‘Not really. Let’s walk.’ She took my arm (yes!) and we started down Earl’s Court Road. ‘I won’t say I’m sorry for being unpleasant yesterday,’ she said, ‘but I do see that it wasn’t useful in any way.’ All around us people were eating, drinking, provisioning themselves at nocturnal greengrocers and supermarkets, laughing, cursing, arguing, embracing, and planning the rest of the evening or the decade while moving purposefully or weaving randomly towards whatever came next.
‘I have a useful idea,’ I said.
‘What?’
‘Let’s go to Paris for a couple of days, eat high-cholesterol things and get pissed in parks.’
‘What will that achieve, except to remind us of happier times?’
‘It’ll achieve not being here, and maybe if we put ourselves in a receptive state of mind we’ll have some kind of epiphany.’
‘We’ve already had a couple of epiphanies, wouldn’t you say? Right now I think I’m only about half an epiphany short of a nervous breakdown.’
‘Well, actually, there’s something I want to see again.’
‘What?’
‘Do you remember that place in Pigalle, Au Tonneau? Shaped like a barrel, looked as if it’d been shut down for a long time — Harry Belafonte posters on the doors?’
‘Of course I remember it: the little train from Sacré-Coeur stopped there, the sky was very grey, the place looked haunted. There were sex shows and dirty cinemas all around there. Why do you want to see it again?’
‘I don’t know. Sometimes a thing that I’ve seen comes up in my memory and wants to talk to me — nothing I can explain, really.’
Her arm was still linked in mine, her breast rubbing against me. ‘Can we go to the flat?’ she said.
‘Zoë’s?’
‘I said the flat.’
‘OK. The plants have missed you.’ We turned around and went back up Earl’s Court Road to Nevern Place. When we reached the house I unlocked the front door after a few fumbles, stood aside to let Serafina in, and followed her up the stairs to the top floor, hearing in my mind the Ravel trio of our first night. She took out her own key and opened the door of the flat.
As the door swung inward all our nights and days, our sleepings and our wakings, all the everything of our four years together rushed out at us. Serafina covered her face with her hands and I took her in my arms but she kept her hands over her face. ‘Bear with me, Jonno,’ she said. ‘It isn’t easy.’
I switched on the lamps. ‘The plants don’t look too happy,’ she said.
‘I’ve been watering them but you have to remember that they were hooked on you and it’s been cold turkey for them. What’ll you have to drink?’
‘Got any red?’
‘Coming.’ I opened a bottle and watched the glasses filling as I poured. As soon as Serafina came into the flat everything looked more like itself; things reassumed their proper colour, texture and character; the lamplight had more warmth in it, the wine gurgled with surcease of sorrow. She went to the shelves where the CDs were and I wondered what music she’d put on. ‘Takemitsu!’ I said, as it made its entrance like Bruce Lee coming over a wall and sneaking up on the bad guys.
‘Right,’ she said: ‘November Steps, for orchestra with shakuhachi and biwa. It sounds the way I feel.’ By then Bruce Lee had abandoned the sneak-up and was banging on dustbin lids with a stick.
‘As if you’re in a dark and narrow place where something might jump out at you?’
‘Something like that.’ We clinked glasses and sat down on the couch. She gave me one of her slanty smiles, somewhat careworn, took off the anti-rape shoes, and put her feet in my lap. ‘I think better this way,’ she said.
‘What are you thinking about, Fina?’
‘Just at this moment I’m thinking about Victor Noir.’
‘Who’s Victor Noir?’
‘He was a French journalist, only twenty-one when he was shot dead by Pierre Bonaparte in 1870.’
‘How come?’
‘He and a colleague had been sent to challenge Bonaparte to a duel with a republican journalist named Grousset. Bonaparte claimed that Noir slapped his face and that was why he shot him.’
‘Why did Grousset want to fight Bonaparte?’
‘Politics. The republicans were pissed off with Bonaparte because they thought he’d abandoned them when he became reconciled with Napoleon the Third.’
‘But why’re you thinking about Noir?’
‘I’m getting to it. On his tomb in Père Lachaise Cemetery there’s a life-size bronze statue of him as he looked just after he was shot. He’s flat on his back with his coat lying open and his shirt unbuttoned so you can see the bullet-hole in his chest. His trousers are partly undone to help him breathe as he died. He was shot on the 10th of January, only two days before he was due to be married.’
‘Not a good way to go.’
‘No, it wasn’t. Now women visit his tomb and they kiss him and rub his crotch and his boots.’
‘As any right-thinking woman would, but why the boots?’
‘I don’t know, but he seems to have become a symbol of the virility and fertility of the republican ideal. He was originally buried at Neuilly but in 1891 he was moved to Père Lachaise and the tomb with the statue was paid for by National Subscription.’
‘National Subscription! Was he that big politically?’
‘Evidently he started getting bigger as soon as he was dead, and Zoë says he’s got a considerable following now. His bronze hat is lying upside-down beside him, and women hoping for a lover or a husband put flowers in it and kiss the statue on the lips. Those who want to get pregnant also give him a little rub. Some of them go a bit further …’
‘How far?’
‘All the way, actually, with a partner or just with Victor.’
‘Zoë told you all this?’
‘Yes.’
‘Has she been to the tomb?’
‘That’s where she met Mtsoku.’
‘Was she there to do the business with Victor?’
‘She’d been visiting Oscar Wilde nearby and was just browsing.’
‘And Mtsoku?’
‘He’d been looking in on Marcel Proust but he’d heard about Noir’s female following so he cruised over for a recce.’
‘But you still haven’t said why you’re thinking of Victor Noir.’
‘Who knows? Maybe if I leave some flowers in the hat and give Victor a rub I can find a faithful lover. I’ve rubbed your crotch often enough but that didn’t seem to do it.’ She paused. ‘Or maybe if I ask very nicely he’ll keep the HIV virus away from us.’ She began to cry, and made no protest when I gathered her up in my arms and kissed the top of her head. She said us, I was thinking, and the air seemed full of angel trumpets.
‘Then you’ll come to Paris with me?’ I said.
She stopped crying, moved out of my arms, blew her nose, rearranged herself on the couch, drank some wine, and said, ‘Probably. But I need to talk a little more before I decide, and if I ask you to explain things I’m not attacking you — I just need to understand, OK?’
‘OK, Fina.’ That one word, us, made me feel cosy and safe despite the fact that Death might well have me on its shortlist inside my body as well as outside my door. Takemitsu wasn’t doing Bruce Lee any more, just sounding lonely. Au Tonneau showed itself to me: the empty barrel, wine all gone. Then the number on Katerina’s wrist. Why do I do the things I do? I wondered.
Serafina drank her wine and pondered silently for a while, then she said, ‘What I’m wondering about is the difference between you and me — how you wanted other women besides me and I didn’t want any other man. Maybe you didn’t just want them, maybe you needed them. What kind of want was that, Jonno, what kind of need?’