Wednesday, 14 August 2013

With Lucien - Complete First Draft

With Lucien

About to leave his house for two or three days – to meet me as it happens – Lucien suddenly froze at the sight of the ring on his middle finger, which had been forced halfway up by the strange, almost painfully contorted hold he’d put on the doorknob, as if to give it a secret handshake. The ring struck him in that moment as being insincere, pathetic, and intolerable.

A harsh conclusion, of course, to arrive at from nowhere. The ring was nothing but a piece of sterling silver; unremarkable except for the way it had come to be on Lucien’s finger in the first place. I’d been with him when he found it, in the middle of a chaotic road in Bangkok a few years earlier. He’d nearly killed himself darting in and out of traffic just to pick it up and had until now thought of it as a kind of good luck charm by consequence. He’d even – this must’ve completely slipped his mind – received compliments about it, albeit mostly from women who wanted to sleep with him.

What the fuck am I doing wearing this, he said aloud, it’s a nut off a fucking Thai screw. He pulled his hand away from the doorknob and held it close to his face, then shut one eye and used a thumbnail to jimmy the ring up just far enough to examine its underside. He seemed to be looking for a thread that wasn’t there. A feeling of worthlessness rose up in his stomach. He lowered his hand and slid the ring back to its usual spot, a double image of sunless and slightly cracked skin. But the feeling didn’t go away.

Lucien, I need hardly mention, was given to fixations of this sort and knew that leaving them to fester untended was like putting out a casting call for more severe problems. Once or twice I’d caught him walking down Smith Street with his face locked in a grimace that made no sense from the outside, from outside of him that is, with strange emissions of effort coming from his mouth the way they might have a Karamazov’s, his hands wilted together by his solar plexus as if nursing fresh a gunshot wound. And then he’d seen me and gotten all embarrassed, checked himself, smiled and straightened up and shook my hand and become what ostensibly he was – a tall, athletic, intelligent, handsome, exotic-looking dude – a maddeningly superior dude. He was the only person I’d ever known on whom dreadlocks looked tasteful. There were other occasions, too, on which I’d been careful to stay out of sight, so as to watch him in that crucible of his for longer.

He tried to take the ring off. On this cold July morning, however, it proved impossible. Even with hot water – Amy had taken all the soaps and other toiletries, which he was yet to replace – there seemed to be no way of getting it over the first knuckle. Had it always fit so perfectly into the contours of the knuckles beside it? He thought of plants grown so closely together that they’d been forced into concessional shapes, forced into harmony. After a while, all but resigned to it staying on, Lucien was lowering himself onto the old mustardy three-seater in his lounge room when he stiffened, took hold of the ring with the thumb and index finger of his other hand – as if it needed to be carried – and rushed to his bedroom.

The bottle he found in the draw of his bedside table was nearly empty and smelt of strawberry liquorice. As the last vestiges blew into his hands, Lucien felt a chemical cold break out, a sensation similar to but milder than that caused by the shit used to burn off warts. Was it liquid nitrogen, the wart-burner? The artificiality of that smell dominated all his other senses in an unnerving way, as if they were being stunk into permanent submission. He ran his teeth along his tongue from back to front and shrugged his shoulders a couple of times.

While pulling at the ring, now lubricated and giving a little more than before, he wondered how Amy could have not only found pleasure in such a weird sensation but actually sought it out as a means of improving their sex life, or hers at least. It was just another nuance of her personality, my friend would later tell me, which could be added to the findings of the previous week’s postmortem – namely that so much had been hidden, or partially hidden, from those faculties of judgment that should have followed his awareness of who Amy actually was and who that person was to him, for so long and intimate a period of time. It was more than rose-coloured glasses, man, rose-coloured glasses don’t stay on for four and a half years. What was it then? I don’t know. A weakness, a complex, a longing, wanting her to be perfect, wanting her. None of these answers satisfied him.

*

Sitting on the edge of the bathtub, Lucien let out a clipped laugh. He’d stained his good jeans, which would usually have rattled him – the way he looked, as you might have guessed, was a source of inexplicably deep anxiety – but this time everything began and ended with the ring. At least until evening, it wasn’t going anywhere. Then he washed his hands, but, owing to the lack of soap, that chemical cold persisted right up to when he was seated at her piano and his fingers were caressing the keys like the small of a beautiful woman’s back, or, if he’d had a daughter, her hair.

Willis of Montreal, Vertical Grand. Three more days and it would be gone too. Amy was having it ‘professionally moved’, whatever that meant. At least, he thought, he wouldn’t have to put his back out, as he’d done upon moving it in.
Have a look at this thing, will you?
Cheap in its time, plain worthless now in all but the most sentimental currency. Dusty, out of tune, mahogany-coloured stain faded so badly in places that it looked intentionally spotted. The lathwork on the legs and on the two supporting columns for the oversized box above the keyboard were, however, still more or less immaculate. Amy’s grandfather, a French Canadian whose lineage could be traced to one of the earliest settlements in Québec, had brought it with him when he emigrated in order to live happily ever after with his new Australian bride. 

It came as a surprise to Lucien that he not only remembered a scattering of tunes from his childhood lessons, but could play them almost perfectly. I’d play like shit tomorrow, he said to himself. He was thinking of the way a golfer or tennis player might come out after a long layoff and swing thoughtlessly, freely, impressively, only to find that the real rust caught up with them on the second or third time round. Because this, in fact, was the first time he’d ever played the Willis. Amy had never played it much either.

He tried to think of the most difficult song he’d learned before giving up and figured that it must’ve been Satie’s Gnossienne 1. Collecting his thoughts for a moment, he started to play. But midway through the raspy, not altogether bad rendition, Lucien became so lost that he felt a genuine panic set in, a feeling of being alone in a dangerous wilderness of some kind, a hunger, a disorientation, an awesome helplessness. For a long time – I’m talking hours – Lucien settled on the last note he could recall correctly, with his fingers and, in an effacing way, his mind. He wasn’t looking at the keys at that point but at the ring. When at last I got the phone call explaining that our camping trip had to be delayed, Lucien told me gnomically that he was halfway up a mountain and halfway to the bottom of the sea. A mountain I could somewhat understand, since we were about to climb one, and so I tried to limit my understanding of the phrase to its first half. Tomorrow morning, then? Seven o’clock I’ll be at your place, with coffees. 

*

We took another narrow switchback in single file. A skink darted across the trail. The gradient was increasing and there were no more birdcalls, or virtually none. Nor were there any other hikers; it was a Tuesday morning in July. I could hear Lucien’s breaths, Lucien’s footsteps, the shifting contents of Lucien’s overloaded pack. Depending on our position – it felt like the trail had been etched into a landmass that changed shape, so frequent were the twists and turns – I could also hear the Taglia River. But I couldn’t see it and, amazingly, had yet to see it at all. This wasn’t so much the fault of the trees, which were arrow-straight and spaced out almost geometrically, but of the massive granite boulders strewn everywhere. We’d been hiking for four hours and, Lucien approximated after checking the map, had four more to go before reaching camp. Then, moments later, a sign appeared; from the distance, the actual time to camp was closer to five hours.

Lunch? I suggested. The trail had flattened out and a big grey log on the shoulder of the hill seemed as good a place as any to sit. Before Lucien had answered I walked over, dropped my pack, felt that the log was dry, or dry enough, and sat down. I picked a branch off a little fern that overhung the right side of the log and ground it down to a paste in my fingers. The smell of ground-up ferns or tussocks was like a double shot of adrenaline and ecstasy for me. Then I wiped my hands on the log and took another long, indulgent breath and stretched out my legs. Blisters had started forming on the balls of my feet. Come on, man, I said to him, fifteen minutes. Come on. Alright, he finally replied, but I’m not all that hungry yet.

He really was like an ascetic or something on camping trips, Lucien – it seemed as if he only spoke because I spoke to him and only ate because I ate and made sure he did the same. His dreadlocks were tied up high on his head, covered with a plain black bandana. The long, wispy hair on his neck blew in the breeze. About to sit down, he noticed that there were some fairly large and sharp nodes, maybe where branches had once been, on that section of the log, and so I moved right to the other edge, the little fern all but in my lap, to make room. We were sitting shoulder to shoulder. Maybe because of that closeness, or because it was the first time we’d been still all day, I thought it was a good time to ask him about the previous morning. As I handed him a sandwich in a snap-lock bag, and an apple, both of which he placed beside him disinterestedly, I said, so what exactly happened yesterday to put you up that mountain?

To tell you the truth, I wasn’t expecting much of a response. Only a handful of times in our friendship had Lucien opened up to me, and even then in such a way as to leave me perplexed as to who it was I’d really been speaking to, if that makes any sense, with an invulnerability that seemed at odds with what we was telling me, as if he had a persona reserved especially for the purpose of relating the innermost parts of himself from an informational standpoint, but which was completely detached from those parts emotionally. It had made me wonder, before scolding myself at the thought, whether Lucien might’ve been abused as a kid, or witnessed something truly horrible, or even been some kind of sociopath.

Sitting shoulder to shoulder, however, I felt that the strange events he recounted were coming directly from him and I knew Amy’s decision to end things must’ve had a hand in that. Of course, we’d spoken about her since the breakup, but only briefly. Given how it had all gone down, how fresh it was, and the nature of the man, I’d treaded carefully, affirming my love for him and restating that I was there unconditionally for support if he needed it, rather than asking too many questions. He hadn’t reached out at all except for raw companionship – a couple of quiet coffees and an even quieter dinner at the pub.

But now and with dramatic flourish he narrated the whole fiasco with the ring, which he’d managed to wrench off in the evening. Clenching and unclenching his fist, he described how it had made him feel to see the ring on his finger, how it had immobilised him and how farcical and desperate his attempts to remove it must’ve looked. Then he did the same with the piano. A little rain fell; it rattled through the near-unbroken canopy above with the noise of a torrential downpour. Mosquitoes would be a problem that night. And, so close to meekly asking why, why had Lucien suddenly turned on the ring and why had he gotten lost at the piano, and was he feeling better without it on his finger and without his fingers on those keys, in the end I managed to ask him the real question – how are you doing without Amy? He threw the last crust of his sandwich into the bush behind us and it disappeared without a sound. I’d been listening to him so intently I’d forgotten to eat mine.

*

Just below the footbridge I counted eight rainbow trout suspended against the current, running out of the lake they were trying to enter and up the crystalline river from which they’d come. Lucien took out his phone and tried to take a photo. Can you see them? Nah, it’s all a blur, the water’s moving too fast. It must be the Taglia, I recognise its voice, I joked. She’s singing. She was serenading us from afar that whole time. I loved her before I saw her face. Maybe let’s cook a fish tonight.

We crossed the bridge, both pretty weary by that stage – I also needed to shit a lot worse than I let on – and headed towards the campgrounds. To our slight disappointment, there were more tents already set up than we’d anticipated. Nonetheless, we swapped cheerful hellos with a few people, all of them men around our age, and found an unoccupied space right by the lakeshore. It was a raised timber platform with six posts nailed to it for attaching guy ropes. I threw down my pack on the slats and ran to the nearest toilet, only to find it out of toilet paper, ran back and took some from the front of Lucien’s daypack, returned to the toilet, lurching in desperation this time, went, washed my hands in the lake, which was colder than I’d expected, and found our tent fully erect and our gear stowed away in the vestibule by the time I got back. Lucien was sitting on the edge of the platform, looking at the water, or more precisely the wall of mountains beyond it.

See there, above that escarpment, where that plateau’s so high and empty and big? Yeah. If Australian winters were about twenty degrees colder, that’d be the most spectacular glacier you’ve ever seen. It’s still beautiful though. Of course it is, I didn’t say it wasn’t. I know. You can say something could be more beautiful, or beautiful in a different way, without affecting your appreciation of how beautiful it already is, can’t you? Or is it neurotic and reductive and all that shit to even think about those other states while you’re supposed to be in the present one? I told him it was a question I’d given some thought to myself, but mainly with regard to food. No matter what I’m eating I’ll always think about how it could’ve been improved, or what I’m going to eat for dessert. That’s interesting. I guess. Do you still enjoy food? Absolutely. Do you want to catch a fish?

Sunset had come and gone by then, but we didn’t need much light. I brought a small head torch back to the footbridge while Lucien carried the fishing net, a long stick he’d found at our campsite, and a roll of duct tape. Locating the trout in the glare of the torch wasn’t easy, but I managed to get a good visual on two adults swimming side by side, all but paralysed by the ceaseless current. Meanwhile, he’d taped the net, which was far too short to reach the water on its own, to the stick by its handle. It reminded me of a splint and a broken, swollen limb. Will that hold? It’s almost rapids down there. We should be all right.

He lay down prone on his belly and dangled his contraption over the side of the bridge. We both fell into complete silence like predators about to pounce. I felt my heart pounding in my chest. I felt that Lucien and I had never been closer but that I had to seize the opportunity, while his guard was down, to go even deeper, to accompany him to the places where those judgments he’d spoken of were stored, and to find out what else was in there. On the second leg of the hike I’d realised, inarticulately of course, that I wanted this because I was convinced and had always been convinced that by revealing himself my friend could somehow reveal me as well. When the net hit first hit the water I could see the flimsy plastic flex with the force, but its connection to the stick seemed tight enough. And it was; under my torchlight, barely ten minutes had passed before Lucien eased our thrashing dinner onto land.

Opposite our tent, by the water, I killed, gutted, roughly scaled, and filleted both fish with the Leatherman my brother had given me one Christmas. Lucien was beside me and also had his head torch on. After assembling the camping stove and checking that the fuel bottle worked, he rifled through a plastic bag and took out the olive oil and a few jars of seasoning. Then he chopped an onion. The sound of laughter rang out from the nearby picnic tables. It was probably drunken laughter. There must’ve been a fire, too; I couldn’t see it on account of the bend, and the density of the trees between us, but smelt it. Fires aren’t allowed in this reserve. Should we tell the ranger tomorrow, if he’s around? Let’s wait and see if we need anything off them first. Seems to be keeping the mossies away, too. Have you been bitten yet? No.

I left one fish floating in a shallow pool, separated from the rest of the lake by rocks, and made small incisions at either side of the other fish’s tail. Then I dabbed my fingers in a bowl I’d filled with some rock salt and used my fingertips to tease away the skin. Strands of different thicknesses and lengths broke away, silvery in the moonlight reflecting off the water. Some of those strands clung to me as if they were charged with static, and when one wrapped around my middle finger like a ring I winced and said to Lucien – with my back to him – what did you mean earlier when you said that none of those answers satisfied you? If it wasn’t a weakness or wanting her or wanting to be perfect for you and so on, what was it that clouded your judgment so badly? With dangerous speed I cut off both fillets and put the carcass in a rubbish bag in a flick that struck me as heartless, and did the same thing with the other fish, the one that’d been floating. Impossible as it is to explain, it somehow felt as if our places had suddenly switched, that I was the one who’d acted irrationally and who was now trying to come down from the mountain, or come up to the surface, or maybe it was both after all.

*

The piano movers were early – doubly so considering Lucien had originally expected them on Friday afternoon. Upon getting back to my place at half past eleven on Thursday night, exhausted after the long drive, I suggested he crash on the couch and join me for recovery brunch at Milkwood the next day, maybe even drink a beer or two, before returning home. At that stage he didn’t know if Amy would actually show up to oversee the moving. But when his phone was charged enough to turn on there was a message from her, stating, like a business memo as he put it, that the movers now needed to do the job at nine instead of four and that she was definitely going to be there, and so after mulling it over he decided to sleep on the couch and set an alarm for seven thirty. It was just after six when I was woken, first by Lucien’s voice and then by the sound of him leaving. I seemed to be all the more aware of the noise because of his attempts to muffle it and found myself wide-eyed with curiosity about what exactly the sounds I was hearing were. I also expected him to call me, which of course he didn’t.

He walked home. Nicholson and Lygon streets were busy but uninhibited; it was still too early for peak hour. A few hot air balloons dotted the clear, whitish sky, all of them branded with telecommunications companies. Only one of the balloons was firing, rising. He felt as if he hadn’t slept at all. Sorry to wake you, Luce, but they have to do it at seven now. You’re at whose place? I mean, you don’t necessarily need to be there. I would appreciate it, yeah, just because you and Anders moved it last time, you know how to get it out the front door. I know they’re professionals, they’ll obviously be fine without you, but also, you know, it’s not technically my house anymore, I’d feel strange. I’d rather give you the key back in person as well. Of course I’d like to see you, why would you need to ask?

The door was ajar. Amy was about to knock when it swung open. Startled, she saw him walk back to the piano stool and sit down, as if he’d already been sitting there for some time, as if he’d been playing that Satie note for three days on end. When he turned around it was clear that he’d been crying. His facial expression bordered on total despondence. She bit her lip, uncomfortable and – deep down – a little afraid, hoping the movers would be there sooner rather than later. The smell of the place struck her as empty somehow and she couldn’t smell Lucien at all. You’ve taken your ring off, she said following an almost filmic pause. I decided I didn’t like it anymore. Well, it’s good to see you. It’s good to see you too.

A while afterwards I would have a dream in which my friend explained that those tears and that anti-greeting were the result of a horrible train of thought – just before she’d arrived he imagined wrecking the piano right before her eyes, threatening to break her nose, maybe breaking it for real, reasserting himself as her equal through intimidation and violence. And in my dream he said he’d found a perverse pleasure in those thoughts the way people did the thought of their parents dying and it was this, the pleasure of devastating himself so manifestly, that brought on the tears. But in reality there was nobody less inclined to such thinking – I now feel certain of this after our conversation by the lake – and what saddened him was that in spite of how patently wrong for him he realised she was and in spite of not being in love with her, he would still have taken her back in an instant.

*

We ate in silence. I didn’t repeat my question and began to feel as if I’d never asked it. For the second time that day, Lucien finished his meal before me. I ate mine slowly, deliberately, chewing each piece away from my tongue. The truth is that I’m good at preparing fish but I don’t like the taste. I almost hate it. Then we did the washing up in the lake, stowed the equipment, brushed our teeth, bemoaned the heavy cloud cover keeping us from what was surely a spectacular night sky, and went to bed. We were lying shoulder to shoulder on our backs and it was so cold that our breath steamed. The smell of the campfire still lingered in the air, on our clothes.

I’ll tell you what it was. What? He must’ve known my surprise was feigned. Now I understand, she was irrelevant, completely irrelevant.  That’s why I misjudged everything, because I was looking at her and she didn’t matter. Why didn’t she matter? Some people find relationships easy but love hard, maybe even impossible, even though they don’t know it. And for other people the opposite is true. I’m one of them. Amy didn’t matter because it was the process and not the person I was living with. It seemed to me as if he was not only verbalising all of this for the first time, but thinking it too. Adlibbing, in a way. Are you saying you never loved Amy? There was a pause. No, I never loved Amy. Then why did she end it and not you? I said I never loved Amy, not that I could live without her. Another pause. Or someone like her. Do you see now?

How could he have expected me to see? I realised I was bracing for him to squirm with unease in his sleeping bag, but he didn’t move a muscle. What I think you’re trying to tell me is that you’ve changed sides, and you’re upset about that. But what’s stopping you from changing back again? Or finding some kind of middle ground? If you’re worried about having become dispassionate or too settled, which is the sense I get, you can just fall in love and be passionate again. He remained silent and so I added, can’t you? No, I can’t, because I have no patience anymore. And I hate myself.

Although I’d suspected this for a long time, his admission left me filled with sadness. But also adrenaline; I thought I could be candid as I wanted and he wouldn’t shy away. A face appeared on the tent ceiling; not his, not mine, not anybody’s. Why do you hate yourself? What possible reason could you have for hating yourself? I’ve always wondered this about you, Lucien. It’s never made any sense to me. You make no sense to me and I want to understand, you’re like my brother, I babbled, immediately embarrassed by the corny sentiment. I brought up Smith Street, including the times I’d observed him in secret. I told him how incredible I thought he was. I even asked, what happened to you? I was genuinely close to tears. And then almost unconsciously I blurted out, you loved a girl and she broke your heart and you’ve never recovered, is that it? What I thought I heard in response were a series of deep sighs, but this turned out to be the breathing of somebody who, apparently, was already fast asleep. We wouldn’t speak again until morning.

*

The piano was out and loaded in fifteen minutes, although, ridiculously, the movers themselves had shown up forty-five minutes late. While waiting for them, Lucien made Amy a pot of her favourite tea, a berry tisane he didn’t like at all, and they were friendly, even relaxed, despite not saying a lot. Asking her to take him back was on the tip of his tongue more than once; the opposite sense that it was she who was trying to seduce him also came and went a few times. When they finally heard the moving truck back into the driveway, Amy was in the middle of relaying a riddle she’d been pulling her hair out trying to solve. Not even Google had been any help. Although he’d forgotten the riddle itself by the time we next spoke, Lucien’s response to her, right before the forceful knock on the door, was that even the most complex ones had simple answers – that was how you knew they were good.

Amy and her grandfather’s Willis Vertical Grand left at more or less the same time. Once they were gone, Lucien spent a little while looking at the impression left in the blue carpet. The pile was all flattened to one side like hair combed down with gel and it was paler in colour than the rest, as if sunless. Dust and cobwebs had accumulated on the wall; the dust was especially thick in the curve of the skirting board. He knew that the impression in the carpet would linger stubbornly – maybe it would never fully leave. And, at a loss to remember how that space had been furnished before, he decided there was nothing for it but to buy another piano and cover it up again, when he got some money together. 


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