a car, not a kitten or a declaration of human rights. Fuck it twice. And, at the risk of rousing your manly ire once more, you have to admit that it was one of the few brave, amusing and independent things you’ve ever done. Besides, I lied about it being towed away, and as it hap­pens the graffiti disappeared with one wipe of Freon, so what harm was done?”

  “So that means . . . er . . . we’re still together again?”

  “Come here you,” she said and pulled my head towards hers.

  We kissed long and hard and, coming up for air, I babbled my thanks. Inside . . . well, maybe I wasn’t so sure. I had been getting used to the idea of feeling let down, betrayed and spat out. There was a kind of comfort in the bruises of hurt and misuse. But then you see I loved her. I really loved her. I still get a thrill When you ter-ter-ter-touch me. It was true. Oily-Moily were never wrong. Every time her flesh contacted mine I got a rush. So, what the hey, we kissed and I told freedom good-bye.

  She’s taller than me: that doesn’t mean much, most people are taller than me. She’s dark where I’m light. A lot of people take her for an Italian or a Spaniard. I call her my raven-haired Gypsy temptress, at which she groans good-naturedly. She’s very clean. That sounds strange but is true. Not just nearly clean, as the TV commercials say, but really clean. Her hands are always fresh and neat and her lab coat and clothes never wrinkle or sag. There is just this sweet endear­ing clumsiness, an awkward stiff suggestion of uncoordination; as with Ingrid Bergman’s hint-of-a-squint, it’s the tiny, almost impercep­tible flaw that magnifies the beauty.

  “Tell you what,” I said. “I’ll go to Sainsbury’s and tonight we’ll cook a really good dinner. Get it right this time. How’s that?”

  She looked down at me. “You know, Pup,” she said, “if you were any more cute I would have to pickle you in formaldehyde.”

  “Shucks,” I went, and picked up a little Perspex dish of bright orange pills from the bench, shaking them in an embarrassed South American rhythm. “Hm,” I said, picking one of them up and holding it between forefinger and thumb. “What kind of a high do these offer then?”

  “Shit, will you put that down?” She made a grab for the dish, sud­denly
wild with anger, and missed, sending pills all over the worktop and the floor.

  I’d never seen her like that. A frenzy, a real frenzy.

  “Hey!” I cried in protest, as she roughly pushed me away from the bench.

  “Why will you never learn to leave alone?”

  She threw herself off the stool and began to gather the scattered pills cursing herself and me and life and God as she did so.

  This was beyond real. I joined her on the ground truffling for orange pills.

  “Look, babe, I just—”

  “Shut up and keep looking for them. I’m not talking to you.”

  For the third time in as many hours I was picking stuff up off the ground. CDs, pieces of paper and now pills. You get days like that. Themed days.

  When all the pills were back in the dish and safely out of the reach of childish hands, she turned to me, bosom, I have to report, heaving with indignation.

  “Christ, Pup, what is it with you?”

  “With me? With me? All I bloody did was pick up a pill . . .”

  “Do you know what these are? Have you any idea what these are? No, of course you haven’t. They might contain anthrax or polio or God knows what. They might be absorbable through the skin. They might have been cyanide, for all you knew.”

  “Well, what are they then?”

  “What they are is a contraceptive.”

  “Yeah?” I looked at them, interested.

  “A male contraceptive.”

  “A male pill. Coolness.”

  “No, not a male pill, the male pill.”

  “But not dangerous?”

  “It depends, shit-wit, on what you mean by dangerous. They are untested on humans, for one thing.”

  “Hey, well, I can be your guinea pig then, can’t I?”

  “No you cannot be my fucking guinea pig!” she snarled. “Their effect is irreversible.”

  “Come again?”

  “Come again is exactly what you won’t be able to do, not in any fruitful sense at least. They sterilize permanently.”

  I gulped. “Oh.”

  “Yes. Oh.”

  “Narrow squeak then.”

  “Not that your gene pool is one that a rational world would ever wish to see propagated.”

  “You should keep them locked up.”

  “I should keep you locked up. Let’s make a rule, Puppy. You don’t interfere with my work and I don’t interfere with yours. That way we can avoid catastrophe, all right?”

  “Yeah, well,” I said, moving away. “I’m sorry. Listen, I’ve got to like blow, ’kay?”

  She looked at me, a smile widening on her face. “Do you think there might be a chance that once your thesis has been read you’ll start talking proper English?”

  “D’you mean?”

  “All this ‘cool’ and ‘slamming’ and ‘woah’ . . . what’s it all about? You’ll probably be a fellow of the college next year. Do you think Trevor Roper used to go around the place saying, ‘woah, man . . . like, cool!’ I mean, darling, it’s so strange. So decidedly odd.”

  “Well,” I said, sitting down again. “Thing is, history, you know, there’s an image problem.” This was a pet theory of mine that I’d never explained to her before. I smoothed the surface of the work­bench with my palms, as if separating out two heaps of salt. “There’s two types of historian, yeah? Over here you’ve got A, your young fogey—the Hayek, Peterhouse, Cowling, Spectator-reading, Thatcher-was-a-goddess, want-to-be-PPS-to-a-Tory-MP type, right? And then, on this side, there’s B, your seriously heavy Christopher Hill, Althusser, E. P. Thompson, post-structuralist, in-your-face, fuck-the-individual, up-the-arse-of-history type.”

  “And which are you, Pup?”

  “I’m neither.”

  “Neither. Mm. Then my scientific training leads me to propose that there must therefore be more than two types. There is type C.”

  “Yeah, yeah, yeah. Very clever. What I mean is, given this image thing, what do you do? See, the fogeyish type belong stylistically to the forties and fifties, the heavy type to the sixties and seventies. So they’re both, like, outdated, and history is no longer a happening vibe. My theory, right, is that a historian should belong to his own time more completely than anyone else. How can you historify a past age if you don’t identify completely with your own, yeah? You’ve got to come from your own time. So me, I belong to now.”

  “I belong to now?” said Jane. “I belong to now? I can’t believe you just said that. And historify?”

  “Yeah, well, obviously the jargon takes a bit of getting used to.”

  “Mm. So what you’ve done is invent a third type, C, the history surfer. Hanging five on the turning point of the past, tubing it through the rollers of yesterday. Dr. Keanu Young, PhDude.”

  “Yeah. Sad, isn’t it?”

  “Just a little, dear. Just a little. But so long as you know it, it isn’t too bad. There are plenty of fading hippies in the faculties and senior common rooms of the world so I suppose there’s no reason why there shouldn’t be fading surfies too.”

  “Yo, way to go, bitch.”

  We kissed again and I tripped out of the lab before I could get her in a bad mood with me again.

  On the way to the bike shed I made a small diversion. Yep, there it was. Our little Clio. Not a mark on the hood to show for my calli­graphic pains. Bloody scientists. What the hell was Freon anyway? I stooped down to do up my laces. All day they had been undone and—you know how it is with boat shoes—the sides get so soft and floppy that the ends of the laces can get in and under the soles of your feet, giving you a permanent princess and the pea irritation.

  Hello! The laces of the right shoe were on the outside, neither end snaking under. Must have picked up a piece of gravel then, ’cause sure as shooting there was something nagging my sole.

  Way-hey! One of Jane’s orange pills. Germaine’s Revenge. I ought to go back and . . .

  Sod it. I tucked the little tablet into my wallet. Maybe slip it into next door’s rabbit hutch. Snigger.

  Tightly laced now, I ride along the Madingley Road making lists in my mind. Food, wine, real coffee, laser paper, back home, print out the Meisterwerk again, back into town to leave a clean copy with Fraser-Stuart and then, oh yeah, drop in on this Zuckermann guy, this Zuckermann dude . . .

  MAKING FREE

  The eagle has landed

  “Push, woman! Push! Her fourth, you say?”

  Alois nodded and looked down with disgust.

  “Listen to me Klara . . . listen to me!”

  Klara could not listen.

  “Klara!” Alois leaned over her and spoke in his sternest voice.

  But she was miles from that place. Swooping from the hills, soar­ing over the lakes and the villages, perching on the church tops, clasping for a moment the bright gold onion domes in her claws before launching herself into the wind again, climbing ever higher and higher.

  The doctor came alongside Alois. “If she has labored three times before there should not be this pain, even without such a copious dosage of laudanum.”

  That remark did penetrate Klara’s opiate-clouded mind. Pain? There is no pain, she laughed to herself. There is no pain, there is only ecstasy! Joy! Pure free flying joy.

  Another huge contraction sent her spinning higher even than the highest mountain. All Europe lay below her. Without customs posts, without borders or frontiers: all the animals running free. High up as she was, the movement of the smallest vole or butterfly was clear to her, she could hear the scrabble of earth as a rabbit left its burrow twelve miles beneath, focus on a single drop of dew trembling on one tiny blade of grass. Master of time and space, lord of all. She let out a high shrill cry of joy, as she wheeled from east to west, from north to south, the lands racing beneath her vast wings in pure, unbounded freedom.

&
nbsp; “My God, Schenck, the blood! She never bled like this before! What’s wrong?”

  “Nothing, sir. Nothing, I assure you. The head is large, a little tearing of the hymeneal muscle, no more.”

  The beak of the eaglet pecking with fierce will at the walls of its egg. This one will live! I can feel her strength. The iron of her will. My daughter eagle, whom I will raise to set me free.

  “Klara! For heaven’s sake! Such noise! Are you sure you gave her enough?”

  “It was a huge dose to begin with. Any more, sir, and she would be knocked out. Ah, here it comes. Yes, here it comes! One more push, Klara.”

  She is free! She is in the world! Free! Listen to her lusty cries! The strength! The will! The lifewill, the lifelust. She will live strong and I will love her more than ever daughter was loved by any living thing.

  “Ha, ha!” Alois laughing. He never laughed, but now he was laughing. He felt it too. Recognized the greatness of the moment.

  Dr. Schenck’s hand smoothed back the sweat-soaked locks, smear­ing a thumb-thick line of blood along her brow.

  “Congratulations, my dear. Your child. Healthy as an oak.”

  “Liebling! Klara! Mein Schatz!”

  “She is sleeping now, sir.”

  “Sleeping?”

  “Really, it was a huge dose. She was in a dream. She will awaken and feel refreshed. She will remember nothing of the pain. In that way Nature is kind.”

  Alois leaned down to kiss her bloodied forehead. “Look at him, you clever girl. Look at him! There he is! My boy! My wonderful boy!”

  MAKING CONVERSATION

  Coffee and chocolate

  “My boy! And so prompt on the hour! It’s just dripping through now, won’t be a moment. Come in, come in! Not so tidy as it should be, but you should find somewhere to sit. Perhaps there? Good. I shall be an Augenblick. You speak German? Of course you do. I get cups. For you, Michael Young, cups!”

  I sit with my hands on my knees and inspect my surround­ings while he moves about the gyp-room, a sort of kitchen, fixing coffee.

 

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