Robert Browning
“I hope you live a life you’re proud of.
If you find that you are not,
I hope you have the strength to start all over
again”
F.
Scott Fitzgerald
“We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time”
Taken from
‘Little Gidding’ by T. S. Elliot
“Where
some have found their paradise
Others
just come to harm”
Taken from ‘Amelia’ by Joni Mitchell
1. This Sunday
Cassidy’s eyes stung.
His throat ached.
He could barely swallow.
Something had happened.
A memory briefly recognized and then moved
beyond.
Behind him, and yet…
He stood like dawn, on the edge of something.
Reaching.
Searching for a word.
He pursed his lips.
Nothing.
“Will Mayfair Mac still go to heaven Dad?”
Thankfully Archie was sitting on Cassidy's
shoulders and was unable to see the single tear snaking down his father’s gaunt
grimacing grin. Daniel, his eldest, caught his eye and tugged his hand. Cassidy
tugged back and then, with Archie still on his shoulders, sat down on the park
bench. This was now a part of their Sunday morning routine; Archie on Cassidy’s
shoulders, skinny legs dangling like knotted rope. Cassidy sitting.
Daniel ripping Velcro, pulling off his brother’s
trainers, reaching into the Arsenal rucksack for his cleats, his football boots; carefully sliding them
onto Archie’s restless feet; pulling them on with the leather tongue; pulling
tight before looping long laces under the sole and back; pulling tight again;
making two loops, bunny ears, painstakingly concentrating on tying the perfect
double knot. Cassidy loved the way that Daniel cared for his little brother,
admired his attention to the detail; a man after his own heart.
He and his boys had four hours before the three
o’clock curfew.
Another two hundred and forty minutes in
Cassidy’s care, then back to their mother in Bayswater.
He'd met Amelia right here.
Nine years and thirteen months ago, to the day.
Thirteen months since the ‘last supper’.
Thirteen months separated, including ten days
divorced.
Cassidy had accounted for that.
“I love you, goodbye”, she had said, waving
papers, stiffly shaking his hand. Civil, cordial even, but he knew that he was
now on her list; things that she was better beyond: capers, clowns, Cassidy and
his bloody cactus.
He
couldn’t remember exactly when he had stopped loving her, or she him.
Had
he ever really loved Amelia?
They
first met in this park, on this very bench.
Nine
years and thirteen months ago, to the day.
Cassidy
was new to London then. He’d recently taken a position at a large international
school in the north of the city. Lower School computers. After ten lazy years
in a sleepy Connecticut primary, he was hungry for advancement and adventure,
keen to taste the wider world. He’d stay in London for two years, no longer.
Appetite sated, he would move on, onwards and upwards. Cassidy was a creature
of comfort and settled easily into his London life; he started to feel at home
in his rented bachelor pad; he’d even brought himself a cactus for company.
After a successful first term he had returned to Cape Cod for a family
Christmas and was now back and well into his second semester.
At
weekends his early morning jog took him out of the cramped basement flat in
West Hampstead, up through Swiss Cottage and St Johns Wood, before he hit the
northern slopes of Primrose Hill. He was learning to love the parks of London.
That bright winter morning he followed the central path leading to the brow of
the hill. From there amongst the dog walkers and kite flyers, he could look
down upon the possibilities of the city. He always paused at the same park
bench; leant into it to stretch and stare and reset himself for the return
journey.
That
February morning the bench was occupied, a lone figure silhouetted by the
pallid sun as it rose over the distant marshes of East London. As she turned
towards him he saw sun splashed pigtails and the grain of her hair, all burnt
copper and straw. He thought of Andrew Wyeth’s studies of ‘Helga’, an
impression reinforced as the keening sun kissed her pale broad features; large
ochre eyes, wide set beneath heavy unkempt brows, high cruel cheekbones, a
generous mouth, kind and vaguely amused. She simply said “Hello handsome” and
that was that. Cassidy sat down beside her and followed her finger as she
traced the eastern marshes, the Isle of Dogs, the skyscrapers of Canary Wharf,
past the Post Office Tower and beyond towards the Houses of Parliament, her
steady slender hand finally fluttering over the leafy hills of Hampstead, where
they would meet later at the Holly Bush
for a ploughman’s lunch and pints of real ale.
And
her name was Amelia.
‘Amelia’
was Cassidy’s favourite Joni Mitchell song. How weird was that? He loved Joni.
The song now assumed a fresh resonance and he sang the words to himself
whenever he was troubled. ‘So this is how
I hide the hurt as the road leads cursed and charmed.’ He felt horny every time he thought about
The Cactus Tree Motel’s ‘strange pillows
of wonderlust’; Amelia crashing into
his arms…
They
married forty days later at a registry office in Holborn and within two years
had two sons.
Cassidy
had always been at the centre of things, a dragon slayer, the master of his own
destiny, but now his first waking thought would never be of himself again. With
a young family in his care, lofty ambitions were grounded by duty; he took his
parental responsibilities seriously and acquiesced willingly; the boys were in
and of his blood.
Daniel
and Archie.
D ‘n’
A.
Nice
one Cassidy.
He
was now in a world beyond himself, living in someone else’s film. No longer the
protagonist, Cassidy now assumed the role of bit part player; his life became
one of subsistence; father, provider, and protector. There were inevitable
dramas; a litany of tiny victories, a derby of defeats, which Amelia took
badly; they diminished her. Amelia
liked order. Defeat came as second nature to ‘Punch Bag Pete’; what didn’t kill
him made he and his family stronger: a peanut allergy, an orthodontic procedure
gone wrong, a new air filter and wheel bearing needed for the ‘Cassidymobile’.
Defeats?
He would laugh them off, sing in his thin reedy voice, “Amelia, it was just another false alarm”.
Cassidy
paraded as ringmaster, knowing all the while that Amelia was the real master of
ceremonies; mistress of emotional geometry; dynamic and well balanced; her
slender grip sure and steady while his big clammy hands shook. How easily
things slipped; they let go of their own imaginings and relaxed into a domestic
bliss. And so began the gentle fall, a creeping shift towards contentment, a
big circus of small dramas, which soon declined into drudgery, their intended life of surprises somehow became a
trudge. There were heated arguments in the early years as salvage seemed
possible, but then came recognition and disappointment. Daniel and Archie
watched on bemused and bewildered as their parents’ passion diminished; two
party clowns, too tired to fight, laughing wearily as they put their faces into
each other’s pies.
Maybe
they sought humiliation to better rescue and reset themselves. Maybe this was a
part of the process of adult survival. Maybe Cassidy thought too much, talked
too much, still telling the story of his life, but now in the third person.
As
the fourth person…
Was
this vulnerability part of his charm?
Could
you be charming and know it?
Didn’t
that make the charm an affectation?
Wasn’t
charm akin to innocence?
Once you
recognized it as one of your virtues was it was not gone, the spell broken?
Cassidy
knew now to keep these questions to himself. Once he and Amelia would lie naked
and spent in silvery moonlight, discussing anything
and laughing at everything. When the
laughter stopped so, it seemed, did the care. There was no spite or unkindness,
just an imperceptible removal of intimacy; they simply ceased to adore each
other, merely endured as functioning parents; the boys the sole focus of any
affection.
Still,
there was always the refuge of music.
Cassidy loved music.
Sometimes
you didn’t have to understand everything. You simply accepted an invitation to
inhabit the world, the possibility, of
a song.
“I wish this pain would just go away
I wish that dogs had wings”
Marc Jordan.
He wasn’t sure why the
thought of flying dogs made his faltering heart swell, but Cassidy loved Marc Jordan.
He
stopped loving Amelia when she stopped loving him.
Tit
for tat, just like that.
Was
it really that simple?
Sure,
but no less real.
Cassidy
got lazy, Amelia got sad.
She
developed an edge, became less understanding, less forgiving. She withdrew all
understanding and would now chastise him for his feckless nature, his prosaic
platitudes. “Christ Pete, this isn’t art, this
is life.”
And
then, thirteen months ago, with the boys in deep sleep, she had prepared a meal
to celebrate the ninth anniversary of that first meeting, a date that they
valued more than their wedding anniversary for some reason. The Last Supper: a
beautifully simple dish of linguine with Parmesan, pine nuts, butter and sage.
Purple sage of such intense flavour that Cassidy had asked Amelia where it was
from.
“It’s
from a friend…” she tucked a loose strand of hair behind her ear. “A friend
from work. Bill grows it himself in this tiny garden in Bayswater...” he lost
her eye for a beat, and he knew.
Tiny
garden.
Purple
sage.
Bayswater…
Bill.
The
Last Supper.
For
Cassidy that was their moment of separation.
He
couldn’t forgive her.
She
had diminished him.
He
demonized her.
Once
he’d been a dragon slayer, now the dragon was burning his French fucking toast…
For a while and “for the sake of the kids” they expertly avoided each other in
the small basement apartment; their lives disconnected.
And
then they just… separated.
So,
life no was longer a travelogue of ‘picture
postcard charms’ then.
Cassidy
didn’t dream of 747s.
That
was travel.
Cassidy
wanted escape.
He’d
got the urge for going.
Amelia
beat him to it.
Time
was a concertina; the essence of a failed marriage in the time it took Daniel
to tie the laces of his brother’s boots. From “hello” to “goodbye”; vital edges
to the arc of their love, a rise and fall that had brought him meandering back
up this hill exactly nine years and thirteen months later. Back to the source,
back to that bright moment, back to this park bench.
Archie
fidgeted on Cassidy’s shoulders sending his glasses flying. Daniel picked them
up and carefully wiped the lenses on his shorts before dutifully handing them
back to his father.
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