âThe Airs above the Ground were originally used in wartime. The spectacular leaps and manoeuvres of the âlevade', âcourbette' and âcapriole' were designed to protect and defend riders in the battlefield. Now preserved simply as a form of equestrian art.'
He moves swiftly into the courbette, rearing up on his hind legs and propelling himself forward, his forelegs never touching the ground. It is a savage attack on invisible air and the audience stands in delight. No opponent on this earth would stand a chance! These are the killing moves, the killing dance, dance of glory and spoils, blood and brutality, scarred legs and wounded knees. The drum roll clamours in his heart and breast.
Gloria all' Egitto
. His ancestors drew the chariots of gods and heroes; their bodies decorate the Parthenon friezeâ¦
âSuch is the nobility of the Lipizzaner horse, that he would lay down his life for his master⦠take the spear or bullet in place of him; which is the reasoning behind the manoeuvre known as the levade.'
â¦now he plays for the applause of the crowd. Dancing the dance of death to the music of Aïda. Dancing the dance of death in a floodlit arena for the bright pale faces that shine in the darkness. His master asks for the levade and Siglavy Parhelion rises up to an angle of forty-five degrees, taking the spear and invisible bullet for the man who crouches high behind his neck, clinging on for dear life to the silk-fine mane, boots wrapped tight around cream and silver hide; though there is nothing to fear here but rosettes, sweet wrappers, maybe one or two ice-cream cones!
âAnd now for the capriole â originally used to decapitate foot soldiers â it is the most difficult feat a horse can perform. Very few stallions in the world are able to perform it. We are lucky that Siglavy Parhelion is possibly the greatest exponent ever.'
He pauses for breath, awaiting command, his muscles quivering under the spotlight, his mighty heart almost fit to burst. He must give it his all, for it will be the last time. The last time they watch him fight, watch him dance; watch him fly. There is a shift in the saddle, a softly spoken word, a deep inhalation and a pressure on the bit. It is time... he has to jump. The trumpets blow, he drinks the air, his muscles bunch and he springs to the height of a man, lashing out his back legs at some invisible foe. He hangs suspended, outstretched, mid airâ¦
Gloria all' Egitto... Gloria all' Egitto
Closer than any horse has ever been to the gods. Closer than Icarus ever got to the sun. He could kick over the moon if he wished. The crowd is in tumult at his feet. Not for nothing is he known as Pegasus: Horse of Kings. For a moment longer he soars, uninterrupted, then drops like a stone into darkness...
The crowd is in uproar. What on earth is going on? No light. No sound. Is he hurt? He jumped so high. They strain to read their brochures by the light of the curtained exit â the finale is the School Quadrille â a choreographed dance routine of some kind. So what is the commotion in the darkened arena? Has Colonel Lebronski fallen off and cracked his elbow? Has Parhelion's mighty heart given out at last? But no, what a relief â there he is right as rain and skittish as a two year old, leading the last dance, the School Quadrille to the tune of Smetana's
Bartered Bride
. The riders are dressed in red and gold-plumed fancy dress and only now do they break into smiles. This is a dance of life and love, of laughter and surprises, of linked arms, swirling petticoats, promises and rings. This is a dance under chandeliers in the rust-coloured sand of the
Hofreitschule
where the Empress Maria Therese drank china tea and Beethoven conducted symphonies. Timpani, trombone, bassoon, strings! They foxtrot, polka, waltz and minuet with Marenka and Jenik, the grizzly bear and Miss Esmerelda Salamanca in Smetana's rural idyll. Delightful! Rumbustuous! Dancing the dance of life and love, laughter and surprises, of cut-glass tinkling streams and soft singing breezes, of birth and death.
Siglavy Parhelion heads the final salute, Deus and Adonis quicksilver at his heels, the rest of them behind like a wave of white horses. The rosettes, garlands, bouquets are for him. Of course they are really for him. He feels the soft hand resting warm on his neck and though his bones are aching, his heart almost bursts with pride. He has flown, fought, danced once again for the bright pale faces that shine in the darkness like the flowers on the steep granite tors of his birthplace.... The soothing voice is soft in his ear, as the garlands fall, softer than the singing breezes. He understands. It will be the last time. He stands motionless facing the crowd, a silver horse carved out of the stars, immortal in their hearts and minds. He stands and faces his final curtain, bows his strong and graceful neck for one last time. By next year the alpine flowers, heather and broom will have covered his remains. His spirit will have rejoined the Karst Bora winds.
The applause went on long after the horses had gone. Marly sat, her hand in David's, and stared at the empty arena. They had disappeared like star-touched ghosts and nothing remained but scuffed-up sawdust, one or two still-steaming droppings. Everyone was on their feet; rustling about with bags and coats, hats and scarves; and the compère was rabbiting on about stalls and badges, video gala performances, tours to Austria and
The Sound of Music
â¦
âNot bad that, huh?' David squeezed her hand.
âNope!'
âYou know we've got to go.'
âI know.'
âThe train goes at ten past.'
âI know.'
Had they raced over mountains with the Von Trapp children, away from the bombs and the Nazis? Seventy stallions, ten instructors, fifteen grooms, a bookkeeper, farrier, saddler, pictures, furniture, archives of the Spanish Riding School; and General George Patton singing âDoh a deer a female deer, Ray a drop of golden sun, Me a name I call myself, Fah a long long way to run', on the way?
âIt's ten to, now. Have you got your scarf?'
âUh huh.'
âBag?'
âUh huh.'
âPurse?'
âUh huh.'
âCoat?'
âUh huh.'
âYou know we've really got to goâ¦'
âI know.'
She didn't want to leave this magical place where silver horses had danced over sawdust, danced their way in to her sick little soul.
âCan we stay a little longer?'
âWe'll miss the train.'
âI know.'
âWe really have to go...'
In the end he took her hand, and led her past the upturned seats â they really were the last to go. Already some men with badges were walking down the aisles, picking up litter and old brochures people had left.
âNo respect,' Marly muttered to herself.
âWhat?'
âDoesn't matter...'
She turned her head for one last look then entered the drab yet brightly lit corridor. It stank of old socks and stale popcorn and posters of âThe Lipizzaner Horses: Equestrian Treat of the Century' were hanging quite askew on the walls.
âHurry up,' David muttered at the crowd in front. He kept glancing at his watch.
âIt's alright,' Marly smiled reassuringly. âPlenty of time.'
âNo we have not. Stone the crows! Get a move on folks, get a move on!'
âI might be an
élève
,' Marly giggled, squeezing his fingers, distracting him a little. âI might be off to the Spanish Riding School. Can you see me doing the capriole?'
âToo right I can. You'd probably decapitate me head off for me!'
âI reckon I could. I can ride. I'm good at music...'
âA little too old I think, my love,' David smiled, glancing at his watch again. âA little too old.'
A little too old. Quite possibly. A little too old and a little too fucked.
David frowned at the crowd, which was bulging now around the stalls, slowing down even more. A tall dark-haired girl was blocking the path in front, standing around with a group of friends. She was holding up a t-shirt of Colonel J Lebronski and laughing her head off.
She
wasn't too old, Marly thought, a little irritatedly. Even under the harsh, artificial light, she was shining, luminous. Her friends were oohing and aahing at her antics, and she picked up a little badge of Siglavy Parhelion and held it above her pointy left breast.
Marly looked quickly at David to see if he was looking. He was looking alright.
Her heart turned to stone; and the magic fled her grubby little soul, not little by little in fits and starts, the way her mother's soul had fled, but in one agonising, decapitating fell swoop. He was right beside her holding her hand but she was miles away from him in her head. Miles and miles away in her head. Watching him watching the girl. More fun, no doubt, than she could ever be. âSweet sixteen going on seventeen into a world of men. Better beware...' Had
she
ever been sixteen? Ophelia in the school play, Stokesy shouting parson's nose when he should have shouted bravo! She'd jumped from eight to fifty in a flash of a sunbeam and now here she was, a twenty-six-year-old hag, well past her sell-by date and alone. Alone. She would always be alone. Watching him watching her. Typical ha ha ha ha man. The magic had gone; the magic had left her in a puff of smoke, a snap, crackle and pop. She dropped his hand, without a word, and headed long and low like a cat, past the girl who was sixteen going on seventeen and her group of admirers, past the happy men and happy women, bags and rustling coats; headed long and low like a cat into darkness, her face numb, her heart turned to stone.
Fifteen
June opened the door for once, her spun-at-the-funfair hair mingling rather attractively with the stained-glass porch. A scent of orange and cinnamon wafted out with her, reminding Marly of Christmas trees and fairy lights and the small pomanders her mother had made of tangerines stuck all over with cloves like bright, round hedgehogs.
âHello Marleeen?' June sounded surprised, as if she wasn't expecting her and Marly mentally checked her dates.
âHello June. I'm a bit early I think.'
âNot to worry, not to worry. I've just taken him in a cup of tea.'
The âmay our wishes come true' receptionist was on holiday apparently in the Peloponnese, and June was doing the work of two.
âIt's exhausting,' she smiled up at Marly. âWorse than looking after the grandkids if that can ever be said. Little monkeys⦠if they haven't got their fingers in the fish tank, they're eating shoe-polish! It's the way to an early grave, I'm telling you.' She glared at Marly for a moment as if it was somehow her fault then relaxed into a smile. âNever mind, never mind. Go on in, go on in.'
Marly smiled, a little confused at this outpouring, then collected herself and walked into the room. Terry sat in his black leather chair, staring out of the window, both hands wrapped tight around a steaming mug of tea. He looked strangely pale and vulnerable and thin, his beaky profile outlined in the chilly winter light, and Marly felt a sudden rush of affection for the old man. How long had she been seeing him now? Was it two years? Two and a half? It seemed a long time she'd been coming to this room full of books and dreams, potions and flowers, the picture of the girl in the shape of a cross and the Grecian vase on the window ledge replaced today by a flame-effect, seasonal candelabra. Very vulgar, her mother would have said. Ivy ever pristine between Scylla and Charybdis. Very vulgar. A row of Christmas cards hung on a piece of string from one side of the window to the other.
She dumped her bag down by the old piano and sat on the chair beside the stool. She felt as if she were going to cry and she tilted her head up and opened her eyes very wide, the way she did to stop herself. Her hands were suddenly shaking in her lap.
Terry sat quietly, put down his cup of tea. âHow's it going?'
âNot too bad.'
âNo?'
âPretty bad actually.'
âYes?'
A tear squeezed out of the corner of her eye and she brushed it away fiercely with the back of her hand.
âI feel evil, all twisted up inside. Full of poison. Never used to be like this, I just want it to stop. If I think for a second he doesn't love me I go off in my head, miles away... cold, remote... a stone wall comes down. It's like I'm justified in thinking what I think, that it's only safe to be alone. That I'll always be alone. That's the truth, that's the reality. I always come back to it.'
âIt's
not
the truth, it's
not
the reality.'
Marly hardly paused to take in what he said. âWe went to see the Lipizanner horses the other night in London... David planned it all as a surprise⦠it was fantastic... the horses were, I mean. But afterwards⦠I don't know⦠I got all jealous⦠I'm always looking, you see, to see where he's looking.' It was with a sense of embarrassed relief she brought this little secret to the surface and she looked away at the book of dreams, wondering if it had anything under Going back to School â she was always going back to school in her dreams â then turned quickly back to Terry to see how he'd taken it.