In the living room, Eurosport is on with the sound turned down. I switch it off. On the floor lie three books, two of them open. I leave them lying there but pick up the plate with the jam sandwich, one-fourth eaten.
I place it in the kitchen, where I find another plate with bread and jam, this one half eaten. I yell up to Frederik, who’s in his workshop, no doubt. “I’m home now! It was a lovely apartment — just the thing for us!”
He doesn’t answer.
Our folding clotheshorse is also in the kitchen. For once, Frederik’s remembered to hang up the clothes that don’t get tumble-dried, just like I’ve asked him to.
“It’s great that you’ve hung up the laundry!” I shout. “I really appreciate it!”
Back in the living room, I see some circulars spread out on the dinner table. A plate protrudes from the top bookshelf, and when I take it down I discover a jam sandwich that looks like it’s been there a couple of days without me spotting it.
Then I notice that one of the papers on the table is damp. I lift it up and see my cream-colored Odd Molly blouse lying beneath it. Frederik must have gotten distracted when he was about to hang it up. I walk back into the kitchen and hang it on the clotheshorse. Some of the printing ink has rubbed off on it, so it’ll have to be washed again. Perhaps it can still be salvaged.
“Niklas?” I call out.
There’s no answer.
Upstairs, I knock on his door. I look inside, but he’s out. Of course.
So I go into Frederik’s workshop, but he’s gone too. On the floor is a rolled-up poster that used to lie in my closet. Frederik must have been meaning to hang it up, which would also explain the hammer I saw in the kitchen.
I find him in our room. He’s lying in bed with his clothes on. I’ve found him here often enough, but today he’s pulled the comforter up over himself and drawn the curtains.
“How are you?” I ask.
He doesn’t say anything, just stares at a spot on the wall. He’s different, I can tell right away.
I sit down on my side of the bed and wait.
At last he says, “Mia, there’s something I’ve been thinking about.”
“Yes?”
“Something I’d like to ask you.”
“Yes.”
Another long pause. The curtains in here are pale, with a rather loose weave; they don’t do a very good job of keeping out the light. One of them trembles slightly. The light in Majorca, I think, early one morning.
“Do you think it was wrong of me to invest that money?”
I don’t know what to say. This is so major, so different. I stretch out a hand and touch his hair. And he lets me.
“Yes. I think it was wrong,” I say in my mildest voice. I smile at him, though he doesn’t see it.
“But I would have gotten the money back when the markets went up, you know. Then I’d have given more back to the school than I borrowed. We could have fixed up the B wing.”
“But it really wasn’t certain that the markets would have gone up, Frederik. It wasn’t a sure thing, was it.”
He doesn’t get angry with me, nor does he start weeping. He listens. The curtains, like in Majorca. It grows a shade darker in the room.
Then he asks, “Do you think Laust is very upset about it?”
“Yes, I think so.”
“Is that why he doesn’t call anymore?”
He pulls the comforter over his head and curls up in a ball, and I can see by his breathing that he’s crying. He’s trying to hide from me; it means something to him that I don’t see his face. Laust and me and the school and all of us; we exist for him again.
I want to lie at his side and cry with him, from sorrow and guilt over what he’s done to his school. And from sorrow and guilt over my own betrayal.
I press myself into his foreign scent, his foreign body. I haven’t been so close to him since he became sick. Perhaps the same images are flooding us both: Saxtorph on the last day of school. The flag waving, the happy children, the staff, and all the teacher friends that we still talk to. Frederik making a speech up on stage, and pulling it off so well that everyone praises him afterward.
And the prison where I visit him: electronic doors slamming, guards behind tiny glass windows, Frederik slumped over when I arrive; him shriveling up and slowly going to pieces.
And him getting better — so that perhaps we take a walk like normal people, perhaps we can have friends to dinner like in the old days.
And Bernard’s lips. His body pressing against mine. He was doing the pressing too. He was kissing.
• • •
Early in the evening, Bernard calls.
“We can’t see each other anymore,” he says.
“What are we going to do about the case then?”
“I’ll help you find a good lawyer.”
I hold my tongue. From what I’ve learned about him in the past two months, I should have known that this was the way it would have to end.
“I’m sorry,” I say.
“There’s nothing you have to apologize for.”
“But can’t we continue to talk on the phone?”
“It won’t work.”
“But just about the best way to support our sons?”
I can hear the stiffness in his voice; each word carefully chosen before he called. As if the least nudge in an unexpected direction might break him.
“I’m sorry, Mia.”
“It would be better for our kids, we really don’t need to—”
“I can’t do it.”
“We were friends,” I say. And now I hear in my voice that we no longer are.
“Yes.”
“I’m going to miss you.”
“What do you want me to say?”
“So now you won’t call me anymore?”
“No.”
“And I shouldn’t call you either?”
“I’m asking you not to.”
My fingers feel stiff as soon as I hang up. I have to stretch and flex them several times, just to verify that I still can. It feels slow, it feels strenuous. My arms and legs; I can hardly move. A jeep in the desert, a jeep that’s driven thousands of miles but whose engine has seized up. It rolls along slowly in neutral, then stops somewhere in the dunes.
Without tears, without expression, without any stops for little tasks on the way, I manage to fight my way up to our bed. I’m going to lie here a long time, I think to myself. I lie down in the same position as Frederik. I’m going to remain here for months, looking at the wall, at that sign on the ceiling.
It’s dark when Thorkild calls. I haven’t slept, haven’t stirred, haven’t gotten up to eat dinner. And Frederik, who in the meantime has gone to the workshop, hasn’t noticed.
Thorkild always sounds serious. I think he was that way before his son became ill, but I’m no longer sure.
“Frederik sounded quite upset on the phone this afternoon,” he says. “I just wanted to hear—”
“Yes, we’re pretty upset,” I say. “The school and everything, it’s just devastating him now.”
“But in a way that’s good, right? A sign that he’s still getting better?”
“Yes, it’s good.”
“Something to celebrate, right?”
“Yes.”
The conversation doesn’t last much longer.
The next day there’s a letter from Bernard’s firm, informing us that we now have a new lawyer by the name of Louise Rambøll. I manage to make it through the school day. I don’t know if my students notice anything wrong with me, but as soon as I’m home I go back to bed.
Frederik is already lying on his side of the mattress. I start to console him but have to stop; I can tell that it’ll only make me bitter, for I need solace as much as he does, and I never get any. We lie under our respective comforters with our backs to each other, the air still; it’s stuffy in here.