Выбрать главу

She was too far away to hear the noise from the mouth of his Aunt Clara which had sounded to him like the chain of an anchor going pell-mell down into the water.

No longer able to support herself, she lay on him and opened her eyes. ‘That was good. I must have needed it.’

He kissed her. ‘You did it by yourself.’

‘The other system doesn’t work for me.’

‘I thought you were taking pity on me.’

‘Funny bloke!’

‘That makes two of us.’

She lessened her reliance on him, and transferred some weight to her elbow. ‘Sorry I’ve got a boy-friend, in some ways.’

‘A beautiful girl like you can’t be unattached.’

‘I’m not glued to him, though,’ she said firmly. ‘He has his piece of action now and again, and so do I. As long as neither of us knows.’

When she lay under him, he went into her.

‘You must have been a long time at sea,’ she said.

There was no way of keeping the talk going. She held him, and moved her hips, and even though her eyes stayed open it was as if neither had any connection with her body. She wanted it to be finished. He went on till he knew she wasn’t able to respond in the same way as before, then felt an ejaculation of pure fire that seemed to have no liquid in it.

She washed herself at the sink.

‘Do you mind if I smoke?’

She came back to kiss him. ‘Gives you cancer. Or heart disease. You should stop.’

He embraced her. ‘I’m scared to, in case I get cancer.’

He watched her dress, then he washed and put his own clothes on. ‘Don’t come out with me,’ she said.

‘You’re leaving?’

‘I have to be on duty at six, to look after your poor old aunt. And a few others. Stay here and sleep, then you can eat your cornflakes – or whatever they give you in a place like this – read your newspaper, and have a pleasant stroll to the hospital. All right?’

It would have to be. He loved her and let her go, thanking God for such lovely kids. Sleep was a beneficial oblivion.

Almost too late for breakfast, he was grudgingly served. He lifted the lid to see one pale teabag floating in hot water. A cook once served the captain with such vile things, and the pot was thrown off the table. He drank the tasteless tea because he was choking with thirst. The sausages were as soft as putty, and even the trimmings were on the blink, he thought, cracking a piece of cold toast that was sharp enough to cut his throat, and smearing butter that looked suspiciously like margarine. The only genuine article was the bill of twenty pounds.

But he left his tip, and sat out his time while he smoked at the table, unaware that they were waiting for him to move. It was impossible to do so. There was no eagerness to go out and find that his life had changed. He already knew it, felt a relaxation so complete that for the moment it paralysed him. He suddenly did not know how to move, waited to do so, unwilling to give himself an order which he sensed would not be obeyed.

7

As a deck officer it was often necessary to pull back into the protection of his own shiftless and brooding mind, solitary contemplation teaching him how to stay sane when he felt as meaningless as the heaving sea outside the cabin. The ability to discipline his threatened mind into quiescence had come slowly, in tune with the growing power of the years to crush him into an uncontrollable blackness. The conscious effort to build a defensive system left no emotional energy for friends, or for the kind of prolonged relationship which might turn him into a tolerable human being. He considered people in the mass to be as threatening in their ever-changing unknowingness as the sea, which often turned wild by some force over which no agency in the universe seemed to have influence, and flew up against him like an enormous and mindless grey wolf intending to take his life away.

The sea at that moment regarded him as nothing, as no one, as a spark to be extinguished on an impulse of fiendishness. Because he knew that the body was fragile, life brief, and existence finally meaningless, he was always wary, continually on the alert to repel danger from any quarter, cultivating a readiness of mind which created a loneliness that over the years made him appear like a man fighting to keep his grip on a deadly secret which was eating his soul away.

Someone might try to get friendly, but he was incapable of taking any steps in that direction. A man of the sea, he was blocked off at all points from the land, and now looked with misgiving on so many years spent in the condition of a prisoner who had clung to the shreds of his soul only by withdrawing into an uncertain peace at the centre of himself. Unless he had done this he would have gone down into unfeeling oblivion. The dread of losing what little he knew about himself gnawed at the tenuous connection he had with the rest of the world, or with that small part which might be concerned as to whether or not he knew of its existence. His mathematical sharpness was continually in tune with the fair conduct of the moving ship between taking departure and landfall, and at times he felt that such faculties would be overwhelmed unless he murdered either another or himself in an attempt to retain the clarity that was necessary for his work. Unwilling to take alcohol, he would long for the trip to be over, but now craved an end of all voyages that tested him to such limits.

Others who were threatened by the same malaise defeated solitude on long trips by an obsessive ingenuity, which for self-respect they called a hobby. A man’s need to be absorbed often came to him like the rediscovery of the power of love, and might involve an attachment to some musical instrument, or to a collection of objects which, when laid out, created a design or picture that the heart viewed as a unique accomplishment. Outlandish schemes kept a man sane in what might otherwise have been his darkest moments. A project, no matter how futile, was necessary to keep within bounds that person who felt chaos press too close, and who knew that something effective to fix his mind on was the only solution.

Once on a tedious great circular haul across the northern Pacific, the third mate drew an outline of the world on Mercator’s Projection in faint pencil on a large sheet of plywood, but then emphasized the coastlines by sticking live match heads, almost touching, to bring out the shapes of the various land masses. The map included both Polar regions, and took weeks to draw, and longer still to cut off thousands of match heads with a razor and glue them firmly so as to demarcate every gulf, peninsula and large island. The operation went on through several voyages, and Tom wondered where the man found so many matches on a single ship, till he saw him walking up the gangplank at one port of call with two huge parcels.

A closer inspection of the near-finished masterpiece showed that the colour of the match heads varied from dark brown through crimson and scarlet almost to grey, but it was pointed out that when seen from a distance they appeared to match well enough. It was impossible to guess what he intended to do with this impressive portrayal of the world, though he did hint that, because he considered it the finest artefact ever devised – and he claimed to have made some really unusual objects in his time – he might give it as a wedding present to his best friend who, in one of his absences, had latched himself to his girl-friend.

In blue match heads the third mate had yet to chart those trips he had made while this treacherous love affair progressed to its final stage. The happy couple, he said, with a dangerous flash of the eyes, would accept it as an unusual gift from a loser who had no hard feelings. They would put it proudly on their living-room wall, together with the cheaply framed pictures and flying plaster birds, and one day, as they didn’t know what the map was made of, it would ignite in their overheated love nest while they were in bed upstairs doing what he himself should have been at if there had been any justice in the world, which there clearly was not – or at least wouldn’t be until his unique map took fire.