‘Of course,’ he replied, smiling now, his expression lightening a little as we began to drink. ‘I wouldn’t have missed it.’ He leaned forward, peering at my forehead. ‘What happened to your head?’
‘A slight accident,’ I told him, waving his concerns away. ‘I woke in the night to use the bathroom and walked straight into my bedroom door.’
‘Ouch.’
‘Indeed. It needed seven stitches. But I was a brave little soldier. And how was your week?’
‘Good,’ he said. ‘And you? Did you get much work done? On your book, I mean.’
‘Which book?’
‘The book you’re writing.’
‘Oh,’ I said. Of course, he assumed that I was working on a new novel. Why wouldn’t I be, after all? I always had been, since I was not very much older than him, and it had been some years now since my last publication. It would seem strange if there weren’t something in progress.
‘How’s it coming along, anyway?’ he asked. ‘Are you close to the end?’
I smiled and tried to think how best to answer this. Before Daniel died, I had been engaged on a new book, but I had all but abandoned it since then. My working title was Other People’s Stories, but I hadn’t been able to look at it since my son’s death. It was still there, of course, sitting on my computer desktop like an unexploded bomb, but I couldn’t bring myself to open it. The truth was, I was nervous of returning to a manuscript that had effectively cost my son his life.
‘I hope so,’ I told him finally. ‘It’s hard to know. These things can go either way.’
‘Can you tell me anything about it?’
‘I’d rather not,’ I said, shaking my head.
‘Fair enough. I suppose it’s difficult to talk about a work in progress. You never know who might steal your ideas.’
‘It’s not that,’ I said, anxious for him to believe that I trusted him. ‘It’s just—’
‘I’m kidding,’ he said, looking a little abashed. ‘It’s not as if anyone could just take someone else’s story and write it themselves, is it? These things need to form in a writer’s mind over time. After all, a novel is about a lot more than just plot, right?’
‘Right,’ I said, wondering how many of my peers would argue with that notion. ‘So, what you’re saying is that if someone did do that, they’d have to be… what? Actually, what are you saying?’
‘Well, they’d have to be really talented,’ he said. ‘But also a complete psychopath.’
I laughed. ‘Well, yes. But, of course, those two things aren’t mutually exclusive.’
‘Can you at least tell me when you think it might be published?’
‘I don’t know,’ I said, wishing he would change the subject, for I didn’t want to talk about any of this. ‘Late next year, perhaps. Or early the following one.’
‘Well, I’ll look forward to reading it whenever it’s ready,’ he said, before making his way up to the bar and ordering some more drinks. When he came back, he reached into his bag and removed a Ventolin, put it to his mouth and took a quick breath. I stared at him in horror. My head began to grow slightly dizzy, as if the earth had shifted a heartbeat quicker on its usual rotation but I had been left a few paces behind.
‘You have asthma,’ I said quietly, more a statement than a question, but he looked across at me and nodded.
‘Yes,’ he replied. ‘It’s not too bad, though. The inhaler gets me through.’
‘My son had asthma,’ I said. ‘He suffered from it quite badly.’
He nodded and inhaled again, before returning the familiar blue device to his satchel. ‘Some people get it worse than others. Mine has always been manageable.’
‘It’s how he died.’
Theo sat back in the chair and stared at me. ‘Christ,’ he said. ‘I’m so sorry. I didn’t realize.’
‘There’s no reason why you should have.’
‘Do you mind if I ask what happened?’
I looked away. There was no harm in telling him the truth. Up to a point, at least.
‘It was hay-fever season,’ I told him. ‘And, of course, his asthma was always much worse at that time of year. He was in our apartment, doing some homework on my computer.’ And now time to massage the details. ‘I wasn’t there. I’d gone out to pick up some take-away. It seems that he had a particularly bad bronchospasm attack and couldn’t reach his inhaler in time. He collapsed on the floor. By the time I got back, he was gone.’
‘That’s awful,’ said Theo. ‘How old was he?’
‘Thirteen.’
I looked down at the table, scratching my nails into the woodwork. I could sense him again, a small hand gripping my shoulder, an arm wrapped around my throat. He pressed against my wind-pipe and I tried to push back but he was too strong for me and when I looked up, he was sitting opposite me in Theo’s place, watching me, an expression on his face that broke through my chest and clutched at my heart, squeezing it, cutting off the blood from pumping around my body.
‘It was your own fault,’ I whispered.
‘What?’
I blinked a few times, felt an immediate release from my delusion and shook my head. Daniel was gone; Theo had returned.
‘Nothing,’ I replied. I noticed the cigarette packet on the table and frowned. ‘You know, if you have asthma, you really shouldn’t be smoking.’
‘I’m trying to give up.’
‘Well, try harder,’ I said forcefully.
‘And did Daniel—’
‘That’s enough about him,’ I snapped, more heatedly than I had intended. ‘Let’s talk about something else.’
‘All right, sorry,’ he said. A long pause ensued. The tension that descended on us was almost unbearable but, finally, he spoke again.
‘Actually, before I forget,’ he said. ‘I was talking to a friend of mine the other day – she runs the literary society at UCL – and I told her that you were giving me some help on my thesis. She wondered whether you might come in some day to talk to the writing students?’
I sat back in my chair, lifted my pint and took a long draught from it. It had been a long time since I’d spoken to any students about writing or, for that matter, spoken to anyone about writing. I wasn’t sure if it was something I would feel comfortable doing any more.
‘No pressure, of course,’ he said quickly, when I didn’t answer immediately. ‘I’m sure you’re busy with your work and—’
‘I don’t think so,’ I said. ‘I prefer only to do such things when there’s a new book out.’
‘Of course, I understand.’
‘Maybe when the next novel is published.’
‘Whenever works. It’s entirely up to you.’
I nodded and drank some more. A roomful of students intimidated me more now than it would have in the past. And, of course, they would probably want me to speak in the middle of the day, which would be a problem, as it was important that I was in one of my pubs every day by eight minutes past two.
‘I’ll let you know,’ I said.
‘Thanks,’ he replied, and he looked down at his pint, staring at it for a few moments before lifting it to his lips.
‘How’s the thesis coming along, anyway?’ I asked eventually. ‘I hope our meetings are proving helpful to you.’
‘They are,’ he said. ‘But it’s important to me that I create a work of scholarship and not just a lazy trawl through your catalogue.’