Authors: Esther Freud
But the door was already opening and Eshkol, his face a mask, his eyes staring, turned and walked away down the stairs. âGo after him,' Pierre hissed. âFind out what happened.' And Hettie skittered away.
âIt's you,' Jonathan looked up from where he'd been sitting calmly by the window.
âRight.' Nell's heart was galloping, her shirt was clammy with sweat. âHere goes.'
Nell had never been into Patrick's office before. It was smaller than expected, and two long desks had been pushed together against one wall. Behind it sat Patrick, Silvio and the registrar, Giles. For a moment she was reminded of her audition, but they'd been smiling then, encouraging, whereas now they were steeped in a tragic air of knowledge. Nell sat down, and found herself sinking backwards into the soft cushÂÂÂÂÂÂion of a chair. Flustered, she righted herself and perched uncomfortably on the edge. âNell Gilby,' Patrick frowned at his papers as if reminding himself who she was. âWe at Drama Arts feel quite confident . . .' Nell looked at the three faces, at Patrick, his grey hair thinning, but still spiked vertically at the front, at Silvio, his eyes sadder than ever, and at Giles, who gave her one tight smile, âthat here, among the myriad opportunities to expand one's resources . . .' Nell looked up at the clock. It was already four. Would they even have time to see everyone today? âthat when a student is ready, and let's face it, courageous enough to truly open themselves to the sensations and sense memories . . .' Nell listened hard, âonly then can they develop into an actor of exceptional qualities . . .' There was a pause. All three men looked at her, quizzically, as if she was a specimen of rare interest. âAnd, we've discussed this at great length, and we're sorry to say, we do not think you possess these qualities.'
Nell swallowed. She looked at them. Sad, grey, disappointed. Nothing, she remembered. Comes from Nothing.
âAnd so . . .' Patrick had clearly only just begun. His head was tilted back, his Adam's apple working. âWe heartily believe . . .'
âI'd better go then.' Nell stood up, and even though she heard Patrick splutter, and Silvio â was he calling her back? â she walked out and firmly closed the door.
âI'm out,' she stood in the doorway of the waiting room â for one short moment, victorious â but, apart from Jonathan, there was no one there.
Jonathan stood up and came across to her. âToo bad,' he said kindly, âwe'll miss you,' and he leant forward and gave her a quick brotherly kiss on the cheek.
Â
Nell walked down the stairs, bracing herself for an assault of sympathy, a barrage of questions, amazement and respect when she described how she'd not even waited for the end. But no one called to her, no one was there. The foyer was deserted, even the canteen, with no sign of Becky, stirring soup behind her hatch, sliding another tray of flapjacks into the oven. I suppose they've all gone to the pub, she thought, unless they've thrown out the whole school, and she laughed and with it came one shaky sob. No. She breathed in, I won't cry, and then Hettie rushed past her. âEshkol's slashed his wrists out on the street.'
âOh my God!'
âIt's horrible.'
Nell ran down the steps towards a group of people, soothing and wrestling with Eshkol's kneeling figure. âLeave me . . . leave me alone,' he fought. Trails of mascara ran down his face and a clear red patch of stubbly skin was visible where he'd wiped his nose. âOh Eshkol,' Nell sank down beside him, âyou'll be all right. Really. Don't give up.' But Eshkol looked at her without recognition, and why shouldn't he; this was the first time in two years that she'd offered him a single word.
âI've called an ambulance,' Hettie was back. âIt'll be here in a minute.' But Eshkol pulled away and began to tear along the road. They all ran after him, Becky, her apron flapping, Pierre, Hettie, Samantha. âStop, you idiot.' It was Dan, fast, and stronger than he looked, who raced ahead and grabbed him by the shoulder. âYou need help, mate,' he said, and he pinned him against the wall. A flap of tissue paper had unravelled and for a moment Nell saw the raw mess of his wrists. Becky grasped his arm and bound it up again. âNaughty boy,' she said, âtaking my knife,' and her nose reddened and her eyes dripped tears. âBastards,' she shook her head. âIt can't be right.' And then Hettie remembered it was her interview next.
âWhat shall I do?' She was shaking. But Pierre nudged her sharply. âGet going. Run.' The ambulance, its siren screaming, turned into the road. âOver here!' They waved, holding tight to Eshkol, as other students came streaming out of college. âWhat happened?' âFucking hell,' they clutched each other, and Nell thought â is this drama any more real than the duet she'd sung with Pierre the week before:
Summer dreams, ripped at the seams, bu-ut oh, those su-ummer nights
. . . The long top note had mangled somehow â the harmonies clashed, and she'd sworn it, she'd seen Patrick wince.
Eshkol stopped struggling as soon as he was in the medics' care. They unwound the tissues and examined his wounds. They asked numerous questions, particularly of Becky, who ran back to find the knife which lay abandoned in the yard outside the caretaker's office. People from the pub, unable to resist the lure of the blue light flashing â Jemma, Charlie, Tess and Susie â handed out cigarettes, their faces ashen, beer hanging hotly on their breath.
They watched while Eshkol was led into the back of the ambulance, laid out on the stretcher and belted in. He had new, thick padded bandages halfway up his arms, and his face, with its mess of make-up, was blank. They watched until the ambulance had turned out of the road, and then they wandered back towards their college, where they sat on the steps in the falling sun and waited for the last interviews to be over.
âYou all right?' Charlie sank down beside Nell.
âYeah,' Nell nodded. âI'm fine.'
âIt's such a relief, isn't it? It's crazy, I know, but I was tense as fuck.'
Nell looked at her. âNo. I don't mean that. I'm . . . They're not keeping me.'
Charlie's long body jolted with the shock. âOh babe! I didn't realise.'
âI guess some people take it worse than others,' Nell laughed dryly, and she pressed her thumb over the blue veins of her wrist.
âBut what will you do?' It was clear, and Nell was grateful, she really hadn't known.
âTry and get work, I suppose. Find an agent. Show the bastards that they're wrong.'
âBut will I see you again? What will happen? Will you promise to keep in touch?'
âSure.' It seemed ironic, such concern, when they'd hardly spoken this last year. âI'll be here tomorrow. I'll have to clean out my locker.'
âLet's have lunch,' Charlie moved closer. âListen. I have to tell someone,' her eyes filled with tears, âI think I'm pregnant. I know I am. And Rob's gone off to Japan on a British Council tour.'
Nell put her arm around her, she couldn't help it, and breathed in the familiar scent of her hair. âDoes he know?'
âNo, and I'm not planning to tell him. Fuck it. Why wait for lunch tomorrow? The pub's open now. Won't you just come for one drink, please, and have a chat?'
Â
That night Nell dreamt she was in the interview. Over and over again she walked into the office and sat before the three stern men. âNell,' they told her, âyou're not exceptional . . . but,' and this time she stayed to hear them out, âwith one more year, you will be.'
âNell,' they'd called to her as she was leaving. âSit down and listen to us.' She'd waited and Silvio had raised his eyes to her. Just as on the first day, it was his turn to be kind. âWe
want
you to be exceptional, we know you can be, congratulations, please do stay.' Even Giles had smiled. Even Patrick. They'd smiled and smiled until she'd smiled too and sunk back, falling into the empty well of the trick chair.
Nell woke in a tangle of sheets. What time was it? Sun was streaming through the thin curtain. And then she remembered. She didn't have anywhere to go. She closed her eyes and rolled away from the light. And almost immediately she was in another dream. âWhere are you going?' Patrick was chiding her. âSit down, you silly girl,' and there were Silvio's eyes again, creased with kindness and regret. âShhhhh,' he'd shaken his head. âNot you. We wouldn't let you go.' She'd choked with relief, warm tears spilling on to her cheeks, and she'd bent her head and felt the healing, almost holy touch of Silvio's broad hand. When she woke again she lay quite still. She could hear her landlord's son moving about upstairs. He was meant to be studying for some extra exam he'd failed, but there was the low drone of the television and the clink of cutlery as he poured himself more cereal.
Very quietly she crept along to the shower. The water was tepid, the timer long switched off, but even so she washed herself all over with lily of the valley soap, and rinsed her hair until it squeaked. She would make a last magnificent entrance. âNell?' Patrick might open that secret door that led on to the balcony. âCome in here a moment,' and she would leave her locker open, her ballet shoes and library copy of Chekhov revealed, and follow him through to where there were party poppers and champagne. Olinka would be there, and Babette, even the voice teacher Steven who had tried so hard to iron out any hint of a west country burr.
âSo glad we caught you,' they'd say. âYesterday, it was all a misunderstanding. Congratulations.' Their glasses were raised. âCheers. Here's to the third year. Here's to you!'
Nell clutched the towel round her and ran back to her room. She rolled her hair into a turban and threw back her head. There she was in the mirror, gleaming, her skin tingling, her features stretched into optimistic arcs. No one would ever know, she thought, that inside, her heart was bleeding, her stomach had been lashed into a knot. Was that because she was a marvellous actor? Or did it prove that she was incapable of showing true emotion on her unexceptional face?
Â
An air of desolation hovered over Drama Arts. Even the canteen was empty. There was nothing on the chalkboard menu, just a plate of cold sausages on the counter, and one hardening flapjack. Becky was scrubbing out a pan. Her hair was bound up with a ribbon and she had on her customary polka-dot apron, but when she turned, Nell saw her face was weary, the skin below her eyes puffy and red. âAny news?' She ran water into the pan, and Nell's heart stopped at the thought that she would have to tell each person she met: they threw me out.
âFrom the hospital,' Becky prompted her. âAbout Eshkol,' and Nell realised that although the knowledge of it had stayed with her through the long afternoon and evening at the pub, where she'd sat in a corner with Charlie, ravelling and unravelling solutions to her predicament, attempting to convince her that she owed it to Rob to at least tell him what she planned to do, she'd forgotten to think once about the details. âNo.' She was appalled. âI don't even know where they took him.'
âWell, he's probably out by now.' Becky looked sour. âIt just worries me, who will take responsibility. Not those . . .' she lowered her voice to a whisper, âso and so's upstairs.'
Becky went back to her pan. âIf you hear anything . . .'
âYes.' Nell wandered through the empty rooms, pushing aside a chair, glancing into the hall, trudging up to the balcony where costumes from last night's production were racked up on metal trolleys. Many of the lockers had already been cleared out. They hung open, their insides sharp and empty. Nell leant down to hers. She'd brought a bag especially, and without looking at what was there she scooped two years' worth of accumulated dance tights, hair ties, leg warmers and make-up into it. No one called to her. No one opened a secret door. On her way down she took a detour past the caretaker's room. The merry sounds of children's daytime television drifted out. âJoey?' She looked in, her nose already filling with the familiar sour smell of spirits, but instead of the caretaker's thickened, dark red face, there was Susie, sewing a button on to one of his shirts. âHey,' Nell said, and then she saw that Joey was lying on the bed behind her, fully dressed, his head sunk into a stained pillow. âGuess what?' Susie licked the thread and brought the needle to her eye. âWhen Joey wakes I'm going to take him to an AA meeting. He said he'd come. He promised, last night, in the pub.'
Nell nodded. She didn't want to remind Susie that he'd promised to stop drinking many, many times before.
âI mean, once I'm gone,' Susie knotted her thread, âthere'll be no one to take care of him, and he won't last here, indefinitely, unless he sorts himself out.'
Nell looked at Joey's feet, his socks threadbare, his ankles white and bony where his trousers had rucked up. He had a wife somewhere, she knew that. And three kids. But his wife had thrown him out.
âWhere is everyone?'
âThey're already in the pub. Are you all right?'
Nell nodded. She didn't dare ask Susie how she was. Susie, so kind she would cry on a daily basis for water voles or the plight of Tibetan monks. Only last week she'd been inconsolable when news came through that a Colombian footballer had been shot dead for scoring an own goal during the World Cup. âSee you later then.' Nell couldn't bear to see Susie cry for herself. âGood luck.'