‘Well, you know each other,’ Vaux exclaims. ‘Of course. Mick, you’re a dark horse, keeping this guy under your hat.’
‘Conrad?’ Michel looks at me. ‘What’s there to hide? He’s an idiot.’
‘This idiot has built the best damned AR platform my R&R people have ever seen.’
There’s a deal more of this bullshit to weather before Vaux bears Michel off to his roaring real fire and VSOP hospitality.
Before the week is out, Bryon Vaux calls to tell me he has hired a private detective to gather all surviving records relating to my mother’s disappearance. Is this a blind – a means of distracting me from my suspicions about him?
Or is this simply what he does? This is, after all, what makes him who he is, and makes him as successful as he is. He digs and digs and digs, living out the lives of others, so that he can eventually realise them in light and sound.
I am his research project. Perhaps I am his next script.
There are veterans working the city’s bars and clubs: soldiers invalided out of the service. Land-mine victims. Purple hearts with missing limbs. Metal hands and carbon fibre feet. Chrome women. Cat women. Upright, tall, fast, oh, so desirable.
She says, ‘What do you want me to do?’
I tell her, ‘Take your lenses out.’
She smiles as she undresses. ‘No.’ Small, hard breasts and black plastic straps wound round her legs, and carbon fibre blades for feet. Dead eyes. ‘Not that.’
In the clubs, even the dancers have silver eyes. I suppose that for them it is a kind of clothing. What they find to watch behind their lenses I cannot imagine. When I first paid my money and went inside one of these places and saw all those eyeless people, the dead-eyed, the seceded, I couldn’t bear it. I walked straight out again.
I’ve hardened up since.
‘Conrad.’
Bryon Vaux is sat at a table near the door. This is not the first time I’ve run into him in a place like this, and there is no escaping him now. His lead-eyed smile. His teeth. His hands. He hugs me. I know these hands, this pressure, this smell. I have been here before.
He lets me go and his silver lenses glitter in the neon of the bar. He says, ‘A funny carry-on, this is.’
Vaux’s easiness around sex – his transparent appetite for all this thigh and tit – is faintly clinical. We watch a while as a dancer works the end of the bar. A tall Japanese. Her steel-lensed eyes, so cold, so anonymous, are a protection for her. However exposed she is to our gaze, yet she remains in her private world. What is she watching? What does she know that we don’t?
‘How did we seem to you?’
Vaux’s question takes me by surprise.
‘It must have been strange. No? When you were growing up. To be surrounded by the blind?’
Vaux’s willingness to discuss the hotel rubs so very badly up against what I remember of him – his bright hair and brute and shuttered face, his fly, his erection. Why can I not simply confront him with what I remember? Even a flat denial would be a relief. As Gabby would say, ‘Just talk to him. Idiot.’
But while my mother’s death remains a mystery, I cannot talk to him about it. Who wraps a bag around their own head? Who locks themselves in the boot of a car to die? Mum was on her way to the protest camp. She was happy. Vaux was there on the platform with her. The next day she was dead. There is no reason – no reason at all, that I can see – to suspect Vaux of Mum’s murder. His present behaviour flatly contradicts the idea. And yet.
I rack my head for anecdotes – anything to defuse this moment. I remember coming home to the hotel with Michel one afternoon and finding the floor of the conservatory strewn with pornography. I can’t help but smile, telling Vaux about this. The innocence of it, and the weirdness. My comically eccentric dad and his madcap experiments.
Vaux doesn’t laugh. He remembers this. ‘We were loudly disappointed,’ he says, with a bitterness, an undercurrent of anger I have not heard before. Once again, I am afraid of him. This smiling man. This middle-aged man with his open demeanour and his open chequebook. There is, after all, a darkness here. A core of anger. Not towards me. Not towards Mum.
Towards Dad.
‘He pissed us off.’ Vaux tries to laugh. He’s trapped inside a tale he does not want to tell. It reveals too much of him. But it’s too late to back out now. ‘We were angry with him.’
‘Yes?’
‘Well.’ He tries to shrug this off. But the memory has come to the surface, and will not be supressed. ‘Those vests. Now they seem so crude, of course, but then—’ He stares into the distance with his plastic eyes, his man-made retinas. Technology – how it marches on! No one wears a vest these days. ‘To read a road sign. To watch TV! Simple stuff, but your dad’s vests, his inventions made us feel whole again. We were so pleased to be able to move around a room again and not fall over stuff! And then your dad comes up and rips our balls off.’
‘What?’
‘Do you know he wrote up that pissy little experiment of his? I’ve read it. It’s written in this weird, floaty, I’m-not-really-responsible kind of language, but basically it says there’s a minimum optical resolution to lust. Pixellate filth too far and the erotic impulse will fail. And you know what?’ His hand clamps tight upon my arm. A strong hand. ‘Daddy was wrong.’
He grins. His steel eyes rake the room. ‘Look.’ Around us table dancers flaunt their curves, their youth, their health, their missing limbs. ‘The other guys, the grunts, they’d already had girls. Those poor blind slobs knew what they were no longer seeing. I didn’t. When my eyes were stole from me, I’d never even touched a girl. You know that? Never touched one. Never seen.’
‘How old were you?’
‘Fuck off.’ He laughs. ‘Fuck off. A virgin, anyway. I was a virgin. A Bible Belt innocent. I hadn’t got a clue.’
Of his blinding, he says little. There is little to be said. There are international laws against blinding soldiers on the battlefield, but some armies do not care about such laws. Even those who do care have found ways around the rules of engagement. You can fire a laser at a targeting system – and you can miss.
‘So, afterwards,’ he says, ‘after your dad proved I would never get excited that way, I headed into town. Bought magazines. With the vest I could see well enough to find a newsagent’s, but not well enough to see the titties on the covers. I just had to reach for the top shelf and pray.’
A dirty story. He laughs. ‘I studied those pictures. I mean, really studied them.’ He stares into his empty glass. The music dies. The girls retire. The lights come on, flattening everything. Closing time. ‘You do that often enough,’ he says, ‘appetite will do the rest.’
The thing about low-resolution vision, he says, as we climb the stairs back to street level, is that everything looks pretty much like everything else. ‘A box is a book is an oil can is a picture in a frame.’ He’s drunk, and he wants to be understood. ‘You see.’ He sweeps his hand across the street. ‘I see them everywhere now. Everywhere. Always have. Right now. Naked women. Buttocks raised. Cunts dripping. The works.’
‘Goodnight, Bryon.’
‘Everywhere. Shadows beneath a table. Fuck your AR – my head’s got better pictures in it than you’ll ever know.’
‘Goodnight.’
‘Light playing on bathwater.’
‘Bryon. Let go.’
‘A flag snapping in the wind. This place—Jesus, look around!’
He’s hanging off my coat, hardly able to stand. Just how much has he had to drink?
There’s the predictable mix of tourists and business people on the pavements, tottering around, blank-eyed, purblind, their movements choreographed by in-eye software that’s more conscious of the real world than they are themselves. ‘Look at them! Look!’