The device, which arrives at my office from friendlyear.com, is no bigger than a watch battery, and transmits to a recorder the size of a memory stick. Feel more secure, the packaging invites, though its actual purpose is to confirm one’s insecurities. The instructions read like they’ve been translated from the Portuguese by someone who speaks only French, but owns two dictionaries.
It weighs my pocket down as I leave, and I wonder if the dogs at the station will bark me out — the police dogs that wait on the concourse, trained to sniff for bombs, guns, and fear.
On the train, Maurice says, “You’re looking pressured. Markets heading for a fall?”
It is such a surprise that Maurice notices anything beyond his own concerns that I’m not sure how to answer. “Same old, same old,” I say at last.
He looks out on a darkening view of warehouse yards and traffic jams. “Tell me about it. We’ve got a citywide systems check on — every camera, every lens, every angle. Guess which muggins gets to coordinate that little lot?”
“Don’t the cameras get checked all the time?”
“Individually, yes. This is a systems audit.” He leans forward. “Means we have to close whole chunks of it down. You want to pull some riverside mischief and not get caught, this week’s good.”
“I presume you’re not advertising that.”
“Jesus, don’t joke.” He brushes imaginary crumbs from his lapel. The real ketchup stain on his tie is unimpressed. “Big Brother never sleeps. That’s our story, anyway.”
At home, I place the bug on the standard lamp. The recorder goes in a drawer. It’s noise-activated, which means that when nothing’s happening, it goes to sleep. Along with hours of sound, it can capture aeons of unremembered silence.
“What are your plans for the rest of the week?” I ask Emma over supper; a strangely formal construction.
“I thought I might go up to London one morning. Do some shopping. But don’t worry, I’ll avoid the commuter crush.”
“That’s good,” I say. “Maurice doesn’t like noncombatants stealing our seats.”
She smiles at this. She knows Maurice.
All night it rains, and I lie awake wondering if the pattering on the windows will trigger the bug. Already I can picture myself listening to it: hours of secondhand rain; a memory of overnight weather.
Emma hums as she moves from room to room; she hums as she changes the roses’ water. And talks to herself, too, snatches of dialogue — single words, mostly — meant to act as memos-to-self: milk, she will say, for obvious reasons, or oven, less obviously. She takes a call on her mobile, and walks out of range while gossiping with a book-club friend. I hear all this hours later, in the bathroom, the recorder’s earpiece clamped to my head.
She interrupts my surveillance by calling upstairs.
I go down to eat, and admire her food. I applaud the industry with which she passes her days. I notice that the oven sparkles; its ceramic buffed and polished. My attentions amuse her.
“Sometimes you act like a brand-new husband,” she tells me.
“Would you like a brand-new husband?” I ask.
“I’m quite content with the old one,” she says. “But it’s nice to be appreciated.”
Later, I return to the bathroom, and continue listening to the day’s messages.
More humming.
Light bulbs.
The friendly clatter of a woman preparing to go out, followed an unknowable amount of time later by the sound of the same woman returning home.
She takes a call on her mobile.
Yes... Tomorrow, that’s right. Well, thank you for confirming. What time’s check-in? Any time after eleven? That’s fine.
Damn, she tells herself sometime later. I forgot to buy the bread.
I hear myself arriving back from work, and removing the recorder from its drawer.
And then all I hear is silence, taking place in real time.
In the morning, before she’s up, I take her mobile from her coat pocket, and jot a number down from Call Register. When I ring it from my own phone, a hotel receptionist answers. I find I can’t speak.
Emma emerges, in her dressing gown. “I’m going to London today, too,” she says. “But I’ll go in on the ten o’clock.”
“Shall we come back together?” My voice is rusty, as if it belongs to somebody older.
“Oh, I’ll be home before rush hour.” She kisses me on the cheek. “I’ll leave the rough stuff to you men.”
On the train, Maurice complains about the continuing rain. He also complains about fare increases, the government’s pensions policy, and the number of reality shows on TV.
“Don’t those guys know their T.S. Eliot?” Those guys are the guys we all hate: the ones responsible for whatever disgusts us at that moment. “ ‘Humankind cannot bear too much reality.’ Did they think he was kidding, or what?”
“I don’t think modernist poetry factors in much in TV scheduling, Maurice.”
“Well, I don’t think basic intelligence factors in much in TV scheduling. They got freaking cheerleaders doing the weather, for God’s sake.” He pauses. “Actually, that bit’s not all bad.”
On the concourse he says, “Let’s be careful out there.”
“Do it to them before they do it to you,” I tell him.
But I don’t head for the Tube. Instead I make for the daylight, or what little there is of it — it’s wet and grey as I walk to Hyde Park Corner, where I buy a cup of coffee in a franchise opposite Victoria’s Hotel, and use my mobile to call in sick. There’s a newspaper on my table, and I pretend to read while I watch the comings and goings.
At ten to eleven a shaven-headed man with an earring pauses at its steps, checks his watch, then goes in.
At ten past, my wife arrives in a taxi. She smiles as she tips the driver.
Stay detached. Remain in control. Let go of the space around you.
But everything inside that space is yours.
I spend so long in that cafe, it starts to feel like my kitchen. I drink so much coffee, I start to feel like hell.
In the newspaper I’m not reading is a grainy picture from CCTV footage. It shows two kids in hoodies stomping a homeless man to death.
Three hours later, Emma leaves the Victoria. Through a circle I’ve rubbed in the steamed-up window I watch as she sets off for the station, and she looks the same to me as she always does. There’s no scarlet letter branded on her forehead. She might have been taking a business meeting in the hotel’s conference room. Out of view she walks, her good grey coat and umbrella keeping her dry. Once she’s gone, I return my attention to the hotel entrance. It swims a little, but I blink away newfound knowledge. When the shaven-headed man emerges five minutes later, my vision is clear again, my purpose undimmed. I pay the bill and follow him round the corner. I’m half an escalator behind him as he dips into the underground.
The Tube map has been played with many times; its stations replaced with constellations, philosophers, authors, famous drunks. It is an attempt, I think, to find poetry in the ordinary. He changes trains, then, at the Great Bear, and I loiter yards from him as he waits on the platform. Every so often he checks his watch. Perhaps he’s heading back to work — playtime over; alibi used up. I wonder what excuse he phoned in before heading for the Victoria: a dental appointment? A checkup? He is wearing a suit beneath his raincoat, and his earring flashes when it catches the light. I imagine him in the passenger seat of my wife’s red car, his hand up her skirt; or in a hotel bedroom, that suit folded onto a hanger before their fun begins. Then the Tube arrives in a silvery whoosh, and we board the same carriage, and sit ten seats apart.