Read Nocturne Online

Authors: Graham Hurley

Nocturne (18 page)

Brendan, when he came back, sensibly laid the subject to rest. He

d
taken a couple of shots of the guys on the jet skis and he

d gone up the
road a
nd got the number of the 4x4
they

d been driving. Neither
had volunteered a name but the photos of the incident should be pretty
conclusive and he planned to send the file to the local police. They

d
doubtless be in touch, and they

d probably want a
detailed
statement from
both of us. When he decanted the Rioja and raised his glass the toast
was to windsurfing. Mine, not his.


You were sensational,

he said.

Like something out of a movie.


What were you expecting?


I

ve no idea. I

d never really thought about it. Windsurfing?

he
shrugged.

Piece of piss. You just get on and off you go. Like riding a
bike.


Really?


Yeah.

He nodded ruefully.

Some fucking bike.

He had the grace to laugh. Overhead, I could hear Gilbert softly
running through a series of scales on his flute, and I thought briefly
about my conversation with Frankie in the Queen

s. But that, like
drowning, seemed to belong to another life. For now, all I wanted was
to be warm, and cosy, and talked to.

Brendan was telling me about what had happened with Sandra.
Apparently they

d had an enormous row because Brendan, for once,
had answered back. The way he described it, this was a new
development in their relationship, the result of advice from his
therapist. She

d told him he needed to get back on terms with himself.
He needed to stand tall, fight fire with fire. This is exactly what he

d
done and Sandra had responded exactly the way his therapist had
warned, by moving the goalposts.

The argument had begun over the loading of the dishwasher.
Brendan, in Sandra

s view, was fa
r too cavalier. Brendan had dutifully
raised the stakes and within minutes, inflamed, the issue was whether
or not the marriage deserved to survive. In Sandra

s view, it most
certainly did, but emphatically on her terms. Brendan

s line was a little
more radical.


I
told her to stuff it. I said I

d had enough.


Enough of what?


Enough of everything. Enough of her going on all the time. She

s a
fascist, Jules, an absolute nightmare to live with.

He nodded.

And
she

s obsessed, too.


By what?


Money. How we can save it. Why we need more of it. How we can
chisel out an extra quid or two. Jesus, it

s not like we

re broke, Jules,
believe me.


I do.


Quite.

He nodded.

You should try it some day.


Wealth?


Marriage.


No, thanks.

He looked at me over the rim of his glass. He

d never been the
slightest bit interested in the small print of my love life but now was
obviously the time to start. I tried to let the invitation pass, but he
wasn

t having it.


How about you?

I shrugged. A mouthful or two of Rioja had begun to detach my
brain from the rest of me. I heard myself talking about university,
about my lecturer friend, and about where - in my wildest moments -
I

d thought the relationship might lead. I didn

t spare him any of the
details, a candour I put down to delayed shock.

By the time I

d finished, most of the first bottle had gone. Brendan
was standing by the stove, stirring the bolognaise.


You ever see him again?


Never.


Never tempted?


Of course. But that

s not the point. The point is he ratted, bottled,
call it whatever you like. It was there for the taking, what we had, what
we

d built, but when it came to the crunch he preferred to go back to
his wife. In my book you get one chance, and one chance only. We
blew it.


We?


Yes, him and me. Had we been stronger, both of us, it would have
happened, I know it would.


So how did you feel when he went?


Awful. I felt awful.

I looked at him, wondering whether to add the bit about the malt
whisky and the sleeping tablets, but I knew I had to draw the line
somewhere. He was still my boss, for God

s sake. Why should he give
office space to someone who

d seriously toyed with ending it all?

Brendan slopped a little more wine into the bolognaise sauce.


Did you blame yourself?


Mostly. He was the one who would have suffered.


How come?


By losing his wife and kids, by taking that great leap in the dark.

I
bit my lip, hearing Harvey

s voice. Even the nig
ht he blew
me
out
, he made a
beautiful job of it.

He understood
how to use
language,

I told Brendan.

He
understood how powerful it can be. He abused it, like he abused
everything else, but he was a hard man to say no to.


I
can tell.

Brendan was looking pensive.

Did you love him?


Very much.


And do you still love him?

I thought about the question. Brendan was playing therapist now
but I was too drunk, and too tired to care.


I
love the idea of him,

I ventured at last.

I love some of the times we
had. I love what
I thought we could become. But the guy inside
?

I shrugged.

Probably not.

Brendan was impressed. He

d even stopped stirring the sauce.

That

s fucking honest, if I may say so.


Thank you.


Not at all.

Brendan frowned.

This Harvey, has he ever
tried to get
in touch?


Yes, lots of times.


Recently?


No, not since I

ve moved up here.


Why not?


He can

t. He hasn

t got the address. Or the phone number.


But what would happen if he did ? Say he phoned ? Say he suggested
a drink? How would you cope with that?


I

ve ho idea,

I
said wearily.

It

s been a long time.


But you might say yes?


I doubt it.


Why?

I frowned, trying to concentrate, trying to find the phrase that
would bring this conversation to an end. Finally, I realised that the
truth was all too simple.


I don

t want to get hurt any more.

I closed my eyes.

So maybe I

ll
just stick to windsurfing.

I heard Brendan

s soft laugh.


You think
that

s
safe?


Safer.

I yawned.

Definitely.

Brendan left after we

d eaten. He didn

t push his luck about staying the
night and for that I was grateful. The moment I lay down in bed I
slipped into a long, dreamless sleep and by the time I awoke it was ten
o

clock in the morning. Hours late for work, I ran for the bus.

Mid-afternoon, my phone rang. It was Brendan. He sounded warm
and cheerful, nothing like as hectic as usual. After he

d checked that I
was OK, he said he

d forgotten his camera. He

d left it on the side in
the kitchen. Could I bring it into work tomorrow?

I did what he asked. Two days later, we had lunch together at a
bistro in Upper Street. He showed no signs of wanting to talk about his
marriage and I didn

t inquire further. After we

d resolved most of the
morning

s crises on
Members
Only
,
he produced one of those
photographic print envelopes you get from Boots.


Take a look.

I began to open the envelope. His face gave nothing away. I emptied
the prints onto the table. Every one of them was black. No beach. No
windsurfer. No jet skis. No Julie. Just black.

I looked up.


What happened?


Fuck knows
.

I frowned, examining one of the prints.

Was it the camera?


No, I

ve checked it, ran another film through. Everything

s fine.

I thought of the lunatics on the jet skis, off the hook now. Might they
have interfered somehow? Opened the camera? Exposed the film?

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