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Authors: Paul Murray

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BOOK: The Mark and the Void
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‘Wait,’ I say, as his meaning dawns on me. ‘You’re talking about debt? Subprime lending? That’s what you’re basing your fund on?’

‘There’s not much you can sell to a world full of poor people, Crazy. So instead you make them the product. To be fair, we didn’t invent the idea. The real visionaries were the boys on Wall Street. They’re the ones who first saw this vast, untapped resource out there, these millions of Americans who were shit poor but who nobody trusted enough to loan money to. They saw that if they could get these deadbeats into the debt market – well, it’s like the oil under Alaska, right? Billions and billions of dollars just waiting to be released. I mean, the sheer audacity of it!’

‘But they were wrong,’ I interject, fighting away the whiskey-fingers tickling the base of my brain. ‘Their model didn’t work. They brought down the whole financial system.’

‘Well, sure, of course.’ Howie is unfazed. ‘They were working off the Gaussian copula, which was bullshit. But the instrument
we
have is tight as a drum.’ He takes a sip from his tumbler and grins at me. ‘Lack is the last great gold rush, Claude. The world is poor and getting poorer. But we can turn that to our advantage. When someone’s got nothing, does he care how much debt he gets into? When he’s walled in, and someone offers him a way out, does he stop to read the small print?’

‘And what happens if he can’t pay you back?’

‘This is what I’m telling you. You work out the correlations and you set it up so the losses don’t register.’

‘How could they not register?’ I’m starting to feel like I’m dreaming. ‘How can a loss not be a loss? That’s impossible.’

‘In conventional terms it’s impossible. In conventional terms, two and two is always four and a triangle always has three sides. But there are fields of mathematics where that is not the case. There
are fields, largely unknown except in the maths departments of certain obscure Russian universities, where two and two is never four, where a triangle, a square, a circle have the same number of sides.’

Over in the shadows, Grisha’s head snaps up. ‘Non-Euclidean geometry,’ he says. ‘Topological, differential, affine. Every level give greater symmetry, more and more figures becomes equivalent to each other. Metric spaces no longer exist, values are translated into their opposite, at this moment we apply providential antinomy, then break symmetries again, return to metric space.’

Leaning against the guard rail, Howie takes this in with the mercenary satisfaction of a carnival barker watching his star turn. ‘We’ve tested the model up and down,’ he says, when the Russian has finished. ‘Every investor we’ve presented to has his chequebook out before we get halfway through. This is the new wave. Soon it’ll be the only wave.’

Can it be true? The whiskey is making everything swim – or maybe it’s the cigar smoke, burning my eyes …

‘See, you’re too cautious, Claude.’ Howie’s voice seems to come from a distance. ‘That’s always been your problem. You need to remember they’re numbers. They’re not real. You can make them do what you want.’

‘That’s what they said the last time,’ I rasp.

‘This is different. But for it to work you have to forget everything you know. Such as don’t put all your eggs in one basket. That’s the first thing they teach you about investment, right? The basket falls, everything’s wiped out. The genius of the subprime guys was to realize that if you put in
enough
eggs, and stack them just right, then even if the basket falls, the number that break will be insignificant.’

‘But they did break,’ I croak, as words, numbers, mathematical functions scroll unreadably before my eyes. ‘They lost trillions. They almost destroyed the whole of civilization.’

‘Yes. They were thinking counterintuitively, only not quite counterintuitively enough. We’re taking it to the next level. We’re saying, instead of minimizing the breakages, get rid of the fall.’

‘The fall?’

Grisha is muttering something – Russian? Geometry? – from the corner. Beside me, Kevin stands utterly motionless, as if his soul’s been charmed out of his body.

‘That’s what our fund does. The maths is complicated but the concept’s very simple. We use non-linear methods so that numerical losses are automatically self-cancelling.’ Howie holds up his whiskey glass, as if he is about to toast me. ‘Gravity, so to speak, is annulled. Meaning that even if you drop the basket, it never hits the ground.’

He lets go of the glass. For one bewitched instant it seems to hang twinkling in the air – even to float infinitesimally upwards. Then it hits the floor and shatters into pieces.

‘Get someone to clean that up,’ Howie says to Kevin, and goes back into the bar.

I have had enough. Before leaving, I do one last sweep of the bar for Ish; at my side, Kevin chatters on excitably about how groundbreaking Howie’s fund is, how it will revolutionize capitalism, and so on, until I lose my temper and tell him that counterintuitiveness has clearly got out of hand if actual nonsense is now being taken for holy writ.

Kevin looks surprised, even a little hurt. ‘It’s not nonsense, Claude. It’s non-
linear
.’

‘Come on. Losses that magically disappear? Risk without risk? This makes sense to you?’

‘I’m not a mathematician, am I? It’s already paying out at 16 per cent! That’s one of the highest returns in the whole industry. And they’ve got like thirty million in investment – shit, that means Howie’s already made …’ He disappears into a little reverie of calculation. Hedge funds have a different pay structure from banks, a ‘two and twenty’ model: from the money invested with them they take 2 per cent straight off as their management fee, and then 20 per cent of any profits. Therefore, even if his fund doesn’t make a cent, Howie could still walk away with millions.

‘It seems to me that he’s investing a bit too much with his Bulgarian friend,’ I say.

Kevin shrugs. I am the old guard; what I think is not important.

Ish arrives at work late the next day, in what appears to be an even worse mood than me.

‘You disappeared last night,’ I say.

‘Ran into somebody,’ she says curtly.


Somebody
, eh?’ I say, arching an eyebrow.

‘Fuck off,’ she says.

I throw my hands up in surrender.

‘Sorry,’ she says. ‘Sometimes going out in this place’s worse than bloody work.’

‘You think?’

‘It’s all right for you, you’re a bloke. You’re not spending a small fortune to keep your hair blonde and your pits waxed, for the benefit of some fucking drunk who can’t remember your name when he wakes up.’ She shakes her head. ‘I swear, if I hadn’t bought that sodding apartment I’d be so out of here.’

‘You could still go if you wanted to,’ I say.

‘How would I do that, Claude? I’m up to my neck in fucking debt.’

‘You could get a transfer. To HQ, for example.’

‘New York?’

‘No, Torabundo. Then you would be able to visit Kokomoko at weekends. See your old friends.’

She gives me a look that I can’t quite decipher. ‘Is that what you want?’

‘Me? I am talking about what you want. If you are not happy here.’

‘Oh, I’m just having a moan,’ she sighs, dismissing her own words with a wave of the hand. ‘Here, get out the Carambars and tell us a joke.’

I open my drawer, unwrap a couple of toffees and scan the jokes – hit by a flashback from my childhood as I do so, my father chasing me around the kitchen and tickling me –
If it’s not funny, why are you laughing? Claude? If it’s not funny …

I clear my throat. ‘All right.
Quel acteur est une copie de lui-même –
this means, Which actor is a copy of himself?’

‘I don’t know.’

‘George Clon-è.’

Ish looks confused.

‘In French, you see,
Clooney
sounds like
Clon-è
,’ I explain. ‘Like he is the clone of himself.’

‘Yeah, I get it.’

‘This is actually quite a good joke.’

Ish laughs, lays her hand on my arm. ‘Oh, Claude,’ she says. ‘How could I leave you here on your own? It wouldn’t be safe.’

‘I don’t understand,’ I say. But she just keeps laughing.

The conversation throws me; at the same time, I know how she feels. Now that Ariadne is out of the picture, now that chapter is definitively closed, I keep expecting some kind of
change
; instead, life just keeps going, as it always has. I wake a few seconds before the morning alarm; I read the market forecasts as the light begins to break; I analyse reports, brief clients, at night lie in bed and try to decide which is worse, the dream where I watch paralysed as Ariadne walks away, or the one where by some unspecified miracle she is there in my arms and my heart is bursting with happiness, and I know that in the morning I will have to undergo the desolation of losing her all over again. While she is away, I watch all the riot footage I can find, in case I might glimpse her amid the tear gas and flying brickwork. When she returns, I cannot even watch for glimpses; instead, as I walk past the Ark, I force myself to look away. Having her close by only underlines how out of reach she is, giving her up only crystallizes how much I desire her; love loves these paradoxes, love generates paradoxes like this ad infinitum. Perhaps it is no wonder that so many people pursue money instead, possessions, power, goals that are lifeless but at least achievable. Perhaps, after all, that is the true purpose of Business: to replace the shifting, medieval labyrinths of love with the broad, sanitized avenues of materialism, the lightless, involuted city of the self with something grid-like and rational – a reordering in the name of reason, a vast Haussmannization of the heart.

Autumn comes: in our denatured domain we see it in the clenched skies, a new chill edge to the rain. The mood in the city has darkened too. A series of revelations about Royal Irish comes at the same time as leaked details of the next round of austerity measures; the zombie encampment swells with fresh recruits, who sit on the quay, battering pots and pans so relentlessly that even at night when it is quiet we still hear it in our ears.

More significantly, sections of the non-zombie population have also taken to the streets. On the way back from a meeting, my taxi runs into a protest outside government buildings.

‘Might be a while,’ the driver says, dropping his hands resignedly over the wheel. ‘Sorry, mate.’

‘That’s all right,’ I say. In the near distance I hear horns, drums, voices chanting.

‘It’s them cunts of bankers are to blame.’ The taxi driver shakes his head. ‘Bad as the paedos, they are.’ He thinks about this for a moment, then goes on: ‘In fact I’d say most of them
are
fuckin paedos. They have that look about them, wouldn’t you say?’

‘Mmm,’ I say ambiguously from the back seat.

‘I’m tellin’ you, if one of them thievin’ paedo scumbags ever got in my cab …’ He mashes his fist into his palm, then breaks off, turns to me and asks sunnily, ‘What line o’ work you in yourself, pal?’

Mercifully, my phone strikes up; feeling rather as Frodo must have slipping on the Ring, I excuse myself to answer it.

At the other end of the line, to my surprise, is Paul; to my even greater surprise, he wants to take me to lunch. ‘You have some
new scheme for finding me a woman?’ I query. ‘Because you know this is no longer something I wish to pursue.’

He laughs. ‘No schemes, no set-ups, no strings attached. Just two friends, catching up over a good meal.’

I meet him in the plaza outside Transaction House. He looks different –
spruce
, as they say in English. He has had his hair cut, and sports a natty blazer with a thin stripe. ‘Have a few meetings lined up later today, got to look the part,’ he explains, as we walk across the bridge.

‘Meetings – about Hotwaitress?’

‘That’s right, only it’s not called Hotwaitress any more. We gave up the domain name after we got sued, and when we went back a few weeks ago we found someone else had taken it.’

‘Someone has used your idea?’ I say, trying to sound sorry.

‘It’s just some joker putting up candids of waitresses in truck-stops. But he’s got the name. In fact most of the premium domain names are gone. Hotwaitress.net, Hotwaitress.org, Naughtywaitress, Saucywaitress, Flirtywaitress, Dirtywaitress, Shamelesswaitress, a whole load of others, all taken.’

‘How frustrating,’ I commiserate.

‘Yeah, a lot of perverts out there these days,’ he says. ‘Luckily, we were still able to get hold of Myhotswaitress.com.’

‘Myhotwaitress,’ I say, weighing it up. ‘Well, this is as good as –’

‘Sorry, Claude – it’s My
hots
waitress. Hot-
s
, with an
s
.’

‘Myhotswaitress,’ I repeat dubiously.

‘It sounds strange at first, but you get used to it. In fact, it’s really grown on me. It’s like, these waitresses are so hot that they’re hot plural. They’re
hots.
Anyhow, that’s the reason I wanted to take you to lunch today – as a small thank-you for all you’ve done in bringing this together. If it weren’t for you, Myhotswaitress might still be on the shelf, gathering dust. It was your story, and your faith in me, that inspired me to give it another try.’

‘My faith was in you as a novelist,’ I say. ‘I was hoping to inspire you to write another book.’

‘Well, the point is that you inspired me,’ he says. ‘Whatever direction that took.’

‘Where are we going?’ I say, as we have been walking for a while and I am getting hungry.

‘It’s not much further. I have a feeling you’ll like this place, Claude. I have a feeling you’ll like it a lot.’ He permits himself a mysterious smile. ‘But what you were saying there, about wanting to inspire me to write a book – in a sense, that’s what you’ve done. I’ve been thinking lately that Myhotswaitress isn’t so different from a novel. Or to put it another way – some people might make the argument that a website like Myhotswaitress is the novel’s natural replacement.’

‘What people? Igor?’

‘Think about it. Why don’t we read novels any more? Because thanks to technology, we can turn our own lives into stories. Each of us can be the hero of our own movie. Yet for all the incredible leaps we’ve made, there are some blank spaces. Things technology can’t give us. We’ve got social media, on the one hand, where we can edit our relationships, control how we appear to the world. We’ve got porn, on the other, acting out all of our fantasies for us. But between them, in that space between sex and friendship, there’s still something missing.’

‘Go on,’ I say warily.

‘What happened between you and Ariadne made me realize we’re still waiting for a twenty-first-century way of experiencing love. Even in the digital age, love is something we want and need. But it’s tricky. In some ways love is the novel of the emotional world. If you stick with it, and put in the hours, there are wonderful rewards. But it demands a commitment, and today, people don’t have time for that. They like the
idea
of it, certainly, but more and more of them are saying about love what they say about the novel: TL, DR – too long, didn’t read. So the question
becomes, how do we upgrade love? How do we give that deep, rich, novel-like experience in a modern, easily digestible form?’

‘By watching waitresses on a spycam?’

‘Before you dismiss it, just ask yourself, what do we want from love? We want to be in a story, right? Isn’t that how you put it to me? It’s like a book: we want to be immersed in detail, pulled along by a narrative, intimately involved with profound or beguiling characters. At the same time, when we’re reading a book, we don’t actually want to be
in
the story. We don’t want a bunch of reanimated dinosaurs actually chasing us around a theme park, for instance. And that’s where I realized we went wrong with Ariadne.’

I am confused. ‘You think the relationship would have been more successful if I had never tried to talk to her?’

‘Exactly!’ he says. ‘When are we most in love? It’s almost always at the start, right? Sometimes before you’ve got to know the other person at all. There are two reasons for that. First, once you know them better, you realize there’re all kinds of downsides and negatives to their personalities you never imagined. They’re drunks, they’re Nazi sympathizers, they have husbands, whatever. Second, as soon as you get something, you automatically stop wanting it. It’s human nature. New shoes, new phone, new love, it’s all the same. Think of Marcel in
In Search of Lost Time
. He spends about a thousand pages running around after Albertine. But the minute he gets her, he loses interest.

‘You see, when it comes to love, the
relationship
has always been the weak link in the chain. The gap between the person you imagine and the reality that time reveals. In the beginning you’re in a story, then you find yourself in the truth, with all of the problems that you were trying to escape in the first place. But thanks to modern technology that doesn’t need to happen any more. You can experience the most intimate details of another person’s life, without ever having to speak to her. You can preserve the illusion – you can
stay in love –
for as long as you want. It’s like your own personalized, never-ending novel!’

‘You are saying that your twenty-first-century concept of love does not involve a relationship at all?’

‘Well, of course there’s a relationship. You’re there relating to her, through your computer, feeling all kinds of very passionate and intense emotions – but without the
fear
of those emotions being compromised by the kind of irritating details that derail analogue or legacy relationships. It stays pure. It’s actually very romantic! And that’s something I only started to realize when I talked to you. Myhotswaitress isn’t just for lonely weirdos. Everyone has a secret crush they’d like to get closer to. Men and women, young and old. It doesn’t just have to be waitresses either. Already we’re thinking about how to carry out surveillance on nurses, air hostesses, shop assistants –’

‘Weren’t there some legal issues with this?’ I say, increasingly troubled by the thought that I have played some part in unleashing it.

‘The law will change,’ Paul says firmly. ‘If it’s what the people want, the law can’t stand in their way. This is the future. We’re not going to stop until we’ve turned the boring old world into a sexy, fun MyHotsWorld. All we need is a small initial injection of capital.’

His last sentence seems to hang in the air between us, glinting and turning like a fishing lure, and then he says, ‘Well, here we are.’

It appears that we have reached our destination; above the portico I see a promising-looking star.

‘I asked for a table with a canal view … ?’ Paul tells the maître d’.

‘Certainly, sir. This way.’ He leads us to our table and tells us the waiter will be with us shortly. From the window I can see swans drifting lazily through the water; around us, there is a pleasant buzz of well-heeled conversation. I feel my mood lift.

‘Anyhow, that’s enough shop talk,’ Paul says. ‘Here, why don’t you choose the wine.’ He hands me the list, and as I make my
way through the familiar names he sits back expansively, surveying the room.

The waiter arrives and asks us if we would like to order a drink; I am thinking of a Pernod – but then I see Paul’s face. He is staring at the waiter as if some great offence has been committed. ‘What?’ he says.

‘A drink, sir?’ the waiter repeats. ‘Or some water?’

‘What’s going on?’ Paul demands.

The waiter, a slender young man in his early twenties, is understandably startled. ‘Sir?’

‘Who are you? Where’s the girl?’

The waiter’s eyes flicker over to me, but I am equally baffled. ‘If you need more time, sir …’

‘We don’t want more time! We want the girl! We want Ludmila! Where is she?’

‘Ludmila’s not working today, sir,’ the waiter quavers.

‘But she always works Thursdays!’ There is a note of appeal in Paul’s voice now. ‘Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, then she does the split-shift with Michaela on Saturday –’

‘Michaela’s away on Sunday,’ the unfortunate waiter tells him, evidently too scared to question Paul’s seemingly intimate knowledge of the restaurant’s work roster. ‘So Ludmila’s covering for her and taking her day off today instead.’

This news falls on Paul like a hammer blow; the furious colour drains from his cheeks, and he slumps back leadenly in his chair. ‘Oh,’ he says.

‘Would you like someone else to serve you, sir?’

‘No, no,’ Paul says defeatedly.

‘We do not have to stay,’ I offer, although I still don’t understand what is wrong.

‘No, it’s fine,’ he says. ‘Let’s just get this over with. You go ahead and order, Claude. I’ll have the same as him,’ he tells the waiter, who raises his order pad with a trembling hand.

I duly select for both of us; a moment later, a different waiter
arrives at the table with our wine, which he carefully presents and then pours without making eye contact.

‘Is everything all right?’ I ask Paul, who is listlessly prodding the wicker bread-basket with his fork.

‘Yeah, yeah,’ he says.

‘Who is this Ludmila?’

‘Who is Ludmila.’ The thought of her rouses him. ‘Tall, elegant, refined, with a perfect size-ten figure and distinctive ash-blonde braids, Ludmila Trotyakova is one of the most enchanting figures on the Dublin restaurant scene. Don’t be misled by her efficient service; Ludmila is happy to stay and chat with diners about her interests, which include mountain-climbing in Slovakia, the work of the Slovakian composer Ján Levoslav Bella, and the history of the tenth-century duchy of Moravia, later Slovakia.’ He shakes his head. ‘She would have been right up your street. Damn it, when Igor rang up pretending to be her uncle they told him she’d be here! Now we’ve come all this way for nothing, and it’s going to cost me a damn fortune.’

‘So that’s what this lunch is about,’ I say, as the original waiter scurries past, dropping off our starters with an inaudible blur of words. ‘All the talk of friendship and catching up was just a trick. You wanted to dangle this waitress in front of me, so I will invest in your website.’

‘No, Claude, no!’ Paul reaches across the plates to seize my hand. ‘Okay, I admit I wanted to give you an idea of how Myhotswaitress might work. But I also wanted to show you that there are other waitresses out there. You don’t have to give up on love just because it didn’t work out with Ariadne!’

‘I don’t think that coming to a restaurant to ogle the staff can be described as “love”.’

‘Believe me, if you’d seen Ludmila, you wouldn’t say that. Ogling her is a transcendent experience, like the piano sonatas of Ján Levoslav Bella.’ He presses his lips together contritely. ‘Look,
I know I wasn’t entirely upfront with you. But try and see things from my perspective. Do you know what it’s like out there for the entrepreneur at the moment? The banks are all on the point of going bust, it’s impossible to get any credit! All I’m looking for is a little leg-up. If you don’t want to invest, the very least you could do is set up a few meetings with some of your clients.’

‘I think you will find that I can do a lot less than that.’

‘Oh, well, that’s lovely, Claude, after all I’ve done for you.’

‘What, exactly, have you done for me? Apart from the incessant lying.’

He goggles at me furiously. ‘You know. The, the …’

‘The attempted robbery? The non-existent book?’

‘The advice!’ he snaps. ‘The advice!’

‘It seems to me that your “advice”, like your business ideas generally, amounts to little more than a vicarious attempt to sleep with waitresses.’

‘Well, let’s just drop the subject, shall we?’ Paul flashes me a deliberately synthetic smile, and swabs his plate with a hunk of bread. ‘Let’s just drop it, and concentrate on enjoying this overpriced, pointless meal.’

BOOK: The Mark and the Void
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