Dreamhouse: extract
Chapter One
My
husband was a vain man with a thick orange moustache who loved to look at
his beautiful wife, slim like a model and striking on the streets. Look,
people nudged each other. Look at her! He liked to see them nudge
each other, and liked to watch me across tables or from the far side of a
room, pleased with his thick orange moustache and his striking wife. As
for myself, I was a woman full of greed: my husband, whose name was
Reynold, was soon to be a professor with an income and a position, while I
could never be anything wealthier than a striking secretary with lovely
legs and little future.
We drove towards our summer in Tuscany,
taking wrong turnings in three countries and asking directions of
wooden-faced locals who gestured vaguely down the road. We had been
looking forward to our summer in Italy, although I had wondered if
Rennie's vanity and my greed would survive a foreign summer, alone with
each other for so long. Here there would be no parties or streets where we
could glitter. Rennie had joked about it: Think you'll be putting
cyanide in my tea by August, darling? as if he was not sure either,
behind his powerful moustache.
We kept asking for Aretta, as Daniel had
told us to. But all those leathery farmers, and their wives with aprons
full of beans, shook their heads blankly. At last Rennie lost patience
with peasants who refused to understand his version of Italian, and drove
fast along the narrow lanes, turning right and left at random, thrusting
his chin out in the way he did when life was misbehaving. Finally, at the
top of a hill we saw the same view of Florence below for the third time,
and he agreed to stop and let me try asking the way.
I used my fingers to mark the pages of
useful phrases in Italian for Fun, still crisp and untried. I was
made reckless by all this tiresome driving and chin-thrusting.
-
Per favore, I
read slowly, Per favore, Signora, dov'é Aretta?
It was a woman in black with heavy
stockings that had fallen around her ankles, dangling a hen from one hand
and a cleaver from the other. She shook her head and muttered and gestured
up and down the road with the flapping hen, saying something that was not
in the book. She did not seem to be saying To the left, to the right,
or straight on. Rennie stared in front of him and tapped his
fingers on the wheel but I was desperate enough to try another of the
names Daniel had written down for us. When she heard it, the woman's face
split into a smile that showed a single tooth and the cleaver glittered as
it pointed up the road.
- San Giorgio, si, si, a sinistra,
sempre sinistra.
- Grazie, I read, then said, but
Rennie accelerated away up the road, whipping my head back and leaving the
woman and her doomed hen behind in the floating dust.
We sped a sinistra along the lanes
then, through tiny villages with long pious names, where all the shutters
on the faded walls were closed against the sun. Were they all ghost towns?
Or were sleepy villagers, woken from their naps by the car, coming to the
windows in their vests to squint at the bright streets, and the car with
the steering- wheel on the wrong side?
Across the side of a barren slope of olive
trees, we were forced to grind along behind a tractor with a bright green
umbrella attached to the back that swayed with every rubbery bounce of the
machine. The driver's face under the umbrella was a luminous green and
even his teeth were asparagus-colour as he turned to grin and wave at us
with flamboyant ambiguous gestures. Locked behind him, sweating in the
cramped car, we were getting tired of smiling and waving back. Rennie
finally took the risk of becoming another statistic, and overtook the
grinning green farmer on yet another blind corner.
Daniel had said, Look for the flags, you
can't miss them. But we missed them until Rennie finally spotted the
bare flagpole above the trees. As we slowed down to drive up the rutted
track that led to the house, the car became intolerable, now that the
journey was nearly over: cramped, noisy, and full of insufferably hot air.
Daniel was a professor in London, a
professor with beautiful suits and small feet. Your husband will matter,
he told me. Rennie will matter one day, but first he must finish the
dissertation. Daniel owned land as well as suits, a property in
Tuscany where he had lived with his wife, an Italian signora of means. His
two children, his son and daughter, still lived on this property, in one
of the two villas. A villa: I heard that word and became
languorous, with visions of balustrades, a view of blue water, cool white
wine, bare feet on marble. My villa, Daniel said. Spend the
summer there, dear boy, and get that wretched dissertation done.
So we were to arrive at the first villa,
where the children lived, and they would direct us to the second villa,
where we would spend our summer.
At the house with the flagpole, we rang the
doorbell again and again but finally, reluctantly, had to recognize that
Hugo and Viola were not at home. We stood wondering what to do, and
covered our ears against the outraged barking of a dog that threatened us
with long yellow teeth, tugging at the chain that held it within inches of
the wall of the house. Its bark seemed piercing enough to bring crowds
storming out of the woods to drive off the strangers. As we stared up at
the windows of the villa, we did our best to look like friends of the
family. The dog knew, though, and we knew. We knew we were foreigners, and
did not speak the language.
Looking for another door at the back of the
house, we found two small wild birds tethered to the ground by lengths of
fishing line. The birds leapt and leapt into the air, but each time their
twig-like legs were nearly pulled out of their sockets and they fell back
to the ground. They had worn a circular bald patch in the grass, but they
fluttered in silence.
Through the glass of the back door we could
see the empty kitchen, which had the smug tidiness of a decoy. One wall of
the room was covered with identical clocks, like the ones in railway
stations, and each one showed a different time. Rennie peered in, then
pushed back his cuff to glance at his watch, and I listened at the glass.
I held my breath, but my ears were still humming after the hours in the
car. I could not tell if the whirring I could hear was from the clocks or
from the tired machinery in my own head.
- Wonder how long they'll be.
Rennie had taken off his watch to wind it,
but he almost dropped it, jumping backwards in fright as one of the birds
blundered against his leg. I looked away as he wiped with a leaf at the
runny white gob on his shoe, and would have liked to have jumped back into
that intolerable car and driven away. That did not seem possible, and I
sat down on the steps with Rennie to wait for Daniel's children.
The afternoon sun had left the steps now,
and the shadow of the house was reaching over the vineyards that sloped
down the hill. Over the snarling and barking of the dog, we discussed the
possibility that the house on the opposite ridge might be the one we were
going to stay in. We were polite to each other, and did not say No,
always Yes, but ... A habit of surface had grown between us and in
spite of dogs and horrors, we were bland and conversed well. Rennie
pointed out that there was a house on top of almost every ridge, wherever
we looked. He was so persuasive, and the landscape revealed so many earth-coloured,
crumbling houses when looked at closely, that we almost convinced each
other that this was the wrong house altogether, in spite of the flagpole.
At last a dull grey van like a riot-truck
bumped up the track. We stood uncertainly. This could be the happy ending,
the arrival of our hosts to let us begin our summer in Tuscany. Or it
could be the story of misunderstanding with Italian police. If we looked
like trespassers or thieves, how would we explain that we were not what we
seemed to be?
The windscreen reflected the sky so that
whoever was inside the van was invisible, but when the door opened the two
people who stepped out were obviously Daniel's children. Even for brother
and sister they looked very alike. Their silence was like the silence of
one person, their poise like a piece of china on a quiet mantelpiece. They
were young, but they moved like a couple used to being stared at
admiringly, and their smooth faces looked as if they would never become
ugly with emotion. Rennie advanced on them with a confident outstretched
hand.
-Hello, I'm Rennie Dufrey and this is my
wife Louise. Did Daniel tell you to expect us?
The two bland faces seemed prepared to
deflect any amount of bonhomie. Hugo smiled as he shook hands but his nod
looked more like resignation than an answer.
-Yes, we were expecting you.
From his boarding-school English no one
would have guessed that his mother was Italian. Viola stared at me and
said nothing so I thought perhaps she did not speak English. There was a
silence in which all four of us stood looking at each other, a silence in
which Rennie's smile went flaccid. Viola finally spoke, over-solicitous
like any reluctant hostess, and in perfect English:
- I expect you'd like to go straight to the
other house.
Nothing in the manner of this couple urged
us to stay, and something about the long wait, the tortured dog, the
tortured birds, made the words pop out of my mouth:
- Yes, yes please.
The brother and sister started to say
something at once, and exchanged a glance. Then Hugo said:
- Just keep going up the road. It's that
house over there. You have the key, don't you?
Rennie held it up and joked about how it
was like a dungeon key. He spoke rather loudly to make it clear he was
joking. Viola and Hugo stared at him patiently. They did not seem to
expect fun or boredom from their visitors, these friends of their
father's, but were just determined to endure us. Rennie had lost faith in
his little joke by the time Hugo finally spoke.
- Domenico will bring you bread every day.
There is no need to pay him.
Rennie began to protest vaguely but Viola
was already moving towards the house and interrupted him to speak over her
shoulder.
- You must ask if you need anything.
Hugo moved away to a shed beside the house.
It seemed unnecessary and even inappropriate to keep on thanking or
greeting or farewelling, but when Rennie started the engine its noise
filled the silence rudely. As the hot little car bounced over the ruts I
glanced back and saw Hugo come out of the shed holding a scrap of bright
cloth.
- Perhaps they're shy, Rennie said. Perhaps
they'll improve on acquaintance.
My husband, that man of optimism, did not
look at me as he spoke, so he did not have to see me shake my head.
-Don't you think? he asked after a moment,
and looked at me, but I had finished shaking my head.
-Don't you think? he asked again.
I did not, but I did not say so.
He refused to be discouraged when the key
would not budge in the rusted lock of the front door, and set off to look
for a small window with Boy Scout resourcefulness and cheer. I picked my
way through the blackberries after him, trying not to think about spiders
and snakes, and feeling spied on. I wished I had asked Viola for a cup of
tea. Rennie enjoyed smashing the smallest window with the heel of his shoe
and I felt he regretted being too large for the hole.
-Careful, Louise, he kept saying as I took
hold of the rotten frame to pull myself up. Careful now.
As I pulled myself through, I felt my palm
slide across an edge of glass and cobwebs brush my face. For a moment I
was stuck halfway and had to fight panic.
-You okay? I heard Rennie call from behind
me, but he was in the world I was leaving. I was entering a foreign one
that smelled of mould and was dark, the unknown interior of a strange
house.
- You okay, Louise?
My toes finally struck the floor and I let
myself down into a small damp room, crouching, expecting a blow, feeling
the blood sticky between my fingers.
Chapter Two
Daniel
had described the house as rustic and had apologized for offering it to us
for the summer. It's terribly primitive dear boy, he had said, and
smoothed a lapel of his beautiful suit. I am ashamed dear boy. We'd
expected a lot of turned and varnished wood, bunches of dried flowers
everywhere, and perhaps even an old well in the middle of a garden
overgrown with roses. We hadn't imagined that Daniel's description was a
euphemism for the last stages of decay.
When we began exploring the house we
tiptoed and whispered to each other like trespassers. What? Find
something? Rennie thought I spoke when I said nothing, and thought I
found something-what was he looking for? - when there was nothing to find.
Every room we went into was dark and silent. When the shutters were pushed
back against the clenched hinges, yellow Tuscan light filled the air, but
revealed nothing more sinister than a scattering of mouse-droppings. Under
the rotten ceiling of the middle room upstairs, there was a heap of
acid-white bird-droppings from the murmurous dove-loft in the roof, and
birds peered down at us through the hole in the ceiling, ruffling their
wings and shifting uneasily.
Next door in the corner room, the shutters
yielded to a push and fell away into the bushes outside. The window-frame
sagged suddenly inwards and we stepped back. Rennie looked up at the beams
above us that supported the roof. They did not collapse as we watched, but
we could see deep cracks running the length of each one. The adze marks of
two centuries before could still be seen on the dry wood, so that I
imagined the hot sweat running off the backs of men labouring to build
this house: It will stand forever, they would have told each other,
and slapped each beam, still bleeding sap, and they would have gone to
their wives at night and held them all the more fervently for thinking
they were building something that would last forever. A colossal weight of
terracotta tiles bore down on the beams that those men had shaped, weight
bearing down year after year and teasing the brittle grain of the wood
further and further apart, towards the final collapse that would send
clouds of dust and astonished doves into the air. But those adze-men would
not have thought about that.
Along the hall, in a big room with a view,
Rennie stamped on the floor to see if it would hold, glanced up at the
ceiling where only a few flakes of plaster drifted down, and decided that
this was the best room to work in. There was a table in the room and he
dragged it over to the window for a desk.
-All set for the summer darling, he said,
and I felt fear at the idea of this particular stretch of my future, not
wanting to think as far ahead as a whole summer.
There were three narrow beds in this room,
each with a cover of clear plastic over the mattress. In one of them a
family of mice had made a nest in the mattress among the kapok and the
springs. It was a cosy home, but exposed like a display under the plastic,
four baby mice, like thick pink maggots, wormed slowly over each other
while the bigger mice nosed further into the wadding between the springs,
enlarging the nest. This happy family seemed to think it was invisible,
safe under its plastic, and was not disturbed by the people bending over
it.
-Think someone's watching us like this?
Rennie poked at the plastic over the nest
and the mice stopped shifting around each other. They listened, felt the
air with their whiskers twitching, perhaps prayed.
- I feel like God, Rennie said.
I fancied the idea of being God, too, and
pressed up and down on the mattress so that the nest bounced and the mice
scrabbled and clawed over each other's backs. One of them slipped up out
of the nest and slid along between the plastic and the mattress, towards
the edge of the bed. Escape! A worthy dream. But like any god I had my
cruel streak, and was not ready for escape just yet. I pressed down on the
bed and tightened the cover on either side of this bold escaping mouse
until its fur flattened and its tiny head struggled against the plastic
squeezing down on it. It was a despicable triumph, but it was a triumph,
and when the mouse gave up the struggle and lay as if dead I released it.
Like any other chastened explorer it turned and crept back the way it had
come, back into the nest.
- Great view darling. Better than that foul
orange fence at home.
I came to stand beside him at the window to
agree about the great view. The badly-shaved cheek of a patchy field of
wheat curved down to a wooded valley and a matching field curved up the
other side of the house on the opposite hill, where small wild birds were
slowly killing themselves in despair. It seemed possible to walk out of
this window across the air into the same window across the valley, where
the limp flag of a curtain shifted along the wall from time to time.
Watching in silence, we waited to see Hugo and Viola appear but they did
not, and Rennie turned away from the window. He brushed a grey line of
cobweb off the front of my shirt and said:
- We'll be able to afford a view when we go
back to London. No more orange fences.
He kicked at a sheet of newspaper beside
the table, revealing a small hole in the wall at floor-level and a
scattering of mortar.
-Ah. The mice.
He bent down and pushed a finger in, but
pulled it out again quickly. I watched the back of his head and wondered
if he was remembering warnings from childhood about how dangerous fingers
in holes could be.
-Like mascots, coming and going while I
work.
He pulled the paper back loosely over the
hole and stood looking at it and smiling. When my husband smiled, his
orange moustache became twisted and alive under his nose. There were times
when I would have liked to rip it off his face.
-As long as they don't take a fancy to the
inside of my pants-leg, of course.
We laughed together at that good joke,
because it was only Louise, the lovely wife of Reynold, who was supposed
to take a fancy to the inside of her husband's pants-leg.
Long Italian dusk was darkening from moment
to moment now, and our first night in our villa was about to begin. We
decided to use only two of the upstairs rooms, and left the others, full
of the smell of mould and mouse-droppings, to breathe and crumble quietly
behind closed doors. In the back room with the murkily mirrored wardrobe,
we swept up the mouse-dirt and made the bed.
We ate a dry meal of leftover sandwiches in
the kitchen and could hear the mice beginning to play through the house,
and plopping and squeaking scratchily. Going upstairs in the dark I heard
Rennie's heavy boots ahead of me on the stairs and waited for the squelch.
We climbed into the high bed and lay
stiffly, feeling the strangeness of the house, or of each other.
-Goodnight darling, Rennie said.
-Goodnight darling, I said back.
He began breathing heavily beside me and
the bedclothes stirred regularly over his rounded back. He was a tidy
sleeper, so it was hard to be certain whether he was really asleep. If I
whispered Fire! would he bounce up, fling the bedclothes back, leap
to the window? The bed was almost too narrow for a couple, but even so my
husband made a space between our bodies. When I slid across to curve
myself against his back, he retreated further, to the very edge of the
bed. He seemed prepared to fall out of this high bed rather than feel me
curved around him.
I did not want to have him fall out of our
bed, so I slid back to my own side. I listened to the pattering and
scratching of the mice through the house, and thought about grossly obese
women and their reinforced mattresses. I had heard that the tiny husbands
of such women were forced to slide to the floor, pad around the bed, and
get in on the other side, when their wife felt the urge to turn over in
bed.
I would not enjoy being such a husband, in
danger of suffocation. I would not enjoy being such a wife, either,
trapped by fat. In the connubial bed of our London flat, Rennie had liked
plenty of space between our bodies, but there, in a bigger bed, it had
been less obvious.
Before we could make the bed in this room,
we had had to shake a layer of grit off the cover and pillows. Throughout
every day and every night, tiny flakes of plaster had come loose from the
ceiling and floated down, with grains of sawdust that trickled out of the
thousands of pin-point holes that riddled the beams above the bed. Those
beams! They looked so strong, so massively rough- hewn, and they were as
weak as grass. The light rain of debris would go on falling as we lay
under it, and I lay feeling or imagining it falling on my face and on
Rennie's breathing back. How long would it take, lying still, to be
smothered completely? Perhaps before that could happen, the whole house
would fold in on itself. I thought about the lingering way buildings fall
to their knees when subjected to the wrong kind of stress.
The scrabble of claws over tiles carried
through the still house like the silly scratch of a watch held to the ear.
I fingered myself between my legs and when I closed my eyes I imagined the
twitching noses of inquisitive mice, their eyes alert and unblinking in
the darkness as they took stock of the intruders. The back of my hand
rasped against the sheet, and I heard my breath coming more quickly, until
my knees fell away from each other and I was consumed by white pleasure
like a bonfire.
Back in London I'd known just how to set
the bed squeaking and make such a friction in the space between our bodies
that I could no longer believe Rennie was asleep. But asleep or not, he
seldom turned to me full of lust and the dream of pleasure. He lay on,
breathing blamelessly or guiltily, not touching his wife as she writhed
beside him. I listened to his steady breathing and wondered if his eyes
were wide open on the dark, staring at the grey square of the window,
concentrating on keeping his breathing as unhurried as someone lost in
peaceful dreams.
I envied the simplicity of his deceit. Mine
would have to be more elaborate. I jammed my forefinger up into myself as
far as it would go, then held it up to my face, straining to see in the
dark, sniffing, finally licking at it tentatively with the tip of my
tongue. There was still no sign, no stickiness, no sharp metallic taste.
How much longer would Rennie not notice the gap in the rhythm of my
months? How much longer did I have, before he would guess at the
possibility of a new being embedded in my flesh, swelling on my blood? How
sweetly he'd kiss me - That's wonderful darling - and what a hug
he'd give me. How easy it was to imagine the bewilderment - but of
course we want to keep it! His eyes would watch me then, watch my
every move, and I would never be able to escape.
(end
of extract)