At ten minutes to one one night in November, Edel loses it. She has been
standing by the window with her arms crossed since ten past twelve,
alternately looking down the drive and then at the watch on her wrist.
Some time before this, she lay on the bed clutching a book to her chest
with her eyes shut tight and felt good, strong and completely open.
Then she got up to clear the snow, so that Alvin could drive straight into
the garage without having to stop and clear the snow himself first. She
wanted to reach out to him - that was the expression she used when
she thought about what it was she wanted to do; it was a cliché, but
that was OK, it was what she wanted. She imagined her own small hand
reaching out and being taken by Alvin’s hand, Alvin’s big, strong hand.
Her eyes filled with tears when she thought of their two joined hands
and everything they symbolised. And clearing the snow - it dawned
on her that clearing the snow symbolised that she was making room
for him again. She was making room for him again after he had asked
for forgiveness and said that from now on, she was the only one, there
would be no others; she had let him stay in her life as Thomas’ father, as
someone she shared her home with, someone she refused to look in the
eye at the breakfast table and whose shoes she occasionally kicked as
she passed them in the hallway. She shovelled and cleared the snow and
as she shovelled, she looked up at the double garage and thought that
it symbolised her goal, she was clearing the way for him - she was the
garage that he could come home to. Her small car was already parked
on one side of the garage and when his car was on the other side, things
would be as they should be. Her small car parked alongside his big car.
She ran up to the garage through the uncleared snow and turned on the
light and looked at her little car that was standing there all alone, waiting,
and then cried as she cleared the rest of the driveway to the garage.
That was forty minutes ago. And it is snowing hard again now, snowing
so much that it looks like the snowflakes are falling together, two by
two, three by three, four by four, falling through the air until they land
suddenly and mutely in the snow. In only forty minutes, the driveway has
been covered again. And the man that she cleared the way and made
room for is not here and the fact that things are not as they should be
screams out at Edel. He should have been here forty minutes ago. The
last ferry docked at twenty past eleven and it takes three quarters of an
hour to drive here from the ferry - and that’s being generous. In other
words, he should have been here at ten past twelve, when she finished
clearing the snow and stood waiting, red-cheeked, by the window with a
magnanimous, nearly loved-up look on her face.
Every minute that passed after ten past twelve pulled this look of love
from her face, like a net being dragged from the water, and by the thirtieth
minute past twelve, when she called his mobile and heard it ringing in the
breadbox in the kitchen, her face was no longer remotely magnanimous.
She screamed with rage, she, who had felt no rage one hour earlier as
she lay on the bed feeling good, strong and open and then decided to
get up so she could clear the snow. At that point, in the thirtieth minute
past twelve, there was nothing left in the body with the crossed arms
that was in any way still touched by the good, light magnanimity she had
felt blossom in her heart just over an hour ago, as she lay on the bed
and read Birthday Letters by Ted Hughes. The English poet Ted Hughes
wrote the book for his deceased wife, Sylvia Plath (also a poet). In the
book he expresses his love for Sylvia, who took her own life largely
because she felt that this love was lacking - she believed that he did
not love her, that he was unfaithful, which he was, and on 11 February
1963, she put her head in a gas oven and took her own life. And in the
years that have followed, the English press and many others have held
Ted Hughes responsible and criticised him for not talking about it, for not
expressing any regret, or even asking for forgiveness, nothing. He has
received prizes for his poetry, but people look at him with eyes that no
doubt clearly express what they really think of his behaviour. Edel is one
of those who have held it against him. She loved Sylvia Plath and she has
borne a grudge against Ted Hughes. Though she has found some solace
in the fact that even among famous poets there are those who share her
experience. She, a small bookseller in a rural community, can recognise
herself in a famous poet, Plath - there are bonds between people, she
thought; even successful poets in big cities wander around in their own
homes in desperation, even they rage and throw things against the wall.
The fact that they cried and felt small, small and betrayed, that they
wanted to be stones that would sink to the bottom and stay there, was
a huge relief to her. It was awful that Sylvia had suspected Ted and was
right. Because that meant it is possible: to suspect and to be right.
But then she read Birthday Letters. With great resentment, she picked
the book with the red poppies on the cover from the cardboard box of
books that she had ordered and with great reluctance she opened the
book and read the first poem. She did not know how it happened, but as
she read the book, it struck her: even though he betrayed her, he must
have loved her, he saw her, saw all the big and small things that she went
around doing and feeling - and if only she had known that, Sylvia, as she
went around doing all those things that she did not think were noticed!
When she got to the last poem, she discovered that the red poppies on
the cover referred to this poem about the red poppies that Sylvia had
loved and seen as a symbol of life; and this evening, as she, Edel, lay on
the bed reading this last poem, she felt she was the one who saw all this
for her, in a stream of warmth and the dark timbre of the voice that saw
and said, that twisted and twisted down and down until finally she could
barely breathe, suffocated by a pressing joy, or sadness: This is Life, You
are Loved and You are Betrayed in That, That is Life, I must Accept It, I
Accept It: Life is Good, Painful and Awful! She thought to herself: This is
Acceptance! The notion of “acceptance” radiated inside her like the sun
suddenly staring through the clouds, forcing them open and covering the
fjord like an iridescent bridal veil. This is God, thought Edel, and she felt
like she was about to explode; she clutched the book to her breast and
closed her eyes and felt completely open. She also felt overwhelmed
by something else and had to scribble down some words on a piece of
paper: “the power of literature”.
The reason that Edel let go of this good, magnanimous feeling, of the
notion of “acceptance”, and has now lost the plot instead, is that she
cannot see, but suspects, the scene that was unfolding in a house by
the ferry around the same time that she was clearing the snow from the
driveway, 45 minutes drive from the double garage at the end of the
driveway. The scene that Edel suspected when she lost it, but could not
see, looked like this: her husband, Alvin, was standing behind Susanne,
who lives in the house that stands alone by the ferry, 45 minutes drive
from the double garage. They were both naked, Susanne was bending
forwards and holding on to a window ledge. Alvin was standing behind
her and holding her hips. Alvin thought to himself that this was not what
was supposed to happen, this was not what he had intended, he should
have driven straight home, he should never have called in on Susanne,
just to say hallo, to find out if she was very sad because he had stopped
coming, if she had been alright in the last six months, and to say that
it was difficult, nearly impossible, just to drive by her house when he
finished work, to say that he stood up on the bridge of the ferry and tried
to see if he could see her inside every evening when she had the lights
on and it was dark all around, and her house twinkled at him like a small
star in the night sky, but that it could not carry on, he had a family to
consider, Edel had threatened to leave him and take Thomas with her and
he could not bear that, he had to sacrifice their love for Thomas, that was
just the way it was, that was what he wanted to say, he wanted to take
responsibility for his family, that was what he had chosen, having spent a
long and painful period thinking and doubting, he could not come in and
stand here like he was now, holding her by the hips and pressing his cock
between her legs.
Thomas – for whom Alvin was going to sacrifice his love and not stand as
he is standing now, for his sake - is asleep. He has been out all afternoon
selling raffle tickets in the snow and spent the whole time thinking about
Noah’s ark, which he learnt about at school. He thought about giraffes
and leopards. He thought about rhinoceroses and dreamed of stroking
them and sitting on their backs, touching their horns. He thought about
how enormous the boat must have been, as the teacher said yes when
he asked if it was bigger than the hotel. He wondered whether there were
also two ants onboard. And two lice! And now he is lying curled up like a
small foetus, dreaming about crocodiles. Because there were crocodiles
onboard, he had asked about that. He is dreaming about a big crocodile
that has laid a crocodile egg in a nest, while Edel storms through the
sitting room and pounds up the stairs to the bedroom. She throws on a
pair of trousers and a sweater, puts on a pair of shoes and hurls Birthday
Letters at the wall as hard as she can. Alvin comes all over Susanne’s
buttocks. In the crocodile nest, the first baby crocodile breaks through
the hard shell of the egg. A rhinoceros stands for a long time looking at
another rhinoceros, then suddenly walks away, out of the ark’s big front
door and the rhinoceros that is left behind does not know why. Thomas
shouts to Noah: wait! Wait for the other rhinoceros! He tugs at Noah’s
tunic. Then he runs towards the door to bring back the rhino that has
walked away. The one that was left behind falls to the ground with a
great thud.
Thomas stands in the doorway with tousled hair.
“Something went bump, Mummy,” he says.
“It was a book that I threw against the wall,” replies Edel.
“Why did you throw it against the wall?” asks Thomas.
“I was angry,” says Edel. “It was a bad book. A terrible, terrible book. Put
your clothes on, Thomas, we have to go and get Daddy.”
“Why?” asks Thomas.
“His car has broken down and he can’t get home. Hurry up,” she says,
and Thomas says that he does not want to, he has to sleep! If he does not
go to sleep now, the rhinoceros might leave forever!
“You can dream in the car,” says Edel.
“But I might not dream the same thing!” says Thomas.
“Of course you will. Come on, I’ll help you get dressed,” she says and
takes him firmly by the arm, her whole body shaking.
“I want to dream the same thing!” whines Thomas.
Susanne is shaking. She stammers. “Alvin,” she says and turns towards
him, wanting him to put his arms around her. “I love you,” she whispers
into his neck. “I knew that you’d come back.” He holds her tight but says
nothing. “I can’t say it,” he says finally. “You know I have said that I can’t.
It would be wrong. It would build up your hopes, you know I would love
to…but Thomas…” She nods and looks at him, he can see that she is not
entirely happy. But she tells herself that she can cope with anything and
that he must be able to see that, on her face, how big and generous she
is. Maybe that will make him understand that deep down, he loves her
and that it would be impossible, impossible to leave her. She looks at him
with an understanding expression on her face.
“Bloody hell, I have to clear the snow again,” shouts Edel. “Bloody, fuck,
shit, shit!”
She drives through the village through the snowstorm, her windscreen
wipers racing furiously back and forth and a triangle of snow builds up
under one of them, in a while she will no doubt have to get out and brush
it off. Triangle! Naturally, a symbolic triangle had to appear right in front
of her eyes! She snorts, Ted Hughes, she snorts, that she could be so
stupid. Oh, Life - right. Oh, Terrible, Oh Good, Oh Pain, it is none of
that, it is pure and simple lunacy and shit. And the outside is just bodies,
skeletons packaged in flesh, doing this and that and nothing makes
sense. That, thinks Edel, and laughs a sad laugh aloud for herself, is
what I will say at the seminar on Monday. “Muuummmmyyy,” complains
Thomas. She has woken him, he is lying across the backseat with his
duvet over him. She let him lie down without putting the safety belt on.
“Go to sleep,” she says. She has been taking courses in English literature
at the college in the next village and up until now has enjoyed the course,
“Symbolism in literature.” She felt that it was true that you should not
scorn symbolism and simply look at is as antiquated, romantic thought,
things should make sense, the expression and the content, she believed
that something could stand for something else, a rose for love, an ocean
for life, a cross for death, but now it just irritates her, because now she
realises that of the two lanes on the road along the fjord towards the
ferry, only her side has been cleared, she immediately thinks: is that how
it is, is that what this means, is his path closed, will he not come back,
is it only she who can reach out to him, and he cannot reach her, is his
lane full of snow, is that how it is? She feels helpless, is that what this
means? No, she refuses to read it that way! It is just a road, she thinks,
a stupid road, without any symbolic meaning. Crap and idiocy, and on
top of that: asphalt. She wished she had a furry dice hanging from the
mirror, or a Wunderbaum, the most pointless thing she can think of, when
she gets back to the village, she will stop at the petrol station and buy a
Wunderbaum, to remind her of this, to mark this evening when she said
goodbye to symbolic thinking and to - what, what else is she going to say
goodbye to? Her marriage? But she is on her way to collect him, why,
why is she doing it, should she rather drive back home and lock the door,
let him sleep in the garage, should she stop driving, should she just stop,
why did she react in this way, it had to be the least reflected thing she had
ever done, she just did it, and what should she do now, should she carry
on driving? She slows down as she swings into a wide bend, she sees
an orange light pulsing in the trees on the other side of the road, it must
be a snowplough, she is frightened of snowploughs, she comes to a near
standstill and lets the snowplough sail past on the other side of the road,
the snow blasting over the barrier on the other side and hitting the trees
and tears come to her eyes, spontaneously, because now his lane is also
being cleared.
Alvin looks at Susanne’s face, the pleading in her eyes makes him feel
ashamed, he kisses her on the cheek and goes to look for his pants.
“What have you been up to recently, then?” he asks and Susanne tries
to hold in her stomach as she picks up her bra from the floor. “Not much,
same as always really… no, hang on…” She has thought of something.
“Give me a second,” she says and with a sparkle in her eyes, she
pulls on her nickers and practically runs to the CD player. Alvin thinks
suddenly that there is something helpless about her body dressed only
in underwear, as she bends down to put on some music, he feels like he
can’t breathe, he tightens the belt on his trousers and pulls on his jacket.
“Susanne, I’m going to have to go. Edel will flip if I’m not home soon, I’m
sorry, Susanne,” he says. But Susanne does not listen to him, she has put
on a CD of salsa music and starts to dance in front of him. He must not
go. She must get him to stay. She must get him to say something nice
to her before he goes. “I’ve been going to salsa classes!” she says and
dances closer and closer to him, with a provocative, slightly coy look. She
takes him by the hands, he says ‘nooooo’ … then she lets go and turns
her back to him, as she rolls her hips. She is a bit nervous, so her dancing
feels contrived. Alvin is so embarrassed on her behalf that he goes over
to the dancing back and puts his arms round her and says that he really
must go now, but that she’s good at dancing, and she should carry on
with it. “I’m a fool, Susanne,” he says. “No, you’re not,” she says. “You
are the best person I know.” He kisses her on the forehead. “I might go to
Cuba soon,” she says, even though it is not true. “Well, I hope you have a
good time then,” he says.
Edel shakes her head, she does not want to think about it anymore, she
does not want to interpret things symbolically any more. We have rejected
nature, that is what we have done, thinks Edel, as she drives slowly
forwards on the newly cleared road and the snowstorm gradually dies
down, yes, nature has been abandoned and we are to blame, we have
focused on language and become complicated. We have to get back
to nature, we have to stop reading books, we have to stop interpreting
everything, we have to stop thinking figuratively, we have to live like
animals, we have to eat food and sleep. We must renounce symbolism.
We must stop thinking all together. We must live in one simple dimension.
Ah! She is happy. She feels mad. Or perhaps she has actually been mad
up to this moment and has now regained her sanity. She has a horrible,
crystal clear feeling in her head. As if her head is two wide-open eyes with
a cold wind blowing into them. She shakes her head. Your husband has
fucked another woman this evening. She wants to laugh. And so we have
to stop thinking symbolism! Haha. Jesus! She mumbles. And then laughs
again. What a thing to mumble. In fact she wants to cry. She has to pull in
to a bus stop and cry. Imagine, she thinks as she leans forwards over the
steering wheel, crying, imagine if it’s not what I think, but that he’s been in
an accident. She looks over her shoulder at Thomas, he is sleeping, lying
with his face to the back of the seat and she can only see his hair sticking
up from duvet, a small fan that spreads across the pillow and she thinks:
then he will be fatherless and she will be a single mother and she leans
over the wheel again.
Alvin cannot quite understand what has happened. He drives home
along the fjord, it has stopped snowing, the branches on the trees on the
mountainside are weighed down, the road is white, no one has driven
here since the snowplough, no tracks in the snow. The street lights stand
silently with bowed heads off into the distance, he imagines the noise
that is made when the light from each street lamp hits the roof of his car
as he drives past, bzzzzzzzzzt, he imagines that they are x-ray beams
that penetrate the roof of the car and illuminate him, so that if you were
looking in from outside, you would see a skeleton sitting there holding
the wheel and driving along the road. Out of the light: a man. In the light:
a skeleton. On, off, on, off. In a kind of corny, grey light, you can now
see his right hand with all its white bones moving like tentacles, griping
the gear stick and changing gear. And then he dresses the skeleton up
in bluish-red muscles, veins and sinews, just as he remembers from that
picture in the anatomy book at secondary school that made a lasting
impression on him: a person without skin, only muscles, veins and
sinews. Teeth without lips, eyeballs without eyelids. Sometimes it comes
back to him, like when Edel was shouting and screaming and saying it
was over, he could only just hear what she was saying, he stood there
staring at her, he imagined her as a face without skin, only bluish-red,
knotted muscles in her cheeks, over her lips and teeth. He feels hot,
flushed, conspicuously flushed, and it will not have died down by the
time he reaches home, he knows that, because he has done it before,
he should really take a long detour when he gets to the village, but that
will not be of much help either as then he will get home even later and
Edel will know, maybe she will have packed the suitcase on wheels like
she did the last time - the good, big red suitcase on wheels - and then
remembered that it was a gift from him and stopped right in front of the
front door, opened the suitcase and taken out all the clothes, then kicked
the suitcase across the floor so that it hit the chest of drawers and lay
there open like a gaping mouth, just like last time, and then run up into the
attic and searched and searched until she found the old bag that was the
bag she brought her clothes in when she moved in with him, as she had
last time, to make a symbolic point to herself that she was on her own
again, and then woken Thomas up and gone down to the hotel; maybe he
smells of perfume, he thinks, thank god he took her from behind, touching
as little skin as possible from the waist up. It was really only the lower part
of his stomach that had touched her hips. He pictures Susanne’s salsarolling
hips and feels sick. He stops the car, in the middle of the road, gets
out of the car, leaves the door open and walks to the edge of the road,
turns around, stretches his arms out from his body and allows himself to
fall backwards into the snow. It is soft. If he lies here for a while, he will
cool down. He will lie here and slowly but surely erase Susanne from his
mind. Because now he can feel it in his bones, it is over.
Susanne pulls on some sweat pants and opens a bottle of wine, she sits
down in the sofa and tries to think that she has just had a visit from her
lover and that she is a grown woman with a rich life. She managed to
get him to come. He could not stop thinking about her. He could not get
her out of his mind - that’s how strong the power is that she is fortunate
enough to possess. But she knows there is no point. She tries not to think
about the desperation that drove her to dance salsa for him. She tries not
to think about the embarrassed look on his face when she wanted him to
dance. She drinks the glass of wine in one go, swallowing only a couple
of times. It tastes of alcohol. Susanne purses her lips and goes over to the
phone, looks up the number of a travel agent in the telephone directory.
She just doesn’t understand, she thinks, how Alvin, the best person she
knows, who is so sensitive and observant, who has told her the strangest
things about what he thinks, could just come like that and fuck her and
then leave with an embarrassed, hard expression on his face. She feels it,
deep down, that he will not come back. It is over this time. She hopes he
has an accident. She hopes he has an accident and ends up in the fjord.
She dials the number for the travel agent. He could quite possibly have
an accident with all this snow. The travel agent is shut and will open again
tomorrow morning at 8am, and she throws herself down on the floor. She
wonders if she should slide her way over to the sofa, she lies on the floor
and pictures herself wriggling exhausted and doomed like a soldier on a
muddy battlefield, over to the sofa - but she knows that it is not true, the
truth is that she is lying on her back on the floor, that she is looking up
at the ceiling, that the back of her throat is burning and that the tears are
running from her eyes down into her ears.
“Please,” says Thomas. The missing rhino has not come back and
Thomas is not allowed to leave the ark. Noah is so big that he nearly
reaches the ceiling and he says firmly that it is not possible to go out, it
has started to rain so they have to shut the door soon. Thomas tries to
get to the door all the same, but the floor is heaving with baby crocodiles,
so he slips and falls and never gets to the door. Now he notices that there
is a lift like the one at the hotel beside the door and he can see that it
is on its way down, because the floor numbers are showing on a panel
above the door, and he thinks that maybe it is the rhinoceros, 2, 1, pling:
it is two lizards. The lizards waddle over the baby crocodiles. Edel lifts
her head from the wheel. She starts the car and swings out into the road.
“Bloody shit,” she mumbles.
Bloody, fuck, shit, shit.
Alvin has made an angel in the snow, which he realises is a great paradox,
symbolically. It makes him think about Edel, it makes him want to cry,
without managing to, he sits up, pulls up his knees and sits huddled in
his own angel. A pathetic, overly symbolic position, thinks Edel as she
pulls up beside him before he has looked up. He looks up. He is not
surprised to see her there. She stops the car, gets out and stands in
front of him. “What’s happened?” she says. He shrugs his shoulders and
opens his hands. Closes them again. “This,” he says. “I made an angel
in the snow.” “You little shit,” she says and nearly starts to laugh, she is
not reacting as she thought she would, she had imagined the scene and
it was not like this, she shouted and cried and then he fell to the ground,
but now it almost feels as if she is not here and the whole thing is slightly
comical. “We’re finished,” she says, without feeling anything and then
goes back to sit in the car, her head feels crystal clear and cold, nearly
light. Her feet feel light as well. “The car broke down!” he shouts, coming
after her. “Bloody hell, Edel! I’ve been standing here for nearly an hour!
And I couldn’t phone you because I couldn’t find my mobile! I’ve been
sitting here waiting for help but no one came.” The crystal clear, light Edel
smiles. “I would have liked to see that,” she says. Alvin says nothing, but
gets into his car and his hands shake as he turns the key, because now it
is over.
But the car does not start.
The car just manages to splutter a few times but does not start. “There
you go,” says Alvin. Edel says nothing. The blood is about to leave her
legs and rush to her head, her cheeks. She looks at him, coughs. Nothing
that is happening now is as she had imagined. She does not know
whether it is true or not. “Get out the way,” she says and sits down in
the driver’s seat of his car, it is cold, so he cannot have just stopped, he
must have been there for a while. It is cold in the car. She turns the key,
the car barely reacts. It is true. The car has broken down. She does not
know what to do. She has driven along the fjord to collect him, to shout at
him and leave him, or collect him, or leave him, and her side of the road
was cleared of snow first, and then his side was cleared, it hits her, that
actually happened. It literally happened. She goes round to the boot and
gets out a towrope and hands it to him. Alvin stands looking at Thomas
who is sleeping in the backseat and tries to behave like someone whose
car has broken down and who has been waiting in the snow for an hour.
“What’s he been up to today?” he asks, casually, and coughs. “He learnt
about Noah’s ark and sold raffle tickets,” answers Edel. “Come and look
at him,” says Alvin. Edel stands beside him and looks in at Thomas. He
is lying asleep with his arms stretched out above his head, up the back
of the seat. In the same position that Susanne is now lying on the floor,
without knowing that the painful pressure she feels in her heart is that
same pressure that is in Edel and Alvin’s hearts right now, as they stand
there side by side.
Edel drives the small car and tows the big car, which Alvin is steering.
She refuses, she thinks, to interpret this symbolically. It’s just the way
things have turned out. They drive along the fjord. It’s night. There are
three of them. And the fact that there is a rope between the cars has no
significance other than the physical fact that when a car breaks down
it needs to be towed. I just don’t understand this, thinks Alvin. He feels
that he is being watched, as if someone is laughing at him: he said the
car had broken down, and that is what happened. He got exactly what
he asked for. He leans forwards towards the windscreen to see if he can
see the stars, but is blinded by the light from the street lamps, which
stand silently with bowed heads, illuminating the cars as they pass. At
regular intervals along the road, you can see a skeleton, an adult, sitting
at the wheel, then a child’s skeleton lying across the backseat and then
finally another adult skeleton, which is sitting more or less directly behind
the first. The adult skeletons have their arms in front of them, holding
the wheel, the child skeleton is not holding anything but has its arms
stretched out above its head.
You can also see a larger skeleton, standing on all fours, which has
a huge horn on its snout; it is standing beside the child skeleton. A
similar skeleton now appears from the left, to the surprise of the first
rhinoceros skeleton, because it lifts its head and looks expectantly at
the approaching rhinoceros skeleton. They stand for a moment staring
at each other and then the one rhinoceros rubs up against the other. A
couple of antelope skeletons wander past and a tiger skeleton and a
lion skeleton and further along, two small cat skeletons and then dogs
and a mass of small crocodile jaws that nibble the child skeleton’s legs,
making it laugh and wriggle. And if x-rays could also show the contours
and shape of other things that were not of solid, indisputable mass, you
would be able to see the outline of an enormous wooden boat, with pairs
of skeletons, two by two, on many levels, two for each sort of animal. A
big human skeleton lifts its arm and then everyone feels what they are
standing on leave the ground and float through the air.