I suggest you start at the end and work your way back. (You may wish to stop when you reach the dark centre of my teenagehood.) But you should read my book however you wish. And then when you are done telling your story, you can return it to me.
We were together for only a few days all those years ago, but now I look back, I realise that I was so wrong and I’m sorry. I should have trusted you, Jolyon. And now I hope to make amends. I am handing my heart to you.
We will find our way back into the world together, Jolyon, pearls before swine. We will read each other’s words and keep them safe.
Friends once more. Fresh words in our story. And let the past fade away.
Kisses,
Dee xxx
XLIII(iii) Dearest Dee, I am a man of my word. Of course I will hold on to your book. I will treasure it, I will read every word. And I feel deeply honoured.
Please, no more apologies for what happened in the past between us. What happened was the result of misfortune. Misfortune and Chad. Let us look only to the future.
And I have a request of my own. Surely now we can meet. You will read this at noon. Perhaps we can see each other in the evening.
I know the perfect place. Tompkins Square Park at the end of this block. Toward the middle of the park there is a grassy knoll where the sunbathers tan themselves until the light shrinks away. Near the grassy knoll is a tall evergreen that looks like a Christmas tree. They string frost-coloured lights all around it each year and, lit up, it looks just like the Chrysler Building. If you say yes, we could meet beside the Christmas tree at six. What do you think?
Jolyon
*
While I am reading Dee’s letter over and over, I realise there is something very important I have to do.
Occasionally, out from the gloom of a hangover, enlightenment shines. Ideas are shaken, disparate thoughts come together, linear turns lateral. And when I read Dee’s words for a third time – pearls before swine – epiphany strikes.
I hurry downstairs to my building’s lobby where the lazier leafleters drop delivery menus or wedge cards into the cracks of the mailboxes. I find what I need, return to my apartment and dial the number.
And now everything is arranged. Early tomorrow. The car will pick me up at six in the morning.
XLIV
XLIV(i) Someone had pushed a note under Chad’s bedroom door, a message from the liaison officer, a summons to an urgent meeting early the next day.
When Chad emerged from his dressing-down, he felt the usual sense of shame. The heat in his cheeks and his forearms itching. The liaison officer had shouted at him for some time, his voice straining like the wail of an old gramophone record. He claimed Chad had let everyone down. Yet the punishment was hardly severe, a housing probation. ‘Another offence and your place in that house will be curtains!’ But nothing would be marked down on Chad’s record. ‘You’re an exceedingly lucky young man – I strongly considered a large fine. Fortunately for you no formal complaints have been brought.’
Lucky for me and lucky for you, thought Chad, as he climbed down the staircase out into front quad.
As the shame subsided, Chad began to detect another sensation, some small sense of warmth. Maybe even inflation. Was this the worst shame could do to him? Today really was another day. And yes, it truly did all seem better in the morning. For the first time in his life those clichéd words made sense to him.
Front quad was glistening with morning dew.
Perhaps it was like exercising a muscle, you had to work that muscle so hard that you damaged its cells. And then, as it repaired itself, the muscle would grow. The muscle would come back larger and stronger, ready for heavier lifting.
XLIV(ii) Dee approached Chad from behind, unannounced but gently, as he rounded a corner of front quad. She took up his arm and held it in hers as if clinging to a mast.
‘Hey, Dee,’ said Chad.
‘How was your date?’
‘You English would probably say something like, slightly disappointing.’
‘Oh dear. That bad?’
‘She didn’t show. No one in the house is speaking to me. And I just spent fifteen minutes being bawled out by Lord Greyskull. Oh, and if I put another foot wrong . . .’
‘Oops. Maybe not ideal to be playing a game of wrong feet then.’
‘I’ll just have to get smart. Hey, maybe you and I should form an alliance.’
Dee laughed. ‘Oh,’ she said, ‘I’ll consider your offer very carefully, Chad.’
And then a silence fell between them as Dee rested her head on Chad’s shoulder. Her hair smelled of woodland and vanilla and they walked on slowly through the cold stone passage out onto back quad where the vast tree was now pimpled with green buds and the flags were swaying like fishtails. Then, with a squeeze of his arm, Dee said, ‘You know you have absolutely no reason to be embarrassed, Chad.’
‘Really? Because I have this weird little itch that tells me you’re wrong,’ he said. ‘It’s funny though, there’s also a small part of me that doesn’t care any more.’
‘Good,’ Dee said, and she squeezed him again. ‘But all the stuff you said in the Great Hall yesterday – don’t worry, I’m not planning to remind you of everything – but there’s just one thing, Chad, one question I have to ask you.’ She tilted her head to look up at him. ‘Why didn’t you just tell us you grew up on a pig farm?’
‘The others knew,’ said Chad. ‘I guess it must have come up before I met you, Dee.’
‘No,’ said Dee, ‘I asked everyone. And Jolyon knew. But of course Jolyon knew. The others thought you were brought up in New York City.’
‘Dee for detective,’ Chad smiled. And then he paused, he felt the press of the new feeling in his chest. ‘I don’t know, Dee,’ he said, ‘I’m ashamed of a whole bunch of things. I guess that once it has a hold of you it’s like shame has the freedom to roam. If I think it through logically, I can’t think of any good reason I wouldn’t tell my best friends I grew up on a pig farm.’ He paused and tried to work it out again for the thousandth time. ‘The thing is, it’s as if there’s another creature inside here who refuses to explain anything he does. Does that even make any sense?’
Dee pushed her head further into the crook between Chad’s shoulder and neck. ‘Of course it does, Chad,’ she said. She let out her breath with another expansive huff and clinging tighter now to Chad, she said, ‘We’re all ashamed of too many silly little things. I used to be ashamed I didn’t have a father. I knew my mother had died when I was three. But my father? Who knows? Maybe he was dead too, or maybe he was alive but just didn’t want me. Maybe there was something wrong with me that made him leave.
‘When I was little, when I was scared of the dark in my bedroom at night, sometimes I would count up to a hundred. And if nothing bad happened before I got all the way there, I’d tell myself everything was OK, I was safe from the monsters. But to make this work, I had to offer something in return, like a sacrifice. Very small sacrifices. If I didn’t get told off at school or hit by a foster-parent, I had to cut my hand with a penknife or stab my arm with a compass. And then, when I was eleven, I thought up this way bigger deal than anything I’d come up with before. I decided I’d write five hundred poems, I was always good at poetry at school when I was little. So this deal was with God, I was daring Him to exist, daring Him to let me go through with it. Anyway, I made a wish that, before I got to the five-hundredth poem, my father would find me. But I had to put something on the line. So I made this threat . . . Well, you know what that was, I don’t need to say it out loud.’ Dee was quiet for a while and then quickly she rubbed Chad’s forearm as if it needed warming. ‘So there you go,’ she said, ‘that’s one of my very best secrets. And I think you deserve to hold on to it in return for so many of yours.’