He reached the Lock and walked briskly over, exchanging smiles with a man coming the other way. The man looked at his watch as he passed, and before Ralph could defend himself against it the thought had flown into his head that Francine must have left the office by now, and that from this moment he didn’t know where she was. He felt a pain in his chest, a bristling of nerves beneath his skin while she moved darkly across his thoughts, the light in her belly bobbing as she walked. All day he had been rehearsing arguments against such moments, but when it came to using them he suddenly found himself unable to remember how they worked: he groped for their analgesic while misery grated back and forth at his heart like a saw. He strained to be home, directing his legs to go faster, imagining the rooms of his flat, his possessions homesick for him, his fridge offering itself to his hungry fingers. He saw himself watching television later, warm and alone, laughing at something funny, the telephone ringing perhaps. What was she doing now? Where was she going, with his stolen property? There in the street he shrugged, irritated, and let a sigh escape his lips. He had to stop indulging himself like that. It would spoil him, like a child, inflame his emotions. The baby had seemed so separate that night — so distinct that he had thought he could just break it off and keep it! — but now that it had receded back into the tangled ropes of her body, an inextricable, futile thing, he knew that he must sever himself or be dragged stomach down after it. He remembered his flashes of hallucination, saw again the terrible images he had harboured of harming her, until his head ached with them. He reached his turning and heard his heels clop loudly like hoofs in the sudden quiet of the small street. What would it have been like? Who would it have become? He had thought that before, hundreds of times already in only a couple of days. Of course, it was always himself he saw, never her; himself going through life again, except knowing the road now, with all that had been wrong put right. It dogged him like a little ghost, and he wondered if it always would, would walk beside him through all its ethereal ages. He checked himself again, walking faster now with the naked trees flying by him in a rush. If such a thing could live, it would only be as the product of his own invention. It was nothing, less than nothing, a loveless clot of bad blood, just something he had done, like other things, not a miracle but a mistake. It had the consistency of an idea, and he could refute it. He could choose, really, not to care about it at all, switch off feelings like lights in a house. He would have a bath and then cook dinner. He saw himself reading the paper while he ate.
Approaching his flat in the failing light a sudden prophetic fear passed over him, as if something were about to happen, and in the next moment he saw a figure standing outside his front door. He couldn’t see her eyes but he knew from the erectness of her head that she had seen him. He slowed his steps while his thoughts, busy with the provision of sedatives, instead struggled to manufacture panic. What was she doing here? He was close enough now to see her face, and felt himself so simultaneously drawn and repelled that he stopped altogether, wondering if he could find another avenue which might carry him through what at that moment seemed impossible to bear.
‘Don’t worry,’ she called out, seeing him halt. ‘I only want to get my things.’
Her words were lobbed awkwardly towards him, and hearing them he knew that she had selected them before he had even arrived. He wondered what else she planned to say to him, and the thought made him want to grip her shoulders and shake her until it all fell clattering out of her mouth to the pavement.
‘Oh.’ He walked carefully past her to the door and took out his keys. His hands were trembling. ‘Come in, then.’
In the stronger light of the hall he risked a glance at her as she came in behind him. Seeing her face he felt as if he had never been away from her, as if he had woken from a forgetful sleep and felt the memory of her drop like a weight through his empty spaces. It was a moment before he realized that she looked awful, quite unrecognizable, and it was in his mouth to ask her what was wrong before remembering that this was how things always began between them.
‘I’ll just let you get on with it, shall I?’ he said, opening the inner door to his flat.
She didn’t answer, but he saw with despair from the slight shrug of her shoulders that she still wanted to talk to him, to prise reactions from him like teeth. The gesture reminded him of his relation to her, her strange significance which was so surprisingly easy to forget when she was there before him. The pregnancy seemed not to be a part of her physical presence — if only he could see into her, look through her walls just once as if they were made of glass! — although now, noticing her curious deterioration, he wondered if this were its manifestation: something gnawing malignly at her insides, the proud extension of his own self, feeding, growing, planning its escape. Her face was deflated, the skin collapsed like a tent on the narrow ridges of her bones, and the hollows of her eyes were painted with shadows. He reminded himself that their poetry was a delusion, a limerick which he must not hear, and he turned away from her and walked into the sitting-room. Moments later he heard her in the bathroom, opening cabinets. He sat on the sofa, rigid with the tension of her presence. In a few minutes she would be gone. He desperately wanted a drink, but he knew he would not sustain his detachment if he made one. He would offer her one too, and she would jam her foot through the crack of his kindness and force herself in. He closed his eyes for a minute and when he opened them again she was there, standing in the doorway.
‘That was quick,’ he said stupidly, rubbing his eyes.
‘There wasn’t much.’
She watched him as a thick silence spread over the room. He looked down, unable to bear her gaze, while a polite impulse to make conversation fought in his chest.
‘So that’s it, then!’ he burst out finally, meeting her eyes.
‘Oh, I’ll be gone soon,’ she said acerbically, for once understanding him at the very moment in which he wished to be most opaque. ‘I just wanted to tell you something I think you should know.’
‘And what’s that?’
He caught the split second of her hesitation, and knew suddenly that he had been wrong, that she hadn’t even thought of what she was going to say until that moment.
‘I’m going to keep the baby,’ she said, throwing his gaze back at him defiantly. ‘I’ve decided.’
Ralph found that he could not take his eyes from her, although a fierce desire to pound his own head with his fists had gripped him. He felt the tide of confusion begin to rise again, the great gorge of their debris swilling on its surface, and he held his breath.